The Fairfax County Police are out of control and need oversight but are slick enough to organize "Campaign contributions" during election time to avoid it.

Jeff Mitchell: Oversight board needed for Salinas PD


On Tuesday I saw a fellow Salinan shot to death by police.
The hard, no-compromises impact of the four or five bullets that slammed into his body dropped him onto the concrete like a sack of potatoes.
Now, in my 24th year as a journalist in California, it's not the first time I've seen a person killed by gunfire – not even close. It's not even the first time I've seen cops kill a person.
But make no mistake, the viral video that I and so many others have seen is hard to watch because every time you play it, you feel like a little bit of your soul is getting shaved away.
I don't want to watch it anymore.
The problem with officer-involved shootings – besides being tragic and awful – is that we never know all the facts.
We don't know what the officers were being confronted with. We don't know their decision-making in the escalation of use of force and we certainly aren't in a position to know what kind of threat, in this incident, the man with the garden shears posed to them or to the public.
These are just some of the factors that went into their decision to pull their triggers Tuesday at noon in front of that Sanborn Road bakery.
What the public does know is this: They've seen one of several shaky, slightly out-of-focus iPhone videos on the Internet showing a man carrying garden shears staggering down the street. At one point the video I saw shows him turning and advancing on the trailing officers. Then, almost just as quickly, he turns and continues to walk down the street.
Apparently he disregarded the officers' verbal commands, and they tried to Tase him. It didn't work and the guy keeps walking with the two cops following him.
But as the man approaches Sanborn, the officers clearly make a decision that he must be stopped and they fire on him. The man falls to the sidewalk and dies at the scene.
Now again, minus all the facts, I'm not going to pass judgment on these cops.
I'd hate to be a cop – in this or any other town. It has to be one of the world's most challenging and thankless (but most critically needed) jobs that we have in our society.
Cops get second-guessed relentlessly (maybe even now in this column). We hate their tickets, their sometimes arrogance with the public and their pay and retirement benefits.
But when someone is breaking into your house at 2:30 a.m., there's nothing better than the sound of an approaching siren and those flashing lights on a radio car.
It means someone's coming to save your bacon.
And despite what some might think, we don't pay cops to get stabbed or shot. Ever. There's no extra pay or incentive to "take one for the (public) team."
Moreover, we train police carefully to deploy the use of force along a well-established, well-practiced escalating arc of force that starts with verbal commands and ends with the use of lethal force, i.e. gunfire.
And when conditions have escalated to the use of lethal force, police are trained to fire their weapons into the subject's center mass and to continue firing until the threat to them or the public is "neutralized."
There's no "winging" the guy in the arm or the leg in the real world. That stuff's just pure Hollywood fantasy.
In real life this stuff ain't pretty. In fact, as I said, it's tragic and it will impact lives for years to come.
But here's the problem in Salinas.
This city's police department has a major trust problem going on with the bulk of its citizens – especially with Spanish-only speakers on the east side.
Now after three officer-involved shootings in the first six months of 2014, Chief Kelly McMillin, his police department and Salinas City Council have a real problem on their hands.
Simply put, there is no trust out there now and that can end up being crippling and polarizing to this chief, this department, to the council and to the city as a whole.
And, frankly, at this point, it just doesn't matter if all three of these officer-involved shoots this year come up "clean" – meaning that the cops involved did their jobs by the book and that the DA rules they were all legal, justifiable homicides.
That doesn't matter a whit to a populace that is starting to see the police as just another rival gang – albeit a gang with better uniforms and resources – but, in their eyes, a gang nevertheless.
So, how do we, as a community, fix this situation?
A couple of ideas:
• Have Salinas City Council direct that Salinas Police Department no longer investigate any of its own officer-involved shootings. Instead, those shootings must be investigated by an independent authority – whether it be the Monterey County District Attorney's Office or the Monterey County Sheriff's Department or maybe some rotating mutual aid network of Monterey County law enforcement agencies. The point here is that if a big chunk of the populace doesn't trust SPD on the street, what are the chances that the people will trust the department to properly investigate its own officer-involved shooting cases?
• Have Salinas City Council create a seven-member independent Civilian Police Oversight Commission to review officer-involved shootings and other, less-than-lethal incidents and complaints involving the department. This new body needs to go way beyond the current police advisory body that's in place now. It cannot be just another pet paper tiger.
And by the way, the new body needs to be fully staffed and fully brought under the Brown Act. It should meet publicly monthly in the Rotunda.
I think such an oversight board – one with real teeth to make hard, written recommendations directly to City Council – would be an important first step to restoring citizen confidence in this law enforcement agency.
So, dear Dome reader, that's where I'd start. What about you? What do you think we should do?
Here are some questions I'd like you all to ponder:
• Do you agree that it's now time to establish an independent civilian police review board in Salinas? Yes or No?
• If no, why not?
• If yes, how would you structure such a body?
• If yes, would you consider applying to serve on the board?

Send your responses and related thoughts to my usual email address: jemitchell@thecalifornian.com.
Let's get a conversation going on this, folks.

Jeff Mitchell covers Salinas Valley politics and government. Under the Dome, an opinion column, appears Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday in print and online. Email him at jemitchell@thecalifornian.com. For quick political hits, check out Under the Dome – The Blog, available most every day at: www.theCalifornian.com