Posted on 06/16/2015 2:32:40 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Our team arrived the day after Freddie Grays funeralafter watching Baltimore on fire the night before. High school kids had clashed with police, and a CVS at the corner of Pennsylvania and North Avenues was looted and burnedan image that would quickly be seared into the national consciousness.
By the time we got to that intersection the next day, people were cleaning up the CVS. The mood was one of healing. People were playing music, dancing in the streets, and trying to get back on their feet and grapple with what had happened the night beforeand to process an anger that you could still feel.
What struck us quickly was the depth of Baltimores grassroots communitya variety of organizations that have been focused on addressing the rift between police and residents for decades. When we arrived, that spectrum of social movements was on display. It was a really powerful contrast to the images of destruction that captured everyones attention the night before.
At the same time, the police were still out and the militarized presence of the National Guard was everywherein the air, on the ground, tanks, tactical units, riot teams, men in military fatigues walking the streets. So there was this general feeling of unease that lasted the whole week following Grays funeral, ending with the announcement by the prosecutor, Marilyn Mosby, of charges against the officers involved in his arrest.
We spent a lot of time in the neighborhood where Gray grew up, outside the Penn North Community Center, a residential drug treatment clinic that is also a sort of community hub. People are always out on the sidewalk in front or in the park across the streetand thats where we would go and meet people. One of them was Blaize Connelly-Duggan, who runs the center. He described this almost magical coming together that had occurred on the block since Grays death.
But he lamented that it took burning stores to get the rest of the cityand the nationto pay attention.
Its sad that people seem to care more about broken buildings than broken lives, he said.
Heber Brown III, the pastor at Pleasant Hope Baptist Church, said he saw the property destruction of the uprisings as a reaction to a daily violencesomething his two boys, and many young people in the city, feel not just physically, but mentally.
It frustrates me watching that beautiful wonderment and gleam of innocence leave my son's eyes as he realizes what's going on, Brown told us. They count the gun tanks, and I wonder what that's doing to them. Why do we think that it's OK for our children to see this and to live in this?"
Struggle for accountability
On May 1, when the prosecutor announced charges against the officers, we went back to the intersection of Pennsylvania and North. People were dancing in the streets. We met several of Freddie Gray's friends, who seemed to be in disbelief that thered been some small step towards justice for their friendand that theyd been heard.
But even at the celebration, there were families who came with pictures of their loved ones that they say were killed in police encounters. People were looking for some semblance of justice in their own cases.
Thats when we met Tawanda Jones.
Jones says her brother Tyrone West was killed by police in 2013. Every week, she leads a vigil West Wednesdays, she calls itoutside of the Northeast District Police Department or City Hall where she calls for charges to be brought against the officers involved in Wests death. Jones is tireless. Shes totally devoted to finding justice for her brother. And in the process, shes connected her family's experience to a pervasive one across Baltimore.
Baltimore is the capital of police brutality in the U.S., A. Dwight Pettit, a civil rights attorney who represents Jones family, told us.
The city has one of the largest police forces per capita in the U.S. And the department has presided over a period of aggressive drug-war policing that helped create the deep rift between it and parts of the community. We talked to many people who no longer believe that calling the cops will resolve the problem at hand. To many of them, police are nothing more than an occupying force.
Pettit says his firm simply cant handle the sheer volume of families who seek counsel for police brutality complaints. He now only take cases where someone has died or been severely beaten.
Beyond the icon
While many in the media were drawn to Baltimore because of the Freddie Gray incident, and the communitys response to his death, we wanted to know more about the manlike where he came from and what he experienced.
We went to the Gilmor Homes where he grew up and where he was arrested on the sidewalk. There were memorials that had sprouted up, murals, shrines almost. And we met his life long friend Brandon Ross, who still seemed to be in a state of shock over the loss of Gray.
Ross kept saying there was no reason why Gray had to be chased. Running is not a crime. But he told us that in this neighborhood, if you're a young black man, any number of simple actions, like making eye contact with a police officer and running away, is viewed by police as suspicious behavior. And that's the baseline mentality of that underlies these episodes of police violence. Ross is forming an organization that will fight for justice for his friend and also address issues like food security in his neighborhood.
Everyone was talking about Gray in the the streets. Hed become a rallying cry and an icon. But here was his friend who was on that street corner every day with him. And whose life would never be the same.
Ross said Gray was a part of his daily routine. They had a little bird call, a sound, a little signal, between the two of them. Ross would make the bird call down the street in the morning. Gray would hear it. And then he would return it.
They would know without seeing each other that their friend was OK.
******
Paul Abowd is the producer of the Fault Lines film "Baltimore Rising." Nikhil Swaminathan contributed to this report.
Paul Abowd, Fault Lines, Associate Producer
Paul Abowd is a journalist and filmmaker based in D.C.. Prior to joining Fault Lines, he was a journalism fellow at American University and an investigative reporter at the Center for Public Integrity, covering money in politics.
His work has appeared in The Huffington Post, Mother Jones, The Washington Post, Labor Notes, Nation of Change, Z Magazine, Monthly Review, Truthout, Counterpunch, Critical Moment, The Muslim Link, In These Times, The Electronic Intifada, WisconsinWatch.org, The Center for Public Integrity and NBC.com.
He is from Detroit, where he reported on the labor movement, produced a documentary about public housing, and led poetry workshops for 4th graders.
Nikhil Swaminathan
Before joining Fault Lines, Nikhil held online editorial positions at Scientific American, Good and Seed magazines.
Most recently, he was senior editor at Archaeology, where he wrote and edited feature articles, in addition to managing the redesign and operations of the magazines website.
His writing has appeared in Wired, Mother Jones, Discover, Scientific American Mind, Psychology Today, Atlanta, The Village Voice, FastCompany.com, and Newsweek.com.
I'm an old white guy. If I make eye contact with a cop and then run away, it will be viewed as suspicious behavior. Probably because it IS suspicious behavior from any logical POV.
If that doesn't qualify, what would the authors consider suspicious?
We can argue about whether cops should shoot people that turn and run on seeing them, but this is the first I've seen someone claim the cops shouldn't chase them down and ask them why they ran.
Next week, reporting live from Raqqa Syria, ISIS headquarters.....
Makes for good TV for those of us in the hills
Baltimore’s non-solutions to urban woes
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/readersrespond/bs-ed-gray-letter-20150615-story.html
They probably have “different” Muslims to embed there.
“Seared into our national conscience”
Truckloads of women and girls arriving at a slavemarket, or fat women and skinny men with pants on the ground running out of a burning CVS with armloads of toilet paper ......
Hmm.
Not a peep for 50 plus murders because of Black on Black crime. The article is totally hogwash.
My computer/modem blew up during a T-storm. Having a difficult time posting from IPhone Lol
Its sad that people seem to care more about broken buildings than broken lives, he said.
I’ve been reading articles like this and the above sentiment since the 1970’s. When are the people in these neighborhoods going to notice that the people they have been voting for all this time seem content with the way things are.
You just can’t civilize negro...I wish it wasn’t so. It’s really disheartening to see the results of what legally empowered negros have done to all our once functioning institutions/municipalities/industries/schools.
It’s not all black people...obviously blacks like Tom Sowell, Walter Williams, Jason Riley, and millions of others proves you can. It’s the Black Underclass that can’t be civilized. Somehow the BU has to be separated from the rest of society.
I’m beginning to get tired and this was good comic relief before nodding off :)
They’re just misunderstood youths :)
lol
Apparently you have no problem posting. It’s stopping that’s a problem. ;)
And if you mentioned those names to any black activist, you would get screamed at, "THEY'RE NOT REALLY BLACK!"
Where do I start???
Two Leftist metrosexuals with street creds from major Leftist outlets?
Al Jazzerra???
Thanks for the laughs, ‘Vet.
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