I Need to Calm Down

  • Action Alerts

    jena_03.jpg

    pinoyhr.jpg

    australia.jpg

Insensitivity and injustice

Posted by Vox on 26 April 2008

I’m angry and upset, but hardly surprised, that the cops involved in Sean Bell’s wedding-day murder were acquitted. And I’m also unsurprised that, at least according to media coverages, only one of them had the balls to apologize, and it was a fairly empty and hurtful apology.

“I’d like to, uh,” he said, and then stopped. Seconds ticked by. His hands nervously worked the sides of the lectern, back and forth, back and forth, before he raised his head and picked up midstream, “say sorry to the Bell family for the tragedy,” he said. “I’d like to thank the Lord, my savior, for today. This is the start of my life back.” [Source]

Sorry I killed your son, but boy am I glad I got off!

“But they attacked the police with a car!” my coworker argued yesterday. I’d challenge anyone to hit the brakes when a cop jumps in front of you and shoots you 50 times. Kind of hard to stop a moving vehicle when you’re dead.

Honestly, I can almost understand the acquittal of Cooper — if I were a cop and heard one of my coworkers yelling for backup and lots of gunfire, instinct might take over. They still ought to have gotten some sort of punishment for running on instinct instead of brains, if not jail time necessarily, but I can at least see the judge’s reasoning there.

But Isnora definitely should have been given prison time. He was supposedly undercover investigating prostitution at this club, yes? So why the fuck was he following Sean Bell and his friends in the first place, who by all accounts had not tried to hire a prostitute? He abandoned his assigned job to follow and harass a bachelor party, and then opened fire on them? And Oliver, who emptied an entire clip and stopped to reload also should have been nailed. He had to know by that time that no one was firing back. How incredibly cold-blooded and calculated.

The point is, not one of them got so much as a slap on the wrist for dereliction of duty, murder of one man, and assault of another two. I cannot imagine the pain and anger and sense of betrayal Sean Bell’s family and fiancee must feel right now.

And while I’m not surprised at the verdict, I am surprised and disturbed at the number of people who choose to sympathize with the police officers and refuse to even consider how they might feel or what they might do if their son’s or fiancee’s murderers walked out of court free men.

If you’re in New York, there are some actions planned. More details at Angry Brown Butch. I’ll add more as I find them.

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>