FORT PIERCE, FLA.
Teenaged girl brutalized by racist officer
By
Tyneisha Bowens
Published Oct 11, 2007 11:05 PM
On Oct. 4, a videotape was released to the public showing a 15-year-old
African-American girl being brutalized by a police officer in Fort Pierce, Fla.
The video, recorded by the officer’s dashboard camera, shows the officer
using what can only be deemed excessive and brutal force.
The young girl, whose identity has yet to be officially disclosed, was being
taken into custody for violating a law enforcing a curfew for minors in Fort
Pierce.
The footage starts with the girl, already crying, being brought to the front of
the officer’s vehicle. As the officer begins to arrest the girl she
attempts to free herself while begging not to be put in jail. It is obvious
that she is afraid as she apologizes for breaking curfew and cries out for her
mother.
As the minor begins to “resist arrest” the officer takes it upon
himself to begin using excessive force. The officer, a white male at least
twice her the size, violently twists her arms behind her back and slams her
face into the hood of the vehicle.
After expressing pain from the officer’s “submission tactics”
the girl defends herself by biting at the officer’s gloved hand. In
response to this the officer forcefully punches the teenager in the mouth and
sprays her multiple times at close range with pepper spray.
As he is now able to easily arrest the girl he puts her into his vehicle,
completely ignoring her complaints that she is having difficulty breathing.
The officer faces no charges. The 15-year-old girl has been charged with
battery, a felony.
Her attempts to free herself from the officer’s grasp and protect
herself, including biting the officer, have been cited as just cause for the
officer’s brutal behavior.
To combat the idea that this unarmed girl did anything to warrant physical
attack from a large adult male it is important to evaluate the fear that she
must have been experiencing.
Both women and people of color have historically been victims of acts of police
brutality. We as oppressed people have never had the luxury of placing our
protection in the hands of officers who serve a historically and currently
racist, sexist state.
We remember and still experience the days when officers are given terrorist
reign over our communities and our bodies by the U.S. federal and state
governments. Furthermore, young people in this country have few if any rights.
The fear anyone would feel while being arrested is magnified when the person is
a young woman of color.
Therefore the young girl’s attempts to protect herself are a product of
the inability of this corrupt state to do so for her and are completely
valid.
This videotape is now all over the Internet, as are comments and discussions
based on its content. Responses to the video vary from disgust and outrage to
declarations that the officer’s actions were just and even provoked.
While many online bloggers and responders are calling the officer’s
actions an obvious racist and sexist abuse of power, others, like the
right-wing online media outlet freerepublic.com, are attempting to validate the
violent arrest.
This videotape’s release all too closely corresponds with the
mobilizations around the Jena 6 injustice in Louisiana and the racist murder of
DeOnte Rawlings in Washington, D.C. These racist injustices are blatant attacks
on our Black youth and have inspired what has been called the New Civil Rights
Era.
The writer is a leader of Raleigh FIST-Fight Imperialism, Stand
Together-youth group. Contact fist@workers.org.
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