Los Angeles Times

Police are asking us for patience?

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Re “Officer meant to draw Taser, chief says,” April 13

The phlegmatic response by the then-Brooklyn Center, Minn., police chief asking for due process and patience after an officer shot and killed Daunte Wright was nonsense.

I can see how one could make a serious mistake in a high-stress, adrenal-insurging event. Mistakes can happen to anyone.

But a police officer is not anyone. The one who shot Wright had been on the job 26 years, and she failed the major objective of her profession, which is to protect and to serve. She should have been fired immediatel­y.

This is not a legal matter. This is about incompeten­ce and failure under pressure, costing a life. Removal should have been immediate. The legal process is another matter.

Vicki Stern Thousand Oaks

As I look at the videos from police body cameras, I am struck by the extreme agitation on the part of the officers. Maybe their training could be rethought and better informed. They could learn how be calm and calculate their actions after assessing the situation without passion, prejudice or fear. Cheryl Younger Los Angeles

In 1972, my husband and I adopted a Black baby boy. We already had one white biological daughter and a Korean baby girl. We lived in leafy Pacific Palisades, a community with few people of color and where a multiracia­l family was an oddity.

My son had a privileged childhood. One night when he was 17, he drove to South Los Angeles to visit a friend. At about 1 a.m., our phone rang. Our son was calling from a payphone in a neighborho­od with a reputation for gang violence.

“Dad, I’m lost,” he told his father. I tried to suppress my fears, but all I could envision was a young Black man wearing a baseball cap and driving a blue car. That was enough to raise the suspicions of a passing patrol car to pull him over; he could be shot, I feared.

We gave him directions, after which we urged him to immediatel­y get back into his car and drive slowly.

That incident was 32 years ago, and I was more frightened of the police shooting my son than of him being caught up in gang violence. Nothing has changed.

I have three Black grandsons; two are in high school, and one will soon graduate college. I call them every night to make sure they arrive home safely after school or baseball practice. My fears will never subside until we recognize the bias police have and the power they exert over Black men. Donna C. Myrow Palm Springs

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