General Brock wrote:That untaxed cigarettes don't merit arrest flew over my head, as did the validity of arresting Mr. Garner in the first place. It was simply assumed the cops had a valid reason to arrest to begin with, and I appear to have been wrong.
My impression was that a political order came down to crack down on people selling loosies, and Garner was known for doing this. On the day he was killed, he claimed to have none on him - and, police were there about a fight Garner helped break up, not loosies. The arrest has been linked to something called
'broken windows policing' wherein misdemeanors are treated like more serious crimes. However, its not clear what Garner's misdemeanor was now; loosies or the fight. As far as I can tell, no cigarettes were ever found, none appear in the video, and no-one in the media has even asked about that. Garner obviously wasn't the one fighting, so the arrest seems to have been unjustified in the first place.
Broken windows policing
may be a good way to fight a crime epidemic (i.e. New York in the 1970s) in that it ensures that casually, routinely committing petty crimes. A given mugger may still not get caught, but if said mugger is in the habit of jumping subway turnstiles (hardly implausible) and there's an outstanding warrant for their arrest because of the time they skipped bail... they can be caught that way. One can make a case that broken windows policing actually helped in some American cities in the late 20th century. It may or may not be airtight, but it's at least a case.
The really big problem with broken windows policing is that
if it works, you expect the crime rate to go down. If there's pressure on the police to keep the arrest rate up in order to be "tough on crime," though... You get escalation. The line between "tough on crime" and "police randomly harassing people" moves. Certain neighborhoods are subject to seemingly random, capricious arrests where the police trawl widely in hopes of finding a few of the many, many people who've fallen through the cracks in an overloaded judiciary. Or who, having already been convicted of a serious crime after a previous trawl, have no realistic prospects except to live on the fringes of society committing more such crimes. And anyone the police know (or 'know') is
probably carrying contraband becomes an easy target to run up their number of arrests.
So at some point, the situation devolves from "police are cracking down on petty crime in an attempt to deter the average citizen from being a petty criminal, and to create a sense of public order" into
"Police are harassing the poor, especially the
black poor, endlessly, and it shows, and the blacks know it perfectly well, and they get upset, and when they express that anger, even in a relatively restrained manner, the police get violent and sometimes kill them over no damn thing at all... because others are
not expressing their anger in such a restrained fashion."
Despite, or because of, the extensive media coverage focused on the chokehold death, the specific reason for Garner's arrest before the chokehold is not clear. While race is likely a factor, there have been cases of unarmed whites being killed by police with no consequences, since the victims were poor whites. No-one's even asking those important questions, what was Garner being arrested for, what was the validity of the charge, and perhaps, do cops have too much discretion to arrest?
Those real questions appear to be being avoided by media sensationalism. Pressing an illegal arrest is
assault and battery under the U.S. Constitution, but most Americans don't know their rights and some would be afraid of the consequences of resisting. Being out on bail for previous non-violent offenses doesn't remove Garner's right to resist an unlawful arrest.
There's a difference, I suspect, between an illegal arrest and a merely
mistaken arrest. One is the police arresting you when, say, they do not have grounds to suspect you are committing or have committed a crime. The other is the police arresting you when they are
wrong.
I do not presume to say which case applies to Garner, but it's an issue. A lot of people assume "I'm not doing X" is grounds not to be arrested for doing X; it's not quite that simple when 'probable cause' and 'reasonable suspicion' start cropping up.