Clean wrote:izybx wrote:Clean wrote:izybx wrote:Clean wrote:GustavBahler wrote:Lebroning, pretty funny. Actually Im glad some kids are doing this instead of the knockout game.
I don't think the Knockout game was as bad as the media made it out to be. The media likes to grab onto one issue and exaggerate it for views. Did it happen? Yes it did, but not to the extent that the media made it seem.
Actually is much worse than reported. Huge issue for law enforcement in nyc
Do we have statistics that show how bad it is?
No, most of these attacks are just classified as misdemeanor assaults, without video they don't get any media attention. There's also no way to classify a knockout attack, a hate crime has it's own penal law section that can be charged, but a knockout game attack has no such designation. Is it some threat to our society? Of course not. It is an issue that is, if anything, under reported.
I have a family member that works in Brooklyn's Central Bookings. So pretty much if you got arrested in Brooklyn you have come into contact with her. She did not notice an abundance of these Knockout game arrests. That is why I was wondering if there were statistics about it. Since there are no statistics that prove or disprove the amount of occurrences it would be hard to say how bad it is or is not.
No offense to your cousin but someone who works in central booking would have limited access to any crime information. Assuming she is a police officer she would only have access to something called an online booking sheet, which pretty much sums up an arrest in a sentence or two. She wouldn't have any access to open complaints in which an arrest hadn't been made. If she isn't a cop then she would have even less access.
But my point is that it isn't over reported. I don't want to hijack a thread splitting hairs, and I guess I did start the hijack.
Beat the Evil Empire. BEAT MIAMI