Fight Back! News

News and Views from the People's Struggle

police brutality

By Jared Hamil

Community members speak out on the University of Florida campus

Gainesville, FL – Over 400 angry protesters – a coalition of students, local residents and university professors – rallied and marched to protest the racist police shooting of Kofi Adu-Brempong.

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By Caryl Sortwell

Chicago, IL – When ex-death row inmate Aaron Patterson was pardoned by Illinois Governor George Ryan in January, 2003, he came out of prison vowing to fight for justice. Within hours of his release, Patterson spoke at a Chicago anti-war rally. The next day he was a featured speaker at an anti-police frame-up community forum hosted by Comite Exigimos Justicia. In the months since his release, Aaron Patterson has proven to be a tireless and inspiring leader in the struggle against Chicago police misconduct, brutality and torture. He emerged as the city’s single most important leader of this fight. This made Patterson an irresistible target for the Chicago police and the U.S. Justice Department.

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By David Hungerford

Photo of the People's Organization for Progress holding protest signs.

He was “unarmed, brutally assaulted and murdered, kicked and beaten on the ground while he was handcuffed, tasered, placed in a body bag but not zipped up…”

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By Maria Camargo

Chicago, IL – Se podría ver el apoyo bien fuerte para Agenor “Junito” Román por los afiches que llevaron la gente en la sala de la corte el 22 de febrero, el último día de la audiencia antes del juicio de Junito. Junito va a ser juzgado por un crimen que no cometió el 3 de abril. Es una dolorosa ironía cuando un persona inocente es balazada por la policía y luego esta persona es acusada de atacar a la policía. Los amigos de Junito, parientes, y los grupos comunitarios Centro Sin Fronteras y Vecinos Contra la Brutalidad Policial siguen trabajando fuertemente para su libertad y para traer justicia a su caso.

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By Heather Truskowski

Chicago, IL – Más de 700 manifestantes, enojados por la reciente brutalidad policiaca que ha dejado varios muertos, coparon la sesión de la junta de la Comisión de Policías el 17 de junio y llenaron las calles aldedredor del edificio de la Estación Central de Policía. Mientras se escuchaba el grito, “Sin justicia, no hay paz!” los policías cerraraban el puente cercano en un esfuerzo por aislar el area aldrededor de la Estación Central.

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By Stephanie Weiner

Chicago, IL – No queda la mas mínima duda de que la Policía de Chicago tomó como su blanco especial el vecindario de Humboldt Park este verano pasado. Tampoco hay duda que el pueblo de Humboldt Park ha sabido resistir.

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By Caryl Sortwell

Chicago, IL – El pasado 22 de Octubre, mas de 600 ciudadanos de Chicago se juntaron en Daley Plaza para parar la brutalidad policiaca y la criminalizacion de una generacion. Víctimas de la brutalidad policiaca y sus familias hablaron sobre sus experiencias con “los buenos” de Chicago y sus luchas por justicia. Ilsa Guillen, la viuda de Jorge Guillen, quien fue matado por tres policias in 1993, dijo a traves de un interprete, “Mayor Daley, aunque usted no estuvo allá en la noche que mi esposo fue matado, usted ha matado a mi esposo otra vez cuando se niega a castigar a sus asesinos.”

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By Stephanie Weiner

Chicago, IL – Cuando a Phillip Cline, Superintendente actual de la Policía de Chicago le preguntaron sobre el plan policial del Alcalde Daley para el área africana-americana del Distrito de Harrison, este dijo: “Hace más fácil nuestro trabajo, es como dispararle a peces en un barril.”

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By Fight Back! Editors

In February of 1999, four New York City cops murdered an innocent, unarmed man, named Amadou Diallo. The cops shot him with 41 bullets in the entryway of his Bronx apartment building. One year later a jury in upstate New York acquitted those same cops of his murder.

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By Freedom Road Socialist Organization

Across the U.S.A., the sharp rise in police attacks has caused an outpouring of rage against police departments and mayors. There have been ongoing protests in Chicago, following the huge protests and mass arrests in New York this past Spring.

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By Caryl Sortwell

Protest crowd

Chicago, IL – 200 activistas contra la brutalidad policial llevaron su mensaje a la vecindad de Dick Devine el Sábado 2 de Junio del 2001. El Sr. Devine es el Abogado del Estado del condado de Cook. Este es el funcionario responsable de procesar a oficiales de la policía corruptos o involucrados en brutalidad policial. Los protestantes marcharon a través de la vecindad de Devine, empujando más allá la policía en los caballos que intentaron evitar que la marcha pasara por la calle donde este vive. “Devine ha rechazado constantemente satisfacernos con respecto de abrir a una investigación en la área 5 de la policía,” dijo Blanca González del Comité Exigimos Justicia (CEJ).“Ahora nos tiene que escuchar, ya que estamos en frente de su puerta!”

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By Caryl Sortwell

Protest crowd

Chicago, IL – Over 200 anti-police brutality activists took their message to the neighborhood of Cook County State's Attorney, Dick Devine, June 2. Devine's responsibilities include prosecuting brutal police officers and investigating police frame-ups. Protesters marched through Devine's neighborhood, pushing past police on horses that tried to prevent them from walking down Devine's street.

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By staff

Photo montage of CEJ members

Chicago, IL – Activists in Chicago, led by Comite Exigimos Justicia (CEJ, or the We Demand Justice Committee), marched on Area 5 Police Headquarters on Aug. 16 to demand a meeting with Deputy Chief Dayna Sparks. CEJ has documented frame-ups by Area 5 detectives resulting in the wrongful convictions of dozens of Latino men. Speakers at the protest included recently pardoned death row inmate Aaron Patterson and community activist Fred Hampton, Jr. (photo above) Deputy Chief Sparks was not present and later refused to acknowledge receiving letter addressed to her, even though 50 copies were distributed to her representatives. “We’ll keep coming back until they listen,” Angel Rodriguez from CEJ told the crowd. “Together, we can stop police corruption and make sure this doesn’t happen to anyone else!”

#ChicagoIL #News #AfricanAmerican #ChicanoLatino #PoliceBrutality #RacismInTheCriminalJusticeSystem #Area5 #ComiteExigimosJusticia

By David Hungerford

People’s Organization for Progress (POP) members

Plainfield, NJ – Four members of People’s Organization for Progress (POP) were arrested here Nov. 17 during a peaceful rally. They were protesting against police brutality and the violence that is permitted to rage in low-income communities.

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By David Hungerford

Group in the cold

Plainfield, NJ – The People’s Organization for Progress (POP) called a rally here, Dec. 15 to protest the Nov. 19 arrest of four of its members. The 4 were peacefully rallying against police brutality and violence in the community when they were arrested, photographed and charged with unlawful assembly.

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By David Hungerford

Lawrence Hamm (right) at Bell protest. Yellow tshirts

Newark, NJ – The chanting rang out: “Shoot…and shoot! And lock and load and shoot!” at a rally here, April 26, called to protest New York Judge Arthur Cooperman’s exoneration of three police officers for killing Sean Bell. The victim was 23 when he was killed in 2006 in a barrage of 50 shots. He was to be married the next day.

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By David Hungerford

sign: "Stop police brutality"

East Orange, NJ – On August 15, seventy-five people protested the brutal treatment of 12 year-old Az-Jhane Hayes by police in East Orange, NJ. The People's Organization for Progress called the protest at the request of Corey Bracey, the girl's father.

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By staff

Interview with Parents of Police Murder Victims

Banner: "Stop police brutality"

Fight Back! talked on May 8 with Elizabeth (Bonnie) Moore, whose son Rasheed, 26, was killed in January by Newark, NJ police officer Thomas Ruane (see Fight Back! March/April 2005.) Fight Back! also talked with Earl Williams, whose son Earl Faison was killed by Orange, NJ policemen in April of 1999. After a struggle of five years, led by the Faison’s family and by the People’s Organization for Progress, four cops were sentenced to terms of 33 months each for violations of the victim’s civil rights. One officer was sentenced to nine years.

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By Arthur Henson

Newark, NJ – Rasheed Fuquan Moore, 26, was killed Jan. 24 by Newark police officer Thomas Ruane in a 12:30 a.m. shooting incident. In the same incident, Ruane’s partner, officer Nicholas Popolizio, shot Richard Guy, 26, in the leg.

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By Stephanie Weiner

Chicago, IL – Philip Cline, Acting Superintendent of the Chicago Police, was asked about Mayor Daley’s policing plan in the African-American Harrison District. “It makes our job easier,” he said, “like shooting fish in a barrel.”

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