Since Ferguson, A Rise In Charges Against Police Officers

Demonstrators march through downtown Chicago on Tuesday following the release of a video showing Jason Van Dyke, a police officer, shooting and killing Laquan McDonald. Van Dyke is charged with first-degree murder for the October 2014 shooting in which McDonald was hit with 16 bullets. So far this year, 15 officers have been charged with murder or manslaughter resulting from an on-duty shooting.i

Demonstrators march through downtown Chicago on Tuesday following the release of a video showing Jason Van Dyke, a police officer, shooting and killing Laquan McDonald. Van Dyke is charged with first-degree murder for the October 2014 shooting in which McDonald was hit with 16 bullets. So far this year, 15 officers have been charged with murder or manslaughter resulting from an on-duty shooting.

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Demonstrators march through downtown Chicago on Tuesday following the release of a video showing Jason Van Dyke, a police officer, shooting and killing Laquan McDonald. Van Dyke is charged with first-degree murder for the October 2014 shooting in which McDonald was hit with 16 bullets. So far this year, 15 officers have been charged with murder or manslaughter resulting from an on-duty shooting.

Demonstrators march through downtown Chicago on Tuesday following the release of a video showing Jason Van Dyke, a police officer, shooting and killing Laquan McDonald. Van Dyke is charged with first-degree murder for the October 2014 shooting in which McDonald was hit with 16 bullets. So far this year, 15 officers have been charged with murder or manslaughter resulting from an on-duty shooting.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

A question some in Chicago are asking after the release of a video that shows a police officer fatally shooting a black teen: Did prosecutors charge the officer who killed Laquan McDonald only because they had to — because the video was about to come out?

Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez rejected that notion Tuesday.

“Pressure? This is no pressure! Why — I would never be pressured into making any kind of decision, quickly,” she said.

But across the country, prosecutors do seem to be under more pressure to charge police — especially in the year since police killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.

Homicide charges against police are pretty rare; they average about five cases a year. That number comes from Phil Stinson, a former-cop-turned-academic who collects statistics like this at Bowling Green State University in Ohio.

Stinson says the average is actually slightly less than five cases a year — but that’s the average for the past decade. This year is looking a little different.

“As of today, we now have 15 officers who’ve been charged with murder or manslaughter resulting from an on-duty shooting where they’ve shot and killed somebody,” he says.

A memorial to Laquan McDonald, 17, is seen in April at the Sullivan House Alternative High School in Chicago. McDonald was shot 16 times by Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke in October 2014.

In a photo taken Dec. 1 of last year, Tomiko Shine holds up a picture of Tamir Rice during a protest. It has been nearly a year since then, but a grand jury has not reached a decision on the case.

Carmen Cobian holds a photograph of her son, 26-year-old Christian Cobian, who was shot and killed by Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies in January 2012. Cobian is among the 375 people shot by on-duty police officers between 2010 and 2014 in Los Angeles County.

Samaria Rice, the mother of Tamir, a 12-year-old boy fatally shot by a Cleveland police officer, speaks during a news conference in December 2014, in Cleveland.

It’s an interesting jump — but Stinson’s not ready to draw any conclusions yet.

“It’s hard to say if we’re seeing a pattern, a change in prosecutorial behavior, anything like that, because we’re dealing with such small numbers,” Stinson says. “We’re dealing with outliers.”

Statistics aside, though, he does think the justice system is giving police less benefit of the doubt than it did when he was a young cop.

“That’s being chipped away,” he says. “I think that now we’re not taking officers at their word, and that people are looking a little bit closer. And I think that goes for prosecutors as well.”

Still, there’s a lot of skepticism about whether prosecutors can be objective about the police, whom they work with every day.

That skepticism grows when the decision to charge them seems to drag out, as it did in McDonald’s case in Chicago, until the video came out — or in Cleveland, where it’s been a year since a police officer shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice.

Jonathan Abady is one of the lawyers representing Rice’s mother; he believes prosecutors there have been using that time to weaken their own case against the officer.

“It seems to us that it’s taking a year because this prosecutor is more interested in protecting the police, and what they’ve been doing for that year is searching for people who would be willing to call what is clearly in our view an unreasonable police shooting justified,” Abady says.

The prosecutor in Cleveland calls that theory “baseless,” and in fact, legal experts say it really isn’t fair to assume that the fix is in, just because a charging decision is taking a long time.

“It’s not a race,” says Laurie Levenson, a law professor at Loyola Law School and a former federal prosecutor in Los Angeles.

“There are good strategic reasons for a prosecutor actually not to bring the charges just because they can bring the charges so quickly,” she says.

Once you’ve file charges, Levenson says, it gets harder to collect evidence against an officer.

And people don’t realize how hard it is to make a case against cops; they usually have great lawyers, and they still get more sympathy from juries than the average murder defendant. Prosecutors have their work cut out for them, she says, even when there is a video.

Article source: http://www.npr.org/2015/11/25/457415588/since-ferguson-a-rise-in-charges-against-police-officers?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

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