DAMNED IF YOU DO, DAMNED IF YOU DON’T

Brave Cop Fired for NOT Killing a Man Who Was Attempting Suicide By Cop

September 12, 2016

Weirton, WV — Weirton police officer Stephen Mader exhibited extreme bravery and restraint earlier this year when he chose not to kill a suicidal man. For displaying such courage and reserve, Mader’s department fired him.

On May 6, 2016, Mader responded to a call about a domestic incident. When he showed up to the call, Mader confronted Ronald D. Williams Jr., 23, who was armed and in a diminished mental state.

Madar said that he began talking to the young man in his “calm voice.”

“I told him, ‘Put down the gun,’ and he’s like, ‘Just shoot me.’ And I told him, ‘I’m not going to shoot you brother.’ Then he starts flicking his wrist to get me to react to it.

“I thought I was going to be able to talk to him and de-escalate it. I knew it was a suicide-by-cop” situation.

Even after the 23-year-old father twitched his wrist and waved around the gun, Mader did not feel threatened enough to kill him. His restraint was nothing short of remarkable.

However, this restraint would be in vain. Just as Mader successfully began to diffuse and de-escalate the situation — backup arrived. The cops who showed up were not like Mader. As soon they got out of the vehicle, one of the cops immediately fired and shot Williams in the back of the head, killing him.

When officers approached Williams body, they found that the gun he was holding was not loaded.

An investigation ensued, and the killing of Williams was eventually ruled justified.

However, according to the Post-Gazette, the case had some peculiar twists along the way. For three days, law enforcement refused to name Williams as the deceased. Also, the investigator assigned to the case left on a week-long vacation the next day, clearly showing they had no intention of doing an actual investigation.

According to the report from the Post-Gazette:

Mr. Mader — speaking publicly about this case for the first time — said that when he tried to return to work on May 17, following normal protocol for taking time off after an officer-involved shooting, he was told to go see Weirton Police Chief Rob Alexander.

In a meeting with the chief and City Manager Travis Blosser, Mr. Mader said Chief Alexander told him: “We’re putting you on administrative leave and we’re going to do an investigation to see if you are going to be an officer here. You put two other officers in danger.”

Mr. Mader said that “right then I said to him: ‘Look, I didn’t shoot him because he said, ‘Just shoot me.’ ”

On June 7, a Weirton officer delivered him a notice of termination letter dated June 6, which said by not shooting Mr. Williams he “failed to eliminate a threat.”

 

Because Mader tried to preserve life instead of end it, the department fired him. What they are essentially saying is kill for us or don’t work here.

Jack Dolance, an attorney for the Williams’ family, explained to the Post that Mr. Mader’s termination “is pretty clear evidence of their policy and that the way they feel [the shooting of Mr. Williams] should have been handled. Not only do they think he should have been shot and killed, but shot and killed more quickly.”

The police are unable to understand that had Mader been in the danger they claim he and his fellow officers were in — he would have been killed long before backup arrive. However, that simply wasn’t the case.

“They did not have the information I did,” he said. “They don’t know anything I heard. All they know is [Mr. Williams] is waving a gun at them. It’s a shame it happened the way it did, but, I don’t think they did anything wrong.”

These facts didn’t stop Chief Alexander from going after Mader, however.

“It was like [Chief Alexander] was a good guy and the next second he’s throwing me under the bus,” he said.

Mader, who thought his job as a cop was the start of something great is now studying to be a truck driver.

To show just how much of a standup guy Mader actually is, he was offered the easy way out and did not take it. Many times, when officers are caught in cases of brutality or misconduct, they are allowed to resign only to go to another department without the red ink in their service records. However, Mader knew he’d done nothing wrong and refused this blue privilege.

“But I told [the attorney] ‘Look, I don’t want to admit guilt. I’ll take the termination instead of the resignation because I didn’t do anything wrong,’ ” Mr. Mader said. “To resign and admit I did something wrong here would have ate at me. I think I’m right in what I did. I’ll take it to the grave.”

Mader’s case illustrates a haunting truth of why good cops are so rare. Being a good cop and showing restraint is not compatible with modern policing and their training requiring them to escalate to deadly force without haste. When the proverbial good cop is found within their ranks — they are removed.

The department will now fill the void left by Mader with someone who will promise to kill for them, and fast.

Matt Agorist is an honorably discharged veteran of the USMC and former intelligence operator directly tasked by the NSA. This prior experience gives him unique insight into the world of government corruption and the American police state. Agorist has been an independent journalist for over a decade and has been featured on mainstream networks around the world. and now on Steemit

Via: FreeThoughtProject


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5 Comments
Francis Marion
Francis Marion
September 14, 2016 9:52 am

Good story IS.

It’s good to know that in spite of the unprecedented level of shitheads roaming our streets in uniform these days that there are in fact some good guys out there. My experience is that the shift towards the police state has come with a change in hiring practice by almost all departments. By placing either thug minded or highly unqualified people in policing positions we have shifted from a Peel type police philosophy to a shoot first ask questions later type philosophy.

I know a lot of cops, mostly older ones. They are frustrated with the change, they are outnumbered by the young unqualified and gung ho types and many of them seem to want out. Given the current atmosphere politically and socially – I can’t say I blame them.

kokoda - Les Deplorables
kokoda - Les Deplorables
  Francis Marion
September 14, 2016 9:57 am

I’ll second that.

Hope@ZeroKelvin - Proud Deplorable
Hope@ZeroKelvin - Proud Deplorable
September 14, 2016 10:44 am

I know alot of police officers (ex husband a lawyer turned police office, don’t ask) and I am telling you – there is a growing feeling among law enforcement of letting all the thugs/gangs/etc just fight it out and only intervene when the bodies need to be taken away.

They frankly are giving less and less of a shit about the bad criminals unless said criminals spill into the taxpaying parts of town. Much easier (and profitable) to do traffic enforcement, etc.

Of course, this ends up creating entire “no-go” zones in some parts of the cities, but hey, why would cops risk their lives for people that frankly hate them and don’t support them?

Ticky Toc
Ticky Toc
September 14, 2016 12:14 pm

“They frankly are giving less and less of a shit about the bad criminals unless said criminals spill into the taxpaying parts of town. Much easier (and profitable) to do traffic enforcement, etc.

Of course, this ends up creating entire “no-go” zones in some parts of the cities, but hey, why would cops risk their lives for people that frankly hate them and don’t support them?”

So because I have a job and pay taxes I’m seen as “profitable”, that pretty much sums it up right there.

Tell you what, let me be and tell your ex lawyer thug cop whatever he is that regular working tax paying “profitable” people like me are really beginning to not support them either.

Lysander The Deplorable
Lysander The Deplorable
September 14, 2016 3:34 pm

Obviously, that ‘good cop’ and soon to be truck driver, didn’t understand the rules of the game when he left the academy and entered the Force. The rules are you do what every other cop does and keep your mouth shut.

If he killed that guy, he would’ve had his 6 week paid vacation and possibly be awarded a decoration for courage in the face of an armed criminal.

He could’ve been at the cop bar every night laughing and high fiving his buddies while slopping down booze and snorting lines of coke off of some whore’s big tits.

You know…..normal cop off duty behavior.

But noooo. He had to rock the boat and will now pay the price. He could’ve had a real nice life getting free coffee, meals, kick back drug money, treating the helpless mundanes any way he felt like, while enjoying a real nice salary and a killer pension with medical benefits for life.

Pity he had a shred of decency in him. It shows that he would’ve never fit in in the long run. In that world he stood out like a sore thumb.