In 2006, when Buffalo Police Officer Cariol Horne saw a white officer using a chokehold on a handcuffed Black suspect, she intervened. But that act ended her 19-year career. She was fired a year shy of getting her full pension.
Ms. Horne鈥檚 actions stand in stark contrast to the passivity of three Minneapolis police officers, who watched as then-Officer Derek Chauvin knelt on the neck of George Floyd last May. At Mr. Chauvin鈥檚 ongoing trial, two bystanders testified . All three officers face charges of .
In New York on Tuesday, after a 14-year legal battle, a judge annulled Ms. Horne鈥檚 dismissal and ruled she is entitled to her full pension, benefits, and back pay. New York Supreme Court Judge Dennis Ward wrote, 鈥淭he time is always right to do right,鈥 paraphrasing the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
The ruling is an overdue vindication for Ms. Horne. But the more enduring victory came last October when the mayor of Buffalo signed Cariol鈥檚 Law, requiring officers to step in when one of their own uses excessive force. Since Mr. Floyd's death, have been passed in Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Nevada, and New Jersey.聽
The Buffalo case suggests law enforcement norms are finally catching up to Ms. Horne鈥檚 moral standards, and that justice sometimes comes slowly. But with persistence, it comes.