I am not questioning the rightness of considering this the correct punishment for homicidal negligence by a police officer. But I do want to double-check to confirm, Thanas, that you do consider this to be homicidal negligence by a police officer, and that you do consider life in prison to be the correct punishment for that crime.Thanas wrote:Yanez should spent the rest of his life in jail...
Is that the case?
The case for manslaughter on the grounds of the police officer's extreme negligence is much stronger than the case for murder, I think. I can get behind the idea that "beyond a reasonable doubt, this was negligence resulting in a death, and therefore manslaughter" more easily than I can get behind "beyond a reasonable doubt, this was first (or second) degree murder."Alyrium Denryle wrote:Here is my sense on this. The officer gave contradictory instructions. He wanted ID, Castille did the responsible thing and politely informed the officer that he had a gun. "Don't reach for it then" is fine as an instruction, but Castille still had to get his ID as per the officer's instructions (I think this is a bit people have not been communicating adequately, largely because I don't think anyone here is being dispassionate right now).Kamakazie Sith wrote:
Saying and doing are two different things. The fact that Yanez repeated his instruction could be interpreted to me that Castile was saying but not doing.
If the officer is reasonable and not panicking (which is the definition of the reasonable person--or reasonable officer--standard of law) then he should conclude that Castille was being responsible about informing him of a gun (rather than threatening him), and was complying with instructions. If the officer was not certain, he should have clarified that he wanted Castille to put his hands on the wheel or exit the vehicle with his hands up so that said officer could remove the weapon and obtain ID in safety. He failed to do this. At every single step of this stop, Yanez failed to do anything that a reasonable officer should do. He failed to do anything that I am absolutely confident that you would do under identical conditions.
He was grossly negligent, and as a result someone is dead. That is manslaughter in most jurisdictions that I am aware.
Yanez did not shoot Castile when Castile announced his possession of gun and permit. There is no evidence that he interpreted that announcement as a threat, as you imply that Yanez did.Napoleon the Clown wrote:When acting in the capacity of an officer of the law, the bar should be several orders of magnitude higher so as to prevent these situations. A reasonable person would not conclude that a dude announcing he has a gun and CCW is making a threat. A reasonable cop should be held to a much higher standard yet.Simon_Jester wrote:Point of order: Finding the defendant in a murder trial to be 'not guilty' by reason of 'reasonable doubt of his guilt' is not the same as proving that the victim was guilty of some crime.
The question is not "is Castile some kind of evil scary criminal?" The question is, "is there reasonable doubt that the officer committed murder for no goddamn reason anyone can identify?"
Your argument appears to be that Yanez was beyond a reasonable doubt committing a cold-blooded killing, and shouting out exculpatory words into the recorder so that he'd have an alibi after the fact. If that is not your argument, I have no idea what your argument is.
Yanez shot Castile when Castile kept reaching towards (his pocket?) after being told three times not to reach for or pull out an object in his pocket. Could a reasonable cop believe that to be a condition under which Castile was drawing a gun? You're saying 'no.'
To be clear, it sounds as if you are saying that "I have a gun and a permit for it" is a reliable proof of non-criminal intent. So reliable that, in and of itself, the bare fact that a person says this to a police officer is proof that they would not shoot a police officer.
Am I misunderstanding you?
I would stop short of assuming that Yanez would automatically pull the trigger on any black person he pulled over because that black person stopped when he said 'stop' and then replied calmly, "Officer, my ID is in my pocket. What do I do?"And if he had stopped he wouldn't have been able to retrieve his ID, and Yanez probably would have flipped his shit over that too. A racist, panicky motherfucker like Yanez would flip out no matter what Castile had done because black=matches description of a bank robber.Once upon a time I was pulled over by a campus police officer. He asked for my vehicle registration. I affirmed that I would get it and reached for the glove compartment. I opened the glove compartment.Should people with guns just assume that announcing having a firearm is likely to get them shot, so they'd best not even announce it? Should they ask the cop "Would you like me to step out of the vehicle, hands raised, so you can retrieve my ID and firearm?" What can they do to not be shot to death? Do your Second Amendment rights evaporate when around cops? Or only if you're one of the "scary" minorities? How could Castile have retrieved ID without reaching where the cop couldn't see clearly? Has teleporting ID been invented and I just missed it? The cop assumed he was reaching for a gun.
Abruptly, he told me to stop. I stopped.
We exchanged further words, and it became clear that he'd seen a glint of metal in my glove compartment (a tire pressure gauge, as it happened), and wanted to know what it was before I reached any further. Life went on, I got away with a warning for speeding.
Now, I'm not pretending I was in a situation where I was anywhere near death there. White guy on college campus, et cetera.
...
But all this amped-up sarcasm on your part is acting as a smokescreen for an important observation:
If you are moving in an attempt to comply with a police officer's instructions, and the police officer says 'stop,' just fucking stop. Seriously, this is a reasonable rule to use even when talking about random people. If someone asks me to do something, and I begin doing so, and they say 'stop!"... I stop. Before I ask why, before I get into an argument, I stop. There might be a handful of exceptions to that rule, but it's a pretty good rule. Very rarely is it a good idea to carry out an action against the wishes of the person who requested that action in the first place. Even more rarely is it a good idea to do that when the person in question is an authority figure.
Castile did not stop. Does this make him some sort of evil person? Obviously not. Does this make him somehow 'guilty' of any offense that any sane person would criticize anyone for? Obviously not.
But I bet there's a parallel universe very close to this one where Castile stopped reaching into his pocket, and in this parallel universe, he is alive and well. If Castile's life matters in the scheme of things, well... we can wish he'd stopped reaching into his pocket the first time Yanez said "stop."
We can also wish Yanez had taken up a career less likely to cause his hair trigger panic reactions, such as flower arranging. We can wish Yanez had been otherwise occupied and had not encountered Castile. We can wish Yavuz were not a goddamn idiot who stopped Castile for a stupid reason. We can even wish Yanez had never been born.
But I, for one, ALSO wish Castile had just stopped reaching into his pocket.
I mean, you can choose to assume that this would have gotten Castile killed. I would imagine it had a much lower associated probability of death
I mean, if you were in Castile's exact position (including the black skin), with a police officer who's saying "Don't reach for it!" ... what would you have done. I know damn well I would have done the same thing I'd do with my lily-white hide here and now: "Officer, my ID is in my pocket. So's the pistol. What do I do?"
Would you have made a calculated decision that reaching for your pocket is more safe than not?
None of this has anything to do with the argument I made that you quoted.This goes back to police acting as enforcers of the law. They need to be held to a higher standard, for the safety of the people they claim to be protecting. If a cop arrests you without a reason, that's a criminal act. Why isn't it a criminal act to kill you wrongfully? "Suspect matches description of suspect in X crime" and then the person who was arrested in no way matches the description would be a wrongful arrest. "This guy is pulling a gun" and the guy isn't pulling a gun, same deal.No, it's not.At absolute minimum, the cop in this case should be relegated to desk duty, because obviously he's too paranoid to be trusted with a firearm in a possibly tense situation. I recall the cop that got fired for not murdering a man with an unloaded gun, for ascertaining that the guy had no real intention of shooting anyone.
When a cop is let off the hook for shooting someone and cannot prove that that person was an active threat, then that's the same fucking result as the dead person being declared guilty of whatever crime.
If John Doe kills Joe Smith, and is declared 'not guilty by reason of self defense,' that is NOT equivalent to Joe Smith being convicted of assaulting John Doe. Because all that is established is that there is reasonable doubt. It is within the realm of realistic, plausible, reasonable possibility that John Doe was in fear of his life.
This does not make Joe Smith a killer, or a man who commits assault and battery. There may be situations where Joe Smith does something totally innocent and still, entirely by accident, causes John Doe to fear for his life... and then John Doe kills Joe Smith, and potentially gets away with it by pleading self-defense.
The equivalency you are drawing here is completely false from a legal point of view.
It doesn't even work in civil cases where the burden of proof is lighter. If you sue me, claiming I am liable for damages, and I prove that I am not liable, that doesn't mean I get to turn around and somehow sue you for being liable. Or that anyone else does, either. Maybe someone else is liable, maybe no one is liable. In and of itself, a "not guilty" verdict that exonerates me does NOTHING to prove anyone else guilty of a crime.
Finding the police officer 'not guilty' is not the same as finding the victim guilty of assault.
Sometimes genuine accidents DO happen. Punishing the police, or anyone, for genuine accidents does not serve a useful purpose. Because harshly punishing people unlucky enough to experience a genuine accident does not reduce crime.
Holding people to higher standards when they fuck up does not mean that any useful purpose is served by changing the standard of proof away from "reasonable doubt" to "absolute 100% surefire alibi."
For that matter, harsh punishments and relaxed standards of due process in general don't do much to reduce crime. We already know that when talking about ordinary criminals and I don't see why it would be less true when we talk about cops. A police officer isn't going to be much more deterred by life in prison than by five years in prison; either way he loses his job and doesn't have much to come back to.
Likewise, a police officer isn't going to be more shy about shooting people he actually thinks are going to shoot him just because you relax due process on him. He won't hold fire just because he knows that a reasonable doubt as to his guilt won't save him at the trial and he's guilty until proven innocent. Because if he actually believes himself to be in danger of his life at that moment, even if he is factually wrong... well, just about anyone would prefer being judged in the defendant's box by twelve people to being carried in a pine box by six.
So... no need to answer the question, because it's dishonest to ask it at all. Because... Um.As it stands, the bar for a cop's use of force being considered justified is "the cop said he felt it was justified" and that's that. We are having regular reports of cops using lethal force and it turning out the person they killed wasn't a real threat. If there's a gun actually being leveled at them, if the person is charging them... Then a case can be made. "I thought he was pulling a gun" is not sufficient. Police are almost never held accountable in this country. They cannot be trusted. They can throw a fucking flashbang into a child's crib and not be convicted. Police have a substantially higher rate of being domestic abusers than the national average. Cops that do get fired (but not convicted!) can just go get a job as a cop at another station oftentimes. Unless we pass laws specifically condoning cop-slaying, it will never give criminals the leeway cops get by default. That's a dishonest argument, and a stupid one. Soldiers in a war zone have a higher bar for lethal force than police that are supposedly protecting us. Something is kind of really fucked up here, and it isn't that soldiers have rules of engagement.You're making a very interesting game-theory argument at the start of this post.And with how often cops aren't so much as indicted, much less convicted, even when blatantly guilty of a criminal act there's no real motivation to not be a corrupt, abusive fuck. Cop killers rarely get off without prison time. Hell, threatening a cop will nab you more prison time than the cop is likely to get for killing you just because (and then lying and saying he thought you were going for a gun). How would you feel if someone were to hold a cop at gun-point and upon being successfully arrested with no lethal force employed successfully said the cop was unlawfully threatening him and he feared for his life? Or if someone killed a cop and got away with it by arguing the cop was attempting to use unlawful, lethal force and nobody could prove otherwise?
You're arguing that since police are seldom punished for crimes, they have no incentive not to commit crimes. This is a very good point. Why would police be honest, if it were safe for them to be corrupt?
Let me turn that around and ask you a similar question. Would police be able to do their jobs at all, if it were safe for people to threaten them with violence?
Criminals have extra incentives to attack and kill police officers, because police officers are a major threat to criminals' ability to operate. If there is no counterbalancing incentive NOT to do so, what happens?
Well, honestly, I'm still sincerely curious, what do you think would happen if there were literally no increased penalty or risk associated with violence directed against a police officer? If that were the only thing that changed, all else being equal? Would the rate of violence directed against the police remain broadly consistent with that directed against the populace at large? Would it be much higher? Lower?
[I would also like to see the specific rules of engagement you're referring to, and where these soldiers were posted, by the way]
'Safe' was perhaps a poor choice of words. To rephrase question (1)...1) It's not just number of cases of police abuse, it's that they constantly get away with it. I don't expect a random cop to even pay attention to me because like I said: Skinny, short white guy. I'm about as non-threatening as a person can get. I'm not afraid of the police, I simply do not trust them to behave in an ethical manner.Let me ask you two questions, which I think I have a right to hear an answer to.
1) In a population of three hundred million citizens and somewhere in the neighborhood of one million police officers, exactly how few individual instances of bad cops would there have to be, before you would feel safe? Please state a number you think would be reasonable, such as "no more than one per year" or "no more than two per day."
2) Would you feel safe if a dozen cases of corrupt cops were reported every week?
How few instances of cops that you believe are guilty, but who are not punished or convicted, would there have to be, before you felt reasonably inclined to trust police? Measured in "no more than one per year" or "no more than two per day" or some such rate?
(2), too, needs rephrasing.2) I would feel better if the shitty cops actually faced punishment, but they do not. I would feel they are trustworthy if the so-called "good cops" worked to root out corruption and rot from within, rather than circling the wagons. Any cop that helps cover up corruption is a bad cop. Any cop who turns a blind eye to abuse is a bad cop.
It seems there are damn few "good cops" by the "work to root out corruption" metric. Hell, even if we define good cop as "doesn't turn a blind eye to bad behavior" it seems there's a shortage of good cops.
What is the number of "bad cops I think get away with it per year" that you would have to learn about, in order to convince you that police were untrustworthy? How many is too many? Can you give me a number?
So I guess they converge to the same question.
What is the number of "cops I think are bad, but know weren't punished" that it takes to convince you the police are dishonest?