- "Almost
all criminal defendants are, in fact, guilty."
Alan
Dershowitz, The Best Defense, 1982
Assume,
for a moment, that Mr. Dershowitz got it right—that most of the guys
the cops legitimately hook and book, the ones the DA prosecutes, did
it.
If true,
this makes the "black community" reaction to the Riverside,
California, shooting death of Tyisha Miller all the more tragic.
- Here’s
what happened. Early in the morning of December 28, 1998, a nineteen-year-old
black woman sat in her locked car, motor running, with a gun in her
lap. Her cousin and friend called 911, and four officers arrived, three
whites and one Hispanic. The officers found her apparently incoherent,
perhaps even having a seizure. They tried to arouse Miller by shaking
the car, shining a light into her face, and honking a horn. Nothing
worked. (A toxicology report later showed Miller to be one-and-one-half
times above the legal limit for alcohol, with traces of marijuana in
her system.)
- Given
what appeared to be a medical emergency, the police broke the window
nearest the gun, so that it could be removed and medics could attend
to her. By law, medics cannot render assistance until police eliminate
the threat posed by the gun.
- Tragically,
the shattering of the window apparently startled Tyisha, and officers
say she moved toward her gun. They shot a her nearly two dozen times,
hitting her twelve.
Following the shooting, the Riverside Police Department announced an
investigation, as did the Riverside DA’s office, as well as the FBI.
Jesse Jackson, giving new meaning to the term "rush to judgment,"
called the shooting "an execution."
- The
decision not to charge the officers, still leaves them vulnerable, however,
to civil liability. And to that end, the Miller family just retained
Johnnie Cochran, who attributed the shooting to racism, saying that
"enough is enough." Reverend Al Sharpton, fresh from falsely
accusing a New York prosecutor of raping Tawana Brawley, came to town,
chanting, "What do we want? Justice. When do we want it? Now."
- Former
University of Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler hated to pass,
saying, "When you do, three things can happen, and two of ‘em are
bad." Yet based on the facts known so far, these officers had precious
few, if any good options.
- Back
to Dershowitz’ dictum that "almost all criminal defendants are,
in fact, guilty." The "black leadership’s" attack on
these four officers, the willingness to assume the worst of motives,
reinforces the "victicrat" mantra, "The cops hate us.
The cops are racist. The cops are storm troopers."
- Given
that attitude, who loses? The inner-city community.
- See,
the race-card leaders and lawyers condition prospective jurors to doubt
police testimony, however compelling. Can you say, "the O. J. Simpson
case"? Nationwide, the criminal trial acquittal rate is approximately
17%. But in predominantly black areas, like the Bronx and Wayne County
(Detroit), the acquittal rates are nearly three times higher. What do
you suppose these, uh, gentlemen do when they hit the streets? Take
a computer software correspondence course and apply for a job at Microsoft?
Or do they commit more crimes, and against the very jurors who cut them
loose?
The anti-cop "victicrat"
mentality has another effect. It makes cops less "proactive,"
less likely to investigate something suspicious, less willing to stick
their necks out. After all, what’s the upside?
Homeowners place
burglar bars on homes not because of Mark Fuhrman, but because of the
young punk down the street.
Certainly there
are bad cops. But not most.
In 1991, following
the videotaped beating of Rodney King, the Warren Christopher Commission
identified a "problem group" of dozens of officers. But
the percentage amounted to a small fraction of the total.
In 1998, LAPD officers
answered close to one million calls, made around 200,000 arrests, and
issued about half-a-million citations for moving violations. The department
received 481 complaints of unauthorized force, with 217 sustained in
some way by department investigation. (The number of complaints in 1998
increased three to four times over previous years, due to the newly-installed
chief’s aggressive policy to encourage citizen complaints.)
Considering the
one million police-citizen "interactions," our men and women
in blue do a good job under stressful, often unrewarding conditions.
Racism? Well, compared to the NYPD, the Washington, DC, Police Department,
a predominately black force, is six times more likely to shoot
at a suspect.
Cops endure a rough,
tough, often thankless job. And on top of that, they are frequently
called bigots. But how many of us are willing to get up in the morning
and take a bullet for somebody we don’t even know? The answer, after
Tyisha Miller, is a lot less than before. We all lose.
Copyright © Larry Elder & Associates
- All rights reserved.
Send mail to Larry@larryelder.com
www.larryelder.com
|