After S.C. police shooting, a radically different response
Loading...
This time, the fatal shooting of an apparently unarmed black man by a white police officer resulted in something different: a swift, decisive, and broad-based consensus that the officer should be charged with murder.
A bystander video that surfaced Tuesday appears to show Patrolman 1st Class Michael Slager of North Charleston, S.C., shooting Walter Scott in the back after a routine traffic stop on Saturday. Mr. Scott was attempting to flee.
Certainly, the compelling nature of the video evidence led to Mr. Slager being arrested, quickly charged by prosecutors, and then fired from the force.
But the reaction by local authorities also hints at how much has changed in the seven months since a white police officer fatally shot a black teenager in the streets of Ferguson, Mo.
There was no attempt to close ranks around the officer. Instead, the mayor and police chief visited the victim鈥檚 family on Wednesday morning and announced they would provide a police escort for Scott鈥檚 funeral. The mayor also issued an executive order that all the city鈥檚 police officers must start wearing body cameras.
Slowly, and perhaps inconsistently, the wide latitude that society has long given police officers who say their lives are in danger is beginning to change.
The victim鈥檚 father said that without the bystander video, 鈥淚t would have never come to light. They would have swept it right under the rug, like they did with many others.鈥
But the existence of the video, along with the momentum for reform spawned by a half-dozen other recent incidents from Los Angeles to Madison, Wis., 鈥 some with videos of their own 鈥 is threatening the traditional deference given to police.
鈥淭here is 鈥 and police departments are starting to know this 鈥 there is a crisis of legitimacy,鈥 says Jeannine Bell, a professor at the who studies policing and hate crimes. 鈥淎nd this crisis does not help the difficult job that police officers already have of fighting crime and protecting citizens 鈥 it absolutely does not.鈥
For the most part, the majority of white Americans have long given police the benefit of the doubt when it comes to the use of force. Combining data from 2011 to 2014, for example, a Gallup study last August found that nearly 60 percent of whites had 鈥渁 great deal or quite a lot of confidence鈥 in police departments, ranking them just below the military and small businesses as the nation鈥檚 most trusted institutions. By contrast, only 37 percent of blacks expressed such confidence 鈥 a fact well known even before the incidents in Ferguson and New York.
Charging a police officer with murder remains extremely rare. During the past five years, police in South Carolina have shot at 209 suspects, killing 79, . Only three officers were accused of wrongdoing in these shootings, however, and none of them was convicted. Indeed, such numbers reflect the same picture from jurisdictions around the country, in which
The police killings during the past year have shed light on a system, including grand jury procedures, that is run by police and prosecutors who work closely together on a day-to-day basis 鈥 a fraternity, one former prosecutor told the Monitor last year, that creates a 鈥渃hallenging environment for a prosecutor to seek an indictment, let alone a conviction, of a police officer.鈥
It is this situation that is coming under such intense scrutiny now.
鈥淭here is no question that people鈥檚 attitudes will continue to change with respect to police agencies and the presumed honesty of police officers, especially if laws don't change,鈥 says Martin Lijtmaer, a criminal defense attorney in Los Angeles, via e-mail. 鈥淓xisting laws foster a culture of secrecy.鈥
He notes that in California, defense attorneys have to overcome substantial hurdles to get a court to order the disclosure of misconduct complaints against police officers. 鈥淓ven then,鈥 he says, 鈥渢he information one gets is limited and subject to burdensome protective orders which prevent wider disclosure.鈥
Scathing reports this year by the Justice Department on the behavior and culture of several police departments and criminal justice systems have only added to the pressure. 聽
鈥淭he bottom line is, these incidents are a wake-up call, not just for law enforcement, but the community as well,鈥 says Tod Burke, professor of criminal justice at Radford University in Virginia.
A former Maryland police officer, Dr. Burke emphasizes the need for officer support, even in the face of public outcry.
鈥淏ut if the officer is in the wrong, the police agency needs to be the first to recognize it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t shouldn鈥檛 take the public going, 鈥楬ey, your officers are messing up.鈥 It should be, 鈥榃e鈥檙e messing up, and we need to correct it.鈥 鈥