Sunday, April 19, 2015

Civilian Police Oversight Works its Way through City Council



Brian Burns, Paul Garner present information to City Council April 7
(Citizens Media Resource photo)
The National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement sent a letter to the Memphis City Council, Mayor A.C. Wharton and Police Director Toney Armstrong urging the city to fortify its impotent Civilian Law Enforcement Review Board.

Association President Brian Buchner wrote, in part:

“Strengthening the CLERB will help to ensure greater transparency, trust and communication between the Memphis Police Department and the public.  Further, more robust, effective oversight will lead to greater cooperation between Memphis police and the public in achieving the ultimate goal of decreased crime and increased public safety.”                                                                                                   



CITY COUNCIL TIME

A City Council Personnel and Public Safety joint committee is expected to vote Tuesday April 21 whether to advance out of committee and move to the full City Council a proposed amendment to the ordinance which established the Civilian Law Enforcement Review Board.  This body, whose members are appointed by the mayor, was established in 1994, but it did not have subpoena powers or the authority to compel participation of police in an investigation.  In 2008, Councilwoman Janis Fullilove called for an audit of MPD’s complaint process after video surfaced showing the savage beating of Duanna Johnson in police custody. 

The audit was completed in 2009, and a resolution was passed by City Council to form an ad-hoc committee to recommend to Council how to improve the board.  That committee never met. 

After a spate of incidents in 2013 in which people were arrested for videoing police who confiscated their phones and who roughly handled some citizens, including pepper-spraying, Memphis United discovered that the police oversight board had been abandoned without notice by the Wharton administration.  When attention was drawn to the demise of the CLERB -- although it had continued to live on the city website and as a line item in the budget -- new appointments were made. 

A coalition of grassroots activists such as the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center and the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition, Memphis United was commissioned in May 2014 by the City Council to do the work the committee never did in 2009.  Memphis United has collected public input by having town hall meetings in all Council districts, has researched best practices for oversight boards and has made a report to the City Council at no cost to the city.  Memphis United’s findings resulted in a proposed ordinance to the existing framework of CLERB, which calls for the civilian body to have authority to subpoena police records and testimony and to form a website which makes transparent the process of citizen complaints about alleged police abuses.

Memphis United organizing coordinator Paul Garner and law student Brian Burns presented this ordinance amendment jointly to two City Council committees, Personnel and Public Safety, on April 7 – ironically or sadly, the same day that nightly network news led with the video of Walter Scott being shot in the back and killed by a police officer in South Carolina.  Rather than advancing out of committee to the full City Council, council member Bill Boyd and outgoing Chief Administrative Officer George Little got action deferred on the ordinance for two weeks.

MEMPHIS UNITED MEETS WITH MPD

The City Council committee required on April 7 that police and city representatives meet with Memphis United prior to its April 21 meeting.  The point of the meeting was for Memphis United representatives and city and police officials to hash out the ordinance and determine any points of agreement and disagreement. 

On April 16 Memphis United met with Little; Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong; Deputy Director Anthony Berryhill; Lt. Mike Winters from MPD internal affairs; assistant city attorney Zayid Saleem, and Memphis Police Association President Mike Williams.  The police oppose strengthening the civilian oversight board, and they complain about the citizens board being able to subpoena records and compel the appearance of officers. 

“They're anti-police,” says Williams, in a shoot-the-messenger reflex against Memphis United.  Williams contends Memphis United represents a narrow segment of Memphis and says he would give more credence to a proposal that came from "the common citizens from Frayser or East Memphis."   This is notwithstanding that City Council assigned the project to Memphis United and that Memphis United brought publicity and town hall meetings to all City Council districts.

The police association had been running a smear and intimidation campaign in social media, posting photos of Garner and comments from and about Garner.  Last week on the police association Facebook page appeared comments about the Memphis United coalition being “hippies,” and having “rap sheets” and being “socialists” and that the city of Memphis is an “anal orifice.”  Later, the most personal and vitriolic posts were removed, although the police association Facebook page has been re-posting messages from the Memphis United Facebook page. 

Garner, Memphis United and the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center have supported Memphis police officers and fire fighters in their issues with the city over pay and benefits. 

Memphis United has been campaigning that Memphis must “fix the barrel” of apples, because police abuses are systemic and cannot be dismissed as “a few bad apples.”

The Memphis United Facebook page states that 20 MPD officers were arrested in the last 12 months, “for crimes ranging from solicitation, sexual exploitation of a minor, to DUI.   We can't continue to excuse these as isolated incidents involving #BadApples. Many have had previous complaints filed against them, and many had their charges reduced.  They say it only takes one apple to spoil the bunch, and we know of at least twenty in our barrel.

“We cannot continue to make this about individual bad actors.”

The CLERB now exists in name only, with members appointed but with no meaningful powers, no staff to follow up on complaints and therefore little incentive for a citizen to go through the hoops and hurdles presently required.  Any citizen with a complaint about police misconduct must first complain to MPD internal affairs and await the outcome of that process before taking the matter up with CLERB. 
Matters came to a head after police twice arrested citizens at Manna House homeless refuge in Midtown and after police arrested and pepper-sprayed people for videoing them after a South Main Trolley Night music event Oct. 25, 2013.
In the wake of those incidents, citizens found the process of asking the police to police themselves through Internal Affairs to be highly unsatisfactory, according to Memphis United. 
After three people were charged with "obstructing a sidewalk" as they were leaving and locking up Manna House in November, 2012, they complained to MPD.  Internal Affairs sat on it for nine months before replying that police did no wrong -- although the "obstructing a sidewalk" charges were dropped.
As it seems police target homeless persons, two Memphians were arrested while trying to video police in front of Manna House on Oct. 21, 2013.  Memphis United says police wanted to search the house, but a woman working there told police they needed a warrant.  Police charged them with "obstructing a sidewalk" and "disorderly conduct." 
Those charges also were dropped, but the citizens' complaint to Internal Affairs took six months to yield a reply, which said charges against the police were "not sustained." 
Looking to appeal how Internal Affairs ended those complaints, those arrested found that CLERB no longer existed.
Garner and Williams agree on one thing:  It will be up to City Council, not them or their organizations, to determine if Memphis will join Knoxville, Atlanta and a growing number of cities that have meaningful citizen oversight of police. 
Memphis United is urging Memphians to contact City Council – especially the Council member over a resident’s district – and tell them to strengthen CLERB by supporting the proposed upgrades.












Moore Media & Entertainment, which makes films to illuminate issues of social and economic injustice, has completed its Memphis-produced comedy short, “The Suburban Itch,” and it is being submitted to U.S. and foreign film festivals.  The film is relevant in the context of profiling and police conduct as it takes on racial profiling with a spoof of a role reversal – black motorists lock their doors and are afraid upon seeing a white fellow running along Chelsea Avenue in North Memphis.  Police stop the white jogger, because he looks out of place and might be running away from a crime.

Film website:  www.TheSuburbanItch.com

Film Facebook page:  www.Facebook.com/TheSuburbanItch

Friday, April 3, 2015

Friday, March 13, 2015

Oliver Stone and Activism in Filmmaking

Producer of The Untold History of the United States gets the sorry state of the nation and uses dramatic media to light up the injustices. 
Here's the story in Movie Maker Magazine.

This is also one of our current initiatives, using dramatization in film to illuminate social and economic injustice in a way that people can relate to better than reading op-eds and listening to sound bites of speeches. 
For example, "The Suburban Itch" takes on racial profiling and how we treat each other with humor and original, Memphis hip-hop music. 

Monday, March 9, 2015

This Memphis Emcee Teaches from the College of Musical Knowledge


‘Knowledge Nick’ Breaks the Stereotype Box

With Music and ‘The Suburban Itch’ Film


So many people told “Knowledge Nick” Hicks they did not think he was from Memphis that the popular Memphis emcee wrote a song about it.

“The M” chronicles Hicks’ view of his city, “from the ‘burbs to the hood” and “blessed, from East to West” and explains that people think he is from “up North.”

“People want to put you in a box,” Hicks says. 

Knowledge Nick and his music were, therefore, a perfect match to be featured in “The Suburban Itch,” a comedy short film which attacks profiling with humor and music.   

“The M” and “Leaders of the New School,” written and performed by Hicks and Bartholomew Jones will, respectively, open and close the film.   “The Suburban Itch,” a Moore Media & Entertainment film, was shot and produced entirely in Memphis. 

Sunday, January 25, 2015

The Spectacle of Illiteracy and the Crisis of Democracy

Bombarded by shameless liars and fake outrage on a daily basis, Americans have lost their ability to connect problems in their lives with the politics and public policies which affect them.


Our condition is excellently laid out in this article by Henry Giroux linked in truthout.org


My angle on this is that regular Americans have been told by Fox and Fakes that they should be mad at liberals and democracy and equality -- and that your misery is their fault, not yours.   
Simple is so easy to sell -- there is no heavy lifting or thinking involved.  And, to salve the populace that nothing is their fault -- all your problems are caused by "them" -- is both a relief and a cop-out, a gift that serves up a rationalization for choosing ignorance. In other words, "You're off the hook.  Feel better?"

Friday, January 2, 2015

'Suburban Itch' Reporter Follows Reality Down the Tubes

While 'The Suburban Itch,' comedy short produced by Moore Media & Entertainment, lights up the issue of racial profiling with a role reversal, the sad state of journalism does not escape the political swath of its narrative.


DeMarcus Malone, the white guy who is hassled by police for looking "suspicious," is a prize-winning print reporter.  Ultimately a victim of the times, DeMarcus loses his job when the fictional newspaper, the Memphis News-Times, closes shop. 


Reality blows.  The Commercial Appeal cut 17 employees in September.  Owner E.W. Scripps concurrently announced it was selling off its print assets and The Commercial Appeal would be owned by the Milwaukee-based Journal Media Group. Click to read story in the Memphis Flyer. 


The Tennessean in August fired all of its reporters, editors and photographers and told them they could re-apply for jobs with a spin-off print company reorganized by media giant Gannett.  Click to read story in the Nashville Scene. 


Go to www.MemphisNewsTimes.com to see the stories that James Miles reads on his cell phone while his daughter Marybeth is handcuffed to DeMarcus.  Yeah, we created a website for DeMarcus' failed paper.  DeMarcus is the subject of, not the reporter of, one story, headlined:  "Our Reporter Beaten, Arrested at Occupy Wall Street!" 


So, the mass media conglomerates are throwing out their print holdings with both hands while hanging onto TV and digital assets.  Gannett, publisher of USA Today and the nation's largest newspaper chain, is doing companywide what they did to The Tennessean, cutting editorial staff across the board by 15 percent.  


Who is going to take up the slack left by the demise of journalism?   The ability of the people to be informed is protected in the First Amendment, which sets aside the press as the only commercial endeavor which gets such elevated status.


Network TV news no longer exists as a separate division, as did CBS News during the years of Walter Cronkite.  The operation may or may not have been profitable any given year, but that was not the point.  There was prestige for the network and honor in doing an important job.  Now, all network news outfits are wholly within the corporate structure, which means the measure of their success is the bottom line, not good journalism.


Instead of digging for the stories -- and the stories under the surface -- the contemporary media fill us up with cats chasing balloons and Kardashian sightings. 


 Instead of editors with strong backgrounds in journalism, today's daily newspapers are headed by "content executives," which means simply this:


Give the people in our target demographic what they want -- not what they need -- and what will drive circulation and ad volume, page views and click-throughs.  These new-era managers talk about "user experience" and, as The Tennessean's executive editor Stefanie Murray spun, the "newsroom of the future" as we are "continually reinventing ourselves."   


Is former Tennessean editor and publisher John Seigenthaler, who died in 2014, already rolling over in his grave?   The top three execs now in The Tennessean's newsroom combined have  less than five years experience.
Film website:  www.TheSuburbanItch.com

Monday, December 15, 2014

Senator Elizabeth Warren Exposes Phantom Provision, Demonstrating Citigroup Rules You and the United States Government

Nobody's taking credit for a last-minute, sneaky provision put in by Citigroup puppets in Washington.  It boils down to who is in charge of the government --- and if this bill passes, it will be Hail to Citigroup.  CLICK TO WATCH THIS INSTRUCTIVE VIDEO AND MAKE EVERYONE YOU KNOW WATCH IT.