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Making amends for Tamir Rice as Cleveland prepares for a new Community Police Commission

Gregory
Ryan Loew
/
91福利
Gregory Carey, president of a community outreach organization called Sons of Cleveland United, says the city has to do more to prevent another incident like the police killing of Tamir Rice.

Gregory Carey is standing in the shadow of Cudell Recreation Center, beside the city park where 12-year-old Tamir Rice was killed by Cleveland police eight years ago. Carey works with kids at a school nearby.

He runs a community outreach organization called Sons of Cleveland United. He鈥檚 born and raised in Cleveland and lives in the West Park neighborhood.

The gazebo where Tamir Rice was playing when he was shot has been removed. It鈥檚 been replaced by a small garden, with a few tulips blooming already on this early spring day.

Carey believes the police department has never really made up for what happened that day in November 2014, beyond a $6 million settlement with the Rice family.

鈥淏ut how much is a life worth? A young life,鈥 Carey said. 鈥淗e could have went on to be a scientist, or something one day, or to impact the world.鈥

Gregory
Ryan Loew
/
91福利
Gregory Carey sits in Jefferson Park in Cleveland.

There was never an apology from the department, Carey said, and it鈥檚 unclear to him that anything has been done to make sure something like that won鈥檛 happen again.

The space between the grass where the Cleveland police cruiser stopped and where Rice was playing with a toy gun is small 鈥 just a few feet away.

Carey says there was no reason for the officer to have gotten so close so quickly, if they actually thought Rice was a threat to shoot them.

鈥淣ot just roll up like the wild, wild west. Like it's 鈥楧iehard 3,鈥欌 Carey said. 鈥淭hat's not how that works. So, you know, they're not following protocol, and they have to be held accountable.鈥

Eventually, the city fired Timothy Loehmann, the officer who killed Rice. But Loehmann was never charged criminally. He was fired for lying on his application to join the force. The driver, Officer Frank Garmback, kept his job after the city imposed a 10-day suspension and some retraining.

Carey says the city has to do more to keep something like Rice鈥檚 death from happening again.

鈥淲e have to. We have to,鈥 Carey said. 鈥淏ecause it's going to get, it's getting out of control. But, hopefully, Cleveland can be the example, can be the prototype of how to make a difference.鈥

鈥淪ince the civil rights movement and here, the Hough riots, and all those things that have occurred in the past, there's always been a slight distrust. But now, it's way beyond that. Like, it's probably that times 10.鈥
Gregory Carey

The new Community Police Commission, when it鈥檚 up and running, would be able to review any discipline handed down by the police chief and safety director. But the process of appeal and arbitration laid out in the police union鈥檚 contract isn鈥檛 likely to change.

In Loehmann鈥檚 case, he was fired following an internal investigation, but then got his job back in arbitration. The arbitrator also cut Garmback鈥檚 suspension in half.

Still, the hope among police reform activists is that the Community Police Commission鈥檚 new disciplinary powers will change officer behavior before an incident like Rice鈥檚 killing can happen again. Carey thinks that鈥檚 possible.

Gregory
Ryan Loew
/
91福利
Gregory Carey works with kids at a school near the park where 12-year-old Tamir Rice was shot and killed by a Cleveland police officer.

鈥淚t would definitely help if an officer knew that if he killed someone wrong, he was going to get the same fate as a regular citizen,鈥 Carey said.

He says his own preference for addressing police accountability is to build a separate justice system for them. He suggests a prison just for police officers, similar to how the military has its own prison system.

鈥淭hey don't put cops in jail, they put ex-cops in jail,鈥 Carey said. 鈥淏ecause they're going to kick you off the force before they lock you up. So, they strip you of that title, and that makes you subject to the regular laws, when, no, it shouldn't be like that.鈥

Carey believes something has to change in Cleveland. The city is more dangerous than he can remember in his lifetime. And, he says, residents and the police are going to have to start working together to fix it.

This is the second of three stories with the voices of Clevelanders on policing in the city.

Matthew Richmond is a reporter/producer focused on criminal justice issues at 91福利.