Consider this scene: An agitated man holding a gun strides toward patrons at a gas station while ignoring the demands of sheriff’s deputies to stop. After repeated warnings, and with little choice, the deputies shoot. ADVERTISING Consider this scene: An
Consider this scene: An agitated man holding a gun strides toward patrons at a gas station while ignoring the demands of sheriff’s deputies to stop. After repeated warnings, and with little choice, the deputies shoot.
Or this one: Two deputies get out of their patrol cars, pull their weapons and shoot a man from behind. He falls. He tries to crawl away — but the deputies keep firing anyway, until he is dead.
Add one more angle: People hear a commotion and leave restaurants, shops and cars to watch the incident, and to record it on their phones. They gather several videos from slightly different vantage points, each providing a bit of information but none containing the full story.
All of these descriptions apply to the fatal shooting of Nicholas Robertson in the Los Angeles-area city of Lynwood on Dec. 12 by Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies. The incident was similar to many recent such encounters in that it was captured on video.
But video has its limits. It won’t confirm or refute the reports of what happened before the phones came out and starting recording, or before the deputies and Robertson came in range of the cameras. It can’t tell us, for example, whether a man fired several shots into the air before the deputies arrived, as the Sheriff’s Department has reported, or whether Robertson was that man.
Video has played a central role in public anger over police tactics since George Holliday tried out his new video camera by recording the arrest of motorist Rodney G. King on March 3, 1991. From that time, but increasingly in the last two years, Americans outside law enforcement have come face to face with the brutality that is often necessarily at the center of police use of force. One lesson is that police do dangerous and often disturbing work in the name of keeping the rest of us safe. Another is that despite their sacrifices on our behalf, and despite the fact that few officers intentionally abuse their power, they can often do better.
The sheriff’s investigation into the Robertson shooting will take time. But it will also require a degree of transparency that has yet to become second nature to the Sheriff’s Department. Confidence in law enforcement depends on a system of accountability designed for the modern era, in which police actions are seen, scrutinized and questioned in no more time than it takes to pick up a cellphone and start recording.
— Los Angeles Times