05-31-2020, 06:08 PM
(05-31-2020, 04:29 PM)Whatever Wrote: Is every charge of resisting arrest justified? No. Does the fact that every charge of resisting arrest isn't warranted mean that no charge of resisting arrest is warranted? No. Let's look at the statistics from SF that I posted earlier. African Americans accounted for 6% of the population, but 45% of resisting arrest charges in misdemeanor cases. In order for the resisting arrest rate for African Americans to be in line with their population, only 13% of those cases could be legitimate. The other 87% were just made up. Does anybody really believe that only one in ten cases of resisting arrest involving African American suspects is legitimate? I hope not. Even if half of those cases are made up BS, their rate of resisting arrest is still almost four times their population percentage.
Dude, people of all races get stopped for stuff they consider to be BS. When I was living in a primarily black neighborhood, I got stopped and my truck searched because I was doing 38 in a 35. I've seen firsthand a cop pull his weapon on a 40 something white woman who had his back turned to him in a Chipotle in the Ohio State campus area. I used to have a one bedroom apartment that was technically in Upper Arlington(wealthy section of Columbus) and I would get stopped in my old Crown Vic with the caved in door and peeling paint all the time. I got pulled over for doing 50 in a 45 one night a few months back. Cops are going to stop you if you look out of place or if you or your vehicle matches the description of a suspect. When I got pulled over in the black neighborhood, I had started renting space in a house with a coworker and he had told me there were drug houses in the area. The cops see a white male they don't know rolling through and they're going to stop me and check it out. That lady the cop pulled the gun on matched the description of a woman who was just involved in a bank robbery nearby. When I would get stopped in my old beater car I looked massively out of place driving by a bunch of houses with Mercedes and BMW's in the garage. When I got stopped a few months back, the cop went to my passenger side window and I could tell he had his hand on his holster. He asked for my license, which I already had out and asked if I knew why he stopped me. I told him because I was doing 50 in a 45. He handed back my license, never asked for my registration and let me off with a warning. It was pretty obvious he pulled me over because my car matched the description of a suspect vehicle and something was up because of just how hurried he acted through the whole thing.
Both of my parents and my Grandfather had talks with me about dealing with police when I got my learners permit. Whether you're black, white, Hispanic, Asian, whatever, if you get loud with a cop, you're headed for trouble. Many African Americans have a tendency to get loud and defiant in an attempt to assert dominance in confrontations. White people are generally more willing to show deference to authority figures, hence parents not being as worried about what happens when they get stopped.
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/05/chicago-police-department-consent-decree-black-lives-matter-resistance.html
First, note the title of the article:New Data Shows Police Use More Force Against Black Citizens Even Though Whites Resist More
As for the point of it all:
Quote:The mantra “stop resisting” is a familiar one to anybody who has assessed police violence. The premise that if black people simply complied during police interactions there would be no police brutality is a common trope. According to newly revealed data on use of force cases in Chicago, it’s a story that has no basis in reality. As dozens of studies have shown, police tend to use more force against black citizens. Often in these cases a claim that the suspect “resisted arrest” is used to justify the violence.