Didn't take long for him to develop the Canberra culture
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f**king lol. Listen here, dickhead; the law doesn't give a flying f**k about your feelings.
It does sound like that, doesn't it?Nor your’s you twit.
You’re acting like you have a vested interest in the case like Craigshark said. My guess is some boys in blue made you their bitch.
Curtis is an upstanding guy and said he's not guilty.Yep poor Curtis.
It's not his fault the cops were called because he was acting a tool.
It's the cops fault.
It does sound like that, doesn't it?
Great news.
Mr Scott is defending all charges.
Legend.
Hope y'all know if Mr Scott begins civil proceedings against the NSW Police Force and decides to sue, and he has a favourable outcome, it's your tax dollars the Police will settle with; y'all know that, right?
bUt ThE pOlIcE nEvEr Do AnYtHiNg WrOnG tHeY hAvE ShInY bAdGeS aNd ThE tElEvIsIoN tElLs Me ThEy'Re ThE gOoD gUy hUh DuH
Hahahahahaha.If the cops have done something wrong, they will face the law.
Back in the heat of the moment we heard Tyrone May was defending his charges as well. Yesterday he got 300 hours community service having pled guilty. Everyone charged comes out indignant at first. In the cold hard light of day when you see what they've got on you things are different.
This is not the US. If the cops have done something wrong, they will face the law. There are no huge civil damages payouts here.
Presumption of guilt
I think the courts to save money and time should have all cases brought before Greenberg so he can eyeball the defendent and he can give the verdict .
Everybody in this thread is a f**kwit ... oh, wait ...Everybody in this story is a f**kwit.
Tyrone May said he was not guilty as well.
Just been sentenced.
Back in the heat of the moment we heard Tyrone May was defending his charges as well. Yesterday he got 300 hours community service having pled guilty. Everyone charged comes out indignant at first. In the cold hard light of day when you see what they've got on you things are different.
This is not the US. If the cops have done something wrong, they will face the law. There are no huge civil damages payouts here.
As far as I'm concerned, if Scott was tasered he must have been a real threat to the public, which doesn't match with him being thrown in the clink "overnight". Which suggests to me the police may have over reacted, as they often do.
And he may have genuinely been a threat, and the police may have acted sensibly and with restraint to keep a threat at bay.
What are you on bout?
You have to read more than three sentences.
But for those three sentences:
1) Using a taser is a serious event that to me, signals there was a serious threat to the public. But there obviously wasn't, as Scott was released the next day.
2) Therefore, it seems likely that the police over reacted, as shown by their use of a taser for someone being a public nuisance (my understanding of when a taser should be used, and that of police officers, may be entirely different).
3) I'm not discounting that the police did the right thing in tasering Scott. Maybe the "assault" was life threatening. Maybe their assessment of threat and mine are quite different. I'm offering that as a possibility.
I wasn't actually there. It is not beyond the realms of possibility that the police over reacted and Scott didn't really do anything wrong. It is also feasible that Scott actually seriously attacked a police officer and perhaps using a taser and laying on those charges was necessary. I'm not sure why the possibility of either being true is so confounding.
If you read after the bits you quote, you'll see I think the truth is somewhere in between. But I don't actually know.
I was responding to a suggestion that if the police did the wrong thing they would face the law. This "in between" scenario is one where Scott may have some reason to feel aggrieved, and yet the police will not face the law.
You have to read more than three sentences.
But for those three sentences:
1) Using a taser is a serious event that to me, signals there was a serious threat to the public. But there obviously wasn't, as Scott was released the next day.
2) Therefore, it seems likely that the police over reacted, as shown by their use of a taser for someone being a public nuisance (my understanding of when a taser should be used, and that of police officers, may be entirely different).
3) I'm not discounting that the police did the right thing in tasering Scott. Maybe the "assault" was life threatening. Maybe their assessment of threat and mine are quite different. I'm offering that as a possibility.
I wasn't actually there. It is not beyond the realms of possibility that the police over reacted and Scott didn't really do anything wrong. It is also feasible that Scott actually seriously attacked a police officer and perhaps using a taser and laying on those charges was necessary. I'm not sure why the possibility of either being true is so confounding.
If you read after the bits you quote, you'll see I think the truth is somewhere in between. But I don't actually know.
I was responding to a suggestion that if the police did the wrong thing they would face the law. This "in between" scenario is one where Scott may have some reason to feel aggrieved, and yet the police will not face the law.
clearly you have no idea what you are really talking about, so you probably shouldn’t comment. Just because he was tasered doesn’t automatically mean he gets refused bail.
you’re right, your understanding whatever that is of when a taser can be used is different to the police. It definitely doesn’t have to be life threatening.
we’ll soon see I guess. The police would have been wearing body cams and there will be footage from the taser also so it’ll be pretty obvious who’s at fault.
I suspect police can use a taser when they are at risk of being assaulted and if its a reasonable response which may have been the case if he had punched a copper.
Alcohol was probably a factor and given he had sobered up, its understandable that he no longer posed any threat to the public at large and no reason for the mag to refuse bail.