New: A BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S DIARY, week ending Jan. 29
This was a very difficult week with more mass shootings and the terrible beating and death of Tyre Nichols at the hands of Memphis Police
The special unit Scorpion, which stands for Street Crimes Operations to Restore Peace In Our Neighborhoods, is disbanded now, but I expect it was built on the myth that Black men, Black boys and Black neighborhoods require tougher policing than White, high resource (wealthy) neighborhoods, the kind of policing that grew stop-and-frisk and exercises in power, intimidation, harassment, fear and violence. It is all justified as stopping crime. It is ugly, described over and over in books on systemic racism and disparate treatment like White Space Black Hood: Opportunity Hoarding and Segregation in the Age of Inequality by Sheryll Cashin, A Colony in a Nation by Chris Hayes, Walking with the Devil: The Police Code of Silence 3rd Edition by Michael W. Quinn and The Rage of Innocence: How America Criminalizes Black Youth by Kristin Henning.
Taking police away from traffic stops for minor infractions is in the talk show discussions again, along with how body cameras were supposed to stop police violence. Body cameras just give the public a record when and if they are released.
In the beating of Tyre Nichols, the police gave 71 confusing and conflicting commands in 13 minutes like yelling “on the ground” when Nichols was already pinned down on the ground, all apparently to create the narrative that Nichols was the aggressor and the police victims. It is sickening.
Berkeley Mayor Arreguin generated the concept of BerkDOT back in 2020. BerkDOT stands for a new Berkeley Department of Transportation, with the purpose of removing minor traffic violations away from policing as a method of addressingl biased policing. Months of meetings were devoted to creating BerkDOT, and then it stopped. California State law prevents implementation of BerkDOT, but that may change.
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