“Jacob Blake Was Shackled in Hospital Bed After Police Shot Him”, The New York Times
By John Eligon, Sarah Mervosh and
The authorities said an earlier sexual assault charge was the reason for the restraints, which were removed on Friday
KENOSHA, Wis. — Days after a Kenosha police officer shot Jacob Blake outside an apartment building, the authorities on Friday provided new details on what led up to the videotaped encounter that has prompted heated street protests and calls for reform.
Law enforcement officials said that in recent days they had shackled Mr. Blake to his hospital bed, where he is paralyzed from the waist down from his wounds, because he faced an arrest warrant from July on charges of third-degree sexual assault, criminal trespass and disorderly conduct. The same woman who had filed that complaint had called 911 before the shooting on Sunday to report Mr. Blake’s presence to the police, according to interviews and records.
Some onlookers and Ben Crump, the civil rights lawyer who is representing Mr. Blake, have described Mr. Blake as a peacemaker who was seeking to break up a disturbance involving two women when the police arrived. On Friday afternoon in Wisconsin, near the spot where Officer Rusten Sheskey fired at Mr. Blake seven times, some of those who knew Mr. Blake said the authorities were attempting to justify a clear-cut instance of excessive force by tarnishing his reputation.
“They’re trying to reverse it and make it seem like he was such a criminal,” said Jesse Franklin, a community activist who described Mr. Blake as a laid-back father who spent considerable time with his children. “The whole point is, I don’t care if he’s a criminal or has a record. Your life matters, too. He’s not less of a man. He’s a human being with kids, with a family, with a heartbeat.”
At a news conference on Friday, Chief Daniel Miskinis of the Kenosha Police Department said he believed that the officers knew of the outstanding warrant when they responded to the call about a domestic dispute.
The outstanding warrant, he said, would have brought a “heightened awareness” to the dynamic between the officers and Mr. Blake. “There was some resisting on the basis of that contact and the arrest, so that is what changed the dynamics,” he said.
The union representing Kenosha police officers issued a statement on the events that led up to the shooting, suggesting that Mr. Blake had strongly resisted arrest, fighting with officers, putting one in a headlock and ignoring orders to drop a knife that he held in his left hand.
“None of the officers involved wished for things to transpire the way it did,” Brendan P. Matthews, a lawyer representing the union, said. “It is my hope that truth and transparency will help begin and aid in the healing process.”
The shooting was troubling enough that Mayor John Antaramian of Kenosha said in an interview on Friday that it “was a situation that, I think, caught all of us a little off guard.” The Police Department “has had some very good rules in dealing with use of force,” he added, though he stopped short of saying whether he believed that the officers violated the use-of-force rules.
Protests have played out around the country in recent days, and more were planned over the weekend. On Friday, thousands of protesters gathered in Washington at the Lincoln Memorial for an event aimed at rekindling the spirit of the 1963 March on Washington in which the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech.
The family of Mr. Blake was among relatives of victims of police violence who spoke from a lectern at the base of the memorial.
“There are two systems of justice in the United States,” Mr. Blake’s father, Jacob Blake Sr., said. “There’s a white system and there’s a Black system. The Black system ain’t doing so well.”
In an interview later on Friday, the elder Mr. Blake said he planned to take part in a rally in Kenosha in honor of his son on Saturday. He said he had not heard from officials of that city since the shooting.
“My plan is to march peacefully,” he said. “I would like the chief of police or somebody up high to come outside and explain to me, face to face, why it was OK for that police officer to put seven shots in my son’s back.”
Court documents filed in the July case against Jacob Blake show that the woman who filed the complaint said he had broken into her home while she was asleep and assaulted her. The woman told the police that Mr. Blake also took her car and debit card, the documents show.
Patrick Cafferty, who is representing Mr. Blake in that case, which includes a felony count and two misdemeanors, declined to discuss the charges, except to say that his client would be pleading not guilty.
Amid growing questions about Mr. Blake being shackled to his hospital bed, officials said on Friday that the shackles were being removed. Mr. Cafferty said he had discussions with the Kenosha district attorney, Michael D. Graveley, who agreed to vacate the arrest warrant. Law enforcement often uses restraints and police guards in hospital rooms when a patient is facing criminal charges.
Mr. Crump issued a statement, which read, in part, “Fortunately, a man who is paralyzed and fighting for his life after being shot seven times in the back will no longer have to deal with the pain of having his ankles and wrist shackled and the traumatic stress of being under armed guard.”
That decision does not stop the criminal case against Mr. Blake from proceeding. “The merits of the case have not been addressed,” Mr. Cafferty said.
Family members of Mr. Blake declined to comment on the charges, which they said were irrelevant to the police shooting.
“The Blake family is exhausted,” said an uncle, Rick Blake, who described a large and diverse extended family. “We are teachers, we are lawyers, we are government officials, we are everyday working people.”
“We have a right to be angry,” he said. “We also have a right to call out for justice.”
In interviews with local media after the shooting, the woman who had accused Mr. Blake of assault was also critical. “You shot him numerous times, for no reason,” she said. “It didn’t take all that.”
Mr. Blake, 29, is the father of six children, ages 3 to 12, and was working at an automotive facility, training to become a mechanic, his family said.
Before the shooting, his father said, he had enjoyed fishing and boating. Now, he has said from the hospital that he never wants to go outside again.
“He is scared right now, and he has every right to be scared,” the elder Mr. Blake said. “Wouldn’t you be?”
Before the police shot Mr. Blake, officers had twice tried to use a Taser on him, state officials said. Two officers — Officer Sheskey and Vincent Arenas — had each discharged Tasers before Officer Sheskey fired his gun at Mr. Blake. Both officers, as well as a third officer at the scene, Brittany Meronek, have been put on administrative leave.
Officials in Kenosha said they were bracing for the weekend, with hundreds of members of the Wisconsin National Guard deployed amid unrest that at times has grown violent, with two people killed in a chaotic confrontation this week between counterprotesters and protesters.
John Eligon reported from Kenosha, and Richard A. Oppel Jr. and Sarah Mervosh from New York. Julie Bosman contributed reporting from Kenosha, Michael Wines from Washington, and Bryan Pietsch from Denver.
John Eligon is a Kansas City-based national correspondent covering race. He previously worked as a reporter in Sports and Metro, and his work has taken him to Nelson Mandela’s funeral in South Africa and the Winter Olympics in Turin. @jeligon
Sarah Mervosh is a national reporter based in New York, covering a wide variety of news and feature stories across the country. @smervosh
Rich Oppel is a national enterprise and investigative correspondent based in New York. Since joining The Times in 1999, he has also covered business, Washington, a national presidential campaign, and for six years was a war correspondent in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
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