Pubdate: Mon, 17 Jul 2000 Pubdate: Mon, 17 Jul 2000 Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) Copyright: St. Louis Post-Dispatch Contact: http://www.postnet.com/postnet/stories.nsf/Home Forum: http://www.postnet.com/postnet/config.nsf/forums Author: Bill McClellan, Columnist for the Post Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n863/a02.html Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n832/a04.html BACK WHEN, CIVIL RIGHTS HEROES WERE EASY TO SUPPORT Shooting In Berkeley I remember when it was easy to understand and support the civil rights movement. Should a qualified black student be allowed to attend the state university? Should black citizens be allowed to vote? In those long-ago days, the heroes were all upstanding people. Students who wanted to further their education, citizens who wanted to participate in the democracy. Easy to understand, easy to support. These days, it's much more difficult. That's because so many of the new heroes are criminals. I thought about that this past week as I watched the stories out of Philadelphia. In that case, police began chasing a fellow who was driving a car that had been taken in a carjacking. The fellow eventually ditched that car, took off on foot and then managed to steal a police cruiser. He exchanged shots with cops, one of whom was hit. When the cops finally caught him, they beat him. The case immediately became a civil rights issue. The Rev. Robert Shine, the vice president of the Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity, declared that the case was an example of police brutality against blacks. The local chapter of the NAACP announced it would assist the suspect, Thomas Jones, in a suit against the city. Back in the days when everything was so much simpler, it was just assumed that if you fought the cops, the cops would win. Your rights? You had the right to swing first, and then you had no more rights. If you shot a cop, you'd be lucky to get away with just a beating. Then Rodney King came along. He was on parole for an armed robbery, and he was drunk and speeding, and he led the cops on a long chase. He came out swinging, and the cops beat the heck out of him. That became a big civil rights case, too, and some of the cops eventually went to prison, and King sued the city and got a $3.8 million verdict. I remember seeing a picture of King -- by then a celebrity -- as a "special guest" at a Los Angeles Dodgers game. One of the new civil rights heroes. Locally, the latest issue of this sort has to do with the shooting of two unarmed black men at a fast-food restaurant in Berkeley after a drug bust went bad. Let's review the little we know, and what these facts seem to indicate. A drug task force sets up a buy with a very low-level crack dealer. He shows up with a friend, who was not a suspect but was instead a working man with a very slight criminal record. Nothing serious and nothing recent. When the low-level dealer realizes the whole thing is a setup, he apparently panics and tries to roar away. But his back bumper is apparently hooked to the front bumper of an SUV driven by some of the cops. The dealer's wheels spin, and apparently the car turns slightly and in the direction of two cops who are rushing up with guns drawn. They apparently panic and begin firing into the car. This was not a cool, deliberate "Dirty Harry" type shooting, in which an unruffled detective calmly fires a single shot into the chest of the car's driver. Make my day. Bang. This had the earmarks of a panic shooting. Oh God! Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. If the shooters were justified in fearing for their lives, perhaps they can't be blamed for their panic. I'll leave that to the legal system. But is this a civil rights case? Some activists seem to think so, and they are insistent that the shooters be prosecuted. Again, I'm not so sure. As far as the actual shooters are concerned, I suspect that panic makes you colorblind. On the other hand, would the bosses have authorized this kind of operation -- a potential shootout - -- if the fast-food restaurant had been in Clayton? If I were in the civil rights movement, that's the question I'd want answered. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek