Lecture from the dais falls flat

It was a bad look at City Hall on Thursday night when a white council member tried to lecture a largely African American audience about the manner in which they were expressing their outrage.

“I’m disappointed in the behavior of the audience,” said Councilman Steve Hansen, an otherwise intelligent and capable public servant.

“People are dying in the street and you’re disappointed?” a woman shouted back.

The council meeting, which in part involved a discussion about police use-of-force policies, already had been briefly suspended after Mayor Pro Tem Larry Carr called a recess in response to audience members ignoring his orders to withhold applause during public comments.

The discussion was prompted by public outcry over the fatal police shooting of Joseph Mann on July 11 in North Sacramento. Mann, who was African American and mentally ill, was behaving erratically and holding a knife when he was shot 14 times by two officers who first tried to hit him with their patrol car. Other officers had tried to deescalate the situation by following Mann in their vehicle and asking him to drop the knife.

Those in attendance Thursday were there in part to express frustration with what they see as a lack of transparency in the city’s response to the shooting. However, the council seemed more interested in adhering to protocol than hearing out the community.

“You’re lecturing us,” another woman yelled at Hansen and Carr, who was running the meeting in the absence of Mayor Kevin Johnson and Vice Mayor Rick Jennings.

“If you continue to interrupt, I will ask to have you thrown out,” Hansen said.

Two protesters later were removed by police at Hansen and Carr’s request.

The night marked a low for a City Council that does not seem to fully grasp the public anger roiling since the Mann shooting. One of the men removed by police put those feelings into words as he was escorted out: “We’re being killed by the same people pushing us out of this room.”

Before you dismiss those words as an exaggeration, consider this:

Two Sacramento officers – John Tennis and Randy Lozoya – shot and killed Mann. One of their colleagues escorted people out of council chambers who were raising their voices in protest of that shooting. Other colleagues of Tennis and Lozoya are investigating the Mann shooting, and the leadership of Sacramento’s Police Department has closed ranks around the officers.

The city soon will be in contract negotiations with officers, and some council members already are advocating for a pay raise.

Hansen treated audience members at Thursday’s meeting as if they were clueless, but they aren’t. They know a form of collusion when they see it.

Now Carr and his colleagues are trying to craft policies that will clarify how the city responds to future police shootings and to enhance civilian oversight of police. That’s appropriate and necessary, but people are still concerned about the Mann shooting. Specifically, they are concerned by the secrecy of the investigation.

Last week, Sacramento police began an internal affairs review of the incident. That process is not subject to public review, and neither the city nor police will comment publicly on the case anymore.

Before the internal affairs investigation began, Sacramento police Chief Sam Somers Jr. might have expressed concern over the shooting of Mann. He might have praised the officers who were trying to arrest Mann peacefully. But he didn’t.

This is a common mistake made by police departments after controversial shootings. We know from the video there were other cops trying to do the right thing. Dash-cam video showed these cops telling Mann they didn’t want to hurt him. Those same cops were recorded saying they didn’t want to force a confrontation.

Tennis and Lozoya were recorded trying to hit Mann with their police cruiser. Then they exited their vehicle and ran toward Mann, shooting him 14 times.

By saying nothing to distinguish one approach from the other, police leaders cast suspicion on the entire department. It’s a self-inflicted wound. There have been others as well.

At Thursday’s meeting, Councilman Jeff Harris said: “I have opinions about (the Mann video), but I don’t share them because we live in a society of due process. Right now, there is a civil case in process, there is a legal case in process, and until those processes are completed, you really won’t know if our process works or not.”

It sounds good, but his comments come off as oblivious to the inherent conflict of interest when cops investigate other cops, and oblivious to the protections that police officers enjoy.

Under state law, it’s almost impossible for the public to view disciplinary records or civilian complaints against police officers. “California’s restrictions applied even in the case of Christopher Dorner, the former Los Angeles Police Department officer who went on a murderous rampage in February 2013,” wrote Bee reporter Jim Miller in a 2014 article. “Department leaders were able to discuss the circumstances of Dorner’s 2009 dismissal only because Dorner, after he failed to overturn his firing through the city’s civil service appeals process, went to court and a judge did not seal the case.”

We may never know the outcome of the internal investigation into the actions of Tennis and Lozoya. Very few officers are prosecuted for shootings. No one in Sacramento can recall a single time a local law enforcement officer was convicted of illegally using deadly force.

So when Hansen said “We are a city of laws” during his admonishment of the audience Thursday, it was no surprise that some headed for the exits. They could tell some people on the dais still don’t get it.

City Councilmembers Walk Out After Protestor Disruptions

Loud cries for justice echoed in Sacramento's City Council Chambers after council members left the room, shutting down the meeting.

"Police brutality is murdering my neighbors," shouted Reverend Ronald Bell of Clear As A Bell COGIC.

The council exited in the face of support shown for more police accountability -- something they said was disrupting discussion about possible new use of force guidelines for city officers.

The 18 shots fired at Joseph Mann in July were much on the mind of many in the room as his family has filed a wrongful death suit against the city as dash cam video has shown police tried to target the mentally ill man with their cruiser before he was shot to death.

Head of Community Police Commission Steps Down, Calls for a Commission with More Power

The head of a year-old Sacramento Community Police Commission has stepped down from his position.

Pastor Les Simmons made the announcement this morning, saying the commission he’d be in favor of needs more authority and power to create change.

“What’s relevant now is a commission that has more power,” said Simmons.

 

Police made a mess of Mann case

On Monday morning, Robert Mann stood in the grass of an empty lot on Del Paso Boulevard, trying, as raindrops began to fall, to find the right words to describe his disgust with the “renegade police” who tried to run over his younger brother, Joseph. Failing, they shot him, 14 times.

“This disgraces the oath that you took,” he spat into a bank of microphones.

It’s hard to begrudge Mann his anger. Thanks to enhanced audio from dashcam videos that the Sacramento Police Department never wanted to release in the first place, we now know the despicable details of how Joseph Mann, mentally ill and holding a knife, died in July.

Officers John Tennis and Randy Lozoya tried to hit him with their cruiser – not once but twice. They sped onto the scene, interrupting the efforts of other officers who had been trying to de-escalate the situation.

“I’m going to hit him,” the driver said, according to court papers. “OK, go for it,” his partner responded. When that didn’t work, they chased Mann on foot.

“We’ll get him,” one said.

Within a few seconds, they had fired 18 rounds, striking him 14 times.

So now, in addition to suing the city, the Mann family has taken the extraordinary step of asking the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the case and the Police Department as a whole.

Officers’ contrasting tactics add to scrutiny of Mann case

When the first Sacramento police officers answered a 911 call for an armed mentally ill man in July, they remained calm and attempted to de-escalate the unfolding situation in North Sacramento.

Their reserved approach contrasts starkly with two officers who arrived four minutes later and attempted to run over the suspect before chasing him on foot and shooting him 14 times, based on a Sacramento Bee review of separate dashcam videos.

Hit and gun: Sacramento cops who fatally shot Joseph Mann seemingly tried to run him over first, video reveals

The two veteran officers who pumped Joseph Mann with 14 bullets seemingly tried to hit the mentally distressed black man with their patrol vehicle—twice—before gunning him down on a north Sacramento sidewalk this past July, SN&R has confirmed.

Black Lives Matter Protest In North Sacramento for Joseph Mann

Black Lives Matter protestors stood amongst other community members in solidarity, asking for justice for Jospeh Mann and others killed by police.

Pastor Les Simmons, ACT leader and Board Member, works with the Police Commissions Advisory Board. Simmons was at the protest and said he is not against police just wants change. 

"We nee to meet each other where we are at, understand each other and have some empathy for what each other is feeling right now," Simmons said. 

He wants a conversation to start and non-lethal alternatives to be available to every officer, like bean bag guns and rubber bullets. 

"Let's take it to a whole other level, this is what our community is asking for, let’s go get it, lets be a city that compliments each other," Simmons added. 

Protesters Call For More Police Transparency After Joseph Mann Shooting Videos Released

Black Lives Matter protesters took to the streets to call for more police transparency Wednesday night. This just one day after Sacramento police released graphic video of officers shooting and killing an armed black man.