Their 'Right' to Kill, Our Duty to Die: The Murder
of Otto Zehm
by
William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: Send
in the Drones: The Predator State Goes Domestic
Otto Zehm,
a mentally handicapped, 36-year-old unemployed janitor, was
beaten to death in a Spokane convenience store in March 2006.
"All I wanted
was a Snickers bar," pleaded
the battered and bloody man before he was gagged by his assailant.
On November
4, Karl Thompson, the man convicted of killing Zehm, was taken to
jail. Several
dozen members of Thompson’s gang were gathered outside the courtroom
– most of them proudly wearing the colors – to "show their
honor" by offering the murderer a public salute. Thompson
– whose hands weren’t cuffed, in violation of long-established rules
– smiled and returned the gesture. Zehm’s still-grieving mother
and several other relatives stood just a few feet away.
The gang in
question is the Spokane Police Department, which even now refuses
to acknowledge that Thompson – who was a nominee to become Chief
at the time he murdered Zehm – ever did anything wrong when he clubbed,
tased, and suffocated a terrified, innocent man who did nothing
to provoke the attack, and who put up no violent resistance to the
assault.
Zehm had done
custodial work at Fairchild Air Force Base and was
well-known, and equally well-liked, by many people in his neighborhood,
some of whom were aware that he had been diagnosed with schizophrenia.
He was in the daily habit of visiting a convenience store called
Zip Trip to purchase junk food – usually Pepsi and a candy bar.
On March 18,
2006, Zehm retrieved some money at an ATM near Zip Trip. Something
in his behavior struck two girls as odd, so they called the police.
Although there was no reason to believe that Zehm had committed
a crime, Thompson entered the store as if he were pursuing a dangerous
fugitive. Security video documents that Thompson approached Zehm
from behind, while retrieving his custom-made, over-sized ironwood
nightstick.
Thompson introduced
himself to Zehm by shouting at him to drop the two-liter bottle
of Pepsi. According to the officer, the startled and puzzled man
responded by quite reasonably asking, "Why?" Thompson
interpreted that Zehm’s fleeting non-compliance as an immediate
and intolerable threat to officer safety. So he rushed at the terrified
man and began to beat him with his nightstick – clubbing him first
in the legs, then on the shoulders, neck, and head. Blows to the
head are defined as lethal strikes under the Spokane PD’s use-of-force
policy, justifiable only when a suspect threatens the life of a
police officer or bystanders.
As
the security video demonstrates, Zehm never put up a fight.
He retreated from Thompson, and then made a pitiable attempt to
use his bottle of soda to deflect blows aimed at his face. Thompson
escalated his assault by tasering him at least three times. Thompson
was eventually joined by six other other police officers. Eventually,
Thompson was actually sitting on Zehm, who was face-down on the
floor.
The victim
was hog-tied in a "four-point
restraint," meaning that his hands were shackled to his
ankles. Department policy guidelines emphasize that suspects restrained
in this fashion are never to be placed face-down, since this posture
can result in "positional asphyxia." Yet Zehm was left
in that position for about seventeen minutes, and at one point an
officer actually pulled his feet backwards – which increased the
risk of suffocation by placing pressure on the victim’s diaphragm.
After emergency
personnel arrived, they were instructed to dig the Taser barbs out
of Zehm’s flesh. They were also asked to provide a "non-rebreathing"
oxygen mask; this was placed over the victim’s face, supposedly
to prevent him from assaulting the officers by spitting on them.
This mask was not designed or intended to be used without being
attached to an oxygen supply. Once the mask was placed on Zehm’s
face, the traumatized and panicking man – who was already at severe
risk of hypoxia – was forced to breathe through an easily obstructed
opening roughly the size of a quarter.
Did Thompson
and his cohorts deliberately set out to suffocate Zehm? Every step
they took led inexorably to that outcome, and incompetence can only
explain so much. That was the outcome, whether it was the result
of deliberate malice or depraved indifference. Zehm stopped breathing
about seventeen minutes after Thompson’s initial assault, and died
in a nearby hospital about two days later. But the police department’s
assault on Zehm continued while he struggled for life in the hospital,
and didn’t end with his death.
On the day
of the beating, Police Chief Jim Nicks told the media that Zehm
had "lunged" at Thompson, thereby threatening his life.
Other officers claimed that Zhem had a prior arrest for assaulting
an officer. Both claims were conscious, deliberate lies.
About two weeks
after Zehm’s death, Detective Terry Ferguson, who "investigated"
the incident for the Spokane PD, filed a report claiming that none
of the seven officers who assaulted Zehm committed a crime. Ferguson
had little time to investigate what was done to Zehm, because she
was too busy investigating the victim. The detective persuaded a
judge to issue warrants to pry into every aspect of Zehm’s medical,
employment, and personal history, on the pretext that the deceased
was suspected of "assaulting a police officer." This was
actually an unsuccessful effort to exhume something – anything –
that could be used to denigrate the victim.
After the pressure
of a threatened lawsuit, Spokane County Prosecutor Steve Tucker
released the video recordings of the assault, which he and the police
had diligently suppressed. The recordings contradicted every critical
element of Thompson’s version of the event, beginning with the claim
that Zehm had "lunged" at the officer.
With no criminal
charges filed against Thompson, Zehm’s family announced its intention
to sue the City of Spokane, and the Justice Department began a civil
rights inquiry. In March 2009 – three years after the killing –
Chief Anne Kirkpatrick (who had replaced Chief Nicks) issued a public
statement offering her "unequivocal support" to Thompson.
"Based on all the information and evidence I have reviewed,
I have determined that Officer Karl Thompson acted consistent with
the law," Kirkpatrick insisted.
A few months
later, Chief Kirkpatrick assigned Thompson – who was, recall, the
subject of a federal civil rights investigation – to help train
other Spokane police officers how to deal with "high-risk liability
incidents," which have been plentiful.
Spokane’s municipal
government, which
paid out $2.5 million to resolve police-related lawsuits between
1996 and 2007, has a policy of filing counter-suits accusing
citizens of "conspiracy to misuse the judicial process."
This is made possible by a state statute intended to protect police
against supposedly frivolous lawsuits. Given all of this it’s not
surprising that Chief Kirkpatrick’s unqualified endorsement of Thompson’s
actions was coupled with an unyielding official line blaming the
victim for his own death. "Any injury or damage suffered by
Mr. Zehm was caused solely by reason of his conduct and willful
resistance," proclaimed the City of Spokane’s official response
to the family’s civil lawsuit.
Mr. Zehm’s
"conduct" – which, according to Chief Kirkpatrick and
Spokane’s municipal government, justified the use of lethal force
-- consisted of doing exactly nothing. Then again, he was
armed with a bottle of Pepsi, which apparently left the heroic
Officer Thompson no choice but to stage a preemptive strike with
his club and Taser. Perhaps if it had been Mt. Dew, the use of tactical
nukes would have been appropriate.
"If all
[the victim] wanted to do was surrender, he could have done so,"
insisted Officer Terry Preuninger, the Spokane PD’s SWAT Team Leader
and patrol tactics instructor, during the trial. "[Officer
Thompson’s] assessment was accurate. He continued to use force.
It did allow him to keep that man from hurting him or anyone else."
Thompson began
his attack within seconds of arriving at the store – before Zehm
had a chance to "surrender." Furthermore, the victim was
backing away from the officer. According to Preuninger – who, as
SWAT leader, approaches such situations with a militarized close-and-kill
mindset – this didn’t matter: "Picture wrestlers or boxers.
It’s definitely not an indication that they don’t want to hurt or
assault you because they move back."
"A police
officer becomes an expert in evaluation of behavior or picking out
little things that are different," Preuninger asserted on the
stand. Victor Boutros, chief prosecutor during the trial, treated
that claim with laudable contempt, mocking
this supposed preternatural gift of discernment as a "Spidey
sense" that "can’t be impeached by citizen eye witnesses
or video. Only [Thompson] could have seen those things."
Furthermore,
according to Preuninger, police have plenary authority to use lethal
force even when their perceptions are in error: "A police officer
can make a mistake. An officer could believe their [sic] life was
in danger or they [sic] were in danger of being assaulted when in
fact we could go back in hindsight and show that’s not true. But
the force would be authorized."
This is to
say: From the perspective of the individual who trains the Spokane
PD regarding the use of force, Karl Thompson was completely right
– but he could have been entirely wrong, and he would still have
had the authority to kill Otto Zehm. This is because police officers,
who face an all-encompassing threat from the public they supposedly
protect, must be entitled to employ aggressive violence at all times,
Preuninger maintains: "If you approach law enforcement situations
the same way you would a neighborhood meeting … it will directly
lead to you getting murdered on the job or getting hurt or assaulted."
Really?
Between
1867 and 2009, a total of 23 law Spokane County law enforcement
officers – police, Sheriff’s deputies, and one member of the County
Game Commission – died in the line of duty. Eleven of them – fewer
than half that total – were killed by suspected criminals. Six died
in traffic accidents. Two were struck and killed by drunk drivers.
Two were fatally shot by fellow law enforcement personnel during
training exercises (one of them was killed by a police officer showing
off a quick-draw technique), and another was a game warden shot
by a hunter who was reaching for a permit. One officer died from
a heart attack during SWAT training.
None of those
line-of-duty deaths occurred because an officer was insufficiently
aggressive during one of the perilous "law enforcement situations"
that haunt Preuninger’s imagination.
Interestingly,
Spokane County – which maintains
a police Honor Guard that attends police funerals throughout
the Northwest – describes itself as "third in the state for
line of duty deaths." This illustrates – redundantly – that
law enforcement is not a particularly hazardous occupation. In Spokane,
as elsewhere, the citizen in a "law enforcement situation"
is at far greater risk than the police officer.
A little more
than a year after Otto Zehm was murdered by Thompson and his cohorts,
37-year-old
Trent Yohe, the father of a young child, was beaten, tasered, and
hog-tied by Sheriff’s deputies who had illegally entered his home.
Yohe was asleep
when the deputies invaded his home. The last
words he heard before lapsing into an irreversible coma were
orders from his assailants to stop resisting.
Shortly
after the incident, Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich admitted in an official
memo that at the time Yohe – a known meth addict subject to Grand
Mal seizures – "was never under arrest." The County eventually
paid $50,000 stolen from local tax victims to settle a lawsuit
filed by Yohe’s family.
The deputies
who murdered Yohe followed almost exactly the same protocols used
by the murderers of Otto Zehm a year earlier. Sheriff Knezovich
defiantly insisted
that he saw no reason to change those procedures.
This isn’t
to say, however, that the Sheriff was categorically opposed to reform:
In a joint press conference with Chief Kirkpatrick, Knezovich indignantly
protested the use of the term "hog-tied" to describe the
method used by officers to truss their prone and helpless victims;
the appropriate term, he insisted, is "hobbled."
That prompted
Seattle Spokesman-Review columnist Doug Clark to compose
a lexicon of law enforcement euphemisms.
In keeping
with Sheriff Knezovich’s delicate sensibilities, Clark suggested
that language like the following would be suitable: "Trent
Yohe, a methamphetamine addict, was holiday gift-wrapped after a
spirited difference of opinion with sheriff’s deputies." What
about the eyewitness report that deputies had kicked out the victim’s
false teeth? Easy: Yohe wasn’t brutalized – he "participated
in a police-assisted dental plan." And henceforth, a Taser
will be called a "joy buzzer."
Clark’s essay
was aimed at the Spokane PD’s institutional vanity, a target that’s
impossible to miss. This prompted Officer Preuninger – who
wept openly when Thompson was taken away to jail -- to rebuke
the impudent
Mundane via
a letter
to the editor in which the
decorated SWAT team leader struck the familiar pose of policeman-as-maligned
savior.
"Sleep
well, Mr. Clark, because no matter how much you insult me, no matter
how low you go to belittle my profession, if you find yourself in
harm’s way, you need only call and one of us will come and risk
our life to save yours: an irony I am quite sure you can never fathom,"
whined Preuninger in a tone worthy of a passive-aggressive teenage
girl.
As is almost
always the case in such matters, it is Officer Preuninger who suffers
from a severe irony deficiency: None of the officers he trained
intervened to save Otto Zehm when that innocent man was being beaten
to death by Karl Thompson, who was a "mentor" to the entire
force and their preferred candidate to be chief.
Following Thompson’s
guilty verdict, U.S. Attorney Mike Ormsby asserted that "This
is not an indictment of our entire police force." Oh, yes it
is.
Reprinted
with permission from Pro
Libertate.
December
24, 2011
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2011 William Norman Grigg
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