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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Thu Nov 27, 2014, 07:58 PM Nov 2014

In Combat, the Killing of Michael Brown Would have Been a War Crime

http://www.opednews.com/articles/In-Combat-the-Killing-of-by-Dave-Lindorff-Armed-Police-Killing-People_City-Of-Ferguson_Jury_Justice-141126-77.html

That was not a defensive action by Officer Wilson. It was an execution plain and simple -- a punishment for Brown's having allegedly struck the officer earlier, for his attempt to leave the scene of conflict, and perhaps also for Brown's initial refusal to obey the officer's order to get out of the middle of the road, which was reportedly the original reason the officer initiated a confrontation with Brown.

That the jury exonerated Wilson speaks volumes about the sorry, racist state of American society and about the sorry state of the US justice system, where citizens charged with looking into whether a murder has been committed will give a pass to a cop who clearly crossed the line and behaved in a manner that, in war-time, would punishable as a war crime. That is what the Geneva Conventions term the slaying of a combatant whose hands are raised in the universally understood sign of surrender.

Sadly, the Geneva Conventions do not apply to domestic policing. I say sadly, because it is clear that in nearly all jurisdictions in the US, police today are for all intents and purposes a law unto themselves, without even a US Military Uniform Code of Conduct to govern their actions. Rare indeed is the police officer who is convicted of unlawfully killing a suspect or a person in custody, though such killings are soaring in number, even as the deaths of police officers on the job (excluding those who die in auto accidents involving usually pointless and sometimes illegal high-speed chases), have plummeted to levels not seen since the 19th Century.
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