Ben Crump (INTERVIEW)
Ben Crump
The “Ferguson”
Interview
with Kam Williams
Attorney for the Brown Family Responds to Shooting
of Police in Ferguson
and to Recent Developments in Other Civil Rights Cases
Ben Crump is the attorney of record
in many high-profile, civil rights cases, most notably representing the
families of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Tamir Rice, the 12 year-old boy
shot by a Cleveland, Ohio police officer a second after he got out of his
patrol car.
Kam
Williams: Hi Ben, I appreciate the time. I know
how busy you are.
Ben Crump:
You’re very, very welcome, Kam.
KW:
What is your response to the recent shooting of the two police officers in Ferguson, Missouri?
BC:
Together with the Brown family, I condemn the shootings and make an immediate appeal for nonviolence, as we have from the
inception of this movement. The heinous act of this individual does not reflect
or forward the peaceful and non-violent movement that has emerged in our nation
to confront police brutality and to ensure equality for all people. An act
of violence against any innocent person eludes moral justification, disgraces
the millions of Americans and people throughout the world who have united in
peaceful protest against police brutality, and dishonors our proud inheritance
of nonviolent resistance. We support the imposition of the full extent of
the law on the perpetrator, and our prayers are with the officers and their
families.
KW:
What do you make of Attorney General Holder’s recently
declining to indict Officer Darren Wilson for the shooting of Michael Brown?
BC:
I just think that the Department of Justice has to stop
sanitizing all these killings of unarmed people of color. When you look at the Justice
Department’s report talking about the Ferguson Police Department’s rampant
pattern of discrimination and its excessive use of force against
African-American citizens, it’s hard to try to rationalize how this cesspool of
racism doesn’t spill over onto the individual officers. For instance, Sergeant
Mudd, the first officer on the scene after Darren Wilson killed Michael Brown.
He was Wilson’s
mentor and supervisor. He was one of the primary witnesses and main advocates
for Darren Wilson in front of the grand jury. We now know that this was the
individual who sent the racist email that was repeatedly forwarded around the
Ferguson Police Department saying that Crimestoppers paid a black woman $3,000
to get an abortion. So you have this cesspool of racism, yet they’re trying to
suggest that it’s not going to affect individual officers. The Attorney General
says that you have this high standard that you have to show that at the time of
the shooting the individual was thinking hateful or racist thoughts. That’s an
almost impossible standard. It should be enough to show implicit bias, given
all the attendant circumstances. If there’s a pattern and practice of
discrimination and excessive force, you should be able to hold these officers
accountable for killing unarmed citizens. The reason I say that, Kam, is
because, if there are no real consequences for their actions, we won’t get any
different results. We need real consequences to get real results. There’s no
deterrent to these officers’ behavior when they continue to see the local and
federal governments under the Obama Administration sanitizing the killings of
unarmed black and brown people.
KW:
Holder’s also just announced that there will be no arrest of
George Zimmerman for violating the civil rights of Trayvon Martin. That shocked
me because everyone heard the recording of the 911 operator ordering Zimmerman
to stay in his car and to wait for the police to arrive. But he ignored the
instructions and killed an innocent teen innocently walking down the street,
just yards from home. And even that’s not considered a violation of the child’s
rights? How insane is that?
BC:
Absolutely! We keep seeing a reoccurrence of their
sanitizing these killings. It almost encourages people to conclude that they
did nothing wrong, since the government didn’t press any charges. We’ve got to
somehow send a message to deter this conduct. Otherwise, we’re going to see it
over and over and over again. It’s becoming almost like an epidemic.
KW:
No kidding. Just since you and I last spoke, we’ve had
police shootings of Jerome Reid getting out of a car with his hands up in New
Jersey, a homeless man in Los Angeles, 19 year-old Tony Robinson in Madison,
Wisconsin, and Antonio Zambrano-Montes in Spokane, Washington.
BC:
We’re representing Antonio Zambrano-Montes’ family.
KW:
Great! And there’s also Sureshbhai Patel, an elderly tourist
from India who was left
paralyzed by a cop in Alabama
who thought he was a black man prowling around a white neighborhood. These
incidents are happening about once a week now. What about the Tamir Rice case?
The chief of police in Cleveland
is a black man, so I was stunned when the city said the boy’s death was
directly caused by his own acts, not by police officer Timothy Loehmann. How
did you react to that conclusion?
BC:
It was literally shocking that, based on what we see in that
surveillance video, this 12 year-old child could be called responsible for his
own death because he wasn’t being careful, versus what we see and know happened
there; how these officers violated all their procedures, training and
department regulations, and drove up to the scene recklessly in a way which
escalated the situation. Tamir Rice was killed in less than one second which
was totally disrespectful. And the pattern of disrespect continued when his 14
year-old sister ran up crying, “You killed my baby brother!” Instead of showing
her any compassion, they tackled her, handcuffed her, manhandled her, dragged
her through the snow and threw her into the back of the police car where she
had to sit helplessly 4 to 5 feet away from where her brother lay kicking as he
died. As if that wasn’t bad enough, the pattern of disrespect continued with
how they treated their mother when she arrived. They told her she could either
get in the police car with her daughter to go to the station or get in the
ambulance to go to the hospital with her son. And now the pattern of disrespect
to the Rice family continues with blaming Tamir for his own death in the answer
to the complaint of wrongful death we filed. That was shocking and sends a loud
message not only to the people of Cleveland but
to people all over America.
KW:
I’d also like to know how you feel about the video that
surfaced of that Oklahoma
fraternity singing that racist song on the bus.
BC:
They may kick the fraternity off campus, but the thing
that’s so unfortunate is that, no matter what they do, those students still
felt it was okay to say what they said. So, you can’t help but wonder whether
that’s how they really feel in their hearts. It reminded me of my personal
hero, Thurgood Marshall. I’m reading Gilbert King’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book
about the Groveland, Florida
rape cases called “Devil in the Grove.”
In it, he talks about Marshall,
saying he had two fears. First, how big a celebration there was going to be the
day racists lynched him and hung him from a tree. But his second and worst
fear, after seeing so many young children in pictures of lynchings, was knowing
that one day they would grow up to be running society. And that’s what I
thought about watching the video on that bus. That in 20 years or so, those
fraternity and sorority members will be running corporations, city governments
and other institutions. And I wondered, what will their mentality be like? How does
this bode for the future?
KW:
I agree. It’s very scary. Thanks again, Ben, and keep
fighting the good fight.
BC:
Thanks so much Kam. Call anytime.
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