During his arrest, Northwestern Ph.D. student thought of other black men and women ‘who had been shot and killed in their cars’
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"I didn't know about implicit bias either until I'd gone through this," Crosby said Tuesday by phone. "I would like to bring attention to the issue of implicit bias and how it can influence people's decision making, in particular important decisions. Especially with someone whose life hangs in the balance."
Crosby's situation began in
I was face down on the pavement. One police officer was kneeing me in the back, while others pulled or punched. They paid no attention to my screams identifying myself as an engineering Ph.D. student at
The record...
An engineering doctoral candidate at
In her 911 call to police, the woman acknowledges that she may have made a mistake by calling the police on Crosby and, if that was the case, asked officers to apologize for her.
Crosby said that call changed his life.
"Getting stopped by the police for what was very clear to me wasn't a normal traffic stop because there were at least four or five police cars, that told me there was something more serious," Crosby said. "I thought of all these other incidents I heard of in the media, black men and women who had been shot and killed in their cars."
In the moment, Crosby said he wondered if he might be next.
He got out of his car with his hands up, which can be see on dash-cam video of the incident. Officers approached Crosby with guns drawn. Police ordered Crosby to get down and when he did not quickly comply, a group of officers rushed him and brought him to the ground. Crosby said that officers hit and kneed him.
A video of the arrest was released
At the time, an
The City of
Attorneys...
Crosby was arrested and charged with disobeying officers and resisting arrest, according to a police report, after officers learned the car belonged to him. A judge later dismissed the charges, according to Crosby's attorney.
Crosby's civil lawsuit, filed
Crosby said he realizes police officers have a difficult and stressful job. More than the traffic stop, though, he was bothered by the city's decision to press charges against him after officers realized that he owned the car and they'd made a mistake in pulling him over.
"Instead of apologizing when they had an opportunity to do that, when they ascertained that I was the owner of the vehicle, even that would have ended the rest of the night," Crosby said. "It would have been somewhat traumatic still, but the actions they took after that were the most egregious to me. They knew that I owned the car, they made a mistake, and they decided to persist in prosecuting these crimes that they knew I didn't commit."
If Crosby could talk to the woman who first reported him stealing a car, he said he would ask why she followed him in her car if she thought he was a dangerous criminal.
"That just doesn't fit with the rest of it. It just doesn't make sense to me," Crosby said.
He also wondered why she didn't try to talk to him or get more information about the situation before calling police. Crosby said the woman was honking her horn at him and at first he thought there was something wrong with his car.
"I don't know. It's hard for me to give advice," Crosby said. "On one hand, if she really did think she saw an auto theft in progress, it should be in her right to report that. On the other hand, if she is unsure, you would think that she would not, that the doubt should be relayed.
"At the end of the day I guess she was cognizant that she at least was potentially engaging, she was cognizant that she was potentially influenced by implicit bias. Which is an ironic twist in this whole story," he said.
Experts describe implicit bias as attitudes or stereotypes that unconsciously influence an individual's actions or understanding of a person or situation.
Crosby said he's working now to mend his reputation, as he finds himself often defending his actions and explaining what happened following the case's national media spotlight. He's moved out of
Meanwhile, Crosby said, one of his first steps in addressing implicit bias is hosting a forum on the topic this spring for students and faculty at
"The goal at the end of the day is to have a conversation," Crosby said.
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