Blue Privilege isn't enough: Now cops want to be a "specially protected class." |
Makaela Zabael-Gravatt was
shot and nearly killed in her own backyard in Meridian, Idaho last September.
The man arrested in that attack, Christopher Wirfs, had
a violent criminal history. Prior to the attempted murder, Wirfs had spent
several weeks stalking and harassing his victim, on multiple occasions
explicitly threatening to shoot her.
Zabael-Gravatt twice requested, and was denied, an order of
protection against the man who eventually tried to kill her. Media inquiries about
those denials were deflected by the Meridian Police Department to the Ada
County Prosecutor’s Office, which simply refused to comment on the matter.
At the time, the Meridian PD and the Ada County DA were
preoccupied with a much more urgent matter than protecting a desperate,
frightened mother who faced an immediate threat on her life from a violent
criminal. They were sheltering a Meridian police officer whose feelings had
been hurt by a confrontational Facebook post.
In March of last year, the Ada County Prosecutor’s Office
requested, and immediately received, a
no-contact order banning Meridian resident Matthew Townsend from coming within
100 feet of the paling, timid creature known as Corporal Richard Brockbank of
the Meridian PD. Townsend had been arrested by Brockbank a few weeks
earlier without legal cause and justification.
On the eve of his preliminary hearing on a spurious charge
of “resisting and obstructing” (he was not under arrest, nor had a charge been
made against him, at the time of his supposed resistance), Townsend
published a brusque but inoffensive post on Facebook.
In that cyber-missive, Townsend said, in essence:
If, in defiance of all reasonable expectations, Officer
Brockbank testifies truthfully, the charge against me should be dismissed. If
this doesn’t happen, I will exercise my constitutionally protected right to
protest the abusive actions of the Meridian municipal government and its
agents, including Officer Brockbank.
When he showed up at the hearing the following day, Townsend
learned that the Meridian City Prosecutor intended to have him arrested on a
felony charge of “witness
intimidation.” District Judge James Cawthon, after
examining the Facebook post in question, concluded that Townsend’s statement
did not constitute a threat but offered the prosecution a chance to convince
him otherwise in a hearing scheduled to take place place eleven days later.
Illegally
defying Judge Cawthon’s court order, the Ada County Prosecutor’s office soughtan arrest warrant from another judge on the following day – carefully
withholding the fact that Cawthon had already made a finding of fact and had scheduled
an adversary proceeding on the matter. Townsend
was arrested late that night -- a Friday – and would have spent the weekend
in jail had his mother not arranged, on sacrificial terms, to pay his bond.
Overt threats: Wirfs in custody post-shooting. |
Unlike Wirfs, who made specific and repeated threats against
Mrs. Zabael-Gravatt, Townsend explicitly and repeatedly foreswore violent or
criminal behavior and never threatened anybody in any fashion. According
to domestic violence counselor Jeannie Strohmeyer, the likeliest
explanation for the denial of Zabael-Gravatt’s request for a protective order was
that there was no “domestic relationship” between her and the aggressor, and she
wasn’t able to cite an incident of physical harm – including “false
imprisonment.”
Ironically, while it is certainly true that Townsend was not
in a domestic relationship with Officer Brockbank, there was a history of violence
between them, specifically false imprisonment. In this case, however, it was
the perpetrator of the criminal
violence who immediately received an order of protection, owing entirely to his
privileged status under what we are supposed to pretend is the law.
In the service of the official fiction that Townsend’s
rhetoric victimized a member of the state’s punitive priesthood, Ada County
Deputy Prosecuting Attorney James
Vogt composed two motions that suppurate sophistry. In one, an objection to
a
defense motion to dismiss, Vogt
insisted that by criticizing Officer Brockbank on Facebook, Townsend had
committed an act directly comparable to a cross-burning carried out by the Ku
Klux Klan.
Vogt’s other exercise in Olympic-caliber dishonesty was an
objection to a defense Motion in Limine. Since Townsend’s statement was a
form of political dissent, that motion contended, it is protected by the First
Amendment and cannot be construed as a criminal act, so it shouldn’t even be
entered into evidence.
Proving that it is possible to simper in print, Vogt wrote
that Townsend’s statement that he was prepared to conduct non-violent, legal
protests in Brockbank’s neighborhood constituted a “true threat” – owing to the
alleged “war on police.” The fact that the post tagged several of the officer’s
family members (in addition to scores of other people – including your present correspondent
and every media outlet in the Treasure Valley) was artfully misrepresented as a
collateral threat to Brockbank’s family. Through the alchemy of Orwellian
inversion, Townsend’s acknowledgement that everything government does contains
an implied threat of lethal violence was repurposed into a supposed threat to
use violence against the State and
its agents.
“Given the current political/cultural climate, Mr. Townsend’s
message … [serves] as a real and true threat,” oozed
Vogt in his objection. “His words are more threatening in an era where
[sic] the police are under attack from civilians, battered, and killed in the
line of duty.”
That sample of special pleading was supplemented by a
footnote citing four news accounts of police being injured or killed. Two of
them described minor injuries suffered by officers in the course of their
not-exceptionally-dangerous jobs. Two others were high-profile stories of supposed
martyrs in the so-called “war on police”: Lt. Joe Gliniewicz
of Fox Lake, Illinois, and Deputy
Darren Goforth of Harris County, Texas. Both died as a result of what the
public was told were anti-police assassinations, and honored with the familiar
Soviet-grade state funeral and saturation media coverage.
Both of them, as it happens, were degenerate frauds.
Gliniewicz
committed suicide after embezzling from a Police Explorer unit he led – and
inquiring into the possibility of a contract hit on a local official who was
investigating the theft. His corruption and long record of abusive behavior
(including death threats against a civilian female employee of the department)
were well-known by the officers and administrators who presided over a funeral
that beatified him as a saintly defender of the public weal.
After Deputy
Goforth was gunned down by a mentally ill man at a gas station last August 28,
Harris County Sheriff Ron Hickman – speaking without a particle of evidence to
sustain his conclusions – blamed the crime on critics of law enforcement: “This
rhetoric has gotten out of control, to the point where calculated, cold-blooded
assassination of police officers happens.”
Shannon Miles, the thirty-one-year-old African-American man
who shot Deputy Goforth fifteen times, has been repeatedly hospitalized for severe
mental illness. His derangement is so severe that his defense attorneys cannot
hold a coherent conversation with him. The only “rhetoric” that played a role
in his eruption of criminal violence would be the voices in his head, not any
he may have heard in the media.
Just as importantly, Deputy
Goforth wasn’t engaged in official duties when he was fatally shot: He was
en route to a motel with his mistress, a “Badge Bunny” who had been used as a
pass-around toy by at least three members of the Harris County Sheriff’s
Office. Goforth found himself in the path of Miles’s lethal derangement because
he was in the wrong place, at the wrong time, in the wrong company, with the
wrong intentions. He wasn’t upholding the law, but engaged in the ongoing
betrayal of his wife and children.
Granted, the details about those cases weren’t widely known
when Vogt cited them in his motion. If they had been, the truth wouldn’t have
mattered. In its persecution of Matthew Townsend, the
Ada County Prosecutor’s Office has proven itself an infinitely self-replenishing
Artesian well of falsehoods. They know that the case is without merit, and
that if they are able (with the eager
help of a deeply prejudiced trial judge) to wring a conviction out of a
jury, their victory wouldn’t survive an appeal. Their strategy, from the moment
this case began, was the same as that of every other prosecutor in our increasingly
Sovietesque system: Extort a plea bargain in order to inflict punishment
without winning the case on its merits.
Whatever the disposition of the Matthew Townsend Case, the
Fraternal Order of Police is
lobbying for legislation that would make it a federal hate crime for a citizen
to violate the emotional “safe space” of one of his uniformed overseers.
An
FOP-supported bill in Maryland that would likely serve as a model for federal
legislation would make resisting arrest a “hate crime” owing to the identity of
the supposed victim. State legislatures elsewhere are considering similar
measures, and
some municipal governments
are enacting resolutions
endorsing the FOP’s demand to swaddle police officers in federal “specially
protected” status.
In
a letter to President Obama, Chuck Canterbury, National President of the
armed tax-feeders’ union, demanded that “the current Federal hate crimes law be expanded to
include law enforcement officers. This call has gone unanswered and our
nation’s law enforcement officers continue to die in the streets.”
Canterbury, like most in his chosen profession, thrives in a
falsehood-rich environment, so his lie of omission – namely, that on-duty
violent deaths of police officers were down in 2015 – was predictable, but duly
noted for the record nonetheless.
Apparently without giving thought to what it says about the
supposed valor of police officers, Canterbury demanded that cops be designated
a “specially protected” group who are “hunted and targeted just because of the
uniform they wear.”
Canterbury’s tales of insurgent criminals and intimidated
cops segued into a demand that “hate speech” be treated as a federal offense.
“Elected officials are quick to console the families of the
fallen and praise us for the difficult and dangerous work that we do every day,”
sniffles the FOP commissar. “Yet, too many are silent when the hate speech
floods the media with calls for violence against police or demands that police
stand down and give them” – Canterbury never defines “them,” interestingly – “`room
to destroy.’ The violence will not end until
the rhetoric does which is why I have called on Congress and your
Administration to work with us to address the surge of violence against police
by expanding the Federal hate crimes law to protect police.” (Emphasis added.)
The objective here, once again, is to penalize rhetoric as a criminal act against a
member of a specially protected class. Ada County’s depraved, vindictive pursuit of
Matthew Townsend demonstrates that this is possible even without the benefit of
federal legislation. The “war on cops” is a malignant fiction, but the Matthew
Townsend case is one of
many portents of a national war
by the police against their critics.
Video Extra: The Ballad of Corporal Richard Brockbank
This week's Freedom Zealot Podcast examines what happens when the local police become social justice warriors:
Dum spiro, pugno!
This week's Freedom Zealot Podcast examines what happens when the local police become social justice warriors:
Dum spiro, pugno!
Canterbury's tales....that was funny.
ReplyDeletefrenchy
"...the emotional “safe space” of one of his uniformed overseers."
ReplyDeletei don't even understand what that means and they want it to be a crime?
soon, it will be cheaper to print a book listing what is NOT a crime, since, or at least it seems, virtually EVERYTHING today is a 'crime'.
printing the shorter list of 'allowables' would be much cheaper.
"Cop" is most definitely a mental disorder of these inhuman animals.
ReplyDelete