The point is this type of shoot happens frequently. And you have demonstrated that you believe every officer is in the right in every one of these cases. I challenged you to find what this guy did wrong.
Another unrelated video that came out this week.
No, I don't think all officers are always right. In fact, I said I hope the cop in Ferguson was wrong and gets convicted of it. In fact, I spoke about how we don't have enough proven information to make a determination in that case. I lamented the rumor and speculation being reported as fact.
I readily admit that cops make mistakes. I readily admit that some cops are in fact bad persons.
I dispute any unfair assertions that fail to take reality into account, or lump all law enforcement into the same category. I dispute your idea that such things happen "frequently". You may perceive it to be so, but it is not. I submit that the rights of citizens to be free from such unlawful and repugnant behavior are more protected than ever. Training has improved. Equipment has improved. Hiring processes and psychological evaluations have improved. Cops are recorded constantly which promotes integrity. You see videos of such because they are so remarkable. Tragedies such as this happening at all is too much, but your chances being brutalized or killed unlawfully by a cop are so small they make winning the lottery look likely.
Any time someone's life ends violently it is a tragedy. It becomes horrific tragedy if it ends due to a mistake. If it ends due to evil intent it becomes a tragic crime. Your default assumption seems to be evil intent, mine does not.
And of course I identify with law enforcement more than you, who would expect otherwise? Doesn't mean I excuse evil intent or even folks who don't have the temperament for the job.