Wednesday, November 29, 2006

For Sean Bell


Fifty shots breaks the silences of the chilly Queens, New York morning air. Shot after shot after shot a brief and an almost inaudible pause then more shots ring out. When silences finally lay claim to her domain there lay injured two and one dead. Death came on what was to be a most joyous day and there would be no rice throwing instead there would be dirt throwing; ashes to ashes dust to dust. Murder is murder whether I am civilian or an officer of the state. Murder took place on that Queens Street and Justice must stand up and do her work or she will be liken to a liar. She must stand or her blindfold will be use to strangle her by lawlessness. How long will you gun down our people whether in a warehouse and get away with it or under the cover of night and walk free. Justice must stand if not they will begin to gun us down in daylight and walk over or decaying bodies until the earth claims are remains. How old long oh Justice how long will you sleep?

2 comments:

Christopher King said...

Blackprof blog has an interesting take on this; you may want to blogsearch it if you haven't already.

This was my response:

A very insightful read. Note how in America today everyone is supposed to dress casual and act ghetto/thug/hip-hop; this makes it easier for the police to target folks who are less apt to have any real power in society.

Anyway, as a former NAACP legal redress chair and as an attorney with a fair amount of Civil Rights experience (stateside and in private practice) I believe it still remains to be seen if these gentlemen are crime victims pursuant to New York Statute.

I discuss that issue, and my successful arguments for crime victim status at the hands of Ohio police in my post on this matter, as I also wonder why the survivors were apparently handcuffed to their respective hospital beds without a warrant:

http://christopher-king.blogspot.com/2006/11/sun-rises-for-naacp-legal-chair.html

And by the way, I love me some old-school (and some new) hip-hop, so this is not an anti-rap rant by any means.

Just an observation.

Peace to all.

-c

Jake A. McKenzie said...

It was a great injustice!