Ohio police officer fired after
calling Black Lives Matter activist’s suicide a ‘happy ending’
By Yanan Wang March 8
23-year-old Black Lives Matter
activist commits suicide
MarShawn M. McCarrel II, a young
Ohio activist involved with the Black Lives Matter movement committed suicide
on the steps of the Statehouse in Columbus. (WBNS-10TV http://www.10tv.com/)
Like many activists, MarShawn M.
McCarrel II was vocal on social media, but not just about his causes. While
political commentary certainly had a place in his Facebook status updates, the
platform was more often dominated by emotional and philosophical musings.
“Pride will make you miss out on
so much,” the 23-year-old Columbus, Ohio, native wrote in January.
“Lost is the man who has more
answers than questions,” he reflected a few days later.
And on Feb. 8, a heart-rending
Facebook post foretold his fate: “My demons won today. I’m sorry.”
That night, McCarrel stood on the
steps of the Ohio statehouse and shot himself dead.
No one — not friends, family or police
— could say why he did it. McCarrel was a prominent local activist, having
coordinated Black Lives Matter protests following the 2014 police shooting of
Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. He founded a nonprofit called Pursuing Our
Dreams, which provided monthly homemade lunches to the homeless.
Days before his apparent suicide,
McCarrel had smiled for pictures taken on the red carpet of the NAACP Image
Awards.
Just as he shared much of his life on social
media, on social media too was he mourned, with condolences and tributes
flooding into the Black Lives Matter Cincinnati Facebook page.
Not all the responses, however,
were kind.
While off duty, Fairborn, Ohio,
police officer Lee Cyr reacted to the news of McCarrel’s death with the comment
“Love a happy ending.”
According to Dayton Daily News,
it appeared alongside unsympathetic responses from others — comments reading
“What a hypocrite” and “One less to worry about.”
Cyr was placed on administrative
leave after an internal complaint alerted the Fairborn Police Department to the
comment last month. He has now been fired, WDTN-TV reported on Monday.
The department said in a
statement that Cyr’s action violated its social media policy.
[‘My demons won today': Ohio
activist’s suicide spotlights depression among Black Lives Matter leaders]
For local activists, the comment
highlighted some of the very issues that the Black Lives Matter movement is
trying to combat.
“We have received a lot of
negative responses,” Tristina Allen, a fellow organizer who knew McCarrel told
Dayton Daily News in February. “I think it is completely unacceptable for
someone who is supposed to protect and serve to have that comment towards
someone who is dead.”
Yanan Wang is a reporter on the
Morning Mix team.
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