“You Don’t Need a Rocket Scientist to Figure Out What Could Happen”: Reasoning Practices in Police Use of Force Trials

Carmen Nave, Albert J. Meehan, Ann Marie Dennis
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Abstract

Trials involving police as defendants are rare but are significant events that give insight into police violence and its adjudication. This article explores the reasoning practices through which court actors navigate the disjunctive accounts created by competing claims of “what happened” in a police shooting. The data is drawn from trial testimony of officers and “use of force experts” in police deadly force cases in the United States. We focus on use of force experts who use a veneer of science and police logic to assert particular visions of officer “reasonableness.” We suggest that the systems of reasoning that lawyers and witnesses use in these cases create accounts of police violence that conflict with mundane reasoning and challenge credibility. We show that the proliferation of different reasoning practices and the elaboration of a “police logic” serve to insulate officers from criticism and accountability—albeit, not always successfully.
"你不需要火箭科学家也能想出可能发生的事情":警察使用武力审判中的推理实践
涉及警察作为被告的审判非常罕见,但却是能让人们深入了解警察暴力及其判决的重要事件。本文探讨了法庭行为者在处理警察枪击案中 "发生了什么 "这一相互竞争的说法所造成的不一致陈述时所采用的推理方法。数据来自美国警察致命武力案件中警官和 "武力使用专家 "的庭审证词。我们的研究重点是使用武力专家,他们利用科学和警察逻辑的外衣来宣称警官的 "合理性"。我们认为,律师和证人在这些案件中使用的推理系统对警察暴力的描述与普通推理相冲突,对可信度提出了挑战。我们表明,不同推理实践的扩散和 "警察逻辑 "的阐述有助于使警官免受批评和问责--尽管并非总是成功的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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