Recently, video has surfaced of police trying to throw a man in a wheelchair from his chair. Allegedly, the individual ran over the officer's foot.
Here are some other incidents worth remembering. And these are just the ones caught on tape. Video at each link.
Brian Sterner: thrown from his wheelchair by an officer who thought he might be faking (I write about this as the "pencil test" for wheelchair users).
Dwight Harris: thrown from his chair in DC in 2011. He was allegedly intoxicated and not complying.
Indiana police officer knocks Nicholas Kincade from his wheelchair for bumping into an officer.
Here's an Oakland school security officer beating and throwing a student from his chair. He was arrested and fired [Note - Not technically "police" but school culture, I argue, is part of the broader cult of compliance. If you are new to my writing, please start here for that concept].
That's just five that happened to be caught on video. How many more are out there?
There are circumstances in which a person in a wheelchair might indeed threaten an officer. Wheelchair users are human. They can carry firearms. They can break the law. I do not believe, based on what we know, any of these incidents meet that standard. I would suggest the following guideline - if you, as a law enforcement officer, would not consider breaking the individual's legs, also do not knock them from their chair.
If a wheelchair user does something requiring a law-enforcement response, such as intentionally rolling over a foot (those chairs are heavy), two legitimate choices emerge.
1) Arrest/cite them.
2) Let it go, the way one might at a little nudge from a shoulder as someone brushes by you.
There is no legitimate option #3 - dehumanize them.
Because that's what these acts are - dehumanizing and intentionally so, stripping away the one tool which allows a wheelchair user real independence. They say - your ability to be a human is contingent on our say-so.
And as always, notice the intersections. It isn't necessary to be black and a wheelchair user to be victimized, but when race and disability intersect, things get dangerous fast.
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I am a freelance journalist focusing on the intersections of disability and police violence. I have written for CNN, Al Jazeera, Chronicle of Higher Ed, New York Times, and more. I'm also a blogger, long-time member of this site, and a history professor. You can read my blog at How Did We Get Into This Mess? This is a modified version of my most recent post.
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