This week, Australia has been seized by footage of police brutality, harrowing on the eyes and heart.
On Tuesday, it was footage of Victoria Police attending a welfare check, only to bully, harass and beat a man with a disability who called for help.
On Wednesday, two more videos were released to the public. One, from February 2016, depicts a 23-year-old African-Australian man terrorising a Preston chemist. It’s believed he was suffering from a psychotic episode. With seven right hooks, two left hooks, a full-blooded kick to the head, blows with a baton and a stomp on the back, Victoria Police arrested him with incomprehensible force.
The other, from March 2015, depicts a 23-year-old Indigenous man – arrested for being drunk in Bendigo – violently swung into a steel cell door. He is knocked unconscious by the blow, blood flowing from his head.
On The Project on Wednesday night, Victoria Police Assistant Commissioner Luke Cornelius appeared to speak on behalf of his work force.
“It’s important that we keep this in context,” he told the panel, going on to cite statistics thrown around all day by Victoria Police in the wake of the saga.
“We have an organisation comprised of about 19,000 employees. We generate about 14,000 contacts with members of the community each day. That results in about seven complaints a day in relation to police interactions with members of the community,” he went on.
It was here Waleed Aly came in to say what so many of us are feeling about the footage.
“Do you really think it’s appropriate to be citing complaints statistics here?” Aly began.