The death of the 12 year old boy was tragic. But looking at it from the police point of view . . . they arrived on the scene and encountered a person waving a very realistic looking gun around, who was pointing it at people, and was still waiving it around when the they arrived. They made a split second decision that the person (they didn't know it was a child) was a direct and immediate threat, and they handled it.
I have a 12 year old son, and he has an airsoft gun, much like the one that Tamir Rice had. When we got the item for him last summer, it came with very strict rules:
1) It does not leave our property. It doesn't go to school, it doesn't go to a friend's house, etc. If it leaves our property, he loses it for good. No second chances.
2) It does not get pointed at anybody else. Period. If it gets pointed at another person, he loses it for good. No second chances.
3) It is only used outside, in the yard. If it is used inside the house, even once, he loses it for good. No second chances.
4) His friends cannot use it. If they do, even if they find it and use it without his knowledge or consent, he loses it for good. No second chances.
5) If his brother wants to use it, we (mom and/or I) need to be told before hand, and rules 1-4 apply to him as well.
6) When not being used, it is put away in a drawer in his bedroom. If it is left out anywhere else in the house when not in use, he loses it for good. No second chances.
If Tamir Rice's parents had similar rules established for him, and if he had followed them, he would still be alive today.
12/16/2014 12:18 PM (edited)