Wednesday, October 15, 2014

How to Extinguish a Riot

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix
 

A Riot Primer
The importance of using force to control the spread of urban riots.
By Eugene H. Methvin
September 1, 2005 1:16 P.M.
National Review

NOTE: This piece appeared in the June 10, 1991, issue of National Review.

Do we have to relearn every couple of decades–at high cost in blood and treasure–the ABCs of riot ignition and suppression?

Two recent outbursts of urban mass violence suggest we may be in for a chain reaction of anti-police rioting like the ones that erupted in Harlem and five other cities in 1964, followed by the bloody “long hot summer” riots in Watts, Newark, Detroit, Washington, and many other cities in 1965-68. Following the vicious Los Angeles police beating of Rodney King on March 3, police attempts to arrest street drunks, a routine occurrence, produced a minor riot in Houston and major violence in Washington, D.C.

[Methvin was wrong about the police beating of “motorist Rodney King,” but at the time, so was I. We were both tricked, along with millions of other Americans by an as yet unidentified deceiver at TV station KTLA. Said trickster took the video filmed by amateur George Holliday of the confrontation between King and four LAPD officers, and censored it, in order to make the cops look like monsters.

What happened was that after leading multiple LAPD and CHP units on a chase at speeds of up to 110-115 mph, Rodney King, who was high as a kite on beer and what the officers based on his conduct took to be PCP, mockingly and violently resisted arrest. First, he responded to orders to get on the ground spread-eagled, by turning around and shaking his butt at the officers. Then, when the cops tried the “swarm” technique, of each policeman grabbing an extremity, King threw each man in turn off of his body like a rag doll. Then Sgt. Stacy Koon shot King with a TASER. King shook it off, as if it were a mosquito bite. Sgt. Koon shot King with the TASER a second time, which had no more effect than the first round, and which exhausted the sergeant’s TASER rounds.

King then charged an officer, whereupon the officers began beating him with their metal batons, which was a brutal, but perfectly lawful and moral response to a suspect’s violent, repeated refusal to submit.

The officers did nothing to King’s two black companions, because the men complied with the cops’ orders.

George Holliday’s videotape begins with King’s charge at the cops, but the KTLA propagandist deleted that, in order to make the cops look like brutal “racists.”

The real monsters, in addition to the unidentified KTLA censor, were the TV news directors all over the country, who had their stations replay the doctored videotape at the top of every broadcast, every day, for at least one year, i.e., thousands of times. The reason the first, all-white jury acquitted the four white officers in state court, was because the jurors got to see the uncensored videotape.]

 

In a drug-and-gang-infested neighborhood in Houston, on Saturday night, May 4, a solo policeman came upon a man who appeared intoxicated. The officer told the man he would have to go to jail. The man refused and shoved the officer. “At that time I noticed another man standing behind me with a video camera, filming the whole thing. It was an obvious setup,” said Officer J. R. Deugenio, who wisely beat a retreat. A crowd of some 75 to 100 people gathered, and bottles and rocks rained down on his patrol car before he could escape. He reported hearing four or five shots. Two similar incidents had occurred in the same neighborhood on Saturday, April 20. In each case an officer’s car was pelted with rocks, sticks, and bottles, and he was forced to yield a prisoner. Houston Police Chief Elizabeth M. Watson ordered her cops not to enter the area, less than a mile west of downtown, without backup.

In Washington, D.C., on Sunday, May 5, a black female police officer attempted to arrest a Hispanic man who was drinking and unruly on a street in the Mount Pleasant area, heavily populated by recent Central American immigrants. The man drew a knife and advanced, the officer reported, whereupon she shot and severely wounded him. The rumor spread that he was dead, shot while handcuffed. A flashfire of violence erupted as hundreds of youths set fire to police cars, smashed windows, and looted. Washington’s new mayor, Sharon Pratt Dixon, at first ordered police to disperse crowds but make no arrests. The second night, running gangs of youths fought a thousand policemen, burning and looting as they spread out. Mayor Dixon then declared a curfew and ordered arrests, whereupon the violence subsided. Police made 230 arrests in three days.

City officials said no more than six hundred youths were involved and claimed a great triumph since no one died, in contrast to the 1968 riots, in which 13 people died. But merchants and residents in the area bitterly criticized the initial police inaction.

Mayor Dixon’s no-arrest order precisely replicated the initial blunders of 1968. If other mayors and police chiefs follow her example, the nation will be in for a “long hot summer” indeed. For the lesson of history is plain: In riot situations, the earlier the police make arrests, and the more arrests they make, the lower will be the toll in life, limb, and property. And the cop on the street will not act decisively unless he feels he has the support of his superiors–principally his chief and mayor.

The social phenomenon is well documented, but the books lie on library shelves, dusted off only once a generation or so by mayoral or presidential commissions. We need only look at Atlanta in 1905; East St. Louis in 1917; Charleston, Chicago, Washington, Boston, and Knoxville in 1919; Harlem in 1935; Detroit in 1943; and Harlem to Watts to Washington and nearly everywhere else in 1964-68.
 

Moral Holiday

In a nutshell: Riots begin when some set of social forces temporarily overwhelms or paralyzes the police, who stand by, their highly visible inaction signaling to the small percentage of teenaged embryonic psychopaths and hardened young adults that a moral holiday is under way. This criminal minority spearheads the car-burning, window-smashing, and blood-letting, mobbing such hate targets as blacks, or white merchants, or lone cops. Then the drawing effect brings out the large crowds of older men, and women and children, to share the Roman carnival of looting. Then the major killing begins: slow runners caught in burning buildings and-as civic forces mobilize-in police and National Guard gunfire.

The books are on the shelf- let the responsible authorities in city hall and police headquarters check them out.

The time to halt a riot is right at the start, by pinching off the criminal spearhead with precise and overwhelming force. The cops will usually be caught flat-footed (no pun intended) by the initial outbreak. But they need to spring into a pre-arranged mobilization that should always be as ready in every major city as the fire-department or hospital disaster-response program.
 

While Detroit Burned

In the worst urban riots of the 1960s–Watts, Newark, Detroit, and Washington–the police did nothing or next to it for the first several hours. Deaths and property destruction soared. Contrast what happened in Toledo 36 hours after Detroit’s outburst.

There, five hundred young men began breaking windows along a six-block stretch. The fourth police cruiser arriving radioed: “Do you want us to observe?” That such a question should even have been asked was damning proof that Americans had let years of extreme court rulings and hysterical “police brutality” propaganda paralyze our last line of defense against criminal anarchy.

Yet in Toledo the answer snapped back steely and clear. Police Chief Tony Bosh happened to be monitoring the radio and he barked: Arrest every lawbreaker you can–and meet illegal force with legal force!”

Just as quickly, Toledo’s mayor requested and Ohio Governor James Rhodes called in five hundred National Guardsmen to stand behind police in reserve, with well-publicized orders to kill if necessary to maintain order. They were never needed. Toledo’s police arrested 22 people (nine for possessing firebombs) in the first three hours. That was almost triple the number Detroit and Newark police arrested in the same period.

Chief Bosh laid out for a Senate committee the criminal records, “some as long as your arm,” of the rioters jailed in his city’s three-day eruption. Of the 126 adults a startling 105 had prior arrests, averaging six apiece. Every single one of the 22 young adults jailed in the first three hours had criminal records; they averaged only twenty years old and three prior arrests apiece. The twenty young men jailed on firebomb charges averaged four apiece.

The result of the quick arrest policy: Toledo’s trouble hardly earned the name “riot.” No one died–not one person, looter, policeman, or innocent bystander. The will that Toledo’s civil authorities displayed, like a heavy rain on a kindling forest fire, made the difference between “incident” and “insurrection.” They withdrew the one essential ingredient for a major riot: implied official permission for criminals and rowdies to coalesce and rebel.

As Santayana said, those who do not study history are condemned to repeat it.

6 comments:

  1. Stacy Koon said that he had used the taser about two hundred times and it had never failed once. It did fail with King. I thought that using the taser two hundred times was exaggerated but Koon had been the sergeant in charge of the holding cell so it was quite plausible then.

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  2. From the time King crashed the car until the time he was handcuffed and led away three and one half hours had passed. Those "beatings" only occupied a small portion of the whole time and were carefully edited. They did spend hours trying to coax, cajole and persuade King to cooperate but the man was totally out of it and resistant the entire time.

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  3. King waggled his butt at officer Melanie Singer. He picked out her female voice from the among the ten police at the scene, turned his back toward her, bent over, spread his buttocks apart and waggled his butt at her. That must have infuriated the male officers a lot.

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  4. The moment I heard that name Stacy Koon I knew there was a problem. Koon. A Dutch name. I thought originally that Koon was particularly subjected to verbal hate filled abuse by negroes on the streets but rather he was laughed at because of his name. It is enjoyable to the colored to hear a white man referred to by his name which was Koon.

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  5. Rodney Glenn actually lasted for a while longer than I thought he was going to. I had given him ten to fifteen years before something bad would happen to him. He made it twenty. So he did OK I guess.

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  6. Usually these riots last for three days and not much more. Historically speaking. Some have suggested that this is evidence of some sort of planning.

    Mostly I think the rioters after three days are so full of booze and pills they cannot even stand upright any more. Even THEY have to sleep once in a while.

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