|

Shot by cops? Not if you’re
white
By Tim Wise
After my recent article excoriating the Cincinnati
police for their well-documented brutality against black residents
(including the shooting of an unarmed young man wanted for seat
belt violations), I received many an angry email from folks
proclaiming that I just didn’t know how difficult it was to
be a police officer.
As such, they insisted I shouldn’t be so quick
to judge cops who shoot criminal suspects. After all, hesitation
in the face of danger could cost an officer his or her life,
not to mention the lives of innocent bystanders.
When a criminal brandishes a weapon (or even when
he doesn’t but is thought to have one), the police have little
choice but to shoot, said my detractors — no exceptions.
Yeah, well, tell that to the Nashville police
department. Apparently it is quite possible to hold fire and
defuse a dangerous situation when one feels like it.
It is quite possible not to shoot a suspect, even
when he most definitely has a gun and is firing it directly
at officers and their cars. All that is required for police
to show this restraint is that the suspect must be an officer
himself.
Last week, 13-year police veteran, Sgt. Mark Nelson,
distraught over being dumped by the female officer he’d been
dating, went to the apartment of her new boyfriend (also a cop),
while both were inside.
He attempted to gain entry, fired bullets randomly
into the air, and when police arrived, proceeded to shoot at
three officers and put bullet holes in their vehicles.
He then threatened to shoot down a news helicopter,
and held an entire neighborhood essentially hostage for four
hours: all down the road from an elementary school that was
letting out for the day.
Now imagine that this overwrought, bullet-spraying
individual had been a civilian — especially a young black man.
How long do you think it would have taken for police on the
scene to drop him in a hail of bullets?
In a nation where black men are shot dozens of
times for brandishing wallets and cell phones, it doesn’t take
a genius to guess that the time needed to “resolve” the situation
would have been well short of 240 minutes.
But in Nelson’s case, his fellow officers insisted
that he posed “no real threat” to them or the general public.
After calm and rational negotiation, he laid down his weapon
and was taken into custody.
Apparently, who constitutes a “real threat” is
in the none-too-objective eye of the beholder. Unlike the black
officer who was beaten senseless a few years ago by white Nashville
cops who didn’t recognize him as “one of their own,” Nelson
was immediately considered family.
Never mind that he pointed and discharged his
weapon at his brothers in blue — Mark Nelson was a friend, a
colleague, and white.
So the danger that would likely have been assumed
had he been dark and a civilian was dismissed. He was cut slack.
Hell, in the case of Nashville police, two young
men (one white and one black), were recently shot in the back
of the heads for trying to back up their cars and escape arrest.
And why? Because their vehicles were seen as threats
to the officers’ lives in a way that Mark Nelson’s bullets were
not.
Funny how some folks are seen as dangerous and
others aren’t; some worthy of harsh treatment, and others not.
Consider recent goings-on in the state of Florida, for further
confirmation.
With the convictions of Lionel Tate and Nathaniel
Brazill for murder (both black, both just into their teen years,
and both going away for a long time) the Sunshine State has
demonstrated that so far as they are concerned, one can never
be too young to go to prison. However, apparently one can be
too white to go there.
That’s right: late last year, a Tampa judge refused
to send a 41-year old white drug felon to prison, despite his
having violated parole, for no reason other than he was white,
and thin, and would be “impossible to protect” in the Florida
State Penitentiary.
In other words, he would most certainly be gang-raped
by black men, who apparently are never too thin or too weak
for a cozy jail cell. According to the judge, “I’m not going
to send a man like this to Florida State prison. That is cruel
and unusual punishment in my book.”
Don’t get me wrong: I certainly don’t fault a
decision to send a drug offender to rehab instead of prison,
nor to hold fire in the case of Mark Nelson. Both were humane
and appropriate decisions.
But in these cases, said decisions were made for
entirely inappropriate reasons. Drug offenders shouldn’t go
to jail, not because they are white, but because imprisonment
is an absurd response to drug use or abuse.
Whenever possible, criminal suspects shouldn’t
be shot, not because they are white or fellow police officers,
but because of a little thing called due process, and the need
to restrain law enforcement from becoming judge, jury and executioner.
Unfortunately, the humanity and restraint shown
in these incidents is mostly extended to those lacking a certain
degree of pigmentation. Our perceptions of danger and deviance
skew the treatment meted out to folks all throughout the various
stages of the criminal justice system.
It’s why Santee school shooter Andy Williams could
be taken alive, despite having a loaded gun pointed at officers
when he was abducted, while 14 year old Aquan Salmon had to
be shot dead for running away from police in New Haven, Connecticut.
It’s why Bernhard Goetz could be viewed not as
a dangerous, off-balance predator, but rather as a real-life
Charles Bronson-type character, gunning down black men for the
safety of all white Americans.
It’s why a recent study at Washington University
in St. Louis found that the mere presence of dark skin increases
the probability that an object (perhaps in the person’s hand)
will be misperceived as a weapon. It’s why white drug offenders
in New York City, though they make up the majority of drug users
there, are less than 10 percent of the persons locked down for
a drug offense, and are taking nearly three-quarters of the
treatment facility beds.
And still, white Americans wonder why their black
and brown counterparts question the fundamental fairness of
our criminal justice system? But why ask why?
The answers become more and more plain every day.
They are as blatant as the daily headlines. And it takes a special
kind of color-blindness not to notice them.
Source: AlterNet
|