Ferguson activists attend meeting with President Obama to demand an end to nationwide police brutality

Last Monday, November 25, 2014, a St. Louis County grand jury decided not to indict Officer Darren Wilson for the shooting death of Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager, shot six times—twice in the head, four times in the chest and arms. Communities nationwide have responded to this miscarriage of justice by carrying out more than 150 coordinated and intense protest actions that show no signs of letting up. Primarily led by young people of color, the continued sit-ins, mass die-ins, highway shutdowns and walkouts have commanded the White House’s attention.

Today President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and Attorney General Eric Holder met with seven Black and Latino organizers from several cities across the US–specifically from Ferguson, Mo.; Columbus, Ohio; Miami, Florida; and New York City– the main players who have been leading some of the ongoing actions to disrupt a status quo that is becoming increasingly intolerable.

“The president requested this meeting because this is a movement that cannot be ignored,” said Ashley Yates, a co-founder of the St. Louis-based organization, Millennial Activists United. “We have two sets of laws in America – one for young Black and Brown people, and one for the police. We are sick and tired of our lives not mattering, and our organized movement will not relent until we see justice.”

The young leaders converged in Washington to convey their experience of a traumatized community in Ferguson, where police have consistently terrorized peaceful protesters with pointed guns, rubber bullets, chemical agents, bean bags and menacing threats. They further discussed the routine harassment and violence that many police departments continue to inflict on countless communities of color across America, and their demands for the federal government to hold police departments that use excessive force accountable for their actions.

“We attended this meeting to make it clear to President Obama that we are in crisis, and police officers must be held accountable,” said Rasheen Aldridge, who is the director of Young Activists United St. Louis. “It is a crisis when a Black American can get locked up for traffic fines, but police officers are rarely prosecuted for killing unarmed children. Black communities have suffered under racially biased policing and unconstitutional law enforcement policies for far too long. This has to stop.”

The group’s demands included:

• The federal government using its power to indict and prosecute all police officers who kill or engage in other forms of police brutality.
• Removing all local district attorneys from the job of holding police accountable, and instead having independent prosecutors at the local level charged with prosecuting officers.
• The establishment of community review boards that can make recommendations for police misconduct, instead of allowing police departments to police themselves.
• Loss of funding for all local police departments that use excessive force or racially profile its citizens. Instead of having the Department of Justice (DOJ) give more than $250 million to local police departments annually, the DOJ should only fund departments that agree to adopt DOJ best practices for training and implement meaningful community input.
• The demilitarization of local police departments.
• Investing in programs that provide alternatives to incarceration, such as community-led restorative justice programs and community groups that educate people about their rights.

“In previous remarks, the president has used language that criminalizes our movement, lumping in the vast majority of peaceful protesters with violence and bad actors,” said Brittany Packnett, a St. Louis educator and activist. “In our meeting, we explained that most violence in our community is coming from the police department, and something needs to be done about it.”

“As young people of color who are often criminalized for our mere existence, we are the experts in how our communities are treated by law enforcement,” said Phillip Agnew, executive director of the Florida-based organization, the Dream Defenders. “We accepted the president’s invitation so that we could present our expertise and needed policy changes to the nation’s top leader.”

“Today we presented great models for policing alternatives,” said Jose Lopez, lead organizer for Make the Road New York. “These include restorative justice programs that promote alternatives to incarceration – work that the federal government should be investing in, instead of funding the further militarization of police who often patrol our streets like commandos in a war zone.”

“If police departments are not committed to community input and oversight, and refuse to train officers appropriately, they should be completely defunded,” said St. Louis-based hip-hop artist T-Dubb-O. “Funding body cameras and other tactics to review police actions is a start, but that doesn’t solve the problem of too many officers who see us as ‘demons’ and not members of a community. Until we deal with that, we can’t move forward.”

“We appreciate that the president wanted to meet with us, but now he must deliver with meaningful policy,” said James Hayes, political director for the Ohio Students Association. “We are calling on everyone who believes that Black lives matter to continue taking to the streets until we get real change for our communities.”

Attendees of the meeting with President Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and Attorney General Eric Holder included:

Ashley Yates, Millennial Activists United
Rasheen Aldridge, Young Activists St. Louis
Brittany Packnett, St. Louis educator and activist
T-Dubb-O, St. Louis hip-hop artist
James Hayes, Ohio Students Association
Phillip Agnew, Dream Defenders
Jose Lopez, Make the Road New York

-Nykki Siren (@QueenMelaK)