southernhybrid
Contributor
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/06/28/us/i-cant-breathe-police-arrest.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage
I will let those who are interested read the entire long article, but the point is that far too many people are being killed by the police. A far larger percentage of black men are victims when one considers that the percentage of black Americans is only about 13%, and there were also a large percentage of Hispanic men killed, but white people are also victims of being killed by the police. To me, it's obvious that our police are out of control and are using extremely aggressive and/or violent means when they arrest people. Some of it is due to ignorance, but a lot of it seems to be due to hatred, prejudice etc.
The NYTImes found about 70 cases where the police killed victims who were usually only being accused of trivial things. One was stopped for riding a bike without a light. Some were mentally ill and needed help or were experiencing untoward reactions to drugs they had taken. In some cases, family members had called 911 expecting medical help to arrive, only to have the police arrive and end up killing the person who needed help.
I just hope that as more of these improper police actions are brought to light, that something will change. Very few police have been brought to justice so far. I hope that changes. I hope that more deadly procedures will be outlawed and that when a person says that he can't breathe, that will be taken seriously.
If the mods think this should be added to an already existing thread, please put it where you think it fits best.
The deaths of Eric Garner in New York and George Floyd in Minnesota created national outrage over the use of deadly police restraints. There were many others you didn’t hear about.
Many of the cases suggest a widespread belief that persists in departments across the country that a person being detained who says “I can’t breathe” is lying or exaggerating, even if multiple officers are using pressure to restrain the person. Police officers, who for generations have been taught that a person who can talk can also breathe, regularly cited that bit of conventional wisdom to dismiss complaints of arrestees who were dying in front of them, records and interviews show.
That dubious claim was photocopied and posted on a bulletin board at the Montgomery County Jail in Dayton, Ohio, in 2018. “If you can talk then you obviously can [expletive] breathe,” the sign said.
Federal officials have long warned about factors that can cause suffocations in custody, and for the past five years, a federal law has required local police agencies to report all in-custody deaths to the Justice Department or face the loss of federal law enforcement funding.
But while the cases of Mr. Garner and Mr. Floyd shocked the nation, dozens of other incidents with a remarkable common denominator have gone widely unacknowledged. Over the past decade, The New York Times found, at least 70 people have died in law enforcement custody after saying the same words — “I can’t breathe.” The dead ranged in age from 19 to 65. The majority of them had been stopped or held over nonviolent infractions, 911 calls about suspicious behavior, or concerns about their mental health. More than half were black.
Dozens of videos, court documents, autopsies and police reports reviewed in these cases — involving a range of people who died in confrontations with officers on the street, in local jails or in their homes — show a pattern of aggressive tactics that ignored prevailing safety precautions while embracing dubious science that suggested that people pleading for air do not need urgent intervention.
In some of the “I can’t breathe” cases, officers restrained detainees by the neck, hogtied them, Tased them multiple times or covered their heads with mesh hoods designed to prevent spitting or biting. Most frequently, officers pushed them face down on the ground and held them prone with their body weight.
I will let those who are interested read the entire long article, but the point is that far too many people are being killed by the police. A far larger percentage of black men are victims when one considers that the percentage of black Americans is only about 13%, and there were also a large percentage of Hispanic men killed, but white people are also victims of being killed by the police. To me, it's obvious that our police are out of control and are using extremely aggressive and/or violent means when they arrest people. Some of it is due to ignorance, but a lot of it seems to be due to hatred, prejudice etc.
The NYTImes found about 70 cases where the police killed victims who were usually only being accused of trivial things. One was stopped for riding a bike without a light. Some were mentally ill and needed help or were experiencing untoward reactions to drugs they had taken. In some cases, family members had called 911 expecting medical help to arrive, only to have the police arrive and end up killing the person who needed help.
I just hope that as more of these improper police actions are brought to light, that something will change. Very few police have been brought to justice so far. I hope that changes. I hope that more deadly procedures will be outlawed and that when a person says that he can't breathe, that will be taken seriously.
If the mods think this should be added to an already existing thread, please put it where you think it fits best.