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Some justice! Some peace!

4 min read
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Derek Chauvin is guilty.

As guilty as sin.

Many of us suspected that before he went on trial.

But, of course, he was entitled to a fair trial.

Nothing short of a Perry Mason ending would have changed the outcome.

Perry Mason never showed up!

Instead, ChauvinĢƵ defense counsel had the unenviable task of trying to make people forget the image they’ve seen hundreds of times since last May – that of a white cop slowly squeezing the life out of a Black man.

ChauvinĢƵ cruel, dead-eyed nonchalance was on full display.

A nine-minute, 29-second videotaped murder did him in.

There was never any guarantee that a jury would interpret that murder as the murder it really was.

America has a tarnished history of juries failing to convict white cops who’ve manhandled Black suspects.

On March 3, 1991 (30 long years, one month and 17 days ago) another Black victim was brutally beaten on the streets of Los Angeles.

There was a videotape of that incident, too.

Ironically, it was just seven seconds short of the one that showed Derek Chauvin murdering George Floyd – 9:20.

The brutal beating of Rodney King made international news.

Rightly so.

King had been beaten with a nightstick, punched and kicked by four L.A. cops as many as 56 times, while a civilian caught the entire, sordid thing on camera.

The real shock came a few months later when a jury failed to convict any of those cops.

The shadow of that Rodney King case hung precariously over Minneapolis during the Chauvin trial.

Supposing with all of the visual evidence, the jury would have still felt that the victim deserved to be a victim?

ThatĢƵ not what happened this time, though.

After just over 10 hours of deliberations, the jury signaled it had a verdict.

It only took the judge a little over five minutes to read the three guilty verdicts and to send Chauvin off to prison.

This outcome won’t completely change the racial inequities in this nationĢƵ legal system.

A lot more has to be done in that area.

But I do caution those spirited young liberals in Congress not to continue with that “defund the police” nonsense.

Or, as Rep. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan recently said, “no more policing, incarceration, and militarization.”

Sorry, but I’ve seen “no more policing” up close.

ItĢƵ frightening.

Nobody wants to experience that.

HereĢƵ why.

I was a young reporter, working for the NBC-owned television station in Cleveland in June 1978.

ClevelandĢƵ “Boy Mayor,” Dennis Kucinich, had directly challenged the authority of the cityĢƵ police union.

The union refused to budge.

A weeklong confrontation followed.

After five days, it came to a head.

I was at Cleveland City Hall that Thursday night at 11 o’clock when Kucinich publicly made good on his promise to fire 13 officers who refused to carry out one of his orders.

Cleveland was immediately thrown into chaos.

The entire police force went on strike. Two thousand men and women simply walked off their jobs.

Within minutes of KucinichĢƵ order, I had to walk the two blocks from City Hall to my TV station (WKYC-TV), so that I could continue to cover what had become a national news story.

As I walked, I saw scenes that I thought I’d never see in America.

With no police on duty throughout the entire city, hooligans struck – and they struck hard.

I witnessed people being pulled from their cars and all manner of lawlessness within minutes of KucinichĢƵ order.

To me, that stands as a direct repudiation of Rep. TlaibĢƵ call for “no more policing, incarceration, and militarization.”

That, to me, is foolishness.

What I saw in Cleveland, Ohio, for the 48 hours in which that strike lasted was a stark example of what could happen if thereĢƵ nobody available to keep law-abiding citizens safe from lawbreakers.

We need those people.

We should be able to depend on them.

We just can’t allow them to act as judges and juries while we depend on them.

Edward A. Owens is a multi-Emmy Award winner, former reporter, and anchor for Entertainment Tonight, and 40-year TV news and newspaper veteran. E-mail him at freedoms@bellatlantic.net.

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