9:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Women|youth · 5 Comments
2 Mar 2009Above is a video of Deputy Paul Schene of King County, Washington kicking and punching a 15 year old teenager arrested for stealing a car last November. The girl can be seen kicking her show towards the officer which provoked a violent attack. The deputy, facing excessive force charges has declared himself not guilty. Defense attorneys are claiming that since the video has no sound it doesn’t tell the whole story. What on earth could this young woman have said to justify Schene’s actions?
Womanist Musings has a post up related to this horrible attack and gives a recent accounting of how black woman are impacted by police brutality.
Via / Pam’s House Blend
7:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · GLBT|Immigration|New York · Comments Off
2 Mar 2009
Last week I wrote how one of the men who killed Jose Sucuzhanay in a racist and homophobic hate crime in Brooklyn was arrested. A second arrest has been made. Keith Phoenix was arrested on last Friday and is claiming that the fatal beating was provoked when Jose and his brother kicked the car door Phoenix was driving and that Jose looked like he was reaching for a weapon.
During Phoenix’s arraignment, his lawyer Jay Schwitzman told the court, “Mr. Phoenix went to break up the fight, and during the fight, there was a weapon brandished by the deceased…It is not gay bashing or a hate crime.” The lawyer also countered Friday’s accounts from Police Commissioner Ray Kelly that painted Phoenix as a cold-blooded killer who questioned, “What’s the big deal?” Schwitzman said that Phoenix is “remorseful and he recognizes the seriousness” of the accusations against him.
No weapon was recovered at the scene to my knowledge.
What disturbs me most about this defense is how it sounds like the defenses we have heard so many times coming from police officers who brutalize people, especially in people of color communities. Often the defense of “I thought he had a gun” has been enough to excuse brutal police behavior. I’m thinking cases like Amadou Diallo and Anibal Carrasquillo where no gun was ever found. To have people of color use this defense for the murder of another person of color really bothers me. To have this defense used for a homophobic murder really bothers me.
It makes me wonder how do we within people of color communities talk about and deal with how divide and conquer politics are contributing to anti-immigrant hate? How are we dealing with the homophobia we see in our communities. How do we build coalitions that create space to talk about these things and recognize and act together against hate crimes based on race and identity?
Via/ Gothamist
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