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102 Cornell L. Rev. Online 1 (2016-2017)

handle is hein.journals/clro102 and id is 1 raw text is: 








       EXCESSIVE FORCE AND THE MEDIA


               Miranda  Dalpiazt  &  Nancy  Leongt t


         Recent  allegations of police officers using excessive
    force  against people of color have  received considerable
    attention in the media. Yet such incidents have largely
    stalled in the legal system. With a few notable exceptions,
    neither criminal nor civil proceedings, at either the federal or
    state level, have provided recourse for those injured by the
    police or for the families of those killed by the police.
         This Essay   examines  the  media  coverage  of police
     excessive force in relation to one federal statute bridging
     criminal and civil rights concerns-1 8 U.S.C. § 242. While
     the  statute  is  criminal in  nature,   allowing federal
     prosecution against government officers who willfully violate
     constitutional rights, it addresses civil rights concerns by
     offering a remedy  against those  who  use  state force to
     infringe civil rights.
         An   empirical   examination   reveals   that-despite
     considerable media coverage of police excessive force-such
     coverage is reactive rather than proactive when it comes to
     federal civil rights charges. That is, it discusses charges
     under  18 U.S.C.  § 242 only  when  an  investigation that
     might result in such charges is already underway,   rather
     than examining  whether one will or should take place. An
     original empirical survey  of ten  years  of coverage  by
     thirty-six major newspapers  reveals that, of 445  articles
     that discussed federal civil rights charges, only forty-four, or
     9.89%, did so proactively rather than reactively. Such an
     approach is uncharacteristic for the media, which typically
     plays  an  important   role in  questioning  whether   the
     government  should take action in rectifying alleged abuses
     of power directed against  citizens. The Essay  considers
     why  the media has  assumed  a more  reactive role in police
     excessive force cases than  in other cases  involving civil
     rights violations, discusses the consequences of this role,
     and finally proposes a number of ways that media coverage
     of police excessive force incidents should be improved.


   t  J.D., University of Denver Sturm College of Law.
   tt Associate Professor, University of Denver Sturm College of Law. We
appreciate the thoughtful comments of John Campbell, Leslae J.E. Dalpiaz, Ian
Farrell, Charlotte Garden, Margaret Kwoka, Justin Pidot, and Henry Sulzbacher
as well as the careful and thorough research assistance of Natalie Klee.


1

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