NY Post Eric Garner and Michael Brown
had much in common, not the least of which was this: On the last day of
their lives, they made bad decisions. Epically bad decisions.
Each broke the law — petty offenses, to be sure, but sufficient to attract the attention of the police.
And then — tragically, stupidly, fatally, inexplicably — each fought the law.
The law won, of course, as it almost always does.
This was underscored yet again Wednesday when a Staten Island grand jury chose not to indict any of the arresting officers in the death in police custody of Garner last July.
Just as a grand jury last week declined to indict the police officer
who shot a violently resisting Michael Brown to death in Ferguson, Mo.,
in August.
Demagoguery rises to an art form in such cases — because, again, the
police generally win. (Though not always, as a moment’s reflection
before the Police Memorial in lower Manhattan will underscore.) And
because those who advocate for cop-fighters are so often such
accomplished beguilers.
They cast these tragedies as, if not outright murder, then invincible evidence of an enduringly racist society.
No such thing, as a matter of fact. Virtually always, these cases
represent sad, low-impact collisions of cops and criminals — routine in
every respect except for an outlier conclusion.
The Garner case is textbook.
Eric Garner was a career petty criminal who’d experienced dozens of
arrests, but had learned nothing from them. He was on the street July
17, selling untaxed cigarettes one at a time — which, as inconsequential
as it seems, happens to be a crime.
Yet another arrest was under way when, suddenly, Garner balked. “This
ends here,” he shouted — as it turned out, tragically prophetic words —
as he began struggling with the arresting officer.
Again, this was a bad decision. Garner suffered from a range of
medical ailments — advanced diabetes, plus heart disease and asthma so
severe that either malady might have killed him, it was said at the
time.
Still, he fought — and at one point during the struggle, a cop wrapped his arm around Garner’s neck.
That image was captured on bystander video and later presented as
irrefutable evidence of an “illegal” chokehold and, therefore, grounds
for a criminal indictment against the cop.
That charge fails, and here’s why. [...]
How is holding up a convenience store a petty criminal offense?
ReplyDelete"Epically." Of course.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure, but I think the backup was already there. Garner resisted arrest for at least several minutes based on the video. The cops even said to him that he "knew the drill and should make it easy", but he wouldn't listen.
ReplyDelete