Statement on the Sean Bell Verdict
by Cynthia McKinney
April 26, 2008
The legislation and histories of the time, and the language used in the Declaration of
Independence, show, that neither the class of persons who had been imported as slaves, nor their
descendants, whether they had become free or not, were then acknowledged as a part of the people, nor intended to be
included in the general words used in that memorable instrument. . . . [A]ltogether unfit to associate
with the white race, either in social or political relations; and so far inferior, that they had no rights
which the white man was bound to respect.
"
And with that, the United States Supreme Court ensured that the 20th Century would be defined, as
W.E.B.
DuBois wrote, by the color line.
So, while we might be outraged at the Sean Bell decision itself, it comes directly from the flawed
jurisprudence that gave us the Dred Scott Decision in 1857, Plessy v.
Ferguson in 1896, Bakke in 1978, Croson in 1989, Adarand in
1995, Gratz in 2003, and all of the Ward Connerly-inspired attacks on the very same affirmative
action hard won by students facing water hoses and dogs; men and women facing jail, lynch mobs, and
death.
Interestingly, according to Attorney Roger Wareham of the December 12th Movement's
International Secretariat, the criminal justice system in this country "always finds a
rationale for letting off cops who kill black and brown people." Indeed, police officers seem to know that they
can kill certain people with impunity.
Just in New York City alone, Wareham rattles off the murders that have defined police-"communities of
color" relations over two generations:
Clifford Glover, 1972
Louis Baez, 1978 shot (22 times)
Randolph Evans, 1979
Eleanor Bumpers, 1985 (a grandmother)
Amadou Diallo, 1999
Patrick Dorismond, 2003
Sean Bell, 2006
Sadly, New York City isn't the only city, with this plague. In 2001, the Dayton Daily News reported that
Cincinnati topped the list of police killings of Blacks, having had 22 people shot, 13 fatally. All
black men. Three unarmed. Plus two additional deaths due to police use of chemical irritants.
The 2001 "Cincinnati Intifada" lasted for three nights after a white police officer
murdered an unarmed black teenager. Timothy Thomas was the fifteenth black male killed by Cincinnati
police over a six-year period. I traveled with Ron Daniels and others to Cincinnati to support the call by
black residents, including Reverend Damon Lynch III and 36 other ministers, for a boycott of that
city. Still reeling from the effects of the boycott, Cincinnati made headlines again in 2003 when the world
watched as one black and five white police offic
by Cynth
April
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