“There is no question that the system is kinder and gentler” to middle-class white youths, Madison Mayor Paul Soglin told RT's Manuel Rapalo. Soglin added that the city is experimenting with ways to keep young African-Americans out of the criminal justice system, by working with a municipal judge and setting up a “peer court” in one of the districts.
Madison is also mulling the introduction of body cameras for police officers, though Soglin said this would not happen before 2016, adding that the decision is pending a study and budget discussions.
“Reconciliation cannot begin without my stating ‘I am sorry,’ and I don't think I can say this enough. I am sorry,” wrote Madison Police Chief Michael Koval on his officialblog.
READ MORE: Protest after ‘unarmed’ black 19 yo shot dead by Madison police
Officer Matt Kenny shot and killed 19-year-old Tony Robinson after responding to multiple calls alleging Robinson’s erratic and violent behavior last Friday night. Kenny has been on the force since 2002. An internal affairs investigation was launched, and may take four to six months.
Madison police have already been receiving racial sensitivity training, Chief Koval told the Wisconsin State Journal. However, though the city enjoys the reputation of a liberal haven with progressive politics, statistics indicate substantial disparities between whites and blacks on every level, from poverty and unemployment to arrest rates.
Police in Madison arrest black people at a rate 9 times higher than people of other races, @usatoday found last year http://t.co/Swb58NanRm
— Brad Heath (@bradheath) March 10, 2015
According to 2011-2012 arrest statistics reported by USA Today, Madison actually had worse racial disparity in arrests than Ferguson, Missouri, where police shot 18-year-old Michael Brown last summer. The Ferguson shooting brought into focus the alarming trend of African-American youths being killed by police.
While protests in Ferguson turned violent on several occasions, demonstrators in Madison have so far been peaceful. Police Chief Koval has urged the community to remember that the “much-maligned criminal justice system should still pay heed to the basic requirements of due process and fundamental fairness.”
On Tuesday evening, however, a cyber attack crippled city and county computers in Madison, with the hacker collective Anonymous claiming responsibility.
Cyber attack hits Madison, Wisconsin, after police shooting of teen http://t.co/4Iv9F1M7SN #Anonymous#OpMadison
— Anonymous (@YourAnonNews) March 10, 2015
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