Not all cops are heroes. Officer Tally ended his career in the purest act of public service. With his last breath, he served and protected. May he Rest In Peace, and honor.
Not sure about footage but it is entirely possible that the audio is either fault of youtube's policy on violence (An example of another youtube source which masks gunshot is donut operator, he uses the iconic duck sound to mask the gunshots). Or Radio microphone noise cancellation, although I doubt the noise cancellation is the issue because the raw audio sounded like analog radio traffic (analog radios usually don't have the best noise cancellation).
To everyone watching this get a gun, learn how to use it, learn how to hide it, carry everywhere regardless of pieces of paper on doors that say not to.
@@alisafrey6459 not true at all. I’m assuming with a strong statement like that you have some fact to show. Civilians end threats all the time. The only difference a rifle has is more stability and round count. Also the shock from a rifle round is different than a pistol but in no way is that one rifle more effective that multiple concealed carriers with proper training and a will power to live.
@@darthmaul9911 I know about 50 people who would be more dangerous armed with a handgun in an active shooter situation. It's just a nonsense line of thinking. Who really stands to gain from everyone being armed with handguns? The NRA? Gun manufacturers? The cop was killed in the boulder shooting, he was armed.
Very useful to have the edited police radio traffic with transcription and times. Curious, though, that in raw audio I heard, dispatcher(s) conspicuously failed to timestamp even some transmissions.
Oftentimes the dispatcher is trained to minimize responses when the situation becomes more tactical or when officers ask to "hold the air" or "hold traffic". The dispatcher is still documenting officer transmissions within their call notes, and the radio traffic is still recorded.
So it took the mass of cops outside 45 minutes to get to the cop that was shot just 30 yards inside the store?? They call the officer shot at 2:38 then say they need to get to him 30 yards into the store at 3:05 then finally begin to go get him at 3:19. Shocking to be honest...
Timing has always surprised me too but I do watch a lot of cops.. always a method to the madness with entering a situation like this. Circumstancesare always better when their are more entrances and exits... They probably had to wait to enter together at multiple entrances. Strategically...which isn't east for them knowing he and several others were down. I couldn't imagine being them in those moments. So sad for real..
@@MrsBax I thought the "form a perimeter and wait" was out the window in active shooter situations. It is obvious why every person shot died with such a delay in getting anyone medical attention.
They didn't know where the shooter was. Do you think this is a movie, where the good guy just struts in blazing and wins the day? Some of you people are real jerks.
@@reggiedunlop5167 No, I think it is real life where 100 cops are too scared to put their lives on the line to rescue another cop and 9 citizens. If it were my brother lying on the floor DYING I wouldn't have waited 45 minutes.
As someone who personally knows the officer killed, and whose sons went to his visitation, funeral, and memorial service, I can say that he was indeed killed. You people who claim it was fake invalidate the families' pain and grief. Disgusting, really. Get a life.