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Court orders reinstatment of Boston cop after arbitrator determined he used justifiable force in arresting an angry drunk man

The Supreme Judicial Court today ordered the reinstatement of a Boston cop the city fired for the way he used a choke hold to help restrain a man angry over a traffic incident in the North End in 2009 - in a ruling that also castigates the city for taking its sweet time to investigate the matter.

The ruling by the state's highest court means that, barring an appeal to federal court, Officer David Williams will get his job back - and the city will still be out the $1.4 million it paid the man to settle his federal lawsuit.

At issue was an incident in which the man and two friends, after spending St. Patrick's Day in bars, tried to move one of their cars from its spot on a North End street to avoid a ticket the next day - only to hit a double-parked car. The three grew angry and called the cops. The man began yelling at one of the cops, who tried to arrest him but was unable to get both his wrists cuffed. His partner, Williams came over, got the man on the ground and applied a choke hold as the man was cuffed.

The city fired Williams, charging he used excessive force and then lied by saying he didn't. The Boston Police Patrolmen's Association appealed to an arbitrator - who ruled that, in fact, Williams did not use excessive force to restrain an angry, drunk man in the process of arrest and so he didn't lie about excessive force and deserved his job back. Among the arbitrator's findings: The man was not actually choked during the time he was pinned to the ground, and that

The city then appealed, arguing, in part, that "public policy," in this case, its right to fire an officer for cause, trumped his right to arbitration under a union contract.

In some cases, yes, the court countered, but not here, because the arbitrator ruled there was no evidence of wrongdoing:

Because the arbitrator found that Williams used reasonable force and was not untruthful in subsequent investigations, the award reinstating him must be upheld.

The court then continued, however, that if the city is concerned about officers applying risky and potentially fatal choke holds, it should develop specific language proscribing their use - current police regulations refer to excessive force, but not choke holds specifically:

Today's decision should not be read to view the city -- and more importantly, the citizens of Boston -- as without remedy moving forward. First, it is incumbent on the city to clarify its own policies with respect to excessive force and specifically choke holds if it does not wish in the future to relinquish interpretive control of that term. ...

If anything, it is the unpredictable dangerousness of choke holds that warns against their use at all. Indeed, it is untenable to assert both that choke holds are so potentially dangerous that reinstating officers who use them violates public policy and that the commissioner retains the discretion to determine whether a choke hold is excessive force in any given case. As discussed supra, it is because choke holds are unpredictably lethal that both officers and the public deserve a bright-line rule.

But in that case, the court added, the city needs to investigate accusations of excessive force promptly:

Second, the city must investigate allegations of excessive force with substantially more alacrity than was evidenced here. Pursuant to its own existing rules,11 the department owes a duty, both to the public and to its own officers, to investigate allegations of excessive force thoroughly and promptly. As with the tension between a choke hold's dangerousness and the commissioner's desire to retain discretionary review of their use, it is difficult to reconcile the department's position that an officer's use of a choke hold requires termination with its protracted inaction in this case.

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Comments

Maybe this would be a good time to remind people the they do NOT have the right to resist arrest. Ever.

Whether or not you did something wrong, don't resist. On the streets isn't the time to start your defense.

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Maybe this would be a good time to remind people the they do NOT have the right to resist arrest. Ever.

Suppose you come home to find two armed, uniformed police officers just finishing up forcibly raping your six year old daughter, and one has a knife out and appears to be about to slit her throat. The other says, "Stay back or I'll arrest you."

Are you seriously going to suggest that the right course of action is to comply, and then take it up with Internal Affairs on Monday?

Don't make blanket statements. They are invariably wrong at the edges.

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I think you could have come up with a better example to back your position than the 6 year old rape scenario. I was waiting for some lesbian nazi zombies to enter your scenario before you cut it short.

In fact, the resisting arrest statute has some case low on exactly what you are thinking about.

The Commonwealth correctly points out that in instances
involving either lawful or unlawful arrest by law enforcement officers, a defendant is not privileged to use force to resist arrest in the absence of excessive force by the arresting officer. See Commonwealth v. Moreira, 388 Mass. 596 , 601 (1983). In Moreira, which involved a conviction for resisting arrest, the court said that "where the officer uses excessive or unnecessary force to subdue the arrestee, regardless of whether the arrest is lawful or unlawful, the arrestee may defend himself by employing such force as reasonably appears to be necessary." Ibid. The question whether the police officer used excessive force and the related question, whether the defendant used reasonable force to defend himself, are questions of fact for a jury to decide, with proper instruction from the trial judge. Id. at 602.

Comm. v. Graham and Comm v. Monico are the two big cases where people are allowed to "resist" if officers use force against them, the above reference is to Graham, where a guy who broke into a house and hid under a girls beat was beaten by police and he attempted to escape.

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Given the case law you cited, I don't think we're in disagreement, are we?

My point being that blanket statements such as the one anon made tend to be wrong.

As for Pluto, I'd suggest that you wouldn't need to go that far; that you could find the edges in Milwaukee , Georgia, Washington, or Milwaukee again

I'm on record here saying that I believe the overwhelming majority of police officers are sincerely motivated law enforcement professionals with the public's best interest deeply at heart. But please don't pretend that the incidence of bad guys is somehow, magically, lower among America's one million sworn law enforcement officers than it is among any other group of a million people.

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But there are exceptions to pretty much every law. I was just pointing out that you don't need such an extreme example to prove your point. You used a hypothetical situation that is probably never going to happen.

(and I don't mean that cops can't rape people, I would bet right now there is some cop in the country masturbating to Mexican goat porn, but no court is going to be discussing the resisting arrest charge when the goats farmer walks in on that cop and gets offended and resists the cop who wants to place him under arrest)

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That's a f@$%ed up scenario you came up with there, Bob.

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Blanket statements piss me off. I chose a vivid scenario to make a point, but not one that is outside the realm of real-life experience.

Do you think that people who are employed as police officers, as compared to the public at large, are

  • A: More likely to be violent criminals?
  • B: Less likely to be violent criminals?
  • C: About as likely to be violent criminals?

I think the answer is B, by a little, but with a million police officers in the country, that still leaves room for a couple hundred or a thousand or two real, actual, sociopathic devils. It's insane to pretend otherwise.

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Cops never do things like that. You've just got a dirty mind.

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Raping a six year old?

You're disgusting.

Please don't ever become a cop.

Actually, don't ever go out in public please.

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What, exactly, is your complaint?

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That was weird.

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nt

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Practically speaking, would this person want his job back? I mean there are a million different ways to fire him again by coming up with new rules violations, giving him acceptable but undesirable assignments, etc.

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according to the BG article.

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So this cop, Officer Williams, choked a guy and cost taxpayers 1.4 million. But thats not it! Williams had previously been fired for his role in the 1995 beating of a plainclothes officer, Michael Cox, after police mistook him for a homicide suspect. An arbitrator determined that Williams was wrongfully dismissed and reinstated him with nearly $500,000 in back pay in 2005.

Cox, now a deputy police superintendent, sued the city for civil rights violations and won $877,000. He sued Williams after he was reinstated and reached an out-of-court settlement with him.

So by my account Williams has cost the taxpayers of Boston almost $3,000,000. What a crook. If cops want people to stop hating them then they should stop stealing from taxpayers and stop shooting unarmed(mostly black) people and just stop generally sucking at their job that they are compensated well to do. And if a cop is "one of the good ones" then stop standing up for these crooks and killers. You are guilty by association when you align yourself with these criminals.

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Care to back that up?

It is people like you who make things up to fit your agenda that cost everyone money. You need to stop before innocent people get hurt or I have to pay for your nonsense (whatever you do).

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If cops want people to stop hating them then they should stop stealing from taxpayers and stop shooting unarmed

Don't ask the infinitesimally small minority of cops who are bad guys to change their stripes. Ask the overwhelming majority of cops who are dedicated, professional, public-serving good guys to quit protecting the bad guys in their midst.

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Officer Williams is black.

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The department fired him for "excessive force."

The court found that the department lacked a clear definition of "excessive force," and that an arbitrator found that excessive force was not used.

Officer Williams, if you believe the history presented here, is a bad guy. But the court's job is not to decide who's a good guy and who's a bad guy, it's to apply the law. Sounds like the court did its job. Viewed transactionally, it's a bad outcome in that taxpayer money gets paid out to a bad guy, and a guy who has no business being on the police force gets reinstated. Viewed systemically, it's a good outcome, in that we reinforce the idea that we live under the rule of law.

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It looks like you wanted to put a quote after the 4th paragraph, since there is a hanging sentence at the end. Did you?

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Now maybe he can go back to doing his job, and the cop haters can go back to foaming at the mouth at anyone who wears a uniform.

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