Carl Takei Profile picture
18 Feb, 18 tweets, 5 min read
Horrifying new 5th Circuit decision: Police officers tased Gabriel Eduardo Olivas while he was suicidal and soaked in gasoline. This set him on fire, burning him to death and burning down his house.

The court held the officers' actions were lawful. /1 ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/unpub…
This began when Mr. Olivas' son called 911, reporting that his father was threatening to kill himself and burn down the house. Five police officers responded. /2 On July 10, 2017, Gabriel Anthony Olivas called 911 and repo
Note: In most cities, police—not mental health providers or even paramedics—are the first responders for mental health crises. We shouldn't have to expect the patient to have to communicate with, work with, and navigate help from law enforcement, especially armed officers. /2
But this kind of law enforcement response is the default in America, even though the presence of armed officers can rapidly escalate crises, and such officers generally lack the comprehensive training and skills needed to provide the safest, most appropriate responses. /3
So, what did the armed officers do at Mr. Olivas' house? They smelled gasoline, and Mr. Olivas' wife directed him to the bedroom where Mr. Olivas was leaning against the wall holding a gas can.

One officer warned his colleagues: "If we tase him, he is going to light on fire." /4 Upon entering, Officer Guadarrama detected the odor of gasol
At this point, it's not clear that the officers attempted to speak to Mr. Olivas—even though the 911 call was about his suicidal intentions.

Instead, their next action appears to have been to shine a flashlight in his face and immediately pepper-spray him. /5 we tase him, he is going to light on fire.” Elliott then d
At some point before or after being pepper-sprayed (the record is not clear), Mr. Olivas doused himself in gasoline from the can he was holding. The court's decision does not make clear whether this was intentional or if the can slipped when he was blinded by the spray. /6
Upon seeing a lighter in Mr. Olivas' hand, Officer Guadarrama, followed shortly by Officer Jefferson, fired his taser at Mr. Olivas.

Mind you, this was shortly after Officer Elliott had warned the two of them that this would set Mr. Olivas on fire. /7 Olivas’s face, temporarily blinding him. It was at about t
As Officer Elliott predicted, the electrical charge from the taser set the gasoline-soaked Mr. Olivas on fire. The fire spread throughout the house, burning it to the ground as the officers evacuated Mr. Olivas' wife and two children. /8 Corporal Ray and Officer Scott arrived at the scene at about
The court's decision focuses on the two officers' decisions to tase Mr. Olivas, because that caused his death. But before we talk about that, it's important to note what was omitted from the decision: /9
Shining bright lights and pepper-spraying a person without trying to talk them down is NOT an appropriate suicide prevention strategy. How might this have played out if, instead of cops, 911 had been able to dispatch a team of mental health providers? /10
We will never know, because Mr. Olivas got Officers Guadarrama and Jefferson instead—and all that's left to determine is whether they are liable for their decisions that killed him and burned down his family's house. /11
The court considered their decision to tase Mr. Olivas under the Fourth Amendment's Graham standard, an elastic standard that too often gives the benefit of the doubt to officers. /12
In its analysis, the court found that because setting himself on fire was felony arson, and because setting himself on fire would put everyone in the house at risk, there were strong factors in favor of using significant force against Mr. Olivas. /13 Having set forth this factual background, we now consider th
And, notwithstanding the officers' apparent failure to take ANY de-escalation steps, the court concluded that the officers really didn't have any other option available besides tasing Mr. Olivas. /14 The fact that Olivas appeared to have the capability of sett
For Officer Guadarrama (who fired first), the court found that preventing Mr. Olivas from setting *himself* on fire was a reasonable justification for tasing him—even though the taser set Mr. Olivas on fire, as Officer Elliott had warned. /15 Given that Guadarrama fired first, the most readily apparent
For Officer Jefferson (who fired second), the court found that since Mr. Olivas was "already engulfed in flames" from the first tasing, there wasn't any harm in tasing him again, in order to immobilize him as he burned alive. /16 Jef-ferson fired second, and while at one point he claimed t
It's hard to overstate the perversity of this decision, which explicitly cites the risks that Mr. Olivas would set himself on fire in order to justify two police officers setting Mr. Olivas on fire themselves. /17 ...given the horrendous scene that the of-ficers were facing

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More from @carltakei

3 Jun 20
THREAD: I've been seeing lots of articles and tweets about the risk of a new COVID-19 spike due to #BlackLivesMatter protests. But they're getting causation wrong.

The likely cause of this spike won't be the protests themselves--it's the police responses to those protests. /1
Yes, being around other people creates some elevated risk, potentially mitigated by being outdoors. But what public health experts have repeatedly emphasized is that the greatest risks come from proximity and crowding, coughing, and indoor spaces. vox.com/2020/5/22/2126… /2
When police use pepper spray, tear gas, and other chemical munitions, they make people choke and cough--that's a high risk factor.

There's also evidence that tear gas causes long-term respiratory harm that makes people more susceptible to COVID-19. /3 nytimes.com/2020/06/03/us/…
Read 7 tweets
19 Feb 20
THREAD: Today, Feb. 19, is the anniversary of #EO9066, FDR's executive order that authorized the mass roundup and incarceration of Japanese Americans--including my family.

Across the country, Japanese Americans commemorate this as the #DayOfRemembrance. /1
To read about how #EO9066 impacted my own family, you can read this piece that I wrote in 2017 for the Smithsonian @amhistorymuseum. /2 americanhistory.si.edu/blog/carl-take…
And to understand why the Supreme Court's 2018 repudiation of the infamous Korematsu case -- in the midst of upholding Trump's Muslim Ban -- gives me no comfort today, you can read what I wrote on that topic two years ago. /3 aclu.org/blog/immigrant…
Read 9 tweets
7 Feb 20
Today, @ACLU and a cross-ideological coalition of @IJ @theCCR @civilrightsorg & @NPAP_NLG filed an amicus brief in Torres v. Madrid. This case will determine whether police are unbound by the Constitution when they use force against people who then resist or flee. /1
In this case, Roxanne Torres was sitting inside her car in a parking lot in the early morning, when it was still dark, with the doors locked and engine running. Two police officers (who were looking for someone else) approached with guns out and tried to open her locked door. /2
Thinking she was being carjacked, Ms. Torres panicked. She inched the car forward, and the officers began shooting to stop her. She accelerated, and they continued firing as she drove away. They fired a total of 13 shots, two of which hit her in the back. /3
Read 33 tweets
7 Jan 20
With all of the news about Iranian Americans being held and interrogated at the U.S.-Canada border, my thoughts keep turning to the 30-page "Alien Enemy Questionnaire" that my great-grandfather, Juro Shiga, was required to fill out after the FBI arrested him in January 1942. /1 Document entitled
Juro had lived in the U.S. for 37 years, and had owned a dry goods business in Seattle for the past 26 years.

Because then-existing immigration laws prohibited Japanese immigrants from becoming citizens, he never applied to naturalize as a U.S. citizen. /2 Juro's responses to questions 28-34 of the questionnaire, describing his business.Juro's responses to questions 69 and 70, stating how long he had lived in the U.S. and stating that he had never applied for naturalization because he was not allowed to do so (by the U.S. government).
(This race-based exclusion was due to the Nationality Act of 1790, which permitted only "free white" people to naturalize. Though it was amended in 1870 to include people of "African nativity and descent," Asians continued to be excluded until 1952.) encyclopedia.densho.org/Ozawa_v._Unite… /3
Read 14 tweets
19 Feb 19
THREAD: It’s both profoundly offensive and oddly appropriate that the Center for Immigration Studies (widely known as a racist, anti-immigrant org) picked this week to launch a PR effort claiming that family detention doesn’t cause suffering or deprive anyone of civil rights. /1
The timing of CIS’s effort to whitewash family detention is especially offensive because today, Feb. 19, is the #DayOfRemembrance, when Japanese Americans mark the anniversary of #EO9066, the executive order authorizing the mass roundup and detention of Japanese Americans. /2
Yet this timing is also oddly appropriate, because CIS’s pro-family-detention rhetoric so closely echoes WWII propaganda justifying the roundup and incarceration of my community. /3
Read 15 tweets

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