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MrScorpio

(73,631 posts)
Sun May 5, 2013, 04:45 PM May 2013

I知 a Scholar, Not a Criminal: The Plight of Black Students at USC

May 4, 2013 · by makiah-isms · in Impromptu Postings, LA Living. ·



Instead of studying for the last final of my undergraduate career, I am writing this letter in protest of the University of Southern California’s latest atrocity. Last night, students gathered at a house near campus to celebrate their completion of another rigorous school year. Many attendees were graduating seniors. Almost all attendees were minority students: African-American and Latino.

I did not attend last night’s party, but I could hear the helicopter circling from my dorm room over a mile away. When the Facebook posts and photos started appearing on my news feed around 2:30am, I had flashbacks to an era I wasn’t even alive to suffer through. I was too scared to go outside, legitimately fearing that an officer would see me and arrest me for being Black and inquisitive. I can only imagine how my peers felt when they saw over twenty LAPD patrol cars pull up and release 79 officers to end a peaceful, congratulatory party.

It is inexpressibly disheartening to hear fellow students recount horror stories of police brutality two weeks away from being among the first in my family to graduate from a four-year university. To know that my college degree holds no weight in the face of institutional racism and discrimination is sobering. Since the three most recent shootings, all triggered by non-USC affiliated Black males, that occurred on and around USC, there has been an increased presence of LAPD and other security forces around campus. Amid the tense racial climate that followed, I patiently endured the ignorant comments, racist blog posts and suspicious stares, but the intolerance has reached a new high. Six of my friends spent the night in jail.

To be clear, I do not have a problem with increased protection or security. Who’s to say that a shooting won’t occur at the next student party? It could happen, God forbid, and I understand why USC wants to be prepared. My issue lies within the selective surveillance of minority-hosted parties, as if crimes only happen among high concentrations of melanin. Hundreds of criminal offenses, including sexual harassment, rape and assault happen every Thursday night on Greek Row, a undeniably white establishment. Yet, the culprits of the Department of Public Safety Crime Reports distributed to USC students and faculty, seem to be strictly limited to Black and Latino males (6’2-6’5 in dark hoodies). These reports, together with the newly constructed, other-izing gates around campus, have instilled an unhealthy amount of fear in students, administrators and safety officials. We have been trained to double check for USC logos on the sweatshirts of minority males on and around this campus to make sure that they’re “one of us.” It doesn’t surprise me that LAPD has adopted the same attitude. For them, it has been this way for decades.

http://makiahisms.com/2013/05/04/im-a-scholar-not-a-criminal-the-plight-of-black-students-at-usc/?utm source=buffer&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Buffer&utm_content=buffer47a36


Celebrating Your Education While Black and Brown - Another thing that America is in dire fear of.
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I知 a Scholar, Not a Criminal: The Plight of Black Students at USC (Original Post) MrScorpio May 2013 OP
The trolling in the comment section is incredible. ellisonz May 2013 #1

ellisonz

(27,711 posts)
1. The trolling in the comment section is incredible.
Sun May 5, 2013, 06:41 PM
May 2013

I would also generally say that a climate on confrontation produces poor policing outcomes and vice versa. I'm not sure that more traditional training would solve this problem so much as training of law enforcement command would and greater effective control.

Here's another blog post that goes into the incident in more detail: http://laist.com/2013/05/05/lapd_officers_show_up_in_riot_gear.php

The crux of it is this:

What happened next is in dispute. Students at the party said that they responded peacefully and cooperatively to LAPD officers that showed up to address the noise complaint. The Department of Public Safety told The Trojan that students responded by pelting them with objects.

Officers at the scene sent out a distress call, and dozens of officers—some said nearly 80—responded:


If the officers were in fact pelted with objects, that should not have occurred, and it would appear the arrests made were probably related to that, but at the same time one has to wonder if that warranted such an overreaction in manpower. While a noise complaint call for a party is a relatively routine call, the police might want to reassess tactically why they're putting themselves in a situation where they would be pelted with objects such that they would issues a distress call with the full riot gear response.

Edit: here's more with a slightly different narrative of events and some frankly interesting video (it's also very well written): http://www.neontommy.com/news/2013/04/lapds-response-college-party-evidence-racial-profiling

And more:

“We do not have a statement, but it is not unusual, on a weekend night in this area, for officers to be in riot gear,” said Watch Commander Sgt. Efrain Tigao.

http://dailytrojan.com/2013/05/04/lapd-response-angers-students-raises-questions/


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