Black man forced to kneel in boxers at gunpoint outside his home after police refuse to believe he is not a burglar

the alarm had already been disarmed. At that point, the officer has no reason to enter the home

did you read or watch the video??

the ONLY thing that would be plausible is if the alarm company didn't in fact alert the authorities that it was a false alarm

The officer entered the home and if anything, if there is a break in, wouldn't waiting until the robbers exited the house with shit in their hands be better than entering into a small closed in space creating even more tension?
Nah bruh thats not how they do that lol unless they know way ahead of time its a false alarm they gonna come in that bitch regardless, hell even if they somewhat close to you they still more than likely will show up anyway and make sure everything is cool
 
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Nah bruh thats not how they do that lol unless they know way ahead of time its a false alarm they gonna come in that bitch regardless, hell even if they somewhat close to you they still more than likely will show up anyway and make sure everything is cool
Fam, I'll just chalk this up to the areas y'all live

I'm speaking from personal experience

I've had my share of alarms go off and each time I called the company that was monitoring it, they immediately contacted the sheriff's office that was over my area to tell them it was a false alarm and they never came
 
Alarm going off for 15 mins though, you sleep through it, then you show up at the front door with gun??? Was is it a silent alarm or something? Did it only ring at the police station or something? It's fuck the pigs all day but something about this shit don't sound right.
 
Alarm going off for 15 mins though, you sleep through it, then you show up at the front door with gun??? Was is it a silent alarm or something? Did it only ring at the police station or something? It's fuck the pigs all day but something about this shit don't sound right.


That shit happens ALL the time.

Ppl sleep right through that shit.
 
Fam, I'll just chalk this up to the areas y'all live

I'm speaking from personal experience

I've had my share of alarms go off and each time I called the company that was monitoring it, they immediately contacted the sheriff's office that was over my area to tell them it was a false alarm and they never came
Well thats good communication on yalls part, like my other post said in this instance tho it was trash for all involved
 
Can you break that up into paragraphs, please?

You want me to break one paragraph worth of sentences into multiple paragraphs. Do you understand what a paragraph actually is, or do you think people just randomly put spaces in between sentences to make things look pretty?
 
That shit happens ALL the time.

Ppl sleep right through that shit.
the alarm in my house was loud as shit. there was no hell you could sleep through my alarm. that shit was loud enough to wake my neighbors up. there was no way you could sleep through my alarm for 5 mins let alone 15.
 
That does change everything, WTF? There is a huge difference between the optics of a door wide open when responding to a call and a door closed but unlocked.



Yes, the cop was calm, but he still didn't treat the man like a reasonable human being. Instead, he defaulted to treating the man like a criminal and did not deviate from that at any point. Also, I'm not really sure why you feel the need to exaggerate how badly the homeowner communicated. When he saw the cop, he was the one that said he had a gun. The cop told him to put it down, and the man complied immediately. The cop told him to step outside. The man pretty clearly and calmly asked him why and then informed him that he wasn't wearing much clothing. The breakdown came because the cop kept shouting orders instead of trying to communicate. I understand it was a potentially precarious event, but how hard would it have been for the cop to explain that he was there because of the false alarm and that he needed to clear the scene and make sure everything was fine. That should have been a no brainer given the very real possibility that he was speaking to the owner of the house. Once again, you can argue that both of them could have done things a little different to improve how the situation went down, but what you seem to constantly want to ignore is that of the two parties involved, only one of them is a trained professional whose job it is to keep things from going left and the homeowner was not that one.

This above is a great statement.

The police officer should've did a better job of stating why he was there from the initial meet up but I also understand why the police officer would want to cuff the homeowner to make 100% sure that he is who he says he is because he was alone at first. If he had backup his partner could watch the homeowner and there would be no need for cuffing the homeowner.

The homeowner escalated the situation (which I understand why) when he realized that he was about to get cuffed and the police officer did a poor job explaining why he had to cuff him. Both communicated poorly and the police officer failed badly in deescalating the situation. Like stated above instead of yelling the same statements over and over (which I understand why he did, because he most likely is nervous) he could've been a bit more calm and explained why he had to cuff him.

Both are at fault this wasn't as smooth as it should've went.
 
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