I honestly don't see how repetitions of what is required of police in high stress situations adds anything other than paltry excuses to a discussion about what happened to George Floyd.
I think I was going more for why the rookie would be unwilling/unable to correct a senior officer - not if what happened was acceptable. There is no universe where it's an acceptable thing to happen.
Honestly I'm guessing he just froze. Happens to the new kids all the time. People think they get much, much more training than they really do. Usually they get the basics in the academy but they learn the skills on-the-job with a senior officer. So when things start to go south they are kind of deer in the headlights. That's the moment some of them realize this isn't the job for them. Happens in dispatch too -- they get that first really bad call and just freeze. All the scenarios in the world can't prepare you for the real thing and I've had my share of them quit on the spot at their first dead baby call, or CPR on grandpa at thanksgiving dinner, or shot and bleeding out on the phone, blah blah blah. Some people just aren't cut out for the job - but they don't know that till they are tested. That's what the sr person is supposed to be doing -- making sure nothing goes wrong if the newbee freezes.
That's going to be one bad thing about this defunding campaign. The first thing they will cut is formal training because it's considered expendable - since you can learn on the job. So it will end with cops with even less training.
But it can be beneficial too:
Many states no longer allow officers to respond to people who are suicidal unless they are endangering
someone else because it's not illegal to be suicidal and it was ending with suicide by cop way too often. Instead, now the caller is referred to the crisis line, who will do an intake and then decide if they will send a team out to see the suicidal person. The crisis team is funded by part of the police budget.
Ok. -- makes sense. And it's really effective, because it's trained mental health providers dealing with it, plus it frees officers up to go to other calls. Overall people are all sorts of happy with it.
Unless you are this person:
Her -- My brother is holding a gun to his head
Me -- where are you?
Her -- I'm outside the house
Me - is anyone inside with him?
Her - no
Me - Ok, stay outside and I'll transfer you to crisis
Her - WHAT?!!! He has a gun to his head!!!!
Me - yep. Gotta send you to crisis because officers no longer respond unless the person is a threat to someone else. Crisis will do an intake with you about his mental health history and then decide if they will send a team out.
her - How long with that take?
Me -- well once they talk to you and decide to send a team it will take about 30 minutes for them to get there
her : YOU f*ckING BITCH WHAT PART OF HE'S HOLDING A GUN TO HIS f*ckING HEAD DID YOU NOT HEAR!!!!! SEND ME A GODDAMN COP!!!!
me - Sorry - cops aren't allowed to do that anymore. So I'm transferring you to crisis.......
I had that conversation a lot - because there are a lot of armed suicidal people out there in merica.
Funny how people's opinions will change once they understand how it's really going to work.