How many police officers does it take to gun down a teenager?

December 14, 2008

 

If you answered three congratulations.

Two nights ago Tyler Cassidy was shot dead by “a spray of police bullets” (The Age Online 13 Dec 2008).  The four officers involved (including two senior officers) apparently felt threatened by the 15 year old and in an act of self-defence three of the officers opened fire. In total 10 bullets were fired into the lone teenager.

According to mainstream media reports, emergency services received a phone call from Tyler (who was armed with two knives that he had stolen early from the Northcote Kmart) saying “Get the cops. I am killing people tonight”. A second call was received from the same phone by Tyler posing as a panicked witness. The police arrived and minutes later Tyler was shot repeatedly by not one, not two, but three of the four police officers.

According to Assistant Police Commissioner Tim Cartwright “this happened within a matter of seconds”. After capsicum spray was used to no avail,  the (not one, not two, but) three officers made a split second decision and fired… repeatedly.

Obviously Tyler was not the most stable of teenagers, but it is beyond comprehension that four officers could get themselves into a situation where they had no choice but to fire a fatal volley of bullets into a 15 year old.

Negation failed - Victorian Police needs to invest in training.

Capsicum spray failed - How is it that the next step after spray is bullets???

Surely the introduction of a taser gun would prove a logical and lifesaving middle step.  And, if it comes down to a situation where bullets are the only answer could one officer not have shot Tyler in the leg? This morning I listened to some talkback on the issue. One listener called in to defend the officers. He suggested that hand guns are massively inaccurate and difficult to handle. Therefore, the caller continued, it would have been near impossible to shoot the boy in the leg…Comforting to know that the states protectors are carrying around weapons of mass inaccuracy.

I’m not opposed to police officers carrying guns. I am opposed to police officers who are inadequately trained being given opportunity to employ their poor judgement skills in an emergency situation. I am opposed to these officers carrying inaccurate weapons. I am opposed to three officers shooting (ten times) a 15 year old who did not have a gun.

I can’t help but draw links to the recent police shooting of a 15 year old boy in Greece last week. Specifically the public reaction to the incident…widespread violence, firebombing of police stations, and mass public protests. While I don’t condone violence…I certainly think that Australians have a some what dispassionate, apathetic attitude towards authoritarian injustices. It will be interesting to see if Tylers death is still in the headlines in 10 days. 

Speaking of headlines I watched yesterday with interest/scorn the way in which this story was its presented in the media. One article detailed Tyler’s suicide-by-police-fire bid. COME ON.

1. Its murder not suicide; and

2. Its beyond ridiculous to imagine that a 15 year old would mastermind such a thing

A further media point – the reliance on social networking sites. Tyler’s media identity was built from information found on his public MySpace profile. On this site Tyler was a supporter of the white supremest group Southern Cross Soldiers. Many media outlets have used this virtual link to draw (and publish) negative conclusions about Tyler as a person. Social networking sites are becoming an increasingly frequent medium for the media to collect information on people. After the 2007 Christopher Hudson CBD shooting incident. Victim Kiera Douglas was defined largely through her  MySpace page. Her links with Chopper Reid and a number of porn stars were used to tarnish her reputation even though she had never actally met these people (rather her ‘friending’ of them indicated she was interested by them).

While I fully embrace the integration of social media channels with more traditional outlets I think that a line needs to be drawn. People often have an inflated sense of security, distance, and ego on social networking sites. It takes five seconds to join a particular cause or organisation through facebook. Simply joining a group on such a site does not hold the same significance as joining and actively participating in such a group in the real world. Personally I see over-reliance on such stories as misleading, dangerous, and sloppy journalism.

I pray that Tyler’s death does not go without impact. Victoria police need to be investigated and held accountable. The (mainstream)  media needs to step up as the forth estate and do this fairly. The social media (perhaps the 5th estate) need to keep check on the mainstream media.


Why I’m opening up the Space and not censoring the Face

April 13, 2008

Finally Finally Finally someone gets it!

Garys’ video reminded me of a conversation I had a couple of months ago with a perspective employer in Beijing. The conversation (which was flowing along quite nicely) came to a halt when the gentleman I was speaking to commented “I saw your profile on Facebook…you look like quite the party girl”. The rest of the conversation consisted of me giving vague ummm and ahhhh answers while I raked my brain trying to imagine what incriminating photos/comments/posts he could have seen on my profile.

Within roughly 30 seconds of putting the phone down, both my Facebook and MySpace pages had been privatised.

Luckily for me my pages are relatively tame. Although at the time the display pic didn’t scream professional it certainly wasn’t anything I would be upset if my mum saw. Even more luckily for me, this guy was cool. As a senior PR practitioner he was interested in social media and appreciated my amateur adoption of it. Their company has a Facebook group which I am now proud to be a part of.

While I agree with most of what Gary is saying in his clip, one point I take contention with is his argument that you cannot have multiple personalities. I would argue that we all have multiple personalities, or perhaps more accurately one mulifaceited personality. Different social situations act as forums to express different elements of our personalities. I am a different person around my friends to what I am when I visit my grandparents or when I am at work. I use different language, discuss different topics and wear different clothes.

I think what social media is doing is making it possible for these different personalities to cross over. What Gary is saying is that for the first time our friends/family/colleagues are able to get a fully rounded picture of our lives – not just one piece of our personality puzzle. We can now be judged (to a higher degree) as entire entities. The separation or distinction that divides our personalities is getting narrower. If an employer visits my MySpace profile they can see the type of person I am around my friends. At first the thought of an employer seeing this side of me was unsettling. However, the more I think about it the more comfortable I am with it.

If Jane happens to be tagged in a bikini on the beach that doesn’t mean that she views that as appropriate work attire. Any employer who comes to such a conclusion is not someone I would want to work for. If I was photographed at a club with my friends. So What! I am a grown woman and presumably it’s the weekend. If it’s 9-5 on Monday through Friday then yes…I see where an employer may take issue!

I found a quote by the wonderful Mitch Joel recently that sums up exactly how I have always approached my professional undertakings…”I treated every position I had as if I owned the company and it’s success (or failure) rested on my shoulders”. Maybe this sentiment isn’t apparent on my Facebook or MySpace page (however, there is certainly nothing to contradict it). Different online communities serve different purposes. If you want to see how I will conduct myself on a Saturday night out with my friends check out MySpace. If you want to see how I will behave in the office go to LinkedIn. If you want to see a complete picture of who I am – have a look at both.

There is no more security in obscurity. Facebook is mainstream. MySpace is mainstream. You are mainstream. Employers and perspective employers are going to look at your profile. Hopefully when they do see you in a less professional context they interpret it as having the work/life balance.

I like Gary’s point about good triumphing over evil. If you have posts up and down your page talking about how horrible your workplace is, how you should really get off Facebook and do some work, or how much you dislike your boss or colleagues then yes a perspective employer will probably (justifiably so) read into this as you being lazy, unproductive, and socially disruptive. They will hire someone else.

Seeing another side of a perspective employees personality is (in most cases) not a bad thing. Employment ads preach about the quest for diversity, ‘people persons’, and energetic people. People say they are these things…now an employer can check it out for themselves. Humans are social creatures, we like to express ourselves – obviously keep some things private- however I can’t imagine an employer who wants to hire an army of 100% all work/no play clones. I’m sorry, but if I am a recruiter and I go on to a potential candidates MySpace page and see nothing but a slide show of them slaving away in the office i am going to come to the conclusion that this person is a one-dimentional robot. If I go to their LinkedIn page and see some photos of them in a professional setting – then fine. DIFFERENT ONLINE COMMUNITIES SERVE DIFFERENT PURPOSES AND CATER TO DIFFERENT ELEMENTS OF OUR PERSONALITIES.

Employers have to understand that these social networking devices need to be viewed in context. Facebook and MySpace – I see as more social networks. I use Facebook strictly for friends. MySpace i’m slightly more liberal with. I’ll accept a ‘friend’ request if you are my friend, you are a family member that I like, you play music that I like, your profile is interesting, or you write me a nice note telling me why we should be connected. LinkedIn and Golden Key (honour society network) are different. They are professional. I wouldn’t dream of putting photos that were anything less then professional up on one of these networks.

People who are good are going to win…I’ll go one further and say people who are balanced –  in the personal and professional -  are going to win.

Today I opened my myspace page and made it public…so in an act of balanced shameless self-promotion:

Check out -  LinkedIn AND MySpace