Loading....
Recent Article links:

Translate

Category 'Justice'

Jena, O. J. and the Jailing of Black America

By ORLANDO PATTERSON
Published: September 30, 2007

Cambridge, Mass.

THE miscarriage of justice at Jena, La. — where five black high school students arrested for beating a white student were charged with attempted murder — and the resulting protest march tempts us to the view, expressed by several of the marchers, that not much has changed in traditional American racial relations. However, a remarkable series of high-profile incidents occurring elsewhere in the nation at about the same time, as well as the underlying reason for the demonstrations themselves, make it clear that the Jena case is hardly a throwback to the 1960s, but instead speaks to issues that are very much of our times.

What exactly attracted thousands of demonstrators to the small Louisiana town? While for some it was a simple case of righting a grievous local injustice, and for others an opportunity to relive the civil rights era, for most the real motive was a long overdue cry of outrage at the use of the prison system as a means of controlling young black men.

America has more than two million citizens behind bars, the highest absolute and per capita rate of incarceration in the world. Black Americans, a mere 13 percent of the population, constitute half of this country’s prisoners. A tenth of all black men between ages 20 and 35 are in jail or prison; blacks are incarcerated at over eight times the white rate.

The effect on black communities is catastrophic: one in three male African-Americans in their 30s now has a prison record, as do nearly two-thirds of all black male high school dropouts. These numbers and rates are incomparably greater than anything achieved at the height of the Jim Crow era. What’s odd is how long it has taken the African-American community to address in a forceful and thoughtful way this racially biased and utterly counterproductive situation.

How, after decades of undeniable racial progress, did we end up with this virtual gulag of racial incarceration?

Part of the answer is a law enforcement system that unfairly focuses on drug offenses and other crimes more likely to be committed by blacks, combined with draconian mandatory sentencing and an absurdly counterproductive retreat from rehabilitation as an integral method of dealing with offenders. An unrealistic fear of crime that is fed in part by politicians and the press, a tendency to emphasize punitive measures and old-fashioned racism are all at play here.

But there is another equally important cause: the simple fact that young black men commit a disproportionate number of crimes, especially violent crimes, which cannot be attributed to judicial bias, racism or economic hardships. The rate at which blacks commit homicides is seven times that of whites.

Why is this? Several incidents serendipitously occurring at around the same time as the march on Jena hint loudly at a possible answer.

In New York City, the tabloids published sensational details of the bias suit brought by a black former executive for the Knicks, Anucha Browne Sanders, who claims that she was frequently called a “bitch” and a “ho” by the Knicks coach and president, Isiah Thomas. In a video deposition, Thomas said that while it is always wrong for a white man to verbally abuse a black woman in such terms, it was “not as much … I’m sorry to say” for a black man to do so.

Across the nation, religious African-Americans were shocked that the evangelical minister Juanita Bynum, an enormously popular source of inspiration for churchgoing black women, said she was brutally beaten in a parking lot by her estranged husband, Bishop Thomas Weeks.

O. J. Simpson, the malevolent central player in an iconic moment in the nation’s recent black-white (as well as male-female) relations, reappeared on the scene, charged with attempted burglary, kidnapping and felonious assault in Las Vegas, in what he claimed was merely an attempt to recover stolen memorabilia.

These events all point to something that has been swept under the rug for too long in black America: the crisis in relations between men and women of all classes and, as a result, the catastrophic state of black family life, especially among the poor. Isiah Thomas’s outrageous double standard shocked many blacks in New York only because he had the nerve to say out loud what is a fact of life for too many black women who must daily confront indignity and abuse in hip-hop misogyny and everyday conversation.

What is done with words is merely the verbal end of a continuum of abuse that too often ends with beatings and spousal homicide. Black relationships and families fail at high rates because women increasingly refuse to put up with this abuse. The resulting absence of fathers — some 70 percent of black babies are born to single mothers — is undoubtedly a major cause of youth delinquency.

The circumstances that far too many African-Americans face — the lack of paternal support and discipline; the requirement that single mothers work regardless of the effect on their children’s care; the hypocritical refusal of conservative politicians to put their money where their mouths are on family values; the recourse by male youths to gangs as parental substitutes; the ghetto-fabulous culture of the streets; the lack of skills among black men for the jobs and pay they want; the hypersegregation of blacks into impoverished inner-city neighborhoods — all interact perversely with the prison system that simply makes hardened criminals of nonviolent drug offenders and spits out angry men who are unemployable, unreformable and unmarriageable, closing the vicious circle.

Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and other leaders of the Jena demonstration who view events there, and the racial horror of our prisons, as solely the result of white racism are living not just in the past but in a state of denial. Even after removing racial bias in our judicial and prison system — as we should and must do — disproportionate numbers of young black men will continue to be incarcerated.

Until we view this social calamity in its entirety — by also acknowledging the central role of unstable relations among the sexes and within poor families, by placing a far higher priority on moral and social reform within troubled black communities, and by greatly expanding social services for infants and children — it will persist.

Orlando Patterson is a professor of sociology at Harvard and the author of “The Ordeal of Integration: Progress and Resentment in America’s ‘Racial’ Crisis.”

Alaska Knight of Columbus spends three days in jail, shares faith

Knight redeems a misunderstanding at Chicago airport

By James DeCrane
Anchor Writer

It was 7 p.m. on July 11. Williams sat down at his gate in Chicago O’Hare International Airport to listen to his iPod as he waited to board a flight home to Anchorage, after a family reunion in Chicago.

He could never have imagined what was about to follow.

Over the airport intercom, he heard his name, summoning him to return to baggage check in.

It’s a call no one in an airport wants to hear and for 65-year-old Cal Williams, it signified the beginning of a surreal experience.

After walking back to the check-in counter, security officers showed Williams a handgun that Homeland Security found in his checked bag. Williams tried to explain that he had misplaced the gun and accidentally left it in his bag from a recent fishing trip to the Russian River. The large bag had numerous pockets, and Williams said he only used the center section to pack for his trip to Chicago.

Airport security understood the mistake and Homeland Security told him they would not press charges, and that he could return to his flight, Williams said.

The state of Illinois and the airport police were not so understanding and decided to press charges.

They immediately handcuffed and arrested Williams and frog-marched him to a patrol car. He spent the next three days at Cook County Pretrial Correctional Facility. With 9,000 inmates at any given time, the facility is one of the largest and arguably one of the most dangerous — pre-trial facilities in the nation.

While fear might be the natural response, Williams said he felt a wave of tranquility and a feeling of closeness to God.

“There was this sense of calmness that had come over me, and before I could ask the question, why me, the answer was clear,” Williams told the Anchor Aug. 23.

Over the course of the next three days, Williams said God used the situation so he could be a Christian witness to a number of people, both inside and outside the correctional system.

On the inside

Once inside jail, officials assigned Williams a bunk that he said was already commandeered by the biggest, meanest inmate on the block.

“He was (unofficially) in control of all the activities that the residents engaged in,” Williams said. “He controlled ‘the Disciples’ and the ‘Vice Lords’, two rival gangs that have been in Chicago for years.”

Williams took the top bunk without argument and befriended other inmates on the ward, including his notorious bunkmate.

“I didn’t nose in their business, didn’t judge them, but listened to their various stories… I learned a lot from those different individuals,” Williams explained.

The other inmates developed a respect for Williams, even calling him ‘Pops’, a term of respect for older inmates.

Williams said he also managed to have an effect on the prison staff as well.

But Williams’s thoughts were also in Alaska.

He told his sister in Chicago to call the Knights of Columbus group at St. Patrick Church in Anchorage to let them know that he wouldn’t make the next meeting.

His concern for the Knights meeting impacted both the superintendent and the prison guard, Williams said.

“(The prison guard) ordered me to slow down on the way back to the cell, he didn’t want to get back to the cell in the emotional state that he was in, because he was teared up about my being there,” Williams explained.

Making an impact behind bars

Williams said his incarceration brought his extended family in Chicago closer together as they prayed each night for him before meals.

“I got a strong sense from my family about their commitment to God,” he said. “I am the only Catholic in the family, (but yet) we knew we were praying to the same God and those prayers were powerful.”

Williams said the spiritual support he felt extended beyond Chicago to his friends and family in Alaska as well.

The many prayers helped energize and prepare Williams for his court hearing, he said.

Williams said his attorney told him that he faced a maximum of 15 years in prison and asked him if he would consider a plea bargain to serve two years in jail instead. Williams refused the deal, and decided to urge his fellow Alaskans to write letters of support to the judge to attest to his character.

Letters flowed in from those who knew Williams, including fellow parishioners, Knights, and politicians such as Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich and former state Gov. Tony Knowles.

Williams said those letters impacted the judge and the state district attorney and they agreed to drop all charges.

“I am forever grateful to God and thankful (to everyone) who wrote letters and prayed on my behalf,” William said.

Giving thanks

Unjustified jail time might leave some bitter and angry but Williams said he is extremely grateful for the opportunity and the closeness he felt to God.

“In a way, I did not want to leave jail, because I felt that feeling would fade,” he said in an email to the Anchor.

Williams hopes his story will inspire others, especially when they are faced with hardships.”We just have to continue toiling and doing (God’s) will, knowing He is there when we need Him,” he said.

Taken from Catholic Anchor Newspaper.


1 Corinthians 10:13 - “No temptation hath taken you — except human; and God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above what ye are able, but He will make, with the temptation, also the outlet, for your being able to bear [it].”

What I like about this story is that in his tribulation, Williams was able to stay focused on God and seek first and foremost God’s desire for him - not his circumstances. By staying faithful, Williams didn’t go for the “okey-doke” - plea bargaining for a reduced sentence. By refusing to play the game, Williams couldn’t get played by the game. Knowing where his strength came from, he turned an apparent misfortune into a blessing for himself and others. I hope that those of you who read this understand how vital it is not to get pulled down by your own anger and instead keep your eyes on God that He may work His wonders through you for His glory that the world may know He is God.

The Larry Davis Story

In 1986, the NYPD attempted to kill Larry Davis when serving a search warrant at a Bronx apartment. He was shot in the head at point blank range, but the bullet did not penetrate his skull. After he fell to the floor from the impact of the blast, he returned fire and shot 6 NYPD officers and escaped out a window.

After an intensive 17-day manhunt Davis turned himself into the FBI in exchange for their guarantee to investigate the NYPD’s involvement in drug deals he [Larry Davis] was forced to participate in as a teenager. This documentary offers a unique insight into the case and speaks extensively to Davis about his ordeal. For the first time ever Davis speaks out about the night in 1986 when 30 police officers came to assassinate him for backing out of a drug deal.

This documentary will take you inside of the life of Larry Davis and how his family was harassed by the NYC Police Department. Troy Reed will interview Davis on how he was able to escape from a stand off with 30 police officers where gunfire was exchanged. The video will also expose the police corruption of the 80’s and how cops were using inner-city youth to sell drugs and guns.

You can purchase this video here.

Rush to judgment

In recent news an unarmed 23 yr old man was gunned down by NYC police officers on the day of his wedding. Outrageous, right? Right. But exactly what part of it is outrageous?

It should be unquestionable that any incident where a police officer discharges a weapon, especially where it results in the death of a civilian, ought to be thoroughly investigated. Moreover, any abuse of power by those whose job it is to serve and protect should be severely prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

That said, it is common wisdom that “it takes two to tango,” and that most times there exists a contributory negligence on the part of both the so-called victim and the so-called perpetrator. Sadly, human emotions often prevent the dialog necessary to discover the logistics behind a tragic occurrence.

The offended cry out for justice often ignorant of the definition of justice - replacing it with something more self-serving. The offenders plead for mercy - understandably interested only in saving their own skin rather than the long range consequences (precedence, societal influence, etc.).

Someone once said that integrity without knowledge is weak and useless, and knowledge without integrity is dangerous and dreadful. There can be no justice or mercy without integrity - integrity measured not as an abstract image of credibility but as a standard determined only by truth. Truth cannot be discovered without knowledge. It follows that justice cannot be administered without truth.

How many people are really interested in the truth? People smoke knowing in truth the risk of developing lung cancer. People eat fast food knowing the risk of developing heart disease. People engage in unprotected sex knowing the risk of contracting AIDS. People keep secrets out of shame, cast stones out of fear, drink and drug away hurt and pain rather than courageously facing and conquering their demons.

Do people really care about the truth or justice?

There is certainly much evidence to the contrary. The desire for retribution and revenge, convenience and illusion, comfort and assurance seem to dictate societal values. To be innocent of sin in spite of the propensity to indulge in it, is an interesting psychology… like a child caught red-handed and denying responsibility for the act, or more extreme - that the act never took place.

Was it a tragedy what happened in New York city? Yes. But why did the officers feel the need to fire so many rounds? When attention seekers exploit such situations by categorically appealing to stereotypes in the name of justice, the deceived are robbed of hope, fools are blinded, and sheep are led to the slaughter.

 

September 2010
M T W T F S S
« Jan    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Photo Gallery

Printer's Row 2007

Children

Wonderful human beings

Add to My AOL

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Add to netvibes

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner



"The Truth shall set you free... ask any martyr."


PPP Direct

ACF loading animated gif