Grifman wrote: ↑Wed Apr 14, 2021 11:29 pm
i am going to say this, and if I take heat for it. so be it. I don't condone any of the shootings that I have seen. That said, in most cases (I can think of a couple of exceptions, such as the Philando Castile shooting), none of this would have happened if the person had done what the police had said. A traffic stop is not the place to litigate your case, to try to explain to the police why you are innocent and why they are wrong, or tell them that they have to explain themselves. Even if you feel like they are acting illegally, the place to deal with that is in court, not by the side of the road. It seems to me that drivers education and driving tests ought to include sections on how to respond when police pull you over. You can call it victim blaming, but fewer people at traffic stops would end up being shot if they just do what the police tell them, right or wrong.
If you are in a car and you don't come out when given the order, police are going to go on edge. They don't know if you have a gun in the car, if the windows are tinted they may not be able to see if someone else is in there, and there is concern that they could be dragged off if they reach in and the car is started and put into drive. All of those things are pretty rare, but that is what is in their mind.
None of this excuses the racism, or the bad behavior of many cops. But I do think we need to train drivers how to react when pulled over in a traffic stop similarly as police train to handle a traffic stop. After all, if the goal is to save lives, then we need to do what we need to do, and approach the problem from all angles.
Catching up on this thread, I really disagree with this take, Grifman. Would shootings at traffic stops decline if every person pulled over complied to the letter with the instructions given by the cops? Sure. I think that's a given. But there would also be fewer shootings at traffic stops if our police weren't armed. Or, as you pointed out later, we just stopped making traffic stops. What does any of that prove? None of those are viable solutions to this problem. They certainly aren't policy prescriptions.
Also, while the conduct of the victim is always relevant in looking at why a police shooting took place, I think it's fundamentally wrong to try to take the reasons for the stop and the decision making of the cops leading up to the stop out of the equation. When the cops are racially profiling and pulling over black drivers because they suspect they are criminals, those cops are going to interpret everything the driver does through that lens. In that charged environment, even efforts to comply (often with contradictory and nonsensical commands) can be seen as noncompliance.
A great (horrible) example is
Tae-Ahn Lea, the 18 year old homecoming king who got pulled over by the Louisville violent crimes task force and handcuffed behind a police cruiser. They pulled him over on the pretense that he made "a wide turn," but the truth is, as they explained to his parents, they suspected - because he was a black kid in a high-crime area - that he had a gun or drugs on him.
Watch that video, Grif, and tell me the answer to all this is that Tae-Ahn Lea should have just complied.
I get that your desire here is just to lessen the number of unjustified police shootings (and excessive force, generally), but the lion's share of the problem isn't with the people getting shot.