Exactly.Fuck all that 14 hour shift bullshit...We used to work 12-14 hours a day 7 days a week for 9 months on the flight deck of a air craft carrier when i was on deployment...Flight deck is one of the most dangerous places to work...Not only that but we was sleep deprived like a motherfucker and we had zero mishaps. She worked a little 14 hour shift and shes complacent on where she lives???
Lol I know its an unpopular thought but to me the shit sounds like she really didn't mean to do it. I could be wrong, but if I am her acting skills is on 1000.
It's just my opinion, don't crucify me for it. I'm still FTP.
I would still find her guilty if I was a juror. I'm just saying she sounded sincere on the phone in my opinion.Did she try to activate EMS for him? Or try to check him or do any type of trauma recovery on him? Like cops are taught? Or did she let him lay there, bleed out and die while she fucking whined about HERSELF and her job?
Well. Did she? Man don’t be no damn fool. She could only hope to have people like you in the jury. People that would buy her bullshit ass story.
She was off duty in uniform. I think she went up there in an official but unofficial capacity to teach that "boy" who runs shit in that complex. Yes I know I typed "boy", but according to her pinterest account, she thought she a warrior because she was a cop.I would still find her guilty if I was a juror. I'm just saying she sounded sincere on the phone in my opinion.
If her intent was to kill a black man it seems like she could have done it in a less incriminating fashion.
Why go into a mans house and kill him? She could have invited him to her apartment and killed him and said he was coming at her. She could have waited in the parking lot and shot him and said she thought he was a threat. She could have pulled him over and stood her ground.
I'm thinking outside of my emotions and saying that if she really meant to do it, there are a million ways she could have gotten away with it unscathed.
Walking into dudes apartment and killing him might be the dumbest way to kill someone and think you can walk away without scrutiny. So she is either retarded or she really didnt mean to do it.
Yea but she could have got him in a million different, much less suspicious ways and nobody would have blinked an eye.She was off duty in uniform. I think she went up there in an official but unofficial capacity to teach that "boy" who runs shit in that complex. Yes I know I typed "boy", but according to her pinterest account, she thought she a warrior because she was a cop.
Yea but she could have got him in a million different, much less suspicious ways and nobody would have blinked an eye.
This way is the dumbest way possible if she was actually trying to get away with it.
Passion. It is something strange about this case because it deals with the so called quote about a man's home being his castle. But not if you are an unarmed black. I could write a lot about this but I know people may try to find fault in what I say if it is not something they are use to hearing.Yea but she could have got him in a million different, much less suspicious ways and nobody would have blinked an eye.
This way is the dumbest way possible if she was actually trying to get away with it.
Amber Guyger Back In Court, Trial Date Set
Jury Selection officially starts September 6th 2019
Coincidentally 1 year from the date Botham was killed
Get your popcorn ready fellas !!!
The Judge Presiding Over Amber Guyger’s Murder Trial Is A Black Woman
Judge Tammy Kemp recently slammed the attorneys for leaking the 911 call.
View image on Twitter
Dallas Black Criminal Bar Association@DBCBAlawyers
Nah fam don't get too happy the judge is a black woman
The Dallas police chief (Renee Hall) was also a black woman
And she was one of the main ones defending that murderer
So we need to have a wait & see approach to this
Because the whole system is corrupt
Police, judges, district attorneys, jurors, etc, etc
I'm not giving any of them the benefit of the doubt
They have to prove it first
Exactly. Meek's judge was a Black woman, too, and she was so shitty, even the feds were investigating her. Zimmerman had a Black woman juror, too... a lotta good that did Trayvon.Nah fam don't get too happy the judge is a black woman
The Dallas police chief (Renee Hall) was also a black woman
And she was one of the main ones defending that murderer
So we need to have a wait & see approach to this
Because the whole system is corrupt
Police, judges, district attorneys, jurors, etc, etc
I'm not giving any of them the benefit of the doubt
They have to prove it first
This is what i expect tooIm looking at alot of cases going on now,an I think this bitch is gonna be not guilty of the felonies an they gonna find her guilty on misdemeanors ..seems to be a trent
Nah fam don't get too happy the judge is a black woman
The Dallas police chief (Renee Hall) was also a black woman
And she was one of the main ones defending that murderer
So we need to have a wait & see approach to this
Because the whole system is corrupt
Police, judges, district attorneys, jurors, etc, etc
I'm not giving any of them the benefit of the doubt
They have to prove it first
Im looking at alot of cases going on now,an I think this bitch is gonna be not guilty of the felonies an they gonna find her guilty on misdemeanors ..seems to be a trent
This is what i expect too
And more to your point.
This "Sista" in Phoenix. AR right here.
Who ended up getting clowned and lambasted by a WHITE Woman in the audience of all people.
Blondie knew what time it was...
And more to your point.
This "Sista" in Phoenix. AR right here.
Who ended up getting clowned and lambasted by a WHITE Woman in the audience of all people.
Blondie knew what time it was...
That police chief need her ass kicked talkin bout some change starts in the community not the police department smh
The fuck bitch saying?
And more to your point.
This "Sista" in Phoenix. AR right here.
Who ended up getting clowned and lambasted by a WHITE Woman in the audience of all people.
Blondie knew what time it was...
Talking community this, community that.. if their was a confrontation between the cops and her son, they would unload on his big ass without hesitation
Im looking at alot of cases going on now,an I think this bitch is gonna be not guilty of the felonies an they gonna find her guilty on misdemeanors ..seems to be a trent
Guygers Aunt put an article in a dallas news paper.
So what facts are we missing, and what does she think should be sufficient punishment for what transpired?The shooting of Botham Jean by my niece, Amber Guyger, was not a lynching
Nancy Bishop, Contributor
July 1st, 2019
For 10 months people have demonized and vilified my niece Amber Guyger, a former Dallas police officer who was indicted in the murder of Botham Jean. Recently, Njoki McElroy, director of the Oral Fixation storytelling series, went a step further by claiming Jean's death was "a form of lynching," according to a Dallas Morning News article.
This inflammatory comparison makes me shudder. I wonder how McElroy can be so certain that the tragic death of Jean was racially motivated.
What happened the night of Sept. 6, 2018, was different from other incidents that drew national attention when white police officers killed Michael Brown, Walter Lamar Scott, Stephon Clark and other black men.
In other cases, men were killed by police officers who were on duty. Guyger had finished a long shift and returned home when, according to the arrest warrant affidavit, she said she mistook Jean's apartment for her own. She said she opened the ajar door of the unit and saw "a large silhouette" in the nearly dark apartment and believed it was a burglar.
Transcripts from a 911 dispatcher call reveal Guyger's initial shock when she summoned help after the shooting. She repeated more than a dozen times, "I thought it was my apartment" and also uttered, "I didn't mean to. I didn't mean to. I'm so sorry."
Would a racist police officer have this type of initial reaction, or was this response from someone who realized this was a horrific accident?
What happened that night was an unimaginable tragedy, and I don't want to minimize the loss of Jean. I grieve for his family, friends and everyone involved.
My niece and my family are devastated by what happened. I wake up every morning praying for everyone involved in this nightmarish situation.
I regret that protesters and others quickly linked the death of Jean to other sensational shootings of innocent black men under questionable circumstances by white police officers. To draw this conclusion, people assume they know what was going through Guyger's mind that night. But how can people be so sure she would have acted differently if she had mistakenly entered the apartment of someone who was white, Hispanic or Asian?
It's unfortunate that comments like the one from McElroy serve to conclusively link the death of Jean to racist intent. The only thing this incident has in common with the heinous act of lynching is that a black man died. Yet ironically, McElroy made this incendiary comment when describing this portion of the presentation at libraries this month titled "Freedman's Town to Botham Jean: Stories for Racial Healing."
How is it racially healing to proclaim that Jean's death was an act of hate simply because the officer was white? When we assume the worst about people who are different, wounds won't heal.
Having grown up during the civil rights era of Martin Luther King, I wish more progress had been made. Sadly, that's not the case, and cities such as Dallas have deep racial divisions.
I'm bracing myself for my niece's trial in September and expect more backlash from people who have already decided Guyger is guilty of murder. I just wish people would wait until the facts are presented in court before rendering their own verdicts.
Nancy Bishop is a counselor in Austin. From 1978 to 1983, she was a reporter at The Dallas Morning News. She wrote this column for The News.
https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/...g-botham-jean-neice-amber-guyger-not-lynching
The shooting of Botham Jean by my niece, Amber Guyger, was not a lynching
Nancy Bishop, Contributor
July 1st, 2019
For 10 months people have demonized and vilified my niece Amber Guyger, a former Dallas police officer who was indicted in the murder of Botham Jean. Recently, Njoki McElroy, director of the Oral Fixation storytelling series, went a step further by claiming Jean's death was "a form of lynching," according to a Dallas Morning News article.
This inflammatory comparison makes me shudder. I wonder how McElroy can be so certain that the tragic death of Jean was racially motivated.
What happened the night of Sept. 6, 2018, was different from other incidents that drew national attention when white police officers killed Michael Brown, Walter Lamar Scott, Stephon Clark and other black men.
In other cases, men were killed by police officers who were on duty. Guyger had finished a long shift and returned home when, according to the arrest warrant affidavit, she said she mistook Jean's apartment for her own. She said she opened the ajar door of the unit and saw "a large silhouette" in the nearly dark apartment and believed it was a burglar.
Transcripts from a 911 dispatcher call reveal Guyger's initial shock when she summoned help after the shooting. She repeated more than a dozen times, "I thought it was my apartment" and also uttered, "I didn't mean to. I didn't mean to. I'm so sorry."
Would a racist police officer have this type of initial reaction, or was this response from someone who realized this was a horrific accident?
What happened that night was an unimaginable tragedy, and I don't want to minimize the loss of Jean. I grieve for his family, friends and everyone involved.
My niece and my family are devastated by what happened. I wake up every morning praying for everyone involved in this nightmarish situation.
I regret that protesters and others quickly linked the death of Jean to other sensational shootings of innocent black men under questionable circumstances by white police officers. To draw this conclusion, people assume they know what was going through Guyger's mind that night. But how can people be so sure she would have acted differently if she had mistakenly entered the apartment of someone who was white, Hispanic or Asian?
It's unfortunate that comments like the one from McElroy serve to conclusively link the death of Jean to racist intent. The only thing this incident has in common with the heinous act of lynching is that a black man died. Yet ironically, McElroy made this incendiary comment when describing this portion of the presentation at libraries this month titled "Freedman's Town to Botham Jean: Stories for Racial Healing."
How is it racially healing to proclaim that Jean's death was an act of hate simply because the officer was white? When we assume the worst about people who are different, wounds won't heal.
Having grown up during the civil rights era of Martin Luther King, I wish more progress had been made. Sadly, that's not the case, and cities such as Dallas have deep racial divisions.
I'm bracing myself for my niece's trial in September and expect more backlash from people who have already decided Guyger is guilty of murder. I just wish people would wait until the facts are presented in court before rendering their own verdicts.
Nancy Bishop is a counselor in Austin. From 1978 to 1983, she was a reporter at The Dallas Morning News. She wrote this column for The News.
https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/...g-botham-jean-neice-amber-guyger-not-lynching
The shooting of Botham Jean by my niece, Amber Guyger, was not a lynching
Nancy Bishop, Contributor
July 1st, 2019
For 10 months people have demonized and vilified my niece Amber Guyger, a former Dallas police officer who was indicted in the murder of Botham Jean. Recently, Njoki McElroy, director of the Oral Fixation storytelling series, went a step further by claiming Jean's death was "a form of lynching," according to a Dallas Morning News article.
This inflammatory comparison makes me shudder. I wonder how McElroy can be so certain that the tragic death of Jean was racially motivated.
What happened the night of Sept. 6, 2018, was different from other incidents that drew national attention when white police officers killed Michael Brown, Walter Lamar Scott, Stephon Clark and other black men.
In other cases, men were killed by police officers who were on duty. Guyger had finished a long shift and returned home when, according to the arrest warrant affidavit, she said she mistook Jean's apartment for her own. She said she opened the ajar door of the unit and saw "a large silhouette" in the nearly dark apartment and believed it was a burglar.
Transcripts from a 911 dispatcher call reveal Guyger's initial shock when she summoned help after the shooting. She repeated more than a dozen times, "I thought it was my apartment" and also uttered, "I didn't mean to. I didn't mean to. I'm so sorry."
Would a racist police officer have this type of initial reaction, or was this response from someone who realized this was a horrific accident?
What happened that night was an unimaginable tragedy, and I don't want to minimize the loss of Jean. I grieve for his family, friends and everyone involved.
My niece and my family are devastated by what happened. I wake up every morning praying for everyone involved in this nightmarish situation.
I regret that protesters and others quickly linked the death of Jean to other sensational shootings of innocent black men under questionable circumstances by white police officers. To draw this conclusion, people assume they know what was going through Guyger's mind that night. But how can people be so sure she would have acted differently if she had mistakenly entered the apartment of someone who was white, Hispanic or Asian?
It's unfortunate that comments like the one from McElroy serve to conclusively link the death of Jean to racist intent. The only thing this incident has in common with the heinous act of lynching is that a black man died. Yet ironically, McElroy made this incendiary comment when describing this portion of the presentation at libraries this month titled "Freedman's Town to Botham Jean: Stories for Racial Healing."
How is it racially healing to proclaim that Jean's death was an act of hate simply because the officer was white? When we assume the worst about people who are different, wounds won't heal.
Having grown up during the civil rights era of Martin Luther King, I wish more progress had been made. Sadly, that's not the case, and cities such as Dallas have deep racial divisions.
I'm bracing myself for my niece's trial in September and expect more backlash from people who have already decided Guyger is guilty of murder. I just wish people would wait until the facts are presented in court before rendering their own verdicts.
Nancy Bishop is a counselor in Austin. From 1978 to 1983, she was a reporter at The Dallas Morning News. She wrote this column for The News.
https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/...g-botham-jean-neice-amber-guyger-not-lynching
what in the fuck is this...!! a judge needs to lock her ass up..isnt there a gag order..
also how will this effect jurors an their thinking before the trial even begins...
I WANNA KNOW WHERE THAT TOXICOLOGY REPORT IS...WHATS THE HOLD UP..??
WHY WAS HER APARTMENT NEVER SEARCHED??
HELL I WOULD LIKE TO KNOW WHO SHE IS FUCKING ON THE FORCE...?? CAUSE SHE FUCKING SOMEONE THAT HAS POWER...TO GET SHIT COVERED UP THIS WELL..