Rising Police Aggression A Telling Indicator Of Our Societal
Decline
A historially common marker of failing civilizations
By Chris Martenson
April 27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "PP"
- My first Uber lift was in South Carolina. My driver was from
Sudan originally, but had emigrated to the US 20 years ago. Being the curious
sort, I asked him about his life in Sudan and why he moved. He said that he
left when his country had crumbled too far, past the point where a reasonable
person could have a reasonable expectation of personal safety, when all
institutions had become corrupted making business increasingly difficult. So he
left. Detecting a hitch in his delivery when he spoke
of coming to the US, I asked him how he felt about the US now, 20 years later.
"To be honest," he said, "the same things I saw in Sudan that led me to leave
are happening here now. That saddens me greatly, because where else is there to
go?"
It’s time to face some uncomfortable ideas about the state of
civilization in the United States. This country is no longer the beacon of
freedom illuminating a better way for the world. Why not? Because it has ceased
to be civilized.
The recent spate of police brutality videos and the complete
lack of a useful or even sane response by the police unions is shaping my
writing here. But it goes well beyond those incidents and extends into all
corners of the lives of US citizens now, as police abuse is only one symptom of
a much deeper problem.
What do we mean by "civilized?" Well, take a look at its
official definition and see if you note any descriptors that are lacking in
present day US culture:
Civilized adjective
1. Cultured, educated, sophisticated, enlightened, humane
All truly civilized countries must deplore
torture.
2. Polite, mannerly, tolerant, gracious, courteous, affable, well-behaved, well-mannered
(Source)
A civilized society, then, is one that is humane at its core,
that knows right from wrong, and which does not need to conduct lengthy
‘internal reviews’ to discover if videotaped brutality is indeed showing illegal
abuse.
Let’s begin by examining a few recent cases of brutality, so
many of which now exist that I have to narrow the field substantially in the
interest of brevity. I'm going to skip over the one where an unarmed black man
was shot five times in the back and coldly murdered by the officer in South
Carolina, because that has already (and rightly) received a lot of media
attention.
So, the first case I'd like to discuss comes to us from San
Bernardino CA where a man being served with a warrant for suspicion of identity
theft started to flee. Much to the dismay of the police, the last leg of his
otherwise humorous escape plan involved a horse, forcing the cops to huff across
the hot, dry desert on foot.
The video eventually shows the fugitive falling off his horse,
throwing himself flat on the ground in total submission, and then putting his
own hands behind his back. Two officers then approach and, in full view of the
news chopper camera circling overhead, proceed to violently kick him in the face
and groin, pistol whip him with a taser, pile-drive him with their elbows, and
then move aside to make room for the other nine officers that also join in the
violent 2 minute long beating:
Aerial footage showed the man falling off the horse he was
suspected of stealing during the pursuit in San Bernardino County Thursday
afternoon.
He then appeared to be stunned with a Taser by a sheriff's
deputy and fall to the ground with his arms outstretched.
Two deputies immediately descended on him and appeared to punch him
in the head and knee him in the groin, according to the footage,
reviewed several times by NBC4.
The group surrounding the man grew to 11 sheriff's
deputies.
In the two minutes after the man was stunned with a Taser,
it appeared deputies kicked him 17 times, punched him 37 times and
struck him with batons four times. Thirteen blows appeared to be to the
head. The horse stood idly nearby.
The man did not appear to move from his position
lying on the ground for more than 45 minutes. He did not appear to receive
medical attention while deputies stood around him during that time.
San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon told NBC4 he
was launching an internal investigation into the actions of the deputies.
"I'm not sure if there was a struggle with the
suspect," McMahon said. "It appears there was in the early parts of the
video. What happens afterwards, I'm not sure of, but we will investigate it
thoroughly."
(Source)
Note the lack of civilized responses there from beginning to
the end. A yielding, non-resisting suspect was repeatedly pounded by 11
officers using means that would land you or me in hot water (justifiably) on
“assault with a dangerous weapon” charges if we did the same.
Then the beaten man was left on the ground afterwards without
any medical attention for 45 minutes. The physical abuse nor the later disdain
for the suspect's condition aren't behaviors you find in a civilized society.
Successfully apprehending a 'suspected criminal' does not give you free license
to mete out a brutal beat-down, at least not if your humanity is intact. But
with these officers, that appears to be precisely what happened. The fact that
it did is indicative of a culture in distress.
In the next part of this sad drama, the county sheriff had the
audacity to say (in an obvious attempt at damage control) that he was ‘not sure’
if a struggle had happened with the suspect, but that it appeared that there had
been one. Apparently, the sheriff needs some training in evidence review (or a
new pair of glasses) because there’s no struggle there at all, which is plainly
obvious in the video:
Then the sheriff concludes with “what happens afterward,
I’m not sure of,…” Again, anybody who viewed the video is very
certain of what happened afterwards because it’s completely obvious: the
deputies kicked the crap out of a non-resisting suspect.
So obvious that less than 2 weeks after the beating, San
Bernadino county hastily
agreed to a $650,000 settlement in attempt to very rapidly put the whole
thing behind them.
The only legitimate response from the sheriff, to show that
the rule of law applies and that he and his deputies have morals and are part of
a civilized society, would have been to say something along the lines of,
“Assaulting a compliant and non-resisting suspect is never
OK, and it is against our internal policies and training as well as the law. In
the interest of complete transparency and fairness, both real and perceived,
we’ve asked for an external review which will include citizen participation.
Whether laws are broken by citizens of the police, our department believes 100%
in equal application of the law because anything else erodes the basic
perception of fairness upon which a civilized society rests.”
Of course, nothing of the sort was said here. Nor is it ever
said in other brutality cases, where instead we see the ranks close around the
accused cop(s), which unfortunately communicates the impression that one of the
perks of being a law enforcement officer is being able to dodge the consequences
of the same laws they administer daily.
Here are a few more cases, all demonstrating the same unequal
application of the laws:
In this next case, an unarmed, fleeing black male suspect was
tackled and pinned on the ground by at least two officers. He then was shot in
the back by a 73 year-old reserve deputy who apparently couldn't tell the
difference between a revolver and a taser. A 73 year-old whose main
qualification for being on the scene seems to have been his prior generous
donations to the police department.
Tulsa Police Chase And Shoot Eric Courtney Harris
The above video is disturbing for many reasons, but especially
because while Eric Harris is dying he says “Oh man, I can’t breathe” to which
one of the officer who happens to have his knee firmly on Eris’s head says “Fuck
your breath!”
Recall that one of the words used to describe civilized is
"humane". Think about how far out of touch with your own humanity you have to be
to say that to a dying person. Even if the officer didn't know Harris was dying
at the time, he at least knew that he had been shot.
In another case, a man approaches a car blocking the street
and asks for it to be moved. The violent manner of the officer's response would
be a case of road rage if it involved another civilian and be prosecuted as a
serious crime with multiple charges.
Man Asks Cop Nicely to Stop Blocking Traffic, So
the Cop Beat Him and Stomped his Head
Sept 11, 2014
Sacramento, CA — A
Sacramento County Sheriff’s deputy is on paid vacation after a video
surfaced showing him stomping on a man’s face and hitting him with his
flashlight after tasering him.
Undersheriff Jaime Lewis says that they are investigating
themselves after viewing the video.
“There are portions of that video that clearly have
caused me concern,” Lewis said.
“And that is exactly what has caused the department to initiate an
investigation, so we can get to the bottom of it.”
The man being beaten in the video is 51-year-old John
Madison Reyes, who said the incident started when he asked the deputy, whose
car was blocking the road, to move.
“I asked him kindly to move the car,” Reyes
said. “He glared at me and stared at me. And then,
I said an expletive, ‘You need to move the car because I can’t get
through.’”
"Let's face it, had the subject complied with the
officer's directives from the initial contact and beyond, we wouldn't be
sitting here talking about this today," Lewis said.
(Source)
What seems to have happened in the above story is simply that
the cop didn't like his authority being challenged, even in a very minor way,
and he over-reacted.
The recipient of the beating, Mr. Reyes, was charged with
resisting arrest. How is that even possible? It seems like there needs to be
something you are being arrested for to resist in the first place. Something
for which the officer has probable cause in the first place which you then
resist? How can the only charge be ‘resisting arrest’?
Sadly, many times after a confrontation has become physically
violent the one and only charge applied is ‘resisting arrest.’
Of course, that’s a mighty convenient charge for some police
who escalate a situation first, and then resort to using the charge of
resisting arrest because, in the end, that’s the only charge they have. And
while it’s not wise to resist arrest, there are hundreds of cases where people
claim they weren’t resisting at all, merely trying to protect their heads and
faces from heavy blows, while the police were beating them yelling “Stop
resisting arrest!” like it was a magic incantation.
As in this case:
Brutal LAPD arrest caught on video; Department
investigating cops seen bodyslamming nurse twice during cell phone traffic
stop
The Los Angeles Police Department is investigating two
officers who were allegedly caught on surveillance camera
slamming a nurse on the ground twice — and then fist bumping afterward —
during a recent traffic stop.
The two officers pulled over Michelle Jordan, 34, of
Sunland, Aug. 21, for allegedly talking on her cell phone
while driving in Tujunga, in northeast Los Angeles, the department said.
Jordan pulled into the parking lot of a Del Taco
restaurant and got out of her car to confront the officers, cops said.
The taco joint's surveillance video appears to
show the officers, both men, yanking the 5-foot-4 inch registered nurse from
the open driver's seat and then slamming her on the ground to cuff her.
The duo then yank Jordan to her feet and bring her to the
patrol car, where they pat her down.
Moments later, one of the cops slams the married
mom to the ground a second time.
After placing her in the cruiser's backseat, the
two appear to share a celebratory fist-pound.
Jordan was booked for resisting arrest and later
released.
(Source)
The pictures of the damage to this woman's face are
disturbing. Think about what it would be like to be pulled over for a minor
infraction, be yanked from your car, thrown to the ground, handcuffed, stood up,
and then violently body slammed a second time. While she may have been using
words that these officers found to be less than respectful of their authority,
in a civilized society grown men do not violently assault the unarmed --
especially handcuffed women. That's just sadistic and has no place in a decent
society.
In another case from Baltimore police broke the leg of a man
they were arresting, Freddie Gray, cuffed him, and instead of getting him
medical help dragged him to a van obviously alive and screaming in pain from the
broken leg. By the time that van ride was over, the man was delivered to a local
hospital
with a broken neck, his spine 80% severed, and he died a short while later.
His “crime?” He allegedly “fled unprovoked upon noticing police presence,"
which, by the way, is not actually a crime, something the Baltimore police were
forced to acknowledge in the aftermath of the incident. The police spokesman,
Deputy Commissioner Jerry Rodriguez initially stated that there was “no
evidence” of any use of excessive force. I would counter that any time you
shatter a person’s neck after they are cuffed during a van ride, that’s
"excessive", by definition.
Again, the initial response by the police, which began as
silence followed by the filing of an initial report that said Mr. Gray was
"arrested without incident or force" reveals just how broken our enforcement
system and culture really are.
In another recent case a mentally ill woman in Idaho was
shot dead by police within 15 seconds of their arrival. She had a knife,
the police got out of their vehicle, walked straight towards her and when she
did not immediately comply with their commands, they opened fire.
Something Is Very Wrong
[note: an incomplete statistic was used here and has been
removed and replaced with the following]
In the past ten years police in the UK have been involved in
23 total police shooting fatalities. In the US in 2013 alone there were
a minimum of 458 'justifiable homicides' by firearm committed by US police.
I say 'a minimum' because the FBI statistics are woefully incomplete because
there is no mandate that police forces report their killings to the FBI so the
database is certainly inaccurate on the low side. But taking that at face
value, there is a vast gap between the number of people shot in the UK as
compared to the US. Adjusting for population, US police officers are killing
citizens at roughly 40 times the rate of UK police. 40 times!
How can this be? In the UK they’ve got hooligans and yobs,
immigrants and poor people. They’ve got drunks and mentally unbalanced people
too. And yet they somehow don’t kill people in the fulfillment of their duties
as public safety officers.
In this video you’ll see
a mentally deranged man
outside of Buckingham palace threatening people while wielding knives. He was
successfully apprehended alive by a patient and methodical UK police force that
did not aggravate, but instead waited for an opening to make their move, which
they did quite successfully using a taser instead of guns.
The problem, it seems, is that the US police have been trained
to be highly confrontational and to escalate, rather than defuse, any
situation.
Police in the US have shot an individual’s
highly trained service dog after showing up at the wrong address, and even a
family’s
pet pot-bellied pig simply because they ‘felt threatened.’
So the one-two punch here is that cops are trained to be
highly confrontational and then to react with force -- oftentimes deadly force
-- when they ‘feel threatened.’ See the problem here? It’s pretty easy to end
up feeling threatened when you are creating threatening situations.
That’s a recipe for exactly the sort of over-reactive uses of
force that are giving us the problems we see today.
An Occupying Force
If you saw the images coming out of Ferguson recently, you may
have noticed that the law-enforcement presence did not so much look like police,
but an occupying military. Snipers perched on roofs viewing the crowds through
their scopes, tear gas and rubber bullets constantly in use, Humvees, the latest
acoustic anti-personnel devices, and officers outfitted with ‘battle rattle’
that even made
one Afghanistan vet jealous for its magnificent excess compared to what
soldiers were issued in one of the most dangerous regions of the world.
How is it that a small mid-western city arrayed more hardware
against its own citizens than you might find in an active Middle East war zone?
Who really thought that necessary and why?
Exactly how and when did policing and crowd control in the US
slip into a set of methods that match those used by occupying forces -- like
those of Isreal -- who subjugate whole populations?
It turns out, by going to Israel and learning Israeli methods
of crowd 'control.'
Israel-trained police “occupy” Missouri after
killing of black youth
Feb 8, 2015
Since the killing of eighteen-year-old Michael Brown by
Ferguson police in Missouri last weekend, the people of Ferguson have been
subjected to a military-style crackdown by a squadron of local police
departments dressed like combat soldiers. This
has prompted residents to liken the conditions on the ground in Ferguson to
the Israeli military occupation of Palestine.
And who can blame them?
The dystopian scenes of paramilitary units in
camouflage rampaging through the streets of Ferguson, pointing assault
rifles at unarmed residents and launching tear gas into people’s front yards
from behind armored personnel carriers (APCs), could easily be mistaken for
a Tuesday afternoon in the occupied West Bank.
And it’s no coincidence.
At least two of the four law enforcement agencies that
were deployed in Ferguson up until Thursday evening — the St. Louis
County Police Department and the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department —
received training from Israeli security forces
in recent years.
(Source)
If the tactics and gear of the police in Ferguson looked
military that’s because they were. The purpose of APC’s and m4 assault rifles is
to go into dangerous battles and kill the other side first so you can survive.
I believe that one’s training and mindset are critical
determinants of what happens next. It should really not surprise anyone that a
militarized mindset accompanied by specialized training and hardware has led to
scenes like the one we saw in Ferguson, among many other places over the past
several years.
I wanted to find out if the assertion of the above article was
true. Had US police agencies really trained with the Israelis?
The answer is yes, beginning over a decade ago. Note that US
police have been training for a domestic terrorist threat that has been almost
completely non-existent, well below the statistical threshold that would seem to
justify such advanced training and tactics:
U.S.-Israel Strategic Cooperation: Joint Police &
Law Enforcement Training
Sept 2013
In 2002, Los Angeles Police Department detective
Ralph Morten visited Israel to receive training and advice on preparing
security arrangements for large public gatherings.
From lessons learned on his trip, Det. Morten prepared a new Homicide Bomber
Prevention Protocol and was better able to secure the Academy Awards
presentation.
In January 2003, thirty-three senior U.S. law
enforcement officials - from Washington, Chicago, Kansas City, Boston and
Philadelphia - traveled to Israel to attend a
meeting on "Law Enforcement in the Era of Global Terror." The workshops
helped build skills in identifying terrorist cells, enlisting public support
for the fight against terrorism and coping with the aftermath of a terrorist
attack.
“We went to the country that's been dealing with the issue
for 30 years,” Boston Police Commissioner Paul F. Evans said.
“The police are the front line in the battle against
terrorism. We were there to learn from them - their response, their efforts
to deter it. They touched all the bases.”
“I think it's invaluable,” said Washington,
DC Police Chief Charles Ramsey about the instruction he received in Israel.
“They have so much more experience in dealing with this than we do in the
United States.”
Also, in 2003, the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security established a special Office of International Affairs to
institutionalize the relationship between Israeli and American security
officials. “I think we can learn a lot from
other countries, particularly Israel, which unfortunately has a long history
of preparing for and responding to terrorist attacks,” said Senator Susan
Collins (R-ME) about the special office.
(Source)
Here’s the thing: your chances of dying of ‘terrorism’ on US
soil are dwarfed by the chances of dying from practically every other cause of
death in the US. Terrorism simply is not a gigantic and imminent existential
threat that requires special hardware and training relationships with nations
that practice the tactics and strategies of occupation.
Terrorism is not such a common thing that we need to define
our entire crowd control methods around it, but a rare thing, and is really
what’s left over after a few individuals feel like every other option of redress
has been stripped away. Which is why it’s practically unheard of in the US, and
most other civilized countries.
But domestic US law enforcement agencies have been training
and outfitting themselves as if it’s a top threat. Why is that?
There are not very many reassuring answers to that question.
One is that our law enforcement agencies lack the ability to discern actual
threats from imaginary ones. Another is that they envision a time when some
portion of the civilian population feels as if it has lost all hope and options
for a better future, and starts resorting to terrorist acts.
Either way, very poor answers.
A Dangerous Job?
One mitigating factor is to note that police have a stressful,
dangerous and low paying job. Erring on the side of personal safety makes sense
when looked at this way.
In terms of dangerousness, however, law enforcement doesn't
even crack the top-ten list of most dangerous professions:
(Source)
The death rate for sworn officers is 11.1 per 100,000 (2013
data) for job-related injuries. Fishing is ten times more dangerous. And even
the 11.1 rate includes some deaths which were not the result of violent actions
committed during an arrest, but things that tend to happen among a force more
than a million strong (green circles).
(Source)
Even if we assumed that half of the reported job-related
deaths were homicides, that would make policing about as dangerous as living in
an average city (5.5 per 100,000) but seven-fold less dangerous than simply
living in Baltimore (35 per 100,000).
So a stressful job yes. An important job, definitely. But not
as dangerous as many other occupations, which is relevant context to this story.
Good Policing
I would be remiss to not also point out other examples of
great police work. We need to illuminate both what’s wrong and what’s right.
One of my favorite examples shows Norwegian police handling a
belligerent drunk:
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=66d_1394803929
Be sure to watch at least the first full minute, and note that
this drunk is yelling, cursing, kicking, and generally ‘resisting’ and yet the
police involved never rise to the bait, handle him with good manners and like
he’s a human being the entire time. Well done!
This next clip shows a policeman in Ohio refusing to shoot a
man wanted on a double murder charge even though he really probably should have
and would have been completely justified in doing so:
The man wanted to be shot and killed by the officer who,
despite being rushed, and having the man put his hands in his pockets after
being warned not to, and even being knocked to the ground at one point, refused
to shoot.
That restraint was quite remarkable and showed someone willing
to place his own life in danger before committing to take another’s. He said
afterwards that he “wanted to be absolutely sure” before
pulling the trigger that it was absolutely necessary.
I do wonder if the two tours the former marine took before
becoming an officer had anything to do with his unwillingness to take another
life?
How To Fix This
Well I think I’ve been in the top 5% of my age cohort all
my life in understanding the power of incentives, and all my life I’ve
underestimated it.
~
Charlie Munger
I think the solution to reducing episodes of police assaults
on citizens is contained within the Charlie Munger quote above. The incentives
have to be aligned.
My solution is simply this: every time a police department
loses an excessive force or wrongful death case and has to pay out money, that
money should come from their local police union’s pension fund. And by law,
these losses cannot be refilled with taxpayer funds.
Every single time a judgment is made against that department
and the union pension is reduced, the retired and currently-serving officers
will have to decide for themselves if they should keep the indicted officer or
officers on the force who lost the pension all that money. Or decide if training
and policies need to be adjusted.
I guarantee you that with the incentive to train and behave
properly and lawfully now resting with the police itself, rapid behavior and
training modification would result.
Moreover, I see no reason why the citizens of any given
municipality should be on the hook for repeated violations by any public servant
or office.
For some of the most abusive departments, the amounts are far
from trivial.
U.S. cities pay out millions to settle police
lawsuits
Oct 1, 2014
The Chicago Sun-Times reported earlier
this year that the city has paid out nearly half a billion dollars
in settlements over the past decade, and spent $84.6 million in
fees, settlements, and awards last year.
Bloomberg News reported that in 2011,
Los Angeles paid out $54 million, while New York paid out a whopping
$735 million, although those figures include negligence and other
claims unrelated to police abuse.
Oakland Police
Beat reported in April that the city had paid
out $74 million to settle 417 lawsuits since 1990.
And last month, Minneapolis Public
Radio put that city’s payout at $21 million
since 2003.
(Source)
Just align the incentives and watch what happens next. The
problem is, the incentives are just completely wrong right now, and taxpayers
are footing the bill for repeated and expensive police behaviors.
That needs to stop if we want to see real change.
Conclusion
The police serve a very important role in society and I want
them to be as effective as possible. They are there to uphold the law and
protect the peace, which are extremely important functions. Unfortunately there
are far too many cases where the police have acted as judge, jury and
executioner to suggest that there are just a few bad apples.
Instead there’s a pervasive atmosphere of hostility and force
escalation better suited to war zones than maintaining civilian order. The
lines have been drawn in many police departments: it’s us vs. them.
Trust in many departments has been utterly shattered within
some communities because the police hold themselves to a different standard than
they do the populace. Police commit brazen acts of brutality and get away with
it, largely because they self-investigate and/or because the local District
Attorney office is unwilling to press charges.
But the recent cases of police brutality are simply a
symptom of a much larger problem. Society in the US is breaking down, civility
has been lost, and the country is rapidly becoming uncivilized.
This extends within and across all of the most
important institutions. Congress is known to work
for corporations first and foremost. Democracy itself is bought and sold by the
highest bidders. The Federal Reserve protects big banks from the costs of their
misdeeds and enriches the already stupidly rich as a side benefit.
DEA agents are caught in Columbia
having sex parties with underage girls and drugs, and the worst punishment
handed out is a 10 day suspension without pay. Nobody is even fired, let alone
jailed.
"Crime, once exposed, has no refuge but in audacity".
~ Tacitus, Annals, Book XI Ch. 26
The FBI has just admitted that they had been consistently (and
certainly knowingly)
overstating forensic lab analysis in ways that favored prosecutors in more
than 95% of cases over a period of several decades. The cases included 32 that
resulted in death sentences. Many people were wrongly convicted, but nobody
from the FBI will face any charges and many of the states involved have (so far)
decided they won’t be looking into any of the cases to right the wrongs. The
wrongful convictions will stand, an injustice that is incompatible with the
concept of being civilized.
The Department of Justice has utterly
failed to hold any banks or bankers criminally responsible for any acts
despite levying a few billions in fines for crimes that probably netted the
banks tens of billions in profits. For some, crime does pay.
I could go on, but why bother? The pattern is easy enough to
see.
The US has lost its way. Fairness, justice, and knowing right
from wrong seem to all be lost concepts and the trend has only gotten worse over
the past several years. Without moral bearings, what’s left?
“The only thing necessary for the
triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”
Edmund Burke
Either the people of the US stand up and resist these
accumulating injustices or they will get exactly the sort of government, and law
enforcement, they deserve.
In the meantime, the challenge for each afflicted institution
is to begin to recognize right from wrong, and in the case of law enforcement
agencies, stop pretending like every single one of your million+ officers is a
good egg. We all know hiring is imperfect and mistakes get made. Own up to
them and let those who make serious mistakes experience the consequences.
Rebuild our trust in your necessary and important institution by clearly
demonstrating that you know right from wrong wherever it occurs and whoever
commits the deed.
If we don't do this, if we allow the current trajectory to
build more momentum, the loss of civilized behavior will reach a tipping point
from which it will be very hard to return without much hardship, and likely,
bloodshed.
In
Part 2: Preparing For The Coming Breakdown, we analyze how the boom in
prosperity seen over the much of the 20th century is evaporating, and as the pie
begins to shrink, the means by which the players compete for their slices
becomes increasingly brutish and violent.
Ask yourself this: If tensions are
this bad now, while relatively abundant resources exist, how bad do you think
they’ll get during the next economic downturn or financial crisis?
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