IF you've ever heard the sound of a broom on a shop floor, sweeping up right before closing time, you would have heard it in the raspy voice of Cook County Associate Judge Luciano Panici reading his decision in the Wrana case.
It
wasn't crumbs or dust bits or sawdust from under the chopping block. Instead,
he was sweeping accountability for one human life, and perhaps saving another
life in the process.
That
was the effect of his decision in the case of Park Forest police Officer Craig
Taylor, charged with felony reckless conduct in the July 2013 shooting of John
Wrana, the 95-year-old World War II veteran who died after being shot four
times at close range with beanbag rounds from a 12-gauge shotgun.
"It
is a tragedy whenever there is loss of life that follows a confrontation,"
Panici began, reading from his papers in a South Side voice, a voice like my
own, our vowels aligned by neighborhood.
Panici
had frowned from the moment he began presiding over the case. But on Wednesday
he'd stopped frowning. He offered no admonition to the police officers
involved.
And
Taylor walked.
"The
force used by Craig Taylor was not excessive," Panici said. "There
was nothing reckless. There was nothing criminal about his actions."
There
were five cops in Wrana's room at the Victory Centre assisted living facility.
Wrana had a knife and a shoehorn and a cane. They had guns and a riot shield
and Tasers and muscle and youth and that 12-gauge Mossberg pump-action police
shotgun loaded with beanbag rounds.
They're
called "less-lethal" rounds, since the rounds aren't designed to
penetrate the skin and explode, but merely to thump the body and put it down.
Police in Ferguson, Mo., are experimenting with similar technology, where anger
and fire and protests and looting erupted after the police killing of Michael
Brown.
But
there were no protests for John Wrana, were there? World War II veterans didn't
form up and scream. That's not their way. They're old and dying every day. And
then there was that bit from Taylor's defense counsel, Terry Ekl, who said he
was sick and tired of hearing about Wrana's war service.
Ekl
is an excellent lawyer, one of the best around, with amazing skills of argument.
He's so good he could argue a 5-pound chunk of bologna right through the
smallest buttonhole on your lapel, and you wouldn't even taste it.
"I've
heard enough about World War II," Ekl said during the trial. "It's
nothing but an attempt to create more sympathy for Mr. Wrana."
But
John Wrana didn't get any sympathy, did he? Not really.
He
was old and delirious, suffering from a suspected urinary tract infection,
which can lead to delusions. He didn't want to be taken to the hospital. He
waved a knife and a shoehorn at cops. He swore at them. And they said they were
afraid for their very lives.
They
didn't give him sympathy. They didn't give him respect. And at trial, his
service to his country was deemed irrelevant.
But
they did give John Wrana something:
They
gave him four beanbag rounds to the abdomen, chest and arms at a range of 6 to
8 feet, with Taylor racking rounds and pulling the trigger, pumping and firing
and pumping and firing.
Part
of the old man's intestinal wall ruptured, and he bled out.
In
his decision, it was clear Judge Panici bought into the defense's argument that
Wrana prompted his own death by refusing surgery that could have repaired the
rupture.
True,
Wrana refused it, personally and through his stepdaughter. But focusing on that
alone is dealing with only half the truth of the situation.
Wrana
had asked the doctor if he could be guaranteed he wouldn't end up on a
ventilator in a vegetative state, and the stepdaughter has told me that the doctor
would not make that guarantee.
So
John Wrana said to let him go. And that's what they did. They let him go. He
didn't want it that way. But he didn't want to end his days with tubes down his
throat.
But
in court and out of it, I got the sense from the legal experts that Wrana had
killed himself.
If
only he'd obeyed officers. If only he hadn't become angry when they shot the
Taser at him and failed. If only he hadn't waved that knife or the shoehorn
that the terrified cops thought was the machete of a jungle ninja warrior.
If
only. If only.
Then
maybe they wouldn't have shot him down in his own room and then handcuff him to
a chair and taken photos of him bleeding on the carpet.
The
problem with this case from the beginning was that Taylor was alone in court.
But he wasn't alone in Wrana's room.
They
were other cops with him, formed up in "stack" formation behind the
guy with the riot shield, so they could rush the old man two weeks shy of his
96th birthday, that deadly ninja who terrified them so.
By
charging only Taylor, and not his superior, the whole thing seemed unfair.
I
didn't want Taylor to go to prison.
But
I don't think he should be a police officer — any more than the commander who
set up the stupid attack plan.
A
guilty verdict could have ruined Taylor's life, and those of his wife and
children, and I didn't want that either.
But
there's got to be some accountability for what happened to John Wrana.
And
there is none.
All
accountability, all official shame, all official sorrow, it was all just swept
away, by those broom stalks in Judge Panici's voice. And that's the tragedy.
No Police Accountability in Police Shooting of WWII Vet, 95
4 comments:
It may not have been criminal because the cop didn't intend to kill, but it was neglect and reckless.
A very well written article and it makes me sick.
It's a crying shame and a shame for this country.
And so this man just fades away. It's so wrong.
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