[ALL people ... actually]
September/October 2015 issue
Police Shootings Won't Stop Unless
We Also Stop Shaking Down Black People
The dangers of turning police officers into
revenue generators.
Jack Hitt
In April, several days after North Charleston, South Carolina, police
officer Michael Slager stopped
Walter Scott for a busted taillight and then fatally shot him, the
usual cable-news transmogrification of victim into superpredator ran into
problems. The
dash cam showed Scott being pulled over while traveling at a nerdy
rate of speed, using his left turn signal to pull into a parking lot and
having an amiable conversation with Slager until he realized he'd
probably get popped for nonpayment of child support. At which point he
bolted out of the car and hobbled off. Slager then shot him. Why didn't
the cop just jog up and grab him? Calling what the obese 50-year-old
Scott was doing "running" really stretches the bounds of
literary license.
But maybe the question to ask is: Why did Scott run? The answer came when
the New York Times
revealed Scott to be a man of modest means trapped in an exhausting
hamster wheel: He would get a low-paying job, make some child support
payments, fall behind on them, get fined, miss a payment, get jailed for
a few weeks, lose that job due to absence, and then start over at a
lower-paying job. From all apparent evidence, he was a decent schlub
trying to make things work in a system engineered to make his life
miserable and recast his best efforts as criminal behavior.
Recently, two more deaths of African Americans that have blown up in the
media follow a pattern similar to Scott's.
Sandra Bland in Texas and
Samuel DuBose in Cincinnati were each stopped for minor traffic
infractions (failing to use turn signal, missing front license plate),
followed by immediate escalation by the officer into rage, and then an
official story that is obviously
contradicted by the video (that the officer tried to
"de-escalate" the tension with Bland; that the officer was
dragged by DuBose's car). In both cases, the perpetrator of a minor
traffic offense died.
When incidents of police violence come to light, the usual defense is
that we should not tarnish all the good cops just because of "a few
bad apples." No one can argue with that. But what is usually implied
in that phrase is that the "bad" officers' intentions are
malevolentthat they are morally corrupt and racist. And that may be
true, but they are also bad in the job-performance sense. These men are
crummy cops, sometimes profoundly so. Slager had a record for
gratuitously using his Taser. Timothy Leohmann, who leapt from his car
and instantly killed 12-year-old
Tamir Rice, had been deemed "weepy" and unable to
"emotionally function" by a supervisor at his previous PD job,
who added: "I do not believe time, nor training, will be able to
change or correct these deficiencies." Ferguson's Darren Wilson was
also
fired from his previous jobactually, the entire police force of
Jennings, Missouri, was disbanded for being awful.
When you ask why such "bad" cops are nevertheless armed and
allowed to patrol the streets, one begins to see that lurking beneath
this violence is a fiscal menace: police departments forced to assist
city officials in raising revenue, in many cases funding their own
salariesredirecting the very concept of keeping the peace into
underwriting the budget.
We saw a glimpse of this when the Justice Department released its
report on Ferguson in March. In his statement, then-Attorney General
Eric Holder referenced a lady in town whose life sounded Walter
Scott-like. She had received two parking tickets totaling $151. Her
efforts to pay those fines fell so behind that she eventually paid out
more than $500. At one point, she was jailed for nonpayment andeight
years laterstill owes $541 in accrued fees.
The judge largely responsible for the extraction of these fees from
Ferguson's poor,
Ronald J. Brockmeyer, owed $172,646 in back taxes, a sum orders of
magnitude greater than any late fine coming before his bench. Even as he
was jailing black ladies for parking tickets, Brockmeyer was allegedly
erasing citations for white Ferguson residents who happened to be his
friends. After the report's publication, he resigned so that Ferguson
could "begin its healing process."
But consider: In 2010, this collaboration between the Ferguson police and
the courts generated $1.4 million in income for the city. This year, they
will more than double that amount$3.1 millionproviding nearly a quarter
of the city's $13 million budget, almost all of it extracted from its
poorest African American citizens.
Evidence also suggests that this new form of raising
revenuepoliciteering?goes far beyond Ferguson. Remember the recent
Oklahoma case involving
Robert Bates, a 73-year-old millionaire insurance broker with scant
law enforcement background who was allowed to go out on patrollikely
because he had donated lots of money and equipment to the local sheriff's
office? He killed an unarmed black suspect when he grabbed his gun
instead of his Taser. In the days that followed, we learned that other
deputies had long resented this guy's freelance incompetence.
"Essentially, these small towns in urban areas have municipal
infrastructure that can't be supported by the tax base, and so they
ticket everything in sight to keep the town functioning," said
William Maurer, a lawyer with the Institute for Justice who has been
studying the sudden rise in "nontraffic-related
fines."
Take the St. Louis suburb of Pagedale, where, among other Norman
Rockwell-worthy features deemed illegal, "you can't have a hedge
more than three feet high," Maurer says. "You can't have a
basketball hoop or a wading pool in front of a house. You can't have a
dish antenna on the front of your house. You can't walk on the roadway if
there is a sidewalk, and if there is not a sidewalk, they must walk on
the left side of the roadway. They must walk on the right of the
crosswalk. They can't conduct a barbecue in the front yard and can't have
an alcoholic beverage within 150 feet of a barbecue. Kids cannot play in
the street. They also have restrictions against pants being worn below
the waist in public. Cars must be within 500 feet of a lamp or a source
of illumination during nighttime hours. Blinds must be neatly hung in
respectable appearance, properly maintained, and in a state of good
repair."
Where did this Kafkaesque laundry list come from? Maurer explains that in
2010, Missouri passed a law that capped the amount of city revenue that
any agency could generate from traffic stops. The intent was to limit
small-town speed traps, but the unintentional consequences are now clear:
Pagedale saw a 495 percent increase in nontraffic-related arrests.
"In Frontenac, the increase was 364 percent," Maurer says.
"In Lakeshire, it was 209 percent."
This racket now has many variants. South Carolina hosts
"
Operation Rolling Thunder," an annual dragnet in which 21
different law enforcement agencies swarm stretches of I-85 and I-26 in
the name of catching drug dealers. In 2013, this law enforcement Bonnaroo
netted 1,300 traffic citations and 300 speeding tickets. But after
everyone had paid up, the operation boasted exactly one felony
conviction.
A different strategy in San Diego simply tacks on various fees to an
existing fine. A 2012 Union Tribune
investigation revealed that while speeding is a simple $35 fine,
other government agencies can tack on as many as 10 other surcharges,
including: a state penalty assessment, $40; county penalty assessment,
$36; court construction, $20; state surcharge, $8; DNA identification,
$16; criminal conviction fee, $35; court operations, $40; emergency
medical air transportation penalty, $4; and night court, $1. When it's
all said and done, that $35 ticket comes to $235.
Another
report released earlier this year connects the dots: African
Americans and Latinos make up less than a third of San Diego's population
but represent 64.5 percent of those searched during a traffic
stop.
There is still no comprehensive study to determine just how many cities
pay their bills by indenturing the poor, but it is probably no
coincidence that when you examine the recent rash of police killings, you
find that the offenses they were initially stopped for were
preposterously minor. Bland's lane change signal, DuBose's missing plate.
Walter Scott had that busted taillightwhich, we all later learned, is
not even a crime in South Carolina. Eric Garner was selling loose
cigarettes. When Darren Wilson was called to look into a
robbery, the reason he initially stopped Michael Brown was for
walking in the streetin Ferguson, an illegal act according to
Section 44-344 of the local code. Between 2011 and 2013, 95 percent
of the perpetrators of this atrocity were African American, meaning that
"walking while black" is not a punch line. It is a
crime.
And not just a crime, but a crime that comes with fines that are strictly
enforced. In 2014, Ferguson's bottom-line-driven police force issued
16,000 arrest warrants to three-fourths of the town's total population of
21,000. Stop and think about that for a moment: In Ferguson, 75 percent
of all residents had active outstanding arrest warrants. Most of the
entire city was a virtual plantation of indentured revenue
producers.
Back in Pagedale, St. Louis Post-Dispatch reporter Jennifer Mann
recently
calculated a 500 percent increase in petty fines over the last five
years. "Pagedale handed out 2,255 citations for these types of
offenses last year," Mann wrote, "or nearly two per
household."
"Once the system is primed for maximizing revenuestarting with
fines and fine enforcement," Holder said apropos Ferguson, "the
city relies on the police force to serve, essentially, as a collection
agency for the municipal court rather than a law enforcement
entity."
In Alabama, a circuit court judge, Hub Harrington, wrote a blistering
opinion three years ago asserting that the Shelby County Jail had
become a kind of "debtors' prison" and that the court system
had devolved into a "judicially sanctioned extortion racket."
This pattern leads to a cruel paradox: One arm of the state is paying a
large sum to lock up a person who can't pay a small sum owed to a
different arm of the state. The result? Bigger state deficits. As the
director of the Brennan Center's Justice Program put it, "Having
taxpayers foot a bill of $4,000 to incarcerate a man who owes the state
$745 or a woman who owes a predatory lender $425 and removing them from
the job force makes sense in no reasonable world."
When the poor come to understand that they are likely to be detained and
fined for comically absurd crimes, it can't be a surprise to the police
that their officers are viewed with increasing distrust. In this
environment, running away from a cop is not an act of suspicion; it's
common sense.
Cops like to talk about "good police." They say, "That guy
is good police"a top compliment, by which they mean cool under the
pressure of the street and cunning at getting people to give up the
details of a crime. Good police look bad when sharing the street with
crummy police. But when budgetary whims replace peacekeeping as the
central motivation of law enforcement, who is more likely to write up
more tickets, the good cop or the crummy one? When the mission of the
entire department shifts from "protect and serve" to
"punish and profit," then just what constitutes good
police?
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/07/police-shootings-traffic-stops-excessive-fines
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