Archive for the ‘George Zimmerman’ Category

This Is the Culture of Impunity That Grows Within Too Much of Law Enforcement – Esquire

(Permanent Musical Accompaniment To This Post)

Being our semi-regular weekly survey of what's goin' down in the several states where, as we know, the real work of government' gets done, and where we sat together in the park as the evening sky grew dark.

We begin in Kentucky, where the police department in Louisville is having a really bad year, and it's about to get even worse. From the Louisville Courier-Journal:

The charges themselves are ghastly. In one way or another, they appear to involve all of the city's law enforcement apparatus and a healthy portion of city government. And it's clear that the police department and city hall had the same initial reaction that every institution, from Penn State to the Roman Catholic Church to the Boy Scouts, had. They looked for a way to bury the evidence.

Almost 800,000 pieces of evidence? Somebody's going to jail behind this. And it's another example of the culture of impunity that grows within too much of law enforcement. Policing in this country needs to change, top to bottom, and if that makes "swing district" congresscritters uncomfortable, then that's the way it goes.

Neilson BarnardGetty Images

We move along to Utah, where the pandemic is spiking, as it is everywhere, and where we once again find our fellow citizens holding out against the jackboots of public health. From the St. George News:

This, however, seems a little nuts.

Is this a thing now? People deliberately spreading the 'Rona because FREEDOM! or something? Apparently, the Department of Justice thought so, at least theoretically. Are a huge number of our fellow citizens absolutely unconscionable morons? Experts are divided.

Joe RaedleGetty Images

We move on to Florida, where Governor Ron DeSantis seems determined to cast the deciding "yes" vote in the survey mentioned above. In addition to hiring some third-rate sports blogger from Ohio to do "data analysis" on the pandemic in Florida, DeSantis is also taking some action against people who say mean things to him on the street, as the South Florida Sun-Sentinel explains.

Almost none of this authoritarian swill is constitutional. (The no-bail provision belongs in North Korea.) And immunizing drivers who run down protestors in the street?

And that's not all. DeSantis also proposed adjusting the state's Stand Your Ground law, the one that allowed George Zimmerman to kill Trayvon Martin and get away with it, to a point where they might as well rename it Kyle's Law, after freedom fighter Kyle Rittenhouse, The Kenosha Kid. From the Miami Herald:

There's serious competition for the title of The Next Trump, and DeSantis is only one of the favorites. That's what worries me.

And we conclude, as is our custom, in the great state of Oklahoma, where Blog Official Natural Gas Dowser Friedman of the Plains brings us the saga of yet another charter school outfit that's only in it for The Kids. From the Tulsa World:

The Oklahoma legislature, which never has been mistaken for the People's Liberation Army, is furiously demanding that the state's Department of Education be audited, and Governor Kevin Stitt has had no choice but to join the legislature in this demand.

The charter industry is a license to loot the public treasury unless strictly regulated. In fact, theoretically, if a kid with a brick in Florida behaved toward a liquor store the way that the charter sharpies behaved toward the Oklahoma taxpayers, Ron DeSantis would let you shoot him.

This is your democracy, America. Cherish it.

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This Is the Culture of Impunity That Grows Within Too Much of Law Enforcement - Esquire

DeSantis Responds to Racial Justice Protests With Expanded ‘Stand Your Ground’ Proposal Slammed as ‘Legalized Lynching’ – Common Dreams

This year's nationwide protests demanding racial justice and an end to police brutalitysparked by the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and other Black Americansinspired a proposal from Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis that critics worry will lead to more bloodshed: expanding the state's controversial "stand your ground" law with his drafted "anti-mob" legislation.

The Miami Herald reported Tuesday on the draft, which traces back to promises DeSantis made earlier this year "as he tried to deliver Florida" to President Donald Trump. The presidentwho ultimately won the state but lost the election, though is still refusing to concede to President-elect Joe Bidenhas come under fire for his own forceful response to the protests.

DeSantis' administration has circulated an "anti-mob legislation draft" among Florida lawmakers since his public statements in September, but no related measures have been filed in the state legislature. However, local attorneys are already raising alarm that the proposal "allows for vigilantes to justify their actions," in the words of Denise Georges.

Georges, a former Miami-Dade County prosecutor who handled "stand your ground" cases, told the Herald that "it also allows for death to be the punishment for a property crimeand that is cruel and unusual punishment. We cannot live in a lawless society where taking a life is done so casually and recklessly."

As Democrats scold progressives about "defund the police," the governor of the 3rd biggest state by pop. is pushing an "anti-mob" law that critics say will legalize the killing of suspected looters and will punish cities that try to reduce police budgetshttps://t.co/tVEgmnWmIr pic.twitter.com/3pHqTWKIeD

Hamza Shaban (@hshaban) November 10, 2020

Florida passed its "stand your ground" law in 2005and other states, encouraged by the National Rifle Association, followed suit, enacting measures that effectively say people have no duty to retreat before using deadly force to defend themselves. The Florida measure garnered national attention in 2012, after George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, killed Trayvon Martin, an unarmed Black teenager, in a gated community. Zimmerman's acquittal the next year sparked the Black Lives Matter movement.

"Zimmerman's attorney did not raise a 'stand your ground' defense at the trial," the Washington Post noted in 2014. "But after the trial a juror acknowledged that jurors had discussed the self-defense law before finding Zimmerman not guilty. The law also changed the standard instructions to jurors in homicide cases, so that the judge said that Zimmerman had no duty to retreat and could stand his ground if he felt threatened. (The law may have also played a role in the initial failure of the local police to prosecute Zimmerman.)"

DeSantis' proposal goes even further than 2017 changes to the law that make prosecutors prove by "clear and convincing evidence" that a defendant wasn't acting in self-defense. As the Herald detailed Tuesday:

The proposal would expand the list of "forcible felonies" under Florida's self-defense law to justify the use of force against people who engage in criminal mischief that results in the "interruption or impairment" of a business, and looting, which the draft defines as a burglary within 500 feet of a "violent or disorderly assembly."

Other key elements of DeSantis' proposal would enhance criminal penalties for people involved in "violent or disorderly assemblies," make it a third-degree felony to block traffic during a protest, offer immunity to drivers who claim to have unintentionally killed or injured protesters who block traffic, and withhold state funds from local governments that cut law enforcement budgets.

Former Miami-Dade prosecutor Aubrey Webb told the newspaper that "the Boston Tea Party members would have been lawfully shot under Florida's law by the British East India Tea Company."

"It dangerously gives armed private citizens power to kill as they subjectively determine what constitutes 'criminal mischief' that interferes with a business," Webb said. "Someone graffiti-ing 'Black Lives Matter' on a wall? Urinating behind a dumpster? Blocking an entrance?"

Webb and Georges were far from alone in criticizing the GOP governor's proposal. Critics warned it could lead to more violence by vigilantes like the white teenager charged with killing racial justice protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin in August and urged DeSantis to instead focus on the coronavirus pandemic that continues to ravage his state.

Florida @GovRonDeSantis has drafted anti-mob legislation to expand Floridas dangerous Stand Your Ground law, which could allow armed vigilantes to shoot alleged looters or anyone engaged in criminal mischief that disrupts a business. #flapol https://t.co/IARLIAb8Gp

Shannon Watts (@shannonrwatts) November 11, 2020

another case in point of how #gunpower is a settler colonial system of social control and social reproduction that delegates the power to kill in a flexible, decentralized fashion so that individuals can kill to "defend" themselves and a broader order of racialized inequality https://t.co/2hvtN8cwXb

inverted vibe curve: burgertown must be defended (@PatBlanchfield) November 10, 2020

more seriously this draft legislation is basically an attempt to give official state sanction to would-be kyle rittenhouses

b-boy bouiebaisse (@jbouie) November 10, 2020

Hospitalizations for #COVID19 continue to rise.

More Floridians are filing for unemployment.

Small businesses and our tourism economy continues to struggle.

Expanding Stand Your Ground should not be the priority, @GovRonDeSantis. https://t.co/TJuPfIkCmo

Nikki Fried (@nikkifried) November 11, 2020

Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber, retired Miami-Dade homicide prosecutor Reid Rubin, Miami defense lawyer Phil Reizenstein, and Melba Pearson, a civil rights attorney and former deputy director of Florida's American Civil Liberties Union, all shared concerns about the proposal with the Herald, while others on social media described the draft legislation as "legalizing lynching" and "legalizing murder."

As digital rights activist Evan Greer put it: "This is basically just a license for white people to kill protesters."

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DeSantis Responds to Racial Justice Protests With Expanded 'Stand Your Ground' Proposal Slammed as 'Legalized Lynching' - Common Dreams

Six degrees of social justice – The Roundup News

Roya Row, Kyla Graham, Loida Navas, Norman Anthony Thatch, Itzhak Matos and JJ Javier interact while riding a subway ride during the first act titled Colored by Winter Miller on Oct. 30, 2020. Screenshot by Alejandra Aguilera.Asia Herbison and Emmanuel Odaibo act as a married couple whove witnessed a crime in Night Vision by Dominique Morisseau on Oct. 30, 2020. Screenshot by Alejandra Aguilera.Loida Navas reacts to Emmanuel Odaibo diagnosing her character with having a fear of Black people in No More Monsters Here by Marcus Gardley on Oct. 30, 2020. Screenshot by Alejandra Aguilera.Topher Ngo sings as George Zimmerman with Norman Anthony Thatch as Trayvon in The Ballad of George Zimmerman by Dan O Brien and Quetzal Flores on Oct. 30, 2020. Screenshot by Alejandra Aguilera.

The sound of police sirens approaching from a distance may comfort some, but to others its a noise associated with anxiety of potential brutality.

This is a common theme in the Los Angeles Pierce College Theatre production of Facing Our Truth: Short Plays on Trayvon, Race, and Privilege, directed by performing arts professor Shaheen Vaaz. Its a collection of six, 10-minute plays written in response to Trayvon Martins death in 2012.

The opening night performance on Oct. 30 was a slow burn featuring aspects of realistic fiction and true events, leaving viewers uncomfortable with the realities people of color experience in America.

In Colored, writer Winter Miller takes the historically offensive term literally. Each character is identified as a color: Blue (Roya Row), Green (Loida Navas), Purple (Kyla Graham), Yellow (Norman Anthony Thatch), Pink (JJ Javier) and Red (Itzhak Matos).

When they interact during a subway ride, the conversation becomes a competition of who is more oppressed than the other. As the play progresses, it becomes more difficult for them to sympathize with one another, resulting in a threatening confrontation.

Its a long-winded 10 minutes with heavy dialogue that attempts to create three-dimensional characters with their own experiences on inequality. Despite this, its evident the actors have taken the time to craft their roles into living people.

Some of the strongest performances are in Night Vision by Dominique Morisseau. Pregnant couple Ayanna (Asia Herbison) and Ezra (Emmanuel Odaibo) witness a man physically assaulting a woman, but because of a broken street light, they arent certain of the perpetrators race when reporting it to 911.

Herbison and Odaibo portray anger and guilt so realistically that it feels as if the audience is eavesdropping on a private conversation. Their tone and volume control is precise in dramatic effect while the pair emotionally discuss why Black is the default race people think of when a crime is reported.

Its a raw performance that takes advantage of the limited time by presenting the reality of what Black people encounter in America.

In Some Other Kid, writer A. Rey Pamatmat illustrates three ways people respond to injustice with monologues. Elissa (Eadan Einbinder) remains optimistic with hopes of inspiring others to act with kindness by placing her original sticker designs throughout her neighborhood.

Owen (Itzhak Matos) understands why marginalized groups may respond with violence through a metaphor of a cat scratching in defense. While Andre (Norman Anthony Thatch) has a bleak outlook by blaming stupidity on injustice.

The most fulfilling monologue is delivered by Matos, who takes the audience on an anecdotal journey that exudes confusion in the beginning but ends with successful symbolization.

The fourth play No More Monsters Here by Marcus Gardley is distressing to watch. Rebecca (Loida Navas) is diagnosed with having a fear of Black people by her doctor (Emmanual Odaibo).

But there is an experimental cure: wear a hoodie and live as a Black man. Rebecca does this and experiences the murder of a friend, job inequality and eventually turns to selling drugs for income. During one of her nightly deals, she is followed and is shot.

Navas bloody screams of complete fear are deafening. Pictures of slain Black people whose last view was staring down the barrel of a gun flash before the audiences eyes.

She wakes up, taking the hoodie off her body. Shes back in her doctors office, unharmed, crying about how unfair it is to attach faces to the names that circulate on news cycles of real Black people who died at the hands of law enforcement.

Although this play has elements of comedy, it presents the grim existence of police brutality.

Equally perplexing is The Ballad of George Zimmerman by Dan O Brien and Quetzal Flores. It recounts the true story of George Zimmermans acquittal on the death of Trayvon Martin through an experimental method of spoken word and song.

Zimmerman (Topher Ngo) sings segments of the real 911 call made to report his suspicions on Martin (Norman Anthony Thatch). During his performance, Ngo plays a guitar to accompany the play and to symbolize the gun that fatally shot Martin.

The audience cant help but feel anger toward how Zimmermans case was handled: house arrest and the return of owning his pistol that murdered a 17-year-old.

In the finale, a mother (Kyla Graham) worries about her sons (Norman Anthony Thatch) wardrobe in Dressing by Mona Mansour and Tala Manassah. It reveals an involuntary and wicked dance that mothers of Black children do to protect their children from harm

Graham performs a heartbreaking monologue that shares the vulnerability Black men in America have confronted since the origin of this country. And despite a mothers best effort to dress their children in non-threatening clothing such as button down shirts, its just a useless shield.

Music starts to fade in, its Ella Fitzgeralds Strange Fruit from 1954. Despite the decades that passed since the poem depicting the lynching of Black people was written, the harsh reality is that Black people are still in danger to this day.

Its the most difficult pill to swallow, but LAPC Theatre needs the audience to. Photos of mothers mourning the lives of their dead children because of racism and police brutality fill the screen: Emmett Till, Tamir Rice, Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner and George Floyd.

These were lives that were brutally ended and are still being protested for by people demanding justice through movements such as Black Lives Matter.

Facing Our Truth: Short Plays on Trayvon, Race, and Privilege is about the ugly reality that America tries to sweep under the rug: racism is alive and present.

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Six degrees of social justice - The Roundup News

Trayvon Martin Avenue To Be Dedicated In Miami – CBS Miami

MIAMI (CBSMiami) Miami-Dade County Commissioner Barbara J. Jordan announced Wednesday that she will be hosting a street renaming event in honor of Trayvon Martin.

The naming of the Miami street will be held Thursday, November 5 at 10 a.m. at 1655 NE 205th Terrace.

The County Commission on Oct. 6 adopted Commissioner Jordans legislation to codesignate Northeast 16th Avenue from Ives Dairy Road to NE 209th Street as Trayvon Martin Avenue.

Martin was a teenager who lost his life after being shot by a neighborhood watch volunteer in 2012.

Martin was shot dead in Sanford, at 17 while on a visit with his father. The teen was unarmed and walking back from a convenience store with candy when he was confronted and shot once by George Zimmerman.

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Zimmerman was acquitted under Floridas controversial self-defense law. The Black Lives Matter movement emerged after a Florida jury decided to clear Zimmerman in the shooting death in July 2013.

Commissioner Jordan, who sponsored the resolution, said the teen had mechanical skills, knowing how to build and fix dirt bikes and wanted to go to college.

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Trayvon Martin Avenue To Be Dedicated In Miami - CBS Miami

Support for the Black Lives Matter movement has decreased significantly since June, local and national polls – The Dallas Morning News

More than five months into protests against racism and police violence, Dallas activist Tramonica Brown has seen turnout dwindle.

As the founder of the Not My Son nonprofit focused on police accountability and reform, shes not all that surprised that some people have checked out from the movement.

Anytime something big happens, everybody comes out, Brown said. One, people come out to be nosy. Two, people come out because they want to be seen and they want to think that theyre a part of a movement. And the all-time favorite: They want to take a few pictures and say Hey, I did my part for today.

But she said fewer protesters doesnt mean the support for dismantling systemic racism isnt still widespread. Her organization has shifted its attention toward getting people to the polls, hosting voter drives and other events. Brown said she still sees allies of different racial backgrounds doing work that helps the movement.

I dont consider it a decrease, because I see allies doing the right thing: building up Black people to where they should be, not to the placement of where America would like for us to systematically fall, she said.

Pew Research Center surveys show public support for the Black Lives Matter movement surged in June amid worldwide protests after a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on George Floyds neck and killed him. That increase included a swell in support among white people, according to Pew. But a few months later support returned to its pre-June level.

In North Texas, Brown said, the movement against racism and police violence is at a different point than a few months ago. Worries about coronavirus and the election mean the protests occupy a smaller place in peoples minds.

As a result, she said, major events such as a Kentucky grand jurys decision to issue no charges in the killing of Breonna Taylor in September, didnt draw as much outrage as they would have a few months earlier.

Still, Brown said protesters' energy remains strong with or without the massive support they appeared to have several months ago.

Those white allies were not allies that we had to begin with, Brown said. They were just there as an extra body. They helped fill up space.

Black Lives Matter is a decentralized movement, founded in 2013 by three Black organizers after George Zimmerman was acquitted of murder in the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin in Florida.

According to Pew, 55% of respondents supported Black Lives Matter in a 2017 phone poll conducted nationally. That figure rose to 67% at the height of protests in June. More white people than ever before including 37% of white Republicans said they at least somewhat supported the movement then.

But both of those figures dipped in Pews most recent survey, which was released in September.

Support among whites dropped to 45%, and as low as 16% among white Republicans. Support among Latinos also declined by 11 percentage points, and by six points among Asian-Americans. Support among Black respondents rose to 87% adding one percentage point since June.

Its not just support from white people thats waned, said Dwight D. Watson, associate professor emeritus of history at Texas State University. But he said whiteness in particular allows some to detach from other races' historic moments.

Whiteness gives people the ability to slip in and out of things that other people cant, Watson said.

Watson said individuals' dispositions towards social issues such as racism are heavily influenced by their parents. And since white people dont undergo life on the same terms as Black people, theyre able to check out from movements when they perceive their own privilege to be at risk.

Youre out protesting about police brutality but youve never been a victim of police brutality, Watson said. So, the selfish part of your human nature steps up.

Researchers describe race as just a part of the conversation. Politics also play a role in shaping public opinion, said Juliana Horowitz, associate director of social and demographic trends research at Pew and one of the studys lead researchers.

As with many things that we study, this is very much a partisan story, Horowitz said. We see that frequently, not only in studies of race, but gender and pretty much any social or political issue that we talk about.

Those national trends apply in Texas, said Kenneth Bryant, a professor of political science at the University of Texas at Tyler.

According to a Dallas Morning News-UT Tyler poll released Oct. 25, 72% of Texas Democrats said they had a favorable view of Black Lives Matter, while 83% of Republicans did not.

President Donald Trump has denounced Black Lives Matter, decrying the movement as being violent and destructive, although studies show only a small percentage of protests have resulted in violence or property damage. Democrat Joe Biden has been more supportive, while still distancing himself from some political ideas voiced at some protests, such as defunding the police.

Bryant also found that some respondents reacted negatively to certain slogans but responded more positively to the ideas behind them.

For example, the poll, conducted Oct. 13 through 20, asked whether respondents supported or opposed defunding the police. Only 25% of respondents said they supported the idea at all, and 60% said they at least somewhat opposed it.

But when the survey reframed the idea as cutting some funding from police departments to increase spending on social services in your community, 37% of respondents said they at least somewhat supported the idea, with 49% voiced at least some opposition.

Bryant suspects that a similar phenomenon may be occurring with the phrase Black Lives Matter.

"I gather a lot of white people differentiate between the organization of Black Lives Matter and the idea that Black lives matter,' Bryant said. Some people agree with the notion but disagree with the negative projections that have been put upon the movement.

Across North Texas, protest organizers have seen that shift play out in different ways.

For example, in Plano, thousands of people have taken to the streets to protest in recent months.

Cheryl Jackson, who organized one of those rallies in June, said that she hasnt seen much of a decline in support but that the prolonged effects of the pandemic have been a barrier to change.

COVID-19 stopped all of the movement, said Jackson, the founder of Minnies Food Pantry. I hate that because this is an opportunity for our country to take our conversation about race relations to the next level.

One day before her protest, people staged a demonstration against racism and police violence in the streets of Waxahachie.

Lillian Ayro, a Black business owner and pastor who spoke at that event, called it one of the most remarkable days of her life.

We began to have dialogue; we began to have conversations, she said recently. It was refreshing to hear that conversation going on with my white sisters and white brothers.

Ayro said many of the allies she knows have remained steadfast in their support. She pointed to a Facebook group, of which shes the only Black member, where white women share resources to educate themselves on systemic racism.

Still, she said some people in her community get caught up in leveling unrelated accusations and false equivalencies while ignoring Black Americans' four centuries of accumulated pain.

I think what they forget is that this thing has been going on for so long, Ayro said. People have been silent for so long, and the Black community has been dealing with it for generations and generations.

Brown, the founder of Not My Son, said whites may not see the generational trauma racism has caused.

White people werent hung in front of their mothers and their children, Brown said. (They) dont have to pass by or hear about hanging trees that used to exist.

When protests ramp up again, Brown hopes the people who show up do so because they truly want to see the pain of Black Americans healed.

Fifty years from now, we can be in the same place, Brown said. Thats not good enough. We dont accept that. We want the same respect that you would want had it been you, had it been your ancestors.

CORRECTION, 10:45 a.m. on Nov. 5: This story has been updated to remove a photo of a person who is not a subject of the article.

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Support for the Black Lives Matter movement has decreased significantly since June, local and national polls - The Dallas Morning News