15 Most Outrageous Responses By Police To Justify
Killing Unarmed People
By Bill Quigley
June 26, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Police kill a lot of unarmed people. So far in
2015, as many as
100 unarmed people have been killed by police.
There have been around 400 fatal police shootings;
one in six of those killings, 16 percent, were of unarmed people, 49
had no weapon at all and 13 had toy guns, according to the
Washington Post. Of the police killings this year
less than 1 percent have resulted in the officer being charged
with a crime.
The Guardian did a study which included killings by Tasers and
found 102 people killed by police so far in 2015 were unarmed and
that unarmed black people are twice as likely to be killed by police
as whites.
Here are 15 of the most outrageous reasons given
by police to justify killing unarmed people in the last 12 months.
1. He was dancing in the street and
walking with a purpose. On June 9,
2015 an unarmed man, Ryan Bollinger, was shot by police in Des
Moines after “walking with
a purpose” toward the police car. After a low-speed chase started
when Bollinger was observed dancing in the street and behaving
erratically, Bollinger exited his vehicle and began charging toward
a police car. An officer shot him through the rolled-up cruiser
window. The shooting is
under investigation.
2. Thought it was my Taser.
An unarmed man, Eric Harris, ran from the police in Tulsa, Oklahoma
on April 2, 2015. After he was shot in the back by a Taser by one
officer and was on the ground, a 73-year-old volunteer reserve
officer shot and killed him (watch the video).
While dying he yelled that he was losing his breath, to which one of
the officers responded, “F*ck
your breath." Police said the officer
thought he was shooting his Taser and “inadvertently discharged
his service weapon.” The officer has been charged with
second-degree manslaughter.
Running away from the police often provokes a police overreaction
given several names, including the
“foot tax” and the
“running tax."
3. Naked man refused to stop.
Anthony Hill, a naked, unarmed, mentally ill Air Force Afghanistan veteran, was
shot and killed March 9, 2015 by DeKalb County Georgia police.
Police said Hill refused an order to stop. The killing is
under investigation.
4. Not going to say.
On March 6, 2015 Aurora, Colorado police shot and killed unarmed
Naeschylus Vinzant while taking him into custody. For the last three
months, while the investigation into the killing continues, the
police have
refused to say what compelled the officer to shoot Vinzant.
5. Felt threatened by unarmed homeless man.
On March 1, 2015, Los Angeles police shot and killed Charly Leundeu
Keunang, an unarmed homeless man, after five officers went to his tent
and struggled with him. Los Angeles police have
killed about one person a week since 2000. An investigation is
ongoing.
6. Taser didn’t work.
On Feb. 23, 2015, an unarmed man, Daniel Elrod, was shot twice in
the back and once in the shoulder by Omaha, Nebraska police after he
tried to jump
a fence to escape police who suspected him of robbery. Police
said their Taser did not
work, Elrod ignored their demands to get down on the ground, did
not show his hands, and they felt threatened. Video was not made
available and the officer later
resigned. Elrod was the
second person killed by this officer.
No criminal charges were filed.
7. Armed with a broom.
Lavall Hall’s mother called the police in Miami Gardens on Feb. 15,
2015 and asked for help for her son who was mentally ill. Hall, who
was only 5'4", walked outside
with a broom and was later shot and killed by police, who said
he failed to comply with instructions and engaged them with an
object. The killing is still under investigation.
8. Throwing rocks.
On Feb. 10, 2015 an unarmed man, Antonio Zambrano-Montes, was fired
at
17 times and killed by police in Kennewick, Washington. A
video of his
killing has been viewed more than 2 million times. Officers said
he had been throwing rocks at cars, ran away and then turned around.
9. Taser worked but he didn’t stop.
On Feb. 2, 2015, a Hummelstown, Pennsylvania police officer shot
unarmed David Kassick in the back with a Taser. When Kassick went to
the ground on his stomach,
he was shot twice in the back. The officer said Kassick, who was
running away from a traffic stop, was told to show his hands and not
move, yet he continued to try to remove the Taser prongs from his
back, and the officer believed he was reaching for a gun. The
officer has been charged with
homicide.
10. Car going 11 miles an hour was going
to kill me. On Jan. 16, Denver police
fired eight times at unarmed Jessica Hernandez, 17, who was
killed after being hit by four bullets. The police said she drove
too close to them when she was trying to get away and may have tried
to run them down, so they shot into the windshield and driver’s
windows. The police said the car
may have reached 11 miles per hour in the 16 feet it traveled
before hitting a fence. The police were not charged.
11. Armed with a spoon.
Dennis Grigsby, an unarmed mentally ill man
holding a soup spoon, was shot in the chest in a neighbor’s
garage by Texarkana police on Dec. 15, 2015. The killing is
under investigation.
12. Armed with prescription bottle.
Rumain Brisbon, a 34-year-old unarmed man, was shot and killed by
police in Phoenix on Dec. 2, 2014. After running away, he was caught
and engaged in a struggle with the
officer, who mistook a prescription pill bottle in Brisbon’s
pocket for a gun. The police officer was
not charged.
13. It was an accident.
On Nov. 20, 2014, a New York City police officer
fired into a stairwell and killed unarmed Akai Gurley. The
officer, who was charged
with manslaughter, is expected to say he fired his gun
accidently.
14. Don’t mention It.
On Nov. 12, 2014, an
unarmed handcuffed inmate was shot multiple times by officers
while fighting with another handcuffed inmate in the High Desert
State Prison in Carson City, Nevada. His family was not told, and
did not know he had been shot
until three days later when they claimed his body at a mortuary.
15. Armed with toy gun.
John Crawford was in a Walmart store in Beavercreek, Ohio on Aug. 4,
2014, when he picked up an unloaded BB
gun. When officers arrived, they ordered him to put down the
gun, and started shooting, hitting him at least twice and killing
him. In a widely viewed video, Crawford
can be seeing dropping the BB gun, running away and being shot.
Likewise, Cleveland police shot and killed a 12-year-old boy, Tamir
Rice, who was playing with a
toy pellet gun on Nov. 22, 2014. Police said they shouted verbal
commands from inside their vehicle in the two seconds before they
shot him twice. In both cases, the police story of shouting
warnings and orders looks iffy at best.
These are the responses of police authorities who
face
less than one chance in 100 of being charged when they kill
people, even unarmed people. These outrages demand change in the way
lethal force is used, reported, justified and prosecuted.
Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and
professor at Loyola University New Orleans College of Law.
He is also a member of the legal collective of School of
Americas Watch, and can be reached at
quigley77@gmail.com.