Pubdate: Sat, 26 Jun 2004 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2004 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Barry Saunders Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) L.A. CONFIDENTIAL: YOU CAN'T BEAT A CAMERA Comedian Richard Pryor told a story of being caught in flagrante delicto -- if you have to ask, don't ask -- by his wife. Thinking quickly but not well, he asked "Who are you going to believe: me or your lying eyes?" Don't be surprised if you hear some police officers and their apologists ask the same question during the investigations into yet another videotaped beating of a black suspect. "Surprised," heck. A group known affectionately as the "yeah-buts" has already started their defense of this latest incident of police misconduct in Los Angeles. Even though the cop, identified as Officer John Hatfield, 35, vigorously whomped away at the prone suspect as though his name was "McCoy" instead of Stanley Miller, a caller to MSNBC's "Scarborough Country" television show started his "yeah-but" defense with "We can't see what he's doing with his right hand." Oy. Check this out, homes. Unless Miller had an Uzi or a CD of Michael Bolton's greatest hits, there was nothing in his hand to justify that kind of assault. Remember the apologists for the four uniformed thugs who beat Rodney King in 1991? "Yeah, but we didn't see what happened before the camera went on." Or "Yeah, but he was on drugs." Yeah, right. It's obvious -- no, since we can't believe our eyes, it appears -- that Miller had surrendered, knelt down and was being straddled by another officer. Hatfield arrived late, kicked Miller in the head and introduced his flashlight -- and we're not talking one of those lightweight, plastic Eveready babies, either -- to other parts of Miller's anatomy. (Despite 11 whacks, Miller didn't seem to be seriously injured.) If Shakespeare was correct and the whole world is a stage, then the whole of Los Angeles is a movie set. Don't these cops know that by now? Even if not every citizen has a video camera, TV station helicopters do. Yet Hatfield evidently felt comfortable enough to assault Miller anyway with news helicopters and his colleagues hovering nearby. This and any other beating of a black motorist by police is naturally going to recall the ghost of the 1991 King beating and the riotous aftermath of a jury's "not guilty" verdict a year later. Of course, what goes unmentioned by many "yeah-buts" who decry lawlessness -- unless, of course, it's under the color of authority -- is that riots erupted only after the evidence-defying verdict. Prior to that, residents waited for the judicial system to do its job. Was justice really served in the first King-beating cops trial? Will it be served this time? You can bet we'll hear, as the "yeah-but" caller on Scarborough's show intimated, that Miller was probably on drugs that gave him superhuman strength, making him a lethal threat. A lame excuse? Yeah, but they may buy it. When Nathaniel Jones died last year after a beating by Cincinnati cops -- again, on videotape -- it was often mentioned that "Yeah, but the man weighed 400 pounds and had illicit drugs in his system." What wasn't mentioned was that the 400-pound man was only 5'8" tall. Hardly an intimidating specimen. And if drugs make someone that strong, it's no wonder the Olympics bans them. Otherwise, we'd have sprinters posting eight-flat times in the 100 meters or deadlifting 900 pounds. If Miller is found guilty as charged of grand theft auto in Los Angeles, by all means bring the full power of the law down upon him. But not a police flashlight. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin