Thursday, September 22, 2016

Guess which one the black community is rallying behind?

Keith Lamont Scott (suspect)



1992 - Aggravated assault
1992 - Assault on a child under 12
1992 - Assault & threats
1995 - Assault with intent to kill
2004 - Assault with deadly weapon
2005 - Evading arrest - (Served 7 years)
2015 - Driving while intoxicated





Brently Vinson (police officer) 

Review of court records show no
infractions ever against Vinson
Former Ardrey Kell High coach Adam Hastings, now the head coach at Providence Day, said Vinson was an all-conference football player as a junior in 2007. Vinson, who played safety and wide receiver, missed his senior year after tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee
Vinson decided to play a prep season at Fork Union (Va.) Military Academy, where he earned a scholarship to Liberty University. At Liberty, Vinson became a team captain at defensive back and had a team-high 69 tackles as a senior in the 2012 season. He also studied criminal justice there.
Hastings said when Vinson came back to town after school he would often ask him to come and speak to his players. Once, Vinson mentored another Ardrey Kell player who had suffered a similar knee injury.
“We need more Brent Vinsons, that type of person, in our communities,” Hastings said. “I don’t know anything that happened (with Tuesday’s shootings). … He’s a natural leader and one of those guys who always had the best interest of others before himself.”

2 comments:

Loretta said...

NOT Officer Vinson.

KD, I stand with those that make the thin blue line said...

Officer Vinson did he job, we do not pay our Law Enforcement Officers to lose.

I once read this book "No Second Place Winners" by Bill Jordon a salty US Border Patrol Officer on the Mexico Border

"OVER THE past thirty years I have been privileged to know and work with
a group of men unique in the annals of law enforcement — the Peace Officers of
our great Southwest. The word "group" is descriptive, for although they were
of no one service they formed a close knit brotherhood, representative of all
branches of government: state troopers and Texas Rangers, city police and
village constables, sheriffs and their deputies, alcohol tax investigators, agents
of the FBI and of the Treasury Department, and inspectors of the U. S. Border
Patrol. Here the dissimilarity ended. They were cast from the same mold. To
them, my companeros of many years and many trails, this book is dedicated.
It is written of the weapons and leather of which their lives were compounded
and of the gun skills they learned in the smoke of little fights, important only to
those involved. The highest praise that could be spoken by one of this group
was to say, "He'll do to ride the river with." Thus I salute them, one and all. "

It is a book about how men and woman in Law Enforcement must win ever gun battle, for their are no 2nd place winners.

The leftist here are so out of touch with reality, with the hate for the men in woman that are the thin blue line, they can never understand what I know , we in law enforcement love what we do, love how we serve and at the end of the day have families to go home to who love us.