Two Cops Will Not Face Discipline For Pushing a 75-Year-Old to the Ground. You Can Thank the Police Union.
The ordeal highlights how collective bargaining in the public sphere has stacked almost every factor against alleged victims of police misconduct.

The last two years brought a reckoning around public sector unions, the collective-bargaining groups that represent workers in government positions. A recent story reminds us why.
On June 4, 2020, 75-year-old Martin Gugino captured much of the nation's attention after a clip showed the man walking up to police officers at a protest in Buffalo, New York, and talking with them briefly before two officers shoved him to the ground.
An arbitrator—hired by the Buffalo Police Benevolent Association, the police union—announced last week that Officers Aaron Torgalski and Robert McCabe acted judiciously when they pushed Gugino to the pavement, after which point blood is seen gushing from his head as he lay on the sidewalk. Whether one officer applied more force than the other is impossible to tell, but the video shows the two thrusting Gugino back in tandem before he trips and falls.
"Gugino, after the force was applied to him, appears to have not been able to keep his balance for reasons that might well have had as much to do with the fact that he was holding objects in each hand or his advanced age," wrote Jeffrey M. Selchick, who also notes that the officers were worried about Gugino getting close to their "bare skin" in the case that they might catch COVID-19.
"It was an acrobatic exercise to avoid what the world saw," Melissa D. Wischerath, an attorney for Gugino, tells Reason.
The video is here, and you can decide for yourself. But the main issue isn't the decision per se. It's the inevitability of it.
A core function of police unions—and of any union, really—is to defend their workers, even when that means sticking up for distasteful behavior. That becomes a bit more complex when the union is tasked with defending the worst actions taken by those who hold the monopoly on force and power.
As a part of that function, many unions have sought to make it as difficult as possible to discipline those within their ranks when they may be out of line. That's no different in Buffalo, which quite literally "bargained away the ability for the city to discipline," notes Wischerath. Instead, when their employees are accused of potentially violating policy, the municipality can pursue a private arbitration process where each entity finds an arbitrator to make a decision that cannot be appealed. In this case, the city and the union jointly selected and financed Selchick's participation, who, according to Wischerath, is a known quantity. "Even if you know it's coming, it's still shocking to read," she says.
This sort of thing isn't new. Up the road in Rochester, New York, a group of cops last year pepper-sprayed and handcuffed a nine-year-old girl, who, for the record, was not suspected of committing any crime. The police union responded that such force was necessary to detain a child. There are many such stories.
Criticism of police unions over the last couple of years has primarily come from the left, it seems. But they aren't the only collective-bargaining groups taking heat. Teachers unions have been thrust under the spotlight as well, accused by the right of overplaying their hand in prolonging measures like remote learning during the COVID-19 pandemic. Both entities have much in common: monopoly control over a public good and a penchant for prioritizing themselves at the direct expense of the people they are charged with serving. Yet, in our tribal political landscape, that close Venn diagram is unfortunately lost on many.
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Well, except for Ashli Babbitt. SHE, and she alone, had it coming.
My thoughts exactly. This guy purposely attempted to block their path, got in their faces and got pushed back. They did not have any intent to push him to the ground he just fell. Where is Babbit was still in the process of crawling through a window, no attempt was made to apprehend her and she was shot in the neck, my guess aiming for her head with intent to kill.
Are you idiots seriously comparing the traitor who was repeatedly told to back away and started CLIMBING THROUGH A WINDOW to get to Congress to some old dude protesting?
JFC, you fascists never stop do you.
Don’t fear the revolt!
(insurrection)!
All our times have come
Here, but now they’re gone
Seasons don’t fear the revolt
Nor do the wind, the sun, or the rain
(We can be like they are)
Come on, baby
(Don’t fear the revolt)
Baby, take my hand
(Don’t fear the revolt)
We’ll be able to fly
Baby, I’m your man
La, la la, la la
La, la la, la la
Valentine is done
Here but now they’re gone
Horst Wessel and Ashli Babbs
Are together in eternity
(Horst Wessel and Ashli Babbitt)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst_Wessel
Traitors, where are the charges of sedition, insurrection or treason? None, mostly trespassing, and as we see some are not getting off because they were ushered into the building by the capitol police.
And what about out west where Federal building were broken into and started on fire. They were federal building the same as the Capitol so they should be the same crimes. Where are those charges of trespassing, injuring officers, arson, sedition, insurrection or treason? They were let go without charges.
You seem to have a very political, warped, one sided opinion of justice.
Don't feed the Trolls, just mute them and move on. I personally give them three chances to make reasonable arguments then Mute User.
That's right Raspberry. You're the fascist traitor. Climbing through a window, so what? She was not presenting any danger to warrant the use of lethal force. Both cases the cops committed crimes which will go unpunished.
Not only did the old guy purposely approach the officers and not back away on request, but moved his arm and hand towards their service belts for some unknown reason. He was pushed away and fell, no deliberate attempt to harm or beat him. As for Ashli Babbit, check the videos. She was surrounded by Capitol Police in riot gear and clearly not harmed or attacking them. She was by the window but no attempt to climb through as no way she could have fit through that little window. She was looking through the window and got shot from close range. She clearly wasn't armed and no way the officer who shot her could see her hands or had any reason to believe she was armed or that he faced threat of death or serious bodily harm. Clearly an unjustified application of deadly force for which he skated for political reasons.
Steve, he never presented any danger to those officers. It was a phone in the dude's right hand, never made any attempt to go after anything on cop's belt. The cop shoved him gratuitously.
Rock, neither was justified. The cop pushed the guy gratiutously. The dude wasn't getting in his face enough and wasn't holding any weapon rather a phone.
Hey Damiksec, damiskec, and damikesc, and ALL of your other socks…
How is your totalitarian scheme to FORCE people to buy Reason magazines coming along?
Free speech (freedom from “Cancel Culture”) comes from Facebook, Twitter, Tik-Tok, and Google, right? THAT is why we need to pass laws to prohibit these DANGEROUS companies (which, ugh!, the BASTARDS, put profits above people!)!!! We must pass new laws to retract “Section 230” and FORCE the evil corporations to provide us all (EXCEPT for my political enemies, of course!) with a “UBIFS”, a Universal Basic Income of Free Speech!
So leftist “false flag” commenters will inundate Reason-dot-com with shitloads of PROTECTED racist comments, and then pissed-off readers and advertisers and buyers (of Reason magazine) will all BOYCOTT Reason! And right-wing idiots like Damikesc will then FORCE people to support Reason, so as to nullify the attempts at boycotts! THAT is your ultimate authoritarian “fix” here!!!
“Now, to “protect” Reason from this meddling here, are we going to REQUIRE readers and advertisers to support Reason, to protect Reason from boycotts?”
Yup. Basically. Sounds rough. (Quote damikesc)
(Etc.)
See https://reason.com/2020/06/24/the-new-censors/
Well, to be fair, a lot of other people there should've had it coming as well.
Ah yes, the very libertarian position of wanting the police to kill your political opponents. The irony that you keep calling everyone you don't like fascists is monumentally comical at this point.
But, Ashli Babbitt almost killed AOC. AOC even said she was almost killed, so it must be true.
Two Cops Will Not Face Discipline For Pushing a 75-Year-Old to the Ground. You Can Thank the Police Union.
Yes. Is there a political party that has done everything in its power to enable and elevate public sector unions?
That sounds a lot like pouncing on Dems. Are you a Republican?
The Bull Moose Party?
Don't want to get mugged? Don't go to New York.
Any part of it.
If you slow the video down you can see him touching the cops. I would have pushed him too. Old people think they can do things others wouldn't and get away with it because they are old.
Yeah, like backing out of a driveway without looking. WTF?!?!?!
Wait the union paid the guy who decided the fate of union members? Conflict of interest much?
A core function of police unions—and of any union, really—is to defend their workers, even when that means sticking up for distasteful behavior.
Fuck you, Binion. That is not the least bit logical, nor libertarian.
What should be any union's only function is to make sure the collective bargaining agreement is honored. That they defend each others' crimes is just a professional courtesy.
Sure! Copsucking is ALWAYS the libertarian thing to do!
Binion was not saying Unions *should* be doing, just that it is what they do. I don't think he is wrong.
Indeed, I was calling this out 2 years ago when he and Britschgi couldn't do anything but talk about QI. The number one problem is public sector unions. If you don't solve that first, it doesn't matter what you do with law reforms around QI.
Binion was not saying Unions *should* be doing
That's not how I read, "core function".
I think he is being critical here. Yes, it is a core function of unions. That doesn't make it right, it just makes it their prime preocupation.
It's like if he were writing an article about the scorpion and the frog. "A core function of scorpions is to sting, even the animals transporting them across the river."
Binion isn't endorsing it. He is just pointing out the reality.
I remember this story! This was June 2020!! Holy crap that was a long time ago.
Back when Trump was leading stormtroopers against peaceful protestors!
That was the DC mayor as even reason has covered.
https://thepostmillennial.com/revealed-dc-mayor-responsible-for-tear-gassing-protestors-in-lafayette-square-not-trump
From that article: "Official reports PROVE that it was IN FACT DC Mayor Muriel Bowser who LIKELY gave the order to disperse the crowd using forceful means such as tear gas. (emphasis mine)"
Whoever wrote that article clearly doesn't understand what proof, facts, and probabilities are.
Pushing protesters is bad, but shooting unarmed women is good?
Great consistency, Reason.
She was going to kill everybody in the Congress building with her bare hands!!! 100% justifiable killing of an insurrectionist!!! - Mike Liarsen, PedoJeffy, Tony, Joe Friday, Reason editors...
Traitors? Yes. Or hang them. All the same.
You keep saying traitors, but no one has been charged with treason.
Yes, they're mostly charged with disrupting the only official event in which election shenanigans would be presented to the country. Sure was lucky for some people that official event didn't happen!
Left-leaning/progressives fuckwits surely do like to throw around the 'treason/traitor/insurrection' labels. It's almost as if words only have meanings when they get to choose the assigned definition.
It's just political propaganda at this point. When your pollical party has nothing remotely good to offer the public, the best thing you can do is gaslight about your opponents.
Don't be too hard on him, it's literally all he has.
Wasn't this the old guy who seemed to be trying to scan the officer's phone or radio? He deliberately walked up to the cops and pushed or grabbed one, as he held something close to the cops phone, as I remember it.
Anyway, as my children used to say "He started it!"
There is really only one important question to decide whether or not the cops should be punished: who did the old guy vote for?
"Gugino, after the force was applied to him, appears to have not been able to keep his balance for reasons that might well have had as much to do with the fact that he was holding objects in each hand or his advanced age," wrote Jeffrey M. Selchick
This is some world-class NY lawyer word fuckery. Use the passive voice and then speculate away about what might have happened. Just say he had it coming and it wasn't excessive if that's how you want to rule. Or it is required of NY lawyers to be as irritating as possible in all things they do? The only thing more irritating than reading it is if I had to hear him say it in that Charles Schumer voice that you know he has.
What was this protest about, again? I remember some of the details of this interaction, but the police were about to move out and to clear some protestors off the streets, and this guy came up and starts shoving them, and they shoved back. I'm more sympathetic to these two officers than I am to the people who gave the orders to assemble a riot squad to clear the streets.
You see, when we said, "Just following orders" wasn't an excuse in Nuremburg, we actually went after the people who gave the orders. Now people want to use that rhetoric to punish exclusively the people following orders at the street level while the people giving orders are held completely unaccountable. I don't find that acceptable: work from the top down.
Good question. Because as we know some protest must be crushed and every participant must be hunted down by the FBI, and others LEO kneels at and watches.
But Billy is not allowed to write about the former.
Criticism of police unions over the last couple of years has primarily come from the left, it seems.
"It seems"? "over the last couple of years"? Republicans have gone out of their way to exempt police, firefighter, and corrections officer unions from restrictions on the collective bargaining rights of public employees for at least the last dozen years. It was Republicans and their base of voters that "back the blue" and have 'thin blue line' stickers on their pick up trucks and talk about how "blue lives matter". It has been Republican politicians that have accused teacher unions as wanting their members to do such evil things as 'indoctrinating' students into CRT or 'grooming' students into becoming LGBTQ+, all why defending cops accused of brutalizing and even murdering innocent civilians.
I'll give you a hint about what the only important difference between police unions and teacher unions is in the eyes of Republican politicians. Look at their lists of campaign contributors.
Erm, those are some nice assertions you've made. Did you have any facts, or did you just need to type while masturbating? While it is true that the GOP and centrist, and working class minorities do tend to support police unions, and more affluent, non-minority left and progressive sorts tend to support teachers unions, the 'GOP bad' argument you advance is pretty weak. Further, parsing campaign contribution for politicians will give many interesting details, and they do not necessarily support whatever argument you think you have.
Look up Wisconsin's Act 10 (circa 2011). I'll do your homework for you once, and it will even come from a conservative opinion source. https://rightwisconsin.com/2020/06/17/is-it-time-to-apply-act-10-to-police-unions
It isn't hard to find many other instances of such favoritism shown to police and other "public safety" worker unions in other GOP dominated states since Scott Walker's efforts a dozen years ago. And it continues today. There were exemptions from right-to-work rules that prohibited unions from collecting fees involuntarily from all workers, even if they didn't want to join the union. (Until Janus declared that an unconstitutional burden on individual free speech rights.) Recent efforts in Florida to ban local governments from allowing union dues to be deducted from workers paychecks would have exempted police unions.
Stop trying to be clever with claims of one-handed typing and actually think and reason for yourself. Maybe also broaden your sources of news to include those that will actually inform you of these things instead of those that only feed you information that supports Republican political goals.
Dozens of Police were clearing the area and someone foolishly came up and touched them and got shoved. Next time write a letter to the editor. Alleged case of excessive force closed.
We can also thank the 75 year old. He doesn't exactly have the moral authority and position of the tank stander in Tiananmen Square.
Some people here miss the point. The issue isn't really that he was pushed to the ground (and in the video it looks more like he lost his balance and fell). The bigger issue is that it took awhile for the cops to get medical attention, at first they just walk on by.
This isn't true, from watching the bodycam video, the response from the two officers he approached is immediate, and the call for medic is near-immediate. I will also say that it appears that he was pushed, but watched a video w/o sound, so had no context in terms of lead-up. I am not sure why he was so close, far too close, well inside 'personal space' guidelines for public spaces. I don't know his background, but blue-collar and minority kids generally get some variation of 'the talk' about how police interactions may pan out, and how to approach police.
His "need for medical attention" was fake.
There is nothing that can result in bleeding from the ear, from falling back, like he did.
His complaint was of pain, which is just proven by the word of the patient, with no ability to come to a diagnostic conclusion.
So this is all you got? How about one cop Michael Byrd not facing anything for shooting unarmed protestor Ashley Babitt?
Not allowed to write about that event are you Billy?
Police privilege is definitely an issue, but this is NOT an example of abuse. This guy was wholly out of line and deserved everything he got.