WATCH: 14 Police Take Down a
One-legged Homeless Black Man
By David Edwards
Posted August 18, 2015
August 18, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Raw
Story" -
Writer Chaédria LaBouvier reported that she
had seen 14 San Francisco police officers subduing a homeless black
man who had one leg outside Twitter headquarters.
In a column for
Medium, LaBouvier explained that she recorded the incident on
Aug. 4 during a visit to Twitter HQ.
Witnesses told LaBouvier that police had
been called because the man was waving “sticks,” which later turned
out to be his crutches.
Video of the incident begins with the
homeless man hidden under a pile of police officers. As the man
struggles, it becomes clear that he is wearing a prosthetic leg.
“It is often twisted and backwards in the
video,” LaBouvier noted. “An officer can be seen at the 5 second
time-mark stomping on the man’s prosthetic leg. In further efforts
to subdue a man already on the ground with four people on top of
him, they stood on his leg, held it, and twisted it around even
after they had cuffed him and pinned him to the piss-stained
concrete.”
“These incidents are so quotidian, so
mundane, that they do not merit a mention in even passing on the
local news. Which is to say, this is everyday harassment,” she
lamented. “Yes, it’s racial profiling. Yes, it’s racism. Yes, it’s
inequality. This is an American heritage.”
LaBouvier pointed out that none of the
employees at Twitter or other tech companies came out to object as
the 14 officers took down the one-legged homeless man. She argued
that residents needed to get involved, ask questions and speak out.
“This happened in the heart of one of
America’s most affluent cities, literally outside the headquarters
of Twitter. One block away are the headquarters of Uber, which is on
pace to be the fastest-growing company in history,” she wrote. “And
not to my knowledge, did any of their employees or representatives
come out to look at what the police were doing.”
“Perhaps they were looking from their lofts
and skyscrapers, on their way to the coffee machines or the in-house
catered lunch and did see, but they too have normalized this
mundane, quotidian and brutal American heritage. Whatever the
internal struggles were, no one came.”
The U.S. Justice Department recently filed
court documents in an Idaho case which declared it unconstitutional
to criminalize homelessness. Activists have said that
San Francisco’s homeless policy runs afoul of the Justice
Department guidelines. Under the city’s policy, homeless people can
be constantly woken up and told to move.
According to the Coalition on Homelessness,
the city handed out 11,000 citations to homeless people who were
sitting on sidewalks between 7 a.m. and 11 p.m. in 2014.
LAPD Holds Pregnant Woman at Gunpoint in Case
of Mistaken Identity: In another
case of mistaken identity that could have turned deadly, Los Angeles
police held a pregnant woman at gunpoint while ordering her out of
her pickup truck, making her walk to the middle of street with her
hands in the air and yelling at her to get down on her knees.
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