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Call me old fashioned. I still believe that a cop's
job is to be a peace officer. Cops are not supposed
to inflict violence on non-violent citizens. That may
sound obvious. It isn't obvious to the Humboldt County
sheriff, the Eureka Police Department, some police organizations
or a former cop, Rep. Frank Riggs (R-Windsor).
On Oct. 16, Humboldt deputies, called in by Eureka
police, swabbed liquid pepper spray into the eyes of
nonviolent pro-environment protestors sitting in at
Riggs' office in Eureka. At no time did the protestors
threaten the congressman, his staff or the cops. An
earlier incident, on Sept. 16 at the headquarters of
the Pacific Lumber Co. in Scotia, also involved Humboldt
sheriff's deputies using the spray on nonviolent protestors.
Both of these incidents of torture -- neither any
kind of appropriate police procedure -- were videotaped
and broadcast on TV. The case is rich with irony: While
we were on the brink of war with Iraq over Saddam Hussein's
chemical weapons, American police officers used chemical
weapons on non-violent citizens. The ruler of China
was condemned here for repressing dissent; as he departed,
Humboldt deputies, with the blessing of a congressman,
tortured dissenters protesting the cutting of ancient
redwoods in the Headwaters Forest.
Thirty years ago, early in my law enforcement career,
cops (myself included) were insensitive to the civil
liberties of civil rights and antiwar protesters. We
were called "pigs" -- sometimes deservedly so -- because
we trampled on protestors and their constitutional right
to protest.
By the 1990s, when I was police chief in New Haven,
Conn., I had learned to work with protestors to minimize
surprise and disturbances. Together, we would arrange
for the orderly processing of protest offenses to maintain
peace.
When police officials learn that a protest is being
planned, they should call the organizers and offer to
help in the planning. Peaceful, robust protest is part
of the debate in a democratic society. Cops have a balancing,
calming role in the protest -- to allow the constitutionally
protected communication to take place and to help keep
order.
Protestors still pay a legal price when their actions
are illegal, but the community endures a minimum of
public disruption. Handling a typical protest like a
sit-in at a congressman's office without violence should
be routine for a modern American police department.
Cops should never use weapons simply to inflict pain.
Pain may be necessary to use to subdue someone who is
violent. It is not the job of the cops to punish --
that's the job for the courts after trial and conviction.
The credo of modern cops is "work with the community."
Cops are almost never called "pigs" anymore.
The Humboldt County sheriff didn't apologize for the
torture, nor did the Eureka police. Now both departments
face a costly lawsuit and an FBI investigation. Riggs,
a former Healdsburg policeman and Sonoma County deputy
sheriff, backed the cops. Surprisingly, Hubert Williams,
the president of the Washington-based Police Foundation,
long an advocate for progressive policing, didn't condemn
the action. He told the Los Angeles Times, "What it
means [for police] to put the spray in the eye in liquid
form, I don't know." Hubert, it means that some departments
remain comfortable attacking their citizens without
provocation.
Law enforcement leaders like the Police Foundation,
the International Assn. of Chiefs of Police, the Police
Executive Research Forum and the National Organization
of Black Law Enforcement Executives should protect the
public -- including protestors -- and the cops by speaking
out for peace over violent provocation.