Chattanooga Times Free Press

More than reform

Chattanoog­a demonstrat­ors call for the abolition of police following Nichols killing

- BY ELLEN GERST STAFF WRITER

Around 60 people demonstrat­ed outside a Chattanoog­a City Council meeting Tuesday, calling for the abolition of police and prisons following the police killing of Tyre Nichols in Memphis last month.

“This heinous act of state-sanctioned violence must be viewed not in isolation, but part of a longstandi­ng history of police violence against Black people in Memphis, across the state of Tennessee and the entire country,” the Rev. Charlotte Williams of Eastdale Village Community United Methodist Church said.

The rally was organized by the Chattanoog­a activist group Concerned Citizens for Justice, which formed in 1984 and revived in 2012 following the killing of Trayvon Martin in Florida.

“We believe that police and prisons do not belong in a just world,” group member Ayana Clemmons said. “We do not believe in reform. We want abolition.”

Demonstrat­ors said Nichols’ killing felt closer to home, because it was in Tennessee, but said police killings on the whole are not new.

“When I heard the news, I was not surprised,” Garrell Woods, with the Black Rainbow Movement, said of Nichols’ death. “Even more so, after the discovery that it was at the hands of Black officers and one white officer, that was also not surprising … this is proof that policing as a system is the problem.”

“We are growing by the day here, and we will not stop.” – DESMOND BROWN

As the Chattanoog­a City Council met inside the building next door, demonstrat­ors lined up on the steps of City Hall, facing 11th Street with signs calling for the end of police terrorism or commemorat­ing people killed by police. Inside, council member Chip

Henderson of Lookout Valley called for bridging racial and economic divides in an opening prayer at the start of the meeting.

Clemmons said while the reason for the demonstrat­ion wasn’t positive, the gathering may help spread awareness about police violence.

“I’m just glad to be here, and I’m glad to see the outcome, because it

started with just a few of us,” said Desmond Brown, whose brother died in the Silverdale Detention Center in May. “We are growing by the day here, and we will not stop … if they don’t hear us, we will be coming right back.”

Some demonstrat­ors said they’d last attended rallies like Tuesday’s in 2020 in response to the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. As night fell on the rally, lights from news crews lit up demonstrat­ors, and passing drivers slowed to read signs or shout encouragem­ent.

“From our standpoint, I feel like this is a solid place to start, just spreading awareness and the word that things are wrong,” demonstrat­or Taylor Delozier said.

As people joined the rally, organizers handed out flyers with a list of 76 people they say have been killed by law enforcemen­t in the Chattanoog­a area, including in neighborin­g counties in Tennessee and Georgia. Just one of those deaths resulted in a criminal trial, according to the group, and the officer was acquitted.

“For years, especially in Chattanoog­a, we’ve been hearing the same reformist agendas,” Clemmons said, “and still, Black lives are being lost and stolen from us at the hands of police and law enforcemen­t.”

The most recent of those, Damean Jones, was shot and killed by Hamilton County Sheriff’s deputies Dec. 29 after a series of car chases that began after Jones reportedly stole a car in Catoosa County, Georgia. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion is reviewing the deputies’ role in that shooting.

Family members of two men who died from alleged medical neglect at Silverdale Detention Center, DaQuarrius “Jay” Brown and Abraham Jackson, spoke about the need for change in the facility.

“When y’all say shut it down, I really do think it needs to happen,” said Ashley Jackson Kellogg, Jackson’s daughter.

Seeing a recent video of the facility taken during a tour by a lawyer, Jackson Kellogg said, convinced her the structure is unsafe. She said she’d like to see a complete overhaul of both the physical building and the staff that work there.

“My brother was a healthy person before he went into Silverdale,” Brown said. “They beat around the bush about everything. I never see them show up to any of these rallies that we do.”

Activists in Chattanoog­a have called for the city’s police budget to be reduced and for more community oversight of the department since weeks of protest in 2020 following Floyd’s murder.

While the department has pointed to its Police Advisory and Review Committee as an oversight measure, demonstrat­ors Monday said they felt the members, chosen by the City Council, don’t represent the public. The committee is also limited by its lack of subpoena power, activists said.

“PARC is merely an administra­tive puppet of the CPD’s internal affairs, and it cannot independen­tly investigat­e the police or hold them accountabl­e in any way whatsoever,” Williams said.

Police Chief Celeste Murphy held a town hall this week in an effort to hearing community concerns about law enforcemen­t.

“Now more than ever, we have to work together to bridge the great divide in our communitie­s and with the police,” Murphy said in a recent statement. “And as your police chief, I assure you this remains a primary focus for our department.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS ?? The Rev. Charlotte Williams of Eastdale Village Community Church speaks Tuesday as individual­s gather behind her on the steps leading to City Hall. The group Concerned Citizens for Justice organized The People's Rally to End Police Terrorism outside of Chattanoog­a's City Hall in response to the death of Tyre Nichols in Memphis and others.
STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS The Rev. Charlotte Williams of Eastdale Village Community Church speaks Tuesday as individual­s gather behind her on the steps leading to City Hall. The group Concerned Citizens for Justice organized The People's Rally to End Police Terrorism outside of Chattanoog­a's City Hall in response to the death of Tyre Nichols in Memphis and others.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS ?? Mo Rodriguez Cruz of the community grassroots organizati­on Semillas speaks as individual­s gather behind him on the steps leading to City Hall. The group Concerned Citizens for Justice organized The People's Rally to End Police Terrorism outside of Chattanoog­a's City Hall on Tuesday in response to the death of Tyre Nichols in Memphis and others.
STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS Mo Rodriguez Cruz of the community grassroots organizati­on Semillas speaks as individual­s gather behind him on the steps leading to City Hall. The group Concerned Citizens for Justice organized The People's Rally to End Police Terrorism outside of Chattanoog­a's City Hall on Tuesday in response to the death of Tyre Nichols in Memphis and others.

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