When they learned one of their “brothers” had been charged, they resigned. En masse. Much like their counterparts in Buffalo and Albuquerque did before them. They had enough.
A group of about 50 police officers who had served voluntarily on a specialized crowd control unit in Portland, Ore., have stepped down from the squad after a year of sometimes violent clashes with protesters, the city’s Police Department said on Thursday.
The resignations came just hours after a member of the unit, Officer Corey Budworth, was indicted on a misdemeanor assault charge that he physically injured an independent photojournalist during a protest in August.
Budworth was charged for an assault captured on video, leaving little doubt that his use of force was excessive and unwarranted.
https://twitter.com/Johnnthelefty/status/1295965796426891265
Nonetheless, the members of Portland’s Rapid Response Team, a voluntary assignment within the PPB, quit the squad for what they perceived as a lack of support.
The officers, [Chief Chris Davis] said, had complained not only about the indictment, but about what they viewed as a broader lack of support after more than 150 nights of sustained protests, fueled in part by the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May 2020.
“If you put a human being through what they were put through, that takes a toll,” Chief Davis said. “They’re not feeling like that sacrifice that they have made, necessarily, has been understood very well, and that’s their perspective, and I have to honor their perspective.”
There’s much about their grievances that is understandable. This has gone on far too long. The expectations, and condemnations, of police handling of the inter-mingled mix of peaceful protesters and violent rioters has been untenable. Like it or not, cops are people too, and can be pushed too hard, too far, and react out of a toxic combination of fear, anger and frustration. Why should they treat kindly and gently people bent on committing violence and destruction night after night after night? What do people expect them to do?
Much of the frustration stemmed from the city’s efforts to appease the mob, a mayor vacillating between apologizing for the use of force and then ordering more force be used, and a district attorney who refused to prosecute those arrested because they were merely acting out of righteous frustration.
The officers’ union has denounced the indictment, calling it a “politically driven charging decision” against an officer who “worked to restore order during a chaotic night of burning and destruction in Portland.”
Except as the video shows, that wasn’t what Budworth did, even if it was a chaotic night of burning and destruction in Portland. And even if politics has driven anarchists and anarchist friends to return every night to burn it down again.
Cops will tell us, me, that we don’t get it. We’ve never experienced what they were living through night after night and we, therefore, cannot judge them for their conduct.
The Rapid Response Team members “do not volunteer to have Molotov cocktails, fireworks, explosives, rocks, bottles, urine, feces and other dangerous objects thrown at them,” [Portland Police Association President Daryl] Turner wrote in a letter. “Nor do they volunteer to have threats of rape, murder, and assaults on their families hurled at them.”
Mr. Turner said the officers had been caught between what he described as conflicting demands to “stand down” and to use force only when protests spun out of control.
“These officers find themselves in a no-win situation,” Mr. Turner wrote. “They can’t win because of the position others have put them in.”
While it’s somewhat disingenuous to argue that these cops don’t volunteer for the assignment to be subject to danger, which is pretty much the job description of police officer and the primary reason they give them guns, there is some validity to the argument that they have found themselves in a no-win situation. Given the way in which rioters and protesters, from the violent to the merely civil disobedient, have presented, there are only so many tactics available to the police to deal with the mobs.
They are charged with preventing the destruction, controlling people bent on destruction, without using more force than would look good on the front page of the Oregonian. No matter what they do, how they handle the mob it will be wrong, bad and evil. And it’s been this way for 150 nights, because the mob realizes that it can act without constraint while the police have no way to stop them short of a massive use of force, which will prove the mob right by proving that the police must be abolished as a violent army of oppressors. It’s win-win for the mob, and no-win for the cops.
But that’s not why Budworth was indicted, and this is a critical distinction. He was charged for what he did to one person, Teri Jacobs, on that one night when his use of force against her was utterly without justification. This wasn’t about some cosmic sense of frustration, but a cop who lost his cool and needlessly battered a woman.
As for the mass resignations, perhaps that’s exactly what should happen. The city has demanded too much of them, and they have not been given the support they need to perform the impossible task expected of them. But mostly, if they’ve lost the point of their becoming cops, that they are not the counterpart to violent rioters but police officers who have chosen a job, a duty, to both enforce the law while respecting the constitutional rights of citizens and not indulging their worst impulses by become the criminals they oppose, then they shouldn’t be on the Rapid Response Team. They shouldn’t be cops at all.
It’s not any easy job, and can, as here, prove to be a near impossible job in many respects, but it’s still a job, and the job they chose. Cops don’t get the option of being frustrated and angry, and relieved of their obligation not to violently harm people. If they can’t hack it, then they should resign. And if the job can’t be done any other way, then Portland and other cities need to address their acquiescence in this untenable situation they’ve allowed to go on far too long.
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Worth noting that the some DA’s office has dropped the vast majority of charges against protesters, including for violent felonies.
[Ed. Note: Link deleted per rules.]
This was noted in passing in the post, but it’s not an excuse.
Excuse for any given use of force? Of course not.
But it’s perfectly valid to say “if you’re not going to deal with the problem after we do our part, we’re not volunteering to do our part any more.”
Then don’t volunteer. It’s actually quite simple. If you’re not capable of performing the job, don’t take the job. There’s no shame in not taking on the responsibility. The shame lies only in volunteering for a job you lack the wherewithal to perform properly.
The cop shouldn’t have hit the photographer, but as you say cops are human and this group has been placed in an impossible situation by city leadership for a very long time. When you are dealing with rioters and the mayor/DA are continually taking the side of the rioters and you’re putting yourself at risk to make pointless arrests of the same people in a doomed attempt to restore order it’s got to be terribly frustrating.
They should have quit a long time ago, and honestly – even though I’ve been in favor of police reforms for more than a decade – this is one where if I were on the jury I’d strongly consider nullification . The performance of city and county leadership here has been that bad. The waiver of penalties for violent behavior should apply to everyone.
One can sympathize with the anger and frustration the Portland cops feel without excusing their inability to control the impulse to engage in illegal violence. Perhaps it has a place in mitigation of sentence, but cops committing crimes is unacceptable no matter how unfair it all feels.
You believe the “independent journalist” fairy tale? These “journalists” are just another sub-section of the mob.
This would be wrong regardless of whether she was a journalist or not. FOCUS.
It in my opinion all comes down to the moment. She was running away from him, he shoved her down from behind, while she was momentarily (it appears) dazed he hit her in the face_ that’s not defensible. At any point he could have restrained himself.
I’m no rah rah for cops or instigators but badge 37 was the aggressor here.
The situation these cops have found themselves in for more than a year is classic heads you lose, tails you lose.
If one of the rioters injures or kills you, they’ll suffer no consequence. If you screw up, you’ll pay with your career and maybe your freedom.
I’m never a defender of aggressive cops, but in this case the local government has been so bad that I can empathize.
The phrase “lions led by donkeys” comes to mind. This time it might be true. One might also think of the work of the Capitol police on January 6th.
The Portland cops should all quit, and minimize the PTSD.
“Given the way in which rioters and protesters, from the violent to the merely civil disobedient, have presented, there are only so many tactics available to the police to deal with the mobs.”
Well good, maybe now the city is a step closer to trying conversation and compromise.
PS- Nothing says “we’re a bunch of thin-skinned babies” than leaving their post because one among the ranks of many who deserve it in PDX is being held accountable for violently assaulting a peacefully protesting individual.
Appeasing a small minority of violent and stupid narcissists is rarely a good way to run a democracy.
Surprise, you and the protesters are in total agreement.
Ted Wheeler was re-elected mayor, Jake. I fear you’re mistaken yet again.
I fear, my friend, that my joke was too sophisticated for you.
That happens a lot to the likes of me.
Oh yeah. Peaceful protest. We forgot.
What an amazing amount of gall to refer to the protests in Portland as peaceful. As if we can’t see the videos ourselves.
It’s not clear the battered photographer didn’t have it coming. Seems she was involved in the scrum where the cops were arresting someone else. It’s possible she deserved arrest in which case you could argue the cop was cutting her a break when he just slapped her around a little and walked off.
Well darn, if she had it coming, that changes everything.
Maybe she just needed a good beatdown.
;D
Too bad you didn’t look closer to home for a source. Tbis isn’t a new thing.
Sorry, that was what google turned up that seemed broad enough that it could be considered “tongue in cheek”. I waited until it was unlikely for others to see this.
There’s nothing I like more than belated links to whatever google turned up in my comments.
The traditional means for clearing streets is tear gas, but they are denied that by courts and the city council. The only tool they had left was brute force and that is always a recipe for disaster. They were set up for just such a situation and should have quit long ago.
Portland, Seattle and other cities are getting to the point that the cops will assemble, then just back off and let the mobs do as they will. I think Portland’s mayor already sees this coming as he has asked the Governor for State Police and National Guard help.
I’m just not sure how those cities restore an equilibrium.