Tags
#BlackLivesMatter, Civil Rights, Daniel Pantaleo, Darren Wilson, Eric Garner, Grand Jury, Human Rights, Indictment, Interviewing, John Crawford, Jonathan Ferrell, Jordan Davis, Journalism, Media, Michael Brown, Murder, No Charges, NYPD, Police Brutality, Qualitative Research, Renisha McBride, Tamir Rice, Trayvon Martin, White Vigilantism

Dumb-assed George Stephanopoulos of ABC News interviewing Michael Brown murderer, former Officer Darren Wilson, November 25, 2014. (http://abcnews.go.com).
I think it would be interesting if I applied my qualitative research skills and did a sociohistorical study of the killer cops and White vigilantes who’ve gotten away or almost gotten away with murdering African Americans over the past few years. We know so much about Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Renisha McBride, Jordan Davis, Tamir Rice, John Crawford and Jonathan Ferrell, including their arrest records, their blood-alcohol levels, their drug use, even their family members’ criminal records, if any. The media always performs a pseudo-social science-y qualitative research study on Black and Latino victims and their families and friends, in search for the perfect victim, someone to justify the outrage and anguish over state-sanctioned, cold-blooded murder.
It’s time to flip the script. I’d conduct a group interview process, bringing in the cabal of murderers, alleged and convicted, for a two-hour-long sit down. I’d ask questions about their upbringing, about the influence of popular culture in their lives, about facing down dangerous criminals carrying cigarettes, Skittles and broken toy guns. Only, my overeducated Black ass wouldn’t make it to my first question. I’d get choke-held or shot the moment I’d reach in my book bag for my digital tape recorder, even if we were conducting the interview in a public place, like the Children’s Room at New York Public Library on West 41st and Fifth Avenue. So I’d have to find one of my privileged White colleagues to interview these men on my behalf.
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Overseer Daniel Pantaleo, 2014. (http://nydailynews.com).
Narrator: Today we have George Zimmerman, Daniel Pantaleo, Darren Wilson, Theodore Wafer, Michael Dunn, Tim Loehmann, David Darkow, Sean Williams and Randall Kerrick here to talk about what it takes to be a White man fighting hard to protect the world from unarmed African Americans.
Pantaleo: Shut da [expletive] up, dumb ass! Where’d ya earn that PhD, Harlem?
Dunn: Yeah, that’s telling him! I respect the law, too. Even if it has me in chains.
Narrator: Okay, everyone. We’re taping here, so wait for me to ask my questions, please.
Loehmann: I’ll give you two seconds to ask your questions. After that, I’m not promising you anything.
Narrator: My first question is about your backgrounds. Can any of you tell me how your background impacted your decision to become either a police officer or vigilante?
Wafer: I’m deeply offended by the idea that you’re calling me a vigilante. I was defending myself. I live in a bad neighborhood. I mean, who bangs on my [expletive] door at three in the morning? You come to my door that late at night, I put you in a body bag!
Zimmerman: Dude, I couldn’t agree with you more. But I wouldn’t wait. I’d hunt these assholes down first!
(Laughter rises up from group)
Darkow: I’m feeling you there, dude!
Wilson: You asked about our background. I grew up as part of a hunting and fishing family. My old man took us out to take down elk and deer every year. It made me a good shot. I could shoot a doe in the head from fifty yards away.
(Group breaks out in laughter again)
Narrator: So, Mr. Wilson, are you saying that when you shot at Michael Brown, you saw him the same way you see a young female deer?
Wilson: Uh, absolutely not. As I said in my report, the perp was like Donkey Kong, like Hulk Hogan, angry, unresponsive and dangerous, more like a giant bear than a doe.
Pantaleo: Man, it’s all right to say it, because I’m thinking it, too. These [expletive] n—-s are dangerous — they all need to be put down!
Narrator: Why’s that, Mr. Pantaleo? Would you say–
Williams: Will you listen to this egghead? Questioning how we do our jobs. Like that guy in Godfather said, n—-s are animals! We have to control them, so that they only destroy themselves!
(Dunn and Wafer raise their hands to show their handcuffs)
Zimmerman (to Dunn and Wafer): Y’all were just stupid enough to get caught snorting and drinking after you defended yourselves!
(Group breaks out in laughter again)
Narrator: Mr. Pantaleo, what about your background?
Pantaleo: The best training I had for the NYPD was from Tarzan and Wild Kingdom. I learned my hand-to-hand fighting skills from them. Also, WWE prepared me good, too.
Narrator: So, when you put Eric Garner in a choke-hold—
Pantaleo: It was like taking down a bull or buffalo! My heart was pumping so hard, I could feel the blood flowing inside my head! That fool should had just fallen to the ground so I could cuff his Black ass!
Wilson: And that’s what these suspects don’t get. When they see us coming, don’t walk, don’t run, don’t grab for anything, don’t hold your hands up. Lay down like you’re dead, and we won’t have to put you down.
Narrator: Mr. Kerrick, you haven’t joined the conversation yet. Do you have anything to add?
Kerrick: Just that my case is still pending. I can’t talk about it much.
Narrator: You shot and killed Jonathan Ferrell, correct?
Kerrick: I can’t talk about that. I–
Zimmerman: Dude, you got a raw deal!
Pantaleo: You should work for the NYPD. Police never get indicted for going hunting here!
(Group breaks out in laughter again)
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Bryan Cranston as Walter White, Breaking Bad, Season 4, 2013, “I am the danger!” (not the only White as danger, either). (http://www.giphy.com).
On second thought, maybe we don’t need to apply social science thinking to these White men (in thought, if not entirely in genetics). We have a century’s worth of studies of White supremacy and systemic racism already, showing that vile men grow out of a vile system.