11-yo called the police and they shot him, and now they're trying to take her other kids away - eviltoast

After arriving at the Murry family home, police instructed everyone inside to come out with their hands up. Nakala Murry says that’s when Aderrien emerged from around a corner, running toward the door. Capers then opened fire.

  • Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Dear lord, talk about victim blaming. They shot the kid because his mom and her boyfriend had domestic violence issues? FUCK THAT. The reason the kid was shot because ALL COPS ARE BASTARDS.

          • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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            7 months ago

            Buddy that’s every cop everywhere. In the USA cops require less training than a hairdresser.

            Give a rando a badge and a gun and there’s a good chance they’ll use that power to terrorize people.

        • PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk
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          7 months ago

          ACAB is a dumb overspimplification of a complex issue and does not help the cause of social justice.

          Anyone who uses the phrase seriously is IMO not to be taken so

          • EdibleFriend@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Ok, this is a good test. Show me the good cops in this situation who are fighting for this family. Doing what they can to out the pieces of shit who stroke their cocks to dead children.

            IF there is a single good cop at this station they would be working to end this, right?

                • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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                  7 months ago

                  Or ‘thank fuck he’s gone, now maybe I can keep my lunch in the office fridge until lunch, maybe even without getting pubic hair and weird tiny holes in it’

                  ‘I knew something was off about him’

                  ‘Huh, that explains some stuff.’

                  ‘Now where am I going to get my cocaine abd child sex slaves!?’

                  They never will though

            • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              There actually was one in Los Angeles about a decade back.

              His name was Christopher Dorner. The hero we needed, but didn’t deserve. They kept the fire department away while they burned him. I know a lot of us have heard that phrase before. But this was in fucking southern California.

              You do not fuck with fire in southern California unless you’re okay with a LOT of people dying. Like, ‘see it from space,multiple counties evacuated’ level disaster.

          • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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            7 months ago

            Eh, it isn’t an over simplification unless you haven’t bothered to look into the origins of the initialism and the ideas behind it.

            The entire point of ACAB as a movement is that it’s a systemic problem, and until that system changes, every officer is part of the problem, even if they as individuals are “good” cops.

            And, having family that are cops, and being friends with the sheriff of my county, I agree with that principle, and have argued it with those people. I know plenty of officers that genuinely want to serve their community and help people. But the system they’re in is still horrible, and unable to be fixed from within unless there’s a top down change.

            Even the sheriff here, and again, he’s a friend, isn’t top enough to make lasting change. At best, he can enforce better policies while in office. And he does. Not everything I’ve tried to talk him into, but part of that is being obligated to deal with local government and police union.

            So, yeah, the movement behind the letters is absolutely, perfectly summed up by those letters, and using them makes perfect sense, even when whoever is using them isn’t aware of all of that and is just bashing cops. It allows opportunities like this.

            Don’t be a dismissive prick. Take opportunities to open a dialogue and make change by doing so.

            • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              Cops who want to serve their community quit, and get a real job as firefighters, medics, or fucking line cooks.

              • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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                7 months ago

                Yeah, sadly. I’ve seen that personally, back when I worked and lived in the city. They either burn out or get run out.

                • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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                  7 months ago

                  No. They’re not serving their community until they do those things; shit society actually needs. Shit that’s actually productive.

                  Tiny little corpses are a want(apparently); not a need .

            • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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              7 months ago

              Thanks for your perspective. Would a tiny little insular department be just as much part of the larger system as any another? Maybe compared to a department say pulling over out-of-state motorists all day.

              Glad I’m reading this, since yesterday I shared:

              I’m hard pressed to think of any group of 10m (global) or 700k (domestic) people where I can use the word “All” before describing them. I prefer “PEB”: Policing Enables Bastards. I may be too literal: “PEB” has been downvoted perhaps 2 or 3 of the 3 or 4 times I’ve mentioned it.

              The most ethical department in the US probably has like two cops and they’re probably great to every single one of the couple hundred residents they serve. (Speculating) Why lump them in with even 99% of the rest of departments even if we believe those 99% all have at least one bad cop who the other cops covered for?

              To quote you now:

              The entire point of ACAB as a movement is that it’s a systemic problem, and until that system changes, every officer is part of the problem, even if they as individuals are “good” cops.

              Policing has systemic problems and every officer is part a problematic system. Some officers who are part of the problematic system are not themselves part of the problem. I don’t know the numbers – I could be referring to 10 or 12 cops.

              To drive this point home, imagine elder care devolves to the point where 100% of caretakers are abusive to their patients. All caretakers would be part of the problem. If one caretaker quits in as replaced by a non-abusive provider, they would be part of a disgracefully problematic system. Given their behavior is not problematic, they would not themselves be a part of the problem.

              If 51% of caretakers are abusive, are 49% of caretakers part of the problem?

              If 49% of caretakers are abusive, or 1% of caretakers are abusive, are the remainder part of the problem?

              If a trans Lemming in Unix socks sees cops kill trans people and wants to take on the impossible challenge of reforming a department from the inside, I don’t know why I’d try to discourage them. “Noo you’re only allowed to vote, protest, and run as a politician, no ground level actions!” I want trans people on the force. PEB, but trans Lemming cops aren’t necessarily bastards. And if their chief takes 30 days to fire them, “ACAB” insults them unnecessarily during that. Besides opportunity cost, the more good people are stuffed into an evil system, the better… provided they won’t think twice before committing terminable offenses (whistleblowing, disregarding immoral orders).

              Thanks for entertaining my verbose, overly literal exploration.

              • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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                7 months ago

                Well, sometimes the smaller departments are worse. You run into places where the cops are a literal organized crime faction.

                But, yeah, when the system is geared towards incarceration for control of the populace, with racist roots and power grabbing people throughout, even a small department is part of the problem.

                Our county? Like I said, the sheriff really does his best to weed out the racists and assholes, but he’s an elected official, and some shit is deeply entrenched. He loses an election, and we’re subject to whatever gets in.


                Conveniently enough, I used to be a nurse’s assistant, so the analogy about nursing homes is close to home. And it is another field where the problems of the industry taint even the best caregivers sometimes. It’s only because most caregivers are genuinely trying their best that it isn’t as bad as the policing problems.

                But you really, really don’t want to see what happens in most nursing homes. The profit driven ones are worse than the charitable ones, but there’s problems rooted in the capitalist dominance of the medical industry. When you’re paying bare minimum for caregivers, abuse, theft, and even worse things can creep in because the keep things staffed, it’s often the worst ones that stick with the job.

                And! When someone stands the fuck up about abuse, they’re the ones that get attacked, fired, or otherwise driven away. There’s multiple reasons I stopped working in nursing homes, but being unable to stop abuse, even when going to state oversight divisions, was one of them. You make reports, and you end up mysteriously off schedule. You stop someone directly, and you’re on report. It’s crazy.

                But, unlike cops, the victims of elder abuse in facilities rarely have anyone advocating for them, so the problem isn’t as well known

                But, after that experience? Yeah, even the good ones are part of the problem because the system prevents them from making change so the good ones never last long. It isn’t as bad as the police problem, but nobody escapes without some taint on them, some compromise made to their ethics.


                You raise a great point though. It is possible for good people to become cops (or caregivers) with the goal of changing from the inside. But they won’t be allowed to they’ll get run out, or killed

          • HopingForBetter@lemmy.today
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            7 months ago

            You sound like the next thing out of your mouth will be, “If you just follow instructions, you have nothing to fear.”

            Fuck that.

          • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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            7 months ago

            ACAB is pretty simple to understand.

            1 in 20 candies in a bowl contain a lethal amount of poison. 19 in 20 are fine. You can’t tell the difference unless you eat one, and by then it’s too late.

            Go ahead and eat one. Not every candy is poisoned, most aren’t. Most candies are safe. The odds are in your favor, what are you worried about?

            Or does a 5% chance of a candy being poisoned motivate you to treat the entire bowl as being poisoned?

            Same with cops. One bad apple spoils the bunch. ACAB.

            • BennyHill500@lemmy.ml
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              7 months ago

              This except 19 are poisoned 1 is fine, and that one fine one could snitch on the others but then the 19 would murder it so it stays silent

            • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              Except also only the other candies can get rid of the bad candy, they all know which it is, and if you try to fix it, even if youre one of them, they’ll all burn you to death.

              And also the FBI agrees that they’re a loose federation of white supremacist gangs that get special tattoos to commemorate kills, with racist tropes based on the victim, published a paper about it 20 years ago, and took no action becauause ACAB

          • Nachorella@lemmy.sdf.org
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            7 months ago

            I don’t think so, my understanding of it is that even if one individual cop is a ‘good one’ they still work for a broken system and help in some form whatever insanity has led to the people who are meant to protect and serve, instead, routinely shooting unarmed civilians. In the case of this article - a child.

            I don’t think it helps to think of cops as individuals when it’s the collective that’s broken. So in this case the simplification is kind of the point.

          • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            No. Itvlooks like an oversimplification if you zoom in a little. But if you zoom in a little more, and look everywhere, you’ll find it holds true.

            They aren’t all obvious bastards; they are all bastards.

          • Cadenza@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            While I agree the issue is complex and everything is not about troopers being inherently mean and brutal, sometimes, one also has to name things plainly.

            Hence, ACAB. CQFD.

          • douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Your commenting on an extremist community where logic doesn’t actually matter anymore.

            This is a community that started from pointing out serious problems and talking about how they might be solved, to not actually caring about how to solve the problems and just hating and being polarized.

            You are 100% correct because using this term is not going to help figure out realistic ways to solve the problem. It’s just going to do what fringe groups do, and make actual solutions impossible to start with. Thus perpetuating the problems the fringe group hates, it’s their identity, they can’t go without it.

            Not only does it prevent solutions but it actually pushes out allies and others who are also passionate about the problem because “they aren’t extreme enough”. (This is me, I despise this problem and want to support anything I can that aims for actual solutions)

            I look forward to all the hate spam, downvotes, and the comments. Which would be no different than if I actually commented on a Nazi community pointing out hypocrisy.

            If y’all want to actually solve this problem then extreme, generalized, non-logical, blind-hate, stances aren’t going to do it. You’re literally becoming a sibling of neo-nazis with this, and you’re weakening your own position, and alienating your support, by being extremists about it.

          • littleblue✨@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Yeah, by that comment alone, smart money’s on you being the only one to say your username out loud. 🤌🏽

  • grue@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    IMO the most salient point of the article:

    Carlos Moore, the attorney representing the Murry family, told NPR that the court-filed petition is “outlandish” and suggests the move by the court is retaliation for her ongoing lawsuit against the City of Indianola over her son’s shooting.

    “I believe they are just harassing her,” Moore said. “She is a single mother and she does not deserve this pure harassment.”

    • CosmicTurtle@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Without even opening the article, I’m going to guess this woman is a person of color.

      Opens article

      Why am I not surprised?

  • Alien Nathan Edward@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    no one is ever safe from police violence. not the victim, not the witnesses, not bystanders, not children, not people following commands, not unarmed people with their hands in the air, no one.

  • Dupree878@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    My ex was from Indianola.

    You can’t expect a cop to show up and not shoot a black person. I mean, that’s just not how it’s done in the catfish farming capital of Mississippi.

  • monsterlynn@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    I dunno. I feel like if you’re asking your 11 year old kid to call the cops for you and shit gets fucked up, is it a you problem not a police problem if they’re responding to a situation where they apply an appropriate level of response not knowing who is who in that hot moment.

    It’s horrible that the kid was in the middle of it - - but where was the parent?

    This seems to me that police need better domestic dispute training, but tragic as it is ,things move so quickly in a situation like that.

    Too bad the boyfriend doesn’t have unlimited funds but really I don’t think the police department is at fault.

    • Sneezycat@sopuli.xyz
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      7 months ago

      If you think that’s an appropriate level of response, you’re delusional and way too influenced by your country. See how police operates elsewhere. Here in Spain they don’t shoot people even if they’re armed, unless they start shooting first basically. There are other ways to control a situation, but in your country they have gone mad with power and they are too afraid to save lives by risking their own safety.

      • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        They’re not afraid to do it; they don’t want to and that’s officially not their job according to the supreme court.

        Not to say they aren’t filthy violent cowards, but it doesn’t even get to the point where cowardice enters the equation.

    • blind3rdeye@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      How did the USA get itself into this kind of situation where police routine just shoot innocent people as an ‘appropriate level of response’ since they don’t know ‘who is hot’? These stories come up all the time. Police get spooked by something, and people get killed because of it. Sometimes its an acorn; sometimes it’s someone walking too fast wearing a hoodie; sometimes it’s someone who closed their car window ‘suspiciously’; and very often, the thing that makes the cops freak out and murder someone is just the sight of the person who requested help.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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      7 months ago

      The police are absolutely at fault for, you know, shooting an 11 year old who was complying with police orders.

      It doesn’t matter who called the police or where the parents were or what they were doing, the police shot an 11 year old who was attempting to do what the police were telling him to do.

      This stems from a lot of different things, but my expectation would be this was the #1 component:

      https://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2014/03/black-boys-older

      https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2014/03/cops-tend-to-see-black-kids-as-less-innocent-than-white-kids/383247/