The smear campaign has already begun for the victim. And white people are desperately going for the "being drunk and wandering the streets" story. Do white people really want to get on the topic of drunk people who are a threat to others?
And I'm still skeptical of the details of the situation especially about her hitting a parked car.
After watching this video, considering the time stamp of events:
-A car accident happens.
-12:57 AM First 911 call.
Nothing out of the ordinary, car accidents usually lead to 911 calls.
-1:23 AM 2nd 911 call stating Renisha was back at the scene.
Here's where it gets fishy for me, if it was some home owner making a call about a parked car being hit, most likely they'd know who's it was. Wouldn't they go to their house and tell them about their car? So now you'd have more than one person by the car by the time she'd be back. If it's a white neighborhood you know they wouldn't let some small Black girl just run away after hitting their car.
Another thing to consider, where's the police or a first responder? It's been nearly
30 minutes since an accident has been reported. Not too long ago I called 911 about a car accident on the freeway in rush hour almost immediately after it happened (talking within a minute or so). I go to check a traffic app on my phone and sure enough the call has been reported, description of vehicles involved and everything. This took under 10 minutes total, during rush hour, in Los Angeles, on the busiest freeway in the state (405 Freeway) and had it posted right away. Half an hour and no one is there yet
?
-1:37 AM Police car takes the run.
So dispatch just now calls the police?? Literally 40 minutes later??
-1:40 AM Cruiser arrives at scene.
Normal in a
neighborhood ~3 minutes after dispatch call to patrol car.
-1:52 AM EMS Arrives, no injuries.
So literally an hour after the initial 911 call about a car accident, ems finally gets there? How much traffic can there be at 1:00AM in the morning in a suburban neighborhood? Someone called 911 a 2nd time saying they saw whoever got into a car accident by the scene, and it still takes 30 minutes for an ambulance to get there? What if they're seriously hurt?
shyt sounds like a cover-up. That or somebody should be held accountable for such poor efficiency regarding the handling of distress calls. Maybe the police chief or mayor of the city would like to answer why it takes so long for first responders to arrive at the scene of an accident at 1:00 AM in the morning. Their choice.