POLICING IS MORE THAN BLACK, WHITE
Along with our heartfelt sympathies for their loss, we extend our gratitude and admiration to the family of Tyre Nichols, the 29-year-old father who died three days after a sickeningly savage police beating in Memphis on Jan. 7.
The family’s courageous call for protesters to avoid violence as they demanded justice appears to have helped Americans to process some of the anger and pain of this horrible episode and mercifully maintain peace after the release of the incendiary video.
The officers were immediately fired, and the district attorney brought charges including second-degree murder and aggravated kidnapping.
And, once again, the nation is left to ask what went wrong and how can we avoid such tragedies from happening again?
In Memphis, attention quite properly turned to the special unit in which these particular cops were working. Known by the acronym SCORPION, for “Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods,” it emerged in the ways that similar strike-force units have been created in other cities, including Chicago, at various times as part of a get-tough response to surges in crimes.
In response to rising homicide numbers and, among other hazards, incidents of late-night drag racing and stunt driving on the city’s streets, Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn Davis deployed some 40 officers to focus less on writing tickets and more on aggressive strategies such as seizing cars from the most dangerous drivers.
But, as arrests went up, so did complaints of heavy-handed tactics, particularly by this team, in response to relatively minor offenses.
Although born out of a desire to respond quickly in neighborhoods torn apart by crime, these units often create new problems. The Memphis Police Department immediately disbanded its SCORPION unit after Nichols’ death.
The tragedy has to be particularly frustrating for Chief Davis, a former president of the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives. Nichols’ case offers the less frequent and perhaps more complicated example of a Black victim killed by Black officers.
That’s a possible sign of what retired New York Detective Marquez Claxton, director of the Black Law Enforcement Alliance, called a “toxic police culture which, of course, sometimes can be fed by racism.”
In the wake of Nichols’ death, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, called on Sens. Cory Booker , D-N.J., and Tim Scott, R-S.C., to resume their talks for federal policing legislation.
Previous talks ultimately stalled on such sticking points as whether police should be shielded from lawsuits and whether national policing standards could be imposed without funding for local departments to pay for them. Still.
“It’s the right starting point,” said Durbin on ABC “This Week” Sunday.
Let’s hope so. A similar bill, the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, repeatedly passed the House under Democrats, and President Joe Biden has said it should be taken up again.
One thing that mercifully has not been heard in the current talks is the self-defeating “Defund the Police” slogan that emerged out of the Democrats’ progressive wing on the heels of Floyd’s tragic death at the hands of police in Minneapolis in 2020.
Now we have a new tragedy. Let us drum up a new seriousness about improving big-city policing, preventing such tragedies from happening again. It’s not an impossible task.