New cop union boss Scott Westerman has some strong words in today's Oregonian about the death of James Chasse. He mentioned the Chasse case when we met two weeks ago, too, for an interview published in my column. At the time, the Tribune had just published video of Chasse's brief moments at the Multnomah County Detention Center, showing Officer Christopher Humphreys telling other officers he "tackled" Chasse. Here's what he has to say:
The misdirected media attention that originally surrounded the death in police custody of James Chasse - followed now by the posturing of the family's attorney for financial gain - has caused many issues about the case to be misunderstood or ignored.The case started with a series of rapidly evolving events. Officers patrolling the street observed a man at a distance that they believed to be urinating in public. They attempted to speak with him, and he fled. They chased him, and he refused to stop. They caught up to him, took him to the ground and apprehended him.
I know there are those who believe that chasing him, or even contacting him, was unnecessary. But I submit that the downtown business owners and residents who have complained, with increasing frequency, of finding urine and excrement in front of their businesses and residences consider it a serious livability issue. The officers were enforcing the law, and James Chasse was fleeing from them.
There are those who believe that crisis intervention training would have prevented the incident from escalating. But I don't think anyone within the program believes such training was designed for the situation officers faced that day. There was no possible way for the officers to have identified in the instantaneous moment of contact with Chasse that he was suffering from mental illness, let alone have the ability to effectively communicate with him.
With the enhanced audio on a newly released jail video, the Chasse family's attorney is attempting to cloud the issue of what really happened that day. He's trying to imply that the apparent discrepancy between informal comments that arresting officers made to jail staff and the taped Internal Affairs interview is somehow significant. No one disputes that Chasse was taken to the ground. Regardless of the manner in which a person is taken to the ground, it's considered "tackling."
Having written and reviewed thousands of police reports over the years, I know there's a difference between the war stories that fellow officers share with each other and the formal, written documents. The Chasse case is no different. The informal discussion between the jail staff and the officers was not a formal interview. Keep in mind that at the time of that conversation none of the officers believed Chasse was seriously injured. He had already been cleared by paramedics prior to being taken to jail.
There's no doubt that James Chasse's death was tragic. The circumstances that forced him to the street and the lack of support for him by our degrading mental health system and others in his life are tragic as well. And the effect on the officers involved has been devastating. They didn't expect Chasse to suffer serious injury. They were merely hoping he would comply with their commands.
The incident was thoroughly investigated - by the district attorney's office, by a grand jury, by the internal affairs process, and by the use-of-force review board - and yet the officers involved are being portrayed by the family's attorney and some elements of the media as cold killers and liars, when nothing could be further from the truth. These are men of honor and integrity who were trying to do their jobs, and they feel terrible about the outcome.
While I recognize the pressure for Police Chief Rosie Sizer to evaluate this "new" evidence, I'm disappointed her decision to do so is being characterized by some as an admission that there was wrongdoing. I'm confident that the subsequent reopening of the investigation will find no discrepancy, and the officers will once again be cleared.
Showing 1-6 of 6
IMPUNITY
Pronunciation: \im-ˈpyü-nə-tē\
Etymology: Middle French or Latin; Middle French impunité, from Latin impunitat-, impunitas, from impune without punishment, from in- + poena punishment
Date: 1532
Definition: exemption or freedom from punishment, harm, or loss
Shit happens. Impunity is systemic. If the cops had said - we made a mistake, we're sorry, we'll fix it - nobody would disagree. We'd take it in stride - the costs of living in the big city. Wrong place at the wrong time. The family would be sad, but compensated knowing the cops understood they had made a mistake. The terrifying and continuing weirdness of this case is they don't think they made a mistake.
This discordant and arrogant statement from the union flack shows the impunity continues.
And didn't Westerman already kill two people?
So. Who's next?
Personally I put a lot more stock in the truth of what the officer said before he realized his actions had resulted in someone else's death. The difference isn't between what he said to other cops and what he said later, it is the difference between what he said when he thought it was no big deal and when he realized he could be on trial for murder.
Nice...kill a 71 year old man and a 45 year old woman as an officer, you get a medal and a promotion.
Brag about how you kicked ass to your buddies then lying to investigators. Humphreys is probably wondering where his medal is...
"...the effect on the officers involved has been devastating": We hear this a lot, but we never get an explanation. HOW was it "devastating"? I'd really like to know. Does their guilt jerk them awake every night at 1 a.m. in a cold sweat?
"They didn't expect Chasse to suffer serious injury. They were merely hoping he would comply with their commands": Implicit in this is a warning: If you don't comply with cop commands, they can and will kill you. Even if all you did was piss in the street.
"These are men of honor and integrity who were trying to do their jobs, and they feel terrible about the outcome": Well. I'm sure they feel terrible about the outcome now, when the damn thing STILL hasn't been swept under the rug. "Honor and integrity"? That's hard for me to credit, given that Chasse was "wanted" for nothing more than PISSING IN THE STREET, which to the cops apparently warranted a foot chase and a brute-force takedown, on pavement, of a much smaller man.
The Chasse case scared me. I'm not in as bad a mental state as Chasse was, but occasionally I can see that place from where I stand. And sometimes it occurs to me that I'm just one bad day away from a disastrous Downtown encounter with the PPB. Because, if you act weird, one of them might "tackle" you from behind and break about forty of your ribs....
What gets me every time I think about this case is that if we had real community policing, this would not have happened. By all accounts from those who knew Chasse, he moved within this 10-15 block area, and seems to have been recognized by many who lived and worked in the same vicinity. The police were the strangers in that neighborhood. If the police walked a beat in that area, they would have already known him (and his mental illness) and he may have had some level of trust of them.
And, Guffman, you are not the only one still scared by this. The police actions in this case only serve to make citizens more afraid - and more likely to react exactly the way James Chasse did to an attempted police stop.
"...Guffman, you are not the only one still scared by this. The police actions in this case only serve to make citizens more afraid - and more likely to react exactly the way James Chasse did to an attempted police stop": Thanks for that. Sometimes I think I'm the only one.
Community policing, conceptually, is a great answer to this issue. Even so, we have to have some lines drawn for the human pit bulls who enforce our laws. Like, pissing in the street is NOT justifiable cause for the kind of apprehension used on James Chasse. Might we all agree on that one point?
Comments (6) RSS