1/16
On May 21st 2010, 3 University of Arizona police officers responded to a “welfare check” about a person hacking a tree with a knife. When they arrived on-scene they witnessed a woman, Amy Hughes, emerge from her home carrying a large kitchen knife. #velshi
2/16
Carrying the knife, Amy Hughes walked towards another woman, Sharon Chadwick, with whom she lived. The officers yelled for Hughes to drop the knife. #velshi
3/16
After briefly assessing the situation, 1 of the 3 officers – Andrew Kisela, who was separated from the women by a 5 ft tall chain-link fence, watched as Hughes moved to within a few feet of Chadwick & shot 4 times claiming Amy Hughes raised the knife before he fired. #velshi
4/16
The officers then jumped the fence, handcuffed the wounded Hughes, and called for medical backup. The other two officers and Sharon Chadwick said they did *NOT* see Hughes raise the knife. #velshi
5/16
Witnesses confirmed Hughes was holding the knife at her side with the point down. Chadwick told officers after the shooting that Hughes had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, was taking medication and that she had managed her behavior in the past. #velshi
6/16
She added that if the police had given her the chance, she would have gotten Hughes to drop the knife. Amy Hughes survived the shooting and sued, claiming Officer Kisela violated her Fourth Amendment right by using excessive force. #velshi
7/16
A district court judge disagreed, saying the force used was “not objectively unreasonable in light of all the relevant circumstances.” A federal circuit court of appeals reversed that decision, saying Kisela had no reason to believe that deadly force was necessary. #velshi
8/16
Officer Kisela should have realied Amy Hughes was mentally ill and diminished his use of force appropriately. The court added that Hughes had quote “a constitutional right to walk down her driveway holding a knife without being shot.” #velshi
9/16
The state then appealed to the Supreme Court, arguing that the decision to deny Kisela so called “qualified immunity” was at odds with virtually every other circuit court and the Supreme Court. #velshi
10/16
The Supreme court agreed, and found that quote “even assuming that a Fourth Amendment violation occurred – on these facts Kisela was at least entitled to qualified immunity.” #velshi
11/16
Qualified immunity, like in the Hughes vs. Kisela case, protects law enforcement officers as well as state and local officials from frivolous litigation unless the accused violated a clearly established constitutional right. #velshi
12/16
Establishing that violation is not easy, especially if there's no prior pattern of such behavior - so over the years, qualified immunity has become a kind of shield in thousands of lawsuits seeking to hold officers accountable when accused of using excessive force. #velshi
13/16
Proponents of qualified immunity say it’s essential because police need latitude to make split-second decisions in scenarios that could put lives, including their own, at risk. #velshi
14/16
Last May, a Reuters investigation revealed how qualified immunity has made it easier for police to kill or injure civilians with impunity by shielding them from lawsuits. But the Supreme Court, in recent years, has become more critical of qualified immunity. #velshi
15/16
Comments about it have been made by Clarence Thomas & Sonia Sotomayor, who described qualified immunity as “a ‘shoot first, think later’ approach to policing”. Qualified immunity is 1 of those things that, if altered or removed, could fundamentally change policing. #velshi
16/16
It’s also turning out to be the hill Republican Senators are prepared to die on in exchange for supporting the George Floyd Justice In Policing Act. And for that reason, it deserves our attention. #velshi
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1/12
We’ve been officially voting in elections in America since 1789 and, while it hasn’t always been perfect we’ve gotten pretty good at it. But it's changed a lot since the beginning granting the right to vote to all people regardless of gender, race or color. #velshi
2/12
Outlawing poll taxes and even making your vote private starting in 1890 when many states began to use secret ballots to prevent voters from being bullied into voting for candidates they didn’t support. #velshi
3/12
A lot has changed since we started voting but one thing hasn't, and probably shouldn't. Voting in America has always been the responsibility of the government. State, Local AND federal. #velshi
1/13
It was an emotional week as the country focused on a 10 mile stretch from Minneapolis to the suburb of Brooklyn Center Minnesota. First the conviction of Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd and then the funeral of Daunte Wright. #velshi
2/13
With the soul-stirring mix of events its certainly understandable if you missed Earth Day on Thursday. It’s a day that usually figures prominently in my life - but this week was displaced in the news cycle. #velshi
3/13
The conviction of Derek Chauvin was a reflection of a changing consciousness - something brought about, in part, by almost a year of constant protest. Protest & demonstration that included up to 26 million Americans. #velshi
3/14
In 1971 an unlikely pairing of a black community organizer and a member of the Ku Klux Klan were asked to co-chair a “charrette” - a 10-day meeting – to address school desegregation in Durham, North Carolina. #velshi
4/14
Ann Atwater and C.P. Ellis were that unlikely pairing, each chosen for the same reason - because their connection to the matter made them prominent and relevant voices for each side of the contentious issue. #velshi
5/14
Both were invested in the outcome, as both also had children in Durham schools. Ann Atwater was said to be a no-nonsense black activist who distrusted all white people and wouldn’t take “no” for an answer. C.P. Ellis was a leader in the local chapter of the Klan. #velshi
1/12
One thing many of us have learned in the last year is how productive we can be when we aren’t spending an hour or two commuting to and from work. The pandemic has made us efficient, if nothing else. #velshi
2/12
All this working from home didn’t break the internet so, with a laptop & a phone or 2, we sure get a lot done. In fact, even before Covid, the American worker was about as productive as we have ever been. #velshi
3/12
As business picks up & unemployment falls, all that productivity is going to be a problem. It’s an economic concept but it’s Sunday so I won’t give you equations and stuff. #velshi
1/13
53 years ago today Martin Luther King Jr. was shot by a white racist as he stood on the second floor balcony outside his motel room in Memphis, Tennessee. #velshi
2/13
King’s dream, that all people be judged by the content of their character, and not by the color of their skin, is a fight that continues today and was the reason King received a Nobel Peace Prize just three years earlier. He was celebrated with high honors in NYC. #velshi
3/13
The reception in his hometown, Atlanta, however, was a different story. It was 1964 Atlanta was still a self-segregated city - so plans for an interracial dinner honoring King were not well supported by the city's top business leaders. Tickets weren’t selling. #velshi
1/13
During an interview on Fox, the now Senate minority leader said: "I don't believe I have spoken with him [President Biden] since he was sworn in.” #velshi
2/13
Mitch McConnell’s office later confirmed that wasn’t accurate since McConnell himself told reporters just last month that he and Biden had spoken about issues in Myanmar, the budget process and the coronavirus relief bill. #velshi
3/13
McConnell, seeming to want to score some points said: “there has been no effort whatsoever by the president or the administration to do anything in the political center." #velshi