“Police fail to grasp that they are
public servants for peace. They should
provide a civil service, to enforce the laws
equally, without bias and with discretion.
They must understand that they do not have
immunity or special privileges and — most
importantly — are just responsible for
apprehending suspects, and
should not act as judge, jury and
executioner, which too many of them
truly believe themselves to be.”—Frank
Serpico, former police detective who
exposed corruption within the NYPD
February 25, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The government should
not be in the business of killing its citizens.
Nevertheless, the U.S. government continues to
act as judge, jury and executioner over a populace
that have been pre-judged and found guilty, stripped
of their rights, and left to suffer at the hands of
government agents trained to respond with the utmost
degree of violence.
That the
death penalty was recently abolished in Virginia
is just the tip of the iceberg.
While any
effort to scale back the government’s haphazard
application of the death penalty—meted out as a
punishment, a threat, and a chilling glimpse into
the government’s quest for ultimate dominion over
its constituents—is a welcome one, capital
punishment remains a very small part of the American
police state’s machinery of death.
Yet it’s not enough to declare
a moratorium on federal and state death penalty
executions.
What we need is a moratorium on federal and state
violence in all their varied forms (on police
shootings of unarmed citizens, innocent civilians
killed by the nation’s endless wars abroad,
unknowing victims of secret government experiments,
politicians whose profit-over-principle priorities
leave Americans vulnerable to predatory tactics,
etc.), because as long as government-sanctioned
murder and mayhem continue unabated, the right to
life affirmed by the nation’s founders in the
Declaration of Independence remains unattainable.
The danger is real.
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Grants - This Is Independent Media
Everything about the way the government operates
today (imperial, unaccountable and manifestly
corrupt) flies in the face of what the founders
sought to bring about: a representative government
that exists to protect and preserve the life,
liberty, property and happiness of its people.
Police violence is but one aspect of the
government violence dispensed without restraint or
respect for the rights of the people, but it is
widespread.
The casualties are legion.
At a time when growing numbers of unarmed people
have been shot and killed for just standing a
certain way, or moving a certain way, or holding
something—anything—that police could misinterpret to
be a gun, or igniting some trigger-centric fear in a
police officer’s mind that has nothing to do with an
actual threat to their safety, even the most benign
encounters with police can have fatal consequences.
Unfortunately, police—trained in the worst case
scenario and thus ready to shoot first and ask
questions later—increasingly
pose a risk to anyone undergoing a mental health
crisis or with special needs whose disabilities may
not be immediately apparent or require more
finesse than the typical freeze-or-I’ll-shoot
tactics employed by America’s police forces.
Indeed,
disabled individuals make up a third to half of all
people killed by law enforcement officers.
(People of color are
three times more likely to be killed by police
than their white counterparts.) If you’re black and
disabled, you’re even more vulnerable.
For example, California police sent out to deal
with a 30-year-old Navy veteran experiencing a
mental health crisis reportedly
knelt on the man’s neck for nearly five minutes
until he stopped breathing. Angelo Quinto died days
later. The circumstances are unnervingly similar to
the death sentence meted out to
George Floyd, who died after Minneapolis police
officers knelt on his neck for more than nine
minutes.
In South Carolina, police tasered an 86-year-old
grandfather reportedly in the early stages of
dementia,
while he was jogging backwards away from them.
Now this happened after Albert Chatfield led police
on a car chase, running red lights and turning
randomly. However, at the point that police chose to
shock the old man with electric charges, he was out
of the car, on his feet, and outnumbered by police
officers much younger than him.
In Oklahoma, police
shot and killed a 35-year-old deaf man seen
holding a two-foot metal pipe on his front porch (he
used the pipe to fend off stray dogs while walking).
Despite the fact that witnesses warned police that
Magdiel Sanchez couldn’t hear—and thus comply—with
their shouted orders to drop the pipe and get on the
ground, police shot the man when he was about 15
feet away from them.
In Maryland,
police (moonlighting as security guards) used
extreme force to eject a 26-year-old man with Downs
Syndrome and a low IQ from a movie theater after
the man insisted on sitting through a second
screening of a film. Autopsy results indicate that
Ethan Saylor died of complications arising from
asphyxiation, likely caused by a chokehold.
In Florida,
police armed with assault rifles fired three shots
at a 27-year-old nonverbal, autistic man who was
sitting on the ground, playing with a toy truck.
Police missed the autistic man and instead shot his
behavioral therapist, Charles Kinsey, who had been
trying to get him back to his group home. The
therapist,
bleeding from a gunshot wound, was then
handcuffed and left lying face down on the ground
for 20 minutes.
In New Mexico,
police tasered, then opened fire on a 38-year-old
homeless man who suffered from schizophrenia,
all in an attempt to get James Boyd to leave a
makeshift campsite. Boyd’s death provoked a wave of
protests over heavy-handed law enforcement tactics.
In Ohio,
police forcefully subdued a 37-year-old bipolar
woman wearing only a nightgown in near-freezing
temperatures who was neither armed, violent,
intoxicated, nor suspected of criminal activity.
After being slammed onto the sidewalk, handcuffed
and left unconscious on the street, Tanisha Anderson
died as a result of being restrained in a prone
position.
This is what happens when you empower the police
to act as judge, jury and executioner.
This is what happens when you indoctrinate the
police into believing that their lives and
their safety are paramount to anyone
else’s.
Suddenly, everyone and everything else is a
threat that must be neutralized or eliminated.
And then you have U.S. Marshals—the federal
government’s de facto national police
force—who may be even more violence and
unaccountable.
“One reason for the high level of violence,”
according to an in-depth investigation by The
Marshall Project, USA TODAY and the
Arizona Republic: “The Marshals Service’s rules
are looser than those of many major police
departments.
Marshals are not required to try to de-escalate
situations or exhaust other remedies before using
lethal force. And marshals are allowed to fire
into cars. Though body cameras have become routine
in major police departments, marshals do not wear
them.”
Marshal task forces, which are made up of local
law enforcement officers who get deputized as
federal agents but are not necessarily given any
special training, are also
shielded from prosecution by the Justice Department.
Look more closely and you may find that many of
the same cops who serve on marshal task forces also
serve on local SWAT teams.
For instance, 23-year-old Casey Goodson was shot
and killed outside his family home in Columbus, Ohio
by a deputy police officer who
also happened to be a member of a marshals task
force and the local SWAT team. Although the cop
claimed to have shot Goodson in the back for waving
a gun while driving, that police account conflicts
with other accounts, which suggest Goodson was
shot on the doorstep while holding a bag of
sandwiches. Goodson was not a target of a police
investigation.
Sariah Lane, 17 years old, was
killed on her way to the grocery when an Arizona
cop, also working as a marshal task force member,
fired into a Toyota Corolla in which she and her
boyfriend were passengers. Task force members, out
to get the driver of the car for violating his
parole, used an unmarked car to ram the Corolla in a
parking lot, boxed it in with other unmarked cars,
and then started firing into the car. Lane was
shot in the back of the head with a hollow-point
bullet.
Lane’s alleged killer, Detective Michael
Pezzelle, trains police officers around the country
to “be
polite, be professional, have a plan to kill
everyone you meet.”
Talk about a recipe for disaster: take poorly
trained cops, deputize them as federal marshals,
grant them immunity from prosecution, and
authorize them to use deadly force to kill someone
who poses an “imminent danger.”
To that noxious stew add the government’s
interest in adopting domestic terrorism legislation
to “better
monitor and regulate the environments in which
extremist ideologies proliferate” and the Biden
administration’s pivot to have FEMA (Federal
Emergency Management Agency)
assist states and cities in their fight against
domestic extremism.
Not to be outdone, the Department of Homeland
Security is also considering
ramping up its initiatives to combat domestic
terrorism by expanding training, providing
technical assistance to local jurisdictions for
threat assessment investigations, and developing
strategies to combat the influence of false online
narratives.
Translation: the government is about to rapidly
expand its policing efforts to focus on pre-crime
and thought crimes.
Given the government’s tendency to manipulate
labels to suit their purposes (case in point:
consider how
interchangeably the government uses the terms
terrorist, extremist and anti-government), that
could easily put a target on the back of any
American who dares to challenge the government’s
agenda or hold it accountable to the rule of law.
This is how “we the people” become enemies of the
state.
The ramifications are so far-reaching as to
render almost every American an extremist in word,
deed, thought or by association.
Yet where many go wrong is in assuming that you
have to be doing something illegal or challenging
the government’s authority in order to be flagged as
a suspicious character, labeled an enemy of the
state and locked up like a dangerous criminal.
Eventually, all you will really need to do is use
certain trigger words, surf the internet,
communicate using a cell phone, drive a car, stay at
a hotel, purchase materials at a hardware store,
take flying or boating lessons, appear suspicious,
question government authority, or generally live in
the United States.
We’re playing against a stacked deck.
As journalist Sharyl Attkisson observed, “What’s
been most striking to me is just how one-sided the
rules are when Americans take on their own
government…. It has been dismaying to learn the
extent to which rules and laws shield the government
from accountability for its abuses—or even
lawbreaking…. It’s been a long and frightening
lesson…. The rules seem rigged to protect government
lawlessness, and the playing field is uneven. Too
many processes favor the government.
The deck is still stacked.”
Because the system is rigged—because there are no
real consequences for agents of the police state who
inflict violence on the American people—and because
“we the people” are at the mercy of a government
that has almost absolute discretion to decide who is
a threat, what constitutes resistance, and how
harshly they can deal with the citizens they are
supposed to “serve and protect”—Americans will
continue to die at the hands of a government that
sees itself as judge, jury and executioner.
Something has to give. Something has to change.
What remains to be seen, as I make clear in my
book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, is whether any of that change will
be for the better.
Constitutional attorney and author John W.
Whitehead is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People
is available at
www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be
contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.