Washington DC Residents Decry Police Tactics

Cross-Posted from WTOP By Michelle Basch WASHINGTON — The stories of people dissatisfied with the tactics of the D.C. police were at the center of a hearing at Howard University Wednesday night.

“The ACLU and the Washington Lawyers’ Committee have documented vast racial disparities in the arrest rates in D.C.,” said D.C. Councilmember Tommy Wells, who chairs the Committee on the Judiciary and Public Safety, which oversees the Metropolitan Police Department.

“Some of these officers treat the citizens who are black in this community like animals on a daily basis. They jump out on the street and confront us aggressively. They pull us from our vehicles for no good reason at all. They yank at our clothing violently while they search us for contraband,” said Patrice Sulton, with the NAACP’s D.C. branch.

Iman Hadieh, who describes herself as white and Palestinian, says that last Monday she was talking with a bunch of young black friends outside a bar along 14th Street in Northwest when jump-outs — police in unmarked cars — suddenly drove up and searched everyone in the group but her.

“I watched as these Black Americans were stripped of their human and Constitutional rights right in front of God and everybody. This was an all-out assault on the Black male. … I’ve never seen anything like this except in war,” she said.

D.C. police are now testing body cameras that film interactions with the public from an officer’s point of view, but Philip Fornaci, with the Campaign Against Police Abuse, says his group plans to start what they call a “D.C. Cop Watch.”

“We encourage residents to film the police themselves, to turn the videotapes and cameras into tools of self-defense. We’re creating a D.C. Cop Watch website where people can post those videos,” he says.

“What I’d love to see is a [police] chief that’s willing to think outside the box. That’s willing to start thinking about, ‘how do we engage in relationships with the community that are positive, that build trust?,’” D.C. Councilmember David Grosso said at the hearing.

“My staff won’t let me tell you that I think we ought to get rid of guns in the city, and that police shouldn’t have guns, so I’m not going to tell you that,” Grosso added, to some applause from the audience.

The hearing will reconvene at 11:30 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 27 at the Wilson Building, where Police Chief Cathy Lanier and other members of the police department are scheduled to testify.

DC Mayoral Candidate Debates

Next Tuesday, April 1, 2014, is DC’s Mayoral Primary. Given that the District of Columbia has never elected a mayor who wasn’t a Democrat, so far as I know anyway, the primary can be counted on as a prediction of the election itself. A Google search of the District’s mayoral race reveals that most news outlets are reporting on who’s likely to win and not so much on their position on the issues. One exception is the Examiner.com article, D.C. mayoral candidate forum addresses sustainability and the environment.

If you were unable to attend any of the candidate forums but want to know what the candidates think about income inequality, the achievement gap, the wage gap, housing affordability, and other pivotal issues, you can watch the Un-Forums. These one-on-one conversations with the leading mayoral candidates were held on three evenings in March at the University of the District of Columbia Law School before a live audience. The forums were moderated by Mark Segraves of NBC4 and Marc Fisher of the Washington Post. Participating candidates were Muriel Bowser, Andy Shallal, Jack Evans, Tommy Wells and Vincent Orange.

Mark Segraves Interviews Andy Shallal and Tommy Wells.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34dsTjuRN2Y

Mark Fisher Interviews Vincent Orange and Jack Evans.

Mark Fisher Interviews Muriel Bowser.

For those who want an opportunity to hear from all of the candidates, you can watch WAMU’s candidate forum.

Labor and Neighborhood Activists Rally Against Wal-Mart’s Blackmail

Cross-Posted From DC Independent Media Center By Luke

The Large Retailer Accountability Act Clearly Supported By DC’s Progressive Community

On the 10th of July labor and neighborhood activists held a rally outside the Wilson Building to support passage of the Large Retailer Accountability Act. It would raise the minimum wage in certain big box stores to $12.50 an hour. Wal-Mart has vowed to abandon at least half their plans to open stores in DC if this passes. Rev Hagler told them not once but twice to “Go to Hell” during his speech!

I think this is the first time I’ve ever heard any pastor tell anyone to go to Hell, but if anyone deserves it, Wal-Mart does, especially in light of their resort to extortion when bribery failed.

Workers from several big box stores complained about being unable to afford to shop where they work due to law wages. One man who works at a Wal-Mart said he could not even afford to have his own place due to the wages Wal-Mart pays.

After the rally, activists went into the Wilson Building to confront several anti-LRAA councilmembers, then observe the vote. I could not go with them, as the Wilson Building is an ID and bag search building.

Wal-Mart has also crudely threatened the DC Council. On the 9th of July, less than 24 hours before the final vote on the LRAA, Wal-Mart lobbyists bluntly said they could cancel their Skyland and two other unbuilt stores if the bill is signed into law. They also said they might abandon (“reconsider”) the three stores under construction. Well, this extortion won’t exactly break DC”s legs, as a lot of people would rather have an abandoned Wal-Mart than an open one in their neighborhood!

 

This Just In! from Grassroots DC’s Coordinator

DC’s City Council voted for the Large Retail Accountability Act. The vote was not unanimous. Councilmembers Yvette Alexander (Ward 7), Muriel Bowser (Ward 4), David Catania (At-Large), Mary Cheh (Ward 3) and Tommy Wells (Ward 6) all voted against the bill. We must still wait to see if Mayor Gray signs on or vetoes the bill, but it looks like years of pressure from community groups, labor and individual activists is turning the tide against a Walmart invasion of the District of Columbia. Is this what democracy looks like? I think maybe so.