“You Don’t Need a Rocket Scientist to Figure Out What Could Happen”: Reasoning Practices in Police Use of Force Trials
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...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Law & social inquiry 2024-11, Vol.49 (4), p.2439-2465 |
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description | 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. |
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source | PAIS Index; Sociological Abstracts; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete |
subjects | Accountability Acquittals & mistrials Attorneys Body cameras Convictions Courts Credibility Criticism Deadly force Defendants Elaboration Ethnomethodology Evidence Experts Juries Murders & murder attempts Police Police brutality Police shootings Shooting Testimony Trials Violence Witnesses |
title | “You Don’t Need a Rocket Scientist to Figure Out What Could Happen”: Reasoning Practices in Police Use of Force Trials |
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