The City of Chicago will pay pay $10.2 million to a wrongfully convicted man who spent 26 years prison for a murder he did not commit.
He was convicted despite the fact that some attorneys familiar with the crime knew almost from the very beginning that he was innocent.
Cook County, IL, prosecutors convicted Alton Logan, 55, for the Jan. 11, 1982, murder of Lloyd Wickliffe, a security guard working at a McDonald’s on Chicago’s far South Side. Police arrested Logan, then 28, and Edgar Hope a month after the killing, based on identifications made by a second security guard, who was wounded in the shooting.
A few days after their arrest, police also arrested Andrew Wilson for shooting to death two Chicago police officers. Hope told his lawyer that he and Wilson, not Logan, committed the murder at McDonald’s.
Dale Coventry and Jamie Kunz, Wilson’s public defenders, confronted Wilson, who admitted that he shot and killed one security guard and wounded the other guard, according to the Northwestern University Center for Wrongful Convictions.
Category Archives: trayvon
Sheriff Seeks Information on Lavanial Williams Shooting
Lavanial Williams, 17, was shot numerous times in the 300 block of Drake Avenue in Marin City early Friday.
He died at the scene, lying on the sidewalk.
Williams, who lived with his father in Weed, CA, recently arrived in Marin City to visit his mother Yolanda Arceneaux when the fatal shooting occurred. Arceneaux was still living in the apartment at which an unknown shooter fired six shots in July.
The Marin County Sheriff’s Office is asking for the help of the community. They are currently looking for witnesses or anyone with information related to Williams’ murder.
Anyone with information may call or text information to the Marin County Sheriff’s Office Investigations cellphone at (415) 497-4245. Voice mail, text or direct contact with detectives will be accepted. This will be a 24-hour hotline.
Or call the Marin County Sheriff’s Office Dispatch at (415) 479-2311, which will be direct to a dispatcher 24-hours a day.
Callers may remain anonymous. All information will be investigated.
Let’s Change the Culture of Gun Violence
By Alice A. Huffman, Criminal Justice Chair for the National Board of the NAACP and the State Conference President in California/Hawaii; and Wilfred T. Ussery, former National Chairman of CORE and former President of the Board of the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART)
How proud we were to watch the president while supporting the families of the victims of Newtown, Connecticut vowing to do whatever he can to stop the carnage.
We are asking all Americans to move beyond the traditional incremental modifications of gun laws and address a more systemic problem in America, namely, the nation’s out-of-control, culture of gun violence.
We are now a nation with 5 percent of the world’s population but which has 50 percent of the world’s guns in civilian hands.
The nation’s obsession with gun ownership emanates from, and is supported and nurtured by the 2nd Amendment to the Constitution. The 2nd Amendment has fulfilled its initial purpose and is no longer needed.
Years ago when it was created, we lived in a far different world. The 13 American colonies became the 13 United States of America in 1783, following the war for independence from Britain.
The 2nd Amendment was ratified in 1791. It is believed that Madison proposed it, but it was common law in the constitutions of most of the 13 states.
The 2nd Amendment to the Constitution supports the creation of a militia and gives everyone in the United States the right to “keep and bear arms.”
Obviously when a massacre, like the one in Newtown, happens to little children, it stops the nation in its tracks, but if we look at the shocking results of our nation’s gun laws, we know that no community in America is safe from gun violence, particularly, the nation’s urban communities where people of color are being murdered in greater numbers than all of the Americans who died in the last two World wars and Vietnam.
The 2nd Amendment that many hold so dear reads, “A well-regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”
This 2nd Amendment was adopted almost 221 years ago. With the formation of the new Constitution that gave the federal government its national power and presence, the founding fathers created:
A common currency, where before, individual states still produced their own; a national military force – until then many states still had their own armies and navies; a centralized control over foreign policy rather than states negotiating directly with other countries; and the national system for imposing and collecting taxes.
In 1787, the new Constitution was approved. In 1789, Congress began deliberation on the Bill of Rights that created the first 10 Amendments to the Constitution.
In 1789, the newly created country was slowly taking shape, but the states that still had been acting as their own countries and were negotiating with foreign powers with their own currency and wanted their own militia.
Today, the official militia of the states is the National Guard. The National Guard was established as a federally funded reserve component of the nation’s armed forces in 1903 with the Militia Act of 1903 under Title 10 and Title 32 of the U.S. Code.
The National Defense Act of 1947 created the Air Force as a separate branch of the Armed Forces of the United States and concurrently created the Air National Guard as one of its reserve components, mirroring the Army’s component structure.
So now that we have a National Guard that operates under the control of the governors of the states, why do we need a Constitutional Amendment that allows individuals to form a militia?
We will not stop our nation’s infatuation with guns, its culture of gun violence, and the directly related senseless killing that occur daily in America until we change our nation’s 221 year old, obsolete, 2nd Amendment to the Constitution.
“USA Today” reported on Dec. 20 that, “Mass killers target Americans once every two weeks on average, in attacks. The killings between 2006 and 2010 of 747 victims from 157 murders classified as mass murders by the FBI offer a portrait of mass murder that in many ways belies the stereotype of a lone gunman targeting strangers.
Children are frequently victims of gun violence.
These massacres are never called white on white crime, but, when it comes to urban areas we think about Black on Black crime and Brown on Brown killings which gives the majority population a reason to look the other way.
So we propose two things: first, that we should begin thinking about all of these deaths without regard to race, but as all of our children and others – young and old – who are affected by gun violence in America. Race has nothing to do with the finality or neutrality of death.
Second, we should modify the Second Amendment to read: “While a well-regulated militia is unnecessary to sustain the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall be well regulated.”
Approval of this proposed rewrite of the language of the 2nd Amendment can lead to the successful adoption of an amended Second Amendment that over time would profoundly change the nation’s culture of violence, the incidence of gun violence and make us all safer.
SF, Oakland Gun Buybacks in Wake of Connecticut Tragedy

Camden Police Chief Scott Thomson speaks in front of 1,137 guns that were turned in for cash during a state-sponsored gun buyback program for Camden County, N.J. residents last Friday and Saturday. The guns were displayed at the Camden Police Department, Tuesday, Dec. 18. (Staff Photo by Tim Hawk/South Jersey Times).
As the country mourns the victims of the Connecticut elementary school massacre, police in Oakland and San Francisco were flooded with people handing over firearms at gun buyback events this past weekend.
Residents brought nearly 300 guns to the buyback on Saturday at Omega Boys Club in San Francisco on Saturday, and another 300 more were turned in at Saint Benedict’s Church in Oakland.
“We far exceeded whatever we thought we could get,” said San Francisco police Chief Greg Suhr.
For each unloaded, working gun that was turned in, residents received $200. But because of the large number of guns turned in, about half of the people received vouchers for the money, and organizers are looking for funding sources to pay them.
The chief said the high numbers were likely attributed to the shooting that left more than two dozen students and staff dead at an elementary school a day earlier, a case Suhr called “unimaginable.”
In Oakland, the event was funded by a $100,000 donation from Keith Stephenson, president of the Purple Heart Patient Center, a medical marijuana dispensary in the city.
Captain Ersie Joyner of the Oakland Police said the department was surprised by the types of guns that were turned in.
”At other gun buyback programs we‘ve often gotten guns that are not operable, or old dusty musket-type firearms. These are kind of like high caliber…these are the types of guns that are used in robberies,” he said.
Police Report in Blueford Shooting Raises Questions, Says Attorney
By Ken A. Epstein
A local criminal attorney is raising questions after examining the police report in the shooting death of Alan Blueford by Oakland Police Officer Miguel Masso.
Meanwhile, Alameda County prosecutors last week released a report saying the police officer acted in self-defense and will face no criminal charges.
The partial police report was released two weeks ago, five months after the 18-year-old high school student was killed.
“It should not have taken the months it has already taken and continues to take,” said Walter Riley, a criminal defense and police misconduct attorney in Oakland since 1984.
“There were a finite number of witnesses available in the case,” he said. “The policeman who did the shooting and his partner, and the officers who arrived at the scene subsequently are all identifiable and accessible.”
The report that was released is missing the “shooter’s statement and the statement of his partner,” as well as crime scene photos and the ownership history of the gun that was found at the scene, Riley said.
A single thumbprint was found on the gun magazine, which is alleged to be Blueford’s, ”(But) we don’t have any further information,” Riley said, about the points of similarity that would indicate the likelihood the thumb print belonged to Blueford.
Nor is there information whether other fingerprints or DNA evidence were found on the weapon.
“There was no gun fight,” Riley continued. “Witnesses say he was shot while he was on the ground. He clearly did not fire a gun. It is disputed by family and some witnesses that he had a gun at any time.”
A witness reported, Riley said, that he heard Blueford speaking while on the ground. “He said he heard Alan say, ‘I didn’t do anything.’ That’s inconsistent with a dying person having a gun, but it is consistent with a dying person not threatening a police officer with a gun,” Riley said.
The Alameda County prosecutors 18-page says Officer Masso shot Blueford three times in the chest and left shoulder after the fleeing teenager pointed a loaded semiautomatic pistol at him.
“Officer Masso actually and reasonably believed that his life was in danger after he had made eye contact with Mr. Blueford and that if he did not shoot, he would be killed,” the report said.
The report quoted Masso as saying he “went into survival mode.”
In an angry written response to the report, the Justice 4 Alan Blueford Coalition this week said “(It) reveals a high level of bias and a shamefully inadequate demonstration of investigative methodology,” citing only witness statements that agree with the police version of the event.
The released Oakland police reports on the killing of Alan Blueford can be found at www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/10/04/18723068.php#18723083
Police Report in Blueford Shooting Raises Questions, Says Attorney
By Ken A. Epstein
A local criminal attorney is raising questions after examining the police report in the shooting death of Alan Blueford by Oakland Police Officer Miguel Masso.
Meanwhile, Alameda County prosecutors on Tuesday released a report saying the police officer acted in self-defense and will face no criminal charges.
The partial police report was released last week, five months after the 18-year-old high school student was killed.
“It should not have taken the months it has already taken and continues to take,” said Walter Riley, a criminal defense and police misconduct attorney in Oakland since 1984.
“There were a finite number of witnesses available in the case,” he said. “The policeman who did the shooting and his partner, and the officers who arrived at the scene subsequently are all identifiable and accessible.”
The report that was released is missing the “shooter’s statement and the statement of his partner,” as well as crime scene photos and the ownership history of the gun that was found at the scene, Riley said.
A single thumbprint was found on the gun magazine, which is alleged to be Blueford’s, ”(But) we don’t have any further information,” Riley said, about the points of similarity that would indicate the likelihood the thumb print belonged to Blueford.
Nor is there information whether other fingerprints or DNA evidence were found on the weapon.
“There was no gun fight,” Riley continued. “Witnesses say he was shot while he was on the ground. He clearly did not fire a gun. It is disputed by family and some witnesses that he had a gun at any time.”
A witness reported, Riley said, that he heard Blueford speaking while on the ground. “He said he heard Alan say, ‘I didn’t do anything.’ That’s inconsistent with a dying person having a gun, but it is consistent with a dying person not threatening a police officer with a gun,” Riley said.
The Alameda County prosecutors 18-page says Officer Masso shot Blueford three times in the chest and left shoulder after the fleeing teenager pointed a loaded semiautomatic pistol at him.”Officer Masso actually and reasonably believed that his life was in danger after he had made eye contact with Mr. Blueford and that if he did not shoot, he would be killed,” the report said.The report quoted Masso as saying he “went into survival mode.”
The released Oakland police reports on the killing of Alan Blueford can be found at www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/10/04/18723068.php#18723083
Trayvon’s DNA Not on Murder Weapon
On Wednesday, prosecutors released another round of evidence in the second-degree murder case against George Zimmerman.
According to Florida Department of Law Enforcement reports, forensic data confirmed that the former neighborhood volunteer’s DNA was found on the grip of the gun used to kill Trayvon Martin on Feb. 26, 2012.
Even though test results revealed multiple handlers, none of them seem to match Martin’s DNA.

Outrage Continues Over Trayvon Martin Killing
By Post Staff

Demands for justice in the killing of Trayvon Martin sweep the nation. Councilmember Desley Brooks wearing hoodie ( top center) joined protesters Monday in front of Oakland City Hall. Photo by Stephen Brooks, Jr.
Outrage over the killing of 17-year-old Florida teenager Trayvon Martin is continuing to spread across the nation, sparking protests in Oakland and San Francisco and reaching even to the floor of Congress in Washington, D.C.
Martin was shot and killed Feb. 26 by a neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman, 28, who claimed self-defense. The police questioned him, but then let him go, saying they did not have enough evidence to charge him.
Contradicting police reports that Martin attacked Zimmerman, breaking his nose, a 90-second video shows police searching a handcuffed Zimmerman, apparently without blood or bruises, as he is led into the Sanford police department on the night of the killing. The police video, which was distributed to the media and available online Wednesday, had not been authorized for release.
“(Martin’s) life was robbed because of suspicion and perception,” said Charley Hames, pastor of BeeBe Memorial Cathedral, speaking at the rally.
The protest was organized by members of the Oakland NAACP and its Oakland Imani Youth Council.
“Every young person in Oakland is important and valuable to our society – their lives are precious. I’m in prayer for Trayvon’s family, as it is an unimaginable loss for a parent to lose a child, “ said Pastor Brondon Reems of Center of Hope Community Church, in an interview after the rally.
Speakers at Monday’s protest at the San Francisco Hall of Justice called for Zimmerman’s immediate arrest.
“We’re tired of saying ‘no more stolen lives,’” said Mesha Monge-Irizarry, whose son Idriss Stelley was killed by the San Francisco Police in 2001. “Now it’s time for action.”
National figures, including the Miami Heat basketball team and President Barack Obama, have spoken out against the incident. The team donned hoodies in solidarity with Martin, while Obama said, “If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.”
Protest reached the floor of Congress on Wednesday when Rep. Bobby Rush told his House colleagues, “Racial profiling has to stop, Mr. Speaker,” as he took off his suit jacket to reveal a grey hoodie.
“Just because someone wears a hoodie does not make them a hoodlum,” the Illinois Democrat said, putting on the hoodie and sunglasses.
On the House floor, wearing a hoodie could be considered the same as wearing a hat — a violation of House rules. So said Rep. Gregg Harper, a Mississippi Republican presiding over the chamber when Rep. Rush gave his speech. Harper ordered him to be escorted off the floor.
“I’d like to commend Congressman Rush for pleading our case,” said Tracy Martin, Travvon Martin’s father, when he learned of Rush’s protest.
“Why wasn’t Congressman Rush allowed to address racial profiling?” he asked. ”This is something that needs to be talked about…This is a country of freedom of speech.”
Angela Corey, Prosecutor In Trayvon Martin Case, Known As Tough
By MIKE SCHNEIDER
SANFORD, Fla. — The special prosecutor leading the investigation into the shooting death of an unarmed black teen by a neighborhood watch volunteer is known for her tough tactics aimed at locking up criminals for long sentences and making it difficult to negotiate light plea bargains.
Furthermore, 57-year-old Angela Corey has handled hundreds of homicide cases involving the justifiable use of deadly force – experience that could prove invaluable. It will be up to Corey whether to charge 28-year-old George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watchman who says he was defending himself when he fatally shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin during a scuffle. Martin was unarmed as he walked from a convenience store, and the case has become a racial flashpoint with protesters across the nation calling for his arrest. Zimmerman’s father is white, his mother Hispanic.
Police did not initially charge Zimmerman because of a state law allowing someone to use deadly force if his life is in danger.
Corey, who also could call a grand jury to decide whether to file charges against Zimmerman, is known in legal circles as being passionate about victim’s rights and having clubby ties to law enforcement. She won the State Attorney’s Office seat after being fired from her job at the office a few years ago, beating the handpicked successor of the state attorney who fired her.
Corey was appointed the special prosecutor in the case by Gov. Rick Scott after State Attorney Norm Wolfinger, whose district covers Sanford, recused himself.
Since she took on the case a dozen days ago, Corey and her team of two prosecutors and an investigator have interviewed witnesses in Sanford and visited the scene of the shooting. She also has instituted a media blackout, refusing to comment on any aspect of the case as of this week. Corey refused to take any questions about the Trayvon Martin case during a telephone interview on Friday.
Defense attorneys who have gone up against Corey in court say she is up for the job.
“She is a tough-minded prosecutor who is prepared, thorough and a very good advocate for the prosecution in the court,” said Ann Finnell, a Jacksonville defense attorney who has faced off against Corey during a trial. Finnell also was on the legal team for Casey Anthony, the Orlando mother acquitted of killing her 2-year-old daughter.
As a courtroom prosecutor, Corey was an aggressive advocate. When she ran for the State Attorney’s Office in 2008, she made prosecuting juvenile criminals a top priority and celebrated her close ties to law enforcement agencies – so much so that in its endorsement of Corey’s opponent, The Florida Times-Union newspaper in Jacksonville wrote: “Is Corey’s relationship with the sheriff and the unions too close? Yes.”
As the Jacksonville-based State Attorney for three northeast Florida counties, she has been known for filing more charges, bringing more cases to trial and being less likely to use a grand jury than her predecessor. Florida prosecutors are required to use grand juries only in first-degree murder degrees. But many prosecutors send high-profile or controversial cases to grand juries to avoid the political fallout of an unpopular decision.
“It would be fair to say that her office, when faced with the choice, files as many counts and charges as they believe they can prove … which tends to make their prosecutions more complex and expose defendants to substantially more sentences,” said A. Russell Smith, a Jacksonville defense attorney who is a past president of the Florida Association of Criminal Defense Attorneys. He attended law school with Corey and considers her a close friend.
“It also makes cases more difficult to negotiate. There are more charges and prosecutors are less willing to drop counts in order to find a fair and negotiated plea.”
Corey, a Jacksonville native, also teaches classes for prosecutors and police officers about interrogations and the justifiable use of deadly force and is active in the local Republican party.
But she does have her share of detractors, including her former boss and predecessor, former State Attorney Harry Shorstein.
Shorstein fired Corey in 2006 from the office she had worked in for the previous 25 years. He said the firing stemmed from a complaint from an intern who claimed Corey was unprofessional and profane. He asked Corey to respond to a professor who had brought the complaint to his attention, but Corey instead sent a letter criticizing the professor for communicating the complaint, according to Shorstein.
“I don’t want to sound like an old, tough Marine, but if I’m your boss, and I order you to do something that is appropriate and legal, and you don’t do it, one of us has to go,” Shorstein said.
Corey disputed that account, saying she was fired because she would not agree to drop her run for State Attorney in 2008.
“They cooked up so many things, it was almost unbelievable,” she said.
A job evaluation from 2006 provided by Corey said “Angela is one of the best” in reference to her litigation skills. It said she goes out of her way to help others but also warned her against giving the impression that police officers could appeal to her with any decision about which they were unhappy. The evaluation is signed by Shorstein.
Corey also has been criticized for bringing a case to a grand jury that indicted a 12-year-old boy for first-degree murder in the beating death of his 2-year-old half-brother instead of allowing it to be handled in juvenile court. Protesters marched outside her office and delivered a petition with 180,000 names opposed to the decision.
Corey said she was seeking a middle ground that would get Fernandez out from the limitations of juvenile court, where there is no guarantee he could serve a continuous incarceration sentence until he is 22 if found guilty.
“If life in prison is inappropriate for a 12-year-old, but neither is juvenile, let’s look for middle ground,” she said.
Trayvon Martin Shooting: Voice Experts Claim Teen’s Cries, Not Zimmerman’s, Can Be Heard On 911 Call
Before George Zimmerman shot Trayvon Martin on February 26, a 911 call recorded the voice of someone screaming. Whether that person was Martin or Zimmerman — who police sayclaimed he was attacked by Martin before the fatal incident — has been an open question since the calls were released by the Sanford, Florida police department. (WARNING: Above audio is disturbing.)
The Orlando Sentinel consulted two voice experts to try to settle the debate, and both came to the same conclusion: The cries could not have come from George Zimmerman.
One expert, Tom Owen, used voice identification software to rule out Zimmerman as the source. From the Sentinel:
“I took all of the screams and put those together, and cut out everything else,” Owen says.The software compared that audio to Zimmerman’s voice. It returned a 48 percent match. Owen said to reach a positive match with audio of this quality, he’d expect higher than 90 percent.
“As a result of that, you can say with reasonable scientific certainty that it’s not Zimmerman,” Owen says, stressing that he cannot confirm the voice as Trayvon’s, because he didn’t have a sample of the teen’s voice to compare.
Another analyst came to a similar conclusion using different technology.
The voice analysis is the latest piece of information to cast doubt on the narrative, advanced by Zimmerman and his family, that the Neighborhood Watch volunteer was attacked by 17-year-old Travyon Martin. A police video this week showed no blood or bruises on Zimmerman in the aftermath of the incident, while Martin’s funeral director said he saw no signs of a struggle on the teen’s body.
LeBron James Tweets Picture Of Miami Heat Wearing Hoodies In Solidarity With Family Of Trayvon Martin
On the evening of Feb. 26, Martin, a 17-year-old Miami native, was returning from the convenience store to the home of his father’s girlfriend in an Orlando suburb. George Zimmerman, a 28-year-old neighborhood watch member, reported Martin to the police, and told the 911 dispatcher that the teenager, who was wearing a hoodie, looked “suspicious.” Zimmerman was told by the dispatcher not to follow Martin, but a few minutes after the 911 call, Martin lay dead from a gunshot to the chest. Zimmerman admitted to police that he shot Martin, but claimed he acted in self-defense, and he has not been arrested or charged.
The tweet from the NBA superstar comes days after the Million Hoodie March, during which protesters wore hoodies to show solidarity with Martin’s family. Pictures of people in hoodies in solidarity have been flooding social networking sites.
Earlier today, President Obama made his first comments on the Martin case. “If I had a son, he would look like Trayvon,” the president said in a Rose Garden press conference.
Several of the Republican presidential candidates have weighed in as well.
Students in Miami, angered by a lack of action in the case, walked out of class.
Black student protesting in the name of #TrayvonMartin: “I just want to know if I’m next. All of us could be next.”
“For the most part they are being organized and are being supported by the school family as an outpouring show of support,” Broward County Public Schools spokesman Nadine Drew told NBC Miami. “I think the reaction is similar to the national reaction. I don’t think our students are any different than others.
Trayvon Martin, my son, and the Black Male Code
By JESSE WASHINGTON
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — I thought my son would be much older before I had to tell him about the Black Male Code. He’s only 12, still sleeping with stuffed animals, still afraid of the dark. But after the Trayvon Martin tragedy, I needed to explain to my child that soon people might be afraid of him.

This undated file family photo shows Trayvon Martin. Martin was slain in the town of Sanford, Fla., on Feb. 26 in a shooting that has set off a nationwide furor over race and justice.
Neighborhood crime-watch captain George Zimmerman claimed self-defense and has not been arrested, though state and federal authorities are still investigating. Since the slaying, a portrait has emerged of Martin as a laid-back young man who loved sports, was extremely close to his father, liked to crack jokes with friends and, according to a lawyer for his family, had never been in trouble with the law. (AP Photo/Martin Family, File)
Martin was slain in the town of Sanford, Fla., on Feb. 26 in a shooting that has set off a nationwide furor over race and justice. Neighborhood crime-watch captain George Zimmerman claimed self-defense and has not been arrested, though state and federal authorities are still investigating. Since the slaying, a portrait has emerged of Martin as a laid-back young man who loved sports, was extremely close to his father, liked to crack jokes with friends and, according to a lawyer for his family, had never been in trouble with the law. (AP Photo/Martin Family, File)

In this Friday, March 23, 2012 photo, Bill Stephney talks to his son Trevor, 13, as they sit outside their home in Randolph Township, N.J.
Stephney, a media executive who lives in a New Jersey suburb that is mostly white and Asian, has two sons, ages 18 and 13. The killing of Trayvon Martin was an opportunity for him to repeat a longtime lesson: black men can get singled out, ì
“so please conduct yourself accordingly.” (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

In this Friday, March 23, 2012 photo, Bill Stephney talks to his son Trevor, 13, as they sit outside their home in Randolph Township, N.J.
(AP Photo/Mel Evans)
We were in the car on the way to school when a story about Martin came on the radio. “The guy who killed him should get arrested. The dead guy was unarmed!” my son said after hearing that neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman had claimed self-defense in the shooting in Sanford, Fla.
We listened to the rest of the story, describing how Zimmerman had spotted Martin, who was 17, walking home from the store on a rainy night, the hood of his sweatshirt pulled over his head. When it was over, I turned off the radio and told my son about the rules he needs to follow to avoid becoming another Trayvon Martin — a black male who Zimmerman assumed was “suspicious” and “up to no good.”
As I explained it, the Code goes like this:
Always pay close attention to your surroundings, son, especially if you are in an affluent neighborhood where black folks are few. Understand that even though you are not a criminal, some people might assume you are, especially if you are wearing certain clothes.
Never argue with police, but protect your dignity and take pride in humility. When confronted by someone with a badge or a gun, do not flee, fight, or put your hands anywhere other than up.
Please don’t assume, son, that all white people view you as a threat. America is better than that. Suspicion and bitterness can imprison you. But as a black male, you must go above and beyond to show strangers what type of person you really are.
I was far from alone in laying out these instructions. Across the country this week, parents were talking to their children, especially their black sons, about the Code. It’s a talk the black community has passed down for generations, an evolving oral tradition from the days when an errant remark could easily cost black people their job, their freedom, or sometimes their life.
After Trayvon Martin was killed, Al Dotson Jr., a lawyer in Miami and chairman of the 100 Black Men of America organization, told his 14-year-old son that he should always be aware of his surroundings, and of the fact that people might view him differently “because he’s blessed to be an African-American.”
“It requires a sixth sense that not everyone needs to have,” Dotson said.
Dotson, 51, remembers receiving his own instructions as a youth, and hearing those instructions evolve over time.
His grandparents told Dotson that when dealing with authority figures, make it clear you are no threat at all — an attitude verging on submissive. Later, Dotson’s parents told him to respond with respect and not be combative.
Today, Dotson tells his children that they should always be respectful, but should not tolerate being disrespected — which would have been recklessly bold in his grandparents’ era.
Yet Dotson still has fears about the safety of his children, “about them understanding who they are and where they are, and how to respond to the environment they are in.”
Bill Stephney, a media executive who lives in a New Jersey suburb that is mostly white and Asian, has two sons, ages 18 and 13. The Martin killing was an opportunity for him to repeat a longtime lesson: Black men can get singled out, “so please conduct yourself accordingly.”
Like Dotson, Stephney mentioned an ultra-awareness — “a racial Spidey sense, a tingling” — that his sons should heed when stereotyping might place them in danger.
One night in the early 1980s, while a student at Adelphi University on Long Island, Stephney and about a dozen other hip-hop aficionados went to White Castle after their late-night DJ gig. They were gathered in the parking lot, eating and talking, when a squadron of police cars swooped in and a helicopter rumbled overhead.
“We got a report that a riot was going on,” police told them.
Stephney and his crew used to talk late into the night about how black men in New York were besieged by violence — graffiti artist Michael Stewart’s death after a rough arrest in 1983; Bernhard Goetz shooting four young black men who allegedly tried to mug him on the subway in 1984; Michael Griffith killed by a car while being chased by a white mob in 1986; the crack epidemic that rained black-on-black violence on the city. They felt under attack, as if society considered them the enemy.
This is how the legendary rap group Public Enemy was born. Their logo: A young black man in the crosshairs of a gun sight.
“Fast forward 25 years later,” Stephney said. “We’ve come a long way to get nowhere.”
But what about that long road traveled, which took a black man all the way to the White House? I can hear some of my white friends now: What evidence is there that Trayvon Martin caught George Zimmerman’s attention — and his bullet — because of his race? Lynching is a relic of the past, so why are you teaching your son to be so paranoid?
There is a difference between paranoia and protection. Much evidence shows that black males face unique risks: Psychological studies indicate they are often perceived as threatening; here in Philadelphia, police stop-and-frisk tactics overwhelmingly target African-Americans, according to a lawsuit settled by the city; research suggests that people are more likely to believe a poorly seen object is a gun if it’s held by a black person.
Yes, it was way back in 1955 when 14-year-old Emmitt Till was murdered in Mississippi for flirting with a white woman. But it was last Wednesday when a white Mississippi teenager pleaded guilty to murder for seeking out a black victim, coming across a man named James Craig Anderson, and running him over with his pickup truck.
Faced with this information, I’m doing what any responsible parent would do: Teaching my son how to protect himself.
Still, it requires a delicate balance. Steve Bumbaugh, a foundation director in Los Angeles, encourages his 8- and 5-year-old sons to talk to police officers, “and to otherwise develop a good relationship with the people and institutions that have the potential to give them trouble. I think this is the best defense.”
“I don’t want them to actually think that they are viewed suspiciously or treated differently,” Bumbaugh said. “I think that realization breeds resentment and anger. And that can contribute to dangerous situations.”
His sons are large for their age, however.
“I’m probably naive to think that they won’t realize they’re viewed differently when they’re 6-4 and 200 pounds,” Bumbaugh said, “but I’m going to try anyway.”
I am 6-4 and more than 200 pounds, son. You probably will be too. Depending on how we dress, act and speak, people might make negative assumptions about us. That doesn’t mean they must be racist; it means they must be human.
Let me tell you a story, son, about a time when I forgot about the Black Male Code.
One morning I left our car at the shop for repairs. I was walking home through our quiet suburban neighborhood, in a cold drizzle, wearing an all-black sweatsuit with the hood pulled over my head.
From two blocks away, I saw your mother pull out of our driveway and roll towards me. When she stopped next to me and rolled down the window, her brown face was full of laughter.
“When I saw you from up the street,” your mother told me, “I said to myself, what is that guy doing in our neighborhood?”
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Jesse Washington covers race and ethnicity for The Associated Press. He is reachable at http://twitter.com/jessewashington or jwashington(at)ap.org
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March 24, 2012 12:56 PM EDT
Copyright 2012, The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Miami Heat Protest Trayvon Martin Case, Beat Detroit Pistons 88-73
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — LeBron James had 17 points and 10 assists to lead the Miami Heat to their fourth straight victory, 88-73 over the Detroit Pistons on Friday night.
Dwyane Wade added 24 points for the Heat, who posed for a photo earlier in the day wearing team-logo hoodies. Players were speaking out following the death of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed black teenager wearing a hooded sweatshirt who was shot by a neighborhood crime-watch volunteer last month in a suburb of Orlando, Fla.
Several Heat players, including Wade and James, took the floor with messages such as “RIP Trayvon Martin” and “We want justice” scrawled on their sneakers.
Brandon Knight scored 18 points for the Pistons, who have lost five of six.
Wade posted a photo of himself from a previous photo shoot wearing a hooded shirt, otherwise known as a hoodie, to his Twitter and Facebook pages on Friday morning. A couple hours later, James posted another photo – this one of 13 Heat players, all wearing team-logo hoodies, their heads bowed, their hands stuffed into their pockets.
Martin was killed as he was returning to a gated community, carrying candy and iced tea. A neighborhood crime-watch volunteer, George Zimmerman, said he acted in self-defense. He has not been arrested, though state and federal authorities are still investigating.
Protests have popped up nationwide in recent days, with thousands of people – many of them wearing hoodies – calling for action. Miami coach Erik Spoelstra called the team photo “a powerful move.”
Once the game started, the Heat made quick work of the Pistons. Miami led by 26 in the third quarter, although Detroit did rally to make it respectable.
Detroit trailed 72-57 after three and cut the deficit to single digits early in the fourth. After Jonas Jerebko’s reverse dunk on a breakaway made it 74-65, the Heat took a timeout with 8:58 to play.
Wade made a floater to start a 10-2 run.
Detroit was without guard Rodney Stuckey, out with a sore left big toe. Ben Gordon, who made all nine of his 3-point attempts in a 45-point effort at Denver on Wednesday night, went 0 for 4 from beyond the arc and scored 10 points.
Miami’s Joel Anthony returned to the lineup after missing Tuesday’s win over Phoenix with a sprained left ankle. He scored six points.
The Heat shot 57 percent in the first half and finished the second quarter strong. Wade’s layup off a pass from James with 4.3 seconds remaining made it 59-36, and Chris Bosh blocked Will Bynum’s attempt at a driving layup at the other end.
James intercepted a pass near midcourt in the third quarter and found Wade alone downcourt for an alley-oop dunk. Mario Chalmers then sank a 3-pointer to make it 70-44.
NOTES: Knight now holds Detroit’s rookie record for 3-pointers after making four Friday for a season total of 73. Lindsey Hunter made 69 in 1993-94. … Miami’s Mike Miller remained out with a sprained left ankle. … Wade missed a streaking James in the fourth quarter on an alley-oop attempt when James was unable to handle a high pass.
After Trayvon Martin, hoodie goes from fashion statement to socio-political one
The Trayvon Martin case forces a reckoning of what it means to be young and black and male — and to wear a certain garment. From the wreckage of the Trayvon Martin killing, the hoodie has emerged as an unlikely symbol, a silent way of expressing solidarity and anger over justice delayed as protests erupt nationwide over the death of an unarmed black teenager at the hands of a Central Florida neighborhood watch captain who viewed the boy as suspicious.
From a downtown outdoor mall in Iowa City to the expanse of Union Square in New York City, from a historic church in Atlanta to a plaza in Washington, D.C., thousands of demonstrators have been protesting the 17-year-old’s death by donning hoodies like the one Trayvon wore that Sunday night a month ago when he was killed in a gated townhouse community in Sanford. Thousands more have posted, shared and tweeted photos of themselves wearing the hooded jackets. Still others have used Trayvon’s haunting black-and-white image as their own profile pictures on the Internet, creating a boundless digital imprint in a case fueled by social media, the focus intensifying Friday with the release of a Miami Heat photo and a controversial remark by TV personality Geraldo Rivera.
“Before the incident, there was a cultural understanding that the African-American male wore hoodies as a way to be under the radar, to be ambiguous, but not because of any malicious intent, not because he was up to no good,’’ says Jason Campbell, an assistant professor of conflict resolution and philosophy at Nova Southeastern University. “Now, it’s visual shorthand that has transcended, used as a way to say I am lending my voice to the cause. It’s not a black cause, or a male cause, it’s a national cause.’’
Trayvon was wearing a hoodie — and carrying a bag of Skittles and an Arizona iced tea purchased from a nearby convenience store — as he returned to the townhouse of his father’s girlfriend. He had been suspended from high school in Miami and was spending time in Sanford with his father. The shooter, George Zimmerman, 28, told police the boy was wearing a dark hoodie, looked “suspicious” and thought he was “up to no good.’’ He said Trayvon jumped him and he shot in self-defense. The boy died on the grass, 70 yards from the backdoor of the townhouse. Trayvon’s girlfriend, who was on a cellphone with him moments before, said it was not until he noticed he was being followed by a stranger that he cloaked himself with the hood.
In the month since the boy’s Feb. 26 death, with no arrests made, a national social movement has grown, exposing the fault lines of race and exploring what it means to be young, black and wearing a hoodie.
The hooded jacket or pullover — an ubiquitous uniform for the youth, hip-hop and sports worlds, a sideline favorite of New England Patriot Coach Bill Belichick and a casual outfit for Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg — has become a powerful part of the Trayvon Martin narrative. Ordinary citizens, political personalities, athletes and big-name celebrities have joined the cause, posting hooded images of themselves, people as disparate as Oscar winner Jamie Foxx; Marian Wright Edelman, who heads the Children’s Defense Fund; and former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm. Many of the images included simple text, asking “Do I Look Suspicious?” or stating, “I am Trayvon.”
For the newly minted hoodie movement, the goal is both to protest Trayvon’s death and also to take back the clothing item, to remove the sting of its sometimes sinister image.
“The meaning has changed for me. Now, I am honored to wear my hoodie because it is showing respect toward Trayvon,’’ said Desrick Hudson, 17, a junior at Norland Senior High who went to elementary and middle school with Trayvon.
The Miami-Dade school district allows hoodies as long as the hood remains down so that students can be easily identified.
“I wore them to school as a fashion thing, no different than putting on a hat,’’ Desrick said. “Now it means something bigger.’’
The hoodie discourse exploded Friday after Fox News personality Geraldo Rivera asserted that the hoodie — and Trayvon’s decision to wear it — was a factor in his shooting death, comments that drew fiery responses from the social media world, including from his own son.
“I believe that George Zimmerman, the overzealous neighborhood watch captain, should be investigated to the fullest extent of the law and if he is criminally liable, he should be prosecuted,’’ Rivera said Friday morning on Fox & Friends. “But I am urging the parents of black and Latino youngsters, particularly, to not let their children go out wearing hoodies. I think the hoodie is as much responsible for Trayvon Martin’s death as George Zimmerman was.’’
He said the hoodies, first produced by clothing company Champion in the 1930s for laborers working in the New York winters, have become a menacing symbol of criminality. Merely wearing one forced people to respond, he said, adding that the image of a black or Latino male in a hoodie is so provocative, the clothing should come with a warning label, like cigarettes — “caution, wearing this could get you killed.”
“When you see a black or Latino youngster, particularly on the street, you walk to the other side of the street. You try to avoid that confrontation. Trayvon Martin you know, God bless him, he’s an innocent kid, a wonderful kid, a box of Skittles in his hand. He didn’t deserve to die,’’ Rivera said. “But I’ll bet you money, if he didn’t have that hoodie on, that — that nutty neighborhood watch guy wouldn’t have responded in that violent and aggressive way.’’
Rivera, who is Hispanic, admitted over Twitter that his son, Gabriel, was “ashamed” of the stance he has taken on wearing hoodies.
Trayvon’s death and his choice of clothing have renewed the focus on the never-ending conversation about race and stereotypes and the inherent difficulties of being a black male.
“The country is following the narrative of George Zimmerman. He tells 911 he sees someone who is suspicious. So what do we know about Trayvon? He was wearing jeans, tennis shoes and a hoodie. Somehow, Zimmerman arrives at the notion that because he is wearing this hoodie, he is suspicious,’’ says journalist Roland Martin, host of TV One’s Washington Watch and author of Speak, Brother! A Black Man’s View of America. “The reason the hoodie is so important in this narrative, it is a symbolic piece of clothing that speaks to the stereotypes people carry.’’
Martin, who also is a CNN contributor, said the case is weighed down by institutional racism and age-old assumptions.
“If I see a white kid in a hoodie or a dark trench coat and tattoos, I do not think he is a skinhead. If I see a white guy on Wall Street in a suit, I don’t automatically think he is a white-collar criminal. And if I see a Hispanic person speaking Spanish instead of English, I don’t assume they are an illegal alien,’’ he said. “Hoodies are deeply entrenched in American culture, not just urban culture, so the problem is not the hoodie. it’s the person who carries the stereotype that hoodies represent a black or Hispanic up to no good.’’
On Friday, Heat star Dwyane Wade posted an old photo of himself on Facebook in a hoodie to show support for the Martin family. While in town for that night’s game against the Detroit Pistons, LeBron James also tweeted a stark photograph of himself and 12 other teammates including Wade, heads dropped, faces shadowed by dark hooded sweatshirts, evoking an almost monk-like image. The point, perhaps, is to change the perception of the clothing item from dangerous to sacred. The photo, posted to James’ Twitter account — he is followed by four million people — was taken at the Heat’s team hotel in Birmingham, Mich., meant to demonstrate the team was united in the battle for justice.
“I’m a father. It’s support of the tragic thing that has taken place. No matter what color, race, we’re all fathers,’’ Wade told the Sun Sentinel. “When you think about what that family’s going through, it hits you hard and it hurts your heart to think about it. Just anything you can do, obviously we can’t bring him back, but anything you can do to get behind and support is what we’re doing.’’
Miami Herald staff writer Laura Isensee contributed to this report.












