So take them to court for trying to get their daughter speedy medical care.
Better yet-- how about they get denied any law suit that is clear to stem from this?
They would have sped off? What are you talking about? The cop did not call an ambulance, didn't do CPR and the parents stood there and watched their daughter die. They clearly did not speed off.
You obviously didn't read the original story...
"The mom said she pleaded to be allowed to continue to Long Island College Hospital while the girl was "still breathing," but he tried to box her in.
Good Samaritan Scott Voloshin, who performed CPR on Briana
on the way to the hospital
Whoever stopped Ojeda eventually
followed her to the hospital. "
She initially fled to the hospital, going down the wrong way of a street and hitting a car. Then, after stopped, she fled to the hospital after the officer didn't help. Again, placing the public at great risk.
How can they be blamed for the cop both not called an ambulance AND pretending not to know CPR.
They can be blamed for not waiting for the ambulance.
I bet the DA will have a field day prosecuting him for manslaughter.
Manslaughter means you have a legal duty to do something, didn't, and it caused a death.
As of right now there is no law requiring cops to do anything in that situation, just department policy, which is why the family is pushing for that law.
If it was illegal, he would have been fired, not suspended.