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Police Asked Facebook To Deactivate Woman's Account During Deadly Standoff (abc7.com) 447

An anonymous reader quotes a report from KABC-TV: In the midst of a five-hour standoff that turned deadly, Facebook granted an emergency request from the Baltimore County Police Department to take offline the social media accounts belonging to a woman who wielded a shotgun at officers. Baltimore County Police officers shot and killed Korryn Gaines, 23, after she barricaded herself inside her Randallstown apartment with her 5-year-old son and pointed a shotgun at officers attempting to serve an arrest warrant. Police Chief Jim Johnson said Tuesday that the department made the emergency request to have Gaines' social media accounts suspended after she posted videos online showing the standoff. People who saw the postings, Johnson said, responded by encouraging her to not comply with police. Videos posted on Facebook and Instagram appeared to show Gaines, who was black, talking with police in the doorway to her apartment and to her son during the standoff. The standoff Monday began after three officers went to Gaines' apartment to serve arrest warrants on her and her boyfriend, Kareem K. Courtney, 39, according to police. Gaines' bench warrant stemmed from charges during a March 10 stop, including disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. Authorities said she was armed with a 12-gauge pistol grip shotgun that was legally purchased last year and toward the end of the negotiations pointed it directly at an officer and said, "If you don't leave, I'm going to kill you." An officer shot at her and Gaines fired two shots, but missed the officers, who returned fire and killed her, police said. Facebook's policy says that it may grant law enforcement permission to suspend accounts in cases where there is a substantial risk of harm. Facebook has received roughly 855 requests for emergency disclosures of information to government agencies due to the threat of harm or violence between July and December 2015, according to their Government Request Report. About 73 percent of those requests were granted.
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Police Asked Facebook To Deactivate Woman's Account During Deadly Standoff

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  • just how? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by quonsar ( 61695 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:03PM (#52640809) Homepage
    how the hell does one get in contact with facebook anyway?
  • FB should did it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by arbiter1 ( 1204146 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:04PM (#52640817)
    On facebook people were reportedly egging her on telling her no to give up and fight til the end. Pretty much pushing her to try to kill cops. Police have asked FB to keep a record of it all pending a warrant later.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by mysidia ( 191772 )

      They need to Identify all those users and bring Murder charges against them for the woman's death And counts of attempted Murder against these FB users, because these people acted with intent to incite behavior which resulted in people dying and was calculated to result in dead police officers.

      • by ravenshrike ( 808508 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:27PM (#52640975)

        Hey look, a proper example of incitement to violence not protected by the first amendment. Bravo sir.

        • Were they telling her to attack the cops or were they telling her to simply not comply? It does make a difference. In either case, there was nothing compelling her to do what she did other than maybe her own stupidity.

          • maybe her own stupidity...

            I'm not going to start name calling like several other posters have, but I can't really see even a stupid person picking up a shotgun and threatening a cop with it. I'm going to go right ahead and assume either meth or untreated mental health problems here.

            It is entirely possible I'm wrong and she died because she was stupid, but I don't think so.

      • At most, manslaughter. I'd be very surprised if someone went for murder, as they have to demonstrate malice aforethought or depraved indifference.

        And her crime, if not shot, would be attempted murder. For a felony murder charge for online inciting, they'd have to show a felony conspiracy, intent to incite an act, etc.

        Probably saber rattling.

        Nonetheless, egging someone on, in writing, to participate in a violent standoff with police is completely idiotic... Or presidential... Ask me again in six months.

      • I don't hate those people any less than you do. They are evil people to the core. But they did not murder that lady. That lady is alone responsible for her death. Good riddance.

    • Re:FB should did it (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:26PM (#52640969)
      A smarter move by police would have been to de-escalate by saying "ok, lady, have it your way," and rather than shooter her dead, simply ended the stand off by going away. Then they could have arrested her without incident the next time she actually went anywhere, because its likely she would have left her shotgun behind. Who walks around with a shotgun? This woman should still be alive, but the police seem to have no ability to understand this. Its madness how many people police have killed "cleanly" when the more ethical choice would have been to back off, come at them later when a low value, low risk suspect least expects it. Trying to arrest someone who is upset has a lot more drama and risk attached than arresting someone that doesn't see them coming. Police, by and large as a group, lack wisdom, and once a gun is involved, it immediately reduces the value of a suspects life. It doesn't need to e that way.
      • by frovingslosh ( 582462 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:37PM (#52641035)
        But she might have posted a video before they got her. Clearly she had to be put down immediately.
      • Re:FB should did it (Score:5, Informative)

        by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:45PM (#52641085)
        Contempt of Cop is a capital crime, to be punished on site by Judge Dredd. The cops don't walk away from a confrontation, once you've challenged the cops. "de-escalation" isn't a term cops are familiar with. "Escalate at all costs" is the only term they know.
      • by stevedog ( 1867864 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:47PM (#52641089)
        I'm a huge believer that police often overstep boundaries, but no, that is exactly what they should not have done. Then you go from having 0.1% of arrests going badly, because someone became violent and police had to counter that with force, to more like 20%, because "holy shit I might be able to actually WIN!" This isn't Game of Thrones: we can't allow Trial by Combat - if we do, even legit nonprejudiced cops (however many of those there are) will get hurt, good people who feel like "I just can't afford to be put in jail, it's worth a shot" will get hurt or killed... or more likely, both will happen, often in the same incident.
        • That's nonsense. Nobody is saying they shouldn't monitor the situation and take action at an appropriate time. Cops have a moral duty to protect the people even if the supreme court has ruled the police have no obligation to protect the people (as crazy as that sounds it's true, and it's not just one ruling, but they have repeatedly ruled this... I do wonder why I should pay my taxes if the police will only ever be used against me). But cops are not honourable and should not be respected if they do not put

        • by Calydor ( 739835 )

          Wait, which one is Trial By Combat?

          Is it getting shot to death by cops, or is it cops going away and taking you away a few hours later when you stop by McDonald's for a snack?

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        These are the two most relevant California law on arrests and using force during them. Feel free to research other States, our country, or other countries' laws on this subject. You will find they are similar on a global scale. Notice the citizen has a duty to submit and the peace officer has no duty to deescalate. It isn't the cops who are "escalating at all costs." It is the will of the people which forces escalation. The reason why is obvious to anyone trying to build or maintain a functional society. En

    • A long time ago... (Score:5, Informative)

      by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:31PM (#52640993) Homepage Journal

      A long time ago, a man named Randy Weaver [wikipedia.org] barricaded himself in his remote Northern Idaho cabin against federal agents, who wanted him to infiltrate the Aryan Nations. Weaver had refused, fearing that the Aryan Nations knew he was not a white supremacist and would kill him.

      The siege was widely reported in the news media at the time. Police of all stripe described Mr. Weaver as a white supremacist, racist, and all sorts of other names. In reality, Mr. Weaver was opposed to white supremacy and its movement.

      During the siege, a helicopter carrying a large object was seen flying towards the cabin. But here's the actual quote from the time [freerepublic.com]:

      Mr. Gritz said that he and a local real estate agent were in the area near the cabin. They saw a helicopter approach with a large object hanging from the helicopter -- like one of the fire-fighting helicopters.

      Both men were out in the open and Mr. Gritz was sure that they were spotted by the men aboard the helicopter. The helicopter changed direction and left the area.

      Mr. Gritz suggested that just possibly the Weaver cabin was about to have a fire -- I can spectulate how it would have been reported -- "White supremacist kills wife, children, and self with arsenal of napalm bombs and flamethrowers! Federal agents look on in horror, wait for rest of arsenal to explode."

      I personally remember Mr. Gritz being interviewed at the time on camera by someone famous (perhaps it was Morely Safer), and my memory of his verbal account matches the one quoted above.

      I'm uncomfortable with this "turn off all social media" sort of action, because it also turns off the victim's ability to call for help, give their side of the story, and perhaps prevent law enforcement from telling a one-sided narrative.

      We've recently seen how law enforcement's version of events don't track with video camera footage of events.

      I'm very much in favor of keeping all channels of information open.

      It keeps both sides honest.

      (*) Weaver was later awarded 3.1 million dollars for the death of his son and wife, and the government admitted no guilt in the matter.

  • Missing any details? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:09PM (#52640859)

    Like that her supporters on Facebook were egging her on?

    That she was pulled over for having a cardboard license plate.
    That she was one of those "free range Americas" that have opted out of the government and believe its law does not apply to them.
    She refused to go to court because she did not recognize its power over her.

    There is only so much a Police Officer can do.

    • Like that her supporters on Facebook were egging her on?

      That she was pulled over for having a cardboard license plate.
      That she was one of those "free range Americas" that have opted out of the government and believe its law does not apply to them.
      She refused to go to court because she did not recognize its power over her.

      There is only so much a Police Officer can do.

      Sure you don't mean a sovereign citizen [wikipedia.org]?

      The profile in the article was kinda weird, it sounded a bit like sovereign citizen rhetoric, but that demographic is about as white as Donald Trump's natural skin tone. Is there a black offshoot?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      That she was one of those "free range Americas" that have opted out of the government and believe its law does not apply to them.

      Funny anecdote about that. I live in a moderately sized city (700K) and I often have the police scanner on in the background. Last year an officer pulled over a car and was calling it into dispatch urgently requesting more units. He was worried he had some kind of sovereign citizen ringleader on his hands because the car's license plate said "No Taxation Without Representation" and "something about Colombians." It was, of course, a regular old American with a Washington DC tag, which bears the motto "No Tax

    • Like that her supporters on Facebook were egging her on?

      Uh... that's pretty much the main gist of the summary.

  • What does being black have to do with anything? The cops were black too.
    • "Sa Prize (Part 2)"

      [...]

      [Verse One: Dr. Dre]

      Fuck the motherfucking police!
      They don't want peace, they want a nigga deceased
      So he'll cease to be a problem, and by the way the perform
      It seems the Klan gave the white police another uniform
      And yo the black police, the house niggaz
      They gave you a motherfucking gun, so I guess you figure
      you made out, good to go, but you didn't know
      They would stick your black ass back in the ghetto, yo
      To kill another nigga, catch him with crack, in fact
      Freebase - they put in the n

    • by aevan ( 903814 )
      Because because black people when they become police internalise racism and are stooges of the man, trying to appease their mastah by eagerly turning Uncle Tom

      ...or certain bullshit to that effect.
    • Now we have a problem, after all everyone knows black people can't be racist, but cops have to be. Or so I'm told in every other YouTube video.

      And people ask me why I consider the bullshit more and more of an ersatz-religion. Same abundance of internal contradictions, same absence of a problem with it by the true believers.

  • Just another case of suicide by cop. Think of it as evolution in action.
  • Well that was fast (Score:2, Interesting)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
    I'm impressed how quickly the powers that be got the whole "live streaming" thing under control. As for the whole black lives matter aspect that part makes me nervous. I'm not really worried about overt racism so much any more as the casual kind. Were they more likely to use force or just plain more aggressive because they were dealing with a black perp. That's what makes the issue so hard, and that's what folks mean by "Institutional" racism.
    • by ravenshrike ( 808508 ) on Wednesday August 03, 2016 @09:38PM (#52641039)

      They weren't even really there for her. Serving her warrant was done out of convenience because they were also there for a guy who had an aggravated assault charge at the same address. But then she pulls a shotgun, gets in a several hour long standoff with the cops while using her son as a shield both figuratively and at times literally, regularly telling him the cops are gonna kill him, and then threatens to kill the cops while pointing a shotgun at them short range.

  • Government shutting down social media accounts represents a prior restraint on subsequent speech. From one view, it's like cutting off your ability to write letters to a newspaper because you wrote one and then somebody posted a letter urging you do do something illegal. In terms of precedent, similar acts could prevent her from livestreaming in order to ensure police behavior remains professional while she is arrested.

    On the other hand, the person or people urging her not to comply with police is clearly e

    • You have no right to a internet connection or access to facebook while in an armed standoff with the police, especially when they were serving an entirely valid warrant..

      • You have no right to a internet connection or access to facebook while in an armed standoff with the police, especially when they were serving an entirely valid warrant..

        Erm... I don't believe that's correct.

        Unless I'm mistaken, you have *every* right unless it's specifically forbidden by law.

        Or has that changed? Admittedly, it's been a long time since civics class...

      • Your rights don't change when the police are trying to arrest you. Your right to speech is inalienable, as is your right to defend yourself when the cops shoot at you for no fucking reason (no, she was not pointing a gun at them).

        • Yes she was pointing a gun at them. Merely pulling out the gun is grounds for use of deadly force. Actually your rights do change. It's called exigent circumstances. You have your rights, they are defended in the courts, not on the spot with the police. You threaten violence (the mere presence of the gun let alone pointing it at them as the report clearly states she was doing) is such a threat, and the police are justified in cutting off outside communications and use of deadly force.

          Rights are not wit
    • Government shutting down social media accounts represents a prior restraint on subsequent speech.

      Except the government did not shut down her social media accounts. Facebook voluntarily shut down her Facebook account at the request of law enforcement.

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