国产视频

In Short

Texas’ Governor Has Condemned the Death of George Floyd, But He鈥檚 Been Silent on the State’s Recent History of Police Killings

texas police.jpg
Never Settle Media / Shutterstock.com

This article in The Texas Tribune.

When George Floyd died at the hands of Minneapolis police last month, Texas Gov. labeled the incident a 鈥渉orrific act of police brutality鈥 and has since repeatedly said that Texas can鈥檛 let such a tragedy happen.

鈥淕eorge Floyd has not died in vain,鈥 Abbott said Monday at in Houston. 鈥淚 am committed to working with the family of George Floyd to ensure we never have anything like this ever occur in the state of Texas.鈥

It already has.

But the governor has been noticeably silent on Texas' own high-profile examples of police killings. An Abbott spokesperson did not respond to questions for this story Tuesday.

Last year, Texas police shot and killed 117 people, according to by the Texas attorney general鈥檚 office. A string of high-profile fatal police shootings and in-custody deaths of black Texans in recent years has sparked protests and widespread calls for police reform and racial justice.

In 2018, former Balch Springs police officer Roy Oliver was convicted of murder in the shooting death of , a 15-year-old passenger in a car that was driving away from police. A year later, former Dallas police officer Amber Guyger was convicted of murder for killing , a 26-year-old man who was unarmed at home when the off-duty officer shot him from the doorway. Guyger said she mistook his apartment, which she entered, for her own home.

Last October, a Fort Worth police officer dispatched to perform a welfare check on Atatiana Jefferson instead fatally shot the black woman, who was home playing video games with her nephew, according to The . Hearing noises outside her window in the middle of the night, Jefferson grabbed her handgun and went to the window, her nephew later said. The former officer, Aaron Dean, did not identify himself as law enforcement and shot her through the window.

Javier Ambler, who was also black, died last year after Williamson County sheriff deputies held him down and stunned him with a Taser after pulling him over for failing to dim the headlights on his SUV. Ambler repeatedly told officers he wasn鈥檛 resisting arrest and that he couldn鈥檛 breathe, according to .

And in Austin, cellphone video recorded by a neighbor showed that and driving away from police in April when a police officer shot and killed him. The officer, Christopher Taylor, is on paid leave.

Those high-profile shootings from 2019 and this year are still under investigation. The names of the people killed have been printed on protest signs and shouted alongside Floyd鈥檚 during the recent Texas demonstrations. Abbott has not mentioned them since Floyd鈥檚 death.

On Tuesday night, the governor changed his phrasing in an interview with , saying reform efforts are needed to ensure 鈥渢hat no one is killed like this in the future.鈥 His comments came after The Texas Tribune asked a spokesperson about the disconnect between the governor's previous remarks and Texas' history.

Rebecca Webber, an attorney for Ramos鈥 mother, said Tuesday that it鈥檚 hard for Brenda Ramos to hear city and state officials speak out for Floyd but not her son.

鈥淕overnor Abbott rightfully condemned a murder across the country but what about the awful videos of the killings of Mike Ramos and Javier Ambler right here in our community?鈥 Webber said in an email to The Texas Tribune. 鈥淲here is the outrage from officials about these tragedies?鈥

Failed police reforms

In the aftermath of the against police brutality and racial inequity that erupted after Floyd鈥檚 death, Abbott has commended Texas鈥 efforts in the criminal justice world, citing certain state laws, a large number of exonerations and the closure of several state prisons in recent years as examples of recent success. And at Floyd鈥檚 memorial in Houston, Abbott he was open to pursuing more policing reforms, suggesting there鈥檚 more to come in next year鈥檚 legislative session.

But the governor has not addressed several police reform efforts that state lawmakers repeatedly failed to pass in recent years in the face of opposition from law enforcement. The failed measures include attempts to require investigations into racial profiling and limiting arrests for low-level offenses that are punishable only by fines.

鈥淩emember this: Texas has a legacy of success, whether it be the Timothy Cole Act, the Sandra Bland Act and now maybe the George Floyd Act, to make sure that we prevent police brutality like this from happening in the future in Texas,鈥 he said Monday.

Texas leaders, like Abbott, have prided themselves on the state鈥檚 criminal justice reforms. in combating wrongful convictions after legislative efforts spurred by Cole鈥檚 case. Cole died in prison after serving more than two decades for a rape that DNA evidence posthumously cleared him of committing. In Cole鈥檚 name, Texas enacted a law in 2009 to increase state compensation given to those who served prison sentences for wrongful convictions. Other laws in following years and for police departments conducting lineups.

But more recently, criminal justice reform advocates at the state Capitol have bemoaned failed attempts at change. The repeated inability to pass bills on issues like bail, police practices and the death penalty prompted a bipartisan group of House representatives last year to in hopes of bolstering their efforts.

The , though noted for its achievements in mental health and jail reforms, was stripped of most of the sweeping police reform provisions initially included in the bill鈥攍ike punitive action for officers found to engage in racial profiling and a ban on police using traffic violations as a pretext to investigate other potential crimes. Bland died in an apparent suicide in a Texas jail cell three days after she was arrested during a routine traffic stop.

Last year, lawmakers again tried to limit law enforcement's ability to arrest people who are suspected of crimes that at most would result in a fine without jail time. That measure 鈥渜uite spectacularly,鈥 said Chris Harris, director of the criminal justice project for the advocacy group Texas Appleseed.

Lawmakers were also unsuccessful last year at closing the so-called which allows law enforcement to withhold videos and records from the public in criminal cases if the suspect has not been convicted鈥攅ven if the suspect died in police custody.

鈥淭here was a time where Texas could plausibly claim some leadership on criminal justice issues more broadly, but I think that time has passed,鈥 Harris said.

Police unions and state officials

Some have blamed the recent failures of those reform attempts on police unions. State Rep. , an El Paso Democrat who was heavily involved in both 2019 bills and leads the Criminal Justice Reform Caucus, said the biggest roadblock has been the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas. The union opposed both 2019 measures of the legislative session in May.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 changed now is, in the past, a group like that thought that they defined the parameters of the debates,鈥 Moody said Tuesday. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛.鈥

Harris agreed that Floyd鈥檚 death and the reaction that has followed have inspired people to look at why unions wield so much power.

However, Charley Wilkison, executive director of the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas, says the union鈥檚 wishes are often rejected at the Capitol, and he attributed successes to his organization's long-standing partnerships with both parties.

鈥淚 would hardly describe us as an organization that鈥檚 been out manhandling legislation,鈥 he said.

Wilkison said he would support police changes that would create more training or raise standards for new officers.

Abbott has not made clear how or if he would stand up against police groups鈥 wishes when they conflict with renewed calls for reform. Although the governor has said he discussed potential legislation with lawmakers and raised the idea of naming a new law in honor of Floyd, he has not specified the details of any issues or policies such a bill would address. In his KBTX interview on Tuesday night, he, like Wilkison, noted officers needed better training.

鈥淲e are beginning to craft a product that will be in a form that has a good chance of being passed by the Legislature this coming session,鈥 Abbott .

He added that defunding police departments, , 鈥渋s always the wrong move.鈥

A spokesperson did not specify with whom the governor had spoken about possible policy changes, and those consulted had not yet included the 17-member Texas Legislative Black Caucus. The group requested to meet with Abbott last week to discuss paths forward to address police misconduct and criminal justice reforms.

鈥淲e are somewhat perplexed that, to date, the members of the TLBC have not been included in your discussions with Legislators regarding possible legislative solutions to halt and prevent the horrific act(s) of police brutality,鈥 state Rep. , a Houston Democrat who leads the caucus, wrote in a letter to the governor.

Dutton told The Texas Tribune on Tuesday that the governor has since agreed to a virtual meeting, which is scheduled for Wednesday.

State Rep. , a fellow caucus member, said Tuesday that lacking gubernatorial guidance, he and state Sen. , both Houston Democrats who authored the Bland legislation and chair committees involved in criminal justice legislation, named in the woman鈥檚 honor. Coleman also said they will look at other suggestions in light of Floyd鈥檚 death, like getting rid of choke holds.

Moody said it is now imperative to close the dead suspect loophole and to limit arrests for minor infractions like traffic violations. Harris hopes the current political climate will lead to a more successful criminal justice session in 2021.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot to do, and I鈥檓 very hopeful that given the broad swell of support for efforts to limit police power and to demilitarize police, that we can do that,鈥 he said.

More 国产视频 the Authors

Jolie McCullough
Texas’ Governor Has Condemned the Death of George Floyd, But He鈥檚 Been Silent on the State’s Recent History of Police Killings