One
of the greatest things we have in our Western system of justice is trial by
jury. One of the most frustrating things
we have in our Western system of justice is trial by jury. One of the best things we have as American
citizens are our rights under the U.S. Constitution and one of the most mischievous
parasites upon it is the way the criminal justice system seems to manipulate it
to create perverted ends.
Surely most thinking citizens have at times
been frustrated when someone who has clearly broken the law seems to get off
with little or no punishment. At other
times most thinking citizens have been scandalized when someone who is innocent, or actually a victim of unusual circumstances, is slammed with a
heavy- fisted punishment due to the written code of jurisprudence. In all of
these situations the reflective question of, “What if that had that been me, or
someone close to me?” is worth asking. What
if I had been railroaded and sent to prison for a crime I did not commit and
spent years in prison? What If I had
lost my family, my youth, and my fortune because of such injustice? Maybe those questions would motivate our
sympathy, our sense of outrage at injustice; maybe.
What if my wife, son or daughter, someone I
love had been murdered, raped, beaten, robbed by someone who had been clearly
identified and that person managed to get away with murder? Surely if I thought that the victim of crime
on the news could have been me or mine my empathy might become engaged; maybe. I
remember all those vigilante movies, (remember the ones with Charles Bronson?)
and I am a bit sympathetic.
Our
American history reveals how the jury system is not infallible in determining
guilt or innocence, especially when the culture of the jurists is resistant to
justice, predetermined to protect the accused because of a communal
prejudice. It is one of the great
protections for defendants to be tried by a jury of his or her peers, as it
allows defendants, and especially those who are ably and well defended by
competent and zealous attorneys, to elicit sympathy even in the clear and
demonstrable evidence of their complicity and guilt. We have seen racism in
juries during the Civil Rights movement allow clearly guilty killers and bombers
walk out of the courtroom as free men. The words
of Native Americans, African Americans, and Mexicans just didn’t carry the same
weight as white men when in court.
Many poor
defendants never get a jury trial, and therefore many of them end up in prison
serving long sentences. The process of
plea bargaining, the heavy handed stacking of charges, and incompetent
representation deprives many of a sympathetic jury and only a “by the book” mathematical
precision of sentence by penal code.
Again, when a person of color went before a white jury the results were
often predetermined.
We are currently facing such a cultural
injustice in our jury system. It has a
blue color over it, but it is not the fault necessarily of the police
departments or systems whose individuals come to trial. It is a fault in our citizenry, and thus in
our culture. We are prejudiced for law
and order, we are prejudiced for the uniform, we are prejudiced for authority
and it is a prejudice that is both ignorant and dangerous. We are finding it almost impossible to hold
officers of the law responsible for their crimes. If they cannot be held accountable sooner or
later all of our rights, and our lives, are at risk.
What is interesting is that in several cases
the police departments themselves have repudiated the actions and behaviors of
their officers and fired the incompetents or malefactors. What is also interesting is that in case
after case whole cities and communities have had to pay exorbitant settlements
in wrongful death suits. In short, the
very citizens who let these officers go free pay for the crimes they have
committed by higher taxes, or less policing since the city budget can no longer
include it.
Does
this tell our citizens anything? Does it
educate them that when officers go off the reservation as it were and kill
citizens whose guilt has in no way been proven or established, nor have given
any real threat to the officers, that these officers need to be held
accountable for their failures in executing the law they have sworn to uphold? The jury system allows for feelings, and the
biggest feeling such officers submit in their defense is fear. Fear now seems to be the trump card that an
officer can offer as to why they shot the deceased in the back half a dozen
times or so, and why they shot the man who was walking away from them, or the
man who was telling the officer he had a gun but also had a permit, etc. etc.
Can we change the culture of juries so that
they understand that fear might make any of us sympathetic but is not an excuse
for cowardice? Cowards are those who
are afraid but don’t know how to master their fear. Fear is something that training is supposed
to help those in uniform services know how to confront in themselves so that
they can function effectively and lawfully.
Fear is understandable, and so is anger, but it should be no defense for
those who respond emotionally and not with self-control.
If you cannot learn to control your fear you
should not be a police officer, or a soldier.
Fear is a constant in confrontation, it can make people do stupid things
and it surely has, but it cannot be an excuse for killing innocent or non-convicted
citizens. Despite what police unions say
(that seem to excuse all kinds of bad behavior and make incidents political) police
departments are trying to hold their officers to a higher standard and all of
us as citizens need that higher standard.
So, if you ever have the opportunity to be
on a jury that must judge a police officer who has been accused of hurting
someone unjustly, think not just of that officer’s fear, think of the victim,
and think of them as if it had been you or yours. We must have sympathy for the abuse and
danger officers face every day, we must pray for them, love on them, support
them, and absolutely let them know that we understand that the challenge they
face is greater than just another day at the office. However, we depend on them not to respond
with their fears, but with wisdom and justice.
And we will and must hold them to such standards, if for nothing else
than for the safety of our very own children.
Randy, in typical police academy training, the emphasis is on "officer safety," and "neutralizing" a perceived threat. Furthermore, look at the use of passive voice in police reports, and especially those reports when police have shot an unarmed person or put a beat-down on a citizen.
ReplyDeleteThe literary device (or whatever one calls it) essentially makes these events just happen, as opposed to police officers having done them. The lesson is this: the officer is not responsible for anything bad that happens to someone else in a confrontation. All the blame rests on the victim.
Culturally, all sides are to blame. Conservatives are forever touting police authority and citizen obedience, while liberals promote government labor unions and in the process have helped to create powerful police unions that have become an authority unto themselves, ensuring that there is little or no accountability for police behavior.
I could not agree more with you. In fact, police supposedly are trained to be able to detect real, versus false threats. Yet, we see police getting a free ride for actions that would get a civilian imprisoned.
Is police work especially dangerous? Well, according to statistics, as a line of work it is less dangerous than a whole host of other occupations, such as logging. Most officers that die in the line of duty are killed in car crashes, not gunned down by criminals. This is not to say that police can be vulnerable to criminals (We remember the Julie Jacks murder in Chattanooga a while back), but the notion that every cop is always on the verge of being gunned down is a false narrative.
I am not "anti-cop," but I do understand that cops are going to see young black males as being threatening. My two sons are black and I have had "The Talk" with them regarding if they ever are stopped by police. My Hispanic daughter was pulled over a while back and had an officer put a gun in her face. She was unarmed, and I am sure that had the cop killed her, there would have been a million posts on social media justifying the shooting. (And the officer would have claimed he shot her because he "feared for his life," the standard line every cop is taught to say.)
As Christians, we both need to be law-abiding and respectful of those in authority, but we cannot let that part of our faith allow us to overlook right and wrong. I don't want my faith to mean that I become part of the Adversary Culture and spend my life protesting and demanding the expansion of state power in order to deal with, well, excesses of state power.
But I do believe that as Christian citizens, just as we are held accountable by God for our actions, so we must hold those in authority accountable, too. Thanks, Randy, for reminding us of our own obligations to others.