No Charges For Cops Who Killed Black Retired Army Major..

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There is no bad sit­u­a­tion in the United States that moron­ic police can­not make worse. I have repeat­ed­ly asked,’ why do black Americans con­tin­ue to call police for help?’
It can­not be that they are unaware of the hun­dreds of years of vio­lence police have per­pe­trat­ed on them. It can­not be that they believe police are there to pro­tect them. It can­not be that they believe any­thing good will come from call­ing police to their homes.
Well, maybe they aren’t fol­low­ing events; many blacks have cocooned them­selves into a shell of make-believe. Hundreds of years of police oppres­sion have caused many to insu­late them­selves from real­i­ty, choos­ing an exis­tence of enter­tain­ment instead.
American police have zero com­pas­sion; it is not taught to them. they see them­selves as ham­mers, and there­fore, every­one becomes nails. They are not taught respect and empa­thy; they are giv­en a crash course in dom­i­nat­ing, con­trol­ling, and killing.
Why would any black per­son call a cop to their home? American police get excit­ed about killing peo­ple. They cre­ate pre­texts to jus­ti­fy killing unarmed blacks, so imag­ine a black man with a gun in his hand.
Murdering black peo­ple gets them paid vaca­tion, pro­mo­tions, and pats on the back. And oh, by the way, did you think a white jury, judge, or attor­ney gen­er­al would find any­thing wrong with them killing your loved one?
I do not get it!!! (mb)

A state grand jury on Monday declined to file crim­i­nal charges against two police offi­cers who shot and killed a Newton man after the retired U.S. Army major point­ed a hand­gun at them, the Attorney General’s Office announced Thursday.

The offi­cers,Steven Kneidl and Garrett Armstrong, were on duty with the Newton Police Department around 9:40 p.m. on July 4, 2021 when they shot Gulia Dale III, 61, out­side his Clive Place home. Dale had alleged­ly opened the rear dri­ver’s side door, leaned inside and closed the door before return­ing to the dri­ver’s seat as offi­cers urged him to get out of the truck and on the ground.

Dale, whose actions were cap­tured on body cam­era footage released by the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office, got out of his vehi­cle and point­ed a hand­gun at offi­cers, prompt­ing the offi­cers to fire their weapons, accord­ing to a state­ment by Attorney General Matthew Platkin. A .45-cal­iber hand­gun was found near Dale, police said.

A vigil is held in Newton, NJ on Saturday August 21, 2021 for Gulia Dale III, a U.S. Army veteran who suffered with PTSD and was killed by police outside his Newton home on July 4 of 2021. Dale's widow Karen Dale (right) is comforted by Dale's sister Valerie Cobbertt (center) and daughter Tori Dale.

A vig­il is held in Newton, NJ on Saturday August 21, 2021 for Gulia Dale III, a U.S. Army vet­er­an who suf­fered with PTSD and was killed by police out­side his Newton home on July 4 of 2021. Dale’s wid­ow Karen Dale (right) is com­fort­ed by Dale’s sis­ter Valerie Cobbertt (cen­ter) and daugh­ter Tori Dale.

Dale’s death was inves­ti­gat­ed by the state Attorney General’s Office of Public Integrity and Accountability, an arm of the state Attorney General’s Office that is tasked with pre­sent­ing the case to a grand jury. Jurors were pre­sent­ed with evi­dence gath­ered by inves­ti­ga­tors, includ­ing wit­ness inter­views, foren­sics, videos and autop­sy results, the office stated.

Police were called to the home after Dale’s wife, Karen, called 911 to report she feared her hus­band was sui­ci­dal and need­ed help, she told the New Jersey Herald weeks after the shoot­ing. Karen Dale said she was not sure what had tran­spired that led to her hus­band’s behav­ior, but fam­i­ly believed hol­i­day fire­works may have trig­gered the U.S. Army vet­er­an’s post-trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der. Dale, who was slat­ed to retire as an equal oppor­tu­ni­ty spe­cial­ist for the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Pentagon two months after the shoot­ing, had served three tours in Iraq and was deployed on 911, his fam­i­ly said.

The inci­dent angered the dis­tressed fam­i­ly, who believed the sit­u­a­tion could have been de-esca­lat­ed had the offi­cers known how to prop­er­ly engage with some­one diag­nosed with a men­tal health dis­or­der, or had called men­tal health experts to respond.

Valerie Cobbertt, Gulia Dale’s sis­ter, voiced the same con­cern in response to the grand jury’s deci­sion this week, telling the New Jersey Herald that the offi­cers “esca­lat­ed the sit­u­a­tion” and failed to fol­low the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General’s 2020 – 14 direc­tive, which cre­at­ed a statewide frame­work to address men­tal health and spe­cial needs pop­u­la­tions in New Jersey.

Gulia Dale III, of Newton, was a retired U.S. Army major who served three tours in Iraq. On July 4, he was fatally shot by police officers responding to a call to his Clive Place home in Newton.

Gulia Dale III, of Newton, was a retired U.S. Army major who served three tours in Iraq. On July 4, he was fatal­ly shot by police offi­cers respond­ing to a call to his Clive Place home in Newton.

Cobbertt said it was “dis­ap­point­ing” to hear jurors decline to charge the “unsea­soned” offi­cers — Armstrong was hired in fall 2020 and Kneidl in 2019 — since that has been the case “for most Black and Brown fam­i­lies in past years.”

The fam­i­ly would like the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey to do a thor­ough civ­il rights inves­ti­ga­tion into the case of my broth­er,” she said.

Dale was giv­en med­ical aid until first respon­ders arrived and he was pro­nounced dead around 9:46 p.m., author­i­ties said.