A Lesson in Systemic Racism: Stand Your Ground, the NRA and the American Legislative Exchange Council

trayvon_stood_groundThe Florida law that allowed five white jurors and one Latina juror to exonerate George Zimmerman for the murder of Trayvon Martin is called the Justifiable Use of Force Statute.  It sounds harmless enough.  Every state has a law that defines when the use of force is justifiable.  These are commonly known as self-defense laws, except when they have a clause that removes a person’s obligation to retreat.  This clause, which was first suggested by the National Rifle Association and later backed and promoted by the American Legislative Exchange Council, is responsible for turning Florida’s self-defense law into Florida’s Stand Your Ground Law.

Here’s the part of the law that was relevant in Zimmerman’s case:

A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in any other place where he or she has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony.

It’s clear to me that this stand your ground clause should have applied to Trayvon Martin and not to the man who stalked and then murdered him.   It’s clear also to Jose V-quez, who posted this video on Facebook.

The defense didn’t present it the way Jose does and certainly Juror B37 didn’t see it that way. The case will not be heard again in the criminal court, so there’s not much point in retrying it except perhaps in an examination of the law itself. Is the verdict bad or is the law itself bad? If the verdict is bad then the judge has the right and should have overturned the verdict.  If the verdict meets the requirements of the law then the law itself is defective.

In Florida and other states that have added the stand your ground clause to their self-defense laws, it’s legal for person A to kill person B if person A is “reasonably” afraid that person B might be capable and intending to kill them first.   This should be good news for victims of domestic violence whose abusers repeatedly threaten to kill them and quite often do.  In the US, at least three women are murdered everyday by their husbands or boyfriends.  But this law is not helping victims of domestic violence because (surprise, surprise) Florida’s judges don’t apply the law evenly. The case of Marissa Alexander, the domestic violence victim who defended herself from her abuser by shooting a warning shot in the air, is a clear example of this. This law is helping white people who are persistently afraid of “the other.”

We live in a nation where it is commonly believed that people with dark skin are unjustifiably and spontaneously violent.  This is of course a stereotype and cannot be applied to all dark-skinned people, but racists are notoriously unable to recognize their racists beliefs as inaccurate. Because of this, when person A is a light-skinned person and person B is a dark-skinned person juries (whose members are not immune to commonly held racist beliefs) are likely to conclude that person A has a “legitimate” reason to fear that person B is a homicidal maniac; therefore, person A is acting reasonably when he pulls out a gun and shoots person B in the the chest even if person B is completely unarmed.

Juries don’t check the statistics, they check their guts.  “Would I be afraid of that scary Black man?,” they ask.  “Would I be afraid of that scary Muslim, that scary transgender person…  Yes, I would be afraid.  I’ve seen on television and in the news how those people are violent and they hate people like me.  So, I’d be afraid.”  As PR Watch makes clear in their report, Seven Faces of NRA/ALEC-Approved “Stand Your Ground” Law, the stand your ground defense is very effective when used by white defendants.  African-Americans are not the only victims but they are the most common.   In other words, it’s Open Season on Black Boys After a Verdict Like This.

If applied evenly, self defense laws with a stand your ground clause might work but they are not applied evenly.  Like Jim Crow and voter suppression laws, they provide a legal framework for the oppression of African-Americans.   The Justice Department should bring civil rights charges against Zimmerman as there is no doubt his actions were motivated by race.   But we must go much further than a prosecution of George Zimmerman.  As long as there are laws in place that can be used to justify the prejudices and biases of the majority population then there will be no “equal protection under the law.”   The legal system in the United States is designed to protect white, heterosexual, Anglo-Saxon protestant, men only.   The problem is not just with Zimmerman or the members of the jury or the judge who refused to overturn the verdict; The problem is system-wide and its the entire system that needs to be examined, reformed or (dare I say it) overturned.

 

Rally For Trayvon At The Justice Department

TrayvonDC

The Human Cost of the Prison Industrial Complex

Wow,   What a forum! Family & Friends of Incarcerated People (FFOIP) along with our many co-sponsoring organizations thank you for attending our forum The Human Cost of the  Prison Industrial Complex (PIC). Your attendance was as important to the success of the educational forum as the panelist and the great effort that went into bringing part II of FFOIP’s first focus together. So, once more we thank you. The Ideas expressed were so valid and varied that it is difficult to point to what might have been the strongest message coming out of this forum. However, the wrenching story of Markia Smith was so profoundly saddening it lingered in the air setting a somber tone for why we should be fighting  mass incarceration, the Prison Industrial Complex, the disparities in sentencing, and the school to prison pipeline as well as pathways to prison!

In the future FFOIP plans to host more educational forums. We will be looking to those of you who came out and took part in this first two part event to point us in the direction that these forums should be going. We do intend to address as many prison issues as we are able.  So we invite you to join us in this effort to bring about social justice change!

 We ask that you keep in touch and share what you learn with us. Just log onto our web page www.FFOIP.org or Facebook fan page and like the fan page and leave us a comment? Your unanswered question are welcome and can be addressed as well by writing us at the P. O. box listed below.   Thank you again,
Stuart W. Anderson, Founder/Director CEO Family & Friends of Incarcerated People P. O. Box 91621, Washington, DC 20090 (202) 239-9439 swandersondc@yahoo.com www.ffoip.org

Courage and a Plan

Since 2003, Washington D.C. has seen a 43 percent decline in children placed in foster care. Though some progress has been made we are still seeing greater numbers of families struggling to access the resources they need to stay together when compared to the rest of the country. Our nation’s capital has one of the highest child poverty rates in the country with nearly 50 percent of youth in Ward 8 and 40 percent of youth in Ward 7 living below the federal poverty line. In 2011, Ward 8 had the highest unemployment rate in the nation.

The above video was also produced by Adwoa Masozi to accompany the Justice Policy Institute Report Fostering Change.

These same wards are predominantly African-American and have the highest rates of children entering the child welfare system, of which 99 percent are youth of color (93 percent African-American and 6 percent Latino) according to research in Fostering Change, the latest report put out by the Justice Policy Institute. Fostering Change shows how family and neighborhood poverty are two of the strongest predictors of child maltreatment, and that the conditions poverty creates can ultimately lead to a child being removed from their home.

When considered in a broader socioeconomic context, poverty becomes more than the absence of income and or earning potential—that is, a lack of work opportunities, quality or not, to support oneself and her or his dependents. It is also dealing with the collateral effects of not being able to take care of basic needs such as buying food, medical care, school supplies and adequate clothing or paying for transportation, utilities and rent. These are just some of the conditions that can lead to children being maltreated. JPI’s report found that abused and neglected children are 59 percent more likely to be arrested, 28 percent more likely to be arrested as adults, and 30 percent more likely to commit a violent crime. In 2011, half of youth under the supervision of the District’s juvenile justice agency, Department of Youth and Rehabilitative Services (DYRS), were from Wards 7 and 8.

You see, in the end, these children grow up. For all people currently incarcerated in the United States 1 in 3 women and 1 in 10 men report a history of abuse as children. So, when we think about the needs of children in poverty, equal thought must be extended to that child’s family on whom she ultimately depends.

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How many hardships would be mitigated and lives spared the trauma of family separation and or justice system involvement if they had access to quality jobs, mental health services and for the child, an uninterrupted education? Fostering Change cites parental incarceration, substance abuse and inadequate housing as some of the leading causes for youth involvement in the child welfare system. Nationally, 80 percent of children entering foster care are a result of at least one parent experiencing a substance abuse disorder. In 2010, 1 in 6 District youth entering foster care had an incarcerated parent. Think if substance abuse were treated like a public health issue rather than a criminal one? Or if instead of building exorbitantly priced condos, there were parallel investments made in maintaining and increasing the availability of affordable housing that kept pace with the need, as articulated by the city’s poverty levels?

These problems, however daunting, aren’t insolvable. Families are doing their best and brave varying levels of unrelenting uncertainty every day. That is courage and something we need a little more of in this city—not from those going through it, calling for it, and writing reports about it but the decision makers with the power to eliminate these conditions that flat-line the trajectory of countless African-American and Latino youth in D.C.’s at-risk communities.

The other half of what’s needed is a comprehensive plan that’s viable. Substance abuse, disproportionately high incarceration rates, poor health, and low educational attainment are symptomatic of deeper systematic social inequity and a historical lack of access. Fostering Change is a report in a four-part public safety and juvenile justice series that offers a way forward for the District in the way city agencies, through strategic collaboration and community partnership, address the needs of its most vulnerable residents. Public safety starts with securing our city’s youth, and their families, who need it the most.

The Human Costs of the Prison Industrial Complex – Part II

Panel discussion focuses on the impact of mass incarceration on communities and the larger society.

kids-in-jail“More than 2.2 million men, women and children live behind bars in the U.S. The overuse and abuse of incarceration is one of the most pressing human rights concerns of our time.”

– The Correctional Association of New York

 

We want to change this. Family & Friends of Incarcerated People and the Institute for Policy Studies host this second forum of a two part series focused upon exposing the impact of the Prison Industrial Complex on individuals, families and communities.

This second forum will focus on the impact of mass incarceration on communities, using short video and a panel discussion with the insights of formerly incarcerated men who are now giving back to their communities in profound ways. The panel will also feature people to discuss ways to formulate and move some national legislation addressing mass incarceration.

Panel Discussion on
The Human Cost of the Prison Industrial Complex
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Busboys & Poets
1025 5th Street NW
Washington, DC, USA

Panelists:

  • Seema Sadanandan, filmmaker, lawyer and organizer for the ACLU of the Nation’s Capital

  • Andrea Miller, Co-director Progressive Democrats of America’s Capitol Hill letter drops and Hill meetings

  • Rick Seeney, facilitator/mentor for Family & Friends of Incarcerated People (FFOIP)

  • Lawann and Markia Smith, children of a currently incarcerated person

Moderator: Luqman M. Abdullah a founding member of the Students Against Mass Incarceration (S.A.M.I) organization at Howard University.

For more information, contact Netfa Freeman at netfa@ips-dc.org.