The Punxsutawney Spirit

Outrage boils in Seattle and in India over death of a student and an officer’s callous remarks

- By Manuel Valdes and Andrew Selsky

SEATTLE (AP) — Outrage grew Friday over a Seattle police officer’s remark that the life of a young woman killed by a speeding patrol car had “limited value.” Diplomats from India are asking for an investigat­ion following the death of the Indian graduate student as people in Seattle protested the officer’s callous jokes caught on bodycam video.

The footage released this week shows Officer Daniel Auderer, vice president of the Seattle Police Officers Guild, joking with the rank-and-file police union’s president after a different officer’s speeding police car on Jan. 23 slammed into Jaahnavi Kandula at a crosswalk.

Protesters on Thursday evening gathered at the Seattle intersecti­on where the 23-year-old graduate student was fatally struck by Officer Kevin Dave’s SUV. The King County Prosecutin­g Attorney’s Office is conducting a criminal review of the crash.

Auderer responded to the crash to evaluate whether Dave was impaired, The Seattle Times reported. Dave had been driving 74 mph in a 25 mph zone on the way to an overdose call.

Later, Auderer left his body-worn camera on as he called Seattle Police Officers Guild President Mike Solan to report what happened. In a recording released by the police department on Monday, Auderer laughs and suggests Kandula’s life had “limited value” and the city should just write a check for $11,000.

At the demonstrat­ion on Thursday, 5-year-old Layla Allibhai sat atop father Mo Allibhai’s shoulders while holding a sign saying: “I have unlimited value. So did Jaahnavi.”

Protesters also carried signs saying “Jail killer cops” and “Convict Kevin Dave.”

“I think this has galvanized people because it’s so blatant and disrespect­ful to put a value on a human’s life at $11,000,” Patricia Hunter, co-chair of the Community Police Commission, said in an interview Friday. “And it galvanizes people to see that the culture at Seattle Police Department has some issues that need to be immediatel­y addressed.”

Hunter’s commission was formed to hold police accountabl­e, along with the Office of the Inspector General and the Office of Police Accountabi­lity. Hunter said its next step is to work with those partners to see what charges might be brought in the case, what policies might have been broken and “to amplify the voices of the community which are enraged over this video, so that justice can be done.”

The Consulate General of India in San Francisco tweeted that it has taken the “deeply troubling” matter up with authoritie­s in Seattle and in Washington, D.C., and that it wants a thorough investigat­ion and action against those involved. Newspapers in India have been following the case.

In a statement Friday, the U.S. State Department called the situation disturbing.

“We are aware of, and are disturbed by, what was said about Ms. Kandula’s death in the bodycam footage recently released by the Seattle Police Department,” the State Department said. “We would like to take this opportunit­y to express our sincere condolence to Ms. Kandula’s family and loved ones.”

The Seattle Police Officers Guild said in a statement Friday that it understand­s the outrage caused by the “highly insensitiv­e comments.”

“It sullens the profession of law enforcemen­t, the reputation of all Seattle Police officers and paints Seattle in a terrible light,” the union said. “We feel deep sorrow and grief for the family of Jaahnavi Kandula as this video has revictimiz­ed them in an already tragic situation as they continue to mourn her death. We are truly sorry.”

But the union noted that the bodycam footage captures only Auderer’s side of the conversati­on: “There is much more detail and nuance that has not been made public yet.”

Auderer, in an Aug. 8 statement he provided to the Office of Police Accountabi­lity that the union released Friday, said Solan had lamented the death and that his own comments were intended to mimic how the city’s attorneys might try to minimize liability for it.

“I laughed at the ridiculous­ness of how these incidents are litigated and the ridiculous­ness of how I watched these incidents play out as two parties bargain over a tragedy,” Auderer wrote. “I understand that without context the comment could be interprete­d as horrifying and crude.”

He denied that his remarks were “made with malice or a hard heart.”

Kandula was from Andhra Pradesh, a state in India’s southern coastal region. Relatives told The Seattle Times that Kandula came to Seattle so she could one day support her mother back home in India. Kandula was on track to receive a master’s in informatio­n systems this December from the Seattle campus of Northeaste­rn University.

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