I honestly don't mean to grind on this one case so hard. There are plenty out there, and I've had essentially this same debate several dozen times, four or five times on this forum. I've also brought up one new case since the debate over the tasered girl began. I would have brought up more, but between crackdown on internet activity at work and a lot of drama currently at home, I haven't been following as much news.
But here. I suspected a website like this would probably exist, so
here's a daily news feed of abusive police behavior I found on a five second google search.
Hey look... at the top of the list today is someone getting beaten because they had a soda bottle in their pocket and it was mistaken for a gun...
It IS possible to prove that a police offer was lying/acted outside of the accepted threshold.
I don't even know what to say... it's hard not to just laugh at this...
Look at the Oscar Grant shooting. Multiple angles of video show this guy pinned to the ground with an officer kneeling on each shoulder for an extended period of time, putting up no struggle that could be picked up by cameras a short distance away, before being shot in the back... and there's no warrant put out for arrest of the person responsible for a whole two weeks, and only after multiple riots.
Looking at it now: the guy who shot Oscar Grant only served two years?
My god.
Compare to this guy, whose offense carries a minimum of two years. Summary: An female undercover cop posed as a student and developed a relationship with this kid for months. He had never had an interest in drugs in his life, but promised to find her some because she said she wanted to try it. After being nagged repeatedly for it, he finally gave her a small amount as a gift, even refusing to take the money she offered in return, and got arrested for it.
But I don't really need to go so far. I've got examples right next door. Where I live, as I've pointed out already, officers can flagrantly disregard procedure to help out a fellow officer in a highly publicized case of running people over while drunk on duty and
get promoted.
It's the situation we were always in. It just seems to be worse due to the rapid increase in technology causing various incidents.
I don't really see how technology has much to do with the general culture of disregard for people's well-being that has corrupted law enforcement. You can make a case for taser policy needing adjustment, but that doesn't say anything for the footage you can find from almost every protest event of the last few years of some random guy doing nothing but holding a camera being slammed into the concrete and then a knee ground into their non-resisting neck as they're handcuffed.
I'm saying that reacting disproportionately isn't the best idea either. There's a possibility of getting a deadly disease from a doorknob, that doesn't mean you need to worry about getting one each time you touch one: that's called an anxiety disorder.
This is a complete disconnect.
First, nobody's intentional behavior puts diseases on doorknobs, and we have many cultural expectations, workplace policies, and medical regulations put towards preventing this from happening. You could argue that the same applies to police behavior, but my response is that cultural expectations holding them accountable are eroding (the reason we're having this discussion right now) and policies of prevention are disregarded alarmingly often without consequence.
Second...
Policy being changed for the future doesn't help you when you're bleeding out or you had your skull cracked open
No, but it does stop the next person from having their skull cracked open and start bleeding out. This is the best we can do most of the time.
Many policies of prevention are being altered or removed in recent years in ways that amount to intentional diseasing of doorknobs for a select portion of the populace. Many basic human rights protections are disappearing in the U.S., allowing police to abuse freely according to the whims of those in power. I have plenty of reason to be concerned about this, because I've hung out with my local Occupy group before and would like to do so again. I'd like to participate in an actual event and have a voice in public without fearing for my safety. Should I witness or be faced with corrupt behavior, I'd like to be able to document it without being attacked (which does not happen in isolated cases, it is near-universal and actually policy in some places now).
And this isn't conspiracy theory.Bruce Nestor, president of the Minnesota chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, told me: “St. Paul actually negotiated a special insurance provision with the Republican host committee so that the first $10 million in liability for lawsuits arising from the convention will be covered by the host committee. ... It basically means we (the city) can commit wrongdoing, and we won’t have to pay for it.”
Powerful groups can even say "Here! Have a party with these people's rights! We'll clean up the mess later!"... and there's nothing we can do about it.
"Time and time again" is a matter of perception. We tend to hear more of the horror stories than the sweeping majority of the good because the good is boring. Unless you keep track of every police action in a sample area, there really is no good way to determine factually the probability of these things happening or their rates of occurrence. I tend to view things like this as normal distribution, with the extremes being the least likely.
It is hard to track the rates of negative, abusive encounters as compared to positive ones... but there are other indicators one can look to for an idea of the nature and scope of the problem.
Their internal culture is one. The reactions of other officers when one of their co-workers does something wrong is another. The application of the law to police officers as compared to the rest of the population is yet another. All these indicators look pretty grim lately.
Edit:
Photos of riot police at a peaceful protest against that bill recently passed in Virginia requiring women to get an ultrasound before having an abortion. A bit much, perhaps?...
I can't remember if I've made the comparison on this forum before but more and more often
this is what police riot gear reminds me of.