On Monday, Jan. 18, WMU-Cooley Law School’s Auburn Hills campus’ students hosted a panel discussion, “Death by Police: Justifiable Homicide or Excessive Use of Force.” The discussion was part of WMU-Cooley’s Equal Access to Justice Day. It focused on law enforcement’s use of deadly force and where it is excessive and where it is justified. The program was moderated by Professor Lewis Langham, former deputy legal counsel and criminal justice policy adviser for former Michigan Governor Jennifer M. Granholm.
Panelists included Chief Eric Hawkins, Southfield Michigan police department; Dr. Amanda Alexander, member of the ACLU Lawyers Committee and University of Michigan law professor who focuses on racial justice movements; Yusef Shakur, social activist; Harold Gurewitz, criminal defense attorney at Gurewitz & Raben, PLC; and Kwasi Akwamu, community activist
When reviewing recent national cases’ dash cam and bystander videos where lethal force was used, Hawkins said, “What I see is a lack of training in the officers ... and agencies with a lack of discipline. I refuse to abandon hope that this system can work.”
Kwasi Akwamu disagreed with Hawkins, “I long ago abandoned hope ... a lot of legalese is not going to change anything when you are dealing with built-in biases.”
- Posted January 22, 2016
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Cooley marks MLK Day with panel discussion on police deadly force
headlines Detroit
- Michigan Law student receives Institute for Policy Integrity fellowship to work on environmental and energy policy
- DOJ suing Washtenaw County over immigration enforcement
- MPA sounds alarm bells on ongoing threats to transparency
- After court decision, MSP seeking applications for FEMA grant program
- Daily Briefs
headlines National
- Exodus: Thousands of federal lawyers left their jobs by choice or by force in 2025
- Wisconsin moves to UBE to ease access-to-justice woes
- The Burton Book Review: A discussion on ‘When You Come at the King’
- Facebook, Instagram pulling ads from lawyers looking for plaintiffs ... to sue them
- Florida law school pressed to include chapter of Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA
- BigLaw firm faces questions over $35M bill




