Why
the Innocent Flee From the Police
by
William Norman Grigg
by William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: An
Opportunity for the Oath Keepers: End the Occupation
"Why
did he run?" This question thrusts itself upon us every time an
unarmed or otherwise harmless person is gunned down while fleeing
from police.
Often that
inquiry takes the form that assumes the guilt of the victim: "If
he did nothing wrong, why did he run?" It's also common for that
second version to contort itself into a nicely circular argument:
"Well, he ran, and resisting arrest is a crime, so obviously
he got what was coming to him."
For reasons
unclear to a mind not enthralled by statist assumptions, most people
simply
assume that both reason and morality dictate an unqualified duty
to surrender without cavil or complaint whenever armed, violence-prone
strangers in peculiar government-issued garb seek to restrain one
of us.
This is why
police
are trained to interpret any hesitation, reluctance to cooperate,
inhospitable body language, or verbal expression of resentment as
"resisting arrest" and thus a justification for the use of "pain
compliance" or even lethal force. Police and their apologists
likewise insist contrary
to both law and judicial precedent that there is no right
to resist even a clearly unwarranted or abusive arrest, or even
for a citizen to take steps to protect himself when he's on the
receiving end of unjustified physical violence from police.
Police are
constantly catechized about the dangers they encounter when they
conduct traffic stops or detain people on the street. Why, the random
"civilian" they encounter might be armed, trained in the use of
weapons, and prepared
to use violence without warning! This is to say that this hypothetical
"civilian" would be ... just like the typical police officer.

"Can
we assault and brutalize innocent people with impunity? Yes We Can!"
"Officer safety"
must be paramount in such encounters, we are told. If a policeman
is just a bit too quick to fire up the Taser or pull the trigger,
it's because he has a dangerous and stressful job.
Are we therefore
to assume that encounters between police and mere "mundanes" aren't
particularly dangerous and stressful to the latter?
Given that
police claim the supposed authority to pre-empt potential violence
in the name of "officer safety," we're entitled to ask: Why isn't
"citizen safety" a legally effective defense for preemptive violence
by law-abiding people to protect themselves against unjustified
violence by police?
At present,
the only form of "preemption" considered legally and morally acceptable
is unqualified submission. People wrongfully on the receiving end
of police violence are given the same advice that used to be given
to potential rape victims: Don't resist, don't fight back it will
only turn out much worse, and you may be killed.
Anyone who
doesn't immediately submit to arrest, irrespective of the circumstances,
is "going to lose and possibly hurt yourself and others in the process,"
insists retired Milwaukee Police Officer Mark Zupnik. "You do
not have the right to resist."
"There are
several more beneficial ways of pleading your case and challenging
your arrest," Zupnik continues. "Get a lawyer, file a motion in
court, go to pre-trial and plead your case. Make a formal complaint
challenging your arrest to the proper authority, but don't resist
or fight! It will add to your problems even if the arrest was a
mistake. You don't have the right to resist a legal arrest and it's
that simple. In most states, resisting arrest is an additional charge
up to a felony, even for minor physical resistance."

No
recourse: San
Jose resident Scott Wright was beaten and tased by police, suffering
a broken arm. He was then charged with "resisting arrest." His "offense"
was to reach into his vehicle to wash his dirty hands.
Zupnik, like
others of an authoritarian cast of mind, embrace a tautological
view of what constitutes a "legal" arrest: It's any arrest
carried out by a police officer, who supposedly embodies the law.
This is why he warns that resistance in any situation will result
in a criminal charge which will be filed before "a usually unsympathetic
judge" who will perceive you as someone who "fought the law" which
is always on the side of the state's armed enforcers, from this
perspective.
Except the
rarest of cases, seeking redress for an unlawful arrest from the
"proper authority" is a singularly useless exercise. In some jurisdictions
such as San Jose, California, a city in which, on average, three
people are arrested for "resisting arrest" every single day it
is entirely pointless to file a complaint over unwarranted arrests,
since they are never upheld.
An
investigation by the San Jose Mercury News found that
of the 117 cases in which a complaint was filed with the police
department's internal review board, not a single one was "sustained."
That includes incidents such as the arrest of Scott Wright, who
was beaten, tased, and had his arm broken by police before being
charged with resisting arrest.
At the time
his valiant protectors arrived at his home, Wright was working on
an old Cadillac; he provoked the gang assault by reaching into his
van to wash off his greasy hands, a gesture that caused the Heroes
in Blue (tm) a timid, skittish lot, as easily frightened as a
young doe to think that he was reaching for a weapon.
As is almost
always the case in such episodes, Wright was charged with resisting
arrest even though no weapon was found, and no other criminal act
was alleged.
Sure, that
spurious charge was dismissed after the victim had spent a great
deal of money seeking treatment for the injuries inflicted on him,
and another sum to pay the legal expenses incurred because the cops,
in an effort to cover their tax-fattened asses, filed a "cover charge"
against the innocent man. And of course, the police department cleared
the assailants of any wrongdoing, because their criminal assault
on Wright was in harmony with "department policy."
"What happened
to Wright is no isolated event," the Mercury News relates.
"Hundreds of times a year interactions between San Jose police and
residents where no serious crime has occurred escalate into violence."
"Many times
the reason for the encounter is as innocuous as jaywalking, missing
bike headlamps, or failing to signal a turn," continues the report.
"But often, as incidents develop, police determine the suspect is
uncooperative and potentially violent and strike the first blow."

He
was "protected and served": San
Jose resident Joseph Ballard bleeds into the sidewalk outside a
nightclub after being tased by the police, who say that his injury
was the result of a "fall."
Joseph Ballard
was a
victim of preemptive violence: Officer Justin Holliday shot
him with a Taser outside a nightclub while Ballard was running to
catch a ride home. As he bled into the sidewalk, Holliday confected
a story about Ballard threatening to shoot a bouncer and running
to the parking lot to get his gun.
As it happens,
the victim had neither a gun nor a car, and the bouncer said that
Ballard had done nothing wrong yet he was still charged with interfering
with police and thrown in jail after he was released from the hospital.
After two police
arrived at her home in August 2008, San Jose resident Ruth Mendiola
earned an assault and a charge of "resisting arrest" when she asked
to see a warrant the cops were supposedly there to deliver.
She was on the phone with the police department trying to verify
the identity of the officers when she was seized by one of them,
who kneed her in the ribs and then threw her on a bed to handcuff
her.
David Haflich
a Caucasian with light brown hair was severely beaten by San
Jose police when he was mistaken for a suspect in a child abduction
a Latino with black hair. Ordered to hit the ground, Haflich froze
in his tracks, an act of insubordination serious enough, supposedly,
to justify a gang-tackle and beating by police, who charged him
with "resisting arrest" even though he wasn't a criminal suspect.
In 206 court
cases in which the most serious charge against the defendant was
"resisting arrest," the paper documented that "145 70 percent
of the cases involved the use of force by officers," observes
the Mercury News. It's as if inoffensive pedestrians, motorists,
and bicyclists were victimized by routine acts of criminal violence
committed by an armed street gang ... which, come to think of it,
is exactly what is going on.
This kind of
officially sanctioned lawlessness is a general affliction.
In
Ohio, police who showed up at a house fire to gawk and collect
overtime tased and arrested a 19-year-old who had been helping friends
and family escape the blaze. This happened after one of the torpid
donut-devourers hurled profane invective at one of the residents
of the burning house, a young woman, who had asked them why they
were standing around in subsidized stupefaction while people were
in danger.
Last May, Minneapolis
resident Rolando Ruiz was stopped by a police officer,
who instructed Ruiz to place his hands on the hood of the officer's
car. Ruiz cooperated and was shot in the neck with a Taser anyway.
The Minneapolis
PD's "use of force" policy permits such gratuitous use of potentially
lethal violence, and neither the policy nor any particular case
is subject to civilian review or oversight.
Last June,
in Everett, Washington, a
51-year-old man was gunned down in his Corvette by a police officer
who had grown weary of trying to talk the intoxicated driver out
of his car. At the time, the drunken driver was boxed in parked
cars on either side, a police cruiser blocking him from behind,
a chain link fence in front.
The officer
spent perhaps five minutes trying to reason with the driver before
pulling out his Taser; the drunk reacted understandably, if tragically
by trying, unsuccessfully, to pull out of the parking space. That
provoked the officer to pull his firearm and murder the driver,
firing eight shots into the car while exclaiming "Enough is enough
time to end this!"
Every death
of a police officer "in the line of duty" is solemnly memorialized
and carefully tabulated. However, there is no official record kept
of civilians who are unjustly killed or otherwise brutalized by
police.
Each encounter
between the police and innocent civilians is a potentially deadly
experience for the latter. Thus the real question is not "Why do
innocent people flee from the police?" but rather, "What rational
person would submit to the police if he had any reasonable
hope of eluding or resisting them?"
November
7, 2009
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2009 William Norman Grigg
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