Political Lies About Police Brutality

Video record­ings of police offi­cers bat­ter­ing or even mur­der­ing unarmed black cit­i­zens have val­i­dat­ed long­stand­ing com­plaints by African-Americans and changed the way the coun­try views the issue of police bru­tal­i­ty. Police offi­cers who

Harry Campbell
Harry Campbell

might once have felt free to arrest or assault black cit­i­zens for no cause and explain it away lat­er have been put on notice that the truth could be revealed by a cell­phone video post­ed on the Internet.
This kind of pub­lic scruti­ny is all to the good, giv­en the dam­age police bru­tal­i­ty has done to African-American com­mu­ni­ties for gen­er­a­tions and the cor­ro­sive effect it has on the broad­er soci­ety. Yet the peel­ing away of secre­cy on these indis­putably uncon­sti­tu­tion­al prac­tices is now being chal­lenged by politi­cians who want to soft-ped­al or even ignore police mis­con­duct while attack­ing the peo­ple who expose it or raise their voic­es in protest against it. This trend is like some­thing straight out of Orwell.

Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey — the increas­ing­ly des­per­ate pres­i­den­tial can­di­date who is going nowhere fast — took this pos­ture on Sunday when he accused President Obama of encour­ag­ing “law­less­ness” and vio­lence against police offi­cers by acknowl­edg­ing that the coun­try need­ed to take both police bru­tal­i­ty and the “Black Lives Matter” protest move­ment seriously.

The pres­i­dent is absolute­ly right. This move­ment focus­es on the irrefutable fact that black cit­i­zens are far more like­ly than whites to die at the hands of the police. The more the coun­try ignores that truth, the greater the civic dis­cord that will flow from it.

The recent remarks of James Comey, the direc­tor of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, were not as racial­ly poi­so­nous as Mr. Christie’s, but they were no less incen­di­ary. In a speech at the University of Chicago Law School on Friday, Mr. Comey said that height­ened scruti­ny of police behav­ior — and fear of appear­ing in “viral videos” — was lead­ing offi­cers to avoid con­fronta­tions with sus­pects. This, he said, may have con­tributed to an increase in crime.

There is no data sug­gest­ing such an effect, and cer­tain­ly Mr. Comey has none. But his sug­ges­tion plays into the right-wing view that hold­ing the police to con­sti­tu­tion­al stan­dards endan­gers the pub­lic. Justice Department offi­cials who have made a top pri­or­i­ty of pros­e­cut­ing police depart­ments for civ­il rights vio­la­tions — and who dis­pute that height­ened scruti­ny of the police dri­ves up crime — were under­stand­ably angry at Mr. Comey’s speculations.

His for­mu­la­tion implies that for the police to do their jobs, they need to have free rein to be abu­sive. It also implies that the pub­lic would be safer if Americans with cell­phones nev­er start­ed cir­cu­lat­ing videos of offi­cers bat­ter­ing sus­pects in the first place.

A day after Mr. Comey made his remarks, The Times pub­lished a lengthy inves­ti­ga­tioninto racial pro­fil­ing and abu­sive police behav­ior in Greensboro, N.C., the third-largest city in the state. After review­ing tens of thou­sands of traf­fic stops and years of arrest data, Times reporters found that the police pulled over African-American dri­vers at a rate far out of pro­por­tion to their share of the local dri­ving pop­u­la­tion. The police searched black motorists or their cars twice as often as whites — even though whites where sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to be caught with drugs and weapons.

Greensboro police offi­cers were more like­ly to pull black dri­vers over for no rea­son and more like­ly to use force if the dri­ver was black, even when the dri­ver offered no phys­i­cal resis­tance. A black Greensboro man who near­ly lost his job as a result of ask­ing an offi­cer why he was being ordered out of his car dur­ing a night­mar­ish encounter said: “Every time I see a police offi­cer, I get a cold chill. Even if I need­ed one, I wouldn’t call one.”

This is the kind of treat­ment that some Americans rou­tine­ly face at the hands of their police depart­ments. Mr. Comey’s spec­u­la­tions about alleged pres­sure on offi­cers to stand down shows that he hasn’t begun to grasp the nature of the problem.
Read more : Political Lies About Police Brutality