11:04 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York City · 1 Comment
28 Mar 2011Normally around the anniversary of her son’s death, Altagracia Mayi marches from where he lost his life in Corona, Queens and retraces the multiple blocks 19 year old Manny was chased while being beaten with bats in 1991. This year she will visit the corner named after him, 108th Street and 36th Avenue but first this past Sunday, she made a stop in front of One Police Plaza in NYC. She had a few things to say to Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.
Altagracia Mayi on the 20th Anniversary of the Hate Crime that Killed her Son, Manny from VivirLatino on Vimeo.
Dominican immigrant Altagracia Mayi speaks out in front of One Police Plaza, NYPD HQ in New York City on the 20th anniversary of the the hate crime that killed her son. Altagracia and the Justice Committee are demanding a meeting with NYC Police Commissioner Kelly and a special prosecutor, given how the current Queens’ DA, Richard Brown, was complicit in not properly prosecuting the case.
Kelly sent a letter to the Dept. of Justice requesting that they intervene and open a case against some of the accused for violating Manny Mayi Jr.’s civil rights. The Feds told Altagracia that they couldn’t because the statute of limitations has expired. Altagracia is now seeking a meeting with Kelly so that the case be reopened locally. Additionally she is seeking a meeting with NY Governor Andrew Cuomo.
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.”
9:50 am By Maegan La Mala · Las Vegas|Netroots Nation · 6 Comments
27 Jul 2010As more videos from the Netroots 2010 mock ICE checkpoint are released and I reflect on my own experience as a reverse border agent, I am struck by, as la Macha pointed out, how many of those profiled laughed their way through. This video, from Madelou de VozMob, really captured alot of that (click on the image in the link to see the full video).
What her video clip made me think of was also how gendered and sexualized the border debate has become, and it’s not something that gets discussed often enough or analyzed enough. At one point during the Mock ICE checkpoint, I and Yahira Carillo were at a checkpoint by ourselves without cameras documenting. Men who were stopped by us used their bodies to try and dominate. Given some of my own personal experiences at last year’s Netroots Nation conference and this year’s as well, finding myself in situations where I was the only mujer among a group of people who identify as male and seeing how that was noticed by others and how the men themselves in those spaces used it as an opportunity to flex some machista muscle. In my video mashup of parts of the MockICE Checkpoint, note how quickly some men use words like “assault” and “police” to threaten our fake agents. I would like to remind people of how these words are often used in so called “progressive” spaces to attack both men and women of color, even amongst our own. Words like “assault” when uttered from the mouths of women of color and non-gender conforming folks, is expected to be backed up by concrete proof, when in the mouths of men, there is the expectation that we should become meek, docile and cower in a corner. It should be noted that after the MockICE raid, a higher up from the Netroots Nation conference approached us asking that some video clips showing people reacting negatively, not be shown, so that peeps’ white progressive asses would be shown publicly.
How many times in immigrant and people of color communities is the violence against us silences, downplayed, viewed as individual incidents and expected to fade back into the shadows? How many times is violence against immigrant and Latina mujeres laughed off, ignored, or hushed to save face?
We need to save our cuerpos, our mentes and our souls, and that does not come through silence or perpetuating invisibility.
7:01 am By Maegan La Mala · California|Immigration|Justice · 1 Comment
16 Jan 2009On November 19th of last year, a 19 year old Latino male was was knocked unconscious and then repeatedly stomped and kicked in the head by individuals who allegedly have ties to a white supremacist gang. The unidentified young man has permanent brain damage and is now in a long term care facility. In other words, his life will never be the same. The attack, which was clearly attempted murder, happened in Hemet, California, an area that has had a growing white white supremacist activity.
Crystal Lee McCann, 22, Derek Shane O’Brien, 22 and Darrin Peter Thibault, 24, were arrested between Dec. 19 and Thursday in connection with the Nov. 14 beating of a 19-year-old Latino whose name has not been released.
Thibault, arrested Dec. 19, has been arraigned on charges of attempted murder, membership in a criminal gang and assault with a deadly weapon other than a firearm, with gang, serious felony and great bodily injury allegations, according to court records.
McCann, arrested Dec. 26, has pleaded not guilty to attempting to dissuade a witness and gang allegations. She is to be arraigned Tuesday.
O’Brien was arrested Thursday on suspicion of attempted murder, violation of probation and membership in a criminal street gang. He is also to be arraigned Tuesday.
The first person arrested, Justin Tyme Hayes, 21, has been charged with attempted murder and participating in a criminal street gang, with serious felony, great bodily injury and gang activity allegations. He has pleaded not guilty.
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