(Funches, 2015) In Tennessee v. Garner, a Memphis cop whom shot and slaughtered a 15-year-old boy named Edward Garner who unexpectedly imparted a last name with Eric Garner, the man who died in an apparent "strange hold" on Staten Island a year ago. The mutual last name goes to my reference of having no father in the family and that families share criminal foundations. The night he died, Edward Garner had burglarized a house was unarmed and escaping on foot when a police officer shot him in the back of the head. The African American teenager had $10 and a purse he'd stolen from the house on him. While the cop said he "figured" Garner was unarmed, he defended his actions under a Tennessee law that stipulated cops could "use all the necessary means to effect the arrest" of suspects who flee. (Tennessee v. Garner, 1985)
Moreover, the choice was composed clumsily enough to make ready for another choice in 1989 that gave cops genuinely wide conclusions to figure out what sort of constrain was sensible for this situation. (Eichelberger) all things considered, Graham v. Connor, a diabetic named Dethorne Graham was stood up to by cops while having an insulin response. Graham had requested that his companion drive him to a comfort store for squeezed orange, saw a colossal line, and rapidly left the store to get it at another store. A cop expected his odd conduct and ceased the two companions after they got into their