But I digress. The subject of this editorial is not the anti-cop toxic waste that flows into my mailbox. It's the effect that all of this anti-cop toxic waste has on the average citizen when it appears in mainstream publications.
You see, media coverage of officer-involved shootings and suspect deaths have a great resonance with the public. Consider the police operations in Chicago that spurred the aforementioned protest rally.
In one incident, Chicago officers shot and killed an 18-year-old African-American man whom they say flashed a gun at them. The community, with the help of professional protestors the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton, decried the shooting because the young man was hit in the back. At presstime, the case was under investigation.
The other incident that triggered the Chicago protest is even more problematic for local officers because it could deprive them of one of the most effective tools available to law enforcement officers, the TASER.
During the first week of August, Chicago's finest were called to a home by a distraught woman who reportedly informed them that her brother—a man who reportedly had been arrested dozens of times and was violating a restraining order—was damaging the property. Official reports say the man resisted attempts to bring him under control, and the officers shot him twice with a TASER and gave him a dose of OC. He died.