Just checking - do Americans have laws that state citizens need to obey police instructions or else?
Out here in Europe, usually you must have done something wrong first and usually cops don't resort to shooting at unarmed people. Heck, in the UK, cops rarely even shoot at armed people if they judge the person to be "not intending to cause harm" and I've seen so many videos where they let people in cars get away just to avoid deadly scenarios. They don't really have to catch you at that moment they are chasing you - they have enough tools to track you down and catch you another day.
On the bolded bit, cops in the UK tend to run into people having "bad days" or "mental episodes" a lot where the individual is like threatening the cops and all sorts, and at most they usually just tase them.
America is just different I guess. Out there, blink and you get shot.
This is a very complicated question and since I'm not a legal expert, I don't feel comfortable guessing the correct answer.
I can say, though, that from where I am standing in the southeastern United States, the notion that American cops are trigger-happy live wires is grossly overblown. I don't have stats and I'm not in a position to look for any right now, so please take my thoughts with a boulder of salt.
Bodycam footage is so prevalent and easy to obtain in the U.S. that there are entire YouTube channels devoted to nothing but bodycam videos of arrests from all over the country. After spending some time watching a lot of these interactions, I came away with a newfound respect for the U.S. police force. In most cases, I was astounded at how much these cops put up with before using ANY sort of force (most of which is just rough handling as people attempt to resist arrest or flee), and how little they employ tasers or guns, even in the face of absolute atrocious treatment.
This is coming from someone who jumped on the All Cops are Bastards bandwagon in 2020 after the Floyd debacle. Needless to say, my viewpoint has shifted... because I started looking deeper than just, "My political party says X, so I believe X."
When it comes to this ICE shooting, I am of the mind that it was an extremely unfortunate situation that could have been avoided on BOTH counts, but that no one was actively trying to murder anyone in the interaction. I am absolutely amazed at how those with strong political loyalties are watching the same videos and coming away with polar opposite observations.
And, honestly, I kind of think that's the goal, from a 4D STS point of view. I really think that this is an inflection point that is serving as a definitive fork in the road for two diverging realities.