SYNDICATED COLUMN: Cops Are Too Crazy To Be Trusted with Guns

We’re not supposed to question juries. They’re our peers. They put in long hours, working hard essentially for free. Most of all, they see all the evidence. We don’t. We have to assume that they know what they’re doing.

Sometimes, however, a jury verdict relies on so many false assumptions, baseless assignments of privilege and twisted logic that you have to call it out. The decision of a Cleveland grand jury not to indict the cop who shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice to death is one such time.

Tamir Rice was playing outside his apartment building with a toy gun when a nosy neighbor took it upon himself to do the one thing you should never do in America unless you’re absolutely certain there is no other option: call the police. Tamir, the caller told 911, was “probably a juvenile” and that the gun was “probably fake.” According to Cleveland police, 911 dispatch didn’t relay that information to the two officers who responded, amped up and loaded for bear.

Officer Timothy Loehmann blew Tamir away between 1.5 and 2.0 seconds after arriving at the scene.

Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty called Tamir’s killing the result of a “perfect storm of human error, mistakes and miscommunications.”

Stuff happens. (Let’s hope the moron who called 911 is happy.)

I don’t need to have been a fly on the wall in the grand jury room to conclude they made a bad call.

First: what’s with this ridiculous assumption that, if a cop fears for his life, he is justified in instantly escalating the use of violent force to the nuclear option — firing his semiautomatic pistol into an American citizen?

McGinty, who made it abundantly clear he didn’t want anyone indicted, told a press conference that Loehmann feared for his life. So what if he did? Fearing for your life comes with the job, a job that requires common sense and sharp instincts to do well. Like, take a little time to assess a situation before speeding your cruiser up to a possible suspect and popping him faster than it takes to read half this sentence.

Second, whether or not the dispatcher passed on the info that Tamir was probably a kid with a probably fake gun is irrelevant. Who cares what a random nobody who calls 911 says?

There’s a phenomenon called “SWATting,” in which pranksters (often gamers) call 911 hoping that a heavily-armed paramilitary force descends on an address and freaks out the inhabitants, or perhaps kills them. Callers can understate a threat as well. What if Tamir Rice’s gun was real, and he wasn’t a kid, and dispatch had failed to forward that information along to the officers? Big duh here: cops need to use their brains to figure out what, if anything, is actually happening at the scene when they respond.

Third, Cleveland’s ersatz prosecutors made an awful lot of their assertion that Tamir was “big for his age” and looked older than 12. This is important because, how many 12-year-old boys go on shooting sprees? It can happen. But’s it’s rare. After I read this Tamir the Giant argument, I looked at his recent photos and was puzzled. He looks exactly like a 12-year-old kid. On the bigger side, sure. But 12. Why did Officer Loehmann think he was older?

Well, his highly abbreviated assessment time — about 1.75 seconds between screeching to a halt and unloading his service pistol — may have had something to do with it.

Also, studies have shown that white cops tend to radically overguesstimate the age of black males. “Black 13-year-olds were miscategorized as adults by police officers (average age error 4.59 years),” according to The Washington Post. Yet another argument in favor of insisting that urban cops live in the communities that pay their salaries — they’ll learn what black kids look like.

Nothing can bring back Tamir. But we can learn from his murder. We can take back the assumptions that killed him and countless other young black men.

From The New York Times: “Even with indictments, juries will remain reluctant to convict police officers absent evidence of malice, said Eugene O’Donnell, a former officer and prosecutor who now teaches at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. ‘Tremendous incompetence, the worst kind of training, disregard for people is really not enough,’ he said. ‘You’re going to have to go beyond that because the police are different.'”

Or we can decide that really, the police are not different. That cop lives do not matter more than civilian lives. That cops won’t enjoy the benefit of the doubt any more than the rest of us. That prosecutors will work just as hard to indict them as they do to indict someone for shooting a cop.

Cop privilege must die.

Which means no more acceptance of ridiculous excuses (“no one told me he was a kid”) for crazy behavior (shooting someone less than two seconds after sizing them up).

Congress is considering making it impossible for mentally ill people to buy guns. Until our cops become sane, they shouldn’t be trusted with weapons. (By the way, Officer Loehmann’s psychological profile indicates he wasn’t all there when Cleveland PD hired him.) Taking away sidearms and Tasers, given how well unarmed police forces work all over the world, is something the United States should seriously consider.

(Ted Rall, syndicated writer and the cartoonist for ANewDomain.net and SkewedNews.net, is the author of “Snowden,” about the NSA whistleblower. His new book “Bernie” about Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, is now available for pre-order. Want to support independent journalism? You can subscribe to Ted Rall at Beacon.)

COPYRIGHT 2016 TED RALL, DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

6 Comments.

  • Game dropping is always bad, especially because someone did take credit for the SWATting mentioned in the Guardian article and that person specifically stated that they weren’t a gamer.

    I expected better.

  • Guns are only part of the problem … what we really need to take away from badge-danglers are pseudo-government police-unions. Also, these unconstitutional and evil monsters called “Police-Officer-Bill-of-Rights” that functionally allow cops to collude with their own union legal reps to effectively make them “above-the-law?”

    According to the U.S. Constitution, ALL people who inhabit America’s domain are EQUAL under the law. On the other hand, these documents that extend the rights of cops to not be prosecuted with the same viciousness used against average citizens causes the cop-class to be treated by all government prosecutors as government employees who are especially more immune to our nation’s code that punishes criminal conduct. And whenever cops do get convicted? The Police Unions then go after the prosecutors. The prosecutors have legal tablets. The unions have a tremendous gang of thugs with guns and explosives who will do the murderous beck-and-call of the union oligarchs. Do you wonder now why prosecutors suck cop-cock?

    Consequently, we’ve turned the badge-danglers into a bunch of Blade-Runners, who treat the rest of us like a community of lesser human replicants.

    DanD

  • I have been SWATted, a very long time ago. Lived in a loft in Williamsburg, in the 90’s long before it is what it is now. Our upstairs neighbor rented out part of his loft as an apartment, and he put a crazy person in. Used to call the cops and the fire department on everyone in the building (also used to slash our tires). Of course, even though back then it was a tough Puerto Rican neighborhood, the cops and fire guys knew we were a building full of white artists (and a few factories still). So they used to politely knock on our doors and ask us if we were OK. Doubt that would have been the case if we weren’t petit bourgeois white folks.

  • Who are you going to call in an emergency, a cop or a hippy (as used to be said)?

    I would rather call a (hippy) citizen who open carries than a cop, because a cop can kill me with impunity and a regular citizen knows he won’t get the same preferred treatment from a prosecutor that a cop will.

    A cop can kill both the victim and his victimizer or an innocent bystander without a second thought. It happened days ago in Chicago.

    A regular citizen knows he won’t get kid glove treatment from a cop or a prosecutor.

    I get in a car and drive every day, knowing that any given car I encounter might be driven by someone who wants to turn his car into a deadly weapon, but won’t because his interest in self preservation tempers his judgement.

    A gallon of gasoline has about as much explosive power as a stick of dynamite and yet any idiot who has a drivers license can buy multiple gallons without even an ID or drivers license check.

    I’m more afraid of the politicians who control nuclear weapons and can’t control their tough talking belligerent mouths. They are as unaccountable as cops and will likely get us all killed in the next world war against the next “Hitler” conjured out of their twisted imagination or campaign talking points.

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