
AP Photo/Danny Johnston
A young girl wears a shirt she made emblazoned with the image of the late Chavis Carter, a 21-year-old Jonesboro police say shot himself in the temple in the back of a police cruiser, despite his hands having been handcuffed behind his back.
The tale of Chavis Carter's death sounds like something that was conjured as a test of Occam's Razor. The simplest explanation is usually the correct one, but in this case, nothing seems very simple at all.
The account we've been given brings to mind times when friends and family would bring up situations like this in levity amongst friends, excreting the pain of police brutality, intimidation, and suspicion with exaggerated jokes. There's also a chance we could hear something like this mentioned in a conspiracy-laden discussion amongst the fellas in the barbershop, a frenzied tale of how police can bust you, then shoot you in the head in the back of their own cruiser, then stage it to look like a suicide. Then, to top it off, people would actually believe that you killed yourself.
The idea that a 21-year-old man allegedly under the influence of drugs and arrested for marijuana could discharge a firearm into his own right temple while his hands were handcuffed behind his back would be laughable if Chavis Carter weren't dead, and the Jonesboro, Arkansas police were telling that exact story. It wasn't surprising, then, to see the Reverend Jesse Jackson, Sr. visiting with Carter's family and leading the latest protest march yesterday, calling it "Houdini justice," and questioning the gap in the police cruiser dashboard camera video showing the arrest, but not the moment when the gun goes off.
The Houdini reference is particularly apt, given the contortions Carter would have had to make to shoot himself in the head while handcuffed. No doubt responding to the doubts surrounding their account, the Jonesboro police have put on a full-court press in the media to re-enact Carter's arrest and "suicide" for a video released to the media last week. (You can check it out here, courtesy of our colleagues at theGrio.) In it, you see both a male and female officer of similar size to Carter show how once handcuffed, one could easily, kinda, sorta, maybe contort themselves into a position to take their own lives.
Earlier this week, Carter's autopsy report indicated that the death was a suicide, despite the lack of any not test on Carter's body for gunshot residue, thus proving that his finger pulled the trigger in addition to his head receiving the bullet. That may be Arkansas state crime lab policy, but not common sense.
Now, to further buffer their story, the Jonesboro police say in a new memo that Carter called his girlfriend from the back of the police cruiser to say that "he loved her and he was scared" and that he had a gun, according to this morning's Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Records show that Carter made two calls that night -- one of which police allege was from the back of the cruiser, presumably also while handcuffed, somehow. A lawyer for Carter's family denies the call included talk of a gun.
The City of New York's former chief medical examiner, forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden, has some serious doubts about the Jonesboro police's story. But in expressing them, Baden got to the most important question of all:
“If it did happen [the way police said Carter's death occurred,] the police still have entire responsibility for it because when they take someone into custody, they’re responsible for his health and welfare,” Baden said. “If he dies in their custody they’re responsible. At the least, we’re talking about very sloppy police work — not finding a gun that he could have used to shoot one of the officers — and it’s indicative of poor training of the officers.”
Joy Reid of theGrio raises many more questions based upon the release of the police memo -- including the implication by police of a suicide motive -- all of which should be answered today by the Jonesboro police department. I've never heard of a person being arrested after a thorough search, and put in the back of a police cruiser while they were still in possession of a weapon. Even if the Jonesboro police's magical tale of Carter's "suicide" is true, there was a startling disregard for Carter's life exhibited by the officers and department involved.
Then, again, Occam's Razor applies: what really is the simplest explanation here? That a 21-year-old young man was so distressed by a marijuana-possession arrest and other yet-undiscovered crimes that he decided he wouldn't be taken alive/couldn't face the punishment, and shot himself with a gun police hadn't discovered in the course of two searches? Or is the simplest explanation much more sinister? If it's the latter, I get why the Jonesboro police department has gotten into filmmaking, and is working so hard to cover their tracks.
The report on yesterday's march from KAIT-TV is below.


Actually if Chavis were white and the officers were black, there would be no Occam Razor's test to speak of, and that's because the officers would have been behind bars, charged with both murder and fabricating lies to cover up their actions. The Chavis case only reinforces the belief among many, including myself, that in many parts of this country Jim Crow attitudes still exist, as the state's labs seem to confirm with their mind boggling conclusions.
What mind boggling conclusions? The observation of lateral red cuff marks on his right forearm? The conclusion that the shot was a direct contact shot due to the density of residue and wound path? Or the conclusion (somewhat dependent on police reports) that the cause was suicide, as opposed to an accident or homocide?
1. The JPD did request GSR tests on the subject. If they decided to do GSR tests on the officers, they would be obligated to do them on ALL personnel who came in contact with the squad car and the body because everyone gets residue on them during contact. It would be difficult to make any determinations based upon the presence of residue alone.
3. I agree. In case it was self-inflicted, there will never be any definitive way to determine if it was suicide or an accident.
4. IF it was suicide, what makes you think it would be over the weed?
5. I don't know if cuff's are always at exactly the same tightness, but Carter's right forearm and those of the demonstrators in the video all had oblong red cuff mark cuts.
6. During the first pat down, did they find the weed in his pocket, or in the crotch of his baggy shorts?
7. I have no idea. But I have experienced broken audio feeds on work equipment.
Let me get this straight...
The young man was handcuffed with his hands behind his back...
He was shot in the temple...
Murder one or murder two...
I think we ought to have a three figure I.Q. requirement to post here...
Go get your big sister to explain my joke to you, Billy Boy, and quit stealing her material, racist.
Would you two like a private room for your indulgences?
Best to back off, barkeep... We cabbies know how to handle your problem children; have for years...
All without a sawed-off behind the bar or a big ugly looking bouncer...
Now go back to your Jay-Z fetish, okay... Cripes, that guy has more money than Mitt Romney... What does that have to do with a poor kid in Arkansas dying in police custody?
Hey! That "barkeep" tag is pretty good. Most realistic, best da*n smack-down I've received in months!
Jay-Z's rich? hmm. You're right. There's not much correlation between this new case, Jay-Z, or Trayvon. I musta been obsessively focused on the black thingy at the time.
Clarification self-advised: "the black versus white race thingy".
Guess again...
cabbie waste your time with billy's dumbass you have to understand that people like him want heler skelter, a violent race war that destroys all government leaving conspiracy wackos in their panic holes to rule the rest
the right is in bed with white nationalists for sometime now.
CC, as a Recovering Republican, I'm not quite persuaded the mainstream party (what's left after the bulk slipped over to the gray areas of shadow, or <gasp!> even the dark side) is truly committed to a rerun of the Holocaust.
It is clear, however, they want those guys' votes... They need to be held accountable for that fact. And not to worry, I carry plenty of one-liners gleaned from a lifetime here on Planet Utah where a lot of those folks are seen as moderates.
As for Billy Boy, he stepped in front of the ol' police interceptor when I slipped over here as a history consultant.
Unlike Chavis Carter, his action did have suicidal overtones.
THIS is ya'alls best lesson plan? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCHB4GCyufE
What would Jay-Z say?
I've got some issues of my own on that one involving Mitt Romney's faith and living here a long time on Planet Utah...
LIke the LDS half of the family boycotting a close relative's interracial marriage after the '79 doctrinal change involving blacks and the Mormon Priesthood... Now the revisionist historians want to pretend the doctrinal practices never existed.
I know Melissa's mother was LDS as well, and I slip by here now and then to make sure the Etch-a-Sketch crowd doesn't try to obfuscate things...
Serving up intellectual roadkill from someone naive enough to get into a swearing contest with a cabbie is just a sideshow sport...
Not you, the guy above who's griping because I asked him for the fare in advance...