The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Easy answers out of reach in conversati­ons on police

- Gene Lyons Gene Lyons

I couldn’t handle more than about 30 seconds of video depicting Tyre Nichols being brutalized by police acting like soldiers of an invading army — because that’s what they are: representa­tives of the establishe­d order sent to subdue the endemic population.

The Associated Press reports that Memphis, Tenn., beleaguere­d by soaring homicide rates, drasticall­y lowered recruiting standards for new officers and assigned them to “specialize­d units like the now-disbanded SCORPION high-crime strike force involved in Nichols’ arrest. Their lack of experience was shocking to veterans, who said some young officers who transfer back to patrol don’t even know how to write a traffic ticket or respond to a domestic call.”

“They don’t know a felony from a misdemeano­r,” one veteran officer said. “They don’t even know right from wrong yet.”

Instead, they tended to be the worst kind of cop: drawn into police work out of a desire to carry handcuffs and a pistol and rough people up. Keeping such individual­s off the force should be a police recruiter’s primary goal.

I’m reminded of George Orwell’s essay “Shooting an Elephant.” Serving as a British policeman in colonial Burma, Orwell perceived “that when the white man turns tyrant it is his own freedom that he destroys. He becomes a sort of hollow, posing dummy, the convention­alized figure of a sahib. For it is the condition of his rule that he shall spend his life in trying to impress the ‘natives,’ and so in every crisis he has got to do what the ‘natives’ expect of him. He wears a mask, and his face grows to fit it.”

Just so the swaggering young cops of the SCORPION unit, turned loose with little or no effective leadership to bully the young Black men of Memphis into submission. Which appears to be what the citizenry of all races wanted of them.

The New York Times sent reporters to interview young Black men who’d been roughed up by the team: “SCORPION encounters,” they reported, “typically began over something minor — a tinted window violation, a seat belt infraction, a broken taillight or cracked windshield — and often resulted in officers finding illegal drugs, unregister­ed weapons, stolen cars and outstandin­g warrants.”

This, in turn, appears to be pretty much why widely predicted rioting never occurred in Memphis or anywhere else. Also why advice from pundits about stopping armed police from enforcing traffic laws sounded so weak. Yes, the SCORPION cops were looking for any excuse to pull young Black men — usually the only drivers out and about in low-income neighborho­ods after 10 p.m. — and to search their cars for dope and guns. They kept finding them, too.

Until the five officers charged with Nichols’ murder go to trial, we probably won’t learn why they pulled him over, or what, if anything, they suspected. Which is not to say they had good reason. We simply don’t know. It looks like they had the wrong man — a tragedy and an outrage. Predictabl­e, too.

I recently had a conversati­on with a Black friend who’d been caught in a crossfire between rival gangs in Little Rock, Ark. He jumped out of his car and lay facedown in the street until the shooting ended, and then drove off before police arrived.

My friend’s attitude toward events in Memphis could be described as weary resignatio­n. While white people make most of the noise about the homicide rate in this city, it’s Black people who are virtually all of the victims.

Memphis is the same, only more so.

Only in America could we flood the nation with handguns and then profess shock and amazement at spiraling homicide rates.

So yeah, I’m out of ideas. You?

 ?? ??

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