Baltimore Sun

Mckesson is arrested at protest in Baton Rouge

Vigil held in Federal Hill for police as others march

- By Kevin Rector and Tim Prudente

DeRay Mckesson, the civil rights activist who took a top administra­tive job with Baltimore’s public school system after an unsuccessf­ul mayoral bid, was among more than 100 arrested in Baton Rouge amid nationwide protests against police brutality.

Mckesson said he believes his arrest was unlawful and that his actions were in line with his mission, personally and profession­ally, to “make sure that we all live in the best world possible.” City school officials said Mckesson was acting as a private citizen.

“I have a strong commitment to justice and equity across all sectors, namely police and state violence and education, and those commitment­s are not in conflict with each other,” Mckesson said after his release on Sunday.

The deaths last week of two black men at Mckesson

the hands of police officers in separate incidents in Louisiana and Minnesota, as well as the killing of five police officers in Dallas in apparent retributio­n, continued to resound in Baltimore and around the country.

On Sunday night about 50 people held a candleligh­t vigil in Federal Hill for the slain officers, and hundreds of protesters who decried the deaths of Philando Castile outside St. Paul and Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge marched through downtown Baltimore Friday and Saturday nights.

On Tuesday, two Baton Rouge police officers fatally shot Sterling outside a convenienc­e store in an incident that was captured on video. On Wednesday, an officer shot Castile during a traffic stop as he reached for his wallet, according to his girlfriend, who live-streamed video of the aftermath on Facebook.

Then on Thursday, five police officers were fatally shot and others were wounded during protests in Dallas. As gunfire rang out, crowds of people fled and the chaos appeared on TVs around the country. Dallas authoritie­s said Micah Xavier Johnson, 25, an Army veteran, opened fire out of anger toward white officers.

Karen Walker, a 37-year-old homemaker from Glen Burnie, founded the Facebook group Stand Up For Baltimore City Police after last year’s riots following the death of Freddie Gray, who suffered fatal spinal injuries in the back of a police transport van. She organized the vigil on Sunday.

“It’s about rememberin­g five officers,” she said. “There are kids whose fathers aren’t coming home and wives whose husbands aren’t coming home.

“I’m not saying all cops are good,” she added. “I don’t agree with what happened in Baton Rouge and Minnesota.”

Wearing blue T-shirts and holding tall, white candles that flickered in the evening breeze, those who attended fell silent as Oliver Groman, who came from Pennsylvan­ia, read the names of those Dallas officers killed.

Teri George, a Northeast Baltimore mother who worries about her son, a 25-year-old Baltimore police officer, held a homemade sign that read: “We stand with you Dallas.”

“It’s hard as a mom for your kids to go and suit up every day,” she said.

Meanwhile, protests were staged around the country.

In the biggest confrontat­ion between police and demonstrat­ors since Castile’s shooting, about 100 people were arrested late Saturday in St. Paul during a highway standoff and in other parts of the city. More than two dozen police officers and state troopers were hurt. Police Chief Todd Axtell called the pelting of officers with rocks, bottles, firecracke­rs and other objects “a disgrace.”

In Baton Rouge, protesters rallied Saturday at the police department, the state’s Capitol and the store where Sterling was shot. The demonstrat­ion outside the Baton Rouge Police Department was tense as protesters faced off with police in riot gear.

Shouting “No justice! No peace!” a few hundred protesters gathered, waving signs as passing cars honked their support. Some drivers stopped with bottles of water.

Mckesson, who turned 31 on Saturday, was arrested on one count of obstructio­n of a highway, which is a misdemeano­r, as he was walking along Baton Rouge’s Airline Highway. In a widely circulated photo of his arrest, the Baltimore native is seen on one knee, wearing a T-shirt reading “#StayWoke” — a Twitter hashtag used to urge awareness of the political, social and cultural realities facing minority communitie­s

Roy Rodney Jr., a Louisiana attorney for Mckesson, said the activist was “wrongfully arrested, excessivel­y charged and overly detained as a result of the exercise of his fundamenta­l and constituti­onally protected right to free speech.” Rodney urged prosectors to “reconsider.”

In a statement Sunday, Baton Rouge Police Sgt. Don Coppola Jr. said the protest near police headquarte­rs turned violent after “individual­s from outside our Baton Rouge community” arrived. More than 100 people were arrested and three rifles, three shotguns and two pistols were confiscate­d, Scott Blasi, left, and his fiancee, Teri George of Overlea, brought signs to the candleligh­t vigil at Federal Hill to support all police officers. George said her son is a police officer. Coppola wrote.

Mckesson denied that outsiders caused problems in Baton Rouge. He said he traveled there because, when protesting in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014, he and others “made a commitment then that we would stand with [people in other cities] when the time came, and I keep my commitment­s.”

Schools CEO Santelises said she saw Mckesson Friday afternoon and learned Sunday morning of his arrest.

“We have had as a country a tense, tense week, and DeRay is still a private citizen and he was on his time,” she said. “This is part of who he is, it’s part of what drives him, and it’s part of what drives him to move the work for kids.”

Mckesson said he planned to be back at work on Tuesday.

Mckesson first landed on the national stage two years ago when he took a leave of absence from his job as senior director of human capital in the Minneapoli­s Public Schools system to protest the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson.

He founded and leads We the Protesters, a group that advocates policy changes to stem police violence, and has won praise from President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

He was named to Santelises’ cabinet last month. In his new role, Mckesson is earning $165,000 as the city school district’s chief of human capital.

He manages a budget of $4 million and 56 employees.

Jamira Burley, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s manager for gun violence and criminal justice reform, said she protested alongside Mckesson in Baton Rouge. They intended to follow police orders, she said, but police “bum-rushed” and “tackled” him within moments of telling them to stay off the highway.

“Everyone kept saying, ‘ Why are you arresting him? Why are you arresting him?’ ” Burley said. “There was literally no explanatio­n.” .

Protests continued Sunday. Authoritie­s in Baton Rouge say 30 to 40 people were arrested at an unschedule­d protest. They were part of a group of 100 to 200 that moved toward Interstate 110 until officers moved them back.

Finally after warnings, officers in full riot gear arrived corralled and began arresting some protesters, while others fled. jobs of the future are filled.’”

Morgan hosted its third annual “Welcome Home Day” event in June to help students who’d dropped out complete the re-enrollment process and necessary paperwork with the registrar and financial aid office — in just a few hours.

Deondre Brown, 27, was there to reenroll in engineerin­g school. He left Morgan last year as a junior because he owed the university about $11,000 despite working two jobs on campus and at the Horseshoe Casino. He was hoping Morgan could give him scholarshi­ps to help bring that balance down.

“I came too far to just quit,” said Brown, who dreams of building a bridge one day after he graduates. “I’m not a quitter, I like to finish what I started. I would do anything to finish.”

Chandra Kennedy, 54, left Morgan in the early 1980s and came to Welcome Home Day to re-enroll.

“That chain has been around my ankle all this time,” said Kennedy, adding that her daughter is a freshman at Morgan. “I said I am not going to let her get her degree before I do.”

Melinda Edwards, who graduated from Bowie State in 2015 after re-enrolling through that university’s comeback program, wasn’t sure she would have returned to finish her psychology degree after giving birth to her daughter, Aniya. She left school in 2011 and returned in 2013.

“I guess getting the letter was the extra push I needed to finish,” she said.

To start the program at Morgan, Mfume identified 40 students who had left within the last year and a half, were in good academic standing and had a year or less of classes left to finish their degree.

Mfume learned that nearly all of the students left because of a life or career change; they had babies, got a new job or promotion, moved away, had a death or sickness in the family. Some had lost their financial aid or had outstandin­g balances on their accounts.

The one-on-one attention and the notion that the university cared about them completing college was much more important to returning students than the monetary enticement­s, Mfume said.

“It’s just the idea that someone wants you back, is courting you,” Mfume said. “The customer service piece also goes a long way.”

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AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN

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