A Brief History of What Happens When White Women Are Killed by Cops
Justine Damond was, by all accounts, the sort of woman who couldn’t help but nurture and protect the life around her. In the wake of Damond’s death—she was fatally shot while unarmed and pajama-clad by Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor, who was responding to her 911 call—photojournalist Angela Jimenez released a widely circulated video of the 40-year-old Australian veterinarian-turned-yogini rescuing a gaggle of ducklings trapped in a sewer and reuniting them with their distressed mother.
Much has been made of Damond’s status as the “ideal victim.” Robert Bennett, an attorney for Damond’s family, described her as “the most innocent victim” of a police shooting he had ever seen. Rightfully, black activists and writers have pointed out the hypocrisy implied in his words: that black people who are shot by police are not innocent but somehow deserving of their fates.
When white women are killed by police, there are often major institutional outcomes.
Damond was no more innocent than Aiyana Stanley-Jones or Tamir Rice, seven and 12 years old respectively when they were shot by police. But she is the embodiment of what a lot of people understand to be innocence: white, beautiful, kind, affianced. Not the type of person who gets themselves shot by the police.
Compared to the recent past, victims of police violence aren’t receiving as much attention as they once did, so for Damond’s case to dominate headlines and social media tells us something. News of the case reached as far as her native Australia, where the media dubbed the shooting an “American Nightmare” and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull demanded answers and accountability. In short order, just as public protest began to ramp up on Friday, the Minneapolis chief of police was forced by the mayor to resign. Black Lives Matter in Minneapolis has stepped up to put pressure on the mayor, including the same organizers that led protests in the wake of Philando Castile’s death.
Justine Damond is not the first white woman killed by police, but their deaths at the hands of the cops are rare. Of the 554 fatal force incidents the Washington Post has tallied this year, 12 were white women and three were unarmed. Last year, unarmed white women were less than 1% of the victims of police shootings. Police often use mental illness or the presence of a deadly weapon—often both—as justifications for shootings involving white women.
When these women are killed by police, there are often major institutional outcomes: the ouster of a police chief, the introduction of mental health units, a federal investigation at a time when it took scores of black deaths at the hands of police and full on riots to get the DOJ involved, and real prison time for an officer.
The death of a white woman will often result in prison time—which is still more than the vast majority of black victims can hope for.
Take the 1999 case of Colleen Kelly, a suicidal white woman armed with a fanny pack who was shot and killed by Houston police while on her way to get medical help. The outrage surrounding her death, along with that of Sheryl Seymour, a schizophrenic white woman who was shot while brandishing a knife at police in the same year, eventually lead to federal court cases and the HPD reforming their use of force policy for the mentally ill. Now, officers are trained in de-escalation tactics, though critics point out that police are still shooting mentally ill people of all genders at an alarming rate.
In other cases, the death of a white woman will simply result in prison time—which is still more than the vast majority of black victims can hope for. In 2012, Officer Dan Harmon-Wright shot and killed Patricia Ann Cook as she was sitting in her car in a Catholic school parking lot. Harmon-Wright was responding to a report of a suspicious person in the area, and opened fire into Cook’s Jeep. He was charged with voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to three years in prison.
It’s almost never the case that a single police killing of a black person triggers a federal investigation, especially prior to the Black Lives Matter movement. But in 2002, Dawn Rae Nelson, a white woman, was suspected of trying to fill a forged prescription in Chandler, Arizona. Officer Dan Lovelace responded and as he was looking at her back plates, she pulled the car forward. He ran to the driver’s side window and shot in through the window, killing her in front of her 14-month-old son. The mayor of Chandler condemned the shooting and the DOJ investigated through the U.S. Attorney’s office. Lovelace was charged with second degree murder but acquitted in 2004. Nelson’s family was awarded a large cash settlement in a civil suit.