Guilty Verdict Against Amber Guyger

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
Good!!! This cracka pig is a dead honkey walking


SINCE THE BLACK LIVES Matter movement began in 2014, I’ve stood with hundreds of families impacted by police violence. With few exceptions, justice for them has been a fleeting mystery. The law is working against them. District attorneys are working against them. Bigotry and the undeserved esteem of law enforcement over everyday citizens is working against them. And yet, each new family whose loved one is mowed down in a hail of bullets hopes against hope that they will be different: that they will be the exception to the rule, and that they will be ones who finally get some tiny measure of justice.

Moments ago, that hope was just realized when Amber Guyger was found guilty for the murder of Botham Jean, who was killed by Guyger, a Dallas police officer at the time, when she entered his apartment and shot him dead. They were neighbors, and Guyger claimed she thought she had gone into her own apartment and that Jean was an intruder. No verdict balances the scales of what Jean’s family has suffered and lost, but this semblance of justice is both rare and necessary. It took not only a skilled team of organizers and activists, but a world-class legal team, a committed district attorney, a fair judge, and a racially diverse jury to get what so few families impacted by such violence ever do.


https://theintercept.com/2019/10/01...mily-of-botham-jean-the-justice-they-deserve/
 
that cop deserves it, shoots her neighbor while off-duty and still in uniform, and says 'I thought is was my apartment'

yeah sure white supremacist, rot in prison!
 
Dallas County jurors made a powerful statement Tuesday with their decision to convict former police officer Amber Guyger of murder.

Plenty of people will lament that Guyger was harshly punished for a terrible mistake, the shooting of Botham Jean in his own home when she thought it was hers. But with their verdict, the jurors said that some mistakes are so egregious, the circumstances can’t excuse them much at all.

This case is an illustration of why we have jury trials. Though the prosecution and defense disagreed over some key facts, the trial turned on whether Guyger’s actions were reasonable under the circumstances of the night of Sept. 6, 2018.


https://www.star-telegram.com/opinion/editorials/article235555602.html
 
Good!!! This cracka pig is a dead honkey walking


SINCE THE BLACK LIVES Matter movement began in 2014, I’ve stood with hundreds of families impacted by police violence. With few exceptions, justice for them has been a fleeting mystery. The law is working against them. District attorneys are working against them. Bigotry and the undeserved esteem of law enforcement over everyday citizens is working against them. And yet, each new family whose loved one is mowed down in a hail of bullets hopes against hope that they will be different: that they will be the exception to the rule, and that they will be ones who finally get some tiny measure of justice.

Moments ago, that hope was just realized when Amber Guyger was found guilty for the murder of Botham Jean, who was killed by Guyger, a Dallas police officer at the time, when she entered his apartment and shot him dead. They were neighbors, and Guyger claimed she thought she had gone into her own apartment and that Jean was an intruder. No verdict balances the scales of what Jean’s family has suffered and lost, but this semblance of justice is both rare and necessary. It took not only a skilled team of organizers and activists, but a world-class legal team, a committed district attorney, a fair judge, and a racially diverse jury to get what so few families impacted by such violence ever do.


https://theintercept.com/2019/10/01...mily-of-botham-jean-the-justice-they-deserve/

Are you suggesting most cop shootings are unjustified?
 
The times are changing



Why the Amber Guyger verdict matters, and not just to Botham Jean’s family


On Tuesday, the nation witnessed an extremely rare moment when a jury found officer Amber Guyger guilty of murder for the shooting death of Botham Jean. It is a sliver of justice for the family and loved ones of Jean, who died when Guyger shot him in his own apartment, claiming that she mistook his place for her own.

As we now await sentencing, we must also recognize that this guilty verdict sends a resounding message that black and brown lives do matter, and that no one is above the law. It is a step in the right direction as we continue to fight for police accountability, criminal justice reform and equality.


https://www.nydailynews.com/opinion...0191001-wi4ifp4hjreffpxaypnhxnkivm-story.html
 
Good!!! This cracka pig is a dead honkey walking


SINCE THE BLACK LIVES Matter movement began in 2014, I’ve stood with hundreds of families impacted by police violence. With few exceptions, justice for them has been a fleeting mystery. The law is working against them. District attorneys are working against them. Bigotry and the undeserved esteem of law enforcement over everyday citizens is working against them. And yet, each new family whose loved one is mowed down in a hail of bullets hopes against hope that they will be different: that they will be the exception to the rule, and that they will be ones who finally get some tiny measure of justice.

Moments ago, that hope was just realized when Amber Guyger was found guilty for the murder of Botham Jean, who was killed by Guyger, a Dallas police officer at the time, when she entered his apartment and shot him dead. They were neighbors, and Guyger claimed she thought she had gone into her own apartment and that Jean was an intruder. No verdict balances the scales of what Jean’s family has suffered and lost, but this semblance of justice is both rare and necessary. It took not only a skilled team of organizers and activists, but a world-class legal team, a committed district attorney, a fair judge, and a racially diverse jury to get what so few families impacted by such violence ever do.


https://theintercept.com/2019/10/01...mily-of-botham-jean-the-justice-they-deserve/

Guyger got what she deserved.

As for the rest of your nonsense, STFU.
 
Good!!! This cracka pig is a dead honkey walking


SINCE THE BLACK LIVES Matter movement began in 2014, I’ve stood with hundreds of families impacted by police violence. With few exceptions, justice for them has been a fleeting mystery. The law is working against them. District attorneys are working against them. Bigotry and the undeserved esteem of law enforcement over everyday citizens is working against them. And yet, each new family whose loved one is mowed down in a hail of bullets hopes against hope that they will be different: that they will be the exception to the rule, and that they will be ones who finally get some tiny measure of justice.

Moments ago, that hope was just realized when Amber Guyger was found guilty for the murder of Botham Jean, who was killed by Guyger, a Dallas police officer at the time, when she entered his apartment and shot him dead. They were neighbors, and Guyger claimed she thought she had gone into her own apartment and that Jean was an intruder. No verdict balances the scales of what Jean’s family has suffered and lost, but this semblance of justice is both rare and necessary. It took not only a skilled team of organizers and activists, but a world-class legal team, a committed district attorney, a fair judge, and a racially diverse jury to get what so few families impacted by such violence ever do.


https://theintercept.com/2019/10/01...mily-of-botham-jean-the-justice-they-deserve/

Guyger got what she deserved.

As for the rest of your nonsense, STFU.
 
that cop deserves it, shoots her neighbor while off-duty and still in uniform, and says 'I thought is was my apartment'

yeah sure white supremacist, rot in prison!

Some weird circumstances. I didn't pay much attention to the trial.

Had she been drinking to get the apartment so wrong?

How in the world was she unable to unlock the door without the correct key?

Anybody know?
 
Good!!! This cracka pig is a dead honkey walking


SINCE THE BLACK LIVES Matter movement began in 2014, I’ve stood with hundreds of families impacted by police violence. With few exceptions, justice for them has been a fleeting mystery. The law is working against them. District attorneys are working against them. Bigotry and the undeserved esteem of law enforcement over everyday citizens is working against them. And yet, each new family whose loved one is mowed down in a hail of bullets hopes against hope that they will be different: that they will be the exception to the rule, and that they will be ones who finally get some tiny measure of justice.

Moments ago, that hope was just realized when Amber Guyger was found guilty for the murder of Botham Jean, who was killed by Guyger, a Dallas police officer at the time, when she entered his apartment and shot him dead. They were neighbors, and Guyger claimed she thought she had gone into her own apartment and that Jean was an intruder. No verdict balances the scales of what Jean’s family has suffered and lost, but this semblance of justice is both rare and necessary. It took not only a skilled team of organizers and activists, but a world-class legal team, a committed district attorney, a fair judge, and a racially diverse jury to get what so few families impacted by such violence ever do.


https://theintercept.com/2019/10/01...mily-of-botham-jean-the-justice-they-deserve/

Good. Few could deserve it more.
 
Some weird circumstances. I didn't pay much attention to the trial.

Had she been drinking to get the apartment so wrong?

How in the world was she unable to unlock the door without the correct key?

Anybody know?

She was coming off duty from her job and texting her married boyfriend while walking to her apartment. She was so distracted she didn't pay attention to any of the visual cues that would have shown she was on the wrong floor. Botham had left his door unlocked when he returned from work so that's how she was able to walk in.
 
She was coming off duty from her job and texting her married boyfriend while walking to her apartment. She was so distracted she didn't pay attention to any of the visual cues that would have shown she was on the wrong floor. Botham had left his door unlocked when he returned from work so that's how she was able to walk in.

Thanks.

What a tragedy for everybody
 
She was coming off duty from her job and texting her married boyfriend while walking to her apartment. She was so distracted she didn't pay attention to any of the visual cues that would have shown she was on the wrong floor. Botham had left his door unlocked when he returned from work so that's how she was able to walk in.

If you believe her story.
I think something else is in play.
 
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