The most
recent news from Ferguson concerns what Eric
Holder has rightly called the
“ambush shooting” of two police officers outside the city’s police
department.
This
incident occurred in the wake of two detailed reports released by the
Department of Justice. The first report deals in depth with the shooting of
Michael Brown by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson. The report recommended
that the case against him be closed. The second DOJ report contained a scathing indictment of the
sad state of affairs within the entire criminal justice system of Ferguson. The
combined effect of these two reports is likely to make matters worse in
Ferguson by combining the back-handed exoneration of Darren Wilson with the
unstinting condemnation of the City of Ferguson.
Let’s start
with the DOJ report that exonerated Wilson. The federal prosecutors ran an
exhaustive review of all the physical, forensic, and testimonial evidence in
the case. It is necessary to state its final conclusion in full: “Darren
Wilson’s actions do not constitute prosecutable violations under the applicable
federal criminal civil rights statute, 18 U.S.C. § 242, which prohibits uses of
deadly force that are ‘objectively unreasonable,’ as defined by the United
States Supreme Court. The evidence, when viewed as a whole, does not support
the conclusion that Wilson’s uses of deadly force were “objectively
unreasonable” under the Supreme Court’s definition. Accordingly, under the
governing federal law and relevant standards set forth in the USAM [United
States Attorneys’ Manual], it is not appropriate to present this matter to a
federal grand jury for indictment, and it should therefore be closed without
prosecution.”
The legal
conclusion is surely correct, but the tone of the report’s findings are slanted
against Wilson. It is not just the case that there is insufficient evidence to
support a criminal prosecution. It is that, beyond a reasonable doubt, the
evidence supports that Wilson’s conduct was fully justified. During the initial
encounter, Brown had tried to wrest Wilson’s gun from him by reaching into
Wilson’s Chevy Tahoe SUV. Wilson’s story was corroborated, to quote the report,
“by bruising on Wilson’s jaw and scratches on his neck, the presence of Brown’s
DNA on Wilson’s collar, shirt, and pants, and Wilson’s DNA on Brown’s palm.”
Later on, the evidence also showed that Brown was running toward Wilson at the
time Wilson fired the fatal shots, not knowing whether Brown was armed or not.
The incident was far clearer than the oft-ticklish situations in which the
courts have to decide whether a police officer used excessive force against a
person who was resisting arrest, as with the controversial grand jury decision not to indict any police officer
for the killing of Eric Garner.
What the DOJ
now has to do is to acknowledge that the killing of Michael Brown was a
justifiable homicide. It must abandon its contrived legalisms and defend
Wilson, by condemning unequivocally the entire misguided campaign against him, which resulted in threats
against his life and forced his resignation from the police force. Eric Holder
owes Wilson an apology for the unnecessary anguish that Wilson has suffered. As
the Attorney General for all Americans, he must tell the protestors once and
for all that their campaign has been thoroughly misguided from start to finish,
and that their continued protests should stop in the interests of civic peace
and racial harmony. In light of the past vilification of Wilson, it is not
enough for the DOJ to publish the report, and not trumpet its conclusions. It
is necessary to put that report front and center in the public debate so that
everyone now understands that Wilson behaved properly throughout the entire
incident.
The
situation is made worse with the publication of the second DOJ report which
offers a top-to-bottom condemnation of Ferguson’s criminal justice system. This
report was clearly prompted by the belief that Wilson’s killing of Michael
Brown was the result of structural problems in Ferguson. But why pick on
Ferguson after Wilson was exonerated? It would be one thing to argue that the
illegal killing of Michael Brown stemmed from a corrupt and racist culture
inside that department. But once it is established that Wilson was fully
justified in acting as he did, it is impossible to explain how the culture and
norms of the police could have contributed to any illegal act. Indeed, the only
plausible inference cuts the opposite way. The ability of Wilson to handle
himself well under extreme pressure reflects approvingly on his conduct and on
the ethos of the Ferguson Police Department.
In this
case, however, the DOJ was determined to make a big deal out of the various
misdeeds of the Department. In so doing, it set back race relations in the
United States by sending out the unmistakable message that while the DOJ could
not get Wilson, it could surely get the city for which he had worked. The
Ferguson report gets off on the wrong foot by leading with the claim that
“Ferguson’s law enforcement practices are shaped by the City’s focus on revenue
rather than by public safety needs.” That basic orientation, the report
continues, leads the police to concentrate on collecting revenue from traffic
offenses in order to fill any hole in the Ferguson budget left by a shortfall
in sales tax collection. It then further chides the city for sending out arrest
warrants for individual ticket holders to meet court dates and to pay for their
offenses.
At this
point, the key question is whether Ferguson is alone in its practices, or if
there are other cities that do the same thing. Given the financial pressures on
all cities, Ferguson does not stand alone. If it acts in violation of the
public trust, then so do all other cities. Why then pick out Ferguson for
special condemnation? It is well known that various form of asset forfeiture
are common across the United States. The practices are condemned on all sides
of the political spectrum. The liberal American Civil Liberties, for example,
begins its Blog of Rights on the subject of Asset Forfeiture
Abuse, by noting: “Across the country, law enforcement agents stop motorists—predominantly
people of color—and seize the money in their possession simply by asserting
that they believe the money is connected to some illegal activity, even without
ever pursuing criminal charges. Under federal law and the laws of most states, they
are entitled to keep the money they seize, which goes to fill police department
coffers, pay salaries, buy new equipment, and fund other perks for the
officers.”
The
libertarian Institute for Justice harps on the same message in its report “Policing for Profit: The Abuse of
Civil Asset Forfeiture.” And most ironically, it was only this January that
Holder himself “barred local and state police from using
federal law to seize cash, cars and other property without evidence that a
crime occurred.” Any balanced report on the situation in Ferguson
should ask whether the city is worse off than other state and local
governments. Yet nothing suggests that it is, let alone that some culture of
revenue collection leads to the improper use of deadly force.
The DOJ
report is even odder for its suggestion that it is improper for Ferguson, or
any other city, to issue arrest warrants for those who do not pay their fines.
Clearly, the entire system will fall apart if parties who receive tickets for
traffic violations ignore them with impunity. Some of these tickets at least
are given for offenses that do have an adverse impact on public safety, so it
seems absurd to think that it is improper to demand their collection. No other
state or local government should yield to that practice, so why should
Ferguson?
The evidence
is no better when the DOJ resorts to statistical evidence to show that the
police force has behaved in an improper way because “African Americans
experience disparate impact in nearly every aspect of Ferguson’s law
enforcement system. Despite making up 67% of the population, African Americans
accounted for 85% of FPD’s traffic stops, 90% of FPD’s citations, and 93% of
FPD’s arrests from 2012 to 2014.”
The point
here represents a gross abuse of statistical evidence for two reasons. First,
the disparity in arrests for various offenses ignores one question that
matters: did African Americans commit these various offenses at a higher rate
than the rest of the population? If they did, then the evidence is perfectly
consistent with even-handed enforcement. Second, the report gives no
information about the arrest rates in other communities. As John
Lott has noted, “The Bureau
of Justice Statistics’ 2011 Police-Public Contact Survey indicates that,
nationwide, blacks were 31 percent more likely than whites to be pulled over
for a traffic stop.” If so, then the Ferguson numbers are consistent with
national norms, and thus do not show any distinctive form of racial bias.
Finally, the
DOJ report points to the presence of some emails from police officials that
“stereotype” African Americans. But here, again, it is important to note that
isolated emails from various officials, however reprehensible in and of themselves,
do not indicate any pervasive forms of misbehavior that suffices to indict an
entire police force. Nor is there any evidence that these offensive emails sent
between 2008 and 2011 indicate present abuse that could have contributed to
poor police practices.
The two DOJ
reports do not cohere. The first shows that Wilson’s use of force against
Michael Brown was fully justified. The second uses that incident to launch a
scathing attack against Ferguson, leading to the resignation of its key
officials for conduct that looks on balance to be no better or worse than that
in other cities around the country. The serious consequence of the second
high-profile report is to keep alive the image that racial injustice is alive
and well in the United States. What the report fails to understand is that it
is as dangerous to exaggerate the risk of racial injustice as it is to ignore
it. In a sad sense, the overheated DOJ report contributes to the inflamed
atmosphere that led to the most recent shootings in Ferguson.
Richard A.
Epstein, the Peter and Kirsten Bedford Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution,
is the Laurence A. Tisch Professor of Law, New York University Law School, and
a senior lecturer at the University of Chicago.
1 comment:
What concerned me most about the hearings was the number of 'witnesses' who claimed to have seen the incident but who, upon even a cursory investigation, were found to have not been actually present at all but were merely repeating what they had been told by others. The fabrication that Brown had his hands up gained currency very rapidly, but is a total falsehood.
This kind of pernicious nonsense is a product of the PC-ideology that truth is entirely relative and that there is no such thing as objective truth, it all being supposedly 'socially constructed'. This ideology now pervades much of the social sciences. We must be vigilant about it working its way into law, for at that stage we will be well on the way to a return to the worst of the Middle Ages. "I saw that woman dismounting from a broomstick......"
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