and you wonder why no one like NYPD...

NYPD > LAPD

I remember my criminology teacher got me so shook on LA cops (he's was black). Dude had so much anger against them and I guess it kind of rubbed off on me. He said he has met cops in most major cities and the worst of them all were in LA.
 
NYPD > LAPD

I remember my criminology teacher got me so shook on LA cops (he's was black). Dude had so much anger against them and I guess it kind of rubbed off on me. He said he has met cops in most major cities and the worst of them all were in LA.
 
its going to be a hot autumn

Originally Posted by tim teufel

idont see how the cop did anything wrong here. what was cpr gonna do forthe kid? if anything the mother should be charged with murder for nothaving the asthma pump thing. these people just want to sue the cityfor millions 


what people?

take that to stormfront
smh.gif
 
its going to be a hot autumn

Originally Posted by tim teufel

idont see how the cop did anything wrong here. what was cpr gonna do forthe kid? if anything the mother should be charged with murder for nothaving the asthma pump thing. these people just want to sue the cityfor millions 


what people?

take that to stormfront
smh.gif
 
I'm not sure i understand exactly.

First yeah i hate cops like any one else who pays attention but what did he do wrong here exactly?

CPR does NOTHING for asthma at all.

The article said she was a few blocks away and he followed her there. Would taking her from one car to another really have saved any time at all?

i am not defending her or blaming the mom at all i am sumply confused.
 
I'm not sure i understand exactly.

First yeah i hate cops like any one else who pays attention but what did he do wrong here exactly?

CPR does NOTHING for asthma at all.

The article said she was a few blocks away and he followed her there. Would taking her from one car to another really have saved any time at all?

i am not defending her or blaming the mom at all i am sumply confused.
 
People are quick to blame the police officer but at the very very least, the parents SHOULD have had an albuterol dispenser/inhaler on hand. I mean c'mon, you have an asthmatic child and you don't carry an inhaler? That is just being stupid. I say the parents are slightly to blame as well - I would kill my mom if she never gave me an inhaler when I was a kid, I don't care how expensive they are or whether you don't have health coverage - life > money.
As an asthmatic kid who was taken to the hospital many times for asthma attacks i got to agree. asthma just something u cant mess with.
tired.gif
 
People are quick to blame the police officer but at the very very least, the parents SHOULD have had an albuterol dispenser/inhaler on hand. I mean c'mon, you have an asthmatic child and you don't carry an inhaler? That is just being stupid. I say the parents are slightly to blame as well - I would kill my mom if she never gave me an inhaler when I was a kid, I don't care how expensive they are or whether you don't have health coverage - life > money.
As an asthmatic kid who was taken to the hospital many times for asthma attacks i got to agree. asthma just something u cant mess with.
tired.gif
 
The Police Officer blew it in this situation, he should've assesed the situation and used his own judgment to assist the little girl.  He could've done things differently, would those actions change the outcome for the little girl, we will never know.

I'm glad someone is calling out the mom as well.  It was completely negligent on her part.  I'm sure she was aware of her asthma, she was out doing physical activity, how do you not have some sort of inhaler? Growing up, kids with asthma always had their "pump" with them... always.  They forget, they wouldn't even try to play.
 
The Police Officer blew it in this situation, he should've assesed the situation and used his own judgment to assist the little girl.  He could've done things differently, would those actions change the outcome for the little girl, we will never know.

I'm glad someone is calling out the mom as well.  It was completely negligent on her part.  I'm sure she was aware of her asthma, she was out doing physical activity, how do you not have some sort of inhaler? Growing up, kids with asthma always had their "pump" with them... always.  They forget, they wouldn't even try to play.
 
Originally Posted by Manglor

I'm not sure i understand exactly.

First yeah i hate cops like any one else who pays attention but what did he do wrong here exactly?

CPR does NOTHING for asthma at all.

The article said she was a few blocks away and he followed her there. Would taking her from one car to another really have saved any time at all?

i am not defending her or blaming the mom at all i am sumply confused.

But from what I read he did not react quick enough, when a asthma patient has an attack you have to act fast. Those 2-3 minutes couldve possibly saved the girls life. Yea CPR does nothing but just the fact that he refused to try it was messed up

son was probably worried about giving citations instead of saving a life
 
Originally Posted by Manglor

I'm not sure i understand exactly.

First yeah i hate cops like any one else who pays attention but what did he do wrong here exactly?

CPR does NOTHING for asthma at all.

The article said she was a few blocks away and he followed her there. Would taking her from one car to another really have saved any time at all?

i am not defending her or blaming the mom at all i am sumply confused.

But from what I read he did not react quick enough, when a asthma patient has an attack you have to act fast. Those 2-3 minutes couldve possibly saved the girls life. Yea CPR does nothing but just the fact that he refused to try it was messed up

son was probably worried about giving citations instead of saving a life
 
Ok did more research.

AN 11-year-old Brooklyn girl died after her mom was detained by a man in uniform as she tried to rush her to a hospital.
"She was my angel. I cannot believe my baby is gone," the devastated mother, Carmen Ojeda, said of daughter Briana, reported The New York Post.

The New York City Police Department is trying to determine whether the man was a police officer, auxiliary officer, traffic agent or private security guard.

The tragedy happened after Briana suffered an asthma attack at 5:15pm (7:15am AEST) on Friday at a playground.

"We have all the equipment in the car but nothing was working. Her eyes started to get really, really big," Briana's heartbroken dad, Michael Ojeda said.

Carmen Ojeda called 911 but could not wait for the ambulance and decided to drive to the hospital in her car.

To break free from heavy traffic, she turned the wrong way on a one-way street, and hit a parked car.

Michael Ojeda said his wife flagged down a marked car and the uniformed man got out and screamed, "What the f*** are you doing going down the wrong way?"

"My wife screamed at him, 'Help! My daughter needs CPR.'"

Michael Ojeda said the man "smirked" and responded: "I don't do CPR".

Carmen Ojeda pleaded to be allowed to continue to Long Island College Hospital while the girl was "still breathing", but the man in uniform tried to box her in.

Scott Voloshin, who performed CPR on Briana on the way to the hospital, told WABC-TV he is certain the man was an NYPD officer.

The uniformed man followed Carmen Ojeda to the hospital. After a doctor broke the news that Briana had died, the man ripped up a ticket he had been trying to give Carmen Ojeda, her husband said.



 
Ok did more research.

AN 11-year-old Brooklyn girl died after her mom was detained by a man in uniform as she tried to rush her to a hospital.
"She was my angel. I cannot believe my baby is gone," the devastated mother, Carmen Ojeda, said of daughter Briana, reported The New York Post.

The New York City Police Department is trying to determine whether the man was a police officer, auxiliary officer, traffic agent or private security guard.

The tragedy happened after Briana suffered an asthma attack at 5:15pm (7:15am AEST) on Friday at a playground.

"We have all the equipment in the car but nothing was working. Her eyes started to get really, really big," Briana's heartbroken dad, Michael Ojeda said.

Carmen Ojeda called 911 but could not wait for the ambulance and decided to drive to the hospital in her car.

To break free from heavy traffic, she turned the wrong way on a one-way street, and hit a parked car.

Michael Ojeda said his wife flagged down a marked car and the uniformed man got out and screamed, "What the f*** are you doing going down the wrong way?"

"My wife screamed at him, 'Help! My daughter needs CPR.'"

Michael Ojeda said the man "smirked" and responded: "I don't do CPR".

Carmen Ojeda pleaded to be allowed to continue to Long Island College Hospital while the girl was "still breathing", but the man in uniform tried to box her in.

Scott Voloshin, who performed CPR on Briana on the way to the hospital, told WABC-TV he is certain the man was an NYPD officer.

The uniformed man followed Carmen Ojeda to the hospital. After a doctor broke the news that Briana had died, the man ripped up a ticket he had been trying to give Carmen Ojeda, her husband said.



 
DAMN...

i was ok till the Father spoke at the end. Men RARELY show pain like that...smh

GOD BLESS
 
DAMN...

i was ok till the Father spoke at the end. Men RARELY show pain like that...smh

GOD BLESS
 
http://www.nypost.com/p/n...h_KOw4AxBr0gz9HYkN8PMsaJ

[h1]Asthma anguish[/h1]
By AMBER SUTHERLAND, JAMIE SCHRAM and DAN MANGAN

Last Updated: 10:46 AM, September 2, 2010

Posted: 2:34 AM, September 2, 2010

The Brooklyn girl whose life was tragically cut short when a cop allegedly ignored her frantic mom's pleas for help was laid to rest yesterday at a funeral attended by hundreds of mourners -- all dressed in white.

Briana Ojeda, 11, had suffered a severe asthma attack in a Carroll Gardens park Friday and her mom, Carmen, was rushing her by car to Long Island College Hospital.

She turned the wrong way on a one-way street and encountered Officer Alfonso Mendez, who she claimed smirked and told her, "I don't do CPR."

A sea of white filled St. Francis Xavier Church in Park Slope after Briana's older brother, Michael Jr., posted a request on his Facebook page, noting the color white represents the innocence of childhood.

Briana's weeping dad, Michael, addressed his daughter in an emotional tribute as he stood next to her white coffin.

"Your love is still our guide; though we cannot see you, you are always by our side," he said.

"Our family chain is broken now . . . the chain will be again."

After the service, the coffin was carried to a white carriage drawn by two white horses and taken to Evergreen Cemetery, where white doves and balloons were released.

"She was a wonderful little girl," said her teacher, Rebecca Roldan.

"I wish all my students were like her. She was so nice to everyone. She was never mean. She was always smiling."

Mendez has been suspended by the NYPD, but officials said he won't be criminally charged.

Briana's mom claims that instead of helping, Mendez wasted precious time by trying to give her a ticket after she side swiped a parked car and briefly boxed her to keep her from leaving.

But Mendez told investigators that when he pulled up, he saw a good Samaritan performing CPR on Briana, who had on an oxygen mask her mother always carried in the car because of her daughter's condition.

Mendez admitted saying he didn't know CPR, but said he escorted the mother and daughter to the hospital with his emergency lights on and sirens roaring. By the time they arrived, it was too late.

All cops learn CPR at the Police Academy.

Cops said Mendez failed to follow a rule requiring him to report being at the scene of an accident where people asked for help.

Additional reporting by Larry Celona


this story is more up to date
 
http://www.nypost.com/p/n...h_KOw4AxBr0gz9HYkN8PMsaJ

[h1]Asthma anguish[/h1]
By AMBER SUTHERLAND, JAMIE SCHRAM and DAN MANGAN

Last Updated: 10:46 AM, September 2, 2010

Posted: 2:34 AM, September 2, 2010

The Brooklyn girl whose life was tragically cut short when a cop allegedly ignored her frantic mom's pleas for help was laid to rest yesterday at a funeral attended by hundreds of mourners -- all dressed in white.

Briana Ojeda, 11, had suffered a severe asthma attack in a Carroll Gardens park Friday and her mom, Carmen, was rushing her by car to Long Island College Hospital.

She turned the wrong way on a one-way street and encountered Officer Alfonso Mendez, who she claimed smirked and told her, "I don't do CPR."

A sea of white filled St. Francis Xavier Church in Park Slope after Briana's older brother, Michael Jr., posted a request on his Facebook page, noting the color white represents the innocence of childhood.

Briana's weeping dad, Michael, addressed his daughter in an emotional tribute as he stood next to her white coffin.

"Your love is still our guide; though we cannot see you, you are always by our side," he said.

"Our family chain is broken now . . . the chain will be again."

After the service, the coffin was carried to a white carriage drawn by two white horses and taken to Evergreen Cemetery, where white doves and balloons were released.

"She was a wonderful little girl," said her teacher, Rebecca Roldan.

"I wish all my students were like her. She was so nice to everyone. She was never mean. She was always smiling."

Mendez has been suspended by the NYPD, but officials said he won't be criminally charged.

Briana's mom claims that instead of helping, Mendez wasted precious time by trying to give her a ticket after she side swiped a parked car and briefly boxed her to keep her from leaving.

But Mendez told investigators that when he pulled up, he saw a good Samaritan performing CPR on Briana, who had on an oxygen mask her mother always carried in the car because of her daughter's condition.

Mendez admitted saying he didn't know CPR, but said he escorted the mother and daughter to the hospital with his emergency lights on and sirens roaring. By the time they arrived, it was too late.

All cops learn CPR at the Police Academy.

Cops said Mendez failed to follow a rule requiring him to report being at the scene of an accident where people asked for help.

Additional reporting by Larry Celona


this story is more up to date
 
Originally Posted by starzinoureyes

Originally Posted by Diego

He did follow her but he was gone before the whole ordeal was over.
Rather than following her, he couldve put her in his vehicle, turned on the siren, and rushed her to the hospital. He did none of that.

I am interested in hearing his side of the story. I understand why he would stop a person driving the wrong way on a one way street, this video does not mention it but apparently she clipped a parked car and thats why he pulled her over.
As an officer I understand him taking action and stopping her, I just dont understand how he wasnt pro active once he saw the condition of that little girl.
  
whoa whoa WHOA.......

pics?   


I didn't watch the video; today's not a day for crying. RIP Little Briana. ):
well yeah... if i were an officer and someone is going the wrong way on a oneway street, id stop em too.  not like he knew what was going on in that car till after he pulled her over.  
 
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