2 JBOEG'S KILL A TEENAGER WIT.....

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Dec 17, 2005
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#21
$CASH$ said:
"So far this year there have been 12 officer-involved shootings in Metro's jurisdiction. Compare that to 11 for all of 2005."

can you beleive that?
YA ITS TRUE THERES BEEN ALOT OF STANDOFFS LATELY AND LOTS OF SHOOTINGS I THINK THE FIRST ONE THIS YEAR WAS WHEN THAT VEGAS RAPPER SHOT THE COP WIT THE AK47
 

kevp

Sicc OG
Dec 7, 2004
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#22
I heard they had him up in the front seat of the BoegMobile...he moved his cuffed up hands under his legs to in front of him...then bailed.

Boegs didnt need to use deadly force. A ROCK to the back would've worked just as well. You know we got plenty of rocks out here.
 
Dec 17, 2005
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#23
kevp said:
I heard they had him up in the front seat of the BoegMobile...he moved his cuffed up hands under his legs to in front of him...then bailed.

Boegs didnt need to use deadly force. A ROCK to the back would've worked just as well. You know we got plenty of rocks out here.

i just looked at the picture and i recognized him i use to know him when he was hella younger around 2002-2003 dont member but im sure he could do that shit wit put his hands under his legs cuz he knew karate tai kwon do or whatever but he was flexible
R.I.P. SWUAVE LOPEZ
 

pAc0

Sicc OG
Feb 8, 2006
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#28
there should be a law that puts officers behind bars when shit like this occurs......instead they get a slap on the hands and get paid while they're being investigated.
Officers are trigger happy nowadays.........
 

Defy

Cannabis Connoisseur
Jan 23, 2006
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Rich City
#29
there are laws that puts officers behind bars when this type of shit happens.....boegs are bound by the same laws us civillians are....the difference is cops see each other as family, bound together...."he's one of us, so we should help him" its just a big ass gang....I wouldn't be suprised if the cops pushed him to run....just before or as soon as he's cuffed he should've been searched for weapons...and the cops should only use deadly force if they felt they or another civillian was in danger.....but that wasn't the case
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
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#30
DASICCLV702 said:
LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Las Vegas police are promising some answers today about the killing of a handcuffed teenager shot by officers as he ran from an unmarked police vehicle over the weekend.

The teen's name's being withheld by the Clark County coroner's office, and the names of the officers are being withheld by the police department.

Dude, call that paper and tell them to fire mother fuckers. That last article you posted from them had a major grammatical error...And this one is just as fucking stupid-see the bold. That makes no fucking sense in the context that it's being used.

And....FUCK THE J-BOEGS!
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
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#32
I know what they mean but it doesn't work in the way they wrote the rest. "Teen's name's" just doesn't fucking make sense. I know what they mean, but it's not proper English and since they're getting paid, they should do their job.
 
Dec 17, 2005
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#34
DAMN HE DIDNT EVEN HAVE A GUN ON HIM AND THEY STILL SHOT HIM FUCK U J-BOEG'S!!!

Arrest report sheds new light on teen suspect shot by police

News 3 has obtained new information about the death of a 18 year old El Dorado High School graduate and his connection to another teenager shot and killed by police. According to a police report, Swauve Lopez planned to kill Kyle Staheli and steal his car.

Friends of Lopez say he bragged about the murder last Wednesday night, giving detail about how he tried to force Staheli into the trunk of his Mustang. According to the arrest report, when Kyle wouldn't get in the car, friends say Swuave asked Kyle, 'if someone pointed a gun at you, what would you do?'

According to the report, Swuave then pointed the gun at Kyle, shooting him three times. Another teenager told police he went with Swuave the next day, poured gas on Staheli, burning his body to destroy the evidence.

Once police learned of the plot, they went to Lopez's apartment Saturday morning to arrest him and another teenager. Lopez had a .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol on him when he was arrested. He managed to escape from the police car while in handcuffs. That's when officers shot and killed him.

A coroner's inquest will determine if that shooting was justified. The other teen, James Carter, faces murder charges. Police plan to try him as an adult.
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
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#35
If he was running away handcuffed, what's to decide about if it was justified? Those police should have chased his ass down. That's what donuts everyday will do to you though I guess.
 
Dec 17, 2005
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#37
SLAIN SUSPECT: No word on police shooting

Department won't discuss why detectives shot handcuffed teen



Las Vegas police on Tuesday wouldn't answer questions about whether department policies had been followed during Saturday morning's arrest and subsequent fatal shooting of a teenage homicide suspect.

Two detectives shot handcuffed 17-year-old Swuave D. Lopez in the back after he got out of the passenger seat of a detective's car and ran.

A police spokesman said details of the shooting and the officers' handling of the case will come out during two hearings: the first in public on June 9, and the second behind closed doors shortly thereafter.

"I know everybody wants answers right now, but that's not the way things happen," Deputy Chief Greg McCurdy said. "In criminal cases, sometimes it's a couple of years before everything comes out. This will be weeks. We will tell the community what happened and why."

A national expert on officer-involved shootings stated that from what he has read of the case, the detective's actions seemed to fall within the guidelines of state and federal law. Whether the detectives complied with the department's policies are another matter, he said.

Just before shooting Lopez, Detectives Ken Hardy and Shane Womack had arrested him in connection with the shooting death of 18-year-old Kyle Staheli, whose burned, bullet-riddled body was found in the desert in the northeast valley Saturday morning, police said.

Police said it was the first time that either Hardy or Womack had shot a suspect.

Hardy has been with the department since 1986, and Womack has been an officer since 1999. Police said neither Hardy nor Womack has had any use-of-force complaints filed against him.

The determination of whether their shooting of Lopez was legal will be made at a coroner's inquest, McCurdy said.

At that proceeding, open to the public, prosecutors present witnesses and a coroner's jury of seven citizens determines if the use of deadly force was justifiable, excusable or criminal.

According to Nevada Revised Statute 171.1455, a police officer can, after giving a warning, "if feasible," use deadly force to prevent an escape if there is probable cause to believe the person "has committed a felony which involves the infliction or threat of serious bodily harm or the use of deadly force" or "poses a threat of serious bodily harm to the officer or to others."

The law was passed by the Legislature in 1993, sponsored by Assemblymen Wendell Williams and Morse Arberry, both Las Vegas Democrats.

Before the 1993 update, Nevada law allowed a police officer to use deadly force on a fleeing felon whether or not there was a threat of danger to an officer or the public. That law had its roots in English Common Law, which dated from a time when most felonies were punishable by death, therefore anyone arrested for a felony would be expected to fight to death resisting.

In 1985, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Tennessee v. Garner that laws broadly allowing police to use deadly force during any felony arrest were unconstitutional. That case involved a Memphis police officer who shot and killed a 14-year-old burglary suspect who was attempting to flee by climbing a fence.

"The use of deadly force to prevent the escape of all felony suspects, whatever the circumstances, is constitutionally unreasonable," the high court held in Tennessee v. Garner. However, "if the suspect threatens the officer with a weapon or there is probable cause to believe that he has committed a crime involving the infliction or threatened infliction of serious physical harm, deadly force may be used if necessary to prevent escape, and if, where feasible, some warning has been given."

According to the Nevada Judiciary committee minutes from 1993, Williams argued for changes in Nevada law to bring it into line with the Supreme Court ruling.

David Klinger, an associate professor of criminology at the University of Missouri at St. Louis and an expert in officer-involved shootings, said Saturday's slaying appears to fall with in guidelines set by the Supreme Court.

Before teaching at the university level, Klinger served three years in law enforcement, including two years with the Los Angeles Police Department, where he was involved in the fatal shooting of an assailant.

Klinger said Saturday's shooting does not fit the classic notion of a justified police shooting where an officer has a "perceived threat of imminent death," a hostage situation, or where someone, usually a youth, points a fake gun or similar looking object at an officer.

"The question is going to be: Was it necessary to use deadly force to effect this arrest?" Klinger said.

Klinger said just because Lopez was handcuffed doesn't mean he wasn't a threat. He said handcuffed suspects often escape or cause bodily harm to police officers.

"It does happen on a regular basis," Klinger said. "We know people who are handcuffed can escape and they can kill people."

Those are some of the issues that coroner's inquest is expected to consider.

Questions about whether the two detectives followed department policies in the case will be hashed out by a use-of-force review board and their superior officers, police said.

In such use-of-force reviews, three officers and four citizens meet behind closed doors within about three weeks of the coroner's inquest and determine if officers broke department policy.

If the panel rules officers violated policy, they make a recommendation to the sheriff for possible discipline against the officers.

The department's internal policy manual gives officers only brief direction in how to deal with fleeing suspects in a section titled "Escape of Prisoner."

"In the event of a prisoner escape, the transporting officer will notify Communications and attempt to recapture the prisoner," the policy states. "The officer may request additional units to establish a perimeter and/or conduct a search, taking into consideration the original charge for which the prisoner was in custody and the level of threat to citizens in the area."

The four-sentence section does not broach how handcuffed suspects should be pursued or state when it is appropriate to shoot at a fleeing suspect.

The Police Department's general use-of-force policy is more detailed, mandating that officers use the minimal amount of force necessary to bring situations under control.

"Members are to fire their weapons only to stop and incapacitate an assailant from completing a potentially deadly act," the policy states.

The manual does not address whether it is appropriate to shoot at a handcuffed suspect.

However, it states that officers are not allowed to use their "low-lethality" weapons, such as Tasers that stun with an electrical charge or shotguns that stun with beanbag rounds, against suspects in handcuffs.

McCurdy, commander of the division to which the two detectives are assigned, said it would be inappropriate to say whether their actions fell within police policy before a use-of-force review board investigates the incident.

"Right now, everybody needs to catch their breath," McCurdy said. "People need to be respectful of our processes."

it states that officers are not allowed to use their "low-lethality" weapons, such as Tasers that stun with an electrical charge or shotguns that stun with beanbag rounds, against suspects in handcuffs.
wtf so its ok to shoot him with bullets to kill him!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#39
Man does dude still even post here since you guys made a whole fuck J-Boeg thread about him?! I don't think I seen him since...shit's funny if he did bounce! hahah
 

kevp

Sicc OG
Dec 7, 2004
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#40
DASICCLV702 said:
"I know everybody wants answers right now, but that's not the way things happen," Deputy Chief Greg McCurdy said. "In criminal cases, sometimes it's a couple of years before everything comes out. This will be weeks. We will tell the community what happened and why."



hmm...it takes YEARS? it took em less than a week to kill him for being a SUSPECT in a crime...

on another note DASICCLV did you hear anything about the 2 chicks found dead in henderson? All I heard was they were found dead.