The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Treatment of Black Army officer a painful reminder to veterans

‘Your service is not going to save you in this country.’

- By Stephen Deere stephen.deere@ajc.com

As an infantry soldier, Isiah Jones survived three brutal combat tours in Afghanista­n and Iraq, but it was police outside the garrison walls at home in the United States who other Black soldiers warned him about. The first thing law enforcemen­t would assess in any encounter, they cautioned, was his race.

The lesson was fresh in his mind this past weekend, after watching viral video of a traffic stop showing a Black National Guard officer being pepper-sprayed, threatened, struck and handcuffed by Virginia police late last year.

“Your service is not going to save you in this country,” Jones said.

The incident, now the subject of a federal lawsuit, has become a painful reminder for many Black troops and veterans that their military service has not insulated them from discrimina­tion and violence.

That the confrontat­ion between police and Caron Nazario, a second lieutenant in the Virginia National Guard, occurred while he was in uniform — “I’m serving this country, and this is how I’m treated?” he cried out — has fueled the outrage surroundin­g the incident and spurred calls for investigat­ion, including from Virginia’s governor.

In the video, Nazario can be heard telling an approachin­g officer he was “honestly afraid to get out” of the car after intentiona­lly pulling over in a well-lit area. One of the officers replied, “You should be!”

One officer involved in the incident has since been fired.

After World War I, there was optimism among Black Americans that their sacrifices oversees would serve as a pathway to greater equality at home. Instead, their service and military acumen was seen — particular­ly in the South — as a threat that would power a fight for civil rights.

The result was a wave of violence against returning servicemen and anti-black riots, dubbed the Red Summer of 1919.

Black veterans, some still in uniform, were accosted by police and civilians. At least 13 were lynched, according to a report by the Equal Justice Initiative.

“No one was more at risk of experienci­ng violence and targeted racial terror than black veterans who had proven their valor and courage as soldiers,” the report said.

Such racial violence persisted through World War II. In February 1946, Army veteran Isaac Woodard, still in his uniform, was blinded after being beaten by a police chief in South Carolina. A few months later, in Georgia, veteran George W. Dorsey was beaten, tortured, fatally shot and hanged along with three others in what is widely believed to be the country’s last mass lynching.

It wasn’t until 1948 that President Harry S. Truman issued an executive order declaring “equality of treatment and opportunit­y for all persons in the armed services without regard to race, color, religion or national origin.”

Black service members and veterans have long looked for ways to defuse potential tension with police, they say.

Coretta Gray, a former Air Force attorney, said that she and her Black colleagues shared practical tips on which small towns to avoid outside military bases in Texas and Louisiana. Gray said she intentiona­lly wore her uniform between work and home in case she was pulled over.

“You hope having the uniform on will help, to say ‘You don’t have to be afraid of me,’ ” Gray said.

Jones, the Army combat veteran, is now an adviser to the Black Veterans Project, an advocacy group. He recalled an encounter he had with the police while parked in a disabled spot outside a Florida convenienc­e store in 2015.

Having suffered injuries from his deployment­s, he displayed a disabled-parking placard in his car, he said. The officer, who parked next to him, accused Jones of not being disabled and slapped Jones’ phone from his hand when he began recording their exchange, according to video from the incident. “I’m a disabled veteran!” Jones told the officer several times.

The confrontat­ion lead to charges for the police officer, who was sentenced to six months of probation.

The Virginia incident encapsulat­es larger worries among communitie­s of color, said Jeremy Butler, a former Navy officer and chief executive of Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, an advocacy group.

That includes a perception that police, by default, view them as dangerous and that doing everything right — such as driving to a well-lit area to aid the police, as Nazario did — can provoke a violent response neverthele­ss, said Butler, who is Black.

The video, he said, shows “how even a Black military officer feels the police inherently see him as a threat.”

Newly elected Cobb District Attorney Flynn Broady told county commission­ers Tuesday that adding seven new positions, including two assistant district attorneys, would help prevent more deaths at the county jail.

The recent fatalities of county jail inmates were a significan­t issue in the 2020 elections that propelled Democrats into local office — among them Broady, the sheriff and three county commission­ers.

In a contentiou­s exchange at

Tuesday’s commission meeting with Kelli Gambrill, a Republican and the lone commission­er to oppose funding for the positions, Broady read off the names of four inmates who died in 2019 from a drug overdose, suicide, natural causes and complicati­ons from a perforated gastric ulcer.

Threeofthe inmates were taken into custody on drug possession charges. Another was arrested for driving on a suspended license.

Broady said that adding the positions would move people through the criminal justice system more quickly.

“The programs that we are trying to put in place, doing the things the right way, would have eliminated those deaths in our

jail, because those individual­s would have been placed back in the community, back to their jobs, back to their homes, where they could have sought proper medical care,” Broady said. “What we are trying to do is take two to three years and reduce it down to 90 days, the stay people have in our criminal justice system.”

The positions are being partially funded on a temporary basis out of roughly $276,000 of the $132 million in CARES Act money that the federal government awarded to the county in 2020.

Broady is expected to request the county permanentl­y fund the positions, which also include two legal administra­tive specialist­s, two investigat­ors and a criminal intelligen­ce analyst, when commission­ers approve the fiscal 2022 budget that begins in October.

Gambrill argued that it wasn’t appropriat­e to use federal CARES Act funds — intended to alleviate the economic hardship due to the pandemic — for expenses that would become permanent. That type of spending would lead to shortfalls, Gambrill said.

“Essentiall­y this board is setting us up for another $30, $60, $90 million deficit,” Gambrill said.

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Cobb District Attorney Flynn Broady said adding seven positions to his office would move people through the criminal justice system more quickly.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Cobb District Attorney Flynn Broady said adding seven positions to his office would move people through the criminal justice system more quickly.

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