While we see it with far more frequency, itâs still not often that a cop goes on trial for an officer-involved shooting, and rarer still for that officer to receive a murder charge.
In the cases when it does happenâparticularly if the victim is blackâthe playbook for the defense is simple: put the victim on trial.
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That playbook was put into action on Monday, the opening day of the Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dykeâs trial. Van Dyke, who shot 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times as the teen was walking away from police officers, says his use of force was justified because he feared for his life and the lives of the other officers on the scene.
Van Dykeâs defense hinges on making a Cook County juryâcomprising only one black personâshare that fear, despite the fact that other officers on the scene didnât share it. All to place the blame for Laquanâs death squarely on the Chicago teenâs own shoulders. As the Chicago Tribune reports, Van Dykeâs attorney, Daniel Herbert, told the court during his opening statement, âthe story in this case is a story written, directed and orchestrated by one person: Laquan McDonald.â
He went on to say that Laquan was on a âwild rampage through the city,â telling jurors that the prosecution wanted them to âlook at the final chapter without reading the rest of the book.â
This was the defenseâs example of a âwild rampage,â according to the Tribune:
A woman who called 911 to report McDonaldâwho was later determined to be on PCPâhad asked to borrow her car in the middle of the previous night. Herbert also told the jury that McDonald had been using a disabled retired veteranâs public transit card throughout the city.
Laquan asked to borrow a car in the middle of the night. Laquan used a metro card that wasnât his. Laquan McDonald held a small folding knife. This is all it takes to classify a black teen as âwild,â and to paint him as the architect of his own murder.
The one thing Laquan canât be called, by the judgeâs own ruling, is a âvictimâ (though Cook County Judge Vincent Gaughan decided that it could be permissible in closing arguments).
âCertainly, there is a person thatâs dead as a result of this tragic situation but that doesnât mean that the person is a victim legally,â Judge Gaughan said in August.
What a reliable playbook it is.
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