This HuffPost Canada page is maintained as part of an online archive.

Baton Rouge Proves Policing And Racial Attitudes Must Change

Police departments across the U.S. need to be radically changed. Brutally racist officers, often working in teams, thrive in too many departments. A massive effort is required to weed out as many racists as possible and rehabilitate those capable of changing.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

A police officer blocks off Airline Highway near the scene of a fatal shooting of police officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States, July 17, 2016. (Photo: REUTERS/Joe Penney)

On Sunday July 17, his birthday, a black man, former highly-regarded U.S. Marine Gavin Long, shot and killed three Baton Rouge police officers and injured three others.

The murders, following the killing of five officers in Dallas, also by a black man, increased racial tensions and hatred in the United States beyond the crisis level of the 1960s, when black people were attacked and beaten across the South during their fight for civil rights.

Gavin Long's attack on Baton Rouge police was calculated and brutal. Nevertheless, an analysis of Long's actions and the response of the Baton Rouge police reveal the failure and poor procedures of the policing system that almost certainly exist in many American communities.

Had police acted differently and if policing techniques were more sophisticated in Baton Rouge, fewer police might have been killed -- or the deadly confrontation might not have occurred at all.

The militarization of local police forces across the U.S. made Gavin Long, and no doubt many like him, fear and mistrust police. Many police departments now behave more like a military force, sometimes abusing people rather than acting like a community service with the goal of protecting all citizens.

Long lived in Kansas City. On July 5, he heard that a black man, Alton Sterling, had been killed in Baton Rouge for no good reason.

While Long was planning his assassination trip to Baton Rouge, others had the same idea.

On July 11, police arrested three teenagers accused of stealing several handguns as part of what police called a 'substantial, credible threat' to harm police officers in the Baton Rouge area.

On July 12, Long rented a car in Kansas City and drove to Baton Rouge.

Gavin Long was a well-trained marksman and military expert. He was more than well equipped with an IWI Tavor SAR 5.56 calibre rifle, a Stag Arms M4 variant 5.56 caliber rifle, a pistol and enough bullets to wreak havoc.

Police moved in too quickly

But how much did police know about what they were walking into?

Someone reported to police they had seen a suspicious man with a weapon.

Knowing there was a man on the street with a weapon -- and in view of the fact police had killed Alton Sterling just days before -- should have warned them to proceeded with great caution. But they did not.

After an officer yelled "Man down!" over his phone system, perhaps as many as eight or nine officers raced in a disorganized manner to the scene of the shooting.

Police couldn't tell where the shots were coming from. For several hours -- just like in Dallas -- they thought there were three shooters. Total chaos ensued.

Meanwhile, Long shot five more officers. When he was caught, he apparently had thrown away his weapons. Two policemen pinned him to the ground and then shot him six times. The officers were placed on temporary leave.

Earlier, when the call came in about a man with a gun, it's easy to understand they wanted to help a fellow officer. But, viewed in hindsight, it was foolish for a swarm of police to rush into an open area when they have no idea what they were up against.

Police clearly bungled the situation. If they had behaved differently, lives likely could have been saved.

If they were following "proper procedures," changes are needed. At a minimum, officers need to use common sense and stay as hidden as possible until they know what's happening around them.

Police used a robot to determine if there were explosives at the scene. Perhaps a robot could have helped identify the location of the shooter, and perhaps could have even been ordered remotely to fire on the shooter.

When the U.S. military uses sophisticated equipment such as drones to avoid casualties, why are local police departments still operating as though it's the 1950s?

Identifying dangerous people

Baton Rouge police and other police across the U.S. don't do nearly enough to identify potential mass murderers ahead of time.

The U.S. spends more than $16-billion a year on counter-terrorism, mainly monitoring and investigating the Muslim community. But of the 26 major attacks since 9-11 defined as terror, Muslims carried out only seven.

The FBI has stepped up efforts to identify terrorists (i.e. radical Muslims) using social media, but apparently there are few co-ordinated efforts to search out radicals and malcontents.

One way to spot dangerous people is obviously easy: Monitor Facebook and YouTube. Some mass murderers like to publicize their plans before they go into action.

On July 10 -- one week before shooting the six officers in Baton Rouge police -- Long posted videos on YouTube advocating revolution and telling people to attack their oppressors. He used the pseudonym Cosmo Setepenra.

Hinting at what was to come, Long posted he would rather die fighting instead of coming back alive.

Micha Johnson, who shot and killed five policemen in Dallas earlier this month, discussed his plans ahead of time on social media.

If security forces had been adequately monitoring social media they might have known that both Long and Johnson were serious threats.

The crisis of police racism

Police departments across the U.S. need to be radically changed. Brutally racist officers, often working in teams, thrive in too many departments. American police killed 1,134 black people in 2015, the highest number ever.

A massive effort is required to weed out as many racists as possible and rehabilitate those capable of changing. In addition, before people are recruited to forces, they need to be tested to make sure they do not have racist tendencies. These tasks must be taken on by local governing councils, and if they refuse to do the job -- just like many jurisdictions in the 1960s -- the federal government needs to step in.

Incidentally, I scanned U.S. mainstream media to find out if any paper or TV network has concerns about whether police did their job adequately in Baton Rouge and Dallas. Not a word. When such horrendous events occur, mass media totally sympathize with the police.

This too needs to change.

Follow HuffPost Canada Blogs on Facebook

MORE ON HUFFPOST:

Dallas Police Officers Shot During Black Lives Matter Protest

Close
This HuffPost Canada page is maintained as part of an online archive. If you have questions or concerns, please check our FAQ or contact support@huffpost.com.