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Rights and Liberties

Indicting NYC Cops Is One Thing, Convicting Them Is Another

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, New America Media. Posted March 19, 2007.


The attorney for the NYC police officer accused of killing Sean Bell believes his client will be acquitted. This is not typical attorney bluster; the odds are that he is right.
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New York Attorney Phillip Karasyk minced no words when a reporter asked about the prospect that his client, New York City police officer Gerscard Isnora, will be acquitted in the killing of Sean Bell. Karasyk flatly said that he'd be vindicated.

This was not typical attorney bluster; the odds are that Karasyk is right.

The November 25 shooting of the unarmed Bell, a new bridegroom, and the wounding of two of his friends, stirred public rage and protests. And there was good reason to expect that some of the cops that fired the volley of shots that killed Bell would be indicted.

But expectations, not to mention witness testimony, seemingly unimpeachable evidence, and even the official condemnation of the deadly shooting by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg won't guarantee that Isnora and the other two officers indicted are convicted. It's easy to see why.

When cops go on trial for overuse of deadly force, their victims are generally poor blacks and Latinos. The attorneys that defend them are top gun defense attorneys, and have had much experience defending police officers accused of misconduct. Police unions pay them and they spare no expense in their defense. The cops rarely serve any pre-trial jail time, and are released on ridiculously low bail.

During jury selection, their attorneys seek to get as many whites on the panel as possible. The presumption is that white jurors are much more likely to be middle-class, and conservative, and much more likely to believe the testimony of police and prosecution witnesses than black witnesses, defendants, or even the victims.

The same rule applies to black or Latino jurors, and both may be represented on the New York cop's jury. They are generally middle-class, and share the same biases toward those they perceive as the criminal element as many whites.

Prosecutors have a big task in trying to overcome the pro-police attitudes, and the negative racial stereotypes of middle-class jurors. A 2003 Penn State University study found that many whites are likely to associate pictures of blacks with violent crimes, and in some cases where crimes were not committed by blacks they misidentified the perpetrator as an African-American.

The frequent media portrayal of young blacks and Latinos as crime-prone, drug-dealing gangsters, the gang and murder violence that continues to wrack many black neighborhoods, and the glorification of the thug lifestyle by many young blacks reinforces negative racial perceptions.

Almost certainly, defense attorneys will try and type Bell and his two companions in that manner. This makes many whites, non-blacks and even many older blacks guarded, suspicious and fearful of young blacks.

There is no ironclad standard of what is or isn't acceptable use of force. It often comes down to a judgment call by the officer. In the Rodney King beating case in 1992 in which four LAPD officers stood trial, defense attorneys turned the tables and painted King as the aggressor and claimed that the level of force used against him was justified.

The four New York City cops tried for gunning down African immigrant, Amadou Diallo in 1999, also claimed that they feared for their lives. The jury believed them and acquitted them.

In Cincinnati, a municipal judge summarily acquitted white Cincinnati police officer, Stephen Roach of criminal charges in the slaying of 19-year-old Timothy Thomas during a traffic pursuit in 2001. The shooting ignited three days of riots. The judge bought Roach's tale that he feared for his life, and fired in self-defense.

In the Bell case, Kasaryk and the other officer's attorneys almost certainly will use the same tact and argue that the officers feared for their lives when they fired. In his initial call to a supervising police lieutenant, Isnora said he thought one of the suspects had a gun, made a suspicious move, and that the car they were in bumped him.

The code of silence is another powerful obstacle to convicting bad cops. Officers hide behind it and refuse to testify against other officers, or tailor their testimony to put the officer's action in the best possible light.

Prosecutors often are barred from using statements made during internal investigations of officer misconduct in court proceedings on grounds of self-incrimination. This knocks out another potentially crucial prosecution weapon. Federal prosecutors that retried the officers that beat King learned a vital lesson from the abysmal failure of local prosecutors to convict them. They did not rely exclusively on the videotape but on expert testimony on the use of force to prove that the officers went way over the top against King.

Yet despite the massive time, resources, and care they devoted to the case, they still only managed to convict two of the four officers. Karasyk well knows that nailing cops is a rough task for even the most diligent prosecutor. He's betting that it will take much more than solid evidence that it was a bad shooting to nail his client. That's a good bet, but prosecutors must be prepared to call him on it.

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See more stories tagged with: new york city police, sean bell

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is a political analyst and social issues commentator, and the author of the book, The Emerging Black GOP Majority (Middle Passage Press, September 2006), a hard-hitting look at Bush and the GOP's court of black voters.

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The Author is color blind!
Posted by: Conservasaurus on Mar 19, 2007 8:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, Mayor Bloomberg’s remarks set a biased situation for the cops accused. Bloomberg should have never made those comments without knowing the circumstances, and never being on the street!

“”When cops go on trial for overuse of deadly force, their victims are generally poor blacks and Latinos”” – how about because Black and Latinos are involved in most of the gang related activity for whatever social economic reasons!

“The attorneys that defend them are top gun defense attorneys, and have had much experience defending police officers accused of misconduct”” – blacks and Latinos have Al Sharpton and the ACLU, the police don’t, so having a top attorney seems only fair – especially given the remarks on Mayor Bloomberg!

""The cops rarely serve any pre-trial jail time, and are released on ridiculously low bail """– these factors are based on probability of flight, lower for cops, higher for gang members!

“During jury selection, their attorneys seek to get as many whites on the panel as possible. “ – and defendants attorneys try to get a jury profile partial to their case.. so what is wrong with this?

""In the Rodney King beating case in 1992 in which four LAPD officers stood trial, defense attorneys turned the tables and painted King as the aggressor and claimed that the level of force used against him was justified. ""– I know the author is partial to the King case, but he should have done some research on this case!...King was the aggressor, attacked the police after pulled over in a highspeed chase! He resisted arrest and fought the police when they tried to restrain him – The police had reason to believe King may have been on PCP as he didn’t respond to a taser at all.. The black community’s response to the verdict was a crime and the beating of whites, especially that white truck drive nearly beaten to death by the blacks was overlooked!!!!! - that is a crime!

“The four New York City cops tried for gunning down African immigrant, Amadou Diallo in 1999, also claimed that they feared for their lives. The jury believed them and acquitted them.” – those police were part of the NYC Street Crime Unit, which was responsible for greatly reducing crime in NY. In their situation, dark hallway and apparently seeing a bright object, their situation is understandable though tragic. Their environment consists of dealing with people who wouldn’t hesitate to shoot at them at all, mostly minority!

While no one should overlook police brutality, and monitities should be treated fairly, no one should overlook what are honest judgment calls by police, and mistake them for intentional crimes just because minorities are involved!

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» RE: The Author is color blind! Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: The Author is color blind! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: The Author is color blind! Posted by: ALANHESTER
» Out of Control Cops Posted by: stagolee
» RE: Out of Control Cops Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Out of Control Cops Posted by: stagolee
» Talk about out of control! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» They Were Doing their JOBS! Posted by: stagolee
» RE: They Were Doing their JOBS! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: They Were Doing their JOBS! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» Left Out Timothy Thomas Posted by: hole11
» RE: Left Out Timothy Thomas Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: Left Out Timothy Thomas Posted by: Conservasaurus
THE TIME HAS COME......
Posted by: ALANHESTER on Mar 20, 2007 12:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....for people of color to stop looking to the Justice system for any real justice. Mafia figures do not rely on police for justice. Neither should people of color!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: THE TIME HAS COME...... Posted by: Conservasaurus
You're comparing people of color to the Mafia?
Posted by: medstudgeek on Mar 20, 2007 6:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't know. I don't really think this is productive. The Mafia is illegal almost by definition but there's no reason people of color can't organize and agitate to have their voices hard in a legal fashion. Come to think of it, corporations do the same thing by buying congressmen, so...

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The Chicago Police Department
Posted by: Peacepole1@miraclestation2000.com on Mar 22, 2007 12:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd be interested to see how the comparison goes between that Chicago Police Officer who beat the crap out of that female bartender and the the Police Officers who shot Sean Bell and his friends.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Read Brownwatch.com For A Litany of Brutality Cases
Posted by: stagolee on Mar 22, 2007 3:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Brownwatch.com

That site hasn't been updated in several months, but still manages to build a shocking case.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Coast to Coast...California..Texas...New York....Wisconsin...Florida
Posted by: ekipnrut on Mar 22, 2007 7:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....
Overkill: Six HPD officers fired over 30 rounds into a sleeping, unarmed man, one officer emptying his clip and reloading in the process. Pedro Oregon died in what police called a drug raid. No drugs or weapons were found. One of the six was charged with misdemeanor trespassing. Witnesses described the killing an intentional murder. The squad of narcotics officers had entered the house without a warrant. In retaliation for his testimony, the victim's brother was arrested on a trumped up charge of giving false testimony, later cleared. No police officers were convicted in the killing. For more, consult:

HPD

When wild vicious hulking mad dogs ,like the one in the video mercilessly beating the bartendress, are allowed to run amok in any community with gun and a badge providing the full authority and enormity of power of the State, all such paths throughout recorded history have always led to revolt.
Not all cops are necessarily evil, racist or psycho/sociopaths
who are able to carry out their perverted agendas under the color of State conferred authority. And yes ,cops as a rule are
expected to routinely confront dangerous situations that most
civilians don't want anything to do with...that's why the cops
were called to begin with!
Nevertheless lethal racism in American law enforcement
continues, thus far unchecked and unabated.

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Bad Cops are Cop Killers
Posted by: leafsong1 on Mar 23, 2007 12:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The authority of the law is a shield more than a weapon for cops, something many of them apparently do not realize. Lawless behavior by cops inspires and necessitates violence against cops in general. Juries must be made to see that unlawful use of force by bad cops against suspects leads to unlawful use of force against good cops by suspects. It should also be noted that there is a correlation between excessive force incidents and inadequate funding for police departments. When the system of bringing suspects in for trial starts to break down, police improvise their own unlawful methods for deterring crime.

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Understanding The Relationship of African Americans to Police...
Posted by: stagolee on Mar 24, 2007 2:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To fully understand the mentality of police in the US (and other racialized societies like Brazil), you must go back to the legacy of the slave-catcher / bounty hunter. The slave catcher and the bounty hunter are the ideological antecedents to police (regardless of ethnicity) in the US and Brazil today. I say 'regardless of ethnicity' because police receive the same training and are given the same mission, regardless of ethnicity.

Also, bringing it a little closer, historically, in the 1920s and 1930s, US police promoted the belief that six .32 or .38 bullets could not stop the average Black man. They created a climate of racial fear (of the African superman) and they were granted the rights to carry larger caliber weapons which, is what we see on their hips today.

Soon thereafter, we hear domestic police discussions about the relative "stopping power" of different bullets - and how to get the most stopping power. This never ending quest for optimized "stopping power" has since been legitimized as the science of "wound ballistics". Not to minimize wounds, of course... to optimize. So, when you see your local PD with 13 rounds of 9mm in their pistol, understand that it's directly linked to racialized fear.

Stopping Power
Wound Ballistics

Today, the police treat Black men as an alien life form who must be subdued with the most vigorous force.

All the tools (clubs, tasers, zip-cuffs, choke holds, nets, etc.) and tactics (fear, intimidation, profiling, hog-tieing, choke holds, raids, etc.) at the disposal of police today have historical precedents in the business of slave catching.

This latent understanding (on both sides), of course, influences the tense relationship between African Americans and the police that we experience today. Their job is to keep us subdued. Our response is toward the affirmation of our humanity.

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