COMMUNITIES DEMAND:
‘Stop racist killer cops’
Killings of 23-year-old unarmed groom, 92-year-old woman are not isolated acts
By
LeiLani Dowell
and Dianne Mathiowetz
New York and Atlanta
Published Nov 30, 2006 12:59 AM
Sean Bell was killed on what was supposed to be the morning of
his wedding, Nov. 25, when police unloaded more than 50 bullets
into the car he and two friends—all African American and
all unarmed—were in. The three were leaving Bell’s
bachelor party in Queens, N.Y.
Bell’s friend Joseph Guzman is in critical condition after
being hit at least 11 times. The other, Trent Benefield, was hit
three times. A report from New York in the Sydney Morning Herald
said the two had been shackled to their hospital beds. (Nov.
28)
One white officer alone, Detective Mike Oliver, emptied a full
magazine of bullets, reloaded and then emptied a second
magazine—a total of 31 bullets. New York Police Department
policy on shooting at moving vehicles clearly states that police
cannot fire at a moving vehicle “unless deadly force is
being used ... by means other than a moving vehicle.” (AP,
Nov. 26) The officers involved were placed on administrative
leave, yet are still being paid.
Not just ‘bad apples’
Authorities are scrambling to come up with excuses for
Bell’s death. The police claim that one of Bell’s
friends made reference to a gun. “Experts” discuss
the problem of “contagious shooting”—which was
amplified in 1993 when the NYPD switched from revolvers to
semiautomatic weapons. The media is quick to point out that a
multinational group of officers were involved in the
incident—two white, two Black and one Latino—to
downplay the racism in the killings. However, to reiterate, all
the victims are Black.
But despite any excuses and “bad apple” theories,
police violence and terror in communities of color is systemic,
not individual. The police act as an indiscriminate, armed
occupying force, with the mentality that the poor and people of
color are disposable. Brutality against these communities is a
daily occurrence.
As if to prove this point, the next day in the Bronx police
attacked and then arrested Juanita Young, an activist against
police brutality and the mother of Malcolm Ferguson, who had been
killed by the NYPD in March 2000. According to a press release by
the October 22nd Coalition, as many as eight cops participated in
the attack, kicking her in the chest and back.
In addition, the group TransJustice has called for a press
conference and rally on Nov. 29 to denounce the Nov. 1 beating
and arrest of two African American men beaten by cops in the West
Village of New York City. When a white male police officer pushed
a young African-American woman without provocation, 23-year-old
African-American college student Shakur Trammel requested his
badge number. In response, the officer punched Trammel in the
face and chest, threw him onto the police van and choked him with
his nightstick. Eyewitnesses report that between four to six
mostly white cops then kicked and punched Trammel and another
African-American man who was being very vocal about his outrage
at Trammel’s beating.
State violence grows with class
tensions
Frederick Engels, Karl Marx’s closest collaborator and
co-founder of scientific socialism, described the state as a
public power that “consists not merely of armed men but
also of material adjuncts, prisons and institutions of coercion
of all kinds.” Engels continues to explain, “It [the
public power] grows stronger ... in proportion as class
antagonisms within the state become more acute.” (Engels,
“The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the
State,” 1884)
Anger in poor communities and communities of color is growing
over the lack of jobs, healthcare and social services, the number
of soldiers coming home dead or maimed from a war for big
business, the news that the rich are getting even richer while
the poor are still getting poorer. As during the Vietnam War, the
ruling class fears organization and rebellion in the communities.
The police apparatus is stepped up to keep these communities in
line, to remind them of their “place.”
But this kind of repression inevitably leads to resistance. At a
rally held the day after Bell’s killing, New York City
Councilperson Charles Barron told the crowd, “I am fed up.
I am not asking my people to do anything passive anymore. ...
Don’t ask us to ask our people to be peaceful while they
are being murdered. We are not the only ones that can
bleed.”
A rally against the police state is planned for Dec. 6, 4:30
p.m., at One Police Plaza in downtown New York City. A statement
by the December 12th Movement, organizers of the event, reads,
“The issues on the agenda include the police profiling of
Black youth; NYPD/Homeland Security occupation of the Black
community; police aggression, harassment and overkill, as well as
President Bush’s assault on Habeas Corpus; the erosion of
civil rights; and Iraq war for oil.”
Atlanta cops kill 92-year-old woman
Police brutality of course is not unique to New York City. In
Atlanta, 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston was killed Nov. 21 when an
Atlanta drug squad executed a “no-knock” search
warrant at her home.
Johnston’s neighborhood is close to an area known for drug
trafficking and crime. According to her family, she was very
concerned about being victimized and so had bars on her windows
and doors and a permit for a pistol.
When Atlanta police pried the bars off the front door and broke
it down, Johnston fired her rusty gun in self-defense, wounding
three of the cops. They responded with a barrage of bullets.
Initially, the police claimed an undercover agent had purchased
drugs at her home. Then the story changed: an informant had
purchased crack cocaine with city-supplied funds at the
address.
This informant allegedly told police that there were surveillance
cameras at the house—an element which increased the
likelihood of a “no-knock” warrant being granted. On
Nov. 21 around 6 p.m., a Fulton County magistrate issued that
warrant, based on an affidavit with these details submitted by
narcotics investigator Jason R. Smith.
Barely more than an hour later, Atlanta police smashed through
the front door of Johnston’s home.
Outraged neighbors and family insist that she lived alone. No one
recognizes the description of the drug suspect,
“Sam,” named in the warrant.
Johnston’s long-time neighbor Curtis Mitchell said,
“I think that’s just something they made up.”
Her niece, Sarah C. Dozier, agreed, saying, “As far as I am
concerned, they shot her down like a dog.”
That suspicion was verified six days after Johnston’s
death, when the informant publicly stated that he provided no
such information to the police. He says that shortly after the
shooting occurred, police called him, telling him to back up
their story. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, he
has told internal affairs investigators and local media that the
police fabricated the whole thing and told him to lie about his
role in it. (Nov. 28)
Johnston’s killing came on the same day that the district
attorney in adjacent DeKalb County announced that she will ask a
grand jury to review a string of deadly police shootings there to
determine whether criminal charges should be filed. Organized
pressure forced this move by local officials, though it is only a
modest response to community demands for police accountability
and civilian review.
Since January 2006, DeKalb police have shot and killed 12 people
and admit that several officers violated standard procedures. A
13th person died in custody after being hit with a baton and
pepper-sprayed. Just days before the DA’s announcement, a
34-year-old woman was fatally shot by a police officer who said
she came at him with a knife. Others at the scene said that she
was scared and running away.
Congressperson Cynthia McKinney made a formal request on Nov. 25
for an immediate Department of Justice investigation into
“a developing national pattern of police misconduct and
abuse.”
From New York to Colorado to Milwaukee to Georgia, family
members, community activists and progressive elected officials
have demanded not only answers to what happened to these
individuals but an end to police disregard for the lives of
residents of working class and poor neighborhoods.
For weeks in Atlanta, there have been vigils, press conferences,
rallies and other protests that have forced the issue of police
killings into the public spotlight. Over and over, the people
have made it clear: “No justice, No peace.”
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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