It’s happened again.
Another confrontation between a white police officer and an allegedly unarmed young black man. Another struggle. Another dead black man, shot by police. And another outcry that police have once again murdered another innocent victim.
Except that the victim’s background proved anything but innocent.
Consider these three incidents:
Incident #1:
On August 9, 2014, Michael Brown, a black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, is shot and killed during a street confrontation with Darren Wilson, a white police officer.
Almost immediately, Ferguson blacks generally and the Brown family in particular begin referring to Michael Brown as “a child.”
Except that this “child” was 18–legally an adult who could obtain a credit card, enter the armed forces and drive a car. He also stood 6’3″ and weighed 300 pounds.
Oh, and one more thing: Just before his fatal encounter with Wilson, Brown, Brown was caught on a grocery store video strong-arming a clerk, who had just seen him shoplifting a box of cigars.
Michael Brown (left) roughing up a store owner
Incident #2:
On March 1, 2015, officers of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) are summoned to downtown Skid Row to break up a fight between two black men.
A security camera outside a homeless shelter shows a man pushing over a neighbor’s tent and the two men duking it out.
When four officers arrive, the suspect–Charley Saturmin Robinet–turns and ducks back into his own tent. Then he jumps out, striking and kicking before ending up on the ground. Officers use Tasers, but these appear to have little effect.
As the officers swarm about him, a bystander’s video captures the voice of a rookie officer shouting, “He has my gun! He has my gun!” That’s when the other three officers open fire.
Blacks in Los Angeles and throughout the nation immediately claimed that Robinet–known as “Africa” on the street–was unarmed when he was shot.
But LAPD Chief Charlie Beck stated that an inspection of the video shows Robinet reaching for the pistol in the rookie officer’s waistband.
The officer’s gun was later found partly cocked and jammed with a bullet in the chamber and another in the ejection port, indicating a struggle for the weapon, said Beck.
Then, on March 3, as a black outcry continued to sound throughout the nation, a news bombshell dropped:
In 2000, Robinet had been convicted of robbing a Wells Fargo branch and pistol-whipping an employee. The reason for the robbery: To pay for acting classes at the Beverly Hills Playhouse.
While in federal prison in Rochester, Minnesota, Robinet was assigned to the mental health unit, where it was determined he suffered from mental illness requiring treatment in a psychiatric hospital. He served about 13 years in prison before being released in May, 2014.
Under the terms of his release, Robinet was required to report to his probation officer at the start of each month. He failed to do so in November and December, 2014, and in January, 2015. So a federal arrest warrant was issued on January 9.
U.S. marshals were searching for him at the time of his fatal confrontation with the LAPD.
Click here: Man killed by Los Angeles police was wanted by US marshals – AOL.com
Incident #3:
On March 6, 2015, 19-year-old Anthony “Tony” Robinson, black, was shot and killed by a white police officer in Madison, Wisconsin.
The shooting came after police got a call saying that Robinson was jumping in and out of traffic and had assaulted someone. Robinson fled to an apartment, and the officer–Matt Kenny–heard a disturbance and forced his way inside.
According to police, a struggle ensued and Kenny fired after Robinson attacked him.
Only hours after the shooting, Madison Police Chief Mike Koval–who is white–called Robinson’s death “a tragedy” and prayed with Robinson’s grandmother in her driveway.
And then, on March 7, came the news: In 2014, Robinson had pleaded guilty to armed robbery and recently began serving a three-year probation term for that felony conviction.
According to a criminal complaint, Robinson was one of five men who staged a home-invasion robbery in Madison in April, 2014, searching for money and marijuana. Police captured Robinson as he fled the home, and he admitted that he stole a TV and an Xbox 360 from the apartment.
Tony Robinson
He was sentenced to three years’ probation in December.
Reacting to her son’s death, Robinson’s mother, Andrea Irwin, said: “My son has never been a violent person. And to die in such a violent, violent way, it baffles me.”
Not every police shooting of a black is a replay of Mississippi Burning, the 1964 case where three civil rights workers were murdered by white racist police.
Some police shootings are fueled by anger or prejudice. Others happen by accident or negligence. So it’s foolish to automatically assume that every police shooting is totally justified.
But it’s equally foolish to assume that every police shooting is totally unjustified. Especially when, in case after case, the “non-violent” victim turns out to have had a history of violence.

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THE TRUTH-AND THE DIRT–WILL OUT
In Bureaucracy, History, Law Enforcement, Politics, Social commentary on May 12, 2015 at 12:02 amOn April 23, the family of teen thug Michael Brown filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city of Ferguson, Missouri.
Brown, 18, was shot by a Ferguson police officer on August 9. Brown was unarmed, but the officer–Darren Wilson, who has since left the police department–claimed self-defense. According to him, Brown tried to seize his weapon.
The lawsuit claims that
Brown, 18, was unarmed and walking in the street with a friend on Aug. 9 when Wilson told them to get on the sidewalk.
The lawsuit claims that Wilson said: “Get the [expletive] out of the street.” Without the “unnecessary and unwarranted profane language,” the encounter would have been “uneventful.”
Attorneys for Brown’s parents promised the case would reveal new forensic evidence and raise doubts about the police version of events. Some of that evidence, they said, had been overlooked in previous investigations.
If it comes to trial, the lawsuit could force a full review of all the evidence in the shooting and bring key witnesses to be questioned in open court.
Civil cases generally require a lower standard of proof than criminal cases. Jurors must base their decision on a preponderance of evidence, not proof beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the standard needed to convict in a criminal trial.
The reason for this is that, in a criminal trial, the freedom of the accused is at stake. In a civil trial, only money is.
The lawsuit could prove embarrassing to the Ferguson Police Department, which has already been heavily criticized in a Justice Department investigation.
The report of those findings, released on March 4, stated:
“The Justice Department found that the Ferguson Police Department (FPD) engaged in a pattern or practice of conduct that violates the First, Fourth, and 14th Amendments of the Constitution….
“Our investigation showed that Ferguson police officers routinely violate the Fourth Amendment in stopping people without reasonable suspicion, arresting them without probable cause, and using unreasonable force against them….
Federal investigators found that the FPD had a pattern or practice of:
Click here: Justice Department Announces Findings of Two Civil Rights Investigations in Ferguson, Missouri | OPA | Department
So there will be many opportunities for the Brown family to reveal highly damaging truths about the FPD.
But the trial promises to be highly embarrassing for the Brown family as well.
Consider the following:
Michael Brown (left) roughing up a store owner
Lesley Mcspadden
Louis Head calls for arson in Ferguson
No doubt the Ferguson police will be working overtime to turn up even more embarrassing truths–or at least charges–against the Brown family.
In the end, the outcome of the lawsuit may well turn on who can dig up more dirt on whom.
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