So why aren’t you hearing about it?
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.motherjones.com
A conversation with LaDoris Cordell
Superior Court Judge, Retired
Independent Police Auditor for San Jose, Retired
Following numerous high-profile cases of police killings of unarmed African American and Latino civilians, public confidence in law enforcement is clearly in crisis. California is not immune. Suggestions have been made — and rather widely supported — to require police to wear body cameras. But is that a sufficient response to deeply endemic problems? What else can be done?
At this month’s Other Voices forum, we’ll examine some other ideas.
At the urging of San Jose’s Independent Police Auditor, Judge LaDoris Cordell, the department there started collecting basic demographic data about every police stop made, regardless of whether an arrest was made or not. An initial analysis of the data shows results that, while perhaps not surprising, are nevertheless alarming. Although black and Latino residents are a third of San Jose’s population, they comprise almost two-thirds of the individuals stopped in 2014.
Judge Cordell and legislators in Sacramento are urging all police departments in the state to compile data in the way San Jose has started doing. A bill recently introduced in the legislature would require them to do so.
“State-wide data collection of police stops … is the starting point. Once we understand what is happening on the streets, we can go forward together — police and community — to balance public safety and the right all Californians to be treated with dignity and respect.” – Judge Cordell (SJ Mercury News)
Judge Cordell also believes the grand jury system must be abolished.
“As demonstrated in the Michael Brown and Eric Garner cases, today’s state criminal grand juries serve no useful purpose and make a mockery of justice; they should be abolished. There is nothing grand about grand juries.” – Judge Cordell (Slate)
Join us for this timely conversation with someone who has a true inside perspective and expertise on the urgent need for police and court reforms. Come prepared to join the conversation with your questions and suggestions.
LaDoris Cordell is a 1974 graduate of Stanford Law School. A native of Ardmore, Pennsylvania, she has resided in California since 1971. For five years, she practiced law in East Palo Alto, California, establishing herself as the first lawyer to open a private law practice there. In 1978, she was appointed Assistant Dean for Student Affairs at Stanford Law School, a job that she held in addition to her private law practice.
In 1982, Governor Jerry Brown appointed Ms. Cordell to the Municipal Court of Santa Clara County, making her the first African American woman judge in all of northern California. On June 7, 1988, Judge Cordell overwhelmingly won election to the Superior Court of Santa Clara County. She was the first African American Superior Court Judge in the county’s history, and the first African American woman to sit on the Superior Court in northern California.
In 2010, following a national search, Judge Cordell was appointed by the San Jose City Council to the position of Independent Police Auditor. When this forum is held, she will have just retired from that position.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.youtube.com
“I felt helpless. I felt violated. And honestly, I felt molested,” says the completely innocent woman who was assaulted in her own home, while nude, by public servants.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: thefreethoughtproject.com
America. Land of the free? For who?
Judge finally orders the release of dash cam footage showing Gardena police fatally shoot an unarmed man, who was being a Good Samaritan.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: thefreethoughtproject.com
Police wanted to keep this video secret. Imagine all the other abuse which has not been disclosed, and before video cameras were added to patrol cars.
Protests erupt in Denver after surveillance video showed the police narrative of why they killed a man to be false.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: thefreethoughtproject.com
#PaulCastaway
The grisly lynching of Samiul Alam Rajon, 13, accused of theft has sparked protests in Bangladesh, after footage of the killing went viral on social media.
903 people were lynched in Bangladesh since January 2009, and at least 60 people were lynched in the past six months.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.cnn.com
A South Carolina man sold a plant to willing customers, so armed agents from the state broke into his home and shot him, leaving him paralyzed.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: thefreethoughtproject.com
More people were killed by American police in just the last three days than were killed in 2014 in Germany, England, Spain, Switzerland, and Iceland — combined.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: thefreethoughtproject.com
Anyone feel safe with U.S. police?
The Supreme Court has backed the use of an execution drug used in U.S. prisons over the objection of death row inmates. By a vote of 5-4, the court’s five right-wing justices on June 29 gave the stamp of approval to death-penalty states to utilize midazolam during executions. Their ruling in Glossip v. Gross endorses painful deaths and has been widely denounced by progressive forces everywhere.
Four Oklahoma death row prisoners had brought the lawsuit seeking to stop the use of midazolam. One inmate has since been executed. While the drug is supposed to decrease pain during executions, the prisoners say that it does not — and cited three excruciating executions in 2014 that used the drug. Plaintiffs claimed the state’s three-drug protocol violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on “cruel and unusual punishment.” Absurdly, the high court also ruled that the prisoners had to take responsibility to find an available alternative to this drug.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote the main dissent, joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan. In the Glossip v. Gross section of the Supreme Court’s blog, Sotomayor stingingly criticizes the ridiculous “available-alternative requirement.” “Petitioners contend that Oklahoma’s current protocol is a barbarous method of punishment — the chemical equivalent of being burned alive. But under the court’s new rule, it would not matter whether the state intended to use midazolam, or instead have petitioners drawn and quartered, slowly tortured to death or actually burned at the stake.”
Continue reading
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.workers.org
A couple messages from the article:
19 states plus Washington, D.C., have abolished the death penalty.
What kind of government continues to kill prisoners and tortures them in the process?
No charges for cop in GA who fatally shot Nicholas Thomas in the back after coming to his place of employment.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: thefreethoughtproject.com
#BlackLivesMatter