[blind-democracy] Re: With Arms in Air, Unarmed Black Caregiver Shot by Police

  • From: "joe harcz Comcast" <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 22 Jul 2016 08:26:16 -0400

As I recently testified at a Flint, Michigan public hearing of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission: "Yes, there is racism here. Yes, there is "classicism". And yes, there is "ableism, which is bigotry against people with disabilities. God help anyone who is both black and disabled."
----- Original Message ----- From: "Miriam Vieni" <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2016 9:39 PM
Subject: [blind-democracy] With Arms in Air, Unarmed Black Caregiver Shot by Police


With Arms in Air, Unarmed Black Caregiver Shot by Police
Published on
Thursday, July 21, 2016
by
Common Dreams
With Arms in Air, Unarmed Black Caregiver Shot by Police
'As long as I've got my hands up, they're not going to shoot me, is what I
was thinking. Wow, was I wrong.'
by
Nika Knight, staff writer

"All he has is a truck. A toy truck. I'm a behavior therapist at a group
home," Charles Kinsey pleaded with officers, holding his arms in the air and
trying to help an autistic patient before he was shot. (Screenshot)
Charles Kinsey, a black man and caregiver at a group home, was shot by
police on Monday in North Miami, Florida.
"There's no justification for shooting an unarmed person who's talking to
you and telling you that they don't have a gun and they're a mental health
counselor."
-Hilton Napoleon, Kinsey's lawyer
Cell phone video footage released late Wednesday showed that Kinsey was
lying on the ground, holding his arms in the air to show he was unarmed, and
trying to help a distressed autistic patient in the moments before he was
shot in the leg.
"As long as I've got my hands up, they're not going to shoot me, is what I
was thinking. Wow, was I wrong," said Kinsey to local TV station WSVN from a
hospital bed on Thursday.
A second video shows police flipped Kinsey over after he was shot and
searched him and his patient, whose name has not been released, with long
rifles.
Kinsey told reporters that he was handcuffed and left lying on the hot
pavement in the aftermath of the shooting for a full 20 minutes before he
was finally given medical attention and taken to a hospital, where he is
still recovering.
Kinsey's lawyer, Hilton Napoleon, released both videos to the public, and
the Washington Post was one of many outlets who consolidated and published
the footage on Thursday:
Reuters reports:
Kinsey told WSVN in Miami that he was trying to calm an autistic patient who
had just ran away from an area group home. Kinsey said he found the patient
sitting in a street playing with a toy truck.
A video that accompanied the news station's online story showed a black man
in a T-shirt and shorts lying on his back with his hands up next to a man,
who appears to have an object in his hand.
"All he has is a truck. A toy truck. I'm a behavior therapist at a group
home," a man is heard saying in the cell phone video as police officers are
seen with their weapons drawn.
While lying on the ground and attempting to communicate to police that he
was not a danger to them, Kinsey told WSVN that "I was more worried about
[my patient] than myself."
"There's no justification for shooting an unarmed person who's talking to
you and telling you that they don't have a gun and they're a mental health
counselor," Napoleon told WSVN.
In a statement, Howard Simon, executive director of the ACLU of Florida,
wrote that the group was "extremely disturbed" by the shooting.
"Thankfully," Simon wrote, "Mr. Kinsey is alive and not more gravely
injured-but had the officer's weapon been pointed just a few degrees
differently, this senseless incident could have been a much greater
tragedy."
Monday's shooting occurred amidst increasing public awareness of police
shootings of black men and women in the U.S., and as Black Lives Matter
demonstrators rally worldwide for victims of such violence.
"We have to stem the tide of violence, both nationwide and here in Florida,"
Simon said. "It starts with holding people accountable for their actions.
There must be a thorough and independent investigation into this shooting
that covers both whether officers violated internal use of deadly force
policies and whether criminal charges should be brought."
According to Reuters, "The North Miami Police Department said in a statement
that officers responded to a call of an armed suspect threatening suicide.
Officers arrived at the scene and found an autistic man and an employee with
an assist living facility."
It remains unclear why the police officer fired his gun. The officer, who
was not named by the North Miami Police Department, has reportedly been
placed on paid administrative leave and the investigation is being handled
by the state attorney general's office.
Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is a Republican, and was recently the
subject of controversy when she declined to investigate fraud claims against
Trump University after receiving a personally solicited donation of $25,000
from the Donald J. Trump Foundation in 2013. Republican presidential nominee
Donald Trump is a vocal advocate of the police, who he recently described as
"the most maltreated people in America." Bondi spoke Wednesday night at the
Republican National Convention.
During a news conference Thursday, Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fl.), told
reporters, "As I stand here, when you shoot a man lying on the ground with
his hands up explaining to you the situation-and you shoot him
anyway-something is not right with that picture, so we, as a district, are
in shock."
Kinsey told reporters that while being searched for weapons, he asked the
officer who shot him, "Sir, why did you shoot me?"
"His words to me," Kinsey said, were "I don't know."
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With Arms in Air, Unarmed Black Caregiver Shot by Police
Published on
Thursday, July 21, 2016
by
Common Dreams
With Arms in Air, Unarmed Black Caregiver Shot by Police
'As long as I've got my hands up, they're not going to shoot me, is what I
was thinking. Wow, was I wrong.'
by
Nika Knight, staff writer
. 28 Comments
.
. "All he has is a truck. A toy truck. I'm a behavior therapist at a
group home," Charles Kinsey pleaded with officers, holding his arms in the
air and trying to help an autistic patient before he was shot. (Screenshot)
. Charles Kinsey, a black man and caregiver at a group home, was shot
by police on Monday in North Miami, Florida.
. "There's no justification for shooting an unarmed person who's
talking to you and telling you that they don't have a gun and they're a
mental health counselor."
-Hilton Napoleon, Kinsey's lawyer
. Cell phone video footage released late Wednesday showed that Kinsey
was lying on the ground, holding his arms in the air to show he was unarmed,
and trying to help a distressed autistic patient in the moments before he
was shot in the leg.
. "As long as I've got my hands up, they're not going to shoot me, is
what I was thinking. Wow, was I wrong," said Kinsey to local TV station WSVN
from a hospital bed on Thursday.
A second video shows police flipped Kinsey over after he was shot and
searched him and his patient, whose name has not been released, with long
rifles.
Kinsey told reporters that he was handcuffed and left lying on the hot
pavement in the aftermath of the shooting for a full 20 minutes before he
was finally given medical attention and taken to a hospital, where he is
still recovering.
Kinsey's lawyer, Hilton Napoleon, released both videos to the public, and
the Washington Post was one of many outlets who consolidated and published
the footage on Thursday:
Reuters reports:
Kinsey told WSVN in Miami that he was trying to calm an autistic patient who
had just ran away from an area group home. Kinsey said he found the patient
sitting in a street playing with a toy truck.
A video that accompanied the news station's online story showed a black man
in a T-shirt and shorts lying on his back with his hands up next to a man,
who appears to have an object in his hand.
"All he has is a truck. A toy truck. I'm a behavior therapist at a group
home," a man is heard saying in the cell phone video as police officers are
seen with their weapons drawn.
While lying on the ground and attempting to communicate to police that he
was not a danger to them, Kinsey told WSVN that "I was more worried about
[my patient] than myself."
"There's no justification for shooting an unarmed person who's talking to
you and telling you that they don't have a gun and they're a mental health
counselor," Napoleon told WSVN.
In a statement, Howard Simon, executive director of the ACLU of Florida,
wrote that the group was "extremely disturbed" by the shooting.
"Thankfully," Simon wrote, "Mr. Kinsey is alive and not more gravely
injured-but had the officer's weapon been pointed just a few degrees
differently, this senseless incident could have been a much greater
tragedy."
Monday's shooting occurred amidst increasing public awareness of police
shootings of black men and women in the U.S., and as Black Lives Matter
demonstrators rally worldwide for victims of such violence.
"We have to stem the tide of violence, both nationwide and here in Florida,"
Simon said. "It starts with holding people accountable for their actions.
There must be a thorough and independent investigation into this shooting
that covers both whether officers violated internal use of deadly force
policies and whether criminal charges should be brought."
According to Reuters, "The North Miami Police Department said in a statement
that officers responded to a call of an armed suspect threatening suicide.
Officers arrived at the scene and found an autistic man and an employee with
an assist living facility."
It remains unclear why the police officer fired his gun. The officer, who
was not named by the North Miami Police Department, has reportedly been
placed on paid administrative leave and the investigation is being handled
by the state attorney general's office.
Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is a Republican, and was recently the
subject of controversy when she declined to investigate fraud claims against
Trump University after receiving a personally solicited donation of $25,000
from the Donald J. Trump Foundation in 2013. Republican presidential nominee
Donald Trump is a vocal advocate of the police, who he recently described as
"the most maltreated people in America." Bondi spoke Wednesday night at the
Republican National Convention.
During a news conference Thursday, Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fl.), told
reporters, "As I stand here, when you shoot a man lying on the ground with
his hands up explaining to you the situation-and you shoot him
anyway-something is not right with that picture, so we, as a district, are
in shock."
Kinsey told reporters that while being searched for weapons, he asked the
officer who shot him, "Sir, why did you shoot me?"
"His words to me," Kinsey said, were "I don't know."
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
License




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