I'm going to start by saying, yes this is in response to the Eric Garner/Michael Brown case, but that isn't the topic. Not going there.
The question is, how do you deal with the ingrained biases inherent in the Grand Jury system specifically with regards to police officers.
http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/f...darren-wilson/
I had three thoughts that sprung to mind tonight.
My thought is, if the system is busted then you modify the system. The thing right now is, because some of it has been written by judicial fiat in the Supreme Court (hence the need for laws) and the natural biases are the result of organization, the system is actually working as designed. So if we don't like the results, yea we can yell about it but I'd be curious how many citizens will actually work on the local and federal levels to fix it. Essentially this is legislative issue, and we've gotten really bad at actually doing anything about those.
The question is, how do you deal with the ingrained biases inherent in the Grand Jury system specifically with regards to police officers.
http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/f...darren-wilson/
I had three thoughts that sprung to mind tonight.
- Completely remove internal affairs from police jurisdiction
- Have a seperate elected official responsible for prosecution of police officers that is not encumbered with depending on the police for their job
- If necessary, create or modify federal laws to govern the prosecution of police officers
My thought is, if the system is busted then you modify the system. The thing right now is, because some of it has been written by judicial fiat in the Supreme Court (hence the need for laws) and the natural biases are the result of organization, the system is actually working as designed. So if we don't like the results, yea we can yell about it but I'd be curious how many citizens will actually work on the local and federal levels to fix it. Essentially this is legislative issue, and we've gotten really bad at actually doing anything about those.
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