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Posts Tagged ‘Hate Crimes Against Immigrants

In an interview with NotiMex, the Vice-President of the National Council of la Raza, Lisa Navarrete, said that the stats on hate crimes against Latinos are an underestimate and part of that is because many of the undocumented who are the targets of anti-Latino and anti-Latino attacks are afraid of being deported.

The FBI statistics have shown a decrease in hate crimes against Latinos. In 2007, there were 830 reported hate crimes against Latinos. In 2008 the number dropped to 792. In the last year that data is available for, 2009, the number of reported and recognized hate crimes against Latinos is 692.

The latest threat, especially to immigrant women, is hidden in a program with a misleading name, Secure Communities. According to a recent article in Women’s eNews :

While federal law protects crime victims from having to reveal their immigration status, if these victims are arrested or have been arrested in the past Secure Communities now discloses that.

This can affect victims in a scenario where a police officer arrives at the home and can’t communicate with the couple. Police may arrest both parties or even arrest the victim if the abuser speaks English and twists the series of events that led to the police call.

This is not theory. We have already seen it happen.

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Last week marked the end of criminal cases surrounding the racist killing of Luis Ramirez. Last Thursday, A jury issued a split verdict against three former Shenandoah police officers accused of obstructing justice in the investigation of a fatal beating. Former police Chief Matthew R. Nestor was found guilty of falsifying records, hindering a federal investigation. Former police Lt. William Moyer was found guilty of making false statements.

Perhaps more importantly than the charges the former officers were found guilty of is what they were acquitted of. Former police Chief Matthew R. Nestor, Former police Lt. William Moyer, and Former police Officer Jason R. Hayes were all found not guilty of conspiracy.

While Nestor faces up to 20 years in prison and Moyer faces up to five years incarcerated, this should be interpreted as injustice for multiple reasons. One, after the horrendous killing of Mexican immigrant/hermano Luis Ramirez, we have continued to see attacks on the Latino community, especially the immigrant Latino community. The list of our dead continues to grow, Marcelo, Jose, Brisenia. The lack of a conviction on the conspiracy charges supports the claim that walls do indeed kill those in our communities. In this case it was the “blue wall of silence” The blue wall is a collective process embedded in police forces around the United States. It allows criminal officers to cover their tracks and threatens those within their ranks who would attempt to break that wall with labels like “snitch” and “rat”.

Take for example the police brutality case here in NYC of Anthony Baez. After the young Puerto Rican was choked to death by former NYPD officer Francis X. Livoti, former NYPD officer Daisy Boria, refused to go along with the cover up that concocted a story blaming Anthony for his own death in an illegal police chokehold. On the stand, Boria revealed the conspiracy and found herself fearful for her own life. That police conspiracy to lie and cover up was never investigated and the blue wall of silence continues to surround the NYPD. It clearly extends beyond the 5 boroughs, wraps around Shenandoah and parallels the U.S. border with Mexico.

While the officers in Shenandoah did not kill Ramirez with their own hands, the collusion, the working together to protect “boys” they considered “part of their own kind” contributed and continues to contribute to an environment of anti-immigrant/anti-Latino hate. As birthright bills and the case against the killers of a 9 year old Arizona Latina girl with her own dreams not referenced in Obama’s last State of the Union Address carry on, the temperature continues to rise. You do not have hate crimes against Latinos in a vacuum. So long as 287(g) and Secure Communities are the answer the Obama administration gives the community to cries for “immigration reform”, the blue wall of silence will continue to choke, stab, and shoot our own.

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It was two years ago today, November 8th, 2008 when Ecuadorian immigrant Marcelo Lucero was murdered because of who he was and what that represented. Marcelo Lucero, a son, a brother was what many of us are, what many of our vecinos are, regular people trying to get by in this world. But for some young men of Patchogue, Long Island, Marcelo represented that promise that the new President-elect Obama spoke about. Marcelo represented the shifting demographic of their town, their state, and in essence the whole country.

Two years later what has changed?

The seven teenagers who attacked Lucero have all been sentenced. The Lucero familia tries to move on without their hermano, working on anti-hate projects. There will be a scholarship fund in Marcelo’s name.

Two years later, there has been backwards progress on immigration reform. Instead of a president and his party keeping their promises, they have increased the deportation and detention of the undocumented. It is doubtful if any undocumented youth would be able to take advantage of that scholarship fund set up in Marcelo Lucero’s name as the DREAM Act did not pass and it’s future is uncertain. Hate crimes against Latinos, immigrant or not, continue to rise as we do not and should not be required to carry our papers on our foreheads or on our bodies as SB1070 in Arizona in full effect demands.

With everyone praising the power of the Latino vote in the aftermath/afterglow of the midterm elections, there is increased noise about anchor babies and amnesty.

In el nombre de Marcelo what have you done?
What will you commit to do?

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I don’t think many immigrants in NYC are celebrating NYC Immigrant Heritage Week, which ends today. At the Opportunity Agenda event on the immigration movement and the arts, Maria Hinojosa asked referred to the three-term Mayor’s pro-immigrant comments but looking at the reality of immigrant life here in NYC, I am reminded of the words of Chung-Wha Hong, Executive Director of the NY Immigration Coalition, who talked about making sure that the rhetoric and the policy intersect.

Bloomberg is a businessman as much as he is a politician, meaning he will talk out of both sides of his mouth so long as it promotes his own power. While Bloomberg plays pro-migrant mayor, he also says that he thinks the Tea Party is a good thing. We all know where the Tea Party movement stands when it comes to immigration. Bloomberg thinks he can get away with saying he supports both immigrants and hate groups by saying one thing to one group and another thing to another.

But who has he not said anything to? What has Bloomberg not spoken about?

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This past Saturday, the family of Manny Mayi Jr., activists, and supporters gathered at the corner named after him on 108th Street and 36th Avenue in Corona, Queens. They were marking 19 years since the Queens College honor student, oldest son of Dominican immigrants, had been chased over a dozen blocks and beaten to death by a racist gang who yelled racial epithets.

As if losing your son weren’t enough, Altagracia Mayi, Manny’s mother, who stands at barely five feet tall, has been fighting not just for the name of her son, who was originally defamed by local media who said he was chased from William Moore Park because he was tagging, but for equal justice under the law. William Moore Park in Corona, Queens is known locally, and somewhat offensively, as Spaghetti Park, because it formed what was the center of an Italian immigrant community. That community wasn’t so welcoming to the growing Latino population, especially Dominicans and Mexicans, that began to move into the neighborhood in the late 1980′s. I know that for myself, who partially grew up in the neighborhood, knew that the area famed for it’s renowned Lemon Ice King of Corona, wasn’t a safe place for Latinos or people of color in general.

Translation of Altagracia’s Words : I want to thank you for always remembering, in 19 years, the name of Manny Mayi. Like I have always told you, Manny Mayi was an honors student, a good student of a high quality that few of those people have. I am Latina and I live proud of being Latina, not like those dogs who commit crimes and stay as if nothing has happened. I live proud.

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marcelo-lucero

Vigil in Memory of Marcelo Lucero
Saturday November, 7th @ 6:00pm
RailRoad Ave. Patchogue, NY
Religious Service to follow at Congregational Church 7:30pm

My family’s wish is to create a new environment of peace and unity for our community. We would like to invite members of all communities to share in the vigil in memory of my dear brother, Marcelo Lucero, on Saturday November 7 at 6pm next to the train station where he lost his life. Following the vigil, we will walk to the Congregational Church of Patchogue located on Main Street for a religious ceremony scheduled for 7:30pm. We request from all who attend to wear a white t-shirt in solidarity to share in this day of peace, healing and hope. Our message is no more violence but peace, no more racism but instead brotherhood and no more abuse rather respect.

During the vigil, we will collect donations for the Marcelo Lucero Scholarship that I created last year for the students of Patchogue-Medford HS and monies will also be used to send a mural to Gualaceo, Ecuador, which was created by Pat-Med students as a symbol of peace. If your organization would like to send a contribution in advance please write checks to: Marcelo Lucero Scholarship and send it directly to the Patchogue-Medford HS, 181 Buffalo Avenue, Medford, New York 11763.

Please be advised that this event will not be used for any political agendas. We would like to thank you in advance for your support and for respecting our wishes.

En Solidarity,
Joselo Lucero and family

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When Marcelo Lucero was murdered in Suffolk County, one step in the right direction from my perspective of years of looking at hate crimes against Latinos, was the Feds opening up an investigation on a pattern and practice of hate crimes against Latinos, with local law enforcement and prosecutors being complicit by not acting on behalf of victims as per their jobs. The report released yesterday by the Southern Poverty Law Center confirms that the pattern and practice of fear and violence has its roots in decades old anti-immigrant speech that racializes immigrants as brown.

The Lucero murder, while the worst of the violence so far, was hardly an isolated incident. Latino immigrants in Suffolk County are regularly harassed, taunted, and pelted with objects hurled from cars. They are frequently run off the road while riding bicycles, and many report being beaten with baseball bats and other objects. Others have been shot with BB guns or pepper-sprayed. Most will not walk alone after dark; parents often refuse to let their children play outside. A few have been the targets of arson attacks and worse. Adding to immigrants’ fears is the furious rhetoric of groups like the now-defunct Sachem Quality of Life, whose long-time spokesman regularly referred to immigrants as “terrorists.” The leader of another nativist group, this one based in California, was one of many adding their vitriol, describing a “frightening” visit to an area where Latinos are concentrated in Suffolk: “They urinate, they defecate, [they] make sexual overtures to women.”

Fueling the fire are many of the very people who are charged with protecting the residents of Suffolk County — local politicians and law enforcement officials. At one point, one county legislator said that if he saw an influx of Latino day laborers in his town, “we’ll be out with baseball bats.” Another said that if Latino workers were to gather in a local neighborhood, “I would load my gun and start shooting, period.” A third publicly warned undocumented residents that they “better beware.” County Executive Steve Levy, the highest-ranking official in Suffolk, is no friend of immigrants, either. When criticized by a group of immigrant advocates, for example, Levy called the organization a den of “Communists” and “anarchists.” At the same time, immigrants told the SPLC that the police were, at best, indifferent to their reports of harassment, and, at worst, contributors to it. Many said police did not take their reports of attacks seriously, often blaming the victim instead. They said they are regularly subjected to racial profiling while driving and often to illegal searches and seizures. They said there’s little point in going to the police, who are often not interested in their plight and instead demand to know their immigration status.

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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.

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