Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Seattle ordered to pay $82K to Black Lives Matter lawyers – Associated Press

SEATTLE (AP) The city of Seattle has been ordered to pay nearly $82,000 to attorneys for Black Lives Matter to cover their fees and costs in pursuing contempt-of-court violations against the Seattle Police Department.

The contempt violations were for the improper use of pepper spray and blast balls by police against peaceful protesters after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, The Seattle Times reported.

The amount by U.S. District Judge Richard Jones ordered was much less than the nearly $264,000 in fees and costs sought by lawyers for BLM-Seattle and King County after Jones found police had violated his injunction prohibiting unnecessary force.

Jones did not place coercive sanctions against the city, sought by BLM, which would have required Seattle officers to provide BLM with use-of-force reports within days of every incident in which an officer uses force against a protester. The judge found those kinds of sanctions were not appropriate in this case.

The judge also rejected the citys efforts to have him reconsider his contempt finding.

We are pleased that the Court rejected the Citys misguided attempt to reverse the Courts contempt finding, and that the Court issued sanctions against the City, said David Perez, one of the lawyers representing Black Lives Matter. Our goal is to ensure greater safety for protesters through compliance with the Courts orders, and this decision will help in that regard.

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Seattle ordered to pay $82K to Black Lives Matter lawyers - Associated Press

City of Seattle ordered to pay $82K to Black Lives Matter lawyers – OregonLive

SEATTLE The city of Seattle has been ordered to pay nearly $82,000 to attorneys for Black Lives Matter to cover their fees and costs in pursuing contempt-of-court violations against the Seattle Police Department.

The contempt violations were for the improper use of pepper spray and blast balls by police against peaceful protesters after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, The Seattle Times reported.

The amount by U.S. District Judge Richard Jones ordered was much less than the nearly $264,000 in fees and costs sought by lawyers for BLM-Seattle and King County after Jones found police had violated his injunction prohibiting unnecessary force.

Jones did not place coercive sanctions against the city, sought by BLM, which would have required Seattle officers to provide BLM with use-of-force reports within days of every incident in which an officer uses force against a protester. The judge found those kinds of sanctions were not appropriate in this case.

The judge also rejected the citys efforts to have him reconsider his contempt finding.

We are pleased that the Court rejected the Citys misguided attempt to reverse the Courts contempt finding, and that the Court issued sanctions against the City, said David Perez, one of the lawyers representing Black Lives Matter. Our goal is to ensure greater safety for protesters through compliance with the Courts orders, and this decision will help in that regard.

The Associated Press

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City of Seattle ordered to pay $82K to Black Lives Matter lawyers - OregonLive

Jason Whitlock Doubles Down On Comparing BLM to the KKK – Black Enterprise

We can always count on Jason Whitlock to make a statement that will cause some type of conversation! According to The Blaze, in an interview with Fox News Tucker Carlson, Whitlock stated that he likens the Black Lives Matter movement to the Ku Klux Klan and says that BLM is a Marxist organization.

During the conversation between the two conservative pundits, Carlson asked Whitlock what he compares Black Lives Matter to and was met with this statement.

Well, I compare Black Lives Matter to the KKK. I really do, Whitlock replied. And some people dont understand it, but if you go back to the 1860s, after the Emancipation Proclamation, the KKK was started, and it was the enforcement arm of the Democratic Party. And whats the enforcement arm of the Democratic Party right now? Black Lives Matter and Antifa. They will come to your home and violate your home, try to intimidate the people in your home if they disagree with you politically.

He then says, Black Lives Matter [is] a Marxist organization. Marxism is hostile toward religion; thats why Im glad you went there today. These are atheist values being expressed from our leaders, demonizing individual citizens here in America, branding them as white supremacists because we disagree with their opinion about something.

Jason Whitlock to Tucker: I compare Black Lives Matter to the KKK you go back to the 1860s after the Emancipation Proclamation the KKK was started, it was the enforcement arm of the Democratic Party. Whats the enforcement arm of the Democratic Party right now? BLM & antifa! pic.twitter.com/29soKBlhYA

Justin Baragona (@justinbaragona) January 21, 2021

Whitlock doubled down on his statement when he followed up and stated this:

Its my belief that the KKK and BLM share the same intent. They use race, intimidation, violence, and property destruction to achieve political goals on behalf of the Democratic Party.

Cultural changes and technological advances explain the difference in tactics between the KKK of old and its modern-day successor, BLM. Burning buildings have replaced burning crosses. Social media lynch mobs destroy a persons character, strike fear, and silence dissent.

Heres my response to people who dont understand my BLM-KKK analogy. https://t.co/aC7tHUkFH4

Jason Whitlock (@WhitlockJason) January 22, 2021

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Jason Whitlock Doubles Down On Comparing BLM to the KKK - Black Enterprise

Where Black Lives Matter Made Their Voices Heard – JURIST

John Raphling, a senior researcher on the criminal legal system at Human Rights Watch, discusses the effects that the Black Lives Matter Movement and George Gascon's election are having on criminal justice in Los Angeles...

Every Wednesday afternoon for years, Black Lives Matter activists and their partners chanted a simple demand outside the Los Angeles County Hall of Justice: Jackie Lacey Must Go! Elected in 2012, District Attorney Lacey presided over the largest prosecutorial office in the United States. These protests and the frustrations that fueled them helped propel George Gascons election as District Attorney in November.

The most prominent complaint about Lacey was her failure to prosecute police officers, even though they killed hundreds of people under her jurisdiction. Among them was Brendon Glenn, an unarmed Black man, shot twice in the back by an LAPD officer. Citing the surveillance video that captured Glenns May 2015 killing, then-Police Chief Charlie Beck and the Police Commission recommended prosecuting the officer. Lacey delayed a decision, then in March 2018 declined to file charges.

Beyond failing to hold police accountable, Lacey, choosing to use a variety of excessively harsh sentencing laws, maintained high incarceration rates in Los Angeles County, primarily affecting Black and Latino communities. These laws included sentencing enhancements with little deterrent effect, rules allowing children to be tried as adults, and the notorious Three Strikes law. Los Angeles County, under her leadership, has also been among the nations leaders in death sentences.

The Black Lives Matter protests revealed widespread discontent with Laceys punitive policies toward the community and her protectiveness toward police. They grew from a few dozen people to thousands demonstrating this summer as the police killing of George Floyd focused the nations attention on racial injustice in the criminal legal system. Former San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon capitalized on that discontent to challenge Lacey, openly campaigning as a reformer who would reverse policies that historically increased incarceration. Los Angeles voters decisively approved his candidacy, despite opposition from police and their unions.

Understanding the debt he owes to progressive organizers who opposed Lacey, Gascon immediately initiated his agenda to reduce the punishment state and hold law enforcement accountable. Gascon is reconsidering Laceys decisions not to file charges in killings by police officers, including the case of Brendon Glenn. It remains to be seen if he will take meaningful action to limit police impunity, but reviewing these cases is a necessary first step.

Gascon will not seek death in any case and will not try children in adult courts. His policy states that he will no longer pursue sentencing enhancements that add prison time based on allegations of gang association. He will no longer pursue other enhancements based on prior offenses, including five-year enhancements and Three Strikes enhancements. He has ordered his deputies to withdraw enhancements in previously filed cases.

These policy changes will most likely have substantial impact. Sentencing enhancements make the consequences of cases so extreme that accused people quickly plead guilty regardless of actual guilt for fear of lengthy sentences if they contest the charges. Lengthy sentences contribute to prison over-crowding and punish people out of proportion to the crime. People serving these extreme sentences languish in prison long after they are no longer at risk of future crime, warehoused with no hope for the future. Gascons policies will begin to limit that harm.

He announced policies limiting prosecutions of misdemeanor cases related to poverty and mental health, like trespassing and prostitution. He instructed his deputies not to request money bail and to only seek pretrial detention in narrowly limited categories of cases. This policy does not end money bail, as judges may still impose it on their own, but it will result in more people being released while awaiting trial, thus supporting the presumption of innocence.

Many prosecutors and judges, steeped in harshly punitive approaches, are unhappy. Some are resisting implementing his policies. Some judges reportedly are refusing to dismiss enhancements, while line deputies are signaling their opposition in court. Removing the enhancements or releasing people from pretrial incarceration means prosecutors and judges hold less leverage to extract guilty pleas, causing courts to proceed more slowly and allowing people to contest their charges.

The criminal legal system has prioritized punishment over rehabilitation for decades, even as crime rates declined drastically. In recent years, people are realizing that public safety depends on investments in communities, including in improving access to health, education, housing, and job opportunities, not policing, prosecution, and punishment. Gascons election reflects that shift. His first policy initiatives honor the will of those who elected him and could serve as models for further reforms across the state and country.

John Raphling is a California-based senior researcher on the criminal legal system at Human Rights Watch.

Suggested citation: John Raphling, Where Black Lives Matter Made Their Voices Heard, JURIST Academic Commentary, January 29, 2021, https://www.jurist.org/commentary/2021/01/john-raphling-blm-la-county-da-office/.

This article was prepared for publication by Tim Zubizarreta, JURISTs Managing Editor. Please direct any questions or comments to him at commentary@jurist.org.

Opinions expressed in JURIST Commentary are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JURIST's editors, staff, donors or the University of Pittsburgh.

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Where Black Lives Matter Made Their Voices Heard - JURIST

Black Lives Matter art installation finds home at ULM – The Franklin Sun

A group of artists unveiled a Black Lives Matter public art project at the University of Louisiana-Monroes campus earlier this week after they failed to gain public support to paint the social justice movements slogan on a city street in Monroe.

At an unveiling ceremony on Monday, ULM officials welcomed the installation of 16 four-by-eight-foot letters spelling Black Lives Matter on the campus to much fanfare. The public art project stands in Bayou Park, across University Drive from the ULM Library.

We are here today because black lives matter, said ULM President Ron Berry. We also are here today because of art that will remind us the past is unacceptable.

Each letter in the installation was painted to represent different aspects of the Black Lives Matter movement, as envisioned by 16 different artists. For example, the letter B contains the messages, End White Silence and Be the Change. The use of large wooden letters in the art installation resembles the display of painted Greek letters by ULMs fraternities and sororities during Rush Week.

Miss University of Louisiana-Monroe 2020 Allison Newton said black lives should have mattered a long time ago.

All lives cannot matter until black lives matter, said Newton, to applause.

ULM Assistant Professor of Art Brooke Foy thanked Berry, who was named the universitys president last September, for voicing support of the Black Lives Matter art project.

Dr. Berry stood in front of us today, Foy said. Thats inspirational.

ULM officials and students heralded the Black Lives Matter installation as a moment of social justice victory.

I hope that people of color, Foy began, amid tears, I hope you never have to apologize. Or ever compromise how you feel.

Speaking of the art installation, Foy said, It means that change is here. It means that we are ready.

Black Lives Matter was founded in 2013 by Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi, three women who have described themselves as Marxists. In a 2015 video interview with the Real News Network, Cullors defended her commitment to social justice by saying she and her BLM co-founders were trained organizers.

We are trained Marxists, Cullors said during the interview.

Later, when asked in an April 2018 interview with Dazed magazine how someone could learn to spearhead a movement like Black Lives Matter, Cullors said she studied Karl Marx, Soviet premier Vladimir Lenin and Chairman Mao Zedong during her year-long involvement in a program at the National School for Strategic Organizing led by the Labor/Community Strategy Center in Los Angeles, California.

The Labor/Community Strategy Center is a self-described communist organization. In a 2014 column published in the Boston Review, the Labor/Community Strategy Centers director, Eric Mann, wrote, Our work focuses on training a new generation of black and Latino activists in the traditions of black revolutionary, Third World and communist organizing.

In a foreword to the 2018 book, Revolution in the Air: Sixties Radicals Turn to Lenin, Mao and Che, Garza wrote that she was loosely trained in the Marxist-Leninist tradition.

In late 2015, Tometi and other black activists welcomed Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to Harlem, months before she penned a letter commending the socialist government in Venezuela.

The U.S. has since declared Maduro a dictator, forbade him entry into the country and indicted him for drug trafficking and narco-terrorism.

Garza, Tometi and Cullors social justice movement gained traction on social media as a hashtag in 2013 following a Florida jurys decision to acquit neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman of murdering Trayvon Martin, a black teenager.

Black Lives Matter organizers went to Ferguson, Missouri in 2014 after a police officers fatal shooting of Michael Brown, another black youth. The death of George Floyd in May 2020 in Minneapolis became another flash point for Black Lives Matter activists.

Though the new art installation at ULM promoted the slogan of an organization with Marxist ties, the social justice concerns voiced by Foy and others appeared closer to home.

When asked, Foy said discussions about pursuing a BLM art project stemmed from public outcry over racist remarks by ULM faculty that were uncovered by the universitys students. In one instance, a ULM instructor defended the use of a racial epithet while another professor described President Obama as a monkey.

I think the discussions that happened over the summer, when some racist remarks were posted on social media, and the university responded to that because the students responded to it, Foy said. That really sparked the discussions about the need for change.

When asked what change was sought, Foy said, Oh gosh, equity for all, inclusion for all.

Berry disputed whether a single event provoked a need for the social justice movement to establish itself at ULM.

I wouldnt say this is because of a certain event or anything like that, Berry said.

Its to create awareness and continue discussion. Its about our ongoing evolution as a university.

Foy was one of four artists in the area who spearheaded the project. Her colleagues included Rodrecas Drek Davis, Vitus Shell, and KShana Davis of the Black Creatives Circle of North Louisiana. Foy and her colleagues first asked the Monroe City Council last July to allow them to paint the Black Lives Matter slogan on a city roadway, but public support for that endeavor fizzled out.

We just couldnt move forward on the street, and honestly, were happier to have it here, Foy said.

Foy said she and her colleagues planned for the art installation to be a traveling exhibit.

When asked where it would travel to next, Foy said, We dont have that planned yet.

We dont have a home for it to go next, Foy said.

After her request to the City Council for a roadway mural sparked controversy, Foy and her partners launched a GoFundMe fundraising campaign in early 2020, seeking $10,000 but had only secured $2,600, as of earlier this week.

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Black Lives Matter art installation finds home at ULM - The Franklin Sun