Also I agree with Wendel on that we probably don't have jobs that allows us to give into some kind of adrenaline frenzy, but I'm also going to bet we don't all of have jobs where lots of people are trying to kill us.
posted by Nyarlathotep at 12:19 PM on July 13, 2000
This isn't a racist matter, period. Even Philly's black community leaders say so outright. And if you need more proof, bother to watch the video. Half the cops hitting this guy are black.
So all we're left with is the possibility of "police brutality." Brutality against a nutcase who:
1) Carjacked a Chevy Cavalier from an innocent woman. (For those of you not clear, "carjacking" means stealing the car by violently threatening and/or attacking another human in the middle of the street, not merely hotwiring an unattended car in a parking lot.)
2) Initiated a high-speed chase in said Cavalier when the cops found him.
3) Hit another car during that chase, injuring the two innocent people in that car.
4) When the cops surrounded him after this crash, he resisted arrest violently, then escaped and jumped into a police car.
5) He then started shooting at the cops. (Whether the gun was "his own" or whether he grabbed it from one of the cops isn't known.)
6) Succeeded in shooting one of the cops.
7) Sped off in the stolen police car.
8) Finally got cornered after another mile-long high speed chase.
9) Was yanked out of the car, where he continued to violently resist arrest.
So this guy - who, by the way, is 6'2" and 250 lbs, not some little puny kid - who threatened a woman, hurt two people after a high speed chase, violently resisted arrest and then SHOT A COP, while trying to shoot a whole many more, was considered a violent psychopath, quite possibly STILL ARMED, after being pulled out of the car and thrown onto the ground, until he was in a position where it was certain he could no longer pose a threat to anybody. Quelle surprise!
And I hate to break it to you, but it's not MeFi, or the "online community" that's largely white, it's the country that is. And that fact doesn't really have anything to do with any of this anyway.
posted by aaron at 1:34 PM on July 13, 2000
Yes you are, in cases where that's what is required to stop the person from being an imminent threat to the life of the police officers trying to arrest him.
When discussing things like this, people seem to forget that just because a cop formally says "You are under arrest," or points a gun at the person, or has fifteen cops on his side versus the one perp, that the perp will not automatically become a docile, sane human being 100% of the time. Sometimes they continue to be violent and extremely dangerous. In this case, the guy was shot five times even before he drove off on that last mile-long chase. Even before he continued to violently resist arrest at the end.
There are plenty of people out there that can be shot a number of times, pepper sprayed dozens of times in the face at point-blank range, piled on by ten huge guys, and still keep on fighting like he'd never been touched. Yet the police are always wrong, 100% of the time, if they have to use any force themselves to get the person arrested. Sorry, but I won't accept that blindly.
posted by aaron at 1:44 PM on July 13, 2000
The WPVI images of Wednesday's incident show a swarming group of about a dozen plainclothes and uniformed officers -- some of them punching and kicking the captured Jones while other officers watch.Does that sound like the police were using the minimum necessary force to subdue a possibly dangerous prisoner? Does it sound like a misjudgment of the level of threat the prisoner provided? If you think it sounds like the latter, then you think the behavior of the police in this incident is defensible. I can understand that. Now, read through all the above posts and tell me if it doesn't sound like some people are condoning police brutality as a way for cops to work off their aggression. I truly think that most cops are better than that and that those who aren't shouldn't be cops.
What the hell does that mean? I had no idea Afro-Americans were heading towards extinction. Perhaps the EPA should pass some measures.
posted by Nyarlathotep at 2:02 PM on July 13, 2000
No, he was not. He was pulled out of the police car and they got him on the ground. Being horizontal does not mean you are no longer an imminent threat to people inches away from you (especially if you still have a gun on you), and certainly doesn't mean you are "in custody" (if he was "in custody," why couldn't they even get the cuffs on him?).
posted by aaron at 2:38 PM on July 13, 2000
What this argument will reduce to, of course, is one side asserting that the odds that a given black youth is involved in something criminal are in fact higher, and it doesn't matter why that's true...I just saw a dandy documentary called American Gypsy last night, and one of its focuses was an 11-year legal struggle by a Gypsy, Jimmy Marks, against the Spokane, WA, police department. After his family's home was raided, a small amount of stolen goods was found in his home; he was found guilty of a misdemeanor and hit with a $550 fine. He felt that they had singled him out--believing he was a fence--and violated his 4th amendment rights (using an unsigned search warrant, among other things) because he was a gypsy.
« Older It's an election year, folks. Remember, your vote... | Even though I've mentioned thi... Newer »
This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments
posted by sudama at 7:44 AM on July 13, 2000