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Title: Darren Wilson and the Reality of "Blue Privilege"
Source: Pro Libertate
URL Source: http://www.lewrockwell.com/2014/11/ ... m-norman-grigg/blue-privilege/
Published: Nov 28, 2014
Author: William Norman Grigg
Post Date: 2014-11-28 07:17:23 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 1330
Comments: 12

“Any time I’m involved in an officer-involved shooting, be it a fatal one or non-fatal, it is always during my initial investigation listed as an assault on law enforcement,” explained the St. Louis County Police Detective who inaugurated the investigation of the Michael Brown shooting. “Officer Wilson … was the victim of the assault we were investigating.”

Once it had been established that the living, armed individual was the “victim” and the dead, bullet-ridden body had belonged to the “assailant,” continued the detective in his September 3 grand jury testimony, “One of the sergeants with Ferguson [gave] me a brief walk-through to start my investigation so I [could] have a logical starting point from where I would start my video, photographs, and looking for evidence.”

That unnamed sergeant, most likely, was the supervisor who had told Darren Wilson to leave the scene after the shooter told him that Brown had tried to take his gun.

From its inception, the shooting of Michael Brown was not investigated as a potential criminal homicide, and the inquiry was an exercise in validating the killer’s story, rather than testing it against the available evidence. The assumption was that killing was part of his job description – or, as Wilson has subsequently told George Stephanopoulos, “I did what I was paid to do.”

If Wilson had been a member of the productive class, rather than a state employee licensed to dispense aggressive violence, he would have been presumed legally innocent, but required to justify his actions. Because of his occupation, however, Wilson was considered both legally innocent and presumptively correct, and the investigation became an exercise in justifying the shooter’s actions, rather than an inquiry into their propriety.

If Officer Wilson had been “merely” Darren Wilson, the deceased Michael Brown would have been identified as the presumptive “victim.” The shooter would not have been allowed to leave the scene without making a statement to the police, and his associates would not have been allowed to frame the crime scene for the benefit of the investigating detective.

Most importantly, if Wilson had been treated as a homicide suspect, rather than the “victim” of an “assault on law enforcement,” he would not have had the luxury of composing his story at leisure, in consultation with his attorney, to fit the facts as they emerged from the investigation.

“When you got back to the police department, after you washed off and everything, did you ever think at what time that I needed to write a report while it is fresh in my mind?” asked assistant St. Louis County prosecutor Kathi Alizadeh.

“No,” Wilson replied. “The protocol is whenever you are involved in a significant use of force, that you contact your FOP [Fraternal Order of Police] representative and then he will advise you of what to do step by step because they are the clear head in that situation. They have not been through a traumatic experience.” (See the transcript of Darren Wilson’s grand jury testimony, pages 77-78.)

When the shooter is a Mundane – that is, a common citizen, rather than a police officer – he may be similarly traumatized, but he can’t count on the “step-by- step” guidance of clear-headed police officers who have identified him as the victim. One of the first priorities for investigators in non-“officer involved” shootings is to get the original story from the shooter, and compare it against the evidence. As a police officer, however, Wilson wasn’t required to make an initial statement of any kind – either in an incident report, or to any of the investigating officers

Asked by Alizadeh if he had committed his recollections to paper in a diary or journal, Wilson replied: “My statement has been written for my attorney.”

“And that’s between you and your attorney, then?” asked the unusually helpful prosecutor, who received an affirmative reply.

“So no one has asked you to write out a statement?” the assistant DA persisted.

“No, they haven’t,” Wilson acknowledged. He made one brief reference to speaking with a detective while in the hospital, but that communication was protected by Wilson’s “Garrity” privileges, which means that it could be used only for the purposes of an internal investigation, not in a criminal or civil proceeding.

In his November 24 press conference, St. Louis County DA Robert McCulloch made conspicuous mention of the fact that some witnesses had changed their testimony once their original story was found to be in conflict with subsequently discovered evidence. This is something that happens frequently to homicide suspects, as well. Wilson was never in danger of being caught in that contradiction because he was not treated as a suspect, nor was he required to make a statement to criminal investigators.

During Wilson’s examination before the grand jury, McCulloch’s deputy prosecutors were gentle and deferential, rather than being adversarial. This is to be expected, given that this was a conversation among colleagues.

At several points in his testimony, Wilson made statements that a motivated prosecutor would have aggressively pursued. For example: Wilson – who at 6’4” and roughly 225 pounds is no small man – said that when he grappled with Brown, he felt like a “five-year-old” who was trying to restrain “Hulk Hogan.” He likewise claimed that he had been struck twice by Brown with such force that he was concerned a third blow would be “fatal” – yet the medical examination displayed no evidence of corresponding trauma to his face.

Wilson didn’t explain how the right-handed Michael Brown could have punched the right side of his face while the officer was sitting in the driver’s side of his vehicle. Although Wilson claimed that the initial blows were inflicted while Brown was holding stolen cigarillos in his right hand, no broken cigars were ever recovered, either in the SUV or the surrounding area. The stolen cigars were not found by the medical examiner who arrived on the scene after the shooting. (Interestingly, that examiner never took photos of the deceased, because “My battery in my camera died,” nor did he take any measurements at the crime scene.)

A well-known and highly respected forensic analyst and expert witness on biomechanics and accident reconstruction takes note of several points the prosecution either ignored or minimized to the point of invisibility.

“The big issue as I see it, is how do the cops justify provoking a lethal confrontation with a kid over some damned cigarillos?” the analyst pointed out in an email to me. “Why not wait for ample backup and use non-lethal methods to subdue and arrest for shoplifting? This of course assumes grounds for an arrest. Why were the alleged cigarillos not found? And what did the DA mean when he stated on TV that Brown’s body was on the road 150 feet from the police car? How does an unarmed kid that far away with no weapons constitute an immediate threat to life?”

He also underscores the fact that the unarmed pedestrian Brown, rather than Wilson, may have had the stronger case for self-defense:

“As for what supposedly went on in the passenger compartment with the alleged grabbing of the cop’s arm – this is “consistent with” a kid whose life was threatened by an overly aggressive cop with a gun aimed at him and where the kid was so terrified of an immediate shooting that he felt compelled to take preemptive action to protect himself by disarming the cop.”

If Darren Wilson had been part of the wealth-producing class, as opposed to an armed emissary of the tax-consuming elite, those questions most likely would have been examined in a criminal trial. But, once again, owing to his occupation, this was never going to happen.

Robert McCulloch has a well-earned reputation for deference to the police, and a well-established habit of justifying every use of lethal force, no matter how questionable. Rather than simply seeking an indictment, McCulloch presented the case for the “defense” as well – a characterization that is an odd fit here, given that Wilson – it bears repeating – had been treated as the “victim” in this incident from the beginning.

“Had the prosecution desired an indictment against Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson, the presentment would have taken an hour, maybe two, and there would have been a true bill by close of business the next day, well before Michael Brown had been laid to rest,” points outattorney and civil rights advocate Scott Greenfield. “The grand jury isn’t the venue to present `all the evidence.’ That’s what trials are for. The grand jury serves a very limited function, to determine whether sufficient evidence exists so that there is probable cause to proceed to trial.”

A great deal of the media coverage has referred to the Grand Jury’s decision as a “verdict,” which is both technically incorrect and substantively true: Rather than seeking probable cause to indict Wilson, McCulloch and St. Louis County law enforcement built a case to convict Michael Brown of “an assault on law enforcement.”

Given the ambiguity of the evidence, Darren Wilson as a private citizen likely would not have been convicted of murder if the case had gone to trial, but a conviction on a lesser count would be a possibility. Under Missouri’s constitutionally perverse statute dealing with police homicide – which has been criticized by former federal judge Paul Cassell, who is broadly indulgent of killer cops – Officer Wilson was never in danger of being convicted of a crime.

It is not necessary to believe that Michael Brown was the embodiment of winsome innocence (it’s pretty clear that he was not) to take issue with the architecture of official privilege that protects Darren Wilson – and the other armed representatives of the political class – from accountability. The problem, in a single phrase, isn’t “white privilege,” but rather “blue privilege.”

Edmund Burke could have had this case in mind when he wrote these lines from his neglected essay “A Vindication of Natural Society”: “In a State of Nature, it is true, that a Man of superior Force may beat or rob me; but then it is true, that I am at full Liberty to defend myself, or make Reprisal by Surprise or by Cunning, or by any other way in which I may be superior to him. But in Political Society … if I attempt to avenge myself, the whole Force of that Society is ready to complete my Ruin.”

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.

#1. To: GreyLmist (#0) (Edited)

Wilson [as a police officer] wasn’t required to make an initial statement of any kind – either in an incident report, or to any of the investigating officers

“My statement has been written for my attorney.”

“And that’s [My note: a privileged communication, classifed as private] between you and your attorney, then?” asked the unusually helpful prosecutor, who received an affirmative reply.

“So no one has asked you to write out a statement?” the assistant DA persisted.

“No, they haven’t,” Wilson acknowledged. He made one brief reference to speaking with a detective [...], but that communication was protected by Wilson’s “Garrity” privileges, which means that it could be used only for the purposes of an internal investigation, not in a criminal or civil proceeding.

Wilson was never in danger of being caught in [contradiction(s)] because he was not treated as a suspect, nor was he required to make a statement to criminal investigators.

[...]

Under Missouri’s constitutionally perverse statute dealing with police homicide – which has been criticized by former federal judge Paul Cassell, who is broadly indulgent of killer cops – Officer Wilson was never in danger of being convicted of a crime.

Note to myself to research Missouri's Unconstitutional statute dealing with police homicide and “Garrity” privileges.

Copying more case points of importance:

From its inception, the shooting of Michael Brown was not investigated as a potential criminal homicide, and the inquiry was an exercise in validating the killer’s story, rather than testing it against the available evidence. [Edit to insert: The assumption was that killing was part of his job description – or, as Wilson has subsequently told George Stephanopoulos, “I did what I was paid to do.”

If Wilson had been a member of the productive class, rather than a state employee licensed to dispense aggressive violence, he would have been presumed legally innocent, but required to justify his actions. Because of his occupation, however, Wilson was considered both legally innocent and presumptively correct, and the investigation became an exercise in justifying the shooter’s actions, rather than an inquiry into their propriety.

If Officer Wilson had been “merely” Darren Wilson, the deceased Michael Brown would have been identified as the presumptive “victim.” The shooter would not have been allowed to leave the scene without making a statement to the police, and his associates would not have been allowed to frame the crime scene for the benefit of the investigating detective.

Most importantly, if Wilson had been treated as a homicide suspect, rather than the “victim” of an “assault on law enforcement,” he would not have had the luxury of composing his story at leisure, in consultation with his attorney, to fit the facts as they emerged from the investigation.

Wilson made statements that a motivated prosecutor would have aggressively pursued. For example: Wilson – who at 6’4” and roughly 225 pounds is no small man – said that when he grappled with Brown, he felt like a “five-year-old” who was trying to restrain “Hulk Hogan.” He likewise claimed that he had been struck twice by Brown with such force that he was concerned a third blow would be “fatal” – yet the medical examination displayed no evidence of corresponding trauma to his face.

Wilson didn’t explain how the right-handed Michael Brown could have punched the right side of his face while the officer was sitting in the driver’s side of his vehicle. Although Wilson claimed that the initial blows were inflicted while Brown was holding stolen cigarillos in his right hand, no broken cigars were ever recovered, either in the SUV or the surrounding area. The stolen cigars were not found by the medical examiner who arrived on the scene after the shooting. (Interestingly, that examiner never took photos of the deceased, because “My battery in my camera died,” nor did he take any measurements at the crime scene.)

A well-known and highly respected forensic analyst and expert witness on biomechanics and accident reconstruction takes note of several points the prosecution either ignored or minimized to the point of invisibility.

“The big issue as I see it, is how do the cops justify provoking a lethal confrontation with a kid over some damned cigarillos?” the analyst pointed out in an email to me. “Why not wait for ample backup and use non-lethal methods to subdue and arrest for shoplifting? This of course assumes grounds for an arrest. Why were the alleged cigarillos not found? And what did the DA mean when he stated on TV that Brown’s body was on the road 150 feet from the police car? How does an unarmed kid that far away with no weapons constitute an immediate threat to life?”

He also underscores the fact that the unarmed pedestrian Brown, rather than Wilson, may have had the stronger case for self-defense:

“As for what supposedly went on in the passenger compartment with the alleged grabbing of the cop’s arm – this is “consistent with” a kid whose life was threatened by an overly aggressive cop with a gun aimed at him and where the kid was so terrified of an immediate shooting that he felt compelled to take preemptive action to protect himself by disarming the cop.”

Robert McCulloch has a well-earned reputation for deference to the police, and a well-established habit of justifying every use of lethal force, no matter how questionable. Rather than simply seeking an indictment, McCulloch presented the case for the “defense” as well – a characterization that is an odd fit here, given that Wilson – it bears repeating – had been treated as the “victim” in this incident from the beginning.

“Had the prosecution desired an indictment against Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson, the presentment would have taken an hour, maybe two, and there would have been a true bill by close of business the next day, well before Michael Brown had been laid to rest,” points outattorney and civil rights advocate Scott Greenfield. “The grand jury isn’t the venue to present `all the evidence.’ That’s what trials are for. The grand jury serves a very limited function, to determine whether sufficient evidence exists so that there is probable cause to proceed to trial.”

A great deal of the media coverage has referred to the Grand Jury’s decision as a “verdict,” which is both technically incorrect and substantively true: Rather than seeking probable cause to indict Wilson, McCulloch and St. Louis County law enforcement built a case to convict Michael Brown of “an assault on law enforcement.”

the architecture of official privilege that protects Darren Wilson – and the other armed representatives of the political class – from accountability. The problem, in a single phrase, isn’t “white privilege,” but rather “blue privilege.”

GreyLmist  posted on  2014-11-29   7:57:57 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: All (#1) (Edited)

Under Missouri’s constitutionally perverse statute dealing with police homicide – which has been criticized by former federal judge Paul Cassell, who is broadly indulgent of killer cops – Officer Wilson was never in danger of being convicted of a crime.

Note to myself to research Missouri's Unconstitutional statute dealing with police homicide

More on that 1979 Missouri statute [Section 563.046] in the video below, the 1985 SCOTUS ruling which invalidated all such statutes of the States as Unconstitutional, and the wrongful presentation of that long defunct statute to the Grand Jury which misdirected their determinations according to law throughout most of the proceedings -- amounting to Jury Tampering, imo, and grounds for dismissal of their decision not to indict Wilson.

Shocking mistake in Darren Wilson grand jury

Published on Nov 27, 2014

In the Rewrite, Lawrence [O'Donnell, MSNBC] looks at a major correction the assistant prosecutors had to make to the grand jury in the Michael Brown case.

Edited for spelling + date of SCOTUS ruling + bracketed insert with statute info.

GreyLmist  posted on  2014-11-30   5:17:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: GreyLmist (#2)

I don't understand what is so hard to understand about unarmed and shot dead.

Even malvo was taken alive.

Brown had no weapon and was fleeing. Then surrendered. Then shot dead. This aint rocket science, Wilson is a murderer.

titorite  posted on  2014-11-30   5:21:47 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 3.

#5. To: titorite (#3) (Edited)

I don't understand what is so hard to understand about unarmed and shot dead.

Even malvo was taken alive.

Brown had no weapon and was fleeing. Then surrendered. Then shot dead. This aint rocket science, Wilson is a murderer.

Excerpts from the opening post above:

the unarmed pedestrian Brown, rather than Wilson, may have had the stronger case for self-defense:

“As for what supposedly went on in the passenger compartment with the alleged grabbing of the cop’s arm – this is “consistent with” a kid whose life was threatened by an overly aggressive cop with a gun aimed at him and where the kid was so terrified of an immediate shooting that he felt compelled to take preemptive action to protect himself by disarming the cop.”

Wilson – who at 6’4” and roughly 225 pounds is no small man – said that when he grappled with Brown, he felt like a “five-year-old” who was trying to restrain “Hulk Hogan.” He likewise claimed that he had been struck twice by Brown with such force that he was concerned a third blow would be “fatal”

Wilson didn’t explain how the right-handed Michael Brown could have punched the right side of his face while the officer was sitting in the driver’s side of his vehicle. Although Wilson claimed that the initial blows were inflicted while Brown was holding stolen cigarillos in his right hand, no broken cigars were ever recovered, either in the SUV or the surrounding area. The stolen cigars were not found by the medical examiner who arrived on the scene after the shooting.

According to the first 20+ minutes of Wilson's 45 minute video interview with George Stephanopoulos, he put in a call for backup about two crime suspects after Brown allegedly cussed at him while walking past his car. He expected that one or two police vehicles would be there within 30-40 seconds, backed the car up to block them and says Brown spoke aggressively then slammed the door shut. He tried to use the door to forcefully push Brown back and Brown slammed the door shut again. He doesn't say that he was hurt by Brown slamming the door shut but Brown might have been hurt when it was pushed into him. He says Brown stared at him after slamming the door the second time and then punched him on the left side of his face. A barrage of swinging and grabbing and pulling went on for about 10 seconds and he thinks he was being struck with the cigarillos in Brown's right hand, then he stopped and handed them to his friend with his left hand. Wilson says that he reached out of the window with his right arm and grabbed Brown's right forearm to try and move him back, then says something unintelligible about being trapped or trapping Brown and makes the illusionary remark that it seemed he was like a child holding onto Hulk Hogan -- as if he's not just as tall and over 200 pounds himself with more muscle as compared to Brown.

Somehow Brown is said to have hit him next on the right side of his face, as if he had "turned the other cheek" Christian-like or something, says the punch to the left side of his face was the strongest but thought after the one to his right that he might not survive or would become unconcious. Two hits described there, not a barrage. He considered mace and ruled it out because it might get him too, says he didn't have a taser, said he didn't think he could use his hand to get to his baton without exposing the left side of his face and ruled out being able swing even his flashlight either. He claims to have pulled his gun with his right hand while blocking his face with his left after Brown had put his head into the car. He doesn't say why he couldn't have gotten his baton or flashlight then instead to jab or hit Brown with because he wasn't so concerned while getting his gun about not using both hands to shield his face.

He describes Brown in an overpowering struggle for his gun and then he says that when he noticed the gun was lined up with Brown, that's when he pulled the trigger to try and shoot him the first time but had to try three times before it went off, breaking the glass inside the door which cut Brown but not him. He claims that Brown, instead of running for his life, came at him again and he blocked his face then tried while being hit to shoot him but the gun again didn't go off. He used both hands to blindly adjust his gun by ejecting a bullet, then aimed upward and fired at him. He says Brown ran that time and he saw the dust cloud behind him and figured he missed. He claims he made a "shots fired" call to send more cars but didn't know that the channel had been changed during the struggle and it didn't get through.

In all this time, he mentions no sirens of cars on the way in the area from his first alleged call for backup, which were expected to get there in less than a minute as Brown and his friend were still walking down the road and the radio channel wasn't allegedly changed yet. He doesn't mention anyone trying to stay in radio contact with him either, before the channel was allegedly changed by the struggle. He describes Brown like a demon who he thought would punch him to death or shoot him or endanger others but follows him without wanting to apprehend him. For no reason like being told to stop and come back because he was under arrest, Brown is said to have just stopped, turned around and charged at him like he might be reaching for a weapon [Edit to add: rather than maybe his side hurt from running]. He claims Brown didn't have his hands up and that he wondered if he could legally shoot him, although he didn't say that he had wondered about that when he intended to shoot him through the car door during the alleged struggle which only broke the window and cut Brown. Nor, moreover, before he tried again to shoot him from the car when he had both hands freely on his gun but missed that time too.

He claims to have been in fear for others and for his survival from 35-40 feet away, so he fired a series of shots and sees that he hit him. He paused but claims Brown kept charging after being told to get on the ground, so he fired another series of shots at 15 feet and sees that he hit him again. At first he says that Brown stopped then but quickly changes it to "I stopped". He claimed to have backed up but Brown, who he knew was wounded and had never displayed a weapon, still kept charging to about 8-10 feet and that he leaned forward with his head down, which Wilson senselessly interprets not as being any safer or any more able to get to safety because Brown was falling to the ground after being wounded multiple times but was instead moving to tackle him, so he shot him in the head and killed him. Even though Brown's head was down when he shot him there, he claims to have seen his face go blank as he died. Then, without mentioning anything about having to fix the channel on his radio that he said earlier got changed during the struggle without his knowing about it so his "shots fired" call didn't go through, he claims to have called to have a supervisor sent and every available car and to have someone notify EMS.

He told the supervisor that he had to shoot him because he had grabbed his gun and charged him and was going to kill him so he killed him first, as if Brown was shot because he was charging Wilson with a gun that he had grabbed from him and Wilson shot him to death with a spare gun he happened to have so that he wouldn't be shot and killed himself. All was said to have happened in a minute or 90 seconds and couldn't have been done any differently except by Brown complying, as if Wilson couldn't have watched from the safety of his car for a minute or two where Brown and his friend walked down the street after they had gone by him until backup arrived but he could get out of the car in supposed fear for his life to pursue them until backup arrived after he had already shot at Brown twice without hitting his target.

He didn't have to kill his target. He wanted to kill his target, imo. The misleading version he told his supervisor is reason enough, imo, to suspect that what else he said was deception out of self-preservation as a deliberate murderer trying to get away with that.

Edited line 1 + link formatting and spelling + bracketed insert at paragraph 4.

GreyLmist  posted on  2014-12-01 10:47:33 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 3.

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