US Myth of ‘superhuman strength’ in Black people persists in deadly encounters with police - Police trainers say the perception of “superhuman strength” stems from unexpected resistance not commonly seen in training scenarios.

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In this image from video provided by the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office, Chinedu Okobi lies on the ground in Millbrae, Calif., on Oct. 3, 2018, during a police encounter where officers used a stun gun, chemical spray, baton strikes and prone restraint in a sequence of rapid escalation. San Mateo County deputies told the district attorney they were reacting to what they perceived as Okobi’s “superhuman strength.” (San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office via AP)

Deputy Steven Mills of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office was on patrol one night in 2013 when he received a call about a naked Black man walking down a rural road in Phenix City, Alabama.

Mills said the man ignored his calls to stop, but when the officer threatened to use his Taser, 24-year-old Khari Illidge turned, walked toward him and said, “tase me, tase me.” In a sworn statement, the deputy said he shocked Illidge twice because he’d been unable to physically restrain the “muscular” man with “superhuman strength.”

Other officers who arrived at the scene used the same language in describing Illidge, who a medical examiner said was 5-foot-1-inch and 201 pounds. They bound together his hands and legs behind his back in what’s known as a hogtie restraint, and later noticed he had stopped breathing. Illidge was pronounced dead at a hospital.

Mills said in his statement that he thought Illidge was “under the influence of narcotics.” The pathologist said Illidge’s toxicology report came back negative for any “known” substances. He initially ruled there was no direct cause of death but after reviewing police reports and body-camera footage blamed the cause of death on “excited delirium syndrome as a result of an unknown substance that he ingested.”

“Excited delirium” is a hotly contested term frequently used to justify police use of force, according to law enforcement researchers and experts. The term is not widely recognized by medical associations, including the American Psychiatric Association.

One of the term’s frequently cited symptoms is “superhuman strength” — a descriptor often applied to Black people. The term creates a hurdle for legal accountability in prosecuting officers, since courts typically defer to law enforcement in determining whether force was necessary, legal experts say.

A review of dozens of police use-of-force cases, including court records, depositions and police statements, by the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at Arizona State University, in collaboration with The Associated Press, found numerous cases in which police officers stated that a person who died while being apprehended displayed “superhuman strength.”

Seth Stoughton, a University of South Carolina law professor who served as an expert witness in the George Floyd murder trial, says the term “plays into the racist trope” of a “scary Black assailant.”

The Howard Center sought interviews with the departments and officers named in this story. None responded.

The story was produced by the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, an initiative of the Scripps Howard Fund in honor of the late news industry executive and pioneer Roy W. Howard.

ONGOING TROPE​

Although “superhuman strength” became widely publicized around the 1991 police beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles, its origins date to the post-Civil War Reconstruction era.

White Southerners spread propaganda that characterized Black men as innately savage, violent and intent on raping white women. Writers and filmmakers perpetuated the myth. The 1915 film “The Birth of a Nation” characterized Black men as rapists and beasts and used that trope to justify lynchings while glamorizing the Ku Klux Klan.

The caricature fueled widespread violence. More than 4,400 Black Americans were killed by lynch mobs between 1877 and 1950, according to data from the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit that provides legal representation to people illegally convicted, unfairly sentenced or abused in custody. Since not all lynchings were documented, it’s impossible to know their true extent.

The 1960s Civil Rights era weakened the “Black brute” caricature, as national media focused on peaceful Black protesters being attacked by police. But the “War on Drugs” and its target on communities of color helped resurrect the myth.

In a 2017 case in Arizona, Muhammad Muhaymin, a homeless man with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, was attempting to use a community center bathroom when police were called, according to records obtained by the Howard Center.

Finding an outstanding misdemeanor warrant for Muhaymin, all four officers attempted to arrest him by wrestling him to the ground. They noted in their official statements that the 43-year-old Black man had “superhuman strength.”

Muhaymin’s autopsy report said he was 5 feet, 5 inches and weighed 164 pounds. His death was ruled a homicide and, in 2021, the city of Phoenix settled a family lawsuit for $5 million.

Peer-reviewed studies on racial bias and perceived size have found that Americans demonstrate a systematic bias in their perceptions of the physical formidability of Black men. One found that white participants associated “superhuman” qualities with Black people more often than they did whites.

“Superhumanization is treating someone like a non-human,” Adam Waytz, a study author, said in an interview.

TRAINING ‘SUPERHUMAN’​

Police trainers say the perception of “superhuman strength” stems from unexpected resistance not commonly seen in training scenarios.

“When you see something that’s abnormal, where a person would typically comply based on an application of force, and they don’t comply, or they seem completely oblivious to pain,” said Spencer Fomby, a national consultant with over 20 years of law enforcement experience, “I think that’s where officers start to use that terminology of superhuman strength.”

In California, Chinedu Okobi was carrying black duffle bags when he was approached in 2018 by a San Mateo County Sheriff’s deputy. According to a federal lawsuit filed on Okobi’s behalf, the deputy called for backup and was joined by four others who ordered Okobi to raise his hands.

The deputy shocked the 6-foot, 300-pound Black man multiple times with a Taser, and other officers piled on top of him. One officer said Okobi had “superhuman strength” — even though he showed no signs of resistance in dashcam and cellphone video. According to the coroner’s report, Okobi died from cardiac arrest following physical exertion, restraint and “recent electro-muscular disruption.” His death was ruled a homicide.

Frank Rudy Cooper, a law professor who directs the Program on Race, Gender and Policing at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, says how officers are taught to protect themselves puts them on edge and affects how they approach certain communities.

When “superhuman strength” is allowed as a use-of-force justification in court cases, such misconceptions make their way into the wider criminal justice system. “It is an unfortunate and dangerous thing,” Cooper added.

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  • Informative
Reactions: SIMIΔN
Add drugs to that, and a group of people who are famously lacking in inhibition of any kind... nothing surprising.
It's a good thing Dresden isn't melinated. Dresden has a reputation for acting impulsively and a talent for pyromancy. He burns down buildings on accident while trying to exercise restraint. Nigger Dresden would have burned down Chicago at least three times because someone scuffed his Jordans. His dog would also be a pitbull instead of a tibetan mastiff.
 
If dude wasn't on drugs why was he walking around naked
Walking around naked like that is one of the big tells for "doped up on shit that let's you toss cars around". Like PCP. Any time you find someone doing the naked and free strut in public, unless they are in the age range for alzheimers, they are 99.9% of the time amped up on something that will result in you having a bad day. They will snap restraints, shatter a backboard. Shrug off tasers. You could hit them with zoo tranquilizers and it just pisses them off. Generally the only method of control I ever knew beyond clear a perimeter around them, was to just feed them salty snacks until they collapse on their own. Don't ask me why but they always seemed to be attracted to Wendy's.
 
That and the PCP. It's basically a real life invincibility star power up:



From: The Washington Post

Whenever nudity is involved it's gonna be PCP. It's like the golden rule of wildin' niggas n'sheeit. Apparently it totally kills your sense of concern/awareness and makes you hot... in addition to all the other schizo effects and whatnot.

I know if I was a cop alarm bells would be ringing in the back of my head. Shit if I arrived on scene and find a confused naked man running about in the street and he is not Joe Biden, I'm calling for backup.
 
It's not that the blacks have superhuman strength, it's that the cops have subhuman strength.
They hire anyone who can fit their finger on the trigger of a gun.
Plus they prefer hiring <90 IQ tards and nutjobs over people with normal intelligence or mental health. The average militarized cop today is as stupid as the ghetto nigger he shot.
 

unexpected resistance not commonly seen in training scenarios.​

sad thing when cops aren't properly trained for chimpouts and regulations say you cant break their skulls or an arm or a leg with a nightstick so any training would be useless anyway
 
  • DRINK!
Reactions: UERISIMILITUDO
You can't do truly realistic training because you don't want the participants to get hurt. All you can really do is rehearse what's going to happen, then hope when it happens in the real world you use enough force--but not too much force, or you will end up in prison like Derek Chauvin or Daniel Penny.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: SIMIΔN
I think there are three issues the article didn't touch on.
  • Police are more apprehensive about restraining PoCs since the George Floyd incident.
  • Fat people of all races are hard to taze and have health issues that make death more likely.
  • Non-Black police aren't used to spotting health or intoxication issues in dark-skinned people.
TLDR : Author of article forgets that certain drugs can make people retard strong.
He was negative to any known substance
 
  • Thunk-Provoking
Reactions: Maginot
Walking around naked like that is one of the big tells for "doped up on shit that let's you toss cars around". Like PCP.
That's exactly what I was thinking, I grew up in Baltimore and it was almost impossible to find weed back then but you could get Love Boat or Sherm really easy. Basically one was PCP dipped on Parsley and the other was supposedly Embalming Fluid. Occasionally they also had "Green Bud" which was PCP dipped Swag weed. Anyway I never tried that nasty shit but I knew a lot of people who did and they were whack jobs. And the darker fellers seemed to love it. Is PCP/Embalmng Fluid one of those drugs that either leaves the system fast or doesn't show up?

I remember back in 1992 I saw my first Grateful Dead show at RFK in DC and someone offered me some weed, and I gave him this hard time about it being weed or PCP anyway dude was taken aback by this little high school kid giving him such a hard time he ended up giving me a oz of it. Good times
 
  • Like
Reactions: I'm Retarded?
You left out the part where he got into a fight with a community center employee who told him he couldn't take his dog into the bathroom with him, and that he had a significant quantity of meth in his system.
Body Cam of incident:

lol:

An autopsy report said multiple factors were behind Muhaymin's death, including cardiac arrest with coronary artery disease, acute methamphetamine intoxication and physical exertion related to being subdued by police.

The city’s lawyers have said Muhaymin had more than five times the toxic level of methamphetamine in his system when he died.

really funny how this kind of shit is always excluded from the initial reporting, which had one side mention in one paragraph that the black guy was a homeless schizo, but a full fucking page dedicated to every single thing the writer could find about the officers that sounds bad. at this point I just assume that every highly publicized case of a black guy dying in an encounter with the police is one of two situations:
  1. the guy OD'd, did some stupid shit that got the cops called on him, and then died from the OD while they were trying to get his stupid ass off the streets (AKA the George Floyd);
  2. the guy was doing some sus hood nigger shit, got the cops called on him for doing sus hood nigger shit, then decided to fight them like a retard instead of complying, because he knew he was doing some sus hood nigger shit (AKA the Michael Brown)
in both cases, lib journalists love being the justice warriors saving the day by shit-stirring and spin doctoring the story as much as possible in an attempt to go "viral" (since the best and most desirable outcome of any news story is to generate the maximal amount of ad revenue)
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Positron
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