The Thoughts of a Frumpy Professor

............................................ ............................................ A blog devoted to the ramblings of a small town, middle aged college professor as he experiences life and all its strange variances.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

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Idiotic Behavior the Lesser of Two Evils

Many of us have seen the horrid video footage of Robert Davis being beaten by police officers in New Orleans. Mr. Davis, stepped outside of a resturant to smoke a cigarette and was attacked by police officers. You can hear an actual interview with Mr. Davis that was conducted by Ross Sneyd of the Associate Press here

Below is an article that FORTUNATELY suggests that Mr. Davis believes the attack was not racially motivated and it instead the idiotic behavior of a few police who have been under far too much stress following the disaster in New Orleans. I am glad to hear Mr. Davis does not believe racism was a motive, for it is so damn foolish, intollerable, and assinine for people to believe that the density of melanin pigment in epidermis of your integumentary system makes you distinctly different from others with different melanin levels. Pure stupidity... and not scientific at all.


Man Beaten in New Orleans Arrest Says Racism NOT An Issue


By Tom Vanden Brook, USA TODAY

NEW ORLEANS — Robert Davis, a retired black schoolteacher whose violent arrest by white New Orleans police officers was videotaped by news crews, believes the incident says more about post-Katrina chaos than it does about racism.

Robert Davis shows some of his scrapes Monday near the site where New Orleans police arrested him Saturday.
By Mel Evans, AP

"Some people want to make it a race thing," Davis said in an interview Tuesday. "I don't. That's demeaning to me."

Davis, 64, was to be in municipal court today to face charges of public intoxication and resisting arrest. The officers have pleaded not guilty to charges of simple battery. They were suspended without pay. The Justice Department is investigating whether Davis' civil rights were violated.

Davis said the officers should be fired. "They don't need to be on the force," he said. "It's not good for the city."

The city attorney and a spokesman for the police department did not return calls seeking comment on Tuesday.

Davis, who said he hasn't had a drink in 25 years, wants the charges dropped. His lawyer, Joseph Bruno, plans to seek a financial settlement. "He needs to be compensated, but that's not what this is all about." The issue, he said, is reforming the department "from the top to the bottom. Put some competent people in charge."

By and large, police have responded well to the devastation of Katrina, Bruno said. But a department that allows a "couple bad eggs" needs to be reformed, he said.

Saturday night's incident began when Davis left a restaurant in the city's French Quarter to smoke a cigarette, Davis said. He said he asked an officer about the city's curfew when he was interrupted by another. He said he was offended and told the officer so. That's when the scuffle, in which Davis was struck in the face and wrestled to the sidewalk by four officers, was captured by an Associated Press TV camera. Davis said his attire — shorts, T-shirt and sandals — might have been a factor. "This individual assumed I was one of the derelicts on Bourbon Street," he said.

Two officers have pleaded innocent to misdemeanor battery in Davis' beating. Their attorney has said Davis struck first.

The incident happened in one of the few parts of the city to survive Katrina relatively unscathed. Narrow, bawdy Bourbon Street is lined with bars, most of which have reopened. People may drink on the sidewalks if they use plastic cups. On Saturday night, Bourbon Street teemed with relief workers, soldiers and police officers.

"New Orleans is a place that has an open invitation to visitors," Bruno said. "And they should know that they're not putting themselves at risk when they come here."


Let us hope that people do not try to make this issue racial. Let us instead bring the parties responsible to the courts, put them through a trial and if found guilty (which seems likely), have these officers spend time in jail.

PipeTobacco

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