April 2018
In This Issue:
- Founder’s Column: Have You Had Enough? (by Cat Brooks)
- Family of Sahleem Tindle, Murdered by BART Police, Demands Justice: “We Shall Not Stop”
- Who Was Sahleem Tindle? An Interview of Yolanda Banks Reed, mother of Sahleem Tindle by Cat Brooks
- Killer Cop Cleared of Criminal Charges: Family of Angel Ramos Continues to Fight
- Black Solidarity Week
- Report Back - 96 Hours of Noncompliance Over the King Day Weekend
- Hands Off Herman Bell!
- Legislative Watch
- The Justice Study by Do No Harm Coalition
- APTP First Responders Training Guide is Now Online!
- Become an APTP Sustainer
Founder’s Column: Have You HAd Enough?
by Cat BrookS
I stood at the press conference where an independent autopsy confirmed what so many of us already knew: The Sacramento Police Department lied about the murder of Stephon Clark. He was not facing them. He did not have his hands toward them in a “shooting position”. He was facing the door of his grandmother’s home. The first bullet struck him in the back left side of his torso area. Of the eight shots that hit his body, seven of them hit him from behind. It was only the final shot that entered his body from the front when he was “on the ground or falling close to the ground.”
In the case of Sahleem Tindle, who was murdered by BART Police Officer Joseph Mateu, BART used the corporate media to lie to you and say he had a gun in his hand and was facing the officer when he was shot. Leaked video showed unequivocally that Sahleem was shot in the back three times and died with his hands in the air in front of his two small children.
The San Francisco Police Department gunned down Jesus Aldolfo Delgado Duerte with 99 bullets while he was in the trunk of a car.
The officers who gunned down Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge will not be charged.
We know that these are not all of the names. We know that law enforcement kills at least one person every single day in this country.
Have you had enough?
Are you tired of having the same conversation with a different name every day of the week? Every week of the month? Every month of the year?
I am.
I am exhausted.
And I don’t understand why more of us aren’t doing more of all of the things to make them stop.
The time is now for radical reforms , actions and practices on the way to abolition.
If it’s your thing to be in the streets - then get in the streets. Interrupt business as usual. Make life uncomfortable for every single person who is unwilling to admit that there is a genocide happening in this country and unwilling to do something about it. Make them understand that if they want to continue their comfortable American lives - that everyone needs to live comfortable lives - lives where we are not gunned down for holding cell phones in our own backyards.
If it’s your thing to drive radical policy initiatives - then get in the meetings where that work is happening. There is a statewide coalition of amazing organizations right now working to chip away at the Peace Officers Bill of Rights. SB 1421 - The Right to Know Bill - will require that information about all confirmed cases of sexual misconduct by police and excessive uses of force will be available to the public through a Public Records Request. Join the APTP Defund OPD Campaign and help us force City Hall to reallocate police dollars to things that actually keep us safe like housing, education and social services.
If it’s your thing to make art - get to writing, acting, rapping, singing and painting.
If it’s your thing to move spirit - get to prayer and ritual.
If it’s your thing to make media - let the graphics and media abound.
If it’s your thing to create alternative community safety mechanisms - get to training the rest of us on how to do it.
Whatever your thing is - NOW is the time to do it.
The state will never fix this for us. Stop looking to the state to fix it. It is not broken in the eyes of the state. It is doing its job.
We have to fix this for ourselves. Brick by Brick. Block by Block. City by City. State by State.
We don’t have to live this way. I know it feels like we do, but I promise you that we do not. There are more of us than them. The power has always lain with the people which is why they work so hard to make you believe you don’t have any.
I believe in the people. I believe in our collective will and power. I believe that we will win.
But we have to do the work. All of the work. The unsexy work. The gritty work. The work without media attention. The boring work. The. WORK. All of us. Now.
We keep saying #neveragain. Do we mean it?
Family of Sahleem Tindle, Murdered by BART Police, Demands Justice: “We Will Not Stop”
On the afternoon of January 3rd, 2018, 28-year-old Sahleem Tindle, a beloved community member and father of two, was shot and killed by BART police officer Joseph Mateu near the West Oakland BART station. Initially, BART and the media reported that Sahleem was holding a gun and did not comply with police orders, but bodycam footage proves this was a lie. Now the family is fighting for justice.
It wasn’t until February 7th, 2018 that Sahleem Tindle’s family, including mother Yolanda Banks Reed, along with their attorney John Burris, were able to review Mateu’s bodycam footage. It reveals that Mateu never identified himself while running across the street, gun drawn, and then shooting an unarmed Sahleem (who was involved in a scuffle with another man) three times in the back. The media also failed to report that Sahleem was with his fiancée and two young children.
On February 13th, the family held a rally at West Oakland BART to protest the false narrative, and to demand that the officer be charged and the footage be released. At that time, the video was being withheld. Mateu, however, was cleared for duty just two weeks after murdering Sahleem.
In conversation with APTP co-founder Cat Brooks on KPFA’s UpFront, Sahleem’s mother Yolanda said, “Let them see it for themselves… His back was towards officer Mateu when he let off three rounds.”
BART released the full video on February 21st—but only after a portion of the footage was leaked. After the video was released, BART police chief Carlos Rojas appallingly called Mateu a hero. “I call that courage,” he said—a statement many felt was a slap in the face to the Tindle family.
At the BART police citizen review board meeting on March 12th, family and community members expressed outrage at the chief’s words, as well as his lack of empathy and condolences for the family. “After we get justice for Sahleem—and it is coming—we want you gone, too,” one mother said to Rojas.
“There’s a code of ethics. There’s a code of the people. There’s a code of humanity. You don’t shoot people in the back,” said Karim Mayfield, Sahleem’s brother.
“I know you’re a human being,” said Kavin Tindle, father of Sahleem, to Rojas. “Do you have a heart? Why did your officer shoot and kill my son?!” By the time the meeting was adjourned, the board had moved to write a letter requesting that Rojas be prevented from making further harmful statements.
During public comment, BART police officer S. Christ played Words with Friends on his phone.
With a media narrative that began with lies, and no action yet from the agencies investigating Sahleem’s murder, the family and community are steadfast in the fight for justice—attending standing-room-only meetings of BART’s board of directors, gathering at District Attorney Nancy O’Malley’s office to demand that she press charges against Joseph Mateu, and rallying in the rain outside OPD to pressure them to arrest the murderer of Sahleem Tindle.
The family and community of Sahleem Tindle demand that BART police officer Joseph Mateu be fired, arrested, charged, prosecuted, and convicted. A civil claim has been filed against the BART police.
“Haki kwa Sahleem! Haki kwa mkuu Sahleem!”
#Justice4Sahleem #SahleemTindle
Who Was Sahleem Tindle? An Interview of Yolanda Banks Reed, mother of Sahleem Tindle
by Cat Brooks
“I’m saddened. You know, I have to live with this; I have to live with this… But while living with it, I’m going to fight! I’m not going to sit here. I’m hurt; I’m devastated, but I’m not just going to cry. I’m going to do something about it. I’m going to do what needs to be done, with every breath that’s in me. I’m going to do what need to be done, because I’m not going to take this lying down. I love my son, and my children, and my nation of people.”
Killer Cop Cleared of Criminal Charges: Family of Angel Ramos Continues to Fight
Photo by @DaveId
On January 23rd, 2017, 21-year-old Angel Rico Ramos was shot and killed by a Vallejo police officer at his family home. Police reports that Angel had a knife contradict the family’s account of what happened—that Angel was unarmed when the cop shot him several times. The family has been fighting for justice.
Angel’s sisters spoke out at the 4th Annual March to Reclaim King’s Radical Legacy in Oakland on January 15th, 2018. And on January 21st, in spite of facing police intimidation and threats (including a police dog barking over a loudspeaker), the family held an event to Remember and Honor the Life of Angel Ramos, and marched in the streets of Vallejo.
Although it’s been over a year since Angel was killed, the family has yet to see an autopsy report. But as of February 14th, the officer who killed Angel was cleared of all criminal charges. (Vallejo police recently killed another man, Ronnell Foster, 33, on February 13th, 2018.)
The family continues to fight. A civil lawsuit has been filed against the city of Vallejo, naming officer Zachary Jacobsen as Angel’s killer.
#JusticeForAngelRamos #AngelRicoRamos
Black Solidarity Week
From February 17th to February 24th Community READY Corps organized Oakland’s first annual Black Solidarity Week.
The week kicked off on February 17th with a historic march and rally in deep East Oakland in tribute to Minister Huey P. Newton on his birthday. Over the next week community members, activists, and a coalition of organizations hosted 13 different events. These events were designed to foster self-determination and solidarity among a variety of components: Politics, Economics, Family, Health, Education, Art, Media, Traditions & Ways, and Self Defense. Some of the events were joyful celebrations, others had educational purposes, and others were in direct response to state violence, such as the powerful turnout at the BART Board meeting where community members demanded justice for Sahleem Tindle, a young Black man murdered by BART Police.
What does solidarity mean for you? Where in your life can you create more solidarity and how is solidarity necessary for this movement? In the words of organizer Tur-Ha Ak, “The time is now. We must set the example for the generations of doers, thinkers, teachers, and leaders that come behind us. We make this call rooted in the understanding that small steps can lead to great things.”
We recommend watching the powerful videos about what solidarity means for people here.
Report Back - 96 Hours of Noncompliance Over the King Day Weekend
For the fourth year in a row, APTP led the Bay Area in taking to the streets for #96 Hours of Direct Action to Reclaim MLK’s radical legacy.
Thank you to everyone who came out and stood with us against white supremacy, against state-sponsored terror, and against development over people. For four years running, APTP put out the call -- and the community answered it!
The week was beautiful and inspiring. From January 12th through 15th, we showed the agents of our oppression -- from 45 to Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf -- that WE WILL NOT COMPLY.
On January 12, actions focused on combating state-sponsored violence, including a demonstration against sexual violence at OPD, an agency known to harbor child rapists.
“All violence is state violence!”
The next day focused on Housing as a Human Right -- and we took this fight directly to the powerful. A coalition of activists and organizers, led by APTP, occupied the lawn of Mayor Libby Scaaff, setting up camp to demand that she create an immediate pathway to permanent housing for all Oaklanders. Specifically, we called for defunding OPD by 50% and redirecting those monies to provide permanent housing for houseless and housing-insecure people, closing landlord loopholes, and that all development projects be required to hire Black Oakland residents in proportion to their percentage of the population. This action was also in solidarity with the Coalition to Defend Aunti Frances, an elder, former Black Panther, disabled, long-time community activist who runs a food program in North Oakland, and who is now facing a no-fault eviction by her predatory property owners.
APTP and other organizers occupied Mayor Libby Schaaf's front lawn to demand housing as a human right - and to defund the police to pay for it.
Courtesy of NBC News Bay Area.
Actions on January 14 focused on Indigenous and International Solidarity, including: a protest at the West County Jail/Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Detention Center in Richmond; a prayer at the West Berkeley Shellmound; a teach-in by Third World Resistance on Dr. King’s resistance to racism, war and capitalism; and a #DefendTPS! [temporary protected status] rally for people from El Salvador, Haiti, Sudan, and Nicaragua.
On Monday, January 15, we reclaimed MLK Day. More than 2,000 people gathered in downtown Oakland at Oscar Grant Plaza and marched to West Oakland, through the Acorn neighborhood, a longstanding Black community. Our powerful, energetic, boisterous and militant march concluded near the West Oakland BART station, at the site of the murder of Sahleem Tindle by BART police.
Here are some images from the weekend of noncompliance. (Courtesy of Brooke Anderson.)
“I am not convinced, and you will never convince me that the only answer is to have another dead Black man on the streets of Oakland. There are alternatives to murdering our People, and we are in the process of developing those alternatives ourselves.
The answer is never them! I don’t care what is happening on the street, the answer is never OPD, SFPD, the sheriffs, BART PD... Why the hell do BART police have guns anyways? We’ve been asking that question since Johannes Mehserle gunned down Oscar Grant in 2009.”
Hands Off Herman Bell!
In 1973, Herman Bell, a member of the Black Panther Party and the Black Liberation Army, was arrested for allegedly killing two New York Police Officers Joseph Piagentini and Waverly Jones. The first trial resulted in a hung jury. To remedy that, the prosecution made a secret deal to drop charges against one witness in exchange for testimony and called another witness who had been tortured by the New York City Police Department until he agreed to testify against Bell. That witness, Ruben Scott, told the judge he had been tortured and whatever he said on the stand would be a lie. The judge reported that to the police who tortured him once again. As a result, Herman Bell, along with his comrades were convicted for the deaths of the police officers. Bell was sentenced to 25 years to Life.
Herman Bell spent 45 years in prison. During that time, he mentored other inmates, received two college degrees, worked with people on the outside to create food programs and so much more.
Mainstream media is falsely reporting that Bell is getting an early release. He is actually being released 20 years after he could have been. If, and it is a big IF, we are to believe that America believes that prisons are supposed to be institutions of rehabilitation. Then Herman Bell should be the perfect candidate for parole.
But the Police Officers Benevolent Association, Mayor De Blasio, the New York City Police Department and others are infuriated with the decision and organizing to keep Bell incarcerated.
Here are three things you can do RIGHT NOW to support Herman Bell:
- CALL New York State Governor Cuomo’s Office NOW : 518-474-8390
- EMAIL New York State Governor Cuomo’s Office: https://www.governor.ny.gov/content/governor-contact-form
- TWEET at Governor Cuomo: use the following sample tweet:
“@NYGovCuomo: stand by the Parole Board’s lawful & just decision to release Herman Bell. At 70 years old and after more than 40 years of incarceration, his release is overdue. #BringHermanHome.”
Script for phone calls and emails:
“Governor Cuomo, my name is __________and I am a resident of [New York State/other state/other country]. I support the Parole Board’s decision to release Herman Bell and urge you and the Board to stand by the decision. I also support the recent appointment of new Parole Board Commissioners, and the direction of the new parole regulations, which base release decisions more on who a person is today than on the nature of their crime committed years ago. Returning Herman to his friends and family will help the heal the many harms caused by crime and decades of incarceration. The Board’s decision was just, merciful and lawful, and it will benefit our communities and New York State as a whole.”
Legislative Watch
The Anti Police-Terror Project does not believe the institution of policing can ever be reformed or "fixed". We are clear that its intention at birth was to uphold institutions of race based capitalism through brutal and violent means. It continues to do its job. We do however also believe that we must walk a path of radical reform on the way to abolition. To that end APTP is supporting two pieces of statewide legislation:
AB 931 (Shirley Weber) and SB 1421 (Nancy Skinner) will break down barriers to accountability and transparency when law enforcement deploys excessive uses of force by ensuring that a) lethal force is only deployed when there are no other feasible options, and when that force is deployed, the public will have the right to access investigation records.
The first public safety committee meeting for these bills is Tuesday, April 17th at 9 am at the Capitol. Stay tuned to the APTP Facebook page for updates on support with transportation to the Capitol if you are interested in riding with us.
The Justice Study by Do No Harm Coalition
If you are able, please take 20 minutes to complete the “Justice Study” today. Launched on March 5, the Justice Study is a project of the Do No Harm Coalition. This coalition is trying to get 100,000 people to take the survey about how state violence has impacted their lives. The data will then be used to make a case that state violence and police terror are public health issues.
In the words of one of the founders of this study, “[We see] tragic examples of how ineffective and traumatizing this form of policing is and how negatively it impacts those who remain. I am currently studying this and seek to hear from Brown and Black voices most affected by this violence.”
We must dismantle these institutions of state violence! If you or your loved ones have been impacted by police terror, the Justice Study is asking for your voice.
APTP First Responders Training Guide is Now Online!
Developed by APTP’s First Responders team, our Training Guide describes APTP’s model for supporting families impacted by various forms of police terror and documenting abuses by police throughout the Bay Area. After an incident of state terror, we connect impacted families and community members with resources and legal referrals. We organize to respond to police murders and incidents of excessive force because we believe in the need to defend ourselves and our communities from violence.
This Guide was designed for APTP Trainings. We encourage you to personalize this Guide in your efforts to eradicate and heal from state sanctioned violence in your communities. We do ask that you credit APTP for the model itself. APTP is available to come to your community and offer and in-person training.
Become a Monthly Donor
We are full-swing into our monthly donor drive. Grassroots fundraising is crucial because even when funding fads wane, our steady individual donors and members are here to support the work that APTP does. If you are able to become a monthly donor, please sign up at antipoliceterrorproject.org by going to "Donate Now" and checking the box to become a monthly contributor. You can also send us checks if you prefer that. Your support makes it possible for the work to continue and grow!
Right now, we are running a promotion where you can sign up to become a monthly donor at $20 or more per month for at least 3 months and you get a brand-new APTP hoodie! These beautiful, soft hoodies were made with the help of local business Merch Monster (based in Oakland) and feature our signature logo on the front and back. Sizes S - 2XL. Get yours today. When you sign up to be a monthly donor, just email annie.aptp AT gmail DOT com with your desired size of hoodie and we can arrange getting it to you.
If you cannot sign up to be a monthly donor at this time, you can still buy a hoodie! They are $35 each. Again, please email annie.aptp AT gmail DOT com with your size and how to get it to you.
Checks can be made out to "Anti Police-Terror Project" and sent to 1201 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Suite 200, Oakland, CA 94612. If purchasing a hoodie, please include information about what size and how we can get the hoodie to you.
Thank you so much to everyone who supports APTP in whatever ways you can!