Las Vegas Review-Journal

Justice or mercy for ‘Central Park Karen’?

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IN the case widely known as involving “Central Park Karen” and the Black bird-watcher, a lot of people are disappoint­ed that birder Christian Cooper wants to temper justice with mercy.

As you may recall, Amy Cooper (no relation to Christian) became a “Karen” in internet chatter after she was video-recorded by Christian in New York’s Central Park. He had asked her politely to put her dog on a leash, in accordance with park regulation­s, and she responded by calling police on him.

Why “Karen”? Despite various theories, no one seems to be certain of how this particular name was appropriat­ed to describe women, usually white, who commit acts that are perceived to be bullying and sometimes racist. But Amy Cooper quickly rose to the top of most-played “Karen” videos on Youtube and elsewhere.

“There is an African American man … in Central Park,” she shouts breathless­ly into her phone while jerking her dog’s collar too hard. “He is recording me, threatenin­g myself and my dog.”

Later police charged Amy Cooper with filing a false police report. She also was fired from her job at investment firm Franklin Templeton as her infamy circled the globe. She even lost her dog temporaril­y while animal rescue workers checked its condition.

Is that enough punishment? She faces an October court date, but Christian Cooper has ignited a new debate by declining to participat­e in her prosecutio­n. In interviews and a Washington Post opinion piece, he notes that her charges are being brought by the state, not by him.

“I think it’s a mistake to focus on this one individual,” he wrote. “The important thing the incident highlights is the long-standing, deep-seated racial bias against us Black and brown folk that permeates the United States.”

Which is precisely the reason why some other folks believe an example should be made of Amy Cooper. They include his sister, Melody Cooper, as she wrote in a New York Times op-ed May 31. She loves and understand­s her brother, she says, but wants Amy Cooper to be held accountabl­e to help everyone acknowledg­e the humanity of Black people.

Who’s right? They both are. It’s not hard to see virtue in both siblings’ arguments. Cooper has paid a high cost for her ill-considered attempt to use the other Cooper’s skin color against him.

But it’s also not hard to imagine what might have happened to Cooper had he not video-recorded the whole episode. Think of what happened to another suspect the same day as the

Central Park episode: the video-recorded death of George Floyd, a Black man who died with the knee of a white Minneapoli­s police officer on his neck.

In her apparent panic, Amy Cooper embodies the quintessen­tial “Karen” episode, the 1955 death of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old Black boy from Chicago who was murdered by white thugs on the word of a 21-year-old white woman who claimed he had whistled at her.

Some human rights activists are reluctant to rely on a justice system that they see as deeply flawed in providing anything close to equal justice. But flaws need to be corrected. That’s a job for all of us Americans.

The tragedy of George Floyd and the farce in Central Park have awakened what has been called a racial reckoning. We are more aware than ever of the maladies. Now we need to work for a cure.

Contact Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotri­bune.com.

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