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Atlanta reinstates US policeman charged with killing Black man

US police officer Garrett Rolfe gives Rayshard Brooks a sobriety test moments before his deadly shooting in southwest Atlanta, US, on June 12, 2020. (Photo by Atlanta Police Department)

The US city of Atlanta has reinstated a white police officer fired over fatal shooting of Rayshard Brooks, an American Black man last year.

The Atlanta Civil Service Board wrote that Garrett Rolfe was “not afforded his right to due process” over his dismissal, noting several instances where the city had failed to “comply with several provisions” in the Atlanta City Code.

Rolfe is charged with felony murder, aggravated assault and other crimes in the case. A trial date has not been set.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has one again defended her initial decision to fire Rolfe.

"Given the volatile state of our city and nation last summer, the decision to terminate this officer, after he fatally shot Mr. Brooks in the back, was the right thing to do," she said in a statement.

Then-Fulton County District Attorney also said Brooks had never presented himself as a threat and appeared “almost jovial” in police body-cam footage.

Brooks is one of multiple cases of African American and members of the minority groups fatally shot by the US police which have drawn the attention of Black Lives Matter movement and civil rights activists.

The June 12 deadly shooting came two weeks after the police killing of African-American George Floyd in Minneapolis, heightening tensions across the United States over police brutality and racism and led to protests in the US and abroad.

Protesters gathered on the steps of Atlanta City Hall on Wednesday, with many of them holding signs with slogans such as "Stop Police Killing", "Justice for Rayshard Brooks" and "Jail Killer Cops Now."

Some protesters called for the city to fire Rolfe again.

"Rayshard Brooks needed a ride home, what he wound up with was a bullet in his back," said a local activist.

An activist tweeted that, “Rayshard Brooks' killer, Garrett Rolfe, should never be allowed to hold a position of power over other people ever again, in Atlanta or anywhere else. The fact that he has been reinstated as an APD officer is as unsurprising as it is infuriating.”

Another activist called the reversal of Rolfe’s dismissal outrageous.

Gerald Griggs, vice president of the Atlanta chapter of the NAACP, the largest US civil rights organization, said under no circumstances should Rolfe go back on street patrol.

"He does not deserve to be a police officer in this or any city, and we are going to protest," Griggs said. "The community is upset and this will not stand."

Raper US cop was rehired due to police negligence

An Alabama State Trooper was arrested last week on charges of sodomy and sexual abuse of a child under 12. 

Christopher Bauer had been fired from the FBI in 2018 after he raped a female colleague, but was hired again by the state in an oversight, the AP said.

His co-workers had accused him of raping her at knifepoint, claiming that the lawman assaulted her so “frequently her hair began to fall out.”

“It was a year of torture,” the woman said. “He quite literally would keep me awake for days. I couldn’t eat. I couldn’t sleep, and in six months I went from 150 pounds to 92 pounds. I was physically dying from what he was doing to me.”

But in 2019, Bauer was rehired after Alabama police failed to conduct an appropriate background check and used false information supplied by Bauer and a forged letter said to be from the FBI, saying that he was “eligible for rehire.”

The US police have come under the spotlight as incidents of violence perpetuated against people of color in the US have witnessed an alarming surge, with George Floyd’s diabolical murder and the subsequent high-profile trial of the white police officer shining light on the phenomenon.

The recent wave of US police killings of African Americans brought US racism back into focus and became an emblem of the anti-racism Black Lives Matter movement.

Floyd’s killing and large-scale protests against racist violence in the US, however, did not make the lives of African Americans and Asian Americans safer. The violence continues unabated across the United States under the new administration.

Experts have attributed it largely to the former US President Donald Trump’s racist rhetoric, which encouraged trigger-happy cops and white supremacists to target people of color and get away with it.

 


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