Some common topics arise when lay persons talk about police
use of force, and most of them are erroneous in fact or interpretation. Here is
a sample.
Clue # 1 They include
the Trayvon Martin case in examples of police shootings. Martin was shot by a
neighborhood watch coordinator in what a jury later accepted as self-defense. The
controversy regarding police was their initial conclusion that it was a case of
self-defense. The shooter, George Zimmerman, was a mixed-race 28 yr old whom
the press managed to call a white male in order to emphasize the potential for
a racially charged story.
Trick question to test the amateur activist: How many times
did the cops shoot Trayvon Martin? If the answer isn’t “zero”, the person doesn’t
know what they are talking about.
Clue # 2 They include
Michael Brown as an example of an innocent black teenager shot without
justification by a white police officer. An additional clue is when they
mistakenly refer to Brown as “Michael Ferguson”, as I heard a commentator on
CourtTV say just today in analysis of the Amber Guyger case.
Brown, always referred to as an “unarmed black teenager”,
was 18 years old, nearly 300 pounds, and was 6’4” tall. Hardly the image of the
headphone wearing Facebook photo pushed in the press. Brown, who had just
walked away from a strong-arm robbery caught on video in which he shoves an
elderly shopkeeper (who was Asian – but Asian victimization hasn’t yet become a
newsworthy trend) in order to steal cigars to modify for marijuana use. When
confronted in a lawful contact by police officer Darren Wilson, Brown
approached Wilson who was still seated in his patrol car when Brown wrestled
to take control of Wilson’s service weapon. Failing that, Brown attempted to flee,
ignoring Wilson’s attempts to take him into custody, and Wilson shot Brown. All forensics verified this account.
Trick questions to test the activist’s knowledge:
1. How
many times was Brown shot in the back? Answer: zero
2. Who
was the first person believed to have started the story that Brown was
surrendering with his hands up saying “Don’t shoot”? Answer: Dorian Johnson,
who was arrested on a warrant from another jurisdiction on an charge of making
a false statement to police during an earlier arrest for theft unrelated to the
Brown incident and who later admitted that his initial statement was untrue.
3. How
many autopsies were there on Brown relative to the shooting case? Answer: 3 –
all of which confirmed the Wilson’s narrative.
4. What
was Wilson convicted of after the shooting? Answer: After a grand jury, federal
investigation, internal investigation, and intense public and media scrutiny,
there was zero evidence of wrongdoing of any sort by Officer Wilson. None.
Clue # 3 They are
still talking about Rodney King.
Trick questions:
1. How
many officers are still around from the Rodney King era? Answer: It was 1991, a
rookie hired that year is likely already retired. Stacey Coons is 68 years old
now. Laurence Powell is 58.
2. In
the Rodney King arrest, there were 56 baton blows alleged. How many of those
blows were ultimately found to be excessive?
Answer: None, according to the first jury trial, and one or two in the
subsequent federal case. (Recent research on reaction time might have negated
that finding.)
Clue # 4 They never
consider the accountability of the alleged victim.
Trick questions:
1. What
is the appropriate response when confronted with a weapon capable of killing
you or others near you or those in the path of that person’s escape? If they
say “talk them out of it”, “shoot them in the leg”, or “use your Taser”, they’ll
need to spend half a year in the police academy and two years on patrol before
they understand differently. They could also read the peer-reviewed research on
the rarity of police use of force, and the multiple findings that fail to show
race bias in police use of deadly force – but that’s just about as likely.
2. What
is the law in every state about complying with an order by a police officer and
submitting to an arrest? Answer: You must. It solves all kinds of problems and
avoids your getting shot.
I applaud activism, sound journalism, and police
accountability. What saddens me is public opinion and activism based on prejudice,
ignorance, and cemented conspiracy theories. What infuriates me is legislation
and policy based on that same ignorance.
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