• Admetus@sopuli.xyz
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    5 days ago

    It’s an incident that needed to be processed unfortunately.

    Edit: Ok, they could just let him go right there and try to answer or guess the answer to a lot of questions about who he was or what he was doing.

    • Semjeza@fedinsfw.app
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      5 days ago

      But processed with the guy in cuffs?!

      This is the sort of stuff that shows our bobbies are becoming ever more like Americans’ pigs.

      • Admetus@sopuli.xyz
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        5 days ago

        Guy was running around in a vest that looked like a bomb vest, close to a Jewish community while in other countries they are being simultaneously threatened. You think they were going to end it there, by not taking him into the station and giving him a chance to make a statement for in case there’s some kind of pushback or worse, he gets targeted too?

        He said they treated him well. I’ve been in handcuffs before (employer cancelled my visa in-country) and it’s not a big deal.

        • Semjeza@fedinsfw.app
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          4 days ago

          I didn’t say don’t take him back to be processed.

          I just don’t see the need for him to be cuffed once the police know it’s a skipping rope and he’s no threat.

          As for “no big deal”, it’s also about optics and respect. A lot of law enforcement techniques are about imposing lack of personhood on someone and by limiting those impositions it shows that the individual isn’t a threat and is being treated as something other than a criminal.

          • Admetus@sopuli.xyz
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            4 days ago

            “I said to the police, ‘it’s better safe than sorry’,” he said. “I’m not blaming the police, they were very nice with me. I was being nice with them, we work together. That’s why we pay our taxes so we keep ourselves safe.”

            Again, I don’t think he took issue with being processed in handcuffs after being mistaken for a suicide bomber.