here's a story of police brutality that involves an asian american, which is relatively rare.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-cho11feb11,1,3926250.story?ctrack=1&cset=true
somebody thought he was a vandal because he was holding a tire iron, and so that guy called the cops. the cops rushed to the scene and drew their weapons on the man. not sure exactly what happened next but they ended up shooting and killing the guy, purportedly because he looked threatening with the tire iron. the man did live in the neighborhood so he might have just been fixing his car.
MORAL OF THE STORY.
this occurred in california, where there is a history of police brutality. not coincidentally, most people here believe guns are evil and therefore are supportive of gun laws. this leads to a dependence on police to resolve issues and defend the citizens. when police rush to a scene and try to figure things out right then and there, it often leads to misjudgment and the use of brutal force to get the uncooperative citizen to give up all freedoms. the distrust of police stemming from the history of brutality and perhaps personal experience like my own (where police thought i wasnt driving my own car and searched me cuz i was wearing a raiders cap), leads to tendency not to cooperate with the police.
we need citizens to be less reliant on the police and be more resposible to defend themselves and resolve their own issues when they can. if they see a hoodlum or possible vandal, they need to try to stop him and defend themselves with their own gun or other weapon if they can. strict gun laws and dependence on police leads to police brutality.