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kwassa

(23,340 posts)
Fri Dec 5, 2014, 10:56 AM Dec 2014

Connie Rice interviewed hundreds of police officers.

I am cross-posting it from GD, where I am sure it will dive straight into oblivion.

Connie is a noted LA civil rights attorney, former head of the local NAACP. She is also, coincidentally, first cousin and the liberal opposite of Condi Rice.

Connie had some interesting things to say.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/codeswitch/2014/12/05/368545491/civil-rights-attorney-on-how-she-built-trust-with-police



Cops can get into a state of mind where they're scared to death. When they're in that really, really frightened place they panic and they act out on that panic. I have known cops who haven't had a racist bone in their bodies and in fact had adopted black children, they went to black churches on the weekend; and these are white cops. They really weren't overtly racist. They weren't consciously racist. But you know what they had in their minds that made them act out and beat a black suspect unwarrantedly? They had fear. They were afraid of black men. I know a lot of white cops who have told me. And I interviewed over 900 police officers in 18 months and they started talking to me, it was almost like a therapy session for them I didn't realize that they needed an outlet to talk.

They would say things like, "Ms. Rice I'm scared of black men. Black men terrify me. I'm really scared of them. Ms. Rice, you know black men who come out of prison, they've got great hulk strength and I'm afraid they're going to kill me. Ms. Rice, can you teach me how not to be afraid of black men." I mean this is cops who are 6'4". You know, the cop in Ferguson was 6'4" talking about he was terrified. But when cops are scared, they kill and they do things that don't make sense to you and me.

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The black community experiences it as racism, that's very clear. So what I'm saying is that for people who have to be in the business of solving this dilemma you have to be able to step into the frightened tennis shoes of black kids; black male kids in particular. You have to be able to step into the combat boots and scared cops, and racist cops, and cruel cops, and good cops. You have to be able to distinguish between all of those human experiences and bring them together. On a single platform of we're going to solve this by empathizing. We're going to solve it with compassion and we're going to solve it with common sense.

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Not only does it cause cops to be less fearful, it causes the community to embrace them. I have taken a group of 50 cops and the chief (Charlie) Beck let me train them. I trained them in what I community partnership policing. The first thing I tell these cops is that you are not in the arrest business; you are in the trust business. We are going to train you in Public Trust Policing. It goes beyond community policing. What it does is it puts police in a position of helping a community solve its problems. These cops come into the black housing projects and they said to these populations who hate them "We know you hate us, but we're here to serve. We're going to win your trust."
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Connie Rice interviewed hundreds of police officers. (Original Post) kwassa Dec 2014 OP
Great explanation ofvthe problem mainstreetonce Dec 2014 #1
Excellent read JustAnotherGen Dec 2014 #2
she makes some salient points heaven05 Dec 2014 #3
 

heaven05

(18,124 posts)
3. she makes some salient points
Sat Dec 6, 2014, 04:24 PM
Dec 2014

about police brutality and fear of black men that drives that brutality, but I feel she soft pedals the racism angle which is a huge motivation for the hate that drives police brutality and not some misplaced "fear" of the black male and "panic" on how to deal with that black male, female or child. Overall, I was not affected with any feeling that she is really trying to address the racism issue. Of course white police officers fear black men, is it any wonder why. Of course black men fear and despise white police officers, no doubt as to why. But you may have read my response in your original OP and you know why I'm not really overwhelmed with the "reasons" for "fear and panic" among white police officers when facing black males in a hostile or peaceful scenario. Interesting reading though.

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