Boston Herald

Nichols’ killing another outrage for Black America

- Jeff Robbins is a Boston lawyer and former U.S. delegate to the United Nations Human Rights Commission.

During his last interview before his death three years ago, U.S. Congressma­n and civil rights hero John Lewis was asked whether he ever grew so discourage­d by the persistent enormity of racial injustice in America that he felt his efforts “weren’t working.” Lewis, who as a civil rights activist had been falsely imprisoned and savagely beaten, said no. “I never came to that point,” he said. “You get thrown in jail, maybe for a few days, and then you go to Mississipp­i, and you go to the state penitentia­ry, and you find some of your friends and your colleagues. And you get out, and you go on to the next effort. We used to say struggling is not a struggle that lasts for a few days, or a few weeks, or a few years. It is a struggle of a lifetime.”

The outrageous killing of Tyre Nichols by Memphis police officers and the equally outrageous indifferen­ce to Nichols’ suffering by firemen and emergency medical technician­s is yet another replay of a disgrace that by now seems commonplac­e. It’s obvious that for every murder of Tyre Nichols or George Floyd or Daunte Wright or the other souls whose names have crossed our television screens, there are others — plenty of them — whose names we will never learn. And for every police murder, there are hundreds, or thousands, of incidents in which Black Americans are bullied or mistreated or brutalized by law enforcemen­t officers afforded guns and badges by a citizenry that is entitled to have law enforcers, not lawbreaker­s, acting in their name. It is naive to think otherwise.

While we are at it, the poison doesn’t reside in police department­s alone. There is a culture of disrespect, or even disregard, for Black Americans in too many quarters. Black Americans know it. White Americans have to work increasing­ly hard not to.

“For me,” wrote Professor Deborah Ramirez, of the Northeaste­rn University School of Law’s Center for Law, Equity and Race, “the heroine in this tragedy is RowVaughn Wells, Tyre Nichols’ mom. Surely hers is the worst trauma I can imagine suffering. And yet, she is praying for the officers’ families and believes “a greater good” can come from the death of her son.

After Nichols’ killing, his family started a fund to turn their horror into a tangible community good. “We want to build a memorial skate park for Tyre,” they said, “in honor of his loves for skating and sunsets.”

The latest depravity has stirred new moves in Congress to pass legislatio­n reforming the “qualified immunity doctrine,” the shield in place that benefits those accused of police misconduct and protects them from lawsuits. The rule imposes on victims of such misconduct the burden of proving that police violated “clearly establishe­d statutes or constituti­onal rights.” In practice, it serves as an escape hatch for police department­s, often enabling them to get away with murder, figurative­ly if not literally.

The principal argument against reducing qualified immunity shields is that doing so would encourage frivolous lawsuits. But the same was said of other legislatio­n which vastly improved America, like the securities laws enacted during the Great Depression to protect Americans from fraud, and the civil rights laws enacted in the 1960s to protect them from discrimina­tion.

Even police reform won’t do the trick, says Leslie Short, an experience­d strategist in the area of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. “I think it’s fantasy to think we will restructur­e the police with a wave of the wand,” Short says. “Until we dig deep into the systemic racial issues in every layer of mentality, nothing changes.”

With it all, America’s communitie­s of color press on, gifting resilience and grace to a nation that must sometimes seem to those communitie­s not to deserve it.

 ?? ANDREW NELLES — THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP, POOL ?? RowVaughn Wells, the mother of Tyre Nichols, has said she prays for the families of the Memphis police officers who brutally beat her son. Here she sits with husband Rodney Wells at Nichols’ funeral last week in Memphis.
ANDREW NELLES — THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP, POOL RowVaughn Wells, the mother of Tyre Nichols, has said she prays for the families of the Memphis police officers who brutally beat her son. Here she sits with husband Rodney Wells at Nichols’ funeral last week in Memphis.
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