New Sandra Bland Video Shows ... Wait, After Four Years There's A New Sandra Bland Video?
A coverup? The hell you say.
Texas police stopped Sandra Bland for failing to signal a turn, and three days later, she was found hanging in a jail cell. Bland was apparently arrested on violation of an "uppity negress" ordinance. Trooper Brian Encinia claimed he repeatedly "feared for his life," but newly released video calls Encina's "scary black woman" defense into question.
Bland recorded the 39-second video with her cellphone. It wasn't publicly released until Monday as part of an investigative report airing on Dallas TV station WFAA. Authorities released Encina's dashcam footage but not Bland's recording of the 2015 encounter that led to her death. The video shows Bland with a cellphone in her hand. Cannon Lambert, a lawyer for the Bland family, says this weakens Encina's claim that Bland was an immediate bed-wetting threat.
LAMBERT: What the video shows is that Encinia had no reason to be in fear of his safety. The video shows that he wasn't in fear of his safety. You could see that it was a cellphone, he was looking right at it.
Police will probably argue that a cell phone is still a potential threat, because in a black person's hands, anything is a deadly weapon. We're like the Daredevil villain Bullseye. However, this does suggest that prosecutors didn't pursue charges against Encinia as zealously as they might have.
Encinia was indicted for perjury. He'd claimed that he'd removed Bland from her car -- with a taser pointed at her and threatening to "light her up" -- so he could "more safely" conduct his investigation. Grand jurors thought this was bogus. However, prosecutors dropped the charge in exchange for Encina accepting a permanent ban from law enforcement. They believed this was their best bet because how could they prove he'd perjured himself? That's kinda hard.
Law enforcement had this video until WFAA obtained it and showed the footage to Bland's family, who want the case re-opened. Lambert thinks it's "extremely troubling" that prosecutors didn't pursue the case again Encinia. Shawn McDonald, one of the prosecutors assigned to thecoverupcase can't understand why the family hasn't just moved on after three-plus years; he thinks it's "frankly quite ridiculous." Besides, he's "proud" of the work they did on the case. His mother still has some of the affidavits pinned to her refrigerator.
McDonald admits he saw the cell phone video along with all the other evidence. Texas Department of Public Safety officials claim the video was part of a discovery and the Bland family should blame its lousy legal representation. We're not sure why the victim's family is responsible for prosecuting cases.
Encinia's perjury indictment was the only criminal charge that came out of a situation where a black woman who committed no actual crime mysteriously died in police custody. Many of our nice white moderate friends on Facebook wondered why Bland couldn't have just been more polite and accommodating to Encinia -- maybe even perform a little soft shoe. Nothing justifies what happened to Bland. Even if she'd survived, she didn't deserve for Encinia to treat her with such naked contempt and toss her around like a sack of clothes.
Encinia's lawyer, Chip Lewis, revealed his client is now "working in the private sector, supporting his wife and family and living a quiet life." In other words, the prosecution's "deal" was meaningless from any punitive sense. Newspaper reporters who are laid off don't bounce back so quickly. We're also not sure what "quiet life" even means in this context. He's not a retired rock star or former assassin. Good on him, though. We doubt he loses much sleep over Bland's death.
[ NYTimes / Texas Tribune ]
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Then you have to ask what "get past this" looks like.
As well as who "us" is.
I'm not trying to sound like Bill Barr. I'm only trying to point out that for white racists, or even for NIMBY white "progressives", "get past this" is actually defined as "people of color should accept permanent second class citizenship in a society where the Constitution nonetheless proclaims equal rights for all, and they should accept all the trauma from the gaslighting that goes with that".
We have to define our terms in order to have a productive discussion.
Professor Carol Anderson Charles Howard Candler Professor and Chair of African American Studies"White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Nation's Divide"John F. Morgan Sr. Distinguished Faculty Lecture, 2018https://www.youtube.com/wat...
Prof Carol Anderson talks about that -- she talks about uncompromised black progress & success where they can't ply denigrating racist tropes being the thing that enrages racists the most. It's the thing that made the KKK want to set their arsonists on Black Wall Street and Tulsa, just for a couple of examples.
Professor Carol Anderson Charles Howard Candler Professor and Chair of African American Studies"White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Nation's Divide"John F. Morgan Sr. Distinguished Faculty Lecture, 2018https://www.youtube.com/wat...