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Ex-NYPD Cop On Trial For Jan. 6th Riot Claims “Self-Defense”

Here's what his defense tells us about American policing

Isnโ€™t it funny how the same rules cops apply to everyone else suddenly no longer apply when theyโ€™re in trouble? Case in point: a former member of the NYPD whoโ€™s currently on trial for assaulting an officer during the Jan. 6 insurgency at the U.S. Capitol is arguing in court that it was the officer he assaulted that started the whole thing. A lawyer for Thomas Webster, the Trump-supporting ex-officer now facing six federal charges, says it was self defense when his client tried to hit a D.C. Metropolitan Police officer, Noah Rathbun, with a flagpole and tackled him, even though Rathbun was on-duty and trying to stop a violent crowd that Webster was a part of. Thereโ€™s no doubt that Webster was part of the crowd that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6; thereโ€™s video of him there. NBC News reported it like this:

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Video played during opening arguments on Tuesday shows Webster pushing a barricade and swinging a metal flagpole at an officer before tackling him to the ground, choking the officer with his gas mask.

But James E. Monroe, Websterโ€™s attorney, told jurors that the officer struck Webster and โ€œstarted this whole thing.โ€ Monroe claimed that the officerโ€™s use of force as a mob pushed against the barricades was inappropriate, and said his client was upset by the force used against members of the mob of thousands who had already passed a barricade and were unlawfully present on the restricted grounds of the U.S. Capitol during a riot.

โ€œThis case is built on the lies of a young officer from the Metropolitan Police Department,โ€ Monroe alleged.

Gasp! A case built on the lies of a police officer? Somehow it feels like Webster must be speaking from experience. How else to explain that a career cop would think self-defense would be his get-out-of-jail-free card for assaulting another cop? Based on the fates of the other Capitol rioters who have gone to trial, itโ€™s unlikely Webster gets off. Everyone else in his situation to date has been found guilty. But donโ€™t let that distract you from whatโ€™s really happening when a Trumpist, rioting cop calls another cop a liar and claims self-defense to save his own ass.

Heโ€™s only doing what heโ€™s been taught works all along.

If thereโ€™s anything to be learned from Websterโ€™s ridiculous defenseโ€“besides that heโ€™ll say anything to spare himself some time in jailโ€“itโ€™s that the universal rule of American policing is that cops donโ€™t think the rules they enforce on everyone else should ever apply to them. They believe this whether theyโ€™re still wearing the badge or theyโ€™ve left the force, like Webster, because it gets reinforced almost every time thereโ€™s an attempt to hold them accountable for violence or abuse of power.Breonna Taylorโ€™s boyfriend had every right to defend their home from intruders with a legal firearm but cops broke in and killed Taylor anyway, with no criminal consequences. Michael Brown died while walking down the street without a gun in his hand but Darren Wilson, the cop who killed him, was never charged. We donโ€™t know yet why Christoper Schurr shot unarmed Patrick Lyoya in the back of his head, but how much of your salary would you bet that if heโ€™s ever charged, Schurrโ€™s defense sounds something like Monroeโ€™s: he started it, and I had no choice but to kill him?

It was self-defense.

Straight From The Root

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