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           | My E-FORUM  posts, We Need to  Support the Richmond Police Department, Not Bash It. February 7, 2016 and Chris Magnus - "A  Huge Step Backwards for a City That Could Do So Much Better" February  5, 2016, have drawn lengthy responses from Mike Parker of the RPA and  Councilmembers Jael Myrick, both of which are copied below. 
            Both  responses are well written and articulate, which gives them the appearance of  rationality. But I have to point out serious flaws in both the facts presented  and the reasoning in both of them. 
            Myrick wrote,  “So when Mayor Butt calls these actions “radical” and “draconian,” I honestly  have no idea what the heck he’s talking about.” Well, maybe Myrick should call  Chris Magnus and ask him to explain it to him. From Tucson, Magnus wrote: 
               
              "I can say  with absolute confidence that NO other cities are following this model. It  seems that no finding will suit the agenda some folks have unless it validates  their preconceived notions about how that incident occurred. This has nothing  to do with fairness or independence, but rather is entirely political. There  are so many ways meaningful civilian oversight could be better achieved, but  this is a huge step backwards for a city that could do so much better." 
               
              While  “radical” and “draconian” were my words, I believe Magnus echoed my opinions by  saying that “NO other cities are following this model,” and “this is a huge  step backwards for a city that could do so much better.” 
            Why don’t I  hear anyone arguing with Chief Magnus? 
               
              Regarding  Perez, why investigate at all? Myrick has already made his mind up, writing: 
               
              "Let’s not  forget the context here. An unarmed 24-year-old was shot and killed by a Police  Officer who was sworn to protect him. In my view, there’s never really an  acceptable excuse for that. Even if the Officer felt threatened, he  clearly made a conscience decision to shoot to kill which I believe was  unnecessary." 
               
              Similarly,  Mike Parker does not need an investigation. He has also made up his mind.  Parker wrote: 
               
              "The  bottom line is that a young man, who did not have a weapon, did not threaten  anyone, and had committed no criminal act (except perhaps being drunk in  public) was shot three times by a person who was supposed to be acting for  all of us in maintaining public safety." 
               
              What  Parker conveniently leaves out is that in addition to being extremely drunk,  Perez had shoplifted (that’s the reason Jensen was summoned to the liquor  store) and had engaged in a desperate fight with Jensen while resisting arrest.  While none of these, even taken together, should result in a death sentence,  they are clearly a recipe for disaster, which is what ensued. All of the  questions Mike posed don’t need an investigation to be answered. We already  know the answers. 
               
              The action  pushed by the RPA Councilmembers and Myrick that I find most disappointing is  to require Police Commission investigations of any police action that results  in a serious injury, even without a complaint being filed. This sends a message  that a police officer is a suspect until proven innocent. It also sends a  message that policing should no longer be a contact business. From now on, it’s  “hands off,” or you may be summoned before the Police Commission. 
               
              The Police  Commission was originally instituted to provide complainants with an objective  review of their grievances. Complaints have dwindled to one a year. One a year?  There must be a flaw in the system because we know the police are out there  every day abusing our citizens. Apparently, there aren’t enough complaints to  satisfy the City Council, so they found a way to gin some up. Now they will be  automatic, even without a single complaint. 
               
              What I am  hearing from residents is that they want more cops, more patrols and better  response time. Instituting automatic investigations will unnecessarily tie up  cops as witnesses, spend precious resources on investigations, and result in  fewer cops on the beat, extended response times and more crime. 
               
              Finally, I  find the aggressive approach of the RPA and Myrick to be both arrogant and  self-righteous. When the three RPA Councilmembers were elected in November  2014, none of them got more than 17% of the vote, yet they now know all the  answers, consider themselves representative of the majority of Richmond and  refuse to collaborate or compromise on anything. Even Corky Booze with 31.4% of  the vote got almost twice as many votes as the three RPA winning candidates. 
               
  Richmond  Councilmember Jael Myrick responds to mayor: ‘Nobody’s bashing police’ 
     
              Feb  9, 2016 
              By  Councilmember Jael Myrick,  
               
              Over the weekend  Mayor Tom Butt published two E-Forum pieces (the Richmond Standard re-posted  one here) about the  City Council’s recent decisions regarding the Police Commission Ordinance and  the investigation of the 2014 shooting of Richmond resident Richard “Pedie”  Perez. 
               
              Before I get  into the specifics of what we did and why I believed it was necessary, I want  to state that I consider Mayor Butt a close partner and ally on most of the  important issues facing the city of Richmond. I intend to continue working  closely with Mayor Butt on our many shared priorities for this community. As it  relates to this issue, however, we simply have a different perspective. 
               
              First, let’s be  clear about what the Council did and what the Council did not do. We did not  take any punitive action towards Officer Jensen or any of the Richmond Police  Department. We did not direct staff to implement any new policies that hamper  the ability of Richmond Police Officers to do their jobs. We simply directed  staff to change the Police Commission Ordinance to allow for automatic  investigations of incidents that result in fatalities or serious injuries and  directed the Police Commission’s next Investigative Officer to take a look at  the September 2014 Perez shooting once that individual is in place. So when  Mayor Butt calls these actions “radical” and “draconian” I honestly have no  idea what the heck he’s talking about. 
               
              I will concede  that the specific phrase “serious injury” did cause concern early on in the  discussion. I was worried that such ambiguous language could be applied in such  a broad fashion that could become problematic. During the course of our  deliberations, however, Councilmember McLaughlin suggested a more specific  definition for “serious injury” and the City Manager committed to bringing back  a definition that is “workable from a workload perspective that meets the  spirit of the discussion.” So again, I’m at a loss as to what is “radical” or  “draconian” about that. 
               
              Much of Mayor  Butt’s two E-Forum’s dealt with the issue of trust. He criticized me and the  other three colleagues who supported these actions for not having sufficient  trust in our Police Department. He specifically took issue with my analogy of  trusting the Police Department to investigate itself being similar to trusting  Chevron to do the same thing, calling that analogy a “visceral verbal attack.” 
               
              So let’s put  this all in context. It was Mayor Butt who first brought up the issue of  “trust” during Council deliberations, he suggested that moving forward with  these actions would send a signal that we don’t trust our own Police  Department. I responded with what I thought was a very logical common-sense  statement that I wouldn’t trust anybody to investigate themselves and used  Chevron as an example. Mayor Butt suggested that was an inappropriate analogy  because Chevron is an outside entity and the Police Department works for us.  Okay, how about instead we use the Richmond Housing Authority. When the Council  made the decision to expedite the relocation of Hacienda residents two years  ago and provide stricter oversight of Housing Authority properties, nobody  argued that such decisions showed a mistrust of Tim Jones or Housing Authority  staff. 
               
              There’s a  broader point here. Whether you’re talking about the Richmond Police Department,  Chevron or the Housing Authority, it is not the job of public officials to  simply TRUST that people are doing the right thing. It is the job of public  officials to provide oversight and enact policies that ENSURE that our  constituents are protected. That is all we are attempting to do here. 
               
              Furthermore, the  tone of Mayor Butt’s E-Forum’s (particularly the second one) seemed to suggest  that anything short of a lemming-like unquestioning support of everything the  Police Department does is somehow “bashing” or showing “antipathy.” Let me be  clear, I believe the Richmond Police Department is the best and most community  oriented in the Country. BUT NOBODY IS INFALLIBLE. I understand that the Perez  incident only involved one Police Officer out of over 170 on the force. This  one Officer’s mistake should not and does not reflect negatively on the others.  But to suggest that we should not try to learn from the incident and change our  policies to allow for more oversight in the future out of some unshakable faith  is just silly. 
               
              Finally, as  always the argument was made by Mayor Butt and others that this was somehow  politically motivated or specifically “RPA-driven.” This charge has been made  after virtually every vote I’ve casted this past year, except the times when  I’ve voted against the RPA where I was clearly motivated by my campaign  contributors and corporate interests(it’s not possible that I’ve actually voted  my conscience on any issue, ever). But on this issue, the charge of this being  “RPA-driven” is particularly ridiculous. The most vocal supporter of the action  we took on the Police Commission is Commissioner Felix Hunziker. While Felix  supported these actions, he’s been very outspoken in his opposition to the RPA  on virtually every other issue. From the Soda Tax, to Richmond CARES (eminent  domain), to Ban the Box, to Rent Control, if the RPA is for it, Felix has been  against it. So when Felix and the RPA end up on the same side of an issue, it’s  time to stop talking about political motives. 
               
              Broadly speaking  I believe we need to get past the place in Richmond, on this issue or any  other, where we constantly question one another’s motives when we have  disagreements. I don’t begrudge Mayor Butt or any of the Councilmembers who  voted against the actions we took. I recognize that the seven of us each come  with our own perspectives, ideals and worldviews and I believe that is a good  thing.   That is how democratic bodies are supposed to operate. 
               
              At the end of  the day the decision the City Council made here was fairly small. We are  limited by State and Federal law as to how we can deal with situations like  this. All we have called for was a Police Commission investigation to help  determine what happened and how it can be prevented in the future and a change  to the Police Commission Ordinance to allow for such investigations to be  automatic in the future. The walls are not tumbling down. 
               
              Let’s not forget  the context here. An unarmed 24-year-old was shot and killed by a Police  Officer who was sworn to protect him. In my view, there’s never really an  acceptable excuse for that. Even if the Officer felt threatened, he clearly  made a conscience decision to shoot to kill which I believe was unnecessary.  There is virtually nothing the Council is empowered to do that would ensure  real justice after these scenario’s, so we used the little bit of power we do  have to try and provide better civilian oversight in hopes that this won’t  happen again. 
               
              I agree with  Mayor Butt about all of the outstanding things our Police Department has  accomplished. I also have the highest confidence for Interim-Chief Allwyn Brown  and the highest regard for former Chief Chris Magnus, who I believe is a  national treasure. That said, no one is infallible, and I believe when  situations like the Perez incident occur those of us in power have an  obligation to do whatever we can to try and prevent it in the future and if  possible hold people accountable. That is all we are attempting to do here. 
               
  The photo was  provided courtesy of the West Contra Costa Unified School District and shows  Councilmember Myrick speaking at a district function.  
   
   
  An Open Letter to Tom Butt on the  Police Commission Issue  
   
  Here We Go Again?
              Tom, 
               
              You seem to believe that an independent  investigation of a police action that results in death or serious injury shows  “distrust” or “bashing” of our police department. I think most Richmond  residents support independent review of the police. It develops public support  for the police and can provide information to reduce negative outcomes in the  future. Do you oppose independent auditors examining the City’s books? Does  requiring such an audit mean that you distrust Bill Lindsay and City staff? Or  do you think that money is more important than the loss of a human life? 
               
              It appears that whenever the Council does not  see things your way, you decide it is time to declare war on the Richmond  Progressive Alliance and pursue a bridge-burning, scorched earth campaign. You  start your message with straight out untruths and arguable “facts” and build  from there: 
               
              "Here we go again. The vast  majority of Richmond residents have no interest in an unprecedented, expensive  and time-consuming expansion of the mission of the Richmond Police Commission  to investigate incidents that have not even resulted in a complaint. But the  Richmond Progressive Alliance believes that is now Richmond’s top priority,  along with reopening an investigation into the death of Pedie Perez." (Tom Butt  E-Forum 2/5/16) 
               
              The RPA has never said anything that suggests  that investigations of the police should be “Richmond’s top priority.” The RPA  considers the policies of community policing, jobs, housing, and the  environment all to be high priorities. It does believe that investigations of  serious incidents are an important part of strengthening community confidence  in our police. Nor should such investigations be assumed “expensive,” as I will  discuss later.  
               
              In trying to find ways to put the RPA down, you  also show how out of touch you are with large segments of our community and  with the justifiable alarm about police actions primarily in communities of  color across the country. I say this with sadness about a Mayor I voted for and  worked hard to elect. I am proud of Richmond, and proud of our police, and  would like to be proud of our Mayor.  
               
              Tom, you are Mayor of Richmond. I think your  personal attacks on Councilmembers do not move the city forward, and I don’t  think the attacks reflect well on us as a city. 
               
              You say that “All [councilmembers who supported  the resolutions] averred that the Richmond Police Department is the best in the  world before proceeding to smash it with visceral verbal attacks.” There were  NO verbal attacks of any kind on the Richmond Police Department --NONE. Nor was  there even any criticism of the department. Here is ALL of what you give  for evidence: 
               
  Jael Myrick argued that we should not depend on departments, or  institutions investigating themselves. Tom, do you really disagree with that  principle --especially for a public agency? 
   
  Eduardo Martinez had  “already made up his mind, calling the Pedie Perez death ‘a homicide.’”  Actually Tom, homicide legally means “death by another human being.” Homicide  was the Coroner’s finding. The use of the term is not a judgment about whether  the death is “justified.” (http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/homicide)  
   
              You then throw in the irrelevant, insulting, and inaccurate  charge that Eduardo is the “new Corky.” Eduardo was clearly very upset. His  behavior was very different from his usual calm, respectful behavior. But at  times council meetings and what goes on behind closed doors push buttons,  resulting in angry responses. There are many public examples of you flying off  the handle. You are in no position to be comparing an infrequent outburst with  consistent disruptive behavior. 
               
  “Jovanka Beckles said  that the Richmond Police Officers Association (RPOA) ’defended racist  murderers,’ later trying to clean it up by explaining she meant police unions  in general, not necessarily Richmond.” She made it very clear she was not  talking about the RPD and the officers she works with regularly but about  police unions and their sorry record in dealing with incidents of police abuse.  See for example this article on the Chicago Police Union. https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20160204/archer-heights/nearly-half-of-police-unions-statements-on-shootings-are-false-report 
   
  Gayle McLaughlin made  “sure people recalled the racist and hateful hit pieces aimed at her by the  RPOA several years ago.” Yes Tom, after you and others equated criticism of the  RPOA with criticism of the RPD, Gayle did remind people of the history of the  RPOA. But you did not mention that Gayle had positive things to say about the  current RPOA and her report on fruitful discussions with the current RPOA  President on these issues.  
   
              So Tom, you presented exactly zero examples of  “bashing” the Richmond Police Department or the police other than that  councilmembers and the RPA are critical of the record of police unions and that  they believe that an independent investigation into the death of Pedie Perez is  necessary. 
               
  Should there be an independent  investigation?  
   
              You say it’s not necessary because there have  been four other investigations. 
               
              The DA’s investigation was only about whether  there was sufficient evidence for a criminal charge against Officer Jensen. The  DA’s office has not earned the trust of the Richmond community in the way that  the RPD has. Further the DA’s investigation did not address the many other  questions involved in this death. 
               
              The Coroner’s inquest found that the death was  not accidental but was indeed intentional. Which leaves one investigation done  internally by the Police Department and one by a retired Police Captain hired  by the RPD. As I think you should agree, internal investigations that report  only summary conclusions that say everything is OK might not inspire confidence  in those involved or communities that might be concerned.  
               
              There are several reasons why an independent  investigation is necessary. 
               
  1. To try to clarify what actually happened. Maybe an investigation cannot clarify it further, but it  certainly beats your relying on contradictory newspaper clips.  
   
  The bottom line is that a young man, who 
            
              - did not have a weapon, 
 
              - did not threaten anyone,       and 
 
              - had committed no       criminal act (except perhaps being drunk in public) 
 
             
            was shot three times by a person who was  supposed to be acting for all of us in maintaining public safety.  
               
              Yes, Tom, we probably can never determine with  certainty what went on in Officer Jensen’s mind and whether he really feared  for his life in dealing with Pedie Perez. But don’t you think that it is  reasonable to consider that there is something wrong when an armed police  officer can only deal with a much smaller, unarmed person several feet away, by  shooting him? 
               
              Put another way: How would you respond if a  relative or friend of yours got drunk and ended up shot? I bet the E-Forums  would be demanding answers and not criticizing those who wanted an independent  inquiry. 
   
  2. To see if there are answers to many  questions which might lead to a change in police policy.  
  · Was Perez  under arrest when he was told to sit down on the sidewalk? 
  · Why was Perez  arrested in the first place, since apparently he was headed for 
              home? 
  · Why were  Perez’s fingerprints or DNA not found on the gun or the holster that he  supposedly grabbed? 
  · Why did the  officer not use his billy club, police dog, or Taser when trying to 
              prevent Perez  from leaving after being order to sit on the curb? 
  · The videos  show the officer several feet away from Perez when he shot him 3 
              times. What was  the threat? 
  · Why did  neither Officer Jensen nor the 2nd officer on the scene make any 
              attempt at  first aid? 
  · Were the  witnesses provided with translators? 
  · What were the  results of the internal police investigations? 
   
  3. To strengthen the confidence that the  community has in the police and in its relationship to the police. Doubts about the way this incident was handled will not  be lessened by everybody declaring their general confidence in our police. The  way to do this is by an investigation that is as transparent as possible. 
   
  4. To possibly provide some justice for the  Perez family. In order to exonerate the  police in this case and reduce city liability, some city officials have been  trying to place all the blame for this incident on Pedie Perez. They demonize  him, not by facts of what happened, but by tearing down his reputation: that he  had an alcohol problem, that he had had minor run-ins with the law previously.  All irrelevant to what happened September 14, 2014.  
   
                                                                                                   *** 
               
              Let’s deal with some of the other issues you  raise. 
   
  Community Confidence in police? Yes there is good reason to be very proud of the police and  the changes they have made, particularly in community policing. And that is  shown by the increase in community support growing from 38% to 59% that you  cite. But, Tom, that means that 41% of the Richmond population still does not  have enough confidence in the RPD to give it a good or excellent rating. 
               
              Richmond exists in a national context. All  across this country, communities are examining police policies and procedures  for review of incidents that threaten lives. Millions of people are seeing  videos like the recent one involving Alameda Sheriffs deputies: 
   
  http://abc7news.com/news/new-witness-speaks-out-in-alameda-co-deputies-suspect-beating-case/1101153/ 
               
              or the one in 2014 involving Marion County,  Florida deputies:  
   
  https://www.facebook.com/reggiehoodofficial/videos/1024375130939263/ 
               
              And there are national efforts, many coming out  of Black Lives Matter, to try to figure out what police policies are the  problem. See for example www.joincampaignzero.org 
               
              Being a police officer is a tough job. That is  why we give police weapons, equipment, extraordinary powers, a lot of training,  and testing. But some bad cops get through; some good cops lose their cool and  panic in stressful situations; some get enraged at situations and strike out.  Some policies in some departments are bad policies. Most cops are dedicated and  do a good job. That is why we need to be very careful to make sure that a  couple of bad cops or bad policies do not ruin a good relationship between the  police and the community. The best way to insure those good relationships is to  provide transparency and citizen oversite. Tom, you call these “draconian  measures.” What is your better idea? 
   
  Were the resolutions “entirely political” or  part of a political campaign as you suggest? What does this charge mean? The people supporting the motions actually went  across the spectrum of politics in Richmond. The RPA’s active support and  discussion of these measures involved no attack or criticism of any elected  Richmond official. It is only you who has turned this into a general attack,  personal and political, on other councilmembers. 
   
  Why require automatic investigation even if  no complaint is filed? As everybody on all  sides knows, the more time you wait to start an investigation, the more difficult  it is. When a death or serious injury takes place, the family is grieving and  paying attention to matters other than filing formal complaints. This is  especially true for people who do not know city procedures or have difficulties  with English. If our aim is to avoid death and serious injury, then when one  occurs, it means our system has broken down some, and we need to find out why,  whether or not a complaint is filed.  
   
  Why include “serious injury”? If someone is in a coma, is paralyzed, or has numerous  broken bones, isn’t an investigation warranted? Or do we have to wait till  someone dies?  
   
  Won’t all these investigations be  “expensive”? The Pedie Perez case was the  only death from an officer’s actions in since 2007. There do not appear to be  many serious injury cases largely because of the policies of the police  department. The supporters of the resolution made it very clear that they were  talking about serious injury despite your attempts to trivialize it with the  example of an officer tackling a suspect. Originally, council members thought  that “hospitalization” would be a good definition of “serious.” But Council  member McLaughlin talked to the President of the Richmond Police Association,  Ben Therriault, who explained that RPD policy is to have any injury treated at  a hospital, so she proposed a legal definition. It was a case of the council  working together to solve this problem and there was ready agreement to allow  staff to try to draw up a definition of “serious” that would not be burdensome.  The process can be further refined by the Citizens Police Review Commission to  take a first look at all of these cases and determine which ones require more  investigation and which can wait to see if a complaint is filed.  
               
              And if some investigations find problems or  different policies that can avoid the loss one human life they are well worth  it. They might also help the city to save money by avoiding suits and  settlements like the $850,000 it just paid out to settle the death of Pedie  Perez 
               
              For more, please see the articles posted at the  RPA web site.  
  www.RichmondProgressiveAlliance.net 
               
              Mike Parker             
             
            
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