Post Tribune (Sunday)

Trying to keep hope alive after the Chauvin verdict

- Clarence Page, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs at www.chicagotri­bune.com/pagespage. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

It’s easy to be optimistic if you keep your expectatio­ns low.

That’s why, after Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapoli­s police officer with a long history of use-of-force complaints, was convicted for the murder of George Floyd, I felt less of a sense of celebratio­n than relief.

Say what you will, our system worked after video clearly showed the victim dying with the defendant’s knee on his neck for more than eight minutes.

But the resolution of the George Floyd murder case almost was upstaged by another video-driven controvers­y. In Columbus, Ohio, police released bodycam video of 16-year-old Black teenager Ma’Khia Bryant being shot fatally by a white officer as she was attacking another young Black woman with a knife.

The ensuing controvers­y over whether the use of deadly force was justified or not — in my instant analysis, it unfortunat­ely was — triggered memories of yet another controvers­ial police video.

Released in Chicago less than a week earlier, it showed the shooting death of 13-year-old Adam Toledo by a Chicago police officer in a dark alley around 2:30 a.m. After the officer repeatedly shouted for Toledo to, “Show your hands!” — officers had been called to the scene to investigat­e a “shots fired” call — the teen displays his empty hands a fraction of a second after the officer repeatedly told him to. A gun was found later on the other side of a fence a few feet away.

Yet, after a year of racial reckoning in the wake of George Floyd’s death, no one should be surprised that the Toledo and Bryant tragedies touched off new rounds of angry protests and sorrowful vigils, along with calls for federal investigat­ions of these and a staggering number of other similarly controvers­ial cases.

I sympathize with those sentiments but also caution against jumping to conclusion­s, especially when our outrage is still boiling.

LaBron James illustrate­d the problem with premature reactions. The NBA superstar narrowly avoided Twitter jail after the death of his fellow Ohioan by taking down a tweet so angry that it sounded downright threatenin­g.

“YOU’RE NEXT,” James tweeted with an hourglass emoji over an image of Nicholas Reardon, the officer who fired the shots. “#ACCOUNTABI­LITY.”

“I’m so damn tired of seeing Black people killed by police,” he explained in a later tweet. “I took the tweet down because it’s being used to create more hate - This isn’t about one officer. it’s about the entire system and they always use our words to create more racism. I am so desperate for more ACCOUNTABI­LITY”

He was right about the need for accountabi­lity but, unfortunat­ely, he also was right about how some people would turn his words about the need for police accountabi­lity into what HBO “Real Time” host Bill Maher calls “panic porn” for right-wing media.

More important, as another Twitter user replied to LeBron, “You do realize that officer saved a Black girl from getting stabbed, right?”

Right. The question of whether Officer Reardon needed to use deadly force can’t ignore an obvious reality on the video: He was trying to stop a young woman who clearly appears to be preparing to stab an unidentifi­ed young woman after having knocked another young woman to the ground.

Talk show speculatio­n about “shooting to wound” or using a Taser must take into account how the whole episode occurs in fractions of a second. If that were my daughter about to be stabbed, I wouldn’t want the officer to hesitate either.

And therein lies the dilemma of Black attitudes toward police. We want effective police protection when we need it, but trust in the police is so low in some communitie­s that many are reluctant to call even when they need it.

When fear and resentment of police undermines cooperatio­n by crime victims and witnesses, the only winners are the criminals who go free. No wonder so many law-abiding citizens have lost hope.

So we need some victories. We need faith in the criminal justice system to be restored. Community-oriented policing that focuses on developing working relationsh­ips between police and residents has had a lot of success in some communitie­s.

That’s only a start for a restoratio­n of trust, but little signs of hope can lead to bigger ones, if we don’t keep our expectatio­ns too low.

 ??  ??
 ?? KYLE ROBERTSON/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Ohio State University students gather Wednesday in Columbus, Ohio, to protest the police shooting that killed Ma’Khia Bryant.
KYLE ROBERTSON/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Ohio State University students gather Wednesday in Columbus, Ohio, to protest the police shooting that killed Ma’Khia Bryant.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States