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10 years after Michael Brown's death, police killings are not going down

A makeshift memorial for Michael Brown stands in the street on Sept. 11, 2015, in Ferguson, Mo. Brown's death prompted nationwide protests and a White House report on American policing.
Michael B. Thomas
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Getty Images
A makeshift memorial for Michael Brown stands in the street on Sept. 11, 2015, in Ferguson, Mo. Brown's death prompted nationwide protests and a White House report on American policing.

Annissa McCaskill remembers exactly where she was when she heard about Michael Brown.

鈥淚 was home on a Saturday folding laundry and I opened up Facebook and I saw an image of a body laying,鈥 she says. She was about a 15 minute drive away from the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, Mo., but the news hit close to home for a different reason.

鈥淏eing a parent of a 10-year-old boy who looked very similar to Michael, being big for his age, hearing terms like 鈥榟e's intimidating,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淭hose are the same things that I heard were being said about Michael.鈥

It was a decade ago this week that police officer Darren Wilson shot and killed Brown, a Black teenager, after a confrontation.

Brown鈥檚 body, although eventually covered, lay on the street for around four hours on a summer day. That image has stuck with Christopher Phillips, a filmmaker who lived in the apartment complex where Brown died and later made a documentary about the unrest.

鈥淚t was the lack of respect for his humanity,鈥 says Phillips.

Filmmaker Chris Phillips on Friday, Aug. 9, 2024, before a unity march commemorating a decade after Michael Brown Jr.鈥檚 police killing in Ferguson. Phillips has been documenting the Ferguson community since 2014.
Brian Munoz / St. Louis Public Radio
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St. Louis Public Radio
Filmmaker Chris Phillips on Friday, Aug. 9, 2024, before a unity march commemorating a decade after Michael Brown Jr.鈥檚 police killing in Ferguson. Phillips has been documenting the Ferguson community since 2014.

Ferguson erupted in the days that followed. What began as peaceful protests ended with smashed windows and a convenience store in flames. Police in armored vehicles and military gear responded with tear gas and rubber bullets. A grand jury chose not to indict Wilson.

Brown鈥檚 death helped launch the Black Lives Matter movement into the national spotlight, and sparked a national conversation about police brutality in America. But as high-profile police killings have continued to amass, some organizers moved from a message of police reform to one that shifts away from police altogether.

Demonstrators protest the killing of Michael Brown on Aug. 12, 2014, in Ferguson, Mo.
Scott Olson / Getty Images North America
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Getty Images North America
Demonstrators protest the killing of Michael Brown on Aug. 12, 2014, in Ferguson, Mo.

"The foundations are cracked"

In the aftermath of Brown鈥檚 death, former President Obama set up a task force to examine the state of policing nationwide.

鈥淭he philosophical orientation of that task force was that police were facing a legitimacy crisis and something had to be done to restore public trust in the police. And the way they decided to attempt to accomplish that was through what are called procedural justice reforms,鈥 says Alex Vitale, a professor of sociology at Brooklyn College.

Essentially, procedural justice is the idea that when police and others in the criminal justice system follow proper protocols and have good communication, people feel better about the outcome, even if they get a ticket or a sentence handed down to them.

鈥淭he emphasis on things like training, tweaking the policies, creating some oversight mechanism through things like body cameras and civilian review boards, were designed to get police to follow the law properly, to follow the procedures properly,鈥 Vitale says.

Many reforms the task force recommended . Police departments began training officers on . Just a few years after Brown鈥檚 death, were using body-worn cameras.

In the years after Ferguson, Minneapolis became a poster child for police reform, Vitale says, until George Floyd was murdered in 2020 by police officer Derek Chauvin.

Officers in the city, for instance, had undergone , wore body cameras and were operating under a more restrictive use-of-force policy.

Michelle Phelps, a professor of sociology at the University of Minnesota, says that led to a key shift among some organizers.

鈥淭hat really was a blow to liberal police reformers,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here was the sense, 鈥業f it has failed in Minneapolis, it will fail everywhere. And so what can we do instead?鈥 And that is really why you saw so much attention and energy around police defunding and police abolition and people trying to shift towards these more radical approaches because of the perceived failures of reform across the country.鈥

Data backs up the ways reform efforts have failed over the past decade. Nationally, police officers killed the most people last year than any other year since 2014, and Black and Hispanic people are still killed at a disproportionate rate compared to white people, according to data from the , which tracks police killings.

A memorial made to look like a cemetery stands in a grassy field near the intersection where George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis, Minn.
Stephen Maturen / Getty Images
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Getty Images
A memorial made to look like a cemetery stands in a grassy field near the intersection where George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis, Minn.

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, Black and Hispanic people in 2020 were the threat of force or the use of nonfatal force during contact with police than white people. That in 2015 too.

What鈥檚 more, data on the effectiveness of specific police reforms is mixed: Studies show implicit bias training officer behavior, the benefits of body-worn cameras ; and the number of officers facing charges for killing people .

McCaskill now leads Forward Through Ferguson, a nonprofit set up in the St. Louis region after Brown鈥檚 death. She says locally there鈥檚 been reform in the last decade, including internal use-of-force databases and increased training hours. But when her organization conducts , she says most people don鈥檛 believe much has changed.

鈥淭he foundations are cracked,鈥 she says. 鈥淗ow do you really change unless you go back and you do something with those foundations?鈥

Phillips, who still lives near Ferguson, says he doesn鈥檛 feel the relationship between police and residents there has deepened, despite an emphasis on community policing.

鈥淪ome of them now may wave when they're passing by,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut they're still disproportionately pulling over black drivers. So for me, it's like, what is that wave? To the point where I still know that you're going to stop me 1.5 to two times more than a white driver, that wave don't mean nothing.鈥

"You do the best you can to make sure that everybody is following policies"

Proponents of reform say changes have made policing better in some cities.

Baltimore, for instance, started a peer support program to deal with officer trauma and an early intervention system to address problematic officer behavior. Prosecutors have for progress on its consent decree, which began after the 2015 death of Freddie Gray, who died from spinal injuries after police transported him handcuffed in a van without a seatbelt.

DeRay Mckesson, an activist who rose to national prominence in Ferguson and is now executive director of the advocacy group Campaign Zero, says there doesn鈥檛 have to be a tension between advocating for police reform and advocating for investment elsewhere.

鈥淲hat happened in 2020 is I saw people pit the two strategies against each other. So it was, 鈥榟ow could you introduce a ban on neck restraints? We need to get rid of [police],鈥欌 he says. 鈥淲e do need to think about safety beyond policing, I agree. And if the police don't choke somebody out tomorrow, that is a good thing. It might not be a good thing for you, but it is certainly a good thing for the person that is not choked to death.鈥

There are around in the country. Charles Ramsey, a retired Philadelphia police commissioner who was co-chair of the Obama task force, says change will vary by city, and progress isn鈥檛 going to happen everywhere all at once.

鈥淣othing's going to be 100%. You do the best you can to make sure that everybody is following policies, procedures and so forth,鈥 Ramsey says. 鈥淏ut you're going to get an outlier every now and then, and somebody does something that is totally inappropriate, wrong, in some cases even criminal.鈥

After Michael Brown's death, former President Obama 鈥 seen here with former Philadelphia police commissioner Charles Ramsey, center, and former New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio 鈥  convened a task force to address policing in the country. Ramsey co-chaired the task force and told NPR he found the variety of voices brought together to be remarkable.
MANDEL NGAN / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
After Michael Brown's death, former President Obama 鈥 seen here with former Philadelphia police commissioner Charles Ramsey, center, and former New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio 鈥 convened a task force to address policing in the country. Ramsey co-chaired the task force and told NPR he found the variety of voices brought together to be remarkable.

Last month in Springfield, Ill., Sean Grayson, now a former deputy with the Sangamon County Sheriff's Office, shot and killed Sonya Massey in her home after she called 911 for help when she believed someone was prowling outside her home.

鈥淣ow, 15 years ago, I think the public would still be waiting to hear what happened,鈥 says Sean Smoot, chairman of the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board and also a member of the Obama task force.

鈥淲e knew almost immediately what happened because the officers were wearing body-worn cameras. There was immediately an outside police agency, the Illinois state police, that came in to investigate,鈥 Smoot says. 鈥淭heir investigation immediately went to a prosecutor, and that officer, within an hour and a half of being indicted, was in jail.鈥

Smoot says that all occurred because of police reforms centering around accountability and transparency.

And yet none of that undoes what can鈥檛 be undone, Massey鈥檚 death.

"This is the way that movements make progress"

Deva Woodly, a professor who studies social movements at Brown University, says that is why activists have pushed to invest in other support systems, like alternative response models where mental health workers respond to some calls rather than police.

now have an alternative response to the police. Woodly says that is evidence that even though the slogan 鈥榙efund the police鈥 became politically charged, the logic behind it has gained traction.

鈥淭his is the way that movements make progress, is that they actually put new ideas and new policy ideas forward and then they get tried,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 do think that there has been progress made. Not because policing is better 鈥 policing is not better 鈥 but because people are thinking more and more about safety in more holistic ways.鈥

McCaskill, of the Forward Through Ferguson group, is marking the 10 year anniversary of Brown鈥檚 death with a heavy heart.

鈥淭here are families that are missing, children that are missing, spouses and loved ones, and moms and dads, sisters and cousins and grandchildren, right now, because we are still not being honest with what we need to do in this country,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 ask people to support and to think of them not just this week, but ongoing. And to think of all the others. There's a roll that could be called. We have all of these names.鈥

Copyright 2024 NPR

Meg Anderson is an editor on NPR's Investigations team, where she shapes the team's groundbreaking work for radio, digital and social platforms. She served as a producer on the Peabody Award-winning series Lost Mothers, which investigated the high rate of maternal mortality in the United States. She also does her own original reporting for the team, including the series Heat and Health in American Cities, which won multiple awards, and the story of a COVID-19 outbreak in a Black community and the systemic factors at play. She also completed a fellowship as a local reporter for WAMU, the public radio station for Washington, D.C. Before joining the Investigations team, she worked on NPR's politics desk, education desk and on Morning Edition. Her roots are in the Midwest, where she graduated with a Master's degree from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.