A discussion on race, police use of force and the law took place at 天美传媒's Olmsted Theatre on December 8, 2014.
Ten students from the criminal justice group at took to the stage in and offered a moving tribute to 10 African American males killed in recent years by police (or by a civilian, in the case of George Zimmerman, who killed teenager Trayvon Martin in 2012).
Each of the 10 students read what were believed to be the final words spoken by each victim, along with his name, age and date of death.
鈥溾業 Can鈥檛 Breathe.鈥 Eric Garner. Age: 43. July 17, 2014,鈥 the final student read in remembrance of the Staten Island, New York, father of six whose death from what appeared to be a chokehold was captured on video. A grand jury decided to not indict the police officers involved, sparking protests around the world.
鈥淲hy did Eric Garner resist arrest? Because he felt that what the police were doing was fundamentally illegitimate,鈥 said Alex Vitale, Ph.D., the keynote speaker at the December 8, 2014, event, 鈥淎 Discussion on Race, Police Use of Force and the Law: From Michael Brown to Eric Garner and Beyond.鈥
About a hundred students, faculty members and administrators attended the event, organized by Stephanie Lake, Ph.D., director of the program and professor of in the .
Dr. Vitale called for the abolishment of New York City鈥檚 鈥渂roken windows鈥 policy, which compels police to make arrests for petty offenses under the premise that it prevents those apprehended from committing more serious crimes. Police had attempted to arrest Garner for selling untaxed cigarettes, known as 鈥渓oosies.鈥
鈥淭here is no evidence whatsoever that the broken windows policy reduces crime,鈥 Dr. Vitale said. 鈥淪uch policies鈥攁nd the unequal enforcement of drug laws鈥攈ave led to criminalizing a whole generation of people of color.鈥
Dr. Vitale, a professor of sociology at Brooklyn College, has been published in peer-reviewed academic journals and in many media outlets including , and . He鈥檚 the author of City of Disorder: How the Quality of Life Campaign Transformed New York Politics and co-editor of People, Power, and Politics. His wife, Elizabeth Palley, Ph.D., is a professor in Adelphi鈥檚 .
Earlier in the day, dozens of students on the protested by staging a 鈥渄ie-in鈥 outside the . The event drew further attention to the killings of unarmed African Americans such as Garner, Brown, Martin and Sean Bell, as well as to the absence of convictions in any of those cases.
鈥淭here is definitely a renewed sense of activism among students,鈥 said Dr. Lake, who attended the die-in along with other faculty members, including Traci Levy, Ph.D., an associate professor and chair of the .
鈥淪tudents are often overwhelmed by a corporate media that entertains them rather than informs them,鈥 Dr. Lake said. 鈥淏ut on issues of social justice, students are determined to make their voices heard.鈥
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director听
p 鈥 516.237.8634
e 鈥 twilson@adelphi.edu
