Thursday, 14 March 2013

Continued protests in New York


Police flood Brooklyn neighborhood in third night of brutality protest
Regular duty officers, police in riot gear and plainclothes officers lined the streets of Brooklyn's East Flatbush neighborhood as New Yorkers came out for a third night of protest over the police killing of 16-year-old Kimani Gray


RT,
13 March, 2013


The demonstration began at Brooklyn's 67th Precinct in East Flatbush, the part of New York's Brooklyn section where Gray was shot to death by police on Saturday. Witness and police accounts differ on whether Gray was brandishing a weapon before he was killed.
Brooklynites were heard shouting "murderers!" at the massive police presence Wednesday as officers prohibited people from even stepping onto the street in one of New York's poorer neighborhoods and police helicopters circled overhead.
City Councilman Jumaane Williams, who represents the area, is reported to have been arrested by numerous sources on the scene, though this has not been confirmed.
Reinforcements were brought in to the neighborhood after a police car's rear windshield was smashed at the tense but generally peaceful demonstration, where several other people are reported to have been arrested.

Image from twitter user@rdevro
"The block is closed," a police officer told Ustream user stopmotionsolo as he tried to film the protest. "Party's over," the officer added.
Gray's killing struck a nerve in East Flatbush, where in August 2012, 23-year-old Shantel Davis was shot to death by a police officer after being dragged out of her car. The officer claimed she had stolen the car she was driving at gunpoint. She bled to death.
RT has been covering the East Flatbush rallies in memory of Gray from day one, and spoke to legendary civil rights activist Carl Dix, who has spent much of his career advocating against police brutality.
The NYPD has long struggled with accusations of systematic racism, and Dix says US authorities have their priorities mixed upaker
The police – whenever they murder or kill a black or Latino youth – it is always justifiable homicide. The witnesses tell a different story, and this happens again and again,” Dix told RT.
We should live in a society where those who are entrusted with public security would sooner risk their own lives than murder or injure an innocent person. But it’s the other way around.”
People are frustrated, people are angry," Dix said of the Brooklyn rallies in recent days. "And I’m not going to condemn them for standing up expressing their anger – because the real violence in this case begins with the killing of Kimani Gray.”



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