19-Year-Old College Student Charged With A Hate Crime For Teasing A Cop

In another shocking iteration of how America has become a police state- police in Utah arrested a 19-year-old college student because she crumpled up a pathetic ‘back-the-blue’ sign, and threw it in the garbage as he abused her colleagues in a traffic stop in a backwoods town of fewer than 2’000 people.
Now check this out, even the people whose brainchild the law was, say that was not the intent of the law. It was designed to protect marginalized people who become victims of legitimate hate.
But this is exactly what these Republican-run states do wherever there is a national outcry against police violence they attach all kinds of police protections in legislation that would legitimately pass muster, effectively making police in America part of a national marginalized community.
If you are wondering why this is so, read up on how policing came into being in the United States from slave overseers to slave-catchers to what it is today.
They wear uniforms today but their functions remain as they did hundreds of years ago. Police still operate as foot soldiers for white supremacy.

Lauren Gibson was in a car­a­van of friends head­ing from their camp­ing spot in Panguitch, Utah, back to California last week when one of the cars was pulled over for speed­ing. The stop took place near a gas sta­tion in the small town of less than 2,000 people.
Before the day was over, the 19-year-old was on her way to fac­ing hate-crime charges in what crit­ics describe as one of the more absurd exam­ples yet of aggriev­ed cops undu­ly liken­ing them­selves to mar­gin­al­ized minor­i­ty groups in a coun­try rife with hate crimes.

Gibson said the Garfield County Sheriff’s Deputy who pulled over her friend’s car was aggres­sive and even­tu­al­ly wrote her friend a tick­et for speed­ing. After watch­ing the inter­ac­tion, she said, she was upset and picked up a rust­ed “Back the Blue” sign that she said her friends had found on the side of the road and kept in one of the cars. (The deputy would lat­er sus­pect that it had been stolen from the gas sta­tion and even went inside to check, but learned it had not been.) After the deputy fin­ished writ­ing his tick­et, she told The Daily Beast, she waved the sign at the offi­cer, stepped on it, and threw it in the trash.

Gibson, a California col­lege stu­dent, said she wouldn’t describe her­self as “anti-police,” even though she does believe some tend to abuse their pow­er. The dis­play of emo­tion, she said, was due to her anger over how her friend was treat­ed and the effect the traf­fic stop seemed to have on her. “I just want­ed to, I don’t know, make her feel bet­ter or some­thing or stand up for her,” Gibson told The Daily Beast.
Instead, Gibson was arrest­ed by a sheriff’s deputy and charged with dis­or­der­ly con­duct and crim­i­nal mis­chief with a hate-crime enhance­ment for her attempt to “intim­i­date law enforce­ment,” accord­ing to a prob­a­ble cause affi­davit obtained by The Daily Beast.
The charge was a shock to Gibson. And hate-crime experts famil­iar with Utah’s laws say they also believe it is a stretch at best.

This doesn’t real­ly seem to meet the cri­te­ria for what we would gen­er­al­ly con­sid­er a hate crime, nor the spe­cif­ic lan­guage of the statute,” said Seth Brysk, a Utah region­al direc­tor with the Anti-Defamation League.
The Garland County Sheriff’s Office did not respond to repeat­ed requests for com­ment on Gibson’s arrest. The Garfield County Attorney’s Office also did not respond to repeat­ed requests about whether and how Gibson would be pros­e­cut­ed on the charges she faces.
In the affi­davit, the respond­ing deputy report­ed that Gibson stomped on the “Back the Blue” sign, crum­bled it up “in a destruc­tive man­ner” and threw it into a trash can — “all while smirk­ing in an intim­i­dat­ing manner.”
But Brysk, who helped advo­cate for Utah’s hate-crime enhance­ments, which passed into law in 2019, said the key phrase there is “intim­i­date” — which is lan­guage includ­ed in the statute. While the mod­el hate-crime statute that the ADL draft­ed for Utah was meant to pro­tect vic­tims of cer­tain races, reli­gions, or sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tions, he said the ver­sion that even­tu­al­ly passed in Utah also applies that pro­tect­ed sta­tus to law-enforce­ment offi­cers. Louisiana passed a sim­i­lar addi­tion to their hate crime statute in 2016, at a time when, as now, protests against police vio­lence were vis­i­ble in the state and nationally.

Although he believes that addi­tion was “unnec­es­sary” giv­en that there are already harsh­er laws on the books for peo­ple who attack law-enforce­ment offi­cers, Brysk said, he does believe there are instances where some­one may be seek­ing to ter­ror­ize or intim­i­date cops writ large.
According to a report by the National Law Enforcement Memorial and Museum, at least 264 cops were killed in 2020, a 96 per­cent increase from 2019 that was large­ly due to COVID. Nonetheless, the report claimed that at least six deaths were the result of an “ambush” attack on officers.
Still, Brysk added, a 19-year-old col­lege stu­dent rough­ing up a sign and smirk­ing doesn’t strike him as one of those instances. “That’s not the inten­tion and that’s not what’s going on here,” he told The Daily Beast.

Brian Levin, a pro­fes­sor of crim­i­nal jus­tice and direc­tor of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino, said he could see how Utah’s law might “at its great­est elas­tic stretch” allow for a “mis­ap­pli­ca­tion” of the statute in the case of Gibson. But he was doubt­ful her case would go very far. “I think any decent pros­e­cu­tor would decline the charges,” he said.
Of course, that might not be the case in Garfield County, where just last year, a man was arrest­ed, charged, and con­vict­ed in a strik­ing­ly sim­i­lar incident.
In August 2020, Joseph Dawson, 32, was arrest­ed by Garfield County Sheriff’s Office deputies after pulling down a sim­i­lar “Back the Blue” sign at an Escalante, Utah, gas sta­tion. He spray-paint­ed it with pink let­ters, replac­ing the word blue with “bisex­u­al,” accord­ing to a prob­a­ble cause affi­davit obtained by The Daily Beast.

A man near the gas sta­tion report­ed­ly con­front­ed Dawson, ripped the sign down, and wiped paint on Dawson’s head before he was able to dri­ve off. Dawson — who did not respond to a request for com­ment — was lat­er found by deputies at a hik­ing trail­head and gave a “long expla­na­tion” of why he defaced the sign, “but the expla­na­tion wasn’t clear,” accord­ing to the affi­davit. He was arrest­ed and, after the Sheriff’s Office appealed to the Utah Attorney General’s Office, charged with a hate crime.
In December, Dawson was found guilty, accord­ing to court records, and was sen­tenced to two days in jail and a year of pro­ba­tion. The Utah Attorney General’s Office did not respond to a request for comment.
Gibson said she start­ed to glean the gist about Dawson’s case from the deputy who arrest­ed her last week. “He told me, ‘Do you want to know what hap­pened to the last per­son that got arrest­ed for this?’” she said. “He was kind of threat­en­ing me in that way.”
Gibson said she spent one night in jail after her arrest and has not yet filed a plea. She faces up to a year in prison, but she hopes to get things resolved with the prosecutor’s office.

I don’t feel like I did any­thing wrong,” she said, adding that she does not believe that her actions jus­ti­fy a hate-crime charge in a coun­try where hor­rif­ic attacks on racial and reli­gious minori­ties have been inescapable in recent years.
“If it was a dentist’s sign or some­thing and I just crushed a den­tist sign or some­thing in front of them, like, noth­ing would have hap­pened,” she said. “It’s the same thing. it’s just an occupation.”(This sto­ry orig­i­nat­ed at Buzzfeed​.com)