February 27, 2016 by Thomas Nephew
This post is a
modification of the original post by Thomas Nephew at Montgomery
County Civil Rights Coalition
MCCRC’s Thomas
Nephew and over a
hundred other advocates of police reform descended on Annapolis on Tuesday to
press their case for real
police reform andagainst
measures like “Recommendation 23”— packing brutality hearing boards with members favorable to the
accused — that would set back that cause.
It was a full day of education and advocacy,
including a press conference, a hearing on the police reform
measures, and meetings with legislators and their aides.
The hashtag for the day was #NoRec23.Activists
demanded that any reform package should:
·
Reduce
the unfair advantage given to officers accused of brutality:
·
Don’t
let bad cops choose who reviews their own brutality cases.
·
Allow
trained civilians to sit on trial boards, ESPECIALLY in brutality cases.
·
Provide
local civilian review boards with subpoena power to question officers accused
of misconduct.
·
Eliminate
the 5 day window that bad cops use to manufacture their story.
·
Outlaw
collusion between officers so they don’t lie to protect each other.
·
Treat
victims of brutality as well as all other victims fairly:
·
Open
up who can file brutality complaints.
·
Eliminate
the time restriction on when complaints can be filed.
A press conference before the hearing featured
advocates bedecked in yellow “Caution” ribbons indicating the strong
reservations about that element and others of the House and Senate leadership
omnibus police reform bill HB1016 (now crossfiled as Senate bill SB1026).
Larry Stafford (Maryland Coalition for Justice and
Police Accountability, MCJPA) led off comments with a remembrance of Marshawn Carroll, a
smart, committed young African American Ohio man who had worked with Larry and
MCJPA here briefly before returning to Columbus, where he committed suicide
earlier this month. “What has not been reported widely was that before
he took his life, he had actually lost a friend to police violence in Ohio. And
so recognizing the pain and the trauma that is inflicted on communities across
this country when their loved ones lives are lost through police violence, or
their freedom is infringed upon because of police misconduct and abuse of their
authority, it’s because of that that we’re here today.” Other speakers
included:
·
William Rau (Caucus of
African American Leaders): “…our elected officials are policymakers who are
acting on our behalf. These walls, this carpet, this podium, the pomp and
circumstance, the parliamentary procedure, that is all put into place to do our
will. We must remember that…we are challenging a process that has run
amuk. […] We must let them know we’re paying attention to every single
word and every single comment.”
·
Marion Gray-Hopkins (Coalition of Concerned Mothers): “…most
importantly, I am a survivor. My son Gary Hopkins was murdered by the
police November 27th 1999. I’m here with Greta Willis whose son Kevin
Cooper was murdered in Baltimore City. I’m here with Darlene Cain whose
son Dale Graham was murdered in Baltimore City in 2008. And… there are
other mothers who are not here who I am representing: Dorothy Elliot – son:
Archie Elliot, murdered – over 20+ bullets while he was handcuffed in the back
of a patrol car, and it was alleged that there was a gun. I’m here for
Gina Best whose daughter India Kator was murdered in Virginia. This is
not just about Maryland.”
·
Rev. Jamila Woods Jones (Jabez Christian Community Church):“This
is not a new issue, we’ve been coming here for years, with the same issues, the
same concerns. And while we’re happy that we’re moving forward, we want to
acknowledge that there are some fatal flaws that *must* be addressed if we’re
going to make this a truly transparent effort that is beneficial to everyone. …
Now we’re calling on our legislators, we’re demanding that our legislators hear
the cry of the people. That’s all I have to say.”
·
Sophia Marjanovic: “…during my divorce I met a county
sheriff whose conduct concerned me about his neglect of duty and misconduct. I
made a complaint of misconduct with the county sheriff’s department. The
department did not advise me about whether they’d be investigating the case,
and never advised me about whether there was an outcome of an investigation.
[…] I was later ordered to work with the same sheriff against whom I filed the
complaint. […] I’m concerned about retaliation because the officer shouted at
me that he didn’t want me filing a complaint against him again. […] I ask
that the agency be required to inform the complainant of the outcome of an
investigation.”
·
Kirkland Hall (Somerset County NAACP): “I’m
here speaking for a young lady who had been voiceless after what happened to
her in 2009. … The Maryland State Police called her home looking for a
young man who had escaped from a work release team. She wasn’t
there. But he left a message. He said ‘My name is Sergeant Milo, Maryland
State Police. We need for you to call us.’ When he thought he had hung up
the phone, he made this statement: ‘I’m getting sick and tired of calling these
n*****s on the telephone with these long voice messages.’ […] We could hear
other police officers laughing on the phone. Which tells me there’s a
culture of the police department. Which tells me that they are very familiar
with the words of Chief Justice Taney many years ago, that a black man has no
rights which a white man should respect.”
·
Lawrence
Grandpre (Leaders of a
Beautiful Struggle):“Some people think this issue of police reform is
complicated. I don’t think so. You can look at the words of the
people who represent the establishment to see what the problem is. A few
days ago [Delegate] Curt Anderson was on the radio. And he said ‘This trial
board thing, it doesn’t matter. That’s internal, that’s kind of like a court
martial. So we don’t need non-police officers on that board. Think about that.
An elected official in Maryland just said that we should have military style
justice for civilian police forces. It’s a small step when you isolate a
community and produce a military style accountability system; soon enough
you’ll get military style application of policing on the streets.”
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