Killing with Robots Increases
Militarization of Police
By Marjorie Cohn
July 25, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- As in many cities around the
country, Black Lives Matter held a
demonstration in Dallas to protest the
police shootings of two more black men,
Alton Sterling of Louisiana and Philando
Castile of Minnesota. During the
demonstration, Micah Xavier Johnson, an
Army veteran who served in Afghanistan,
mounted his own personal, deadly protest
by shooting police officers guarding the
nonviolent rally. Five officers were
killed and seven wounded.
After negotiating for some time with
Johnson, who was holed up in a community
college parking garage, police sent in a
robot armed with explosives and killed
him. Dallas police chief David Brown
said, “We saw no other option but to use
our bomb robot and place a device on its
extension for it to detonate where the
subject was,” adding, “Other options
would have exposed our officers to grave
danger.”
The legal question is whether the
officers reasonably believed Johnson
posed an imminent threat of death or
great bodily injury to them at the time
they deployed the robot to kill him.
Johnson was apparently isolated in the
garage, posing no immediate threat. If
the officers could attach explosives to
the robot, they could have affixed a
tear gas canister to the robot instead,
to force Johnson out of the garage.
Indeed, police in Albuquerque used a
robot in 2014 to “deploy chemical
munitions,” which compelled the
surrender of an armed suspect barricaded
in a motel room.
But the Dallas police chose to execute
Johnson with their killer robot. This
was an unlawful use of force and a
violation of due process.
The right to due process is a bedrock
guarantee, not just in the U.S.
Constitution, but also in the
International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, a treaty we have
ratified, making it part of our domestic
law. Due process means arrest and fair
trial. It is what separates democracies
from dictatorships, in which the
executive acts as judge, jury and
executioner.
During the standoff, Johnson reportedly
told police there were “bombs all over”
downtown Dallas. The police didn’t know
if that was true. In order to protect
the public, they could have interrogated
him about the location of the bombs
after getting him out of the garage with
tear gas.
Apprehension and interrogation are
recommended in a 2013 study conducted by
the Pentagon’s Intelligence,
Surveillance, and Reconnaissance Task
Force. The study was cited in “The Drone
Papers,” leaked to The Intercept
by an anonymous whistleblower who was a
member of the intelligence community. It
concluded, “kill operations
significantly reduce the intelligence
available from detainees and captured
material” and recommended capture and
interrogation rather than killing in
aerial drone strikes.
The Obama administration currently uses
unmanned armed drones to kill people in
seven countries, effectively denying
them due process.
There is a slippery slope from police
use of armed robots to domestic use of
armed drones. The Dallas police
department’s robot was apparently
manufactured by Northrup Grumman, the
same company that makes the Global Hawk
drones, used for surveillance in Obama’s
drone program.
More than half the U.S.-Mexico border is
patrolled with surveillance drones.
Customs and Border Protection is
considering arming them with
“non-lethal” weapons. That could include
rubber bullets, which can put out an
eye.
The killing of Johnson is evidently the
first time domestic law enforcement has
utilized an armed robot to kill a
suspect. It will not be the last. Police
departments are becoming increasingly
militarized, using assault weapons,
armored personnel carriers, grenade
launchers, and ear-splitting sirens
known as LRADs. Much of this equipment
is purchased from the Pentagon at a
significant discount.
But the answer to our national epidemic
of racist police killings is not to
further militarize law enforcement. We
must completely rethink and restructure
policing. That means requiring advanced
degrees for police officers, intensive
screening for racism, and rigorous
training in how to handle cross-racial
situations. It means moving toward
community-based policing and citizens
police-review boards with independent
authority. And it means coming to grips
with the pernicious racism that
permeates our society.
Marjorie Cohn is professor emerita at
Thomas Jefferson School of Law where she
taught for 25 years. The former
president of the National Lawyers Guild
and criminal defense attorney is a legal
scholar, political analyst and social
critic who writes books and articles,
makes media appearances and lectures
throughout the world about human rights
and U.S. foreign policy.
This article first appeared on
The Hill.
©
2016 The Hill