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Police killing sparks protests in New Jersey
Unarmed man shot in front of children
By Bill Vann
10 May 2001
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A cop's fatal shooting of an unarmed Irvington, New Jersey
man has sparked angry protests in a predominantly black community
that has long suffered acts of police violence and brutality.
Bilal Dashawn Colbert, 29, was about to drive his fiancée's
two daughters to school April 29 when police officer William Mildon
approached the car with his gun drawn. When Colbert ignored an
order to halt, the cop fired once, striking the motorist in the
neck and killing him instantly. The two girlsShaquita Boyd,
10, and Shanice Henry, 8who were in the back of the car,
ran screaming from the scene.
Hundreds of protesters marched on Irvington police headquarters
last Saturday, chanting no peace, no justice and carrying
signs reading enough is enough. Demonstrators linked
the latest killing to a series of incidents in New Jersey, including
the shooting death of an East Orange teenager two weeks ago by
an off-duty cop and the case of Earl Faison, who in 1999 was beaten
to death while in the custody of Orange police.
Officer Mildon, a white cop, killed another young black man
himself just four years ago. He shot to death Keion Williams,
24, in a similar incident involving a traffic stop.
Rev. William Rutherford, the leader of the New Jersey NAACP,
charged that Officer Mildon had engaged in systematic harassment
of Colbert, his latest victim, for at least a year before the
shooting. Officer Mildon would see Mr. Colbert sitting on
the stoop and make gestures with his hand as if he had a gun and
was shooting him, Rutherford said. On Monday morning
at 8:30 a.m., Officer William Mildon no longer made gestures,
but succeeded by being judge, jury and executioner.
In a bid to intimidate critics of the police, an attorney for
the cop filed a defamation lawsuit against the NAACP leader for
calling Mildon a racist and a murderer.
Meanwhile, the Irvington Police Department has taken no action
against the cop, who was allowed to go on a scheduled vacation.
Irvington was the scene of a notorious act of police brutality
five years ago when a group of cops barged into the apartment
of a Haitian immigrant in response to a complaint from a neighbor
about noise from a party there. When the cops started shoving
people, one of the guests, Max Antoine, challenged them, declaring
that people had a right to be there and that the American police
were not allowed to act like Ton Ton Macoutes, referring
to the notorious security force in his native Haiti.
The cops moved swiftly to disabuse Antoine of this notion,
smashing his head into a wall and beating him with night sticks.
After dragging him down the stairs, several cops picked him up
and rammed him headfirst through the glass pane of a storm door.
They then threw him into the back of a patrol car, shooting pepper
spray into his face. Taken to a station house, he was thrown handcuffed
and bleeding into a cell and denied medical attention for two
days.
The beating left Antoine paralyzed below the waist, blind in
one eye and with severe brain damage. Despite complaints filed
by his family and a number of guests at the party, no action was
ever taken against the cops who brutalized him.
New Jersey has been rocked recently by revelations that former
state attorney general and now state Supreme Court Justice Peter
Verneiro concealed information about racial profiling by state
troopers. Minority troopers have themselves come forward to testify
about a police culture rife with racism. Meanwhile, the state
legislature has taken preliminary steps towards Verneiro's impeachment.
The tensions between the police and poor and working class
neighborhoods ringing the city of Newark and acts of police brutality
in these areas have escalated in direct proportion to the ever
widening social chasm between the haves and have-nots in New Jersey,
a state which has seen its poverty rate grow over the past decade,
even as per capita income has remained the second highest of any
state in the nation.
See Also:
Misdemeanor charges for Cincinnati cop
who killed unarmed black teenager
[8 May 2001]
US will not prosecute New
York police in Diallo killing
[2 February 2001]
New Jersey internal
records document widespread racial profiling of black and Hispanic
motorists
[2 December 2000]
Detroit police kill
again
[15 September 2000]
The Los Angeles police
scandal and its social roots
[13 March 2000]
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