Saturday evening, I got a call that no parent
wants to get. It was my son calling from college — he’s a third-year student at
Yale. He had been accosted by a campus police officer, at gunpoint!
This is how my son remembers it:
He
left for the library around 5:45 p.m. to check the status of a book he had
requested. The book hadn’t arrived yet, but since he was there he put in a
request for some multimedia equipment for a project he was working on.
Then he left to walk back to his dorm room. He
says he saw an officer “jogging” toward the entrance of another building across
the grounds from the building he’d just left.
Then this:
“I
did not pay him any mind, and continued to walk back towards my room. I looked
behind me, and noticed that the police officer was following me. He spoke into
his shoulder-mounted radio and said, ‘I got him.’
“I faced forward again, presuming that the
officer was not talking to me. I then heard him say, ‘Hey, turn around!’ — which
I did.
“The officer raised his gun at me, and told me
to get on the ground.
“At this point, I stopped looking directly at
the officer, and looked down towards the pavement. I dropped to my knees first,
with my hands raised, then laid down on my stomach.
“The officer asked me what my name was. I gave
him my name.
“The officer asked me what school I went to. I
told him Yale University.
“At this point, the officer told me to get
up.”
The officer gave his name, then asked my son
to “give him a call the next day.”
My son continued:
“I got up slowly, and continued to walk back
to my room. I was scared. My legs were shaking slightly. After a few more paces,
the officer said, ‘Hey, my man. Can you step off to the side?’ I did.”
The officer asked him to turn around so he
could see the back of his jacket. He asked his name again, then, finally, asked
to see my son’s ID. My son produced his school ID from his wallet.
The officer asked more questions, and my son
answered. All the while the officer was relaying this information to someone
over his radio.
My son heard someone on the radio say back to
the officer “something to the effect of: ‘Keep him there until we get this
sorted out.’ ” The officer told my son that an incident report would be filed,
and then he walked away.
A female officer approached. My son recalled,
“I told her that an officer had just stopped me and pointed his gun at me, and
that I wanted to know what this was all about.” She explained students had
called about a burglary suspect who fit my son’s description.
That suspect was apparently
later arrested in the area.
When I spoke to my son, he was shaken up. I,
however, was fuming.
Now, don’t get me wrong: If indeed my son
matched the description of a suspect, I would have had no problem with him being
questioned appropriately. School is his community, his home away from home, and
he would have appreciated reasonable efforts to keep it safe. The stop is not
the problem; the method of the stop is the problem.
Why was a gun drawn first? Why was he not
immediately told why he was being detained? Why not ask for ID first?
What if my son had panicked under the stress,
having never had a gun pointed at him before, and made what the officer
considered a “suspicious” movement? Had I come close to losing him? Triggers
cannot be unpulled. Bullets cannot be called back.
My son was unarmed, possessed no plunder,
obeyed all instructions, answered all questions This is the scenario I have always dreaded: my
son at the wrong end of a gun barrel, face down on the concrete. I had always
dreaded the moment that we would share stories about encounters with the police
in which our lives hung in the balance, intergenerational stories of joining the
inglorious “club.”
When that moment came, I was exceedingly happy
I had talked to him about how to conduct himself if a situation like this ever
occurred. Yet I was brewing with sadness and anger that he had to use that
advice.
I am reminded of what I have always known, but
what some would choose to deny: that there is no way to work your way out — earn
your way out — of this sort of crisis. In these moments, what you’ve done
matters less than how you look.
There is no amount of respectability that can
bend a gun’s barrel. All of our boys are bound together.
The dean of Yale College and the campus police
chief have apologized and promised an internal investigation, and I appreciate
that. But the scars cannot be unmade. My son will always carry the memory of the
day he left his college library and an officer trained a gun on him.
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