RTThu, 09 Apr 2015 16:00 UTC
© Reuters/Carlo Allegri
When it comes to officer-involved shootings, the problem lies with law enforcement's training that instructs cops to say they felt the suspects were a threat, either to the officers or to the public, a retired US Marshal told RT.
Retired Chief Deputy US Marshal Matthew Fogg, who served as a law enforcement officer for 32 years, spoke with RT's Ben Swann about the recent spate of officer-involved shootings in which police killed unarmed suspects and claimed they feared for their safety or for the safety of others. He said the officers' training is to blame.
"The training says that, whenever you use deadly force, you have to be able to justify it. So to justify it, you have to say either I feared for the safety of myself or the safety of the public, and that this person was an extreme danger to either party," Fogg said.
In two recent cases - that of Officer Darren Wilson's shooting and killing of unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, in August and Saturday's incident in South Carolina, where North Charleston Officer Michael Slager fatally shot unarmed Walter Scott eight times in the back -
both policemen said they feared for themselves and public safety. This despite the fact that the physical altercations โ and thus the threats โ had abated.
Fogg doesn't believe the officers were wrong in pursuing their suspects in either case, but does think that their fears may not have been justified.
"We can pursue you as a law enforcement officer, but the deadly force was over once there was no weapon involved," he said.
"There was no reason at all for this officer [in South Carolina] to be shooting at [Scott]. Now he could have ran [sic] and chased and tracked him down, and if there had been some melee at that point โ guy tried to take his gun โ then yeah."
The difference between the two cases, in which Wilson was not indicted but Slager has been charged with murder, is that there was video of the second incident, Fogg noted.
"I think what happened here is now once these officers โ when there's no video โ can always say that [there was a threat], and that's what the public outcry has been, that a lot of incidents where people realize folks were shot and killed, there [were] no weapons involved or whatever, so why did the officer shoot him?" Fogg said.
When Swann asked if the story would be very different in the South Carolina instance if there had there been no video recording, Fogg immediately agreed.
"Absolutely. Certainly. And that's the problem, that's why public outcry has been body cameras, videos. It is because [as] officers, we are trained to say whenever we use deadly force that line, 'I felt a danger for myself or for the public,'" he said.
Fogg then explained how the investigations into officer-involved shootings proceed.
"You have 10 days to think about your story, get your story together. You hear from other detectives, what they came up with, and then you come up with a line that is pretty standard that says, 'This is my justification,'" he said.
"And most of the time, the public is going to go with my โ as a law enforcement officer, they're going to believe me."He believes that body cameras, if they are treated the same way dashboard cameras are โ meaning they automatically switch on during interactions โ will help show when officers truly are justified in shooting suspects.
Comment: Sure, lack of proper police training could play a part in these shootings. However, what type of person needs extensive, state-paid training to treat people respectfully and not gun them down in cold blood? The spate of police murders goes above and beyond lack of training and smacks of the psychopathy that runs rampant in police forces.
I spent nearly three years pulling Shore Patrol in the Med. I weighed 125 pounds and carried a baton on a webbed belt. I received no training in using the baton and no training on how to apprehend a miscreant sailor. My mindset was that it was going into the groin or the collarbone, even though we were told to strike the solar plexus. This may be politically correct, but stupid. Most young males can easily take a strike in the solar plexus, take the baton and use it on you.. My beat was every dirty neighborhood in dirty port cities. I never had a single instance in which I had to pull that baton. Many cops spend as much as 15 years on the force without ever having to draw their firearm. There is NO excuse to train them to brandish it or fire indiscriminately; as they are just as likely to be injured as a would-be assailant. When the New York Police Commission said anyone who resists can expect to be killed, he painted a target on his cops. He should have been censured and removed; and he should be charged as an accessory in any case when one of his cops uses unnecessary force.