Amadou Bailo Diallo (September 2, 1975 - February 4, 1999) was a 23-year-old immigrant to the United States from Guinea, who was shot and killed on February 4, 1999, by four New York City Police Department plain-clothed officers: Sean Carroll, Richard Murphy, Edward McMellon and Kenneth Boss. The four men fired a total of 41 rounds. Diallo was unarmed at the time of the shooting, and a firestorm of controversy erupted subsequent to the event as the circumstances of the shooting prompted outrage both within and outside New York City. Issues such as police brutality, racial profiling, and contagious shooting were central to the ensuing controversy.

The shooting took place at 1157 Wheeler Avenue in the Soundview section of The Bronx. The four officers involved were part of the now-defunct Street Crimes Unit. All of the officers were exonerated by jury trial of any wrongdoing.

 

Phillip Pannell was an African American teenager killed by Police Officer Gary Spath in Teaneck, New Jersey on April 10, 1990. Pannell was fleeing police when he was shot; Spath was later charged and acquitted on charges of manslaughter[1]. The case created controversy over the issues racial profiling and police brutality.

 

Rodney Glen King (born April 2, 1965 in Sacramento, California) is an African-American motorist driver who, in 1991 was stopped and then beaten by Los Angeles Police Department officers (Laurence Powell, Timothy Wind, Theodore Briseno and Sergeant Stacey Koon) after being chased for speeding. A bystander, George Holliday, videotaped much of the event from a distance. Part of the video was broadcast around the world and shows four LA police officers restraining and repeatedly striking a black man, while four to six other officers stand by.[1] There is no part of the tape that shows Mr. King attacking the officers, as some have claimed.[2]

The resulting public outrage raised tensions between the black community and the LAPD, and increased anger over police brutality and issues such as unemployment, racial tension, and poverty in the black community of South Central Los Angeles. The four officers were tried in a state court for using excessive force, but were acquitted. The annoucement of the acquittals sparked the 1992 Los Angeles riots

 

(from Wikipedia.com)

2 Comments

  1. I just don’t understand…I read these articles, hear these atrocities and can’t fathom why anyone would care what the color of someone’s skin was…and that they would care in such a dark way as to harm another human for that reason…it’s such a tragic waste and so depressing…killing and harming for the color of another’s skin is so ignorant, so wrong…we are defined not by our exteriors but by our actions and how we live…

  2. Both the other editor and myself were there for the Pannell atrocity. We were in his grade in HS. We couldn’t understand it either. Then for a judge to say those 4 officers were in the right for shooting and killing that young man… I still don’t understand that.

    Why the police feel as though it is okay to shoot young black men I’ll never know. I’m scared for my little boy, who will grow up to be a young black man, and hopefully an old one too…

Post a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.