Look Chad, I've been using hyperbole, humor and satire to try to get you to look at the absurdity of what you're asking. I'll lay this out as best I can:
A lot of those comments are from intelligent, caring people. People who want the world to be a better place. I do too. I bet those cops do too. They're also viewing that video, probably over and over to get all the detail they pointed out, in the perfect 20/20 of hindsight. Those cops didn't get that. They had a split second, under extreme stress you cannot understand, to make a life or death decison. Yes, they chose their own life. You can what if a situation all day. What if they had held back? Maybe the deceased grabs a nearby gawker and takes himself a hostage? Backs that hostage into a nearby business and gets to stabbin? Then who's fault is it?
The post about what British police might and might not do does not apply. The British police were not there, thus we don't know what they would do. If anyone feel so strongly that their justice system is superior I invite them to go.
And yes. As I understand it you are extremely liable for whatever happens the moment after you taser someone. Yes, as I understand it, in the specific instance I was thinking of the cops got sued and lost. No, I don't agree but no one cares.
Yes I wish I had a phaser I could set to stun. (And yeah, I probably would abuse the shoot out of that) but a taser is not a magic gun. They're unreliable, they're flawed and they save the shoot out of lives applied correctly.
Is mental health a problem in America? Yes. The way Alabama handles it, by the way, is horrifying and causes deaths all the time. Deputies pick up the people, take them to be evaluated. After evaluation they are transported to a facility for a month while the workers there get the mentally ill person's medication adjusted. Then they release them. Then the cycle repeats a month later when they go off the meds. I wish it were better.
The problem with all these wishes and what ifs is they aren't reality. In reality nothing goes totally right the first time at full speed. shoot, watch a football game to understand that. Guys spend entire YEARS designing and practicing plays that work in SPECIFIC SITUATIONS and more often than not they don't work as designed. Your comment about 100% right was perfect because no one is 100% right in the real world. No one thinks fast enough to cover all the what ifs. The percentages go down, markedly, as stress goes up. Law is a high stakes game, and its a game that your only hope is to be good enough.Those men..those heroes, the choices they made.. It was good enough Chad. Good enough that no one but the armed maniac got hurt. Good enough that they made it home. Good enough that there's not been rioting in the streets. And on those streets there's nothing much better than good enough.
The truth is, nobody that isn't mentally ill wants to kill anyone. The truth is, to get in a situation where you are paid not much more than minimum wage to risk your life you have to run through a gamut of background checks and psychological tests designed by experts to pick out just the kind of racist, or sociopathic killers these people seem to be insisting the average cop is. The truth is being a cop is just full of hard choices. And hard choices leave ugly results.