Saturday, April 28, 2012

No More Trayvon Martins Campaign Appeal

The mass mobilization and media generated in response to the outcry over the murder of Trayvon Martin and how it was handled by the Sanford police, provides the human rights movement with a critical opportunity. The opportunity is to demonstrate how the international human rights framework can strengthen the movements for racial justice and transform the institutions of this society. In order to realize this opportunity, we must engage in mass education and advocacy.

The “No More Trayvons” campaign was launched as a result of research and a petition produced by Kali Akuno and Arlene Eisen at the request of the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement (MXGM) and disseminated in partnership with the Black Left Unity Network (BLUN) and US Human Rights Network (USHRN). The campaign is demanding the implementation of a National Plan of Action for Racial Justice, a critical tool that can be used to educate, agitate, and organize on a mass level. For the campaign to be successful, we need the critical support of organizations such as yours. The MXGM is calling on you to help us build this initiative and seize the opportunity. The first step we are asking you to take is to formally endorse the demand for a National Plan of Action.

The second step is asking you to engage in some of the following activities (based on your capacity and resources) listed below:
1. Outreach: contacting your constituents and allies directly to ask them to support the petition drive and the demand for a National Plan of Action
● Phone Banking
● Direct Mailing
● Listserv Blasts
● Door Knocking
● Community or Event Tabling
2. Social Media Outreach and Mobilization: promoting the “No More Trayvons” campaign via your social media resources
● Post the handbill flyer on your website
● Post the handbill flyer on your facebook, myspace, etc., page
● Post the petition link on your facebook, myspace, etc., page
● Promote the petition on your twitter account
● Blog about the campaign and the demand and encourage people to sign the petition
3. Education: utilize your educational resources and processes to educate your members and the public at large about the campaign, the National Plan demand, and what a National Plan of Action is and how it can be used
● Produce handouts on the campaign
● Disseminate the handouts produced by USHRN, MXGM, etc.
● Conduct webinars on the campaign
● Conduct Teach-in’s and Community Forums on the Campaign
4. Action: support the campaign by building local, statewide, and national pressure on the government to comply with the demand to implement a National Plan of Action
● Raise the demand at city council meetings, with state representatives, in requests to federal level officials
● Conduct local and/or regional hearings or Tribunals on human rights violations to press for government accountability
5. Content Development: work with the National Alliance for Racial Justice and Human Rights and the National CERD Implementation Task Force to produce content for the Civil Society National Plan of Action for Racial Justice that we will use to press the Obama administration to adopt as the basis of the governments National Plan of Action.

Our goals for this initiative are to:
1. Secure 100,000 signatures for the petition by Friday, May 18th to deliver to the Obama administration.
2. Mid-term goal is to expand the National Alliance to carry out this work.
3. Long-term goal is to build mass consciousness and a broad base for CERD and the National Plan of Action.

If you or your organization is prepared to endorse the demand for a National Plan of Action and to engage in any of these activities please email Kali Akuno at kaliakuno@mxgm.org. Please indicate in your email what types of activities your organization is committing to, when, where, and what you may need from MXGM and the National Alliance for Racial Justice to support your efforts.

Thank you,
Kali Akuno, Malcolm X Grassroots Movement
Thursday, May 26, 2012

Friday, April 6, 2012

Trayvon Martin is All of US! Demand Obama institute a National Plan of Action for Racial Justice to end the epidemic of Black murders


http://www.ushrnetwork.org/content/actionalert/trayvon-martin-petition-learn-and-sign-now

The murder of Trayvon Martin is no isolated tragedy. The murder of Black men and women by police and other state officials and by self-appointed “keepers of the peace” is standard practice in the United States, and essential to the very fabric of the society. Since the European colonization of North America, Black life has been disposable. Despite the many proclamations that the society is color blind and moving into a post-racial phase, the summary execution of Trayvon Martin and at least 29 other Black women and men murdered by the Police, Security Guards or vigilantes in 2012 alone demonstrates that Black life continues to be regarded with short worth.

State sanctioned or justified murder of Black people in the United States is systemic, and more than just a set of random and isolated incidents. The solution to this pervasive crime against humanity cannot rely on local district attorneys for justice. We have to demand more than just investigations and individual prosecutions. We have to demand that the federal government take action and uphold its obligations under International Human Rights Law to protect historically discriminated groups such as Blacks.

Pattern of Murders by the Numbers since January 1, 2012
* 30 cases of state sanctioned or justified murder of Black people in the first 3 months of 2012 alone have been found (due to under reporting and discriminatory methods of documentation, it is likely that there are more that our research has yet to uncover)
* Of the 30 killed people, 20 were definitely unarmed. 2 probably had firearms, 8 were alleged to have non-lethal weapons.
* Of the 30 killed people:
- 12 were innocent of any illegal behavior or behavior that involved a threat to anyone (although the killers claimed they looked “suspicious”);
- 8 were emotionally disturbed and/or displaying strange behavior.
- the remaining 10 were either engaged in illegal or potentially illegal activity, or there was too little info to determine circumstances of their killing. It appears that in all but two of these cases, illegal and/or harmful behavior could have been stopped without the use of lethal force.
* In most cases, where planned, investigations of the deaths have not been completed.
* Note: only seven of the 30 killed people were over 30 years old and two of the six were 31 years old. Two were women.

Implications for Action Needed

Almost every news story that reported these killings says something like, “another Black man dead.” Yet, perhaps to fight off despair, many people treat each case like Trayvon Martin as if it were the first, an exception, and hopefully the last, if only the perpetrator is arrested.

This gruesome list demonstrates that the US legacy of lynching and enforcement of Jim Crow apartheid persists. But today’s epidemic of murders of Black people thrives in a new deadly context. The myths of democracy and the election of a Black president hide the epidemic—make it harder to diagnose the pattern. And the hysteria of the War on Terror, building on the War on Drugs, has fueled the militarization of 17,000 local police departments. Nearly a trillion dollars in grants by Homeland Security and the promotion of a militarized culture has escalated the wars of racial domination and containment at home. In New Orleans, Chicago, New York, Little Rock and hundreds of other towns and cities, police departments and white citizens are armed and ready to maintain “security”. The so-called drug and terror wars have become a war on Black people—even if some combatants on the aggressor side of the line in Homeland Security and Police departments are Black.
In many ways, today’s war on Black people resembles the hounding of escaped slaves or the persecution of Black people who dared appear in segregated “sundown towns” after dark. The record of lynching shows that demonization of Black people did not begin with hoodies. Black people have survived this war by resisting Klan terror in all its forms, by affirming their culture and building solidarity and community. Depending solely on a local district attorney for survival, let alone justice, has never worked and will not work today.

Within this context—and given the data—we suggest the campaign to end the war on Black people take the following steps:
1. Currently, there is no national database that documents the killings of Black people by police, security guards and self-appointed peacekeepers. To understand the magnitude of the epidemic, we demand it be documented. To ensure that we hold the government accountable to this mandate, we call on all the organizations defending the human dignity and rights of Black people to collaborate on producing an independent database of these summary executions.
2. We must demand that the priorities of Homeland Security be shifted. As a recent Salon.com article noted, “So much money has gone into armoring and arming local law-enforcement since 9/11 that the federal government could have rebuilt post-Katrina New Orleans five times over and had enough money left in the kitty to provide job training and housing for every one of the record 41,000-plus homeless people in New York City. It could have added in the growing population of 15,000 homeless in Philadelphia, my hometown, and still have had money to spare. Add disintegrating Detroit, Newark, and Camden to the list. Throw in some crumbling bridges and roads, too.”(March 5, 2012) The military industrial complex is no longer a sector of the state—it has become the state—a police state. We must use whatever political rights we have left to demand that the tremendous resources used to fortify this militarized stated be used for human development, such as education, health care, and the development of sustainable energy and technology, not hunt and kill people.
3. At the same time, Homeland Security grants to police departments should be conditional on institutional overhaul that deprograms racist policies, rules of engagement, training and rewards.
a. Recruitment, training of new recruits and on-going retraining must identify racist assumptions and uproot them. The concept of “suspicious behavior” must be deconstructed under the leadership of community representatives.
b. When a cop has killed or wounded an unarmed “suspect” or used excessive force to subdue a “suspect”, that cops should be suspended without pay until the investigation is complete. If the cop is not cleared, he should be fired. (A number of killer cops are repeat offenders)
c. Cultural and institutional support that allows police departments to lie, cover-up, spin, justify and remain unaccountable for killing Black people must be identified. All actions must be video recorded and made public.
d. Community representatives responsible to community forum should be consulted on all these changes and approve them before implementation. Representatives of families whose loved ones have been killed should participate in these community bodies.
e. Money from one homeland security tank could more than fund high quality training for the entire police force for decades.
4. Redirect Homeland Security Funds to establish and institutionalize local community mental health programs. Jails and prisons are flooded with people who need support for emotional problems. Treatment, not punishment is needed. And there also should be community support for families—especially those with children who have emotional problems. A tragic number of children get killed by police when desperate parents call for help. This must end. Also, police must be trained, retrained and retrained on how to deal with people exhibiting erratic behavior. The policy of tasing for compliance must be ended.
5. Overhaul policies that encourage and justify harassment, assault and murder by non-trained, non-accountable citizens, such as “stand your ground”. Eg. Security guards, self-appointed neighborhood watch coordinator and a man defending his “castle” were responsible for at least four murders in the last three months.
6. Eliminate all the policies and procedures on all levels of government and in all state agencies that sanction the racial profiling of Black and other discriminated and targeted groups.
7. Stop the War on Drugs and end the mass incarceration of Black people. Reform all of the drug enforcement, quality of life, and mandatory minimum sentencing laws that have resulted in the gross over incarceration of Black people and the largest penal system in the world.
8. Challenge the cultural and legal climate that demonizes Black people and encourages racist attacks by security guards and vigilantes by instituting a massive public education campaign that addresses the historic legacy of white supremacy and institutional racism and educates the public about their fundamental human rights.
9. Finally, the Obama administration must create and institute a “National Plan of Action for Racial Justice” to fulfill the governments obligations under the Convention to Eliminate all forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD) by creating a permanent Inter-Agency Working Group to implement all of the aforementioned demands to protect Black and other historically oppressed groups from racial discrimination, targeted violence, and summary executions. For more information on CERD visit http://www.ushrnetwork.org/content/campaignproject/elimination-all-forms-racial-discrimination-icerd.

Please join us is pressing these demands to hold the United States government accountable for its failure to fully address the systemic problem of institutionalized racism. You can help by endorsing these demands and raising them to the Obama administration and state and local governments in every venue possible. You can start by signing and distributing the following petition http://www.ushrnetwork.org/content/webform/trayvon-martin-petition.

If you and your organization would like to officially endorse this initiative and work with the USHRN’s National CERD Implementation Task Force to directly engage the Obama administration regarding the implementation of a National Plan of Action for Racial Justice please email Kali Akuno at kakuno@ushrnetwork.org.

30 Black People Killed by Police Officials, Security Guards, and
Self-Appointed “Keepers of the Peace” between January 1 and March 31, 2012

Date
of Death Name of Dead
Family Member Age Place Was “suspect”
armed? Comments
01/12/2012 Donald Johnson 21 New Orleans, LA Probably NOPD reported they shot Johnson after led them on a chase and fired on them. He was allegedly involved in a shooting that left 3 dead and 2 wounded.
01/12/2012 Duane Brown 26 East New York, Brooklyn, NY allegedly Brown had called police for assistance in stopping a robbery.Police shot him.
01/17/2012 Angelo Clark 31 Little Rock, AK allegedly Killed by SWAT Unit serving drug-related search warrant.
01/24/2012 Steven Rodriguez 22 Monterrey Park, CA Pipe bender Man in hoodie allegedly broke windows at Carls Jr Fast Food and police were called. They tased him in the face and almost immediately shot him ten times when didn’t surrender.
01/26/2012 Christopher Kissane 26 Cypress Hills, Brooklyn, NY Probably An off-duty police lieutenant shot and killed Kissane who he thought was involved in a carjacking.
01/29/2012 Atwain White 17 Bushwick, Brooklyn, NY Cane An off-duty detective alleged that White attempted to mug him near the subway station close to midnight. The detective shot him in chest. A 15-year old alleged accomplice was not charged.
02/01/2012 Stephon Watts 15 Calumet City, IL
(Chicago suburb) No Watts was a child with Asperger’s Syndrome. Police reported he lashed out with a kitchen knife. Mother said he had a small harmless pen knife. Police Dept had been called to this house many times before. Had experience in dealing with this emotionally disturbed child.
02/03/2012 Remarley Graham 18 Bronx, NY No Killed after Narcotics Task Force chased Graham into his home.
02/10/2012 Manuel Loggins Jr. 31 San Clemente, CA No Loggins was a former Marine Sargeant who followed a daily exercise and prayer routine with his two daughters, aged 9 and 14. His kids were waiting for him in his SUV when Orange County Police shot and killed him on the assumption that he was a threat to the girls.
02/13/2012 Johnnie Kamahi Warren 43 Dotham, AL No Warren died after he was shot with a taser twice for being intoxicated.
02/26/2012 Trayvon Martin 17 Sanford, FL No Shot and killed by George Zimmerman, self-appointed community watch coordinator who thought Martin looked suspicious.
02/29/2012 Raymond Allen 34 Galveston, TX No Police, suspected this father of four was under influence of drugs, subjected him to multiple tasings and hog tied him. He died two days later. Wife is suing.
03/01/2012 Justin Sipp 20 New Orleans, LA No Off-duty police officer thought Sipp looked suspicious.
03/01/2012 Dante Price 25 Dayton, Ohio No Ranger Security Guards at Summit Square Apartments shot him 22 times as he attempted to keep an appointment to babysit his own kids.
03/01/2012 Melvin Lawhorn 26 Kershaw County, SC No Shot by County Sheriff when he tried to avoid a drug traffic stop.
03/03/2012 Bo Morrison 20 West Bend, WI No When police broke up a party where alcohol was being served to underage people, Morrison ran away and hid on neighbor’s back porch. Homeowner, Adam Kind, shot him in chest. He was not charged because under the “Castle Doctrine” he had the right to defend his home against perceived threat.
03/05/2012 Nehemiah Dillard 29 Gainesville, FL No Behaving “strangely”, possibly despondent over divorce. Tased twice and went into cardiac arrest.
03/06/2012 Darryl Berry 45 Bush Creek Township, PA No In the aftermath of a car accident involving Berry on a rural stretch of the PA Turnpike, a State Trooper arrived and alleged that Berry attacked him with his dogs, so he shot Berry (not the dogs) 3 times. Cop had no injuries.
03/07/2012 Wendell Allen 20 New Orleans, LA No Allen, a high school basketball star, was shirtless and wearing pajama bottoms when he was shot by a plainclothes narcotics officer. Four children were in the home at the time of the raid for marijuana.
03/07/2012 Michael Lembhard 22 Newburgh, NY allegedly Police alleged Lembhard came at them (four) with a knife. Hundreds, including the town mayor, attended his funeral and protested the police use of excessive force.
03/10/2012 Marquez Smart 23 Wichita, KS allegedly Allegedly refused police order to drop gun. (news story very sketchy. The funeral guest book on line is only indication Smart was Black)
03/12/2012 Jersey Green 37 Aurora, IL no Green died after police officers tasered him after he allegedly jumped on the hood of a squad car and moved toward an officer. He may have been in possession of crack cocaine.
3/15/2012 Shereese Francis 30 Jamaica, Queens, NY no Francis had a diagnosed mental illness. When her family called for medical assistance, the police arrived, further upset her and in the process of “subduing her”, held her face down on the bed, and suffocated her.
03/21/2012 Robert Dumas Jr. 42 Maple Heights, Cleveland, OH no Killed during a car chase and crash with police. He had been speeding.
03/25/2012 Kendrec Lavelle McDade 19 Pasadena, CA no Police shot McDade, a Citrus College student, based on false accusation that he had stolen a laptop at gunpoint. Carrillo, the accuser, was charged with manslaughter because his false statement “led” to McDade’s killing.


03/25/2012 Ervin Jefferson 18 Atlanta, GA no As he was trying to protect his sister, Jefferson was shot by two security guards who impersonated police officers
03/26/2012 Name withheld 16 San Leandro, CA no A sixteen year old died in custody in the Alameda County Juvenile Justice Center. Neither the cause of death or his name has yet been released.
03/27/2012 Sheron Jackson 21 Baltimore, MD allegedly Officer killed Jackson after he allegedly threatened police and mother with a knife. The mother said the officers were trigger happy, that her son only had a small pocket knife and he was emotionally disturbed.
03/27/2012 Tendai Nhekairo 18(?) Atlanta, GA Conflicting reports Zimbabwean teenager attended Campbell High School. There were conflicting reports about whether his behavior was bizarre or a threat.
03/27/2012 Rekia Boyd 22 Chicago, IL no Shot by off-duty cop. Innocent bystander.

This document was researched, written and produced by Kali Akuno and Arlene Eisen working on behalf of the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, Black Left Unity Network, and US Human Rights Network.