← Back to context

Comment by kreetx

6 hours ago

Yes, because the woman was following the agent around, whistling.

This is no reason for violently pushing someone to the ground, at least by my Central European standards.

And at no point did Alex attack an agent. See my other comment.

  • If someone were to follow me around while blowing a whistle then that would be quite irritating. What would you do in this situation?

    Alex seemed to put hands on an officer. Whether this was well meaning in his head, it might have not seemed so to the officer. (Keep in mind that he had a constant whistle in his ear!)

    • > What would you do in this situation?

      Follow the protocol. If you lose your nerves because of people blowing a whistle, you're in the wrong job.

      > Alex seemed to put hands on an officer

      Where do you see that? All I see is that he raised his left hand in a protective manner, likely to keep the agent at a distance and protect himself from the pepper spray. After that gesture he turns away from the agent to help the woman on the ground. That's when they grapple him from behind and wrestle him to the ground. At no point did Alex behave in a threatening way or physically attack an agent. The DHS report does not mention any threating behavior either.