Lawmakers Demand Wray Correct the Record
Republicans Call Out Dems for Latest Trump Conspiracy Theory
An Honorary Squad Member Runs for President
Harris Finally Nabs One Crucial But Expected Endorsement
What Trump Told Netanyahu at Mar-a-Lago
Ronny Jackson Shuts Down Those Questioning Whether Trump Was Hit With a Bullet...
Another Day Another Fresh Lie in the Press About Kamala's Past
Speaker Mike Johnson Puts Kamala Harris' Border Failures on Full Display
Trump Announces Plans to Return to the Site of His Would-Be Assassination
Is Gavin Newsom's Latest PR Stunt a Way to Secure Himself a Seat...
Kamala Harris Sits Down With Drag Pro-Palestine Advocates While Boycotting Netanyahu’s Vis...
Kamala Harris' Roadmap to the White House Left Out a Very Crucial Aspect
Dave McCormick's Ad Tying Bob Casey Jr to Kamala Harris Will Run During...
Why One Name Being Considered for the Trump Assassination Attempt Task Force Is...
Was Kamala Harris Complicit in Covering Up for Joe Biden? This Poll Is...
OPINION

What Presumption of Innocence?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Facts don't matter. Police are guilty until proven innocent -- or even if proven innocent. The Black Lives Matter crusade, born after Florida vigilante George Zimmerman shot unarmed teen Trayvon Martin in 2012, turned to police shootings of black men after the death of Michael Brown, 18, in 2014. It doesn't matter that the U.S. Department of Justice essentially cleared Ferguson, Mo., police officer Darren Wilson, who said he shot Brown in self-defense. Facts cannot dent the popular narrative of white cops shooting black men because police are racists.

Advertisement

Sunday, African American vigilante Gavin E. Long ambushed and killed three law enforcement officers -- Montrell Jackson, Matthew Gerald and Brad Garafola -- and wounded three more officers. Long apparently wanted to pay back Baton Rouge police for the baffling July 5 police shooting of Alton Sterling, a black man hawking CDs. Watch a video of the shooting and it is hard to figure why police shot Sterling. Yes, he was armed, but the two white officers appeared to have control of the 37-year-old -- although perhaps not, as the videos are short and the view largely obstructed.

The officers certainly had reason to be fearful. Sterling was no unarmed kid. He apparently had a gun and a long criminal record that, according to the New York Times included aggravated battery, domestic abuse battery and carnal knowledge of a juvenile. The officers were responding to a 911 call about a man making a threat with a gun in front of a convenience store. The Department of Justice rightly is investigating the shooting.

Hillary Clinton already seems to have decided the Sterling shooting smacks of police brutality. The day after Long's rampage left six officers down, she came up to the very edge of asserting the cops misused force when she said in a speech to the NAACP that a proper response to what happened in Baton Rouge is investing in police "training on the proper use of force." Presumption of innocence? Police need not apply.

Advertisement

By the way, the Baton Rouge police perfectly understood the proper use of force when Long ambushed them. "They ran to the threat," Sheriff Sid Gautreaux said at a news conference, "not from the threat."

Clinton did say something with which I very much agree: "We white Americans need to do a better job of listening when African Americans talk about the seen and unseen barriers you face every day." I only wish Clinton had departed from your typical liberal conversation. (One side talks; the other listens.) She should have told NAACP members to listen to the reasonable fears of cops in U.S. cities -- especially during supercharged confrontations.

Sure, Clinton suggested that everyone put themselves in the shoes of police "heading off to a dangerous job," but she did not suggest that police deserve the benefit of the doubt. To the contrary, she spoke of the need for black Americans to alert their children on how to behave around cops "because the slightest wrong move could get them hurt or even killed." She also failed to ask anti-police activists to withhold judgment in the statement released after Michael Brown's funeral. First the verdict, then the trial. That's how Hillary Clinton brings America together.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos