How much is a black boy’s life worth?
In the case of 12-year-old Tamir Rice, $6 million. That’s how much the city of Cleveland has agreed to pay to settle a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the boy’s family.
Six million dollars for the city to avoid ever having to admit any culpability in Tamir’s death at the hands of a rookie cop with questionable qualifications back in 2014.
Six million to duck the possibility of a federal civil rights trial and what could have been an even costlier payout.
Six million to cool the anger over the execution of a child whose crime was packing a pellet gun in his waistband.
Six million for a black boy’s life.
RELATED: City of Cleveland settles Tamir Rice lawsuit for $6 million
The settlement was announced on Monday morning, several months after a grand jury declined to bring charges against officers Timothy Loehmann, the shooter, and Frank Garmback, who skidded the pair’s police cruiser into a park and within feet of Tamir before Loehmann opened fire. The first of the shots came as Loehmann flung open his door and before the cruiser came to a full stop.
Tamir’s death by police gunfire is one of many to unleash a wave of anger, protests and, at times, violence over what activists contend are the vestiges of racism that have systematically devalued and destroyed black life.
His killing came just two days before a grand jury in Ferguson, Missouri, decided not to charge a police officer there who fatally shot Michael Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old killed under questionable circumstances that summer.
The Rice family’s wounds have time and again been salted by the city and state officials. When the city responded to family’s lawsuit last year, it did so by seeming to blame Tamir for his own death. The Cleveland mayor eventually apologized and tweaked the language of the city’s filing. Earlier this year, in February, the city took legal action of its own, suing Tamir’s family for the $500 ambulance ride that carried his dead body from the scene of the shooting. Once again, the city later reversed course.
A probate court must still approve the pending agreement between the city and the family. As part of the settlement, Cleveland does not admit wrongdoing.









