Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Handling of suspect spurs talk of uneven restraint

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NEW YORK (AP) » When police confronted the white man suspected of killing 10 Black people at a Buffalo supermarke­t, he was the very poster boy for armed and dangerous, carrying an AR15-style rifle and cloaked in body armor and hatred.

Yet officers talked to Payton Gendron, convinced him to put down his weapon and arrested him without firing a single shot. Buffalo Police Commission­er Joseph Gramaglia that day cited their training and called it “a tremendous act of bravery.”

In a country where Black people have been killed in encounters with police over minor traffic infraction­s, or no infraction­s at all, though, it’s raised the question: Where is that training, that determined following of protocol, when it comes to them?

“It’s important to emphasize this is not about why aren’t police killing white supremacis­t terrorists,” said Qasim Rashid, a human rights lawyer and satellite radio host who was among those on social media making posts about the subject. “It’s why can’t that same restraint and control be applied to a situation involving an unarmed Black person?”

He and others pointed to a litany of examples of white men taken calmly into police custody after shootings, including Dylann Roof, who killed nine Black people at a South Carolina church in 2015; Robert Aaron Long, who killed eight people at Georgia massage businesses last year; Patrick Crusius, who is accused of killing 23 people in a racist attack at an El Paso, Texas, Walmart in 2019; and Kyle Rittenhous­e, whose attempt to surrender immediatel­y after shooting three white people at a Wisconsin protest was rebuffed. Meanwhile, George Floyd, Atatiana Jefferson, Tamir Rice and a host of other Black people have died at police hands when the initial circumstan­ces were far less volatile.

“There’s just a stark contrast between how a Kyle Rittenhous­e or a Payton Gendron gets treated by the system in these incidents versus how a Black man gets treated in general,” said Insha Rahman, vice president of advocacy and partnershi­ps at the Vera Institute — a national nonprofit research and advocacy group focused on criminal justice.

Rahman said there are a lot of similariti­es in the public perception of the two cases. Rittenhous­e walked toward police with an AR15-style rifle slung over his shoulder, his hands raised. He testified at trial that police told him to “go home,” and he turned himself in the next day. He was acquitted of all charges after arguing self-defense.

“A few folks said at the time, if Kyle Rittenhous­e was a young Black man, he wouldn’t have made it out of Kenosha that night. He might not have ever made it to a trial,” she said.

Rahman also cautioned against viewing high-profile incidents in a vacuum. She said people need to consider everyday interactio­ns with the police, which along with arrests happen at a disproport­ionate and often more dangerous level for Black people.

The difference has been noted in Buffalo, said Jillian Hanesworth, 29, the city’s poet laureate and director of leadership developmen­t at Open Buffalo, a nonprofit focused on social justice and community developmen­t.

“We see how Black and brown people get treated by the police,” she said, that police don’t hesitate to “take deadly action against Black and brown people.”

Martìn Sabelli, president of the National Associatio­n of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said historical­ly there has been a racial divide in the U.S. that affects every aspect of the criminal legal process.

“The perception of racism is perpetuate­d because it’s rooted in a reality,” Sabelli said, noting the impact of implicit bias on policing has been studied extensivel­y. “We are unfortunat­ely in the process of trying to reverse decades or even longer of explicit racism in many police department­s around the country and that is often aggravated by implicit bias that exists at a subconscio­us level. And unfortunat­ely it taints these encounters by subconscio­usly making officers believe a person of color is more dangerous than a white person.”

Frank Straub, director of the National Policing Institute Center for Targeted Violence Prevention, said he hoped there’s a rethinking of how police respond to situations, in the wake of what the public has seen of disparate treatment in recent years.

“Maybe the fact that these videos are out there ... hopefully that now is impacting how officers are being trained to respond to arrest situations,” he said.

 ?? JOSHUA BESSEX/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jillian Hanesworth, with Open Buffalo, is photograph­ed Tuesday in Buffalo, N.Y.
JOSHUA BESSEX/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jillian Hanesworth, with Open Buffalo, is photograph­ed Tuesday in Buffalo, N.Y.

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