Anyone regularly perusing this space knows we comment on current events, usually
as
Now, the time has come for our thoughts on the verdict. The
inherently personal character of our reactions merits speaking independently:
Henry: Sighs of
Relief/Hope/Grief
This experience felt like batting
practice for a baseball game in which the ball has been put on a
tee or
watching a mystery with what seems an obvious ending. No doubt about the plot
existed. A video showed who did it and how. Everything was teed up for an inevitable
conclusion. Still, though the images had circulated around the globe for a
year, doubt about our criminal justice system and white resistance to letting go
of systemic and individual racism made me wonder if the result still might
mimic so many before – “not guilty” said the jury.
When I heard the verdict on the first charge I breathed a
sigh of relief. Wow, we have a conviction! Upon hearing the second, I felt a
spark of hope. Maybe, just maybe, we now live in a different world. After the third, however, grief for the Floyd
family and those who came before overtook me. Neither George nor the others
were coming back.
Then my mind turned to the pragmatic. Will law enforcement organizations, particularly
police unions, double down and fight
police
reform efforts? Or will the good
officers become the engine for change the nation needs? That’s in the hat, I
decided. Though I have hope, I’m not optimistic. I still hear the wails of the
many who couldn’t breathe, but perhaps now we can hear their voices.
Woodson: The Wind Is at
Our Backs
represents hope that at last African Americans
will be policed as Caucasians are. They believe cries for equality in policing
are gaining traction and the wind is at the movement’s back. They believe, as
echoed by the biblical prophet Isaiah, “Justice will one day roll down like
waters and righteousness like a mighty stream”. They are inspired to make “good
trouble”.
Others
believe the verdict was unjust; that it resulted from jurors’ fears of rioting.
They fear that people of color will continue demanding
to be policed as their white counterparts, which in their opinion is
unreasonable, given their view of the criminality of black and brown people. For
them Chauvin’s conviction is a threat to White Supremacy, and
something should be done to squelch the fervency of demands for changes.
objected to President Roosevelt
inviting the first African American, Booker T. Washington,
to dine at the White House, they fear the conviction will unleash a torrent of
demands for rights that are for whites only. Tillman said that the expectations
growing out of a single African American having dinner at the White House meant
that “we shall have to kill a thousand niggers to get them back in their
places”. Today, the Tillmans of the country may be outnumbered. The January
6th insurrection, the rash of anti-voting rights laws, and continuing police killings of African Americans, suggest a number of Tillmans
remain.
I
join the former group. Our numbers are growing as young Caucasians become aware
of racial discrimination in policing. With the shifting demographics in the
country, the fight continues with the wind at our backs!
Rob: The Playbook Fails
I watched the judge read the verdicts
and
experienced some of the same thoughts and emotions as my brother bloggers. I
took in the cable news commentary (well, at least
MSNBC and
CNN).
MSNBC’s
Joy Reid expressed
an observation about what happened in the courtroom that rang truest. I wish I
could claim it as original with me, but it’s not, so I’ll give her credit. It
best represents my thoughts about the impact of the verdicts.
Having practiced law for 34 years, mostly doing
litigation,
and having tried dozens of cases myself, I never fault a lawyer for doing the
best he or she can for their client. Every defendant enjoys the right to a vigorous
defense by competent counsel.
Chauvin’s lawyer did what he could with what he had. He
trotted out the defense police officers accused of killing black people usually
offer – put the victim on trial, try showing the officer’s fear of the black
suspect, blame the death or injury on a confluence of circumstances that
exonerate the officer. The defense claimed George Floyd’s drug use and medical condition
killed him, not Chauvin. Floyd, in the defense’s telling, could have risen from
the pavement and overwhelmed the officers, the reason they kept holding him
down. The nearby, supposedly menacing, crowd posed a threat that made aiding
Mr. Floyd imprudent, even after he couldn’t breathe.
Supposedly menacing
crowd witnessing death of George Floyd by Derek Chauvin
Beginning with the Rodney King case
in 1992, we’ve often seen these tactics employed in trials of police
officers accused of killing unarmed black people. Many times they worked,
resulting in acquittals by jurors reluctant to find against police
officers. The playbook failed this time,
perhaps demonstrating it’s not infallible. Maybe it’s out of date. I think that’s
potentially the verdict’s long-term significance.
The conviction was plainly justified. It doesn't seem like there should be any doubt. I haven't talked to anyone who thought the verdict was not justified.
ReplyDeleteI like Joy Reid but I found her comments about the defense to be unsophisticated. She criticized and rolled her eyes at defense attorneys for doing their job, for dredging up whatever defense they had. Now, this defense was not much---but it is what they had. To my mind, it was not so much on blaming the victim (though there was some of that, to be sure), but trying to posit the idea that Chauvin's actions did not kill Floyd. It was a crappy defense, but it was all they had and while it was fair to say it was a bullshit defense, I found her criticisms of counsel to be wrong.
As to the future of such events, I am not hopeful. Until guns are out of everyone's hands, perhaps especially the police, I see this going on and on.