“HE NEVER STOOD A CHANCE.”
That’s what one friend of Tom Phillips says when describing the way police portrayed him in the aftermath of his death. To them, Tom wasn’t just a man killed in a chaotic raid — he was a character already written into a narrative of guilt.
Reports released after the incident painted Tom as volatile, troubled, and even dangerous. Old run-ins with the law were dragged into headlines. Fights from his teenage years were framed as proof of a lifelong “violent streak.” Even his struggles with depression and financial hardship were twisted into evidence that he was “spiraling.”
But those who knew him paint a different picture: a father doing his best, haunted by mistakes, but devoted to his children. His co-worker recalls how he worked double shifts just to keep food on the table. His neighbor remembers him fixing bikes for local kids. His sister insists the man on the news was “not the Tom we knew — they turned him into a monster to justify killing him.”
This narrative war — between the official story and the personal memories — is tearing at the case. If Tom was already framed as a threat before officers ever arrived, did he ever really have a chance at survival? Was he executed not because of what he did that night, but because of the image authorities had built around him over years?
The question looms: was Tom Phillips a danger, or a man made into one by those who needed to defend their actions?
Until the truth is untangled, the debate rages on — between a grieving family demanding the world remember Tom as a father first, and a system determined to brand him something else entirely.