On Father’s
Day, June 17, several thousand marched behind a banner demanding that the New York City police “End Stop and Frisk” and
“End Racial Profiling.” Said NAACP President Ben Jealous, a central march
organizer: “Stop and frisk is the most massive local racial profiling program
in the country.”
The
ethnically diverse rally marched from the northern tip of Central Park on 110th
St. and then proceeded south on 5th Ave., past exclusive homes, to Mayor Michael
Bloomberg’s mansion at 79th St. At the march’s end, near the mayor’s home, cops
strong-armed dozens of mostly young marchers, who had conducted a vocal,
impromptu rally of their own, and pushed them out of the street. There were no
arrests.
Mayor
Bloomberg, whose personal wealth is $22 billion, is an enthusiastic supporter
of “stop and frisk.” Another proponent is Bloomberg appointee Ray Kelly, New York’s top cop, who headed the training
of Haitian police under a deadly U.S.-led United Nations military occupation.
The mostly
silent procession, which avoided central Harlem by pre-arrangement with city
officials, according to reliable sources, was modeled on the 1917 NAACP silent
5th Ave. march in protest of a racist riot and the lynching of Blacks in East
St. Louis.
Other rally
organizers were activist/politician Rev. Al Sharpton of the National Action
Network and union leaders loyal to the Democratic Party—most prominently, union
President George Grisham of SEIU 1199. The march was endorsed by nearly
300 community organizations, which included immigrant rights groups, Muslim
organizations, and Occupy Wall Street.
Among the
signs carried by protesters were “Skin color is not reasonable suspicion,”
“Stop and Frisk: The New Jim Crow” and “Frisk the Bankers.” Another, “He
Couldn’t Be Here Today,” showed a drawing of Amadou Diallo, an unarmed Guinea immigrant killed by a hail of 41
bullets fired by NYC cops in 1999, igniting massive protests.
Donna Lieberman,
Executive Director of the N.Y. Civil Liberties Union, has called stop and frisk
an “unconstitutional violation of civil rights.” According to a report released
by the NYCLU, police stopped and interrogated 685,724 individuals in 2011, a
more than 600-percent increase in street stops since 2002, Bloomberg’s first
year. An incredible 87% were Black or Latino. Of those, nine out of 10 were
found innocent. Less than 2% had weapons. Black and Latino males, between 14
and 24 years old, were 41.6 percent of all stops in 2011, but only 4.7% of the
city’s population!
Top cop
Kelly maintains that the policy lowers street crime. Facts speak differently.
For example, murder in New York dropped 11% from 2002 to 2011.
However, the murder rate dropped by 50% in Los Angeles, 43% in Washington, D.C., and 35% in Chicago over the same period, cities
without stop and frisk.
On May 15,
Federal Judge Shira Scheinlin granted a hearing for a class-action suit against
the policy by the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR). Said CCR attorney,
Darius Charney, “This is not about five or six bad officers;” it affects
“hundreds of thousands of people in the city.” Also pending are at least three
lawsuits by civil liberties organizations against the NYPD’s patrols of privately
owned buildings and the detaining of tenants with the landlord’s permission.
The NYPD
has also targeted New York’s Muslim community through police
surveillance on legal antiwar activity, infiltration, and frame-ups on
“terrorism” charges. Virtually ignored by the corporate media and organizers
who sought to deflect criticism of Obama was a contingent linking attacks on
the Muslim community to the war drive. Participants included Majlis Ash-Shura
of Metropolitan NY, the United National Anti-War Coalition (UNAC), Desis Rising
Up and Moving (DRUM), the NY Board of Imams, Occupy Wall Street, the Muslim
Peace Coalition USA, Pakistan USA Freedom Forum, the May 1st Coalition for
Worker and Immigrant Rights, and many others.
Speaking to
Socialist Action, Roksana Mun, youth organizer for DRUM—which brought several
hundred, mostly women, low-wage workers of Southeast Asian origin to the
march—said, “We have a vibrant immigrant community that has showed its
solidarity with all communities of color. All communities of color must unite
against all forms of police brutality, surveillance and stop and frisk.” The
Muslim Peace Coalition had about 200 marchers, many from the Harlem mosque of Imam Talib, who was
invited to march up front with the lead banner.
Testimony
of police violence
Christopher
Chadwick, a Brooklyn college student, told The New York
Times, “They talk to you like you’re ignorant, like you’re an animal.”
Recently, in Queens, Louis Morales, 15, and Alex Mejia,
16, were shoved into a car by narcotics police. One cop told them, “Say one
word and I’m going to make your parents pick you up at the jail. You guys are
just a bunch of immigrants.”
Jason
Morales, an organizer for the union SEIU 1199, interviewed on Pacifica radio’s
“Democracy Now!” program, said, “It’s been more than 20 times that I’ve been
stopped and frisked in my neighborhood in Brooklyn and never arrested.” When
asked why, he replied, “I’m assuming because of the color of my skin. I’m
brown. I’m Latino, and we experience that day in and day out. As a teenager
that’s all I experienced.”
Tyquan
Brehon, 18, an African American high school student, told The New York Times
that he has been stopped more than 60 times, several times handcuffed, and
detained for hours without charges. His case was made into a short film by
Julie Dresser and Edwin Martinez.
Stop and
frisk is similar to other racist policies. The NYPD “Street Crimes Unit,” now disbanded,
was responsible for the death of Amadou Diallo in 1999. In Miami, what are called police “jumpouts,”
guns drawn, were responsible for several high profile deaths of African
Americans over the last decade. At the June 17 march were the fathers of
Ramarley Graham 18, and Trayvon Martin, 17, murdered in South Florida, victims of racist violence against
African Americans.
Ramarley
Graham was killed Feb. 2, 2012, in the Bronx by Richard Haste of the NYPD
narcotics unit, who claimed Graham had a gun. But Graham was unarmed. He was
shot in his bathroom in front of his grandmother and little brother. At first,
cops claimed that Graham was running to his door, but a camera video showed him
walking. Cops came into the house, guns drawn, kicking down a door without a
warrant. Haste was charged with manslaughter.
Some 500
protesters, many from Occupy Wall Street, rallied outside Graham’s Bronx home. Frank Graham, father of the
slain teen, said, “We are human beings. Stop treating us like animals! My
son did nothing wrong. I want justice for my son, my baby.” Protesters then
rallied at the 47th precinct, chanting, “NYPD, KKK, how many kids did you kill
today?”
Other
high-profile murder victims of the NYPD include the elderly Eleanor Bumpers,
killed in her home in 1984; Anthony Baez, whose football struck a police car in
1994; Sean Bell, killed in his van by police bullets; and Patrick Dorismond, a
Haitian immigrant. Abner Louima, also a Haitian, was tortured by police (who
stuck a plunger up his rectum), sparking huge protest rallies.
Coincidently,
the day of the march carried news of the death of Rodney King, who was savagely
beaten in 1992 by seven racist Los Angeles cops. King received 50 blows to the
head, was kicked and tasered. Although it was caught on video, the cops were
acquitted, which resulted in six days of rebellion and 55 dead. In the end, two
were sentenced to two years behind bars.
Socialists
support mass mobilizations against cop racism, brutality, and illegal spying.
At the same time, we point out that there can be no permanent solution to
police violence until we do away with capitalism.
> The
article above was written by Marty Goodman, and is reprinted from the July 2012
print edition of Socialist Action newspaper.
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