I guess I’m a bit late in talking about Ferguson, but it
doesn’t seem to be an issue that’s disappearing in any hurry (nor should it),
so I’ll address it, or at least one aspect of it. Darren Wilson, as we all know
by now, was not indicted for his killing of Michael Brown. I don’t think this
came as a surprise for too many people (it didn’t for me), nor should it have.
It’s the result that’s entirely predictable—the system protected one of its
own. Darren Wilson’s resigned now—can’t keep around someone who causes that
sort of controversy—but we’ll have no criminal trial, at least not by the state
of Missouri. He walks away a free man, albeit one who’ll have to look over his
shoulder for a long time.
I’ll be blunt: based on what I’ve heard and seen, I think
Wilson should have been indicted. Of course, that doesn’t mean an intelligent
couldn’t disagree with my assessment, and it’s certainly true that I haven’t
gone through every bit of evidence that was presented to the grand jury, but
from the substantial amount I have heard, it seems like there should have been
an indictment unless there was some piece of evidence that clearly exonerates
Wilson (and I think we would have heard about it if there were). But that’s not
really the point. The point, this whole process was obviously engineered to get
Wilson off the hook while everyone else pretended they did their job.
Bob McCulloch, the prosecutor, defied the norm of how to
handle a grand jury in numerous ways. Instead of just making the case for a
certain charge and presenting the relevant evidence—you know, like you’re supposed to do—he allowed a huge
evidence dump and essentially told the grand jury to make their own decision.
He barely did anything to insinuate the idea that Wilson could be a murderer
(thus failing completely to do his job as a prosecutor), and basically let
Wilson get away with a story that was inconsistent with what he’d originally claimed,
and not very believable to begin with.
And why not? McCulloch was a local prosecutor. As the
attorney for Michael Brown’s family puts it, his relationship with the police
department is “symbiotic,” not adversarial. Why would he want to expose
wrongdoing on the part of a criminal justice system he was part of? McCulloch
was never on the side of Michael Brown’s family, or those who wanted justice.
His speech after the grand jury’s decision largely complained about how much
the media focused on the case.
Why was someone like McCulloch allowed to be prosecutor for
this case, rather than being replaced by a special prosecutor, as one might
expect he should be? Because Governor Jay Nixon decided not to do so. This is
the same governor who was blatantly more concerned with the violence of the
protestors rather than the violence of the police, yet another shameless
servant of the blatantly corrupt establishment. What would Nixon have had to
gain from Wilson’s indictment? A police officer who served in an area where the
police are infamously disproportionately white, while the residents are largely
black, being charged with manslaughter, or even murder? It would just be
another mess he would be expected to take care of as governor. Why not just
sweep it under the rug?
And should we be surprised at all that the grand jury was
seventy-five percent white? Indictment already requires nine votes in favor,
and, in a racially charged case, even if all the black jurors and a majority of
white had voted in favor, that still wouldn’t have been sufficient. And these
are jurors selected from St. Louis county, home of a major city almost half of
whose population is black. Could a more even balance really not have been
achieved? I’m not by any means trying to say you can’t be white and have an
unbiased view of this case (I’m white myself, so that would be pretty absurd),
but nearly half of white Missourians voted for Todd “Legitimate Rape” Akin in
2012 (based on exit polling); it’s hard for me to believe, given the complete (and probably deliberate)
incompetence of the prosecution, that at least a few backwoods, cop-worshipping
people (the type who also tend to associate young black men with being
dangerous and violent) didn’t end up on the grand jury, and a few is really all
it would take.
One question remains: why would McCulloch release all the
evidence shown to the grand jury? It basically shows what an awful job he did,
and what a joke the proceedings were, and it’s not standard to released that
evidence, so why do it? Admittedly, this is pure speculation on my part, but
maybe he hoped it would provoke a reaction. If we can hear about angry,
violent, frequently black protestors, it makes it all the easier to distract
from the issue of corruption in police forces across the country, and the
continuing unfairness of police toward blacks in America. As long as Middle
America feels uneasy, questions about police brutality and militarization can
be pushed aside for the time being.
The entire proceeding was a joke, and was designed not to
indict Darren Wilson. Wilson has been forced to resign; McCulloch and Nixon
should be, too. Their disgusting and almost certainly deliberate mishandling of
this case should earn them ostracization by the rest of the country. In a
fairer country, it would. But we’ve just been reminded that our country is
nothing resembling fair. Too bad the only people who believed it was are too
deluded to change their mind at this point.
I agree. The system perpetuates the system. I blogged about this too. I'm in your Triberr tribe.
ReplyDeletePS I'm a Socialist too.
ReplyDelete