Paused at 0:27 before his answer. I would secure the man being detained, then remove the other officer from contact with the man he just assaulted. Report the incident as I saw it. After listening to his answer, I disagree with his answer. First priority is custody of the detained person. Second is the safety of the detained person. I would not publicly restrain the other offer unless he continued the assault, but he has already disobeyed policy and should be removed from the situation.
I like his answer, the police in the UK normally give a first time criminal a caution for a minor assault, then if they do it again further action is taken. I suppose it depends on how hurt the suspect was but he should be able to give his colleague a caution and if he repeated the offence then he should report it. I must admit this guy gives very good answers especially considering he's under a lot of pressure. :)
I like his answer because if he were to question his partners actions in public it would look like they were in the wrong even if the punches were justifiable. Plus they would loose further control of the situation if they had to argue about what happend instead of dealing with the problem at hand. Assumption is the mother of all fuck ups, dont do it.
if that was sposed to be the right answer then thats fucked up. he'd overlook an assault cos its his mate...what if i assaulted someone in front of him...would i get away with it? fuckin pigs think theyre above the law.
Answer to that would be: intervene right away on the spot by asking " what was that for? the guy is already in cuffs" and suggest that he report it to the supervisor himself or else I'll report it.
Good answer, he answered the way that HE would handle the situation based on his judgment of right and wrong. The truth is, policy and protocols speaks black and white but the face of the matter is that there is always always always exceptions for the gray area.
my answer.....I would most likely confront the fellow officer and ask him why he done such a thing....I can't be too judgmental about the situation because I don't know what occured prior to me arriving. I would tell the officer that if they incident occured again I would have to contact my superior officer in regards to the matter.
this was not a good answer if the media gets word of something like that happening (especially if you did nothing to stop it) all hell would break loose people who are not as knowledgeable about the american criminal justice system might be under the impression that this is normal police behavior however most citezens would know that this is not acceptable behavior.
good answer. . .it is frustrating when they ask follow up questions to the vague and ambiguous question originally asked. . .SO annoying. Nicely done though, and way to keep your cool :)
good lord that's a poor answer.
dagwood2001 1 year ago 4
Paused at 0:27 before his answer. I would secure the man being detained, then remove the other officer from contact with the man he just assaulted. Report the incident as I saw it. After listening to his answer, I disagree with his answer. First priority is custody of the detained person. Second is the safety of the detained person. I would not publicly restrain the other offer unless he continued the assault, but he has already disobeyed policy and should be removed from the situation.
TheGrayman1234 1 year ago
I like his answer, the police in the UK normally give a first time criminal a caution for a minor assault, then if they do it again further action is taken. I suppose it depends on how hurt the suspect was but he should be able to give his colleague a caution and if he repeated the offence then he should report it. I must admit this guy gives very good answers especially considering he's under a lot of pressure. :)
ZoeeSavX 1 year ago
hey that's Shane Domi, 30yrs old, wanted for theft in the RPAT exam!
MontrealMan1970 2 years ago
I like his answer because if he were to question his partners actions in public it would look like they were in the wrong even if the punches were justifiable. Plus they would loose further control of the situation if they had to argue about what happend instead of dealing with the problem at hand. Assumption is the mother of all fuck ups, dont do it.
Asmodai2011 2 years ago
if that was sposed to be the right answer then thats fucked up. he'd overlook an assault cos its his mate...what if i assaulted someone in front of him...would i get away with it? fuckin pigs think theyre above the law.
TheBoobsniffer 2 years ago
Wrong answer
xransierx 2 years ago 2
Answer to that would be: intervene right away on the spot by asking " what was that for? the guy is already in cuffs" and suggest that he report it to the supervisor himself or else I'll report it.
nismokure 2 years ago 10
Good answer, he answered the way that HE would handle the situation based on his judgment of right and wrong. The truth is, policy and protocols speaks black and white but the face of the matter is that there is always always always exceptions for the gray area.
junglexlife 2 years ago
are you kidding me? sure i would report it! how do we know for sure that this officer has not done this a dozen times already?
pinoyakopinoyako000 2 years ago
my answer.....I would most likely confront the fellow officer and ask him why he done such a thing....I can't be too judgmental about the situation because I don't know what occured prior to me arriving. I would tell the officer that if they incident occured again I would have to contact my superior officer in regards to the matter.
thepokerclinic 2 years ago
Wow, I would immediatly call for backup while running over taking control of the suspect and relieving both other officers.
pukaman2000 2 years ago
this was not a good answer if the media gets word of something like that happening (especially if you did nothing to stop it) all hell would break loose people who are not as knowledgeable about the american criminal justice system might be under the impression that this is normal police behavior however most citezens would know that this is not acceptable behavior.
CobaltSpieder777 2 years ago
well said cops are people too
mikenwr 2 years ago
good answer. . .it is frustrating when they ask follow up questions to the vague and ambiguous question originally asked. . .SO annoying. Nicely done though, and way to keep your cool :)
oopalonga 3 years ago 8
wow! well said !!!
chueco 3 years ago
Wrong Brother!
You never cannot overloo a crime and not matter if is your partner or not.
GEISON1974 3 years ago 2
well said
600SELV12 3 years ago 3