I always try to wait a few days before I comment on a hot
button issue. I think enough time has passed for me to write about the now
infamous pool party in McKinney, Texas.
I am bothered by the false narrative that this is yet
another attack on police. This is not an attack on police. There were 12
officers who reported to the scene, yet only 1 is being criticized. I have yet
to hear people complain about the other 11 officers. In the few glimpses that
we did have, the other officers appeared to be employing techniques that were
drastically different than Casebolt's. We have to ask ourselves, with at least
3 officers clearly at the scene when the most controversial part of the video
was filmed, why did the boy focus his camera only on Casebolt? What was it
about Casebolt that drew the young man's attention and held his attention for 7
minutes? At no time in the video does the boy filming turn his camera to one of
the other officers there. In fact the few glimpses that we did get of the other
officers were in stark contrast with Casebolt. In the beginning, when the boy
returns the flashlight to Casebolt, we see one officer speaking calmly to the
teenagers then Casebolt comes over and starts yelling at the kids and tells
them to sit down. The next glimpse that we get is when Casebolt unholstered his
gun and two officers ran over to him as if to say, "Hey, put that
away."
I've seen so much vitriol coming from both sides that I'm a
little nauseous. I don't think this was necessarily about race on the police
officer's behalf. I think that the adults made it seem like the black kids were
the problem and that's why the police targeted the minorities. That said, I do
think that Casebolt's actions were over the top and that his behavior towards a
mouthy 14 year old child was unnecessary. I see people defending his actions
because the girl did not leave right away. What these same people willfully
ignore is that when he grabbed the young girl, she was....wait for
it....walking away. He didn't rough her up while she was lingering. He
literally snatched her back as she was finally following his instructions to
leave. The worst part is that even the officer (speaking through his attorney)
has admitted that his behavior was unacceptable and yet people are still
defending him and excusing his actions.
Casebolt had an emotionally draining day. I'm glad that his
attorney explained the two suicide calls that Casebolt had received before
arriving at the pool party. The first was an actual suicide and the second was
a young girl threatening suicide. Either call would have been a major stressor
on its own, but together, that had to be an emotionally exhausting day.
Casebolt came to the scene in a compromised emotional state. Like the teacher
with outside stressors who "snaps" on a kid, the situation was the
straw that broke the camel's back. I'm not excusing Casebolt's actions, but I
don't think they were as malicious as some would lead people to believe.
However, if Casebolt had not responded to the scene, we wouldn't be talking
about the pool party. This would just be another teen party that got out of
hand and was broken up by the police.
The other issue that I have is the portrayal of the kids as
out of control. Let's review what we know: too many teens were invited to the
pool. The security guard (rightfully so) started refusing entry for the teens,
even though many had legitimate guest passes and were invited. Some of the
teens jumped the fence because they were invited and felt like the security
guard was in the wrong to not let them in to the party. Most teens know little
to nothing about HOAs. All these teens knew was that they had guest passes that
gave them permission to be there. The appropriate response from adults should
not have been to belittle the teens or argue with them. The offended adults
should have called the police immediately. Instead, the offended adults, waited
until after a fight between an irate woman and a black girl who lived in the
community and was hosting the party.
When the police showed up to break up an out of control teen
party, the teens started running. Does that surprise anyone who has seen the
cops breaking up a wild party? Teens and adults alike scatter with the
quickness. Some get away, some don't. The police are left to deal with those
who didn't get away or who, for whatever reason (like not thinking they have
done anything wrong) did not attempt to flee. Casebolt yelled at the boys to
sit down and they did. They tried to explain that they had just arrived and one
of them even used the ever offensive "sir" when addressing the officer
(yes, that was sarcasm). When watching the video, I saw Casebolt charge at two
other young boys and those young boys literally sat on the street because they
were following his directions. He had to tell them to move to the grass and all
they did was get up and move to the grass. Wow! Those kids sure put up a fight!
When Casebolt ran over to the group of teen girls who were
standing away from the scene, he was the aggressor. The girls were the first
teens on film who did not jump and follow Casebolt's commands. That set him off
and that's why he kept coming back to them and picking with them. I'm not going
to sit here and say that the girls were right to keep standing there or point
out that there were other people walking in and out of the scene with not so
much as a peep from Casebolt. The girls should have been like the boys and immediately
followed the order, but like most teens, they saw that they were being singled
out and they thought that somehow gave them permission to take their time. They
did eventually decide to walk away, but it was too late. Casebolt zeroed in on
the girl in the bright bikini and pulled her back in to the fracas. He threw
her to the ground and as Jon Stewart so nicely pointed out, Casebolt, yelled at
the girl to get her ass on the ground when her ass was quite literally on the
ground. If that doesn't scream out of control to the layman viewer, then I
don't know what will.
The other thing that has astounded me is the hypocrisy on
both sides. Many on the left refuse to acknowledge that 11 of the 12 officers
(as far as we can tell) behaved appropriately and many on the right refuse to
acknowledge that 1 out of the 12 did not behave appropriately. Many on the left
refuse to accept that HOAs are allowed to have rules for their pool. The residents
who called the police were well within their rights and I would have done the
same thing and probably much sooner. Many on the right justify the manhandling
of a 14 year old girl because she had the nerve to talk back, yet openly ignore
that she was complying with the police orders when she was grabbed.
Both sides keep cherry picking the dialogue that they want
to have and that's unfair to the situation. This was not a group of black thugs
terrorizing a suburban pool. This was a mixed
group of teens having an end of the school year pool party. This was not a
police versus black kids incident. This was one emotionally drained police
officer responding in an inappropriate fashion to what should have been a
routine break up of a teen party. This was not a bunch of confrontational
teenagers threatening the police. This was a bunch of teenagers reluctant to
leave a party. This was not a teenage girl resisting arrest. This was a teenage
girl being mouthy then flailing to the ground as a grown man yanked her by her
arm and hair. (Notice how her first instincts after being forced to the ground
was not to curse out the police or fight back, but rather to cry for someone to
call her mother.) The two guys who approached the officer were not trying to
jump him. They were two guys who were concerned with the teen girl who had just
been thrown to the ground like a rag doll and inadvertently got too close to
the officer.
I could probably keep going, but I think you get the picture.
This wasn't some horrible racist officer attacking black kids, but it also
wasn't some mob of unruly black kids. Both sides are far more complicated.
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