Inside Story America

US policing: Institutionalising brutality?

In the wake of the killing of an unarmed man in California, we ask if US policing is becoming increasingly militarised.

Extreme police tactics are not a new phenomenon in the US. But in the age of social media, police violence, such as the shooting of unarmed people and the use of pepper spray and taser guns, are being documented for the world to see.

“We obtained video showing that in the immediate aftermath of Diaz’s shooting, he was there lying on the ground twitching. The police department did nothing for three minutes, instead they were more interested in trying to shoo away onlookers … blocking people from documenting what was going on …. Unfortunately shootings are going to happen but when you’re so cavalier about them, people are going to get upset.

– Gustavo Arellano, the editor of the OC Weekly

Occupy protesters throughout the country felt the full force of police tactics – many were subject to violent arrest.

Perhaps the most controversial example was at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis) where peaceful protesters were pepper sprayed last November.

It is more than 20 years since a recording of police violence sparked riots in Los Angeles. The beating of Rodney King was caught on video and the footage shocked the world.

But two decades later how much has changed?

On Saturday, police in the Californian city of Anaheim shot and killed Manuel Diaz, an unarmed man who they said was running from them, hitting him in the leg and the back of the head.

Police said he and another young man shot dead the following day were both gang members. But local residents say the Latino men were victims of racial profiling and an overly aggressive police force.

The community reacted furiously and on Tuesday night, when protesters attempted to attend a city council meeting, they were barred from entering city hall by police who said the meeting room was full.

“Racial profiling is real. People are treated differently in a criminal justice system. So when you look at a group of people and you criminalise them by saying this is a neighbourhood with a lot of crime, it’s a high crime area, this is an area with a lot of drug dealers, these people are gang members, it dehumanises them and it makes them fair targets in a lot of ways.

– Jumana Musa, a human rights lawyer

The protesters reacted by throwing rocks and bottles at the police and setting fire to bins. Hundreds of police in riot gear responded by firing non-lethal rounds at the crowd. At least six people were injured and police made two dozen arrests.

The clashes between protesters and police have now gone on for several days and nights. In one incident, police fired rubber bullets at near point blank range and police dogs attacked protesters. Mobile phone footage of the incident went viral, attracting nationwide attention.

Anaheim’s mayor says federal officials have agreed to investigate the shootings. But the city, where there have been six fatal police shootings this year, is now being compared to a powder keg.

So is policing in the US becoming increasingly militarised?

To discuss this, Inside Story Americas, with presenter Shihab Rattansi, is joined by guests: Jumana Musa, a human rights lawyer who is deputy director of the Rights Working Group; Gustavo Arellano, the editor of the OC Weekly, a newspaper that has been covering the shootings; and Raymond Lewis, a retired Philadelphia police captain who was arrested by New York police while taking part in the Occupy Wall Street protests last year.

“I’ve lived in this community my whole life and it’s sad when you have to be scared for your kids to go outside.”

Louisa Sanchez, a protester