More than that hopefully. And it should come out of the pension fund.I doubt it.
I wonder what the innocent citizens shot up by over zealous jackboots lacking self control will get.
More than that hopefully. And it should come out of the pension fund.
Doubt they'll ever see a penny. The rewards came with the usual caveats. "Info leading to a conviction". Dead body, no conviction. "Info leading to capture". Dead body, no capture. The cops had their orders.
Dorner Reward Loophole: Chris Dorner $1 Million Reward -- Big Loophole | TMZ.com
More than that hopefully. And it should come out of the pension fund.
It most definitely should come out of the pension fund.
So the citizens are the police officers' boss until the citizens' employee screws up. At that point you advocate taking the money from the citizens' other employees to pay for the mistake. If your co-worker messes up, does your boss take it out of your pension?
I don't have a dog in this fight, but I'm interested in the logic. What does it have to do with the other several thousand officers tied into that pension fund who didn't do anything wrong? To me, this screams of "do that to them, but not to me."
Doubt they'll ever see a penny. The rewards came with the usual caveats. "Info leading to a conviction". Dead body, no conviction. "Info leading to capture". Dead body, no capture. The cops had their orders.
Dorner Reward Loophole: Chris Dorner $1 Million Reward -- Big Loophole | TMZ.com
In my mind it is a way to make the police, police themselves to a degree. Kind of like in some boot camps, one person fails, everyone pays the price for that failure. I know it is not feasible and would punish to many of the innocent, but maybe those innocent would speak up and demand more of their coworkers
Very good point and the problem with that scenario as well.I can understand that. But say you work for a company of 10,000 employees. If a couple guys do something really stupid, do you feel that you should be financially on the hook for it? How would you speak up and demand more of your 10,000 coworkers? You've likely never met the couple guys who made the really stupid mistake.
I can understand that. But say you work for a company of 10,000 employees. If a couple guys do something really stupid, do you feel that you should be financially on the hook for it? How would you speak up and demand more of your 10,000 coworkers? You've likely never met the couple guys who made the really stupid mistake.