When
a Black police officer is shot by a white officer who mistakes him
for a regular Black criminal rather than a cop, we are told this is
“friendly fire.” Does that mean the bullet doesn’t
hurt so much because it is friendly?
The
absurdity of it all is exactly why we need to deal with internal
racism in law enforcement.
The
recent troubling incident in St. Louis is a case in point. A Black
off-duty officer, coming to the aid of his fellow cops, was shot
by one of them, a white officer who viewed him as a threat
because he is Black. Seven cops are now on administrative leave as a
result of the incident, until the department can sort out exactly
what happened.
Yet,
there is a distinct sense that we may very well know enough about
what took place. The uniformed officers encountered the off-duty cop,
who is 38 with 11 years on the force, and in possession of his
department-issued firearm, according to the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
They ordered him onto the ground, then ordered him to get up and walk
toward them, when one of the officers recognized him.
One
of the officers just arriving on the scene – 36 years old with
eight years on the force, and “fearing
for his safety” - shot the off-duty Black cop in the arm.
Because Blue Lives Matter. The department tried to say the officer
was wounded in the crossfire between police and armed suspects in
connection with a car theft. But apparently, that isn’t how it
went down. This, in a city that has been rocked by tensions in the
community and people erupting in protest in the streets over police
shootings of Black
men in the last few years.
Certainly,
this is by no means the first Black police officer to be bombarded by
“friendly” white police bullets, stopped and searched,
arrested, or otherwise criminalized for policing while Black. In
1994, in a New York subway station, Officer Peter Del Debbio opened
fire on Black undercover Transit Officer Desmond
Robinson, hitting him four times, twice in the back, and wounding
a woman civilian as well.
In
2005, Howard Morgan, a Black former Chicago cop was shot
28 times - 21 in the back - during a traffic stop, for driving
the wrong way on a one-way street. A jury, believing Morgan had
discharged his weapon, found him guilty of attempted murder
and sent him to prison for 40 years before his sentence was commuted.
NYPD
Officer Andrew Dunton, a white cop who killed his Black colleague
Omar
Edwards, 25, in 2009 after ordering him to drop his gun, not only
faced no punishment, but was promoted to sergeant three years later.
Because apparently only “White” Blue Lives Matter.
Then
there is the story of the four
Black parole officers who were held at gunpoint and detained by
local police in Ramapo, NY, while on official business. And let’s
not forget the white plainclothes officers who were busted for
ordering Chief Douglas Zeigler – a three-star chief, head of
the Community Affairs Bureau and the highest
ranking Black cop in the NYPD - out of his department-issued SUV
with his ID around his neck. Because sometimes you mess with the
wrong one.
And
recently, a white NYPD sergeant, Valentin Khazin, filed a federal
lawsuit claiming he is facing harsh treatment from the department for
refusing
to bully a Black cop who filed his own discrimination lawsuit
against the highway patrol.
When
off-duty, Black
police officers face harassment and racial profiling from white
officers and feel threatened. Racism on the force is a problem that
affects Black cops, yet the prevailing white police officers’
narrative that attempts to silence community protest tends to
overlook it. Influenced by the civil rights and Black Power
movements, Black officers facing a climate of hostility and
discrimination formed their own associations, because the majority
organizations did not represent their interests.
This
divide
continues to this day, with the Fraternal
Order of Police endorsing Trump for president, and proposing a
curious wish
list (.pdf) that included reversing the federal ban on private
prisons, ending the Bush-era ban on racial profiling, restricting
federal aid to sanctuary cities, ending Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals (DACA), and reversing Obama-era changes in U.S.-Cuba
relations, “perhaps until such time as the cop-killers harbored
there [a thinly veiled reference to Assata
Shakur are returned to the U.S.” The FOP also recommended
that Trump scrap the recommendations made by the President’s
Task Force on 21st Century Policing (.pdf) under Obama, designed
to “identify best policing practices and offer recommendations
on how those practices can promote effective crime reduction while
building public trust.”
Black
people have been monitored and regulated since the days when the
slave patrols, the nation’s first police force, roamed the
plantation. And bad habits are hard to break. So it should surprise
you not that the racism of law enforcement culture is visited upon
Black police officers. An off-duty Black cop out of uniform looks
just like any other Black civilian. Unfortunately, in the eyes of
some of their fellow officers, this means they in tandem look like
criminals, which is how more Black victims are created.
This commentary was originally published by The Grio
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