When Cpl. Schauerhamer and Officer Judson approached Hunt
outside a Saratoga Springs convenience store, both noticed Hunt was carrying a
sword in a sheath. Schauerhamer asked him to put it down.
“I can’t do that,” Hunt said, according to testimony. “It’s
my sword.” He did not mention, and officers did not know, that the sword was plastic.
Hunt lunged at both of them. Abruptly and without any
apparent provocation, he reportedly withdrew the sword from its sheath and stabbed
it toward at least one of the officers. Schauerhamer started shooting and Hunt ran.
Both officers chased him and three more shots were fired.
The family says it’s a whitewash. A family spokesperson says
“I think it’s an exaggeration…I think they ignored good hard evidence to be
contrary.” The family is conducting its own investigation and plans a lawsuit.
The problem? Hunt was part black, son of a black father and
a white mother. With his afro haircut, he appeared black and his mother, Susan,
says that’s why he was shot. “They killed my son because he’s black. No white
boy with a little sword would they shoot while he’s running away”. The officers
are white, as is 93 percent of Saratoga Springs.
The family has tried to attract media attention and drum this into racial conflict. Noone points out that any person who charges cops with a sword takes his life in his hands. The blame is being placed on his skin color. While we feel deep sympathy for the family and sorrow at Darrien’s death, the racial issue doesn’t play.
The entire event lasted 37 seconds. Police Chief Andrew Burton
says his men followed Utah law. “They followed their training,” Burton said.
“At some point, they have to make a very difficult decision in just a matter of
seconds, and then the rest of us get to Monday-morning quarterback the thing
for years.”
Chief Burton stands behind his men. As the facts unfold, it
appears that it is proper for him to do so. Utah County Attorney Jeff Buhman
ruled this week that the shooting was justified. Filmed footage and several
eyewitness accounts have aided the county in its investigation. There is no
reason to disbelieve Buhman.
Racial prejudice is not a common issue in Utah. Perhaps
that’s easy to say for one who isn’t black, but decades in Utah have left me
with no incidents of racial prejudice. We just elected two blacks to
government: Mia Love to the US Congress and Al Jackson to the State Senate. If
prejudice was an issue, it’s hard to believe either would have won against
their white opponents. Nor were there any observable racial overtones in the campaign.
All I ever heard was that we are proud to have blacks in our community that
succeed in office—hardly prejudicial statements!
The liberal media outlets, of course, claim injustice and
discrimination. We aren’t surprised. The left-leaning press always tries to whip
up negative public opinion. This is an attempt to engineer racial tensions from
those who want to tear America apart. If the attention of the race-riot pushers
wasn’t focused on Ferguson, Mo, we might see national attention in Saratoga
Springs. How fortunate that we don’t.
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