Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Anquan Boldin shares poignant inspiratio­n for social justice

- By Arnie Stapleton

Players Coalition cofounder Anquan Boldin shared a poignant personal tragedy in the signature public service spot of the NFL’s Inspire Change platform during Sunday’s conference championsh­ip games.

In the spot that will run through Super Bowl Sunday, Boldin shares his inspiratio­n to launch social justice work: the 2015 shooting death of his cousin Corey Jones, 31, at the hands of a plaincloth­es police officer after his car had broken down on Interstate 95 in Florida.

A jury in West Palm Beach last year found ex-police officer Nouman Raja guilty of armed manslaught­er and attempted first-degree murder in the death of Jones.

Prosecutor­s said Raja never identified himself to the stranded motorist as a police officer when he arrived in an unmarked white van with tinted windows and approached him while wearing plaincloth­es and a baseball cap.

Raja was on duty doing burglary surveillan­ce when he shot Jones several times in the encounter caught on audio.

“There are just some things that are bigger than football and I felt like starting the Players Coalition and affecting change in this country was one of those things,” Boldin says in the 60-second spot that debuted during the AFC championsh­ip game between the Titans and Chiefs.

“Had it not been for the work that we do, Corey’s death would have been in vain,” Boldin says in the PSA, concluding, “The best way to inspire change is to be it.”

The league launched the initiative, which emphasizes education and economic developmen­t, community and police relations and criminal justice reform, in 2019 in connection with its 32 teams and the Players Coalition, a group of current and former players that works for social justice.

The league and the players had establishe­d a working relationsh­ip in October 2017 following player demonstrat­ions for social justice during the national anthem.

“We are aware of the challenges we’ve faced over the last few years. The issues that NFL players brought to the forefront do not only impact players. These are American issues that affect us all,” said Anna Isaacson, the NFL’s senior vice president of social responsibi­lity.

“The NFL is fortunate to have an incredible platform and with this platform, we have the opportunit­y to help create positive change and work toward social justice for all of our communitie­s. We’re amplifying and supporting the work that players have started — this is what Inspire Change exists to do.”

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