Indeed, police leaders can also undermine a cop’s presumption of innocence. When they do, unexpected consequences can result.
In 2008, Lt. Michael Pigott ordered an officer to Taser Iman Morales, an emotionally disturbed man perched on the ledge of a Bedford-Stuyvesant building. While holding an eight-foot fluorescent lightbulb, Morales menaced the cop who was trying to rescue him.
After Pigott ordered his officer to fire the Taser, Morales fell to the pavement and died, his awful end filmed by witnesses and shown repeatedly on TV. Pigott took full responsibility for Morales’s death and publicly apologized to Morales’s family.
Nonetheless, then-Police Commissioner Ray Kelly stripped Pigott of his badge and gun, placed him on modified duty and had him warned that he faced jail time. Eight days later, Pigott committed suicide with a gunshot to his head. His suicide note, which he left alongside pictures of his three children, said he didn’t want his family seeing him behind bars.
A former top police official who asked for anonymity to speak about the Garner case said the rhetoric by Paterson and Jeffries “raises expectations for an indictment of Pantaleo and subsequent charges of racism if there is none. It’s an attempt to bully the Staten Island district attorney, Dan Donovan.”
At the same time, both Sharpton and Jeffries [together with four other black city Congressmen] have called on the feds to take the Garner case from Donovan, saying he may fear to indict because many police officers live in Staten Island.
There have been similar calls in Missouri for taking the Brown case from St. Louis District Attorney Robert McCulloch, saying he cannot objectively prosecute Wilson because as a boy, his own father, a policemen, was fatally shot by a black man.
“People think the more you demonstrate, the more chances you have of getting a federal prosecution,” Siegel said. “But federal cases are difficult to make. You have to show intent and willfulness and the connection to race in a cop’s actions and that is hard to prove.
“In the old days in the deep South, mobs of whites used to march on courthouses to pressure juries into convictions. That’s why I never demonstrate in front of courthouses,” he added.
“Political leaders must be patient and disciplined. If they act for political reasons, that’s when we get in trouble.”