Re: Witnessed a possible assault; seeking critique of my actions
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2009 8:10 am
You did it right. You called 911, you witnessed what happened, you waited for LEO and you did not get involved in trying to stop the ruckus.
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srothstein wrote:As an officer, I would have really appreciated what you did if I were the one handling the call. You did more than most would have by just calling 911. The fact that you, at some risk to yourself, went back and looked to verify while you were on the phone, then hung around to show it to the officer who arrived, is well beyond what anyone could have reasonably expected of you. You did good.
The situation you described in your intial post is consistent with an agreed mutual combat situation (2 groups approaching each other deliberately with apparent intent to fight). The fact that everyone left the scene and apparently no one else was interested in pressing charges against someone else tends to confirm that. In such situations, it is virtually never a good idea to intervene directly. If a close family member is dumb enough to walk himself into one of those, letting the police walk him out is still the best course of action. If you have family members who may be predisposed to put themselves in similar situations, a little counseling beforehand can prevent a lot of heartache later.Rayden wrote:I think for the above, depending on the situation at the time, I have in advance made up my mind that for the close family members and a woman being assaulted and raped, I will intervene. For the rest, it really depends on the situation at the time.
I agree...Some of us certainly have WITNESSED incidents like this...Oldgringo wrote:As usual, both Excaliber and srothstein's above comments are right on the mark. See t_kopecky's post for one example of confirmation.
SALUT!
Is the TexasCHLforum an educational wonderland or what?
I am glad this thread, and this comment have been posted. I now know what to do in these scenarios.stevie_d_64 wrote:I agree...Some of us certainly have WITNESSED incidents like this...Oldgringo wrote:As usual, both Excaliber and srothstein's above comments are right on the mark. See t_kopecky's post for one example of confirmation.
SALUT!
Is the TexasCHLforum an educational wonderland or what?
Wife Unit and I years ago WITNESSED one in progress, a man was chasing a woman on the far side of a parking lot...Yelling and screaming and eventually he caught her and started the physical portion of the assault...
Within that time frame,. I told the wife to go into the store and stay there, but watch everything that was going on, and see if anyone else would watch what happened with her...
I hit the earbud, speed dialed 911, got through to the "communications specialist" I knew in Webster, Texas...And within 60 seconds two units responded and were on scene within 2 minutes...I could not even cross the distance (in th eparking lot) before they were there and had the man in custody...I did walk up, and told them what I saw, and informed them I was the one that made the call...
What was funny, was the abuser heard I was the one, and told me he was going to kill me...The officer overheard that, and said to the guy, that would be the last mistake he ever did...The officer I knew very well from my days doing the VFD thing down there, and he knew about my CHL since we used to go to a local range every now and then...
To me its what you do, and more important, what you don't do, that matters more than who you know, and what you think you know in the long run...
And it is an important skill to learn and apply, as much as what you do when you practice with what you strap to your hip everyday...
Just my opinion...