Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
4.5.17
Denied validation, interests continue divisiveness
Despite hitting the canvas in Round 1, backers of
the “war against blacks” narrative signaled they would not take the federal
decision not to charge two Baton Rouge police officers with civil rights
violations lying down, coming out swinging in Round 2 – to the detriment of the
community.
The U.S. Department of Justice, in an investigation
spanning the Democrat former Pres. Barack Obama
and Republican Pres. Donald Trump
Administrations, concluded that while the officers did not engage in perfect
policing, it found
insufficient evidence that the officers had malicious and abusive motives
towards Alton Sterling when he was shot last summer while resisting arrest. A typical
reaction from this crowd came from the Alinskyites at Together Baton Rouge,
who expressed disappointment and frustration of no charges filed, called the
federal government unjust, and implied as suspect the coming state
investigation if it resulted in no indictments of the officers in the death of Sterling.
This closed-mindedness indicative of the group by this kind of pre-judgmental criticism and
shared by its ideological allies sadly reveals a cancer in the body politic. They
seize upon every incident where a black “gentle
giant” loses his life in an altercation with police as evidence to back up
their narrative, refusing to let facts which do not conform to their narrative inform
them.
From the DOJ report, they currently engage in a
lot of denial. Sterling, a very black large man, appeared uncooperative at the
start, refusing to place his hands on a car hood until one of the white officers
pointed a gun to his head. This reflected proper caution on their part, as the
tipster who had alerted police reported Sterling had a gun and, in fact, he did
in a pocket. This combativeness and the fact that, after the officer holstered
his gun Sterling started to move his arms again, he received a Taser shot that
seemingly did little to slow him down, suggests a pharmacologically-impaired
state, although about a month after
the incident a judge sealed his toxicology report so it is not public
knowledge whether he was high on drugs.
The officers began to wrestle him down while he
resisted continuously. After finding themselves unable to control him and he
appeared to reach for a pocket with them knowing he had a gun (one shouted out
a warning of that), one drew his weapon again and shot him three times, and
then seconds later three times more when, even after Sterling rolled on his
back, Sterling kept flailing his arms.
The report appears
as impartial as it can get. Career, experienced agents, with most of the
legwork likely done prior to the changeover from Obama to Trump, assiduously
gathered evidence, and two experts often used by DOJ in these matters agreed
that the evidence did not exist to charge the officers.
Its conclusion lends to a very simple scenario.
Sterling, who had multiple brushes with the law and criminal convictions, at
the time was serving probation. Probationers cannot legally possess or carry a
firearm. He knew any peaceable arrest quickly would find the gun, so, employing
poor judgment, he resisted mightily, repeatedly ignoring lawful commands and
acting in a threatening manner. It ended in tragedy and, like it or not, his
recklessness contributed to his demise.
Yet as this does not fit the race-driven narrative,
those ideologically invested in that cannot admit this as the most plausible
explanation of events. They particularly seize on allegations
that the shooting officer threatened to kill Sterling early in the encounter
when first drawing the weapon. The report didn’t mention that datum, but even
assuming that as actually occurring, it would not be an unexpected utterance if
an officer was trying to deescalate a situation with a very uncooperative
suspect, emphasizing the gravity of it all if the suspect did not begin to
cooperate. If actually said, that remark did not sway the experts assessing the
incident.
Given that state
standards under law work differently, it’s possible that the officers
involved may end up charged with a lesser offense. But the federal
investigation clearly indicates that the actions did not rise to cold-blooded
murder – and for the “war on blacks” narrative to receive validation, that
assumption must exist. It will be interesting to see whether those invested in
the narrative will accept from the state anything less than charges and conviction
for some degree of murder or even manslaughter.
If so, we can only hope somehow to cure the hearts
of stone of those interests. Such attitudes that forgo understanding the world
through right reason poison community relations, inducing illegitimate
divisiveness that puts political goals ahead of the community’s welfare. Intolerance
of this nature serves no good purpose, and we only can pray they embrace
whatever truth emerges as a step towards healing rifts to which they at this
point, through their rhetoric, have contributed.
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