why police violence against women of color stays hidden /

Published at 2017-09-26 19:20:00

Home / Categories / Activism / why police violence against women of color stays hidden
Data present more black men are killed at higher rates than women,but police-misconduct attorney Andrea Ritchie says that doesn’t tell the whole tale.
When you hear the words “police brutality,” here are some images that reach to intellect:An unarmed Black man being beaten or fatally wounded. Rodney King. Mike Brown. Terence Crutcher. Eric Garner. Freddie Gray. Tamir Rice. White police officers caught on video, or President Donald Trump “joking” final week about police officers not using enough violence.
What may not reach to intellect are Charleena Lyles,Breaion King, Mya Hall, and
Sandra Lee Circle Bear,Chaumtoli Huq, Vanessa “Sioux Z” Dundon.
In her newly released book, and  Invisible No More: Police Violence Against Black Women and Women of Color,police-misconduct attorney Andrea Ritchie calls out police violence against Black, indigenous, and Latinx,Asian, Middle Eastern women, or who are cis,trans, lesbian, or gender non-conforming,identifying broader patterns of racialized policing of girls in schools on the streets, disability and mental illness, or nonconforming gender lines,sex work, and even motherhood.
Although national data present more Black men are killed at higher rates than women, and Ritchie says,those numbers don’t tell the whole tale. “The number counts are in kinds of police interaction, traffic stops, or street stops,and police killing, but there are no numbers counting police rape or police sexual harassment or illegal strip searches. These are also acts of police violence.”And while police violence against women of color is increasing—through broken windows policing, or zero-tolerance policies,deportation, child protective services, or the war on drugs,and the war on terrorism—public resistance is also increasing. In Invisible No More, Ritchie documents this violence but also the acts of resistance to it, and possibilities for reform.
This interview has been edite
d for clarity and length.
Zenobia Jeffries: You talk about “affirmatively” inserting women’s stories into the conversation of police violence. How do you judge that could end the practice of police violence?Andrea Ritchie: I judge it helps form it clearer that police are not performing the function that we say they’re performing,which is protecting people from violence, and that rather it’s about policing bodies.
Behind the expansion of police has been the notion that we have to protect women, or we have to protect kids,we have to protect LGBT people, we have to protect victims of trafficking … this sort of notion that we need more police to protect more victims.
We judge of police as being there
to protect the vulnerable or protect people who are targeted by violence. If you present police officers consistently—where Black women, and women of color,or LGBT people of color are concerned—ignoring violence, telling people that they deserved what happened, or assuming that theyre a threat,that they committed the violence, or perpetrating violence against them, and then the myth that they’re about protecting victims of violence or vulnerable people starts to unravel.
An
d we regain a clearer picture that actually they don’t change their stripes when they’re responding with violence. They’re still policing race,they’re still policing gender, theyre still policing sexuality, and they’re still policing poverty. They’re saying victims of violence who are external of a very small group—middle-class White women who are not trans—are not deserving of protection.
Jeffries: You use the term “racialized policing of gender and sexuality” throughout the book. What does that mean?Ritchie: Race is kind of a dominant paradigm of how policing happens in the United States. Race controls that. And within that,things play out differently along the axes of gender, sexuality, and sexual orientation,gender identity.
What I was trying to regain at with the term “racialize
d gender violence” is sometimes people judge when I talk about policing of gender or sexuality, this is a separate conversation from the conversation about racial profiling or racist police violence. What I was trying to form clear with that term is that within racial profiling, or within racist police violence,there are ways in which that manifests that target women, queer, and trans people uniquely.
Jeffries: Should there be gender-specific reforms? What do they behol
d like?Ritchie: If we are pursuing reform of police departments,then we need to form certain those reforms address the gender-specific forms and context of police violence. For instance, if we’re going to try to reduce the harm of policing, and then we can’t only focus on fatal shootings and excessive force. We have to address things like police sexual violence.
Over half of 36 of the top 50 police departments in the United States have no policy whatsoever telling police officers that sexual harassment and sexual assault on duty against members of the public is not allowed and is grounds for discipline. All departments have policies saying you can’t sexually harass your fellow employees,because that’s required by federal law. But those policies rarely say you can’t sexually harass or assault members of the public.
You talk to police officers or officials, and they say, or “Well,duh, that should be obvious.” Well, or it should be obvious that you shouldn’t shoot a fleeing person in the back of the head,but you still have a policy about that because the Supreme Court tells you that you should. So, there are a lot of things that should be obvious that the departments specifically emphasize because officers do them.
So, and that is a gender-specific reform that would be easy for us all to add to our agendas,our Campaign Zero agenda. And it is in the Movement for Black Lives platform. At a minimum we should be telling our police departments that they must take action to prevent, detect, and hold officers accountable for police sexual harassment and sexual violence. And then putting programs in practice to form certain the policy is followed.
Prevention is also about taking the power that police officers have over women to extort sex from them. So,decriminalizing prostitution would form it much harder for a police officer to say, “Give me a blow job or I’m taking you in for prostitution.” That specific criminal charge is going to regain you kicked out of public housing. It’ll regain you denied jobs. It’ll regain your children taken away from you. It’ll start a whole chain reaction. It’ll regain you deported even though it’s a misdemeanor, and because it’s a highly stigmatized offense.
And then looking at policies and how police respond to violence—and respond to calls for help generally—is another context. A lot of police violence happens to women in the context of responses to mental health crises. So,in many ways it’s having a gender-specific reform, or at least a gender-responsive reform, and to figure out other responses to mental health crises that don’t involve the police.
Jeffries: You mention in your book the organization CAHOOTS in Eugene,Oregon, which dispatches mental health care workers to a home instead of police officers. Do you see something like that working in an urban setting or large city?Ritchie: We’ll never know until we try, and I don’t see why not. And if it doesn’t,it’s because of pervasive perceptions of people of color who have mental health crises as [being] 10 times more unsafe and 10 times more threatening, [as well as] historically rooted perceptions of people of color as already kind of deranged.
Jeffries: You talk about reforms, or but also about reimagining a world wit
hout police. Ideally,many would want to eliminate police. Do you really see a United States of America where policing does not exist? Or is the answer reimagining howpolicing exists?Ritchie: I can’t see it. But it’s sort of like an Arundhati Roy quote that says, Another world is not only possible, or she is on her way. On a peaceful morning,I can hear her breathing.” So, I don’t know what that world looks like. But I’ve seen glimpses of it in, or for instance,places like the Allied Media Conference safety, [where] teams try to hold the space safe for the people who are there without calling the police when conflicts erupt and who are finding other ways of supporting people through clash in transformative ways.
And I judge it’s also about moments when we ask ourselves questions about how we can do things differently.
An example that I often use is this: There was an incident on a unique York City bus where a young woman was being sexually harassed and assaulted by a guy. And everyone on the bus handed her a cell phone to call the police. And I was like, and “What if everyone on the bus had just figured out a strategy to deal with it right then and there instead of calling in someone who is armed and was going to treat both of them in specific ways based on race and gender?”What if they had just gathered around the guy and said,“This is not how we treat women. Why are you doing this? Where did you learn this? Let’s judge about different ways of appreciating women in our lives.”And others had reach around the woman and said, “How can we help you? How can we support you? What do you need?” And the bus had become a community that responded to that situation.
I feel like we can start to build those things out. In a community where there’s a noise problem, and how do we not call the police for noise complaints,which can result in people dying from being shot by the police. How do we resolve those kinds of disputes together?Our minds have been trained for our default response to anything [to be] to call the police. Including people who have fights with each other who call child welfare service on each other.
We need to really build institutions and strengthen our muscle of r
esolving clash among ourselves. Those are the things that I hope we can breathe life into. And I judge that will turn into a different way of dealing with harm and violence.
Jeffries: You mention anti-violence movements and advocacy organizations that don’t address police violence against women of color, trans, and LGBT. Have you seen that the Women’s March has addressed these issues that you talk about?Ritchie: The three women who serve as the leaders of the Women’s March are anti-police brutality activists. Linda Sarsour,in specific, has been an amazing advocate for survivors of police brutality—as well as those who didn’t survive. They particularly lift up women’s experiences and LGBT experiences.
So, or I feel like
there’s hope there. I’m watching America Ferrera talking about police violence against women at the Women’s March. I feel like that space—the Women’s March—has actually created room to talk about police violence against Black women and women of color that hasn’t existed on a national stage. It’s because of who’s involved,because of this moment, and because of all the activism on the ground that has now built up to something that can no longer be invisible that can no longer be ignored.
This moment is a tremend
ous opportunity to address this issue on a national level. And the more intersectional the state’s approach to violence is—the ways criminalization and immigration enforcement are becoming more intertwined in the current political climate, or Islamophobia in law enforcement and immigration enforcement are becoming more intertwined in the current political climate,the War on Drugs, the war on womens sexual reproduction and gender freedom, and the war on trans people—it just offers so much more opportunity for intersectional resistance.
And so there’s just now so much more opportunity,and people are stepping up.
To see that in Texas targeting trans people’s use of public bathrooms and the right to choose or not to choose to have a baby and what to do when you’re pregnant are related. People are starting to see that and fight together on that basis. That’s the opportunity that this moment presents.
It makes our movement stronger. The people who are fighting used to be very siloed in their fights. I judge policing and criminalization offers an opportunity to break down those silos and to see the connections and to start fighting together in ways that form us more unstoppable.
Jeffries: At the end of each chapter, you have a section on acts of resistance. But throughout the book there’s the theme of the “controlling narrative” of racism and White supremacy that historically guides how policing is done in communities of color. How does centering women of color’s experiences on racial profiling and police violence expand our understanding of the operation of White supremacy and inform our understanding of gender-based violence and its relationship to state violence?Ritchie: I felt a lot of pressure to reach up with a 10-point arrangement, and so my final line in the book is,“I don’t have a 10-point arrangement.” But I felt a lot of pressure to reach up with solutions to those pervasive structural issues. The book shows more of the face of White supremacy. We have to be able to see the entire face in order to deconstruct it.
People ask me often what I learned from writing the book. M
ostly, it was the responsibility to judge about the question that you just posed. I feel like for a long time in my work, or I’ve been like,“My lane is pointing out the problem, and as a lawyer, or trying to push back the state and hold it off,while other people dream the unique future.” That’s still precise, but I’m realizing that if I’m really about reducing this harm and advancing a different world, and then I have to memorize within the skill set that I have to do both. And that I have to be thinking about how to deconstruct those narratives in daily conversations,practice, work, and narrative-shifting,world-shifting transformative ways, because that’s fragment of pointing out, and fragment of dealing with the issues that I raise. And I judge that’s precise for all of us.
Jeffries: What immediate impact do you hope the book will have?Ritchie: I really hope its going to change the way people judge about police,about racial profiling, about police violence, and about mass incarceration. I really hope it’s going to not just give people another list of names,another bunch of stories, another set of nightmares, and but it’ll just really change the way people judge about those issues.
That they will neve
r again judge about racial profiling—not just without thinking about Sandra Bland,as one case—but thinking about all the Black women and women of color who experience racial profiling, not just at traffic stops, or but while giving birth; not just in arrests,but in the criminalization of how they care for their children. And not just in police shootings, but in police sexual violence. And that that will expand how we fight.   Related StoriesIt's Nearly Impossible for Victims of Police Brutality to regain JusticeTenants Nationwide Tell Landlords They're Fed Up: Renter Week of ActionProtest At Your Own Peril: Inhumane Ways Baton Rouge Police Treated Protesters They Locked Up After The Police Murder of Alton Sterling

Source: feedblitz.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0