Chicagos African American, Latino and Arab youth kicked out some of the movements more imaginative chants as hundreds gathered at police headquarters on Chicagos south side Thursday evening to oppose police brutality and racial profiling.

Chicagos African American, Latino and Arab youth kicked out some of the movements more imaginative chants as hundreds gathered at police headquarters on Chicagos south side Thursday evening to oppose police brutality and racial profiling. While the action had been scheduled for some time, the protest was particularly timely -- coming on the heels of the death of three people of color, including an 8-year-old child, in the last two weeks as a consequence of police actions.
The youth held a short press conference at cop central at 35th and Michigan, where young people demanded that Chicago mayor Richard Daley and police superintendent Phil Cline publicly acknowledge rampant police brutality and racial profiling throughout the department. At 6PM sharp, the protesters stepped off to march on Daleys house at 15th Place and Indiana, a posh neighborhood of high-priced townhomes and gated residences where a small number of non-white working class residents remain of the thousands whove been gentrified out of the area.
Some of the more boisterous chants included Serve and Protect! Dont Disturb and Disrespect!, Daley, Daley, Meet With Us! And Stop the Cops From Beating Us! and Give us Education! Not Probation!
The group, which came together under the banner of the youth activist organization Generation Y, also demanded that the city push for an independent investigation into the death in police custody on May 26 of activist and mother May Molina. They also demanded that the city release the names of all people who have died in police custody in the last year.
We demand our basic rights as human beings and we must question if the police are really here to serve and protect us, said Liliana Rodriguez of Generation Y. We stand in solidarity with Comite Exigimos Justicia and May Molinas family in demanding that every prisoner receive the healthcare and medication they need. We demand that our police force stay responsible and accountable to the people and communities of Chicago. We demand our rights as human beings. How can an activist die in the custody of the people who are supposed to protect us? How can police harass, beat or kill youth of color on the streets? Who should be held accountable? We demand a response from superintendent Cline and mayor Daley because we are not here as individuals or as communities, but as a united city committed to ending police brutality and racial profiling, and committed to fighting for our rights!
Late last year, Generation Y wrote to Daley and Cline requesting a meeting to discuss the findings of their research into police violence and youth in Chicago. In that research, they found that 41% of 810 surveyed youth had experienced some form of racial discrimination by police. In January, Clines general counsel sent the youth a reply denying the validity of their research.
Generation Ys research shows that the police have racially profiled one out of five youth of color on Chicagos southwest side. The police dont listen to their own laws, one student from Curie High School told the surveyors. Some male officers search females, others trespass where theyre not supposed to.
The young activists want the city to establish an independent youth complaihnt reviw board that would keep the police department and the Chicago public schools accountable to the needs of young people, and to develop a youth-friendly legal space to facilitate youth action against harassment by law enforcement. The youth are also demanding that Daley enforce the executive order of late Chicago Mayor Harold Washington, which prohibits police officers from acting as immigration officials or collaborating with la migra -- and punishing officers who do.
During the summer of 2003, 43 young people from different high schools on Chicagos southwest side came together to tackle the issues that youth routinely confront in the city. Generation Y has documented their research in a report called Still We Rise! A Youth Action Research Report on Racial Profiling and Undocumented Immigrants Rights, which the group made public last October. The study was published by the Summer Youth Liberation Institute a program of Generation Y, along with the Arab American Action Network, Sisters Organized for United Leadership, and the 8th District YouthNet Council.
The report paints a disturbing picture of the treatment of youth of color in the city. The survey shows that while 32% of U.S. citizens reported mistreatment at work, a whopping 64% of undocumented youth workers report similar mistreatment that ranges from low wages and no benefits or health insurance to long hours and poor working conditions. Government institutions also mistreat immigrant youth, according to the study. Of the undocumented youth that report discrimination, 40% say theyve been denied immigration and other services given to citizens and documented people. 35% feel theyre denied college opportunities. And even though discrimination is technically against the law, police are particularly aggressive in targeting youth for discrimination and mistreatment.
The study documented that 28% of surveyed African American youth, 18% of Arab/Middle Eastern youth, and 13% of Latino youth reported being racially profiled by police. No white youth reported profiling by police. Of the youth who reported discrimination, nearly half said that discrimination and abuse was at the hands of the police, with 45% also reporting discrimination by school staff and school security. Police abuse included heavy searches searches that are particularly aggressive or abusive as well as false charges, physical abuse and other misconduct, including groping and sexual harassment by officers of female youth of color.
At Thursdays press conference, young people read the testimony of a number of youth, including two girls who reported that police who raided a party that they were attending last January made young women remove their shirts and bras. The cops then felt up the girls. Boys were forced to unzip their pants and officers felt down their pants. During the raid, one officer hit a youth over the head with a baseball bat, and when the youngster asked the cop why he was hitting him, the cop replied, Shut the fuck up, you pussy. I didnt even hit you that hard. The women who reported this brutality say the cops never told them why they were being searched, and said they feared speaking out in public because they were concerned the cops would see them and brutalize them again.
Another youth reported that police threatened his seventeen-year-old cousin with torture and falsely charged him with felony auto theft, for which he could face from three to seven years in prison. Those charges are still pending.
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The Copsâ Credibility Gap
04 Jun 2004
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June 2 - 8, 2004
The Copsâ Credibility Gap
A citizen overseerâs frustration and a botched use-of-force investigation raise questions about Seattle Police Department accountability.
by Philip Dawdy
Police say Raymond Nix, 66, fought off arrest. To subdue him, they used pepper spray and a Taser, and kicked him. Days later, he passed out, and his spleen was removed.
(Kevin P. Casey)
No one ever said making police accountability work in Seattle would be easy, and it hasnât been. Legislated into life in 1999 as a way to bring some measure of public oversight to investigations of police misconduct, the Office of Professional Accountability (OPA) has been a civic sore spot ever since. The powerful Seattle Police Officers Guild and its member street cops donât trust it to fairly investigate complaints of officer misconduct. Community watchdogs donât think the OPA adequately handles citizen complaints against cops. Elected officials consider it a hot potato.
If that werenât enough, a member of the OPAâs review boardâthree appointed citizens charged with overseeing the processâis threatening to resign because he feels muzzled. Meanwhile, Seattle Weekly has learned that OPA recently botched an investigation into allegations of excessive force involving Seattle police officers who arrested a homeless man, force so extreme that the man was left with life-threatening internal injuries.
When the OPA was conceived, in the wake of concerns about perceived shortcomings in police oversight, one of the most ticklish provisions was for the civilian review board to examine a random sample of OPAâs concluded investigations. OPA looks into internal complaints against police as well as citizen-generated complaints and reports to the City Council and the public on how well the system works. That mission sounded innocent enough at the outsetâto everyone except police, whose union filed a lawsuit against the city over the review boardâs role. The suit was settled by having board members sign a confidentiality agreement, prohibiting them from releasing identifying information about officers gleaned from already heavily redacted case files. Peter Holmes, an attorney on leave from Miller Nash, a downtown law firm, and Lynn Iglitzen, a former chair of the Seattle Human Rights Commission, are the current review board members. The third spot is unoccupied, awaiting nomination of another citizen by the City Council, which appoints review board members. Members receive a small monthly stipend for their work.
When Holmes and Iglitzen prepared their most recent report to the council in April, they had questions about whether it potentially violated the confidentiality agreement. Their report didnât name officersâthose identities are hidden even from review board membersâ but Holmes says they wanted to quote passages from OPA investigative reports to give the council and the public an accurate picture of what they were seeing. The worry for the board members was that even without names, the release of OPA information could be construed as somehow revealing an officerâs identity, opening them up to litigation by the union.
Holmes and Iglitzen sought a legal opinion from City Attorney Tom Carrâs office about whether their report breached the confidentiality agreement. But Carr refused to offer an opinion, even though his office does such assessments on a regular basis for city agencies. Carrâs spokesperson, Kathyrn Harper, offered âno commentâ when Seattle Weekly recently asked for an explanation. The review board members also asked Mayor Greg Nickelsâ office if it would indemnify them, as provided for in the confidentiality agreement. Nickelsâ office refused.
The two released their report on April 30. They are still frustrated by how they were treated and, like some watchdogs in the community, wonder if they sense subtle censorship at work. âYouâve got citizen volunteers at peril, simply trying to do their job in good faith,â says Holmes. âYou either have to have an opinion from the city attorney or city saying, âWe are going to back you up.â They totally sat back and said, âNo.â That makes it seem that you canât disclose anything, and if you canât disclose anything, then what in the world can you report on?â
Holmes says, as a result, heâs been thinking of resigning from the board, which would be a blow to the OPAâs credibility as an answer, in small measure, to civilian skepticism about police- misconduct investigations. Holmes says heâd advise any future board members not to sign the agreement. âI wish Iâd never signed it myself,â he says.
Even Sam Pailca, the civilian lawyer who is in her second term as the OPAâs director, calls the situation ânot healthy.â
Tellingly, in its report, the review board stated that, in some cases, it was left with âthe impression that OPA had been predisposed to exonerateâ officers.
One case that would surely interest the civilian board members, were it to show up in their random sample of decisions to review, involves Raymond Nix, 66, who was arrested in front of a Belltown bar early last July 31 by a Seattle police anticrime team. Officers alleged in incident reports that they observed Nix making a suspected drug transaction with a woman outside the bar. During the arrest, Nix allegedly fought back and punched a Seattle police sergeant in the right eye. Officers pepper-sprayed Nix, applied a Taser to his stomach and buttocks, and slapped him across the face, according to Seattle police reports. Nix, the reports state, fought on. The sergeant, according to his report, admits to kicking Nix.
After he was subdued, Nix was taken to the King County Jail and then to Harborview Medical Center. He was diagnosed with a cracked rib and returned to jail. On Aug. 4, Nix passed out in a shower at the jail, where he was being held on charges of assault and possessing marijuana with intent to distribute. He was taken to Harborview again, where he was diagnosed with a ruptured spleen and a lacerated gut lining. His spleen was removed.
As he was wheeled out of surgery, Nix was greeted by Mary Ann Scott, an old friend who works at the Pike Place Market, where Nix hangs out. She was outraged at his treatment by police. On Aug. 15, she phoned in a complaint to OPA, alleging that officers had used excessive force on Nix and badly injured him. In April, Capt. Mark Evenson, who leads the OPAâs day-to-day work, sent Scott a letter. In it, Evenson stated that OPA had âadministratively exoneratedâ the officers and there was no evidence of injuries to Nix.
A review of relevant OPA and SPD documents in the case, obtained as part of a motion in King County Superior Court by Nixâs attorney, Paul Richmond, make it clear, however, that someone at OPA did a poor job of investigating. The records also reveal troubling information about how officers documented the use of force on Nix. In their reports, officers describe Nix as a âlargeâ man whose âbrute strengthâ took them by surprise. Nix is 5-feet 10-inches and about 180 pounds. He is a senior citizen and moves slowly. At the time of his arrest, there was alcohol and cocaine in his system, according to medical records. Still, itâs difficult to think that he could ward off several police officers over the several minutes described in the reports, especially after being Tased. Stranger still, it is unclear when officers prepared those required use-of-force reports. OPA personnel first requested copies of the reports in August, according to records in the case. By mid-October, an e-mail from one of the involved officers says that the âpacketâ was missing and needed to be âre-created.â Use-of-force reports are supposed to be filed by officers as soon as possible after an incident, preferably by the close of that shift, says Pailca, the OPAâs civilian director.
In light of those inconsistencies and indications in SPD incident reports that Nix had been hospitalized, the OPA might have violated some of its procedures by not pursuing the case more actively. The office only tried to contact Nixâa homeless manâby mail and through his attorney. Pailca says that her investigators, each a sworn police officer, typically use more resourceful methods in tracking down witnesses and victims in an investigation, especially when homeless persons are involved. That wasnât the case here.
In fact, OPA didnât even contact Scott, the original complainant, after her initial call. She could have led them directly to Nix, since she sees him on a regular basis at the Market. To be fair, Richmond, Nixâs attorney, could have produced his client. But he says that he was having trouble obtaining documents in the criminal case against Nix and didnât want to expose his client to any form of police questioning.
Still, obviously something worth clarifying happened when Nix was arrested, and OPA should have aggressively investigated the use of force, the odd reports, and Nixâs injuries. After inquiries by Nixâs attorney and Seattle Weekly, Pailca ordered the case reopened. She declined to answer questions about it, citing the ongoing investigation, which, like all of OPAâs cases, could result in criminal charges.
âEvery use-of-force complaint is at the highest level of investigation,â Pailca says. As for the Nix case, she says, âWeâve got another chance, and weâll take a very close look at it.â
Re: Youth Rally To Oppose Police Brutality and Racial Profiling
10 Jun 2004
Peace Love Untiy!
Re: Youth Rally To Oppose Police Brutality and Racial Profiling
14 Jun 2004
Re: Youth Rally To Oppose Police Brutality and Racial Profiling
14 Jun 2004
The RAP version would be: All da bitches are hollering... is give da playaz some crack!
Re: Youth Rally To Oppose Police Brutality and Racial Profiling
19 Jul 2004
Re: Youth Rally To Oppose Police Brutality and Racial Profiling
18 Aug 2005