The cop gets the benefit of the doubt because he represents me. We hire him, train him up, give him a gun and expect him to go out there and protect our interests. He might be a bad cop with his own motivations, but starting out, he is doing whatever he is doing, not for personal reasons or self-interest, but because I pay him to do it.
That gets at one of the legs of the means-opportunity-motivation bit. Our default should be the cop as a neutral actor. Sadly, this is not how police officers are always viewed, and I can't say that that too is without reason.
Oddly, I hold cops to greater scrutiny, for the exact same reason. They have great power, and great responsibility. I assume that most police fully understand that responsibility, and accept it because they love all of the times where they help someone *without* using force - or saving someone's life using force.
And that's one major reason why I like dash-cams and body cams - as many others have said already, not only do they point out the bad cop, they also exonerate the good cop, who we *want* to be on the force. That's also why I'm still waiting for a full report, despite thinking that the evidence to date points strongly against officer Wilson - I think his chief is doing a terrible job protecting him, but I actually want to think that he's a good guy, even if the rest of the local police have acted horribly. I would *like* to think that this shooting was reasonable.
Despite my own personal experiences - the
Charles Stuart Case, being thrown against a wall and jailed because I walked through a turnstile on the subway, having *every* black man I know have absurd incidents with cops - I want to believe.
I want a good police force. I want to not worry every damn time I see a cop sitting beside me at a stop sign. I want to not go looking to buy a new car, and immediately think "Huh, what would a cop think, if he saw me driving this?" And failing that, I'd rather at least think that we have such a police force, and be wrong.
But then we get a cop saying that Trayvon Martin "must regret" running away from George Zimmerman. Or a bunch of handwaving when a cop shoots Michael Brown. Or saying that the coerced testimonies of black guys in the Charles Stuart case are "known liars". Or a cop screaming that protesters at a police shooting are "animals".
But over and over, we see the exact opposite. I never lived anywhere close to St. Louis, but that's where the anger, and the exhaustion, is coming from, I'll guarantee it. People seem to think that this is fun - it's really not. It's enraging, and exhausting.