As you read this article, keep in mind that Kevin Powell has long been
out there speaking truth to power. Last night Tuesday April 29th) he had held a townhall meeting in
Brooklyn to help the community find ways to deal with this frustrating Sean Bell situation. His meeting did not get all the
fanfare mainstream coverage but it got love from the people in his neighborhood. We should also note that Kevin is
also running for Congress and and the word around town is his bold, forthright leadership is perched to
unseat a 26 year incumbent who hasn't done too much for his district. While people go nuts over Obama, folks may
wanna pay close attention to Powell's race in Brooklyn. One of our own may soon be sitting in the halls of
Congress.
Davey D
Sean Bell Tragedy
By Kevin Powell
April 25, 2008
I am
sick to my stomach and I really do not know what to say right this second.
My cell and office phones have been blowing up all day, and people have been emailing me nonstop, to let me know that
Detectives Michael Oliver , Gescard Isnora , and Marc Cooper , the
three New York City police officers accused of shooting 50 times and murdering Sean Bell, were found
not guilty on all counts: Oliver, who fired 31 times and reloaded once, and Isnora, who fired 11 times, had
been charged with manslaughter, felony assault and reckless endangerment. They faced up to 25 years in
prison if convicted on all charges. Cooper, who fired four times, faced up to a year in jail if convicted of
reckless endangerment.
And that's it: Sean Bell, a mere 23 years of age, out partying the morning before the wedding to the mother of his
two small children, dead, gone, forever. Sean Bell and his two friends, Trent Benefield and Joseph Guzman,
all unarmed, ambushed by New York's finest. His last day, November 25, 2006, is marked as another tragic one
in New York City history. How many more? I once heard in a protest song.
How many more?
But I knew this verdict was coming.
I have lived in New York City for nearly two decades and, before that, worked as a news reporter for several
publications throughout the city's five boroughs, and I cannot begin to tell you how many cases of police
brutality and police misconduct I covered or witnessed, more often than not a person of color on the
receiving end: Eleanor Bumpurs .
Michael Stewart …Amadou Diallo …Sean Bell.
This is not to suggest that all police officers are trigger-happy and inhumane, because I do not believe
that. They have a difficult and important job, and many of them do that job well, and maintain outstanding
relationships with our communities. I know officers like that. But what I am saying is that New York, America,
this society as a whole, still views the lives of Black people, of Latino people, of people of color, of
women, of poor or working-class people, as less than valuable. It does not matter that two of the three officers
charged in the Sean Bell case were officers of color and one White. What matters is the mindset of racism that
permeates the New York Police Department, and far too many police departments across America. Shooting in
self-defense is one thing, but it is never okay to shoot first and ask questions later, not even if a police
officer "feels" threatened, not even if the source of that "feeling" is a Black or Latino
person.
That is a twisted logic deeply rooted in the America social fabric, dating back to the founding fathers and
their crazy calculations about slaves being three-fifths of a human being.
And in spite of Barack Obama , Oprah Winfrey , Tiger Woods , and other
successful Black individuals, by and large the masses of Black people, and Latino people, are
perpetually viewed through this lens of not being quite human.
William Kristol of the New York Times wrote what I felt was an incredibly
Davey
Sean Bell Trage
By Kevin
April
I am
sick to my stomaMy cell and offic
And that'
How many more?
But I knew this verdi
I have lived
Micha
This is not to sugge
That is a twist
And in spite
Willi

