1:26 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|Seattle|Violence · 2 Comments
7 Sep 2010Remember this incident caught on video…..
Apparently in Seattle, two officers beating an unarmed man and calling him “a Mexican”, and not as an identifier but rather as a slur, is not a hate crime.
From Colorlines:
King County prosecuting attorney Dan Satterberg wrote in his decision:
Cobane will not be charged with the felony crime of malicious harassment because prosecutors have found that he did not intentionally target or assault a person because of their race or national origin, as required under the State’s hate crime statute.
Satterberg explained that in order to charge Cobane with a hate crime, the 15-year Seattle Police Department veteran would have had to “maliciously and intentionally target[ed] Mr. Monetti due to his ethnicity.” Cobane merely “lawfully detained Mr. Monetti and the other two men because they had a reasonable belief that the men were involved in two armed robberies.” The prosecutor acknowledged that Cobane detained Monetti and his companions because they fit a description of Latino males who had been involved in a robbery nearby.
Satterberg also defended Cobane’s verbal and physical abuse. Cobane’s actions toward Monetti were not racially motivated, the prosecutor wrote, because he did not also beat up the two Latino men Monetti was with. The prosecutor also wrote that police have the right to use physical force “beyond what an ordinary citizen would be allowed to use so long as the force is reasonable in the performance of their duties.”
6:00 am By Maegan La Mala · Justice|New York City|race|Violence · 2 Comments
27 Aug 2010I cannot even begin to fathom the pain of a parent who loses a child to state sponsored violence and then finding the strength to struggle for justice in the name of that child, day after day. In this video testimony, the parents of Sean Bell, killed by the NYPD in 2006, speak out on what justice looks like to them.
Video gracias a the Justice Committee
4:27 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York City|race|Violence · 3 Comments
18 Aug 2010
With gracious permission from the folks at City Limits magazine, we are reposting an article written by Michael Cohen regarding the possible reasons behind the wave of attacks on Mexicans in Staten Island, NYC.
As a national debate erupted over Arizona’s controversial immigration law this summer, a simmering anti-Mexican sentiment appeared to explode in Staten Island’s Mexican enclave, Port Richmond.
Ten of the 21 Staten Island cases investigated as hate crimes this year involve attacks on Mexicans in the neighborhood. Most victims report being robbed, beaten and peppered with ethnic slurs.
Diversity among the assailants involved in those assaults and an economic motive as consistent as the victims’ ethnicities, however, further complicate the already murky definition of a hate crime.
Victims have reported white, Hispanic and black male attackers. A South Asian woman was arrested in connection with two attacks. The latest arrest was a 17-year-old Liberian immigrant, Derrian Williams, who once burglarized the African Refuge Center in Park Hill, according to the center’s director.
“I don’t think there’s racism behind it,” said Ed Josey, president of Staten Island’s NAACP branch. “But those who are doing the beatings are not speaking about it. It’s not like they’re telling anyone why they do it.”
Victim and police accounts do indicate, however, a majority of black perpetrators, in this neighborhood where reports show—and residents confirm—a history of tension between blacks and Mexicans.
Josey said that the diminishment of jobs and recreational facilities play just as much a role as baseless hate towards another ethnic group.
Rev. Terry Troia, executive director of Project Hospitality, and a long time community leader here, suggested a psychological element.
“There’s a negative pulse in the community,” she said. “The people committing these crimes hear this negative verbiage, like ‘Oh, these damn Mexicans are taking all the jobs,’ and they act impulsively off that buzz.”
The buzz of bigotry on Staten Island caught the eye of federal officials in November 2008, when on Election Night four young men sought “revenge,” for President Obama’s victory by randomly beating African-Americans.
Soon after, the U.S. Department of Justice assigned Matthew Lattimer, an agent with department’s Community Relations Service to ease Staten Island’s racial tensions. Established under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, CRS functions behind the scenes to quell community conflicts, while cloaked in the secretive spirit imposed by the racial climate of the 1960s.
Given the history of sporadic assaults on Mexicans and the current flurry of attacks, Lattimer has become a fixture in Port Richmond, holding monthly meetings at El Centro, an immigration advocacy center on Castleton Avenue.
“He does a good job getting the dialog going,” said Ron Misels, a North Shore activist who has attended some meetings at El Centro and met Lattimer two years ago at an anti-bias summit. “But it’s clear we need more than dialog. These young people need parks and facilities and more things to do.”
For CRS agents, making information public can result in a misdemeanor conviction punishable by a maximum $1,000 fine or up to one year in prison. So Lattimer doesn’t allow reporters to attend meetings at El Centro.
Residents appreciate that federal authorities finally recognize the borough’s racial tension—a review of CRS annual reports from 1997 to 2006 contained not one reference to Staten Island—but after almost two years the violence has increased and their neighborhood is flooded with city cops.
“Supposedly my block has been under surveillance for years,” said Ednita Lorenzo, a 22-year-old Mexican living in Port Richmond. “There’s one of those NYPD signs up on the corner.”
Lorenzo recalled feeling tension between blacks and Mexicans as far back as elementary school but doesn’t attribute hate as the prime motivator in the recent attacks.
She said that thieves target Mexicans because cash-carrying day laborers might hesitate reporting an attack to the police because of their own immigration status.
That’s why John Messiha, one of Lorenzo’s childhood friends, accidentally killed her father’s cousin, Ricardo Salinas, four years ago, in one of the many but less frequent attacks that foreshadowed this summer’s violence.
Messiha, an Egyptian American, then 17, testified against his two black codefendants and admitted that they wanted to “rob a Mexican.”
“It hurt when I saw that quote in the paper,” Lorenzo said. “But I knew it was more about him being defenseless than him being Mexican.”
7:30 am By Maegan La Mala · GLBT|Immigration|Justice|New York City|Violence · Comments Off
5 Aug 2010Today in Brooklyn Criminal Court, the family of Jose Sucuzhanay awaits the sentencing of the two men convicted of killing the Ecuadorian businessman, brother, and son in a hateful attack.
I wanted to highlight this this morning and bring all of your thoughts to the Sucuzhanay for two reasons apart from the horrible injustice that no court will ever be able to fix. First, the sentencing is happening while New York City finds itself smack in the middle of another wave of anti-Latino/anti-Mexican hate crimes. Certainly, people will be looking to this verdict as a sign of what the NY justice system values the lives of Latinos at. However this is also dangerous, as the NY justice system is the same that incarcerates both Latinos and African-Americans at record numbers. Having working with families who have lost their children to hate crimes and racial violence, I understand the desire and want for the loss of life to come at some cost, for equal protection under the law to really work for once. But I also know that no time behind bars will bring back the Jose’s of the world.
12:24 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York|race|Violence · 4 Comments
2 Aug 2010This past weekend, the 10th anti-Mexican attack in about four months happened in Port Richmond, Staten Island.
In this latest attack, a 17 year old coming home from work in the early morning hours was beaten, robbed of 10 dollars and called anti-Mexican slurs. NY1 News television is reporting that a suspect is in custody. That suspect a 15 year old African American teenager.
8:45 am By BiancaLaureano · Books|chicago|Drugs|Education|society|Violence|Women · 7 Comments
2 Aug 2010***Trigger Warning***

When my homegirl Nilki asked me if I’d like to review the book Lady Q: The Rise And Fall Of A Latin Queen, I said “of course!” It’s rare when our stories are told in general, especially in book form, and specifically as testimonio. What is also a rarity is hearing from Latinas who are involved or associated with gangs in the US. Often there is this idea that we should not hear such stories because it gives “us a bad name.” Or such narratives focus on such a negative aspect of our community. My opinion is that there is positive, there is negative, there is struggle and redemption and all of those stories must be shared, heard, and valued.
I received a free copy of the book for review through the Condor Book Tour, and I must say as a disclaimer that the opinions expressed in this review are mine alone.
Before I begin this review I must state my bias: I do not see all gangs as negative aspects or parts of communities. I have worked with youth for over two decades and in that time have worked directly with youth involved or associated with various gangs. In that work I’ve learned a lot about my own social justice agenda, ways to mentor youth, and how to help young people learn about self-determination without lecturing, bullying or judging them.
Read more…
6:43 am By Maegan La Mala · race|Violence · 2 Comments
27 Jul 2010I’m going through some videos that I took during the mock ICE checkpoint at Netroots and at the same time I’m catching up on what is up in my home city and while I helped to play Latina reverse ICE agent, while I watched Latino men in my same sphere get threatened with arrest, asked for their papers and described as “shady”, while fierce ass young woman in touch with how all their facets still form one whole life are dismissed and ultimately threatened by white men with “hell to pay”, while panelists on immigration asked for “task forces”, more Latinos can’t walk outside without fear. There were two reported attacks on Mexican immigrants in Port Richmond, Staten Island.
6:10 am By Maegan La Mala · Fashion|U.S.-Mexico Border|Violence|Women · 19 Comments
20 Jul 2010It may be old news already for some, since MAC & Rodarte have officially apologized for their Fall 2010 fashion and makeup collection based on what the designers felt and thought they saw in the border city of Juarez.
The blushes, lip glosses, eyeshadows and nail polishes were given names like “factory,” “Juarez,” “Ghost town,” “del Norte,” and “quinceanera” and look like this:
The models bear no resemblance to the hijas mourned over, hijas like Solangie Medina.

8:36 am By Maegan La Mala · Puerto Rico|Violence · 2 Comments
12 Jul 2010On Friday, I was live on Mega TV News , discussing some of the problems with having an investigation led by people hand picked by Gov. Luis Fortuño as to what went down against student protesters and the media outside the Puerto Rican Capital on June 30th. I believe my exact quote was:
” If Fortuño wants Puerto Rico to be a state so badly then he should have no problem with the Federal government investigating his police force”
Indeed this weekend, testimony began to come out from the students and others who were outside the Capitolio on June 30th. An ad-hoc commission at the Puerto Rican Bar Association heard testimony that pointed to the brutality of the island police force, brutality that can be seen as a continuation of the actions against students in Puerto Rico during their two month long strike.
From the Puerto Rico Daily Sun:
Elvin Reyes Meléndez, a 21-year old student at the University of Puerto Rico in Humacao was affected by pepper spray used by the riot squad to break up the demonstrators. “After 20 minutes, I saw wounded people stretched out on the ground, covered in blood and breathing with difficulty,” said the student who participated in the demonstrations convened by the National Confederation of University Campuses.
“What was not captured on film was how tear gas was shot from a helicopter and how more than 25 police, gestured for us to approach them so they could yell obscenities at us,” he said.
9:11 pm By la Macha · Violence · 4 Comments
9 Jul 2010Colorlines has a post detailing an apology that Johannes Mehserle, Oscar Grant’s murderer, sent to Grant’s family and out to media outlets. The original hand written letter is at Colorlines, the transcript of it is below:
TRANSCRIPTION OF THE LETTER:
July 4, 2010
Mike – Please try to get this message to the public:
I don’t know what the jury in this case is going to decide, but I hope those who hate me and those who understand that I never intended to shoot Oscar Grant will listen to this message.
I have and will continue to live every day of my life knowing Mr. Grant should not have been shot. I know a daughter has lost a father and a mother has lost a son. It saddens me to know my actions cost Mr. Grant his life, no words can express how truly sorry I am.
I hoped to talk to Ms. Johnson and Ms. Mesa in the days following this terrible event, but death threats toward my newly-born son, my friends and family resulted in no communication occuring [sic]. I hope the day will come when anger will give way to a dialogue.
For now, and forever I will live, breathe, sleep, and not sleep with the memory of Mr. Grant screaming “You shot me” and me putting my hands on the bullet wound thinking the pressure would help while I kept telling him “You’ll be okay.” I tried to tell myself that maybe this shot will not be so serious, but I recall how sick I felt when Mr. Grant stopped talking, closed his eyes and seemed to change his breathing.
I don’t expect I can convince some individuals how sorry I am for the death of Mr. Grant, but I would not feel right if I didn’t explain my thoughts as I wait for a decision by the jury.
-Johannes Mehserle 7-4-2010
Well, I think that the guy is clearly speaking from his heart. I don’t know what, if anything, this does for his legal case, for his sentencing, etc. But I do feel like he was speaking from a position of vulnerability and truth. I hope that somehow his words bring some small comfort to Oscar Grant’s family.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
About | Advertise with us | Contact | Twitter