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ICE Agent Shooting: What the Law Actually Says #shorts
David Feldman
Because the video evidence is overwhelming, a new narrative has emerged that the ICE agent was well within his right to fire at a suspect fleeing an arrest. They are saying, if an ICE agent orders you to stop, you have to stop. And if you drive off, they say, the ICE agent has every right to fire their weapon at you. That is not what the law says, and that is not what the Supreme Court ruled in 1985. They are changing their arguments, the right to get their arms around this. But here's the headline, okay? Know this for a fact. The police here in the United States,
federal, local, they can only discharge their weapons and fire at a suspect who is fleeing a violent crime and is deemed a physical danger to the community because they are armed and dangerous. Was Ms. Good armed and dangerous? Was she a threat to the community? So this is why you hear a constant refrain from ICE throughout all of last year. And in Portland, on Thursday, Border Patrol officers shot two alleged gang members because they had weaponized their car. That's what we always hear. Whenever ICE agents or Border Patrol agents fire their guns,
it's always because somebody weaponized their car. Now, you saw the videos. Had Good weaponized her vehicle? Was she driving it into this ICE agent Was she driving it into this ICE agent with the intent to kill him?
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