This morning, I was greeted by the sickening news that the North Miami Beach Police Department (NMBPD) is using mug shots of black people and others for target practice. These are not cartoons or computer-generated mug shots—these
are photographs of real people, some of whom were arrested by the NMBPD
itself.
I was amazed, appalled, and terribly disappointed by this practice.
And if I was shocked, imagine the reaction of the Florida National Guard
Band member who arrived at the shooting range last month only to find
her brother’s 15-year-old mug shot, riddled with bullet holes, following
target practice by NMBPD officers.
In the aftermath of Ferguson, many of the lessons we’ve learned about what works and what doesn’t in law enforcement have been reinforced.
Among them is the importance of law enforcement working closely with
communities to build trust. We learned that communities of color far
too often view law enforcement officers as enforcers, not protectors, as
a result of policies and practices that unfairly treat them like
criminals.
We also know that valuing the lives of black people—and all people,
for that matter—is critical to establishing healthy, collaborative
relationships between law enforcement and the communities they serve.
But if the NMBPD truly believes that “black lives matter,” they have a
funny way of showing it.
This incident raises deep concern about whether the NMBPD understands
the full implications of this practice and the message this sends to
communities of color—especially since North Miami Beach Police Chief J.
Scott Dennis has shrugged off the incident, saying that policies were
not violated and that there is no discipline forthcoming for the
officers involved.
Good policing isn’t just about policies written on paper, it’s about
the relationship between law enforcement agencies and the communities
they are entrusted with protecting. Mutual trust and respect between
police and the communities they serve is critical for effective police
work.
In a world where the images that bombard us reinforce unconscious
racial biases, using the mug shots of black men for target practice
reinforces the power of hidden bias to influence police conduct and
perpetuate racialized policing. Whether policies were broken or not,
having officers train by shooting at images of real life people from the
community tells the community that the police see them as targets,
engendering fear and resentment, not trust.
taken from here
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