Jamar Clark Killing Internal Investigation.
About ten days ago, on Friday
October 21st, the police department announced that they had completed their internal investigation into the police officer killing on November 15th, 2015
of Jamar Clark and that the chief has determined that there were no violations
of City policy and that the officers will not receive any discipline. She
wrote, “After looking at all the evidence and all the verifiable facts in this
case, I can say with absolute certainty that I fully support the actions of
[the] Officers….We did not find any violation of MPD policy.”
While
not surprising, given the long history of not disciplining officers involved in
police killings and similar determinations by other investigating bodies who
looked into this case, the result was a shock and disappointment to many,
including me.
While
I have confidence and trust in the Chief and the Mayor and have not been given
the same access as others to the evidence, I remain deeply concerned by a
number of things about this case. These concerns include: 1) the failure of the
officers to record anything despite squad cameras and audio being available; 2)
the very, very short time that passed between the officers arriving at the
scene and when they choose to escalate to physical violence against Mr. Clark;
3) the failure on the officers’ part to employ any de-escalation techniques
despite the fact that Mr. Clark was not threatening to harm anyone and was not
armed; 4) the specific way that Mr. Clark was “taken down” and the fact that
the technique that was used and the way it was used allegedly – per the
officers’ own testimony – provided Mr. Clark easy access to an officer’s
firearm, dramatically increasing the risk inherent in the situation; and, 5)the
fact that he was shot in the head and that other less lethal use-of-force
techniques were not used. I am especially struck by the failure of the officers
to avail themselves of the clear opportunities they had to negotiate, wait and
observe or get further assistance while Mr. Clark was clearly posing no
imminent threat to anyone.
It
is worth noting that the Internal Affairs police investigators did not look for
new evidence or talk to witnesses themselves but relied on and reviewed the
evidence in the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension file, including all videos,
witness statements, police reports and supplements, Minneapolis Emergency
Communications Center records, and Hennepin Emergency Medical Services Dispatch
files. They evaluated the evidence against relevant police department policies
and procedures. Then the case was presented to the Internal Affairs Unit
Commander and forwarded to the Chief’s Office for review by a four person panel
comprised of the Assistant Chief and three Deputy Chiefs. The Chief made the
final determination.
As
an elected official and not a trained police officer, I do not possess the same
degree of training in law enforcement that the Chief’s panel did, and perhaps
the officers in this case acted according to national best practices, best
training and in compliance with all city and police department policies. I am
not necessarily disputing that. But after days of reflection on this, reviewing
the videos and listening to and reading the reports of the County Attorney and
Minneapolis Police Department, I can only conclude this: if the officers
followed our policies in this incident, then something is deeply wrong with
those polices. If their actions represented the best training we have
available, then that training is (or was) grossly inadequate. If this
exemplifies national best practices, then those best practices are
fundamentally flawed. Mr. Clark did not need to be killed and should not have
been killed. The officers’ actions in this case resulted in a preventable,
avoidable, and tragic death. Our best practices are insufficient. Our policies
must be improved. We need to learn from this incident, and other similar
instances, to ensure that this never happens again.
When
Chief Harteau was sworn in, in her inaugural speech she laid out a clear, moving guiding principle by
which she wanted every police officer to judge "every encounter" with
the public: "Did my actions reflect how I would want a member of my family
to be treated?" I don't think that anyone - certainly not me - can say
that they would want a member of our family treated the way Jamar Clark was
treated. I would not want a member of my family to be shot in the head within
one minute and one second of encountering police officers for not taking his or
her hands out of his or her pocket fast enough. By the Chief's own test, the
Minneapolis Police Department, its officers, and the whole City of Minneapolis
failed Mr. Clark that night. As a City Council Member, I failed Jamar, and by
failing him, failed our community and failed ourselves. We must - we absolutely
must - do better.
Finally,
I will note the glaring omission of any formal community or civilian review of
this internal affairs investigation. Despite efforts taken by the Council and
in City Ordinance to create a system of shared police and community/civilian
oversight and review of police issues and complaints, and to bring Internal
Affairs cases into our more general police conduct review process, in this case
with such intense community concern and interest, none of the available
city-appointed civilian police conduct review panelists were included in the
review, nor were any of the civilian investigators. I remain convinced that
there is a serious and wide divide between community expectations and
professional policing standards when it comes to police conduct. Until we can
close that divide, community confidence and trust in the police will be hard to
build.
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