Dashcam footage released of Philando Castile's execution

Are we watching the same video? If you watched closely, you would have seen that he produced his documents at the 1:31 mark then proceeded to alert the officer that he had a firearm.
That was the insurance he produced. He had not handed him his ID yet. That dude should have been a dishwasher or clean bathrooms. He could have hit that kid with all that shooting.
 
If,these are the jurors that buckled under the pressure of white folks,I will consider them traitors.

I don't give a fuck,how young they are,because they should have some knowledge about the killings that's been going on,since Obama was in office.

I'm tired of people using someone's youth as an excuse for shit...I was eleven years old when the Rodney King beating happened; I knew how fucked up it was at the time.

We're in the information age yet you're telling me you haven't seen one story about a race soldiers executing our people.......gtfoh


No way in hell,a black person can see that video and come out with a not guilty verdict unless they care more about themselves than sending this piece of shit to prison.

White folks can send us to jail for the smallest shit with hardly no evidence yet some of us don't want to send white folks or our so called ally to jail for executing us on a fucking video.







White folks can shoot and point at cops and get taking alive yet we can't even fucking give them our ID without getting shot at.

I remember a few years ago,in South Carolina a black guy got pulled over at a gas station and the cop told him get his license.When the guy was getting his license,the cop start shooting at him.Let me get this straight you asked the guy for his licence yet you start shooting him.... :smh::smh::smh:


Luckily,the guy survived and sue the shit out of the police department.

Edit:




How the fuck you have a gun,taser,baton and backup(sometimes),but you're still scare for your life.


And,who is that in your sig

:sleazy:


I remember that shit. Young bruh was apologetic when he was not in the wrong. Fuck the police!!!!!!!!
 
I remember that shit. Young bruh was apologetic when he was not in the wrong. Fuck the police!!!!!!!!
Start listening at the dashcam footage from 8:10. He admits on there he fucked up. He asked for his license and he claim his hands looked like he was getting something wider than a wallet. And I know the dashcam footage should have been played in court. I am wondering how they did things.
 
Start listening at the dashcam footage from 8:10. He admits on there he fucked up. He asked for his license and he claim his hands looked like he was getting something wider than a wallet. And I know the dashcam footage should have been played in court. I am wondering how they did things.

Wrong video
 
I can't say I'm on board with the cop going to jail for this because the action happened way too fast. Who's to say Castile goes for the gun and kills the officer. The officer's hesitation could cost him his life. When you're in a situation like that you can't hesitate. If you give somebody a direct order and they disobey it you got to do what you go to do. You can say that Castile was a good man and would never try to harm a cop but the officer doesn't know that.
What? Are you kidding me? This is a routine traffic stop in a state where people are allowed to carry firearms. What the fuck do you mean if the officer hesitated that could cost him his life? The cop was a scared pussy like most of these Faggots.

Years ago I was driving in a benz I had at the time, a police van came out of nowhere, stopped in front of me, 2 cops ran out with guns in their hands aiming at my head. I put my hands over my eyes and screamed "don't shoot!!' Don't shoot!" You want to know why I got pulled over? Because I wasn't wearing my seatbelt. Man fuck the police for real
 
you are a liar! CASTILE DID NOT "REACH" HE WAS TOLD TO GET HIS I.D AND THEN HE TOLD THE COP HE HAD A LICENSED FIREARM
..AND KNOWS THAT, AS HES ABOUT TO REACH FOR HIS I.D ,THE COP MIGHT BE AWARE OF THE FIREARM IN THAT RESPECT AND PANIC AND THINK HE IS "REACHING" NOT THE OTHER WAY ROUND, ,.............AND THAT IS WHY MR....
CASTILE TOLD THE COP "BEFORE HE REACHED FOR HIS I.D." AS HE WAS INSTRUCTED TO! ..B
.....BECOS HE IS A BLACKMAN, HE IS AWARE, THAT THE SIMPLE ACT OF REACHIN FOR HIS ID CAN BE MISCONSTRUED AS REACHING FOR A FIREARM , HENCE HE TELLS THE COP "BEFOREHAND "HE IS CARRYIN!!

AND LASTLY...RIDDLE ME THIS ..... WHO TELLS A COP " I HAVE A FIREARM" IF HE IS TRYIN TO BLAST THE COP?,I

TRULY WONDER WHY ITS SO EASY FOR U TO SEE & UNDERSTAND THE COPS PERSPECTIVE AND EVEN DRAW UP IMAGINED SCENARIOS BUT SOMEHOW BE UNABLE TO SEE CASTILE'S PERSPECTIVE??...HMMMM VERY TELLING

First of all dude lose the Caps. We just having a discussion; no need to be yelling at anyone. Secondly, I mentioned that Castile informed the officer that he had a gun in the previous post before reaching for his ID so I'm not lying about anything. I also mentioned in earlier posts (please read the whole thread) that the officers involved in the Mike Brown, Terence Clutcher, Tamir Rice, Eric Gardner, etc cases were wrong however in this particular case I see it differently. So there's no pattern of me easily understanding the cops perspective. Just calm down, take emotion out of it and stop cherry picking my comments.
 
Please, stop.
I can't say I'm on board with the cop going to jail for this because the action happened way too fast. Who's to say Castile goes for the gun and kills the officer. The officer's hesitation could cost him his life. When you're in a situation like that you can't hesitate. If you give somebody a direct order and they disobey it you got to do what you go to do. You can say that Castile was a good man and would never try to harm a cop but the officer doesn't know that.
 
How the fuck is he allowed to shoot with out seeing a actual gun... Plus how can he be scared, like he said he was when the man told him he had a firearm? If he was going to really shoot him, do you think he would have told him, giving him a warning?
Plus where was the hands up don't move or I will shoot warning?
 
How the fuck is he allowed to shoot with out seeing a actual gun... Plus how can he be scared, like he said he was when the man told him he had a firearm? If he was going to really shoot him, do you think he would have told him, giving him a warning?
Plus where was the hands up don't move or I will shoot warning?

they tell you to keep your hands out where they can see them
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http://kdvr.com/2017/05/08/lawsuit-denver-police-target-black-man-for-having-aurora-plates/
 
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I understand, but if they fail to comply you just don't shoot, they are trained to order you to freeze, put your hands up, with the warning of shooting if they don't comply..
To me cops should be also trained to control the tempo of the actions, with a few command words, such as slow down your moving too fast, and if they continue to move too fast then they should tell them to step out the vehicle with their hands up..
 


The Minnesota police officer who was acquitted in last year's fatal shooting of black motorist Philando Castile will receive $48,500 as he leaves the suburban department that employed him at the time of the killing, according to a separation agreement announced Monday.

Jeronimo Yanez will be paid the money in a lump sum, minus applicable deductions and withholdings for state and federal taxes. Under the five-page agreement released to The Associated Press through a public records request, the Minneapolis suburb of St. Anthony also will pay Yanez for up to 600 hours of accrued and unused personal leave pay. The agreement, which has Monday's date, doesn't say how much time he has accrued.

Castile, a 32-year-old elementary school cafeteria worker, was shot by Yanez during a traffic stop on July 6, 2016, after Castile told the officer he was armed. Castile had a permit for his gun. The shooting gained widespread attention after Castile's girlfriend, who was in the car along with her then-4-year-old daughter, livestreamed its gruesome aftermath on Facebook.

Yanez, who is 29 and Latino, was acquitted of manslaughter and other charges in June. On the day of the verdict, the city announced the "public will be best served" if Yanez were no longer an officer. The city said Monday that the agreement "ends all employment rights" for Yanez.

"Since Officer Yanez was not convicted of a crime, as a public employee, he would have appeal and grievance rights if terminated," it said in a statement. "A reasonable voluntary separation agreement brings to a close one part of this horrible tragedy. The City concluded this was the most thoughtful way to move forward and help the community-wide healing process proceed."

Under the agreement, the city is released from lawsuits by Yanez. He was given 10 days to consider and sign the agreement and has 15 days to rescind it in writing. The agreement noted the official "date of separation" as June 30.

Yanez wrote his initials and Monday's date on each page of the agreement and signed the last page along with the city manager.

Castile's uncle, Clarence Castile, said he's glad Yanez will no longer be an officer.

"He should be in jail," the uncle said. "He's like a fish that wiggled his way off a hook. ... Hopefully he won't be able to get a police job in the United States. Because he's a poor example of a police officer."

Yanez had been with the St. Anthony Police Department since November 2011. His annual salary at the time of the shooting was more than $72,600, not including overtime pay, according to documents released by the city.

His acquittal led to days of protests, including one in St. Paul that shut down Interstate 94 for hours and ended with 18 arrests. At a recent city council meeting, residents of St. Anthony called on the city's mayor to resign.

After the trial, Castile's mother, Valerie Castile, reached a nearly $3 million settlement with the city, precluding a wrongful death lawsuit.

The Associated Press examined several high-profile fatal police shootings and found severance or separation agreements for officers to be unusual. In some cases, officers were fired outright. In many cases where charges were not brought or officers were acquitted, they have remained on the job.

In the August 2014 shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was unarmed and black, Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson did not receive a severance package when he resigned. Wilson was not charged in Brown's death, which led to months of sometimes violent protests and became a catalyst for the national Black Lives Matter movement. At the time of Wilson's resignation in November 2014, the St. Louis suburb said it had cut ties with Wilson and he would not receive any additional pay or benefits. Wilson's attorney said he chose to resign after threats were made against the police department.

Chicago officer Dante Servin resigned last year just days before a hearing to determine if he should be fired for the 2012 shooting of Rekia Boyd, an unarmed 22-year-old black woman. Servin, who was acquitted of involuntary manslaughter, has since asked for disability pay for post-traumatic stress disorder. A decision on whether he qualifies for that pay, which could amount to tens of thousands of dollars, is pending.

David Larson, an employment law professor at Mitchell-Hamline School of Law in St. Paul, said reaching a voluntary separation agreement can be simpler than firing a public employee like Yanez. Most collective bargaining agreements require several steps before someone can be dismissed. And if a dismissal is contested, there can be a lengthy grievance and arbitration process.

"Given the emotion that's been involved with this and the public protests, St. Anthony is probably saying the most important thing to us is to wrap this up as quickly as we can," Larson said.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-officer-shot-castile-buyout-20170710-story.html
 
The Minnesota police officer who was acquitted in last year's fatal shooting of black motorist Philando Castile will receive $48,500 as he leaves the suburban department that employed him at the time of the killing, according to a separation agreement announced Monday.

Probably leaving the area cause he knows he has a target on his back..
 
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