Minneapolis Police kills Australian Becky after she calls 911- All Lives Matter Where Are You?

Just saw this on GMA...sorry for Becky but too many of us have gone through this. Can't shed a tear. I'm moving on

She came out in pjs and not carrying talking to cop in driver side and partner riding shotgun shot her through the driver side window...scared cac pig.
 
if she wouldve followed orders, and obey his commands she would still be alive.. she thought because she was pale with yellow furry hair, she was immuned to the

pussys in the police farce

that being said... waaay tooo many pussys on the police farce...

and it wont be a problem untill they start killin each other en masse, which is bound to happen...
 
this was a tragic and unfortunate event for all involved.

we should do a thorough search of her social media, and also if she had any prior arrests.

Just so we have all the facts.

I am sure this has been stressful on the officer his family and the entire department.

Everyday these brave men and women but their lives on the lives to serve and protect us.

Hopefully once we can get the full story?

we can find a way to prevent these events in the future

I really think the public needs more training on how to treat officers respectfully.
 
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Neighbors mourn woman fatally shot by police officer in Minneapolis
Mayor Hodges "heartsick;" officers' bodycams weren't turned on, BCA says.
By Pat Pheifer Star Tribune

JULY 17, 2017 — 6:31AM
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STEPHEN GOVEL – .


Video (00:27): Police fatally shoot woman in south Minneapolis


Authorities have not released the woman’s name, but it was confirmed by people at the scene.


Minneapolis police confirmed that the two officers involved are on paid administrative leave, which is standard procedure.

The shooting was called “tragic” by Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges, who held a news conference about it at City Hall late Sunday afternoon, appearing with assistant Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo and Linea Palmisano, who represents the 13th Ward on the City Council.

“I am heartsick and deeply disturbed by the fatal officer-involved shooting that happened last night,” Hodges said.

“I know the neighborhood well,” said Hodges, who represented the area for eight years as a City Council member.

“We have few facts at this point,” she said. “I want to know more. I call on the BCA to share as much information with all of us as quickly as they can.


“I have questions about why the bodycams weren’t on,” she said.

Arradondo confirmed that the officer bodycam program is fully rolled out in Minneapolis but declined to say more about why there is no footage of the shooting.

Zach Damond, 22, whose father, Don, 50, was to be married to Justine in August, arrived at the scene with a close family friend about 11:30 a.m. Sunday. While the couple were not yet married, Justine referred to herself as Damond on her personal website. Her maiden name was Justine Ruszczyk.

“Basically, my mom’s dead because a police officer shot her for reasons I don’t know,” Zach Damond said, referring to Justine. “I demand answers. If anybody can help, just call police and demand answers. I’m so done with all this violence.”

Damond said Justine called police after she “heard a sound in the alley.”


He left the scene at noon Sunday to go to the airport to pick up his father, who had been on a business trip.

From her home in the middle of the block, Justine Damond would have had to walk a little more than 100 yards to get to the end of the alley.

There are three lights mounted on telephone poles along that route plus nine motion-detector lights on garages, and neighbors said the alley is well-lit at night.

A woman named Hannah, who came to the scene with Zach Damond and is a close family friend, said Justine was a “spiritual healer.” Hannah, 21, did not want her last name used for safety reasons.

“I don’t know what she was doing out,” Hannah said. “She’s such a kind woman. She took me in when I was in a tough situation and helped me with whatever I needed.


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STEPHEN GOVEL, .
A photo of Justine Damond from her web site. The Sydney, Australia, native lived with her fiance in the Fulton neighborhood of Minneapolis.



“They were just so in love,” Hannah said of Justine and Don Damond. “I’m just kind of in disbelief.”

At a community vigil in the neighborhood on Sunday night, about 50 friends and neighbors held hands in a semicircle around the spot where Damond fell, while another 200 or more people watched from the sidewalk and the street. Some sobbed.

“This woman was a beautiful light,” said Bethany Bradley of Women’s March Minnesota, who had been at the scene since Sunday morning. “She was loved. She should still be here.

“It’s OK to cry, it’s OK to scream,” she said. “Share what you’re feeling.”

Leslie Redmond of the Minneapolis NAACP said she and other members of the NAACP who attended “stand in solidarity with the family.”


Nekima Levy-Pounds, one of three mayoral candidates who attended, said, “I hope and pray this is a wake-up call for the community to stop being divided by race and socioeconomic status ... for treating everybody with respect.”

Dustin Johnson and his wife, Roz, live across the street from Justine and Don Damond. They saw the flashing lights and walked over to see police trying to resuscitate Damond as she lay on the ground.

Johnson said he heard no gunshots.


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JEFF WHEELER, STAR TRIBUNE
People listened as Bethany Bradley of Women's March Minnesota spoke at the beginning of a vigil Sunday evening to remember an Australian woman shot by Minneapolis police.


Justine Damond’s website says she “originally trained as a veterinarian” and “has also studied and practiced yoga and meditation for over 17 years, is a qualified yoga instructor, a personal health and life coach and meditation teacher, embracing and teaching the neuro-scientific benefits of meditation.”

She attended high school in Sydney. The story of her death was front-page news in Australia.


Earlier Sunday, someone drew colorful chalk hearts on the driveway pad where Damond was shot, adding names of others, including Jamar Clark and Philando Castile, who were fatally shot by police. A few hours later, Hannah, an artist, added “Live in love not fear” to the drawings.

Hannah said there’s no way Damond would have had a gun. She often talked about how much better it was in Australia, where people aren’t allowed to have guns, Hannah said.



Staff writers David Chanen, Libor Jany and Erin Adler contributed to this report.
 
I've been saying this for a long time the police racism is morphing into classism and white people too stupid to notice. To expand on the classism claim White people have to be rich and well-connected for the police to kiss their ass.... middle-class and poor whites are becoming fair game to the polices
 
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I've been saying this for a long time the police racism is morphing into classism and white people too stupid to notice. To expand on the classism claim White people have to be rich and well-connected for the police to kiss their ass.... middle-class and poor whites are becoming fair game to the polices


True!!

The state of Minn might have a 96% fill rate at their private prisons.. There going to meet that 96% oneway or another and Im sure they a large number of whites in the middle and lower class!! Ill bet you they start bringing up criminal justice reform...
 
How much yall wanna bet that they'll move the goalposts to accomodate either a criminal conviction and or firing or put some new "measures" in place so "this doesnt happen again".

A blonde head blue eyed, middle class white woman is like the queen mother of Amerikkka, she is to be treated like a deity and the optics of this is pretty bad.
They will get there justice, she may even be treated as a martyr and held up as a real "victim" of po-lice violence.
 
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