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Why Sandra Bland was in Mortal Danger

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earl ofari hutchinson
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These facts in the death of Sandra Bland are not in dispute. She was a lone driver on her way to her alma mater Prairie View AM University to interview for a job. She was stopped for a minor traffic violation by a Texas Highway Patrol officer. She was threatened with a Taser. She was penned on the ground by the arresting officer and arrested on an assault charge. She was taken to Waller County jail and placed in a holding cell. Two days later guards found her found hanging by a plastic trash bag in the bathroom partition area of her cell. Jail officials based on their autopsy called her death a suicide. Waller County District Attorney Elton Mathis will investigate her death as a murder. The FBI is also investigating the death.

Murder or suicide? In either case, these facts are also not in dispute. The jail has been repeatedly cited and sanctioned for violating minimal jail standards. This includes continual failure to watch and monitor inmates, shoddy staff training on jail and inmate management, and that includes providing training and handling and sequestering of inmates with possible emotional challenges. This would certainly include an inmate such as Bland who authorities have professedly said was "combative" with the officer. This points the finger of blame squarely at jail officials no matter what actually happened in Bland's cell. If even these minimal safety procedures and precautions had been taken by jailers Bland would almost certainly be alive.

But Bland is just the latest in a growing train of black women that have been directly shoved in harm's way from law enforcement. In fact the day after Bland's body was found, Kindra Darnell Chapman, who was arrested first-degree robbery in Alabama, was found dead in her jail cell. Her death was also ruled a suicide.

In recent times, videos have caught an Arizona State University police officer body-slamming a tenured and respected African-American female professor at the university to the ground as she crossed a street. Another video caught a Clayton County, Georgia off-duty officer spitting on and then punctuated that with an N-word verbal harangue of an African-American female motorist. A California Highway Patrol officer pummeled a middle-aged African American woman on a Los Angeles freeway. They, if you can call it that, are the lucky ones. They are still alive. In the past few years, the number of black women who have been slain by police in several cities has at times drawn headlines and protests. This is separate from the endless tales of black women who have been beaten, tasered and threatened during routine stops or street searches by police officers often with no charges filed against them, or whatever charges were filed were soon dismissed. The black women, though, who have been killed by police had one thing in common. They were unarmed, and in nearly all the cases were not committing a crime. They also had one other thing in common: In each case, there were endless and predictable efforts to dig up any and every bit of damaging information about their history or lifestyle to in effect virtually blame them for their own unjustified killing.

This prompts the even larger question and that is what, if any, role race and gender play in these repeated tragic and increasingly deadly encounters under the color of law. The horrid history of racial stere otyping, profiling that indelibly link crime and violence with African-Americans can't be ignored in trying to answer the question about why now African-American women are fair game for physical abuse by police officers. The feminization of racial stereotyping has had a gripping effect. While black men are frequently typed as violent, drug dealing "gangstas," black women are typed as abrasive, emotionally high strung and now even violence prone. Texas investigators leaped all over Bland's video quip that she suffered from depression and PTSD and Mathis latched onto this hardly professional diagnosis to say it would be considered as a motive for the suicide.

These characterizations of the female victims of police encounters reinforce the belief of many that black women offenders are menaces to society too. Much of the public and many in law enforcement are deeply rapped in the damaging cycle of myths, misconceptions, crime, fear and hysteria about crime-on-the-loose women.

This is a crass, cynical, and classic "blame-the-victim-for-their-own-demise" ploy. The sad thing is that it has worked. The public's initial horror at the killing or beating, or if Bland did die as authorities claim, from suicide, it quickly hardens into heaping negative aspersions on the victim. This insures that apart from whatever conclusion authorities come to in their investigation there will be minimal or no effort made to totally review and revamp training, policies and procedures by departments to reduce the use of excessive force by officers. Or, to correct the glaring inadequacies in the holding cells that Bland was held in and met her death in. This is what put Bland in mortal danger and others too.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on American Urban Radio Network. His latest book is: From King to Obama: Witness to a Turbulent History (Middle Passage Press) http://www.amazon.com/dp/0692370714

He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on American Urban Radio Network. He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is host of the weekly Hutchinson Report Newsmaker Hour heard weekly on the nationally network broadcast Hutchinson Newsmaker Network.

Follow Earl Ofari Hutchinson on Twitter: twitter.com/earlhutchinson

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Earl Ofari Hutchinson is a nationally acclaimed author and political analyst. He has authored ten books; his articles are published in newspapers and magazines nationally in the United States. Three of his books have been published in other (more...)
 
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