Very thoughtful piece. 

http://www.vox.com/2015/5/28/8661977/race-police-officer

I'm a black ex-cop, and this is the real truth about race and policing

On any given day, in any police department in the nation, 15 percent of 
officers will do the right thing no matter what is happening. Fifteen percent 
of officers will abuse their authority at every opportunity. The remaining 70 
percent could go either way depending on whom they are working with.

That's a theory from my friend K.L. Williams, who has trained thousands of 
officers around the country in use of force. Based on what I experienced as a 
black man serving in the St. Louis Police Department for five years, I agree 
with him. I worked with men and women who became cops for all the right reasons 
— they really wanted to help make their communities better. And I worked with 
people like the president of my police academy class, who sent out an email 
after President Obama won the 2008 election that included the statement, "I 
can't believe I live in a country full of ni**er lovers!!!!!!!!" He patrolled 
the streets in St. Louis in a number of black communities with the authority to 
act under the color of law.

That remaining 70 percent of officers are highly susceptible to the culture in 
a given department. In the absence of any real effort to challenge department 
cultures, they become part of the problem. If their command ranks are racist or 
allow institutional racism to persist, or if a number of officers in their 
department are racist, they may end up doing terrible things.

It is not only white officers who abuse their authority. The effect of 
institutional racism is such that no matter what color the officer abusing the 
citizen is, in the vast majority of those cases of abuse that citizen will be 
black or brown. That is what is allowed.

And no matter what an officer has done to a black person, that officer can 
always cover himself in the running narrative of heroism, risk, and sacrifice 
that is available to a uniformed police officer by virtue of simply reporting 
for duty. Cleveland police officer Michael Brelo was acquitted of all charges 
against him in the shooting deaths of Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams, 
both black and unarmed. Thirteen Cleveland police officers fired 137 shots at 
them. Brelo, having reloaded at some point during the shooting, fired 49 of the 
137 shots. He took his final 15 shots at them after all the other officers 
stopped firing (122 shots at that point) and, "fearing for his life," he jumped 
onto the hood of the car and shot 15 times through the windshield.

About that 15 percent of officers who regularly abuse their power: they exert 
an outsize influence
Not only was this excessive, it was tactically asinine if Brelo believed they 
were armed and firing. But they weren't armed, and they weren't firing. Judge 
John O'Donnell acquitted Brelo under the rationale that because he couldn't 
determine which shots actually killed Russell and Williams, no one is guilty. 
Let's be clear: this is part of what the Department of Justice means when it 
describes a "pattern of unconstitutional policing and excessive force."

Nevertheless, many Americans believe that police officers are generally good, 
noble heroes. A Gallup poll from 2014 asked Americans to rate the honesty and 
ethical standards of people in various fields: police officers ranked in the 
top five, just above members of the clergy. The profession — the endeavor — is 
noble. But this myth about the general goodness of cops obscures the truth of 
what needs to be done to fix the system. It makes it look like all we need to 
do is hire good people, rather than fix the entire system. Institutional racism 
runs throughout our criminal justice system. Its presence in police culture, 
though often flatly denied by the many police apologists that appear in the 
media now, has been central to the breakdown in police-community relationships 
for decades in spite of good people doing police work.

Here's what I wish Americans understood about the men and women who serve in 
their police departments — and what needs to be done to make the system better 
for everyone.

1) There are officers who willfully violate the human rights of the people in 
the communities they serve

As a new officer with the St. Louis in the mid-1990s, I responded to a call for 
an "officer in need of aid." I was partnered that day with a white female 
officer. When we got to the scene, it turned out that the officer was fine, and 
the aid call was canceled. He'd been in a foot pursuit chasing a suspect in an 
armed robbery and lost him.

The officer I was with asked him if he'd seen where the suspect went. The 
officer picked a house on the block we were on, and we went to it and knocked 
on the door. A young man about 18 years old answered the door, partially 
opening it and peering out at my partner and me. He was standing on crutches. 
My partner accused him of harboring a suspect. He denied it. He said that this 
was his family's home and he was home alone.

My partner then forced the door the rest of the way open, grabbed him by his 
throat, and snatched him out of the house onto the front porch. She took him to 
the ledge of the porch and, still holding him by the throat, punched him hard 
in the face and then in the groin. My partner that day snatched an 18-year-old 
kid off crutches and assaulted him, simply for stating the fact that he was 
home alone.

I got the officer off of him. But because an aid call had gone out, several 
other officers had arrived on the scene. One of those officers, who was black, 
ascended the stairs and asked what was going on. My partner pointed to the 
young man, still lying on the porch, and said, "That son of a bitch just 
assaulted me." The black officer then went up to the young man and told him to 
"get the fuck up, I'm taking you in for assaulting an officer." The young man 
looked up at the officer and said, "Man ... you see I can't go." His crutches 
lay not far from him.

The officer picked him up, cuffed him, and slammed him into the house, where he 
was able to prop himself up by leaning against it. The officer then told him 
again to get moving to the police car on the street because he was under 
arrest. The young man told him one last time, in a pleading tone that was 
somehow angry at the same time, "You see I can't go!" The officer reached down 
and grabbed both the young man's ankles and yanked up. This caused the young 
man to strike his head on the porch. The officer then dragged him to the police 
car. We then searched the house. No one was in it.

These kinds of scenes play themselves out everyday all over our country in 
black and brown communities. Beyond the many unarmed blacks killed by police, 
including recently Freddie Gray in Baltimore, other police abuses that don't 
result in death foment resentment, distrust, and malice toward police in black 
and brown communities all over the country. Long before Darren Wilson shot and 
killed unarmed Michael Brown last August, there was a poisonous relationship 
between the Ferguson, Missouri, department and the community it claimed to 
serve. For example, in 2009 Henry Davis was stopped unlawfully in Ferguson, 
taken to the police station, and brutally beaten while in handcuffs. He was 
then charged for bleeding on the officers' uniforms after they beat him.

2) The bad officers corrupt the departments they work for

About that 15 percent of officers who regularly abuse their power: a major 
problem is they exert an outsize influence on department culture and find 
support for their actions from ranking officers and police unions. Chicago is a 
prime example of this: the city has created a reparations fund for the hundreds 
of victims who were tortured by former Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge and 
officers under his command from the 1970s to the early ‘90s.

The victims were electrically shocked, suffocated, and beaten into false 
confessions that resulted in many of them being convicted and serving time for 
crimes they didn't commit.  One man, Darrell Cannon, spent 24 years in prison 
for a crime he confessed to but didn't commit. He confessed when officers 
repeatedly appeared to load a shotgun and after doing so each time put it in 
his mouth and pulled the trigger. Other men received electric shocks until they 
confessed.

The torture was systematic, and the culture that allowed for it is systemic. I 
call your attention to the words "and officers under his command." Police 
departments are generally a functioning closed community where people know who 
is doing what. How many officers  "under the command" of Commander Burge do you 
think didn't know what was being done to these men? How many do you think were 
uncomfortable with the knowledge? Ultimately, though, they were okay with it. 
And Burge got four years in prison, and now receives his full taxpayer-funded 
pension.

3) The mainstream media helps sustain the narrative of heroism that even 
corrupt officers take refuge in

This is critical to understanding why police-community relations in black and 
brown communities across the country are as bad as they are. In this interview 
with Fox News, former New York City Police Commissioner Howard Safir never 
acknowledges the lived experience of thousands and thousands of blacks in New 
York, Baltimore, Ferguson, or anywhere in the country. In fact, he seems to be 
completely unaware of it. This allows him to leave viewers with the impression 
that the recent protests against police brutality are baseless, and that 
allegations of racism are "totally wrong — just not true." The reality of 
police abuse is not limited to a number of "very small incidents" that have 
impacted black people nationwide, but generations of experienced and witnessed 
abuse.

The media is complicit in this myth-making: notice that the interviewer does 
not challenge Safir. She doesn't point out, for example, the over $1 billion in 
settlements the NYPD has paid out over the last decade and a half for the 
misconduct of its officers. She doesn't reference the numerous accounts of 
actual black or Hispanic NYPD officers who have been profiled and even 
assaulted without cause when they were out of uniform by white NYPD officers.

No matter what an officer has done to a black person, that officer can always 
cover himself in the running narrative of heroism
Instead she leads him with her questions to reference the heroism, 
selflessness, risk, and sacrifice that are a part of the endeavor that is law 
enforcement, but very clearly not always characteristic of police work in black 
and brown communities. The staging for this interview — US flag waving, 
somber-faced officers — is wash, rinse, and repeat with our national media.

When you take a job as a police officer, you do so voluntarily. You understand 
the risks associated with the work. But because you signed on to do a dangerous 
job does not mean you are then allowed to violate the human rights, civil 
rights, and civil liberties of the people you serve. It's the opposite. You 
should protect those rights, and when you don't you should be held accountable. 
That simple statement will be received by police apologists as "anti-cop."  It 
is not.


4) Cameras provide the most objective record of police-citizen encounters 
available

When Walter Scott was killed by officer Michael Slager in South Carolina last 
year, the initial police report put Scott in the wrong. It stated that Scott 
had gone for Slager's Taser, and Slager was in fear for his life. If not for 
the video recording that later surfaced, the report would have likely been 
taken by many at face value. Instead we see that Slager shot Scott repeatedly 
and planted the Taser next to his body after the fact.

Every officer in the country should be wearing a body camera that remains 
activated throughout any interaction they have with the public while on duty. 
There is no reasonable expectation of privacy for officers when they are on 
duty and in service to the public. Citizens must also have the right to record 
police officers as they carry out their public service, provided that they are 
at a safe distance, based on the circumstances, and not interfering. Witnessing 
an interaction does not by itself constitute interference.

5) There are officers around the country who want to address institutional 
racism

The National Coalition of Law Enforcement Officers for Justice, Reform and 
Accountability is a new coalition of current and former law enforcement 
officers from around the nation. Its mission is to fight institutional racism 
in our criminal justice system and police culture, and to push for 
accountability for police officers that abuse their power.

Many of its members are already well-established advocates for criminal justice 
reform in their communities. It's people like former Sergeant De Lacy Davis of 
New Jersey, who has worked to change police culture for years. It's people like 
former LAPD Captain John Mutz, who is white, and who is committed to working to 
build a system where everyone is equally valued. His colleagues from the LAPD 
—former Sergeant Cheryl Dorsey, now a frequent CNN contributor (providing some 
much-needed perspective), and former officer Alex Salazar, who worked LAPD's 
Rampart unit — are a part of this effort. Several  NYPD  officers, many of whom 
are founding members of 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care, the gold 
standard for black municipal police organizations, are a part of this group. 
Vernon Wells, Noel Leader, Julian Harper, and Cliff Hollingsworth, to name a 
few, are serious men with a serious record of standing up for their communities 
against police abuse. There's also Rochelle Bilal, a former sergeant out of 
Philadelphia, Sam Costales out of New Mexico, former Federal Marshal Matthew 
Fogg, and many others.

These men and women are ready to reach out to the thousands of officers around 
the country who have been looking for a national law enforcement organization 
that works to remake police culture. The first priority is accountability — 
punishment — for officers who willfully abuse the rights and bodies of those 
they are sworn to serve. Training means absolutely nothing if officers don't 
adhere to it and are not held accountable when they don't. It is key to any 
meaningful reform.

Police abuse in black and brown communities is generations old. It is nothing 
new.
Racism is woven into the fabric of our nation.  At no time in our history has 
there been a national consensus that everyone should be equally valued in all 
areas of life. We are rooted in racism in spite of the better efforts of 
Americans of all races to change that.

Because of this legacy of racism, police abuse in black and brown communities 
is generations old. It is nothing new. It has become more visible to mainstream 
America largely because of the proliferation of personal recording devices, 
cellphone cameras, video recorders — they're everywhere. We need police 
officers.  We also need them to be held accountable to the communities they 
serve.



Sent from my iPhone

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