If you or I were to murder a police officer, what do you suppose the sentence would be? Death? Life without parole? 40 years? Whatever it would be, it wouldn’t be a slap on the wrist.
So what happens when a police officer murders an unarmed 54-year-old Sunday school teacher and flat-out lies about what happened? If you’re Daniel Harmon-Wright, you get three years for “voluntary manslaughter.”
Why do we have one set of rules for people with badges and another set of rules for us?
Harmon-Wright was a police officer who responded to a report of a “suspicious woman” in a church parking lot in Culpeper, Va., at 10 a.m. on a Thursday morning last year. The woman was actually at the church to apply for a job, and nobody has said what made her “suspicious.” Harmon-Wright claimed that he tried to reach inside the woman’s vehicle to take her license, but she suddenly rolled the window up on his arm — trapping him — and tried to drive away.
There were problems with this story, though. Most importantly, a carpenter working in sight of the confrontation said nothing of the sort happened. He said the officer had his gun in one hand and had his other hand on the woman’s door handle. When she tried to drive away, the officer fired at least six shots, killing the woman.
Pure and simple, Harmon-Wright murdered a woman who tried to drive away from him.

What’s at the root of objections to real freedom? Paternalism
What if we’ve completely missed the point of loving other people?
What happened when a coach valued discipline over winning?
Proposals to skip rent payments are rooted in magical thinking
The moon represents what I seek, but words are all I can offer now
I still feel shame for wanting to pursue the desires of my heart
Sometimes we should ignore idiots who yell about non-existent racism
Self-compassion is difficult when harsh inner judge condemns you
I don’t regret my choices, but I do lament choices he refused to make