June 13, 2019 11:30 a.m. update: US marshals shot and killed a man in Frayser, Tennessee, a north Memphis neighborhood, on Wednesday, sparking a protest that turned violent and left 24 officers, two journalists and an untold number of protestors injured.
The protest began when marshals were trying to apprehend Brandon Webber, 20, according to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, when Webber "reportedly rammed his vehicle into the officers' vehicles multiple times before exiting with a weapon," the bureau said. "The officers fired striking and killing the individual. No officers were injured."
Below is a story from 2016, following two fatal shootings by police officers, and describes police training that comes into play in a situation such as the one in Frayser on Wednesday.
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Original story:People have taken to the streets in both Tulsa and Charlotte during the past week, protesting the fatal shootings of two men by police officers in those cities.
>> Got a question about the news? See our explainers here
Do officers really operate under a shoot-to-kill policy?
Why not “shoot to wound” instead?
Dr. Bill Lewinski, executive director of the Force Science Institute, explained in a position paper for the Institute the physics involved in the notion of training officers – who are often running after suspects – to "shoot to wound."
David Klinger, a professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, put it another way speaking to ABC News -- with officers trying to stop a threat to their life or the lives of others, "Why would we want to injure or maim people?" he said. "It doesn't stop them."
What’s the law on police using deadly force?
In 2015, the court ruled citizens could not sue police for using deadly force against fleeing suspects unless it is "beyond debate" that a shooting was unjustified.
Candace McCoy, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the City University of New York, suggested in an article in The Guardian that shooting to wound would lower the legal threshold for using deadly force.
“As a policy, [shoot to wound] is a really bad idea because it would give the police permission to take that gun out of the holster under any circumstance,” she said.
Cox Media Group





