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US Officers Involved in Shootings ‘Targets of Retribution’

© Fotolia / Dominik HerzUS Police
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US police officers shot suspects become targets of death threats or retribution because of communities’ perception and response to the shootings, National Association of Police Organizations Executive Director Bill Johnson told Sputnik on Monday.

A police officer keeps watch outside a room at the Tri-City Inn, one of the scenes of a multiple location shooting in Mesa, Arizona March 18, 2015. - Sputnik International
One Person Dead in Arizona Shooting Spree - US Police
WASHINGTON (Sputnik) — Johnson’s statement comes after the US state of Arizona passed a Police Bill on March 17 that would protect local police officers’ names for sixty days after being involved in a shooting as well as shelter them from retribution.

“You’d have to have a blind eye to see the officers involved have not become targets of retribution or death threats,” Johnson said. “Everything but the specific identity of the officer can be released.”

Johnson said he believes the Arizona Police Bill strikes a good balance between community understanding of what is happening and the physical safety of the officer involved, and the law will protect officers in light of the type of developments in Ferguson, Missouri.

“Even when two police officers are shot, there are protestors still saying they need to go,” Johnson said. “Ironically, the protest was in response to [Ferguson] Police Chief Jackson resigning.”

Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson shot Michael Brown as he was attempting to stop Brown flee on foot after robbing a store in August 2014, causing protests, often violent, to erupt across the United States.

Johnson said in order to successfully end the dialogue on police brutality in the United States, the US Department of Justice should release an unambiguous statement that Wilson complied with the law when he had been forced to shoot Brown.

Police in riot gear use tear gas to clear the street in front of the Ferguson Police Department after the announcement of the grand jury decision not to indict police officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old, Monday, Nov. 24, 2014, in Ferguson, Mo. - Sputnik International
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“I don’t think it’s enough to say there’s enough evidence to prosecute Office Wilson,” Johnson said. “The Attorney General needs to say that evidence shows Officer Wilson complied with the law, and the ‘Hands Up, Don’t Shoot’ narrative was a lie.”

Johnson said the Justice Department realized very early on that Wilson did not commit a crime, but felt they needed to show some result for the expenditures in investigation in Ferguson.

“That’s one of the reasons for such a scathing police report against the [Ferguson] police department itself,” Johnson said. “I think the bill will pass, and will be helpful if a situation like this [Ferguson] arises.”

Johnson added that deadly force was something that cannot be ignored when difficult situations like the one in Ferguson emerge.

The National Association of Police Organizations serves to improve the working conditions through legislative issues, awareness and modification of the rights of US law enforcement personnel.

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