Cop Block: Cops May Do Bad Things, But Are White Guys Filming Them Worse?

Cleveland Scene magazine
has a long profile of Cop Block
, a national organization
founded by libertarians from, surprise, New Hampshire dedicated to
citizen observation and if possible prevention of police abuse and
brutality.

While spending part of the article detailing how incredibly
important it often proves to be to have a citizen video record to
expose police lies, especially when it comes to their use of often
fatal force, the author still seems dedicated to finding something
weird and untoward about Cop Block. (Readers of Hit and Run are
all too familiar
with such stories
 of bad police behavior.)

He does note that Cop Block founder Pete Eyre:

speaks fluidly and subtly drops dismissive language about cops
into the conversation with ease. They aren’t police officers,
they’re police employees. The police don’t wear uniforms, they wear
costumes. A person isn’t sent to prison, they’re put in a cage.

But then author Doug Brown has to note that, hey, Cop Block
seems to be made up of “pissed off suburban white men.” This is
not meant to show how much credibility they have.

Yet later he notes:

During a trip to Austin for the Peaceful Streets “Accountability
Summit”, the Sandusky [Cop Block] group met with Bobby Seale, the
co-founder of the Black Panthers. “He’s talking to us and he said
‘you know, we walked around with those rifles not to defend
ourselves, but so the cops would know who we were. It would put
them on edge and make them do their job right,'” Gold says.
“[Seale] said, ‘The phones you carry around with you today are so
much more powerful than those rifles we were walking around with
back in the day.'”

Indeed, and it’s probably far safer for a citizen filming a cop
to be a “suburban white man,” other things being equal, when it
comes to considering how an officer is likely to treat the filming
citizen.

The rest of the story is dedicated to describing a night
out with Cop Blockers meant to make them seem like laughable
ninnies, dissed by hot chicks, their foolishness tolerated by
beleagured innocent cops, and making flailing nuisances of
themselves as cops come by to do their real, important duty when
someone is hurt.

It’s a shabby performance, but at least open-minded
readers of the full story will be reminded that the general mission
of keeping a citizens’ eye on cops as they do their work can be a
matter of life-or-death justice.

Reason on
Cop Block
.

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