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BART Shooting Draws Rodney King Case Parallels
OAKLAND - To an outraged public that watched an amateur video of the scene, it looked like an open-and-shut case of police brutality.
Demonstrators gather in Oakland, Calif., to denounce the shooting of Oscar Grant on Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2009. Several thousand people rallied against the killing of Grant, an unarmed 22-year-old who was shot by BART police on New Year's Day. (AP Photo/Noah Berger) But after lawyers for four white Los Angeles police officers dissected the video footage and told jurors to put themselves in the shoes of officers under stress, a jury delivered not-guilty verdicts in the 1991 beating of black motorist Rodney King. After six days of riots and 54 deaths, federal prosecutors filed civil rights charges and won convictions against two of the officers.
The King case becomes a cautionary tale for prosecutors now that Alameda County District Attorney Tom Orloff has filed murder charges against Johannes Mehserle, 27, the former BART police officer who fatally shot an unarmed and prostrate Oscar Grant at the Fruitvale Station in Oakland early New Year's Day.
As in the King case, the defendant is white, the victim black. Once again, onlookers' videos appear to show a criminal assault, this time fatal. Two local elected officials, Oakland City Councilwoman Desley Brooks and County Supervisor Keith Carson, have referred publicly to the shooting as an execution. The president of the NAACP in California, Alice Huffman, said Mehserle could have been motivated by racial prejudice.
As in King's case, in which the first trial was held in suburban Ventura County, intense media coverage and public anger might persuade a judge to transfer the Mehserle case to another county.
And, as in King's case, the guilt of the officer, if he goes to trial, will be determined not by what he did but by a jury's assessment of why he did it.
That won't necessarily show up on a video, said a lawyer for one of the officers in the King case.
'Both useful and deceptive'
"Videotapes can be both useful and deceptive," said Harland Braun, whose client, Theodore Briseno, was acquitted at both trials.
"They portray accurately, from that particular angle and time frame, what's going on," Braun said. But he added, "They can deceive you because they show only one angle" - and because they don't show what happened before the camera was turned on or after it was turned off.
Orloff said Wednesday that the videos shot by BART passengers - including "very valuable" footage that the public hasn't seen - show an apparently unlawful and intentional killing, the textbook definition of murder.
"The videos are very powerful on what act was committed," the district attorney said. "The issue likely to be in this case is, what was the mental state at the time that act was committed?"
Range of possible verdicts
His mental state at the time of the shooting will determine whether Mehserle committed murder, manslaughter - voluntary or involuntary - or no crime at all.
An intentional killing without provocation is second-degree murder if it's spontaneous and first-degree murder if it's planned. The sentence is 15 years to life for second-degree murder and 25 to life for first-degree, and 25 years is added to each for use of a gun.
At a news conference, Orloff didn't mention the possibility of a racially motivated murder, which is punishable by a death sentence or life without the possibility of parole.
Officers who shoot unarmed suspects often report that the victim provoked the attack by making a threatening move or appearing to reach for a gun.
Even though Grant had no gun, jurors could acquit Mehserle if they decide he had reasonably believed that Grant posed an imminent danger.
If jurors concluded that the officer's belief was sincere but unreasonable, they could convict him of voluntary manslaughter, punishable by three to 11 years in prison or as much as 21 years for use of a gun.
Stun gun confusion?
The defense also could argue that Mehserle thought he was firing his Taser stun gun and not his pistol. If a jury believed him, legal analysts say he would have a virtually ironclad defense to a murder charge and could be convicted of no more than involuntary manslaughter, which requires proof of grossly negligent conduct showing disregard for human life. That is punishable by two to four years in prison, or up to 14 years with use of a gun.
However, neither Mehserle nor his lawyers have offered any explanation for the shooting, and the Taser possibility remains speculation.
Also, in a court statement justifying Mehserle's arrest, Oakland police said Grant had struggled with officers but had already been restrained when Mehserle shot him in the back. That could raise the question of why Mehserle thought it necessary to pull either his service weapon or a stun gun.
BART police Chief Gary Gee says Mehserle was equipped with a newly issued Taser, which officers were ordered to carry on the opposite hip from their gun to avoid confusion. Robert Talbot, a University of San Francisco law professor and former trainer at police academies in San Francisco and San Mateo County, said the videos he's seen could support a claim that the fatal shooting was an accident.
Didn't look 'murderous'
"Nothing about his body looks murderous," Talbot said of Mehserle. "He looked almost too casual" for a deliberate killing, in which you might expect "somebody is going to put both hands on the gun and put it in the back of somebody's neck."
Besides, Talbot said, "he'd have to be out of his mind ... to stand on a platform full of people and pull the trigger."
A few cases in which officers have confused firearms for stun guns have arisen elsewhere, but apparently none has ever gone to a jury. Steve Tuttle, a spokesman for Taser International, said the company is unaware of any criminal prosecution against an officer who fired a gun in the mistaken belief that it was a Taser.
One who avoided prosecution was Marcie Noriega, a police officer in the city of Madera, who fatally shot Everardo Torres in 2002 with a gun she said she thought was a Taser. After an investigation that produced a 1,100-page report, District Attorney Ernest LiCalsi decided not to file criminal charges against Noriega, who remains on the police force. The Torres family's civil suit against the officer and the city is pending.
Changes in weapons
Changes in police weaponry since the Madera case, though, could make it harder for an officer to argue that he mistook a service weapon for a stun gun.
Tasers, which were about the same size and weight as pistols in 2002, now are smaller and weigh less than half as much. While Noriega held her gun on the same side as the Taser, officers now are told to keep the weapons in different areas.
"A Taser looks different from a gun," said Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles and a former federal prosecutor. "It's hard to believe that it's a reasonable mistake for an officer who's had any training at all."
The law and the shooting
Criminal laws that could apply to the BART police shooting:
First-degree murder: A premeditated, intentional killing without provocation. Sentence: 25 years to life in prison, with up to 25 additional years for use of a gun. If racially motivated, punishable by death or life in prison without parole.
Second-degree murder: An unplanned but intentional killing without provocation. Sentence: 15 years to life, with up to 25 additional years for use of a gun.
Voluntary manslaughter: A killing committed because of a sincere but unreasonable belief that the victim was about to inflict death or serious injury. Sentence: three to 11 years in prison, with up to 10 additional years for use of a gun.
Involuntary manslaughter: A killing committed by grossly negligent acts that show a disregard for human life. Sentence: two to four years in prison, with up to 10 additional years for use of a gun.
Day of Remembrance and Healing
Three community centers in Oakland will open for part of the day Saturday for a "Day of Remembrance and Healing" in the wake of the death of Oscar Grant, the 22-year-old Hayward man fatally shot on New Year's Day by a BART police officer.
"This day is to honor all those who have died or been injured by violence in the streets of Oakland and neighboring communities," reads a flyer for the events organized by community groups in conjunction with Mayor Ron Dellums' Task Force on Youth Violence. "We honor these mostly young men and women whether the cause of their death was police brutality, gang violence, domestic dispute or by accident."
The three community centers, which will be open from noon to 4 p.m., include East Oakland Youth Development Center, 8200 International Blvd.; Arise Charter School, 3709 E. 12th St. in the Fruitvale Transit Village; and Poplar Recreation Center, 3131 Union St. in West Oakland.

9 Comments so far
Show AllThis is unacceptable. Watch the video and see for yourself. Who exactly were they protecting and serving in this case? I say one dead cop for every dead innocent. If our joke of a "justice" system refuses to do offer us any semblance of real justice, it's our right and duty to take it for ourselves.
Hundreds of blacks get killed by other blacks each year in Oakland and no one gives a sh!t, no one sees anything to give the police a lead and life goes on in the 'hood. One BART policeman makes a tragic mistake and everyone is there with cell phones, cameras and eye witness accounts and they're ready to convict the cop. Kinda makes you wonder doesn't it?
Makes me wonder about your post, that's all.
winning ticket:I posted my comment before I saw yours. Almost same thought/words.
All it means is the police are serving a function there's no demand for. We have unreasonable, unenforceable, unwanted laws, so we have to institute a class of people to do our dirty work. People are more than happy to go informant in the rare occasion the police are doing something good.
And tragic mistake? Shooting somebody held on the ground in the back is hardly a mistake. Have you even watched the videos? He knew exactly what he was doing.
real world:Perhaps more about you. See www.October22.org October 22 Coalition to End Police Brutality.
"Hundreds of blacks get killed by other blacks each year in Oakland and no one gives a sh!t..."
This is known as a false premise.
"... no one sees anything to give the police a lead..."
If what you mean is that few people cooperate with police in some murder cases, that can be a serious problem stemming from the fact that cooperation can bring more trouble, especially if the violence is gang related. Personally, I suspect that, in general, such statement is too broad and too sweeping; possibly a stereotype. Anyway, it's irrelevant to this case. When I worked in Oakland, Alameda, and Berkeley, I rode BART to or through Oakland every day. The experience was hum-drum commuting; the BART police were low-profile. I never heard of BART police misconduct (we're not talking about a force with the reputation of the LAPD, for cryin' out loud).
"... tragic mistake..."? The video shows otherwise.
"... ready to convict..."? Not me. But I'm sure ready to see the guy put on trial. The outcome will be in the judge and/or jury's hands.
Your implication that people are "out to nail a cop" is ridiculous.
real world?
It was not a mistake. The Officer carefully drew his service weapon. After the suspect was subdued on his stomach. The Officer carefully placed his service weapon against the suspect. The Officer discharged the weapon. Executing the suspect.
Mistakes happen in melee's. This was calculated and controlled.
You say no one "gives a *#%*" about murdered blacks...how does that Anais Nin quote go? Your eyes really reflect you, they don't refract light. I give a *@^* and so do many others.
When a death ray is labeled a "stun gun" it becomes much simpler to mistake a pistol as a 'sleeping iron.'