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| The Occupy protesters inspired others to take to the streets |
As
questions grow about where the Occupy movement is headed, in New York City,
where it all began, attention is turning to local issues. Protesters have
demanded that police put an end to their stop-and-frisk policy.
As winter
sets in and cities across North America clear Occupy protesters from their
camps, many wonder what lies ahead for a movement without a geographic base,
leaders or concrete demands.
If New York
City, where the Occupy movement began, is any indication, part of that future
may lie in new grassroots coalitions organizing around specific and local
social justice issues that connect with the overarching cause of the movement,
a more egalitarian society.
Since
October, an eclectic mix of young and old, black, white and Latino protesters have
been "occupying" the entrances of police precincts in Manhattan,
Brooklyn and Queens.
Their
demand: an end to the New York Police Department's stop-and-frisk policy.
By law, if
a police officer has reasonable suspicion that someone has committed a crime or
is about to, that officer can stop the person and question them. If the officer
suspects that person is carrying a weapon, the officer can also frisk them.
A
controversial policy
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| Protesters have marched near the entrances of police precincts |
But the
policy has been coming under growing scrutiny as the number of stops has risen
steadily, from fewer than 100,000 in 2002 to more than 600,000 last year.
Nearly 85 percent of those stopped have been black or Latino, despite the fact
that they make up 52 percent of the city's population.
The police
department declined to be interviewed, but it has argued that the practice is
an essential public security tool that takes guns off the street and has
contributed to reducing crime in New York City. It rejects charges of racial
profiling, arguing that stops are concentrated in some predominantly black and
Latino neighborhoods because police are concentrating their efforts where crime
rates are higher.
The policy
is controversial. It is the leading cause of complaints against the police.
Eric Adams, state senator and a former police captain, as well as Manhattan
Borough President Scott Stringer, have called for an investigation by the
Justice Department into the policy. In 2008, the Center for Constitutional Rights
filed a federal class action lawsuit against the New York Police Department
(NYPD). But until this fall, there had been no concerted protests against the
policy.
Occupy Wall
Street changed that.
On October
21, protesters locked arms in a peaceful protest in front of the 28th Precinct
in Harlem. Around 30 people were arrested, among them, media figure and
Princeton University professor Cornel West.
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| Many feel protesting stop-and-frisk was long overdue |
Occupy Wall
Street comes to Brooklyn
Ten days
later, around 125 protesters marched to Fort Plaza in Brownsville, Brooklyn
where the 73rd Precinct sits between Brooklyn's Youth Prison and one of the
many housing projects that spread across the neighborhood.
The
diversity of the protesters stood out in a neighborhood that is 95 percent
black and Latino. White college kids who had never been stopped demonstrated
alongside young black men and women from Brownsville, like Sherrod Hays. He
said he'd followed Occupy Wall Street on TV, but spending the night in a tent
wasn't for him. Protesting stop and frisk was long overdue, he said.
"Every day we're getting stopped."
The
hallmarks of the Occupy movement were everywhere, from invocations of the 99
percent, to the use of the "human microphone" in which protesters
repeat what a speaker is saying to amplify the message.
The
campaign "gets a lot of energy from Occupy Wall Street," said Debra
Sweet, executive director of the World Can't Wait movement. "It is
absolutely out there to support the rights of the 99 percent which almost never
connect. Brownsville, Brooklyn would almost never connect with the white middle
class banker protester," said Sweet.
Drawing on
the past
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| Protesters have vowed to continue their campaign of civil disobedience |
But the protesters
are also drawing on an earlier mass movement which, like the stop-and-frisk
protests, was concerned with racial justice; the civil rights protests of the
1960s. It is echoed in their chants, "stop-and-frisk has got to go, we say
no to the New Jim Crow," referring to the system of legal segregation in
the American South defeated by the civil rights movement.
It's
evident in their tactics of non-violent civil disobedience, and is also
explicit in the way the protesters describe themselves as a "new generation
of freedom riders."
Dan Craig,
a pastor at Brownsville's Mount Zion Baptist Church, remembers the civil rights
movement. He grew up in Selma, Alabama where Martin Luther King Jr. led a
historic march to Montgomery for voting rights. But when the protesters showed
up, he was standing with a group of neighborhood clergy in support of the
police.
Craig
actually agreed with the protesters' accusations of racial profiling by the
police. "But racial profiling isn't a product of the NYPD, it's a product
of the United States of America," he said. Craig, who is part of a task
force of clergy working to improve relations between the police and the
community, said things were getting better.
For their
part, protesters are vowing to pursue their campaign of civil disobedience
until the NYPD stops its policy of widespread stops.
The number
of those stops is on track to top 700,000 this year, setting a new record for
the fourth year in a row.
Author:
Jonah Engle, Brooklyn, New York
Editor: Sarah Steffen
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