By Reid Collins on 7.15.02 @ 12:03AM
The Inglewood and Iverson cases suggest racism doesn't have to be prejudicial; it can be preferential.
Last July 6, when videographer Mitchell Crooks was recording the
thumping of a handcuffed 16-year-old by Inglewood, California
police, Allen Iverson had already made very quiet news in
Philadelphia. He'd gone looking for his fleeing wife armed with a
gun. 'Tis a far better thing being Allen Iverson than being Donovan
Jackson, the 16-year-old in the Crooks video taping.
The Inglewood story goes that sheriff's deputies had approached
Jackson's father's car to cite the father for driving with expired
tags. Roll tape. The next thing we know for sure, young Jackson is
in handcuffs, being bodily lifted from the pavement, slammed
head-down onto a patrol car hood, punched by an Inglewood officer
identified as Jeremy Morse, hustled back upright and moved toward
the back seat of a patrol car for arrest and transport. Stop
tape.
It gets blurry from here on in. The videographer Crooks, 27,
makes many TV interviews, expresses fear of police retribution,
hangs up on an L.A. District Attorney who commands him to tell
officers where he is so he can authenticate the taping for a grand
jury. Turns out Crooks has had experience with the law, has some
outstanding warrants for his arrest up near Sacramento, is in fact
arrested in front of a TV News Bureau in L. A., taken screaming
from the scene, subsequently hospitalized while in police custody.
Crooks later is transported to Placer County to serve time for
driving under the influence and petty theft. The Inglewood mayor
calls for the firing of Officer Morse. The police chief says "not
so fast." Both are black, as is some 47 percent of the Inglewood
citizenry, and Al Sharpton is on his way west to straighten all
this out. Young Jackson has a lawyer, two in fact, and maybe more
by this reading.
There are those who insist on knowing what all led to the
body-slam and right cross on the patrol car's hood. There are those
who say that makes no difference: Jackson was in 'cuffs, under
officer control and no danger to them when Crooks captured the
sequence. Prior events, if actionable, are to be handled in court,
not on the arrest site.
Contrast this swirling scene with the utter calm surrounding the
Iverson case in Philadelphia. It is alleged that back on July 3
Allen Iverson of the NBA 76ers went looking for his wife who had
fled their domicile during a dispute and that he barged into his
cousin's apartment with a pistol in his waist and threatened the
occupants, one of whom called 911. Police searched the Iverson
limo, mansion and curtilage, towed away two vehicles and now, some
ten days after the event, the District Attorney indicates the
roundball star may be charged with four felonies and about ten
misdemeanors. The D-A says part of the reason for the delay is that
she was attending a law enforcement convention when this
unpleasantness came up. Delay continues, however, while the Iverson
attorney finishes a visit out of the country. Iverson has been
requested to appear at a Philadelphia police station on Tuesday, a
fortnight after the unpleasantness. In Philadelphia we can all get
along.
Since the venue is Pennsylvania, it is doubtful that the
Virginia Governor's pardon issued Iverson back when he was a junior
in high school can be applied here. But don't be too sure. Sixers'
coach Larry Brown laughingly excused him from practice on Thursday.
A vice president of Reebok, who has a high stake in Iverson's
continued mobility, says: "We firmly believe that Allen will be
vindicated, and Reebok, along with his millions of fans, will still
be standing by him when he is." A wiry fellow who can thread his
way among giants, get knocked off balance, and still make the shot
should have little trouble with four felonies and ten
misdemeanors.
The Iverson case should be instructive to those in Inglewood who
would charge racism is a rampant problem in the nation. No. It is a
selective problem.
topics:
Law