Militant South Bronx march shows the power, and anger, of the people

“Our Streets, Our Blocks — Jail All Killer Cops!” On Feb. 4, the 13th
anniversary of the murder of Amadou Diallo, a militant march responded
to two new incidents of police violence that have rocked the Bronx.

The
New York Police Department’s brutal beating of Jatiek Reed and the
cold-blooded killing of Ramarley Graham brought hundreds of angry
protesters, mostly young people, into the streets and in front of the
41st and 42nd Precincts. A spontaneous march then developed down 3rd
Avenue, which the police could not contain.

In one the central
arteries of the South Bronx, 149th and 3rd Avenue, the crowd took the
entire intersection, detaining traffic for 15 minutes as community
activists read off a list of youth slain by the NYPD. The crowd
responded “Presente!” after every name. In the 13 years since Diallo’s
murder, at least 204 people have fallen at the hands of the police.

In
the brutal police beating of Jatiek Reed, four officers repeatedly
struck him with batons and kicks as the unarmed 19-year-old lay on the
ground trying to protect his face. Left black-and-blue, Reed required
staples in his head and arm. His friend captured the beating on his cell
phone camera, and the video spread virally throughout the city.
Nonetheless, Reed remains incarcerated, falsely charged with assaulting
an officer.

The following week an even more gruesome act took
place, when NYPD officers charged into the home of Ramarley Graham,
shooting and killing the unarmed teenager in front of his watching
grandmother. The police claim they saw a gun — the line that they
always use to get away with murder — but there was none. Officers had
chased Graham from outside his home, reportedly for some drug deal, and
then barged into his home without a warrant, guns drawn.
Graham’s 6-year-old brother was close by.

In the South Bronx,
police harassment, stop-and-frisks, and false arrests are a part of
daily life. There is a deeply felt resentment against the police, which
boiled over into seething anger on Feb. 4 as many community members
joined the march for a few blocks or simply raised their fists in
solidarity.

Sony Cabral, a 16-year-old community activist spoke
about the daily harassment he and his peers endure: “These police
continue to racially profile us, discriminate us, stop and frisk us, and
throw us in jail. All day, every day. I identify with Jatiek Reed and
Ramarley Graham. That could have been any of us.”

When the
march circled back down to the 41st precinct, the cops patrolling
outside scurried indoors. The five-hour rally and march then ended in
front of Jatiek Reed’s house with family members of Jatiek addressing
the crowd. His cousins yelled out “Free our cousin. Free our brother.
The NYPD is out of control. None of us our safe. No mother should have
to go through this. We are not afraid of the NYPD. Join us.” The crowd
chanted back “We are all Jatiek.”

Reed’s mother addressed the
crowd expressing her sadness and thanking everyone for their support.
She urged everyone to continue their support by packing the Bronx
courthouse on Monday morning at 9 a.m. when Reed again goes before a
judge.

The police assaults on the Occupy movement garnered
national headlines, and helped put a spotlight on the NYPD’s repressive
instincts. The police department’s practice of giving arrest and ticket
quotas to officers has been exposed, as well as the multi-million dollar
donations they have received from the biggest Wall Street banks. There
is a growing movement against their flagrantly unconstitutional
stop-and-frisk policies, which targets Black and Latino youth in
particular.

The electric Feb. 4 march through the South Bronx
shows that now is the time to step up our efforts for a citywide
movement against NYPD repression. Meet every act of police brutality
with marches and demonstrations! Document and film the abuses of the
NYPD! Jail all racist, killer cops!

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