Actually, I wrote about this before after Jayland Walker, a Black man with no criminal record and no warrants, was killed after fleeing Akron police.

From that report:

Ronald Greene died after he fled from Louisianna state troopers who caught up with him, beat the life out of him and told officials Greene died from injuries sustained in a car crash. Javier Ambler died after he fled from Texas police who caught up with him and Tasered him over and over again while he frantically pleaded with them to stop, told them about his heart condition and repeatedly told them, “I can’t breathe.” Antonio Harris survived after fleeing cops who beat him and gleefully bragged about the “whoopin’” they said that would go on to give him “nightmares for a long time.” At 17, Devin Carter “was left with bruises on both eyes as well as scratches on his face and back” after California police officers arrested him after he failed to stop when they attempted to pull him over for speeding. (In this case, Carter said he didn’t realize the cops were trying to pull him over.)

In all of these cases, the default assumption is that police violence happened because Black men (and boys) fled. Not enough people ever consider the possibility that Black males flee because police officers seem to be violent, particularly against Black males. People don’t consider that the cops in the aforementioned cases ultimately proved there was plenty of reason to fear them.

This brings us to 23-year-old Jadarrius Rose.

According to NBC News, Jadarrius Rose was driving a semi-tractor trailer in Ohio on the Fourth of July when a Motor Carrier Enforcement inspector with the Ohio State Highway Patrol tried to pull him over because his truck “was missing a left rear mud flap,” an incident report stated.

From NBC News:

Rose was traveling westbound on U.S. Route 35 and failed to stop for the inspector and troopers who were called in for help.

Stop sticks were deployed twice before the vehicle came to a stop on U.S. Route 23.

“After several times of being ordered to exit the vehicle, the suspect exited the vehicle from the driver’s side door,” the incident report said. “The driver was given orders to get down on the ground and the suspect would not comply.”

Rose can be seen on video released by the highway patrol standing in front of troopers with his hands in the air.

So, what happens next? Well, obviously, all of the officers of the law involved in the pursuit instantly realized a man who has his hands in the air is posing no threat to them even if he didn’t immediately comply with their exact demands and they arrested him without using any excessive force.

Nah, I’m lying—a cop released his canine on Rose for no discernable reason whatsoever.