Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Expert reports ordered by Tamir Rice family attorneys call shooting 'objectively unreasonable'

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Attorneys for the family of Tamir Rice released reports Saturday from two use-of-force experts who determined the shooting of the 12-year-old boy by a Cleveland police officer was "objectively unreasonable."

The reviews stand in direct contrast to three expert reports commissioned and released by Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy J. McGinty, who Tamir's family, activists and religious leaders have repeatedly called to remove himself from the case.

Cleveland attorney Subodh Chandra and the New York law firm of Emery, Celli, Brinckerhoff & Abady have called McGinty's expert reports "utterly biased and deeply flawed." The attorneys represent Tamir's mother in a pending civil lawsuit filed against the city, the two officers involved in the shooting and the Cleveland police department.

At the legal team's request, police procedures consultant Roger Clark and former deputy police chief of the Irvine Police Department Jeffrey J. Noble, both California-based nationally renowned experts in police use-of-force issues, pored over investigative material and determined the shooting was not justified.

Clark and Noble, in a combined 31 pages of documents, reasoned that officers Timothy Loehmann and Frank Garmback placed themselves in harm's way by driving within feet of Tamir and shooting him Nov. 22, 2014 outside the Cudell Recreation Center on Cleveland's West Side.

They pointed to a 2008 U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling in the case of Kirby v. Duva that determined: "Where a police officer unreasonably places himself in harm's way, his use of deadly force may be deemed excessive."

The experts also partially blamed the shooting on a culture of corruption in the Cleveland police department that tolerates misconduct. They condemned the department for hiring Timothy Loehmann, the officer who shot Tamir,  without examining his file from a former job that described him as an inept officer.

The officers' poor tactical decision-making and systemic failures within the department resulted in a death of a child that was "completely avoidable...and should never have occurred," Clark wrote.

The attorneys sent a letter to McGinty Saturday asking him to present their findings to the grand jury. The prosecutor invited the attorneys in June to offer input and evidence while a case for the grand jury is prepared.

McGinty after receiving the letter told cleveland.com that he would include the reports in the grand jury presentation.

"Our stated policy in all use of deadly force cases is to welcome all relevant evidence and let the grand jury evaluate and make the decision," McGinty said. "This process is a wide open search for the truth."

Poor police tactics

Clark's and Noble's analysis examined the officers' tactics from the moment they were dispatched to the park.

The partners failed to follow police procedure that requires officers to develop a plan and call for backup before approaching a person who may be armed, the experts wrote.

"Reasonable police officers responding to a man-with-a-gun call would have stopped their vehicle prior to entering the park to visually survey the area to avoid driving upon a subject who may be armed," Noble wrote.

Clark also noted that the officers couldn't have known for sure whether Tamir was the subject being described by the 911 caller. The caller said the person was on the swings, but Tamir was seated at a table in the gazebo when police arrived.

"In my opinion there was nothing in the dispatch information that would positively identify Tamir as the certain target of the call to the responding officers," Clark wrote.

Further, if the officers determined that Tamir was the suspect in question, the park surveillance video makes it clear that Tamir was not a threat, Clark wrote. The man who called 911 told a dispatcher that the person was pointing a gun at people and scaring them.

But the video shows that Tamir didn't appear threatening as Loehmann and Garmback arrived, the experts said, and despite this, Garmback pulled the cruiser next to the gazebo.

The position of the car placed Loehmann, who was in the passenger's seat, in a difficult position, Noble wrote. Loehmann was forced to make a split-second decision about whether to use deadly force because he had no cover.

The experts bolstered this opinion with a statement from Judge Ronald Adrine of the Cleveland Municipal Court, who in June announced that he found probable cause to charge Loehmann with murder and other counts.

"The video in question is notorious and hard to watch," Adrine wrote. "After viewing it several times, this court is still thunderstruck by how quickly this event turned deadly."

But the fault was not just Garmback's, the experts wrote. Loehmann also acted too quickly when he drew his gun and fired twice without warning.

While Loehmann has not provided an official statement in the investigation, a report from the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Department shows that Loehmann says that he yelled commands to Tamir before he shot him.

But the fact that Loehmann shot the boy within 1.7 seconds of exiting the car proves that he did not give any verbal commands to Tamir, much less give him time to act on them, Noble wrote. The video makes it clear that there was no time for a "meaningful exchange" between the two, he said.

All of this, they wrote, goes against a basic tenet of policing that deadly force should be used only as a last resort and when someone is in danger of dying or being seriously hurt.

Systemic flaws in police department


Clark and Noble both wrote that the shooting cannot be fully evaluated as an isolated event. They pointed to systemic flaws within the police force that they say led to Tamir's death.

The experts dedicated portions of their reviews to a file from Loehmann's former job that Clark says paints Loehmann as "unfit for duty as a police officer."

Cleveland police admitted that they hired Loehmann without examining his personnel file from the Independence Police Department, where a supervisor described him as immature and incompetent. The documents include incidents in which Loehmann lied to his supervisors and cried on the gun range during firearms training, among other issues.

A supervisor wrote that he did not believe that time or training would help Loehmann.

Less than a year later, Loehmann was sworn in as a Cleveland police officer.

"No reasonable chief of police would have hired Officer Loeh-mann knowing that less than one year prior Officer Loehmann had engaged in acts of dishonesty as a police officer with his supervisor and who suffered with emotional issues so serious that the officer could not perform basic tasks related to his duties as a police officer," Noble wrote.

Clark said the department's poor hiring practices are an indicator of the broken organizational culture within the force.

He also made note of the findings of a U.S. Justice Department investigation into Cleveland police released last year that pointed out this flaw, among numerous others. The federal review also uncovered patterns of excessive and careless use of deadly force that resulted in millions of dollars in settlements and a consent decree between the city and the Justice Department that could take years and millions of more dollars to implement.

"A department with a problematic use of force history and/or one having chronic problems in this regard is more likely to produce incidents of misconduct and error," Clark wrote.

Original Article
Source: cleveland.com/
Author:  Ryllie Danylko

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