Dear White America: Here’s What You Should Know About MLK Before Using Him to Shut Down Black Uprising

By Chauncey DeVega

Peacefully Protesting (photo by Bill Hughes)

The United States may have a black man who happens to be President. But racial equality, justice, and the radically democratic transformative possibilities that Obama symbolized seven years ago have not been translated into substantive improvements in the life chances for people of color more generally, or the black and brown poor in particular.

In response to the killing of Freddie Gray, Baltimore’s ghetto youthocracy responded with protests and street violence, but the deeper and more substantive causes of Baltimore’s violent spasm (and Ferguson and other sites as well) are long simmering grievances and righteous anger at an American police establishment that is racist towards black Americans, and a society where its supposed “meritocracy” is broken by the colorline and class inequality.

There is a ritual that accompanies these moments of protest by black Americans, and the wholly predictable urban unrest that follows the repeated killings of unarmed black people by police.

The high priests of public opinion take to the TV, radio, and Internet and summon the memory of Brother Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to condemn black folks who are “rioting”, for the latter are violating the sacred covenant of “non-violence” for which King, as one of America’s greatest

Read More Dear White America: Here’s What You Should Know About MLK Before Using Him to Shut Down Black Uprising | Alternet.

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The Freddie Gray Case Should Be A Warning To Reporters Who Print Unfounded Police Leaks

By Carimah Townes

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The death of Freddie Gray was ruled a homicide and all six officers involved in his arrest and transport face criminal charges, including second-degree murder and manslaughter. Announcing the charges at a press conference Friday morning, Prosecutor Marilyn Mosby also condemned the leak of a police document in which a witness suggests Gray injured himself.

On Wednesday, the Washington Post obtained a Baltimore Police Department document with testimony from a prisoner who rode in the police van with Gray. According to the prisoner, Gray was “banging against the walls” and “intentionally trying to injure himself.” But the document contradicted previous reports of what happened to Gray, and was viewed as a power play to absolve police of their involvement in his death. And during Friday’s press conference, Mosby took time to blast the document’s leak.

“I strongly condemn anyone in law enforcement with access to trial evidence who has leaked information prior to the resolution of this case,” she said. “You are only damaging our ability to conduct a fair and impartial process for all parties involved. I hope that as we move forward with this case everyone will respect due process and refrain from doing anything that will jeopardize our ability to seek justice.”

Shortly after the Post published the document’s details, people took to social media to criticize attempts to assassinate Gray’s character — a move that’s been done to countless people killed by police. After high-profile, officer-involved killings, police departments selectively release information about victims that isn’t pertinent to the incident, thereby distracting the public from the case itself. And too often, mainstream media hones in on those details, contributing to a smear campaign that the deceased cannot defend themselves from. For instance, the New York Times wrote a profile of Michael Brown that emphasized his consumption of drugs and alcohol and detailed his “rebellious streak.” Sanford police informed the Orlando Sentinel that Trayvon Martin was suspended for possession of an empty marijuana bag.

Read More The Freddie Gray Case Should Be A Warning To Reporters Who Print Unfounded Police Leaks | ThinkProgress.

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A Ground-Level View of Baltimore’s Protests: Hope, Anger, and Beauty

Photos by Andrew Renneisen, text by Mitchell Grummon

Black baby dolls hung from a tree as a symbol of protest of the death of 25 year old Freddie Gray in Baltimore, MD on April 28, 2015. (Photo/Andrew Renneisen)

Black baby dolls hung from a tree as a symbol of protest of the death of 25 year old Freddie Gray in Baltimore, MD on April 28, 2015. (Photo/Andrew Renneisen)

 

 

 

On April 12, Freddie Gray was arrested by Baltimore police. One hour later he was comatose. A week later he was dead, succumbing to spinal injuries inflicted while in custody. On Monday, Gray’s funeral was followed by peaceful protests as well as looting, arson, and confrontations with police.

Photographer Andrew Renneisen was on the streets that night and the following day as the city took stock of the riots’ aftermath, capturing images of violence and destruction, but also hope and courage.

Read More  A Ground-Level View of Baltimore’s Protests: Hope, Anger, and Beauty | Mother Jones.

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De Blasio: Civil Disobedience Means Do What The Cops Tell You

After police refused to let thousands of peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters march in the street on Wednesday, some people noted that the NYPD’s tactic of violently repelling and arresting demonstrators differed considerably from how the de Blasio administration handled similar protests just a few months ago. At a press conference yesterday, the mayor assured reporters that this was wrong: “If you guys want to sensationalize, if you think that’s your contribution to society, feel free.”

“I’m giving you lots of quotes, maybe you could borrow from some of these quotes,” the mayor said, helpfully, as he set the record straight.

“We have an extraordinary tradition of freedom of thought, a respect for diversity of all kinds, and a deep, deep respect for the right to peacefully protest. It’s something that I believe that the NYPD has handled, over many, many years, with exceptional distinction.”

Overwhelmed by rich memories of the NYPD’s harmonious handling of dissent, the mayor seemed to have forgotten all the rebukes the department has earned from federal courts for unlawfully spying on innocent people, the wrongful arrests of nearly 2,000 political demonstrators (and subsequent $18 million settlement), and the wanton acts of cruelty committed against some people riding bicycles.

The mayor continued: “The NYPD coordinates with any protesters who want to have an honest conversation about how to make their protests work right. There’s is a long tradition of this. Ask people the stories of Occupy Wall Street, of the ongoing dialogue that occurred between police and the protesters, day in and day out.”

Read More  De Blasio: Civil Disobedience Means Do What The Cops Tell You: Gothamist.

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‘Root of rebellion is violent police department’

By Richard B. Muhammed

Baltimore police officers were pelted with rocks, bottles, and planks, patrol cars trashed as news outlets broadcast the unrest live and streamed unfolding events in real time—shortly after Freddie Gray was laid to rest.

The governor of Maryland declared a State of Emergency as scenes of chaos were broadcast around the world.

“What media and everybody focuses more on is a CVS burned about four miles from where I live than what happened to Freddie Gray in that van,” said Dr. Ray Winbush, director of the Institute for Urban Research at Morgan State University, a historically Black university in Northeast Baltimore.

City officials and media want to focus on the rebellion, which is the fruit, “the roots of the rebellion is Baltimore has one of the most violent police forces in the United States,” he continued.

Mondawmin Mall, a major shopping center in a Black neighborhood, was the epicenter for initial clashes between police and high school students.

Read More ‘Root of rebellion is violent police department’.

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Baltimore Protesters Jailed Without Food For Days, Attorneys Say

In Kira Lerner

 

AP Photo/Matt Rourke

AP Photo/Matt Rourke

In Baltimore’s Central Booking, protesters and rioters are being withheld food for up to 18 hours, denied medical attention and detained for extended periods of time with up to 20 people in small cells intended to hold many less, two Baltimore public defenders told ThinkProgress.

Deputy District Public Defender Natalie Finegar said she spoke with her clients Wednesday night as they were being released from detention. Many spoke about the inhumane conditions and overcrowding and questioned why they were being held unlawfully.

“One [story] I heard described was that folks went 18 hours without food at one point and that when they were given food, it was a series of slices of bread with a small slice of cheese,” Finegar said.

The facility is facing a higher arrest rate than it’s capable of handling due to the influx of arrests following the riots that occurred on the streets of Baltimore over the death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray.

“In cells that were designed for 8 people, they had 15 to 20 people,” she said. She also described one person who had an open wound and was worried he wasn’t getting the necessary medical attention to check for infections.

Read More Baltimore Protesters Jailed Without Food For Days, Attorneys Say | ThinkProgress.

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Baltimore Is Not Ferguson. Here’s What It Really Is

By Steve Inskeep

This week’s Baltimore riot could not have happened to a nicer city.

Baltimore residents welcome strangers and even call them “hon.” They sit on benches painted with the slogan “The Greatest City in America.”

Baltimore is also where people looted stores and burned cars Monday night. They did it when a man died a week after being arrested.

I was about to call Freddie Gray’s death the latest in a string of high-profile deaths of African-American men involving police. But that’s not quite right. And that’s the point. Each incident of the past year was a particular story in a particular place, which became clear as soon as we arrived in the very particular place that is Baltimore.

Nothing about this story was quite the way it seemed from a distance. For one thing, the uprising did not bring a black populace into confrontation with an overwhelmingly white police force, as happened in Ferguson, Mo., last year.

Baltimore, a majority black city, has a black mayor and a black police commissioner whose force is about half black.

This reality was plain to Taiwan Parker, who lives in the neighborhood where Gray was arrested. He told us that police-community relations have long been sour. And yet, he said, “It ain’t no race thing — it’s not a race thing at all.”

Read More Baltimore Is Not Ferguson. Here’s What It Really Is : NPR.

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The “Shocking” Statistics of Racial Disparity in Baltimore

By Bill Quigley

Were you shocked at the disruption in Baltimore? What is more shocking is daily life in Baltimore, a city of 622,000 which is 63 percent African American. Here are ten numbers that tell some of the story.

One. Blacks in Baltimore are more than 5.6 times more likely to be arrested for possession of marijuana than whites even though marijuana use among the races is similar. In fact, Baltimore county has the fifth highest arrest rate for marijuana possessions in the USA.

Two. Over $5.7 million has been paid out by Baltimore since 2011 in over 100 police brutality lawsuits. Victims of severe police brutality were mostly people of color and included a pregnant woman, a 65 year old church deacon, children, and an 87 year old grandmother.

Three. White babies born in Baltimore have six more years of life expectancy than African American babies in the city.

Four. African Americans in Baltimore are eight times more likely to die from complications of HIV/AIDS than whites and twice as likely to die from diabetes related causes as whites.

Five. Unemployment is 8.4 percent city wide. Most estimates place the unemployment in the African American community at double that of the white community. The national rate of unemployment for whites is 4.7 perce

Read More The “Shocking” Statistics of Racial Disparity in Baltimore | Common Dreams | Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

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Charges Against Officers In Freddie Gray’s Death Range From Murder To Manslaughter

mosby_wide-ade76fceee1eb17afe10f555bae5e86a116288b5-s900-c85The death of Freddie Gray was a homicide, and there is “probable cause” for criminal charges, Baltimore lead prosecutor Marilyn J. Mosby says, citing her office’s “thorough and independent” investigation and the medical examiner’s report on Gray’s death.

Mosby, the city’s recently elected state’s attorney, announced a range of charges against several Baltimore police officers, with the offenses ranging from second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter to assault and misconduct in office. Warrants have been issued for their arrest, she said.

The prosecutor’s investigation found that there had been no reason to detain Gray — and that his arrest was in itself illegal, Mosby said. She said that the knife that police officers had found Gray was carrying turned out to be legal.

After announcing the charges, Mosby noted her own ties to the police community — including her mother and father. She thanked officers who are committed to serving the community.

We’ll have more details from the announcement and any documents released by the prosecutor’s office.

Update at 10:51 a.m. ET: Recounting Details Of Gray’s Arrest

Running down an exhaustive account of Gray’s arrest and treatment while in custody, Baltimore’s chief prosecutor is listing numerous occasions on which Gray was not properly restrained with a seatbelt while he rode in the back of a police van.

Read More Charges Against Officers In Freddie Gray’s Death Range From Murder To Manslaughter : The Two-Way : NPR.

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Freddie Gray’s Attorney on the Benefits of Body Cameras

By Conor Friedersdorf

On Tuesday night William Murphy, the attorney representing Freddie Gray’s family, gave a televised address to an audience in a Baltimore church. As MSNBC cut to his remarks he was reflecting on black America’s long experience of police brutality. During slavery, segregation, and the War on Drugs, he argued, police officers have been used to foist immoral laws on young black men. And all along interactions have been fraught with physical abuse.

“That’s not my opinion,” he said. “That’s the verdict of the black community, which has had direct experience that was hidden by coverup after coverup after coverup.”

But not anymore.

“You know, they used to be able to get away with lying about it,” he explained. “And there were lots of people in the establishment anxious to believe them over anybody black. Thank God for cell phone video cameras. Thank God for cell phone video cameras. Because now the truth is finally coming out. And it’s ugly.”

How striking to see a black leader express thanks for something as basic as the ability to document abuses that his community has long alleged to a skeptical majority. He knows as well as anyone that video wasn’t dispositive in Freddie Gray’s killing. He acknowledged that Eric Garner’s killing showed its limits too. Nevertheless, he argued that body cameras are a logical next step that could transform the relationship between black people and the police like no other reform.

Read More Freddie Gray’s Attorney on the Benefits of Body Cameras – The Atlantic.

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