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- From: nyt%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (NY Transfer News)
- Subject: NEWS:Detroit Shocked by Police Killing/ww
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.234832.25158@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 23:48:32 GMT
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- DETROIT SHOCKED BY POLICE KILLING
-
- By Cheryl LaBash
- Detroit
-
- Malice Wayne Green, a 35-year-old African American worker, was
- beaten to death on Nov. 5 by white Detroit police. The next day,
- all seven cops involved were suspended without pay.
-
- A tearful Police Chief Stanley Knox said criminal charges are
- pending. Mayor Coleman Young assured Detroiters that the
- perpetrators would be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the
- law. The city administration moved swiftly to deplore the racist
- bloody murder.
-
- Lineups so witnesses could identify the killers were held over
- the weekend to speed the indictments of those who actually
- participated in the beating and departmental disciplinary action
- against those police who watched without intervening to save
- Malice Green. While indictments of police take weeks or months in
- other cities, in Detroit they are expected in less than a week.
-
- At the same time, however, police patrols were stepped up in the
- west Warren Avenue neighborhood to quell any demonstrations of
- outrage.
-
- On Nov. 8, demonstrators at a previously planned march against
- violence eagerly grabbed up signs saying, "Jail killer cops!"
- Members of the Green family attended.
-
- NOT LOS ANGELES, BUT ...
-
- In the national and local media, this murder is being compared to
- the vicious video-taped police beating of Rodney King in Los
- Angeles. When King's attackers were acquitted by a suburban white
- jury, rebellions broke out in Los Angeles and many other cities.
-
- But this is Detroit, a city where Mayor Coleman Young's first
- election in 1973 followed a mass movement against police
- brutality and racism. He was Detroit's first African American
- mayor elected without the endorsement or support of the
- Democratic Party. He disbanded a police hit squad known as STRESS
- and instituted an affirmative action program in the Detroit
- police department.
-
- The City of Detroit has a civilian board of commissioners,
- appointed by the mayor, that includes Detroit NAACP President
- Arthur Johnson.
-
- BRUTALITY COMPLAINTS UP
-
- Yet police brutality and racist repression have not been
- eliminated. In 1989, 254 brutality complaints were filed against
- Detroit police; only nine were upheld. By 1990, Detroit paid out
- $12.1 million in settlements of police assault lawsuits. In the
- same year Los Angeles, with three and a half times the
- population, paid only $9 million.
-
- Detroit attorney William Goodman, who has about a dozen brutality
- cases pending against the city police department, says, "When two
- cops beat up a guy in the presence of five other officers and no
- one tries to intervene, then you've got a situation that is the
- rule rather than the exception."
-
- The media are pleading with the people of Detroit to rely on the
- city administration to get justice for Malice Green. However, the
- Movement for a Peoples Assembly has issued a call for community
- control of the police. It says an independent commission drawn
- from the community is urgently needed to investigate the Malice
- Green murder and the reemergence of police brutality in Detroit.
-
- Such a community-based investigation "will be a stimulus to
- rebuilding the kind of movement that will end police brutality
- once and for all in Detroit," says an MPA flyer. The objective is
- community control of the police, including the right to hire and
- fire, so the police are held accountable to the workers and
- community, not the capitalist establishment.
-
- The struggle for justice for Malice Green is just beginning. The
- next question is one of venue: the trial must stay in Detroit if
- the voice of the people is to be heard--not through the courts
- but in the street. For more information, call the Movement for a
- Peoples Assembly, (313) 965-0074.
-
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
- if source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; "workers" on PeaceNet; on Internet:
- "workers@mcimail.com".)
-
-
-
- NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
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