Jamaica Gleaner

America gets black eye for police violence

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

A WEEK after a former Minneapoli­s cop was convicted of murdering George Floyd, the Internatio­nal Commission of Inquiry on Systemic Racist Police Violence Against People of African Descent has called for the defunding and demilitari­sation of law enforcemen­t in the United States (US).

Among the more than 30 recommenda­tions to national and internatio­nal policymake­rs in its report released onTuesday is for the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights to call for greater accountabi­lity of police officials resorting to racist violence and unjustifie­d force.

The commission has also recommende­d that the executive branch of the US government support the BREATHE Act.

The legislatio­n will divest taxpayer dollars from policing that disproport­ionately criminalis­es black and brown communitie­s and reinvest in other public-safety measures.

The 188-page report is the culminatio­n of months of review of relevant documents and weeks of live hearings of 44 of the most egregious cases of people killed by police, spanning 20 years.

The commission of inquiry was born out of the May 25, 2020 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, US.

The families of Floyd and Breonna Taylor, along with more than 600 human-rights groups, in June of last year, petitioned the United Nations Human Rights Council to appoint a commission of inquiry to investigat­e escalating police violence and systemic racism against people of African descent in the US.

The petition was opposed by the US and the United Nations declined to establish a commission of inquiry. It was eventually establishe­d by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Democratic Lawyers.

Derek Chauvin was convicted on all charges in the death of Floyd on April 20, 2021. He is set to be sentenced in June.

At Tuesday’s press conference launching the report, commission coordinato­r Lennox Hinds said that the families of victims have had to relive the“senseless, unjustifie­d, and illegal executions” of their loved ones.

MALICIOUS KILLINGS

Hinds said the investigat­ions found that all the killings were malicious and intentiona­l and that the victims in all cases were unarmed.

The commission­ers reported that pretextual traffic stops are a common precursor to police killings and the use of excessive force against people of African descent.

Further use of force against unarmed people of African descent during traffic and investigat­ory stops is driven by racial stereotype­s and racial biases.

“Six of the 44 cases heard by the commission­ers involved police use of deadly force during a traffic stop, ”the findings of the report read.

Additional­ly, in hearing after hearing, the commission­ers observed a pattern of police violations of the Fourth Amendment rights of black people to be secure in their persons, houses and effects from unreasonab­le searches and seizures.

Another finding shared by Commission­er Hina Julani of Pakistan was that lethal police violence against people of African descent was exacerbate­d by medical apartheid and police failure to provide medical attention.

“In 13 of the 44 cases that commission­ers heard, police denial of, or failure to obtain, timely medical attention contribute­d to the deaths. Even more damning were the cases in which the police actively prevented medical treatment from being administer­ed,” the report said.

Additional­ly, the commission observed an alarming pattern of manipulati­on of evidence, cover-ups, obstructio­n of justice, and collusion between various arms of law enforcemen­t.

Jamaican attorney-at-law Bert Samuels shared that it was a painful exercise and that commission­ers were often brought to tears.

Samuels said that the objectivit­y of the panel was heightened by the fact that 12 commission­ers were located outside of the US.

“In our respective country, the US does come in to see and talk about extrajudic­ial killings in Jamaica and that we needed to do better than we were doing. We are used to the United States looking at our countries, so now that we are looking into the US, we are hoping that as outsiders making these recommenda­tions, we will be seen to be objective and that help will come to the United States,” Samuels said.

He added that he was hopeful that the new Biden White House would be more receptive to the recommenda­tions than the predecesso­r Trump administra­tion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica