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Outrage and Controversy at NY Museum Art Show Depicting Police Brutality

By Dread Scott, AlterNet. Posted March 29, 2008.


Artist Dread Scott argues that the controversy over his art installation only proves his point about "America's abuses of power."

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"Taxpayer dollars certainly should not fund any art that promotes hate, and that's certainly what [Dread Scott's, Blue Wall of Violence] does." Patrick Lynch, president, NYC Patrolmen's Benevolent Association

My exhibition Dread Scott: Welcome to America opened on February 28 at MoCADA (the Museum of Contemporary African Disporan Art) in Brooklyn, NY. It is a survey of my art spanning almost two decades. The show was instantly vilified in the NY Daily News and the police union called for the city and state to defund the museum because of one of the works. Specifically, they denounced "The Blue Wall of Violence." In its Feb. 29 article bearing the headline "Finest: Dis Art is the Worst!" the News wrote: "A cop-bashing art exhibit at a taxpayer-funded museum in Brooklyn portrays the city's Finest as trigger-happy racists who have put bull's-eyes on the backs of black New Yorkers."

"The Blue Wall of Violence" is a 1999 installation that addresses police brutality. It focuses on the object that the police "mistook" for a dangerous weapon when they shot an unarmed person. The artwork consists of several elements: On the wall are six actual FBI silhouette targets which police use for shooting practice. Protruding from each of these is a cast of an arm. In each hand is an object -- wallet, house keys, 3 Musketeers bar, squeegee, etc. Above each target is a date. In front of this is a coffin and in front of the coffin are three police batons which are moved by motors so that they each strike the casket every 10 seconds with a loud penetrating bang. The dates correspond to a day when an actual person was shot by the police and the objects are what they were holding when shot (For example, on February 4, 1999 Amadou Dialo was shot 41 times while holding his wallet, on Sept 24, 1994, 13-year-old Nicholas Hayward Jr. was killed while holding a brightly colored oversized water pistol ...)

In many of my artworks, I use common objects that have a particular resonance from everyday life. In this case, targets, coffins and billy clubs are combined and people can see something new about them. In another work in the exhibit I have a Black baby doll floating in an aquarium and place a trumpet at the bottom -- all in reference to Hurricane Katrina. My works tend to have a horrible beauty and that tension is what I think contributes to their power.

This work stylizes these six targets and a coffin to point to the tip of a much larger iceberg. When I made the piece in at the end of the 90s the police and law enforcement had killed over 2,000 people that decade. And this statistic has rapidly increased in the past 8 years.

The news story that has developed has focused on one artwork. What is overshadowed in all of this is that "The Blue Wall of Violence" is part of a larger exhibition that explores many themes. It includes work about people left to suffer and die in Katrina, people killed by the U.S. war on Afghanistan, brutality against Muslims while in detention after 9-11 and photographs and audio interviews with some of the 2.4 million prisoners in the U.S.

Police brutality in the U.S. is part of this larger picture. In considering what work would be included in the exhibition, I thought about what would enable my audience to think about some particular theme or subject addressed by individual works as well as to be able to muse about broader relationships. For example what is the relation between a Guinean immigrant being drawn to America and later killed by the police in the doorway to his Bronx apartment and children killed by U.S. bombs in Afghanistan?

A couple of people who visited the exhibit recently noted that I say, "I make revolutionary art to propel history forward" and wanted to know more about what I meant by that. The conversation touched on a range of things, but one thing I pointed out was that the world is a horror for billions of people. Many of the works in this exhibit highlight what this means for Black people and reveal how this society literally kills us.

I want my audience to engage the misery that this system causes for so many as well as dream about how it could be radically different. One work, "Imagine a World Without America" encourages the viewer to do just that. The title is from Bob Avakian, Chairman of the Revolutionary Communist Party, U.S.A, who has inspired my thinking and influenced my work for 20 years. We need systemic change from bottom to top and I would like my art to contribute to society getting beyond a world where a tiny handful controls the great wealth and knowledge that humanity as a whole has created.


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Prime Directive
Posted by: NoPCZone on Mar 29, 2008 1:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Law Enforcement MUST be Law Abiding.

Pardon me if I don't worship at the altar of the thin blue line, but the track record of US Law Enforcement and our criminal justice system isn't that good. Although there are without a doubt many good people who work within it (thank god), the greater whole is a mess and giving them a pass on scrutiny is not the way to improve things.

This set of works is doing what great art has done in the past and is stimulating conversation, thought and public comment upon a serious issue. Those who will not even consider the challenge posed by the art are shortchanging themselves, their community and the nation in which we live.

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» perfectly stated Posted by: abbadon2007
» RE: Prime Directive Posted by: efsawyer
» RE: Prime Directive Posted by: ZenQuixote
Tom
Posted by: disc golf on Mar 29, 2008 4:00 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The response to this accurate portrayal of actual events is certainly hypercritical and inappropriate! Why are so many Americans so afraid of tackling the truth? Police brutality happens, many officers have been involved and death of innocents is what can happen. This exhibit depicts the truth and for this, the artist is villified and ridiculed?

How else is police brutality to be stopped if the ways in which it happens in "the real world" aren't examined closely. That is what this smartly designed exhibit is doing. I think the brains of many Americans have become so accustomed to NOT thinking that when they are FORCED to think, they can't. This is as true for the issue of police brutality as many other issues confronting our society today.

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this is a forced title title for a titleless comment
Posted by: shikejian on Mar 29, 2008 5:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ah, that there were a publisher with as much guts as MoCADA!

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Success
Posted by: marxalot on Mar 29, 2008 5:39 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If work like this did not incite controversy, it would by definition be unsuccessful. You are right to anger the police and they are right to be angry.

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» RE: Success Posted by: sandratapial
» RE: Success Posted by: Pax99
Art and Reality vs Police Brutality
Posted by: Jim Swanson on Mar 29, 2008 6:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the many years I have lived and worked in mixed race communities I have witnessed thousands of cases of police brutality against People of Color.
In 1999 I witnessed a brutal, and incapacitating, set of beatings of a Black Man by two Officers. When the victim and I filed complaints the FBI came and threatened us with prison terms if we did not drop the complaints. The two Officers were Federal employees.
Living in a mixed community here in Chicago I see police brutality almost daily and there is no effort to improve it. As the politicians say: "this is what the voters want".
Barack Obama's Reverend Wright may be incorrect on a few issues, but for People of Color "God Damn America" is a mild form of outrage at the continued mistreatment of their Brothers.
Art may be one of the few ways left where OUTRAGE can be expressed in this repressive and racist nation.

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Policing A Police State Becomes An Artist's Responsibility ...
Posted by: gazooks on Mar 29, 2008 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... when there's no other civil entity willing or able to do it.

The culture of "law" enforcement is inherently complex, contradictory, ethically flawed, morally compromised, frequently corrupted and when push comes to shove, by design, a brutality based agency of the self deserving, overtly self serving internal and external political forces that dictate and support it's culture of violence.

It breeds a contagion of fear first amongst it's own by demonizing minority populations, anti-racial profiling policy be damned, then separates and distinguishes itself as something apart and morally superior to the "civilians" it ostensibly serves. In doing so it betrays the benevolent intent and legal discipline of the truly dedicated, professional practitioner of public service under the law.

Fundamental to this perverse sub culture within a sub culture, is an overriding belief in the fiction that they're cut of a different moral cloth than the rest of us, more courageous, socially conscious and uniquely dedicated to the collective social good. It's a self congratulating club of blindly bigoted, sexist, self righteous, macho morons looking for and facilitating trouble with their usual suspects with neurotic fervor. They're as psychically twisted and prone to feeding on violence as their presumed sociopathic targets. A bust is a multifaceted rush for release of accrued, professionally harbored tensions. It's often an opportunity to compromise the ethics of the underpaid and over juiced as well.

Cops have a tough job, maybe long term impossible for any but a singular few with a stomach of steel for the net of human depravity. But even they, the best, pay a heavy toll for the daily exposure to the sickness of violence that permeates the scope of our schizoid culture.

The marginal cops in the mix are always a hazard to civilians, but they're tolerated by good cops until they break the same laws that they've sworn to enforce, or their fears finally outweigh their inadequate training, or their fantasy of being more than human finally catches up.

Meanwhile, they're the ones crying the loudest about Dread Scott.

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To you, Dread Scott I say
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Mar 29, 2008 8:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Congratulations to you for your accurate examples of reality.

I also want to say, watch your back.

It is not overkill or stretching truth to say that police brutality is running rampant and uncontrolled in America.
Every day we see another example of this abuse of power by those in power.
I am a white business/home owner with no type of criminal record save for traffic offenses.
I live in a small/average sized city in the upper midwest.
I absolutely do NOT trust them.
Although I grew up in Chicago and spent much of my teen years with black people, I cannot imagine what it is like for a black person when they are automatic targets for these butchers.

As Jimmy Valvano said,
"Never give up. Never ever give up."

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» RE: To you, Dread Scott I say Posted by: Beached Whale
Racism in America - the police are no exception
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 29, 2008 8:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's what the comments reported by the artist show. It does reflect that the greatest area of racial disparity is in our police, court and prison system. Police target black people and Mexicans - everyone knows it. Whether this is because they're racist or not is unclear - but that's the reality. The one place you are guaranteed to find racism in the U.S. is inside most police departments. It's also one of the most common stereotypes in the U.S. media world: black people are criminals.

Racism is still a problem in the U.S. The only sane public comment on it I've ever heard is Obama's recent and remarkable speech.

Police always complain about criticism because they say it makes their job more dangerous - but the fact is, their behavior is what makes their jobs more dangerous. Cops who are racist and/or corrupt are all too common, especially the drug cops. If you really want to find the screwed up racist drug addicted cops, look no further than your local undercover drug squad.

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Better to be tried by 12
Posted by: billwald on Mar 29, 2008 9:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Better to be tried by 12 than carried by 6.

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This gives me hope.
Posted by: Sojourner on Mar 29, 2008 9:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do not resent cops, even after they have abused me to a small extent. But the fact that we have empowered them to be interpreters of the law--judge and jury on the street--means that we have created what can be a monster.

An additional consequence is that those who have the power of deadly force under the law, and who are unable to balance such a tremendous responsibility, will lash out at anyone who points out examples.

But that means that art also is just doing its job. The history of art has abundant examples of works that changed political and social history. A people is known by its art. I am happy to be known by the art described in this article.

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» RE: This gives me hope. Posted by: Lauren
» RE: This gives me hope. Posted by: Sojourner
An Unfair Portrayal of the Majority
Posted by: Southern Gal on Mar 29, 2008 9:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The majority of law enforcement people in this country are not as bad as the examples portrayed in this article. Most law enforcement people work to serve and protect their communities. They are paid next to nothing and frequently rish their lives to save peoples' lives and to protect their property. I know a white policeman who went into an angry group of African Americans to stop a fight, because he didn't want to see innocent people hurt. He is a community policeman and truly loves his community which is racially diverse, in the heart of the South. Yes, there are racists and thugs in law enforcement. I just don't believe that they are the majority. Having said that, I don't believe in censoring art because of the content. If you don't want to see it, don't go.

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» Majority, minority, all, or none Posted by: improperly_sedated
America is so insecure
Posted by: kindmuse on Mar 29, 2008 9:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Right on! Dread Scott! Keep up the good work. America needs to wake up.

peace

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Good art is meant to...
Posted by: VickyinSD on Mar 29, 2008 9:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
provoke an emotion or message of some kind, and that's what this installation has done.

Unfortunately, because of their cop mind-set, they only see it as an attack on them, instead of the message it's meant to convey.

There's cops all over the country who are guilty of killing innocent un-armed people, and they aren't all in big cities. A few years back in San Diego county, a menatlly ill man armed with a shovel "threatened" a couple of the back-country sherriffs, and they shot him dead. C'mon... a man with a shovel vs. 2 cops with guns and tasers. It's pathetic.

Just remember... it could be anyone, anywhere, if the circumstances are right (or wrong), and nobody is really safe against the 'gun power' of law enforcement... no matter who you are.

Be afraid... be VERY afraid!!!

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Dread Scott should be applauded!
Posted by: HughScott on Mar 29, 2008 10:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because of my love for visual art and the article's opening quote of Patrick Lynch, president, NYC Patrolmen's Benevolent Association -- "Taxpayer dollars certainly should not fund any art that promotes hate, and that's certainly what [Dread Scott's, Blue Wall of Violence] does" -- I accessed Scott's website to see for myself.

Far from promoting hate, Scott's artworks, in my mind, generated tremendous sympathy for the plight of black people in America.

The exhibits also made me suspect Patrick Lynch was the kind of cop black people fear -- and rightly so.

Hugh E. Scott, Vietnam vet, ex-USAF pilot, lifelong registered Republican, ARDENT Obama supporter and author of George Dub-ya Bush, THE PHONY FIGHTER PILOT, published in 2004.

To read a sample chapter and learn about the only smoking-gun proof of White House corruption ever found on the Web, visit www.PhonyFighterPilot.com.

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Cops
Posted by: frank69 on Mar 29, 2008 10:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure there are good cops. How many do you know? As a teenager in the distant past living in a small town in Connecticut, I can vividly remember at least three good cops on a force of about 35 men and zero women. FYI, I am not a member of a minority group.

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I subscribe to
Posted by: willymack on Mar 29, 2008 11:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The George Carlin outlook. This fits in nicely with his discourse on television. "If you don't like what you're watching, here's good news. The TV's got two knobs on it; one changes the channel, and the other turns it off". (or words to that effect). If you don't like what's in the art museum, go watch a play or a movie. The tax money "squandered" on someone's art is as nothing compared to the black hole in Iraq or the phony war on terror.

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Thudman
Posted by: Thudman on Mar 29, 2008 11:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Police Brutiality is much more rampant throughout out our country than people realize. It seems that most folks are afraid to speak out about these issues that happen within their States and Towns.
This is a shame, because someday it might happen to you and as usual since not many citizens bring these instances to the forfront, you are basically left standing alone in any accusation you might bring to the forefront.

Too bad, but since you did not say anything in any manner about the widespread of these occurences you are out there by yourself.

The police forces have done a magnificent job in keeping this a low profile subject. But word does seem to drift around, not in the news of course.

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wife beater
Posted by: HANGTRAITORS on Mar 29, 2008 12:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this will also help to protect the police themselves from random attacks by alerting them to the problem... good piece on an ugly topic

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America's greatest weakness...
Posted by: eosrk on Mar 29, 2008 12:43 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...RACISIM

the way to bring down an society is thru its weakest points, and one of its biggest ones is racisim....and a crumbling infrastructure.

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While the cops gripe on this artwork......
Posted by: eosrk on Mar 29, 2008 12:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....most of their pensions, raises, extra money for new equipment, etc, is going to.......to......Iraq!!!

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I have known too many
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Mar 29, 2008 1:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cops that think everyone except them are "perps". Drug addicted bullies with badges. drug addicted? you bet your ass.I know families in New Jersey that have gangsters and cops in the same family, and it is no coincidence. and the only difference between the two are, one has a badge.

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In your face art necessary for a free state.
Posted by: YogiBear on Mar 29, 2008 2:39 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cops can dish it out but not take it? What a shocker!

I think we need more art like the above and the movie produced by that rabid right winger in the Dutch government that incited Muslim anger. Gotta let people know that you're not really free if people can make you stop producing art.

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sowing hate
Posted by: sandratapial on Mar 29, 2008 3:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I too, beleive my tax dollar shouldn't support hate. Stop war, stop ocupation, stop abusing human rights home and abroad with my tax contribution.

That is what I say to those who fear your powerful social commetary though artistic expression.

kudos to Dread Scott. What a beautiful warning of a name!

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Someone needs to tell the truth about the police
Posted by: drcyflowers on Mar 29, 2008 4:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The police force exists primarily to keep the upper class in power.

The proof, if you need it, was Seattle in 1999, when Seattle's police force teargassed women with babies, little old ladies and peaceful protestors, whose taxes pay their salary, because they had to protect the bigwigs of the undemocratic World Trade Organization.

I'm tired of American worship of these so-called "heroes," these violent alpha males of our anti-gay, anti-feminist militarized society.

I praise this museum for telling the truth about the police. Keep it up.

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The Freest Nation on Earth?
Posted by: buzzsaw on Mar 30, 2008 1:38 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's what we in the US like to claim to be. How do we reconcile this with the highest incarceration rate, both as a percentage of population and in absolute numbers, in the world. Our rates exceed those of China, Russia, and notoriously abusive regimes such as Iran and, presumably, North Korea. Those incarcerated are disproportionately People of Color.

Could it be that we do not have a crime problem here, but a law problem? Any law prohibiting any item or activity that doesn't harm anybody else, is an affront to freedom, which is the right to do and possess anything you please, as long as you don't interfere with the same rights in others.

The most offensive laws are those banning drug use and possession. These laws have accomplished very little other than being a pretense to lock up significant segments of our population. They drive up the price, making drug dealing very lucrative, and thus a business worth protecting. Since the product is illegal, there is no legal recourse against anyone who provides you bad product or interferes with your business. This leaves only illegal recourse. This, of course, increases levels of violence. We failed to learn this lesson from Prohibition. When is the last time liquor sellers solved disputes with guns? Another lesson we didn't learn from Prohibition was that the hard stuff displaces the soft stuff. You couldn't get beer during Prohibition, but you could get all the liquor you wanted. (I saw this repeat itself when I was in college and they raised the drinking age. The drink of choice shifted from beer to hard stuff, presumably because it is easier to hide a bottle of liquor than a case of beer. Binge drinking also started increasing during this time.) And finally, if a product is illegal, there is no quality control. Since the end of Prohibition, nobody has gone blind because of tainted liquor from a reputable manufacturer. Legitimate companies have to be competent, and can be shut down if they make bad or dangerous products.

I would like to think that the drug laws were passed with good intentions. The cynic in me says otherwise. Drug users know that these laws are a violation of their right to pursue happiness in a way that they deem appropriate. The War on Drugs results in a lot of jobs for law enforcement. But these are jobs that don't need to be done. These people and resources should be applied elsewhere. Some probably realize that. Attempts to effectively enforce drug laws have resulted in a whole raft of other laws like RICO, which have a high potential for abuse. In a free society, people have the right to even destroy themselves any way they see fit, as long as they don't take anyone with them against their will. I do believe that most people in law enforcement do choose that career in order "to Protect and to Serve." Actions that have unwilling victims are truly crimes, should be illegal and Protecting and Serving will inevitably involve law enforcement, i.e. arresting someone to bring them before the courts. However, in the case of drug laws we must ask, Who is being protected from who or what? and What purpose does it (really) serve? Laws that are just wrong are going to be widely broken. Attempts to enforce these contribute to the siege mentality that many of the police have. Bad laws contribute to the mistrust, fear and loathing that the people have for the police, and disrespect for the laws in general. A free society should need only a few good laws.

buzzsaw-If you dumb the people down enough, the people will be incapable of maintaining Freedom.

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Remember The Victims
Posted by: ronavila on Mar 30, 2008 2:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't give a rat's ass about what the cops think (isn't that an oxymoron?) I've known many cops and they are all adrenaline junkies.
What about their victims? They need to be remembered. Their story needs telling and re-telling.
Kill a cop and you're gonna fry (or somebody will fry in your place).
A cop kills you for holding a candy bar and he gets time off to recover.

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More on Avakian...
Posted by: MLMrev on Mar 30, 2008 3:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To check out the inspiring works of Bob Avakian which Dread Scott says influence his work, go to Free audio mp3 downloads of "7 Talks" that can be found at bobavakian.net and also at www.REVCOM.us

If you wanna check out a dynamic and thorough re-envisioning of Revolution & Communism - you gotta see what Avakian's been digging into, and putting out, over the past 30 years!

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Bullies and jackbooteds don't like being outed
Posted by: DaBear on Mar 31, 2008 11:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Glad you've done it as many others have and will continue to. The vitriol and violent reactions from cops is typical from bullies freshly exposed as such.

For the cop lovers out there, for every one decent cop there are ten more thugs to make the good one a statistical anomaly. If that hurts, do something about the ten that dominate cop culture.

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