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Indybay Feature

Oakland Police Kill Unarmed Fleeing Black Man

by Copwatch 13
Oakland police shot and killed Parnell Smith on Wednesday after he fled when they tried to arrest him for a crime he didn't commit.
Two Oakland police officers, Phong Tran and Scott Hewitt, shot and killed Parnell Smith on Wednesday, July 15th, near the corner of 16th Avenue and International Boulevard.

Smith, who was unarmed when he was shot, was running away from Tran and Hewitt as they fired on him. On Thursday, when grilled about why Police would shoot Smith if he was only running away, Oakland Police Spokesman Jeff Thomason initially said, "This was a gunfight...it was a gun battle that took place in the streets of Oakland." However, on Friday, Thomason acknowledged that his earlier statements were premature.

As inquiries continue, it is becoming increasingly evident that police were the only ones shooting and that they were trying to arrest a man for a crime he didn't commit.

It all started Wednesday afternoon when Tran and Hewitt incorrectly thought that Smith was a wanted rape suspect simply because they were looking for a black man with a cane and Smith was black and had a cane. When they spotted Smith, they tried to arrest him. But Smith, who ostensibly did not want to be wrongfully charged with rape and be deprived of his freedom, chose to flee.

Oakland police admitted later that Smith was not the man that they were after. Police allege that in spite of their ultimately grave error, at some point early in their foot pursuit of Smith, Smith pointed a gun at them and then tossed the gun during the chase. They said Smith also swung his cane at them before he fled.

Police are now saying that even though Smith was unarmed when they shot him, since he allegedly pointed a gun at the officers earlier, that justified them killing Smith later when he no longer had the gun because the previous threat carried over into the future. They also say that even though they shouldn't have been trying to arrest Smith as a rape suspect, he was nonetheless wanted for allegedly violating his parole from an old drug conviction. Some people believe that the reference to Smith's alleged parole violation is an attempt to legitimize his killing and to demonize him so that the killing will appear more just.

Since the initial reports on Wednesday, Police have revised their press statements and changed their story significantly, so many details are still not really clear. It should be noted that no independent sources have been investigating the police conduct, so virtually all media reports (including this one) only know what Oakland Police are telling reporters.

As the questions from the press continue, police are being more cautious. In fact, since the killing of Smith, officers Tran and Smith already have a lawyer, Mary Sansen, speaking on their behalf. Civil rights attorneys say that having an attorney speak for police so early after an incident is unusual except when allegations of police misconduct are likely.

Finally, an examination of similar cases involving police killings of unarmed civilians shows that one of the most common statements from police includes an allegation that an unarmed suspect reached toward his waistband. The officers often state in addition that a shiny object which appeared to be a gun was visible and that they decided to shoot the suspect because they believed their life was in imminent danger.

One of the first comments Ms. Sansen had for the press on Friday was, "Smith turned toward the officers and appeared to be reaching for his waistband, prompting Tran and Hewitt to fire the shots that killed him."
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by Bill
Probably after the Lovelle Mixon case the cops have more anxious trigger fingers, especially if they see someone who in their minds reminds them of Mixon. That kind of profiling and racism will take a lot of work to eliminate. It would help if police academies included a big section of "civil rights respect" training. Better still, if they recruited people with backgrounds that reflected a pro-peace and pro-civil rights ideology rather than people who clearly want to be right wing cowboys and join the hot pursuits, we'd have a more effective, inexpensive and respectable justice system.
by ntuit
Until Pat Gonzales is removed from the force and sent to prison for murdering Gary King, Jr. - this police department will be tainted. It has so many serious and ongoing issues of corruption that are constantly swept under the table by the police and the city council - like maybe people will just forget after time passes.

Let's see - we have the Chief removed, the head of internal affairs removed and investigated by the FBI in the Jerry Amaro case (another young man dead by police abuse); one cop removed for using unneccessary force in a killing, another removed for fondling women and trying to get their phone numbers, the port riot where legal protesters were assualted and injured by police, the riders....the list goes on and on.

And they want to hire ex service people with experience in Iraq and Afghanistan - so I guess they can treat the people in Oakland the way they do people in those countries. This is an abomination!
by junya
From http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/07/21/18611822.php -

“Police are adept at writing reports, so they know how to phrase things so they appear acceptable,” Adams [professor of health and public affairs at the University of Central Florida and author of a U.S. Department of Justice report on police use of force] said. “But it can be suspicious when every officer who comes in has exactly the same story.”

A review of police reports from 55 instances of Taser use shows that officers often justify their use of force in similar ways, sometimes using the exact same phrasing. In 11 cases of Taser use reviewed, the officer wrote in his or her report that the suspect appeared to be reaching toward his or her waistband or pockets, and the officer feared he or she might have a weapon. In only one of these cases was a weapon — a screwdriver — discovered.
by logician
So if the cops reach for shiny objects by their waistbands and thereby put us in imminent fear of great bodily harm or death, are we allowed to react the same way they do?

I mean, if the law permits cops to use deadly force to defend themselves when they perceive the imminent threat, shouldn't the law also permit citizens to react the same way when they perceive that same kind of threat from cops?

Maybe Lovelle Mixon shot the cops who stormed his apartment because he feared imminent harm when they all came in pointing shiny objects that looked like guns (and the holsters were empty on their waistbands)...
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