Esaw Garner: ‘There Was No Sincerity From Day One’

NEW YORK (AP) — The widow of Eric Garner says that from the beginning she’s had no faith in prosecutors on Staten Island, the borough where a police officer placed her unarmed husband in a chokehold that resulted in his death. Esaw Garner said in an interview Thursday on NBC’s “Today” ”there was no sincerity from day one” from Staten Island police or the district attorney. A grand jury on Wednesday decided not to bring any charges against the officer involved. Garner says she hasn’t had any kind of encouragement, remorse, or compassion from the borough’s authorities. The grand jury’s decision prompted protests across the country and sent thousands onto New

NEW YORK (AP) — The widow of Eric Garner says that from the beginning she’s had no faith in prosecutors on Staten Island, the borough where a police officer placed her unarmed husband in a chokehold that resulted in his death.

Esaw Garner said in an interview Thursday on NBC’s “Today” ”there was no sincerity from day one” from Staten Island police or the district attorney.

A grand jury on Wednesday decided not to bring any charges against the officer involved.

Garner says she hasn’t had any kind of encouragement, remorse, or compassion from the borough’s authorities.

The grand jury’s decision prompted protests across the country and sent thousands onto New York’s streets, where they marched, chanted and blocked traffic. Police say 83 people were arrested.

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Esaw Garner: ‘There Was No Sincerity From Day One’

Don’t Understand the Connection Between Tamir Rice’s Killing and His Parents’ History? Join the Club

There is still much to be learned about the Tamir Rice killing in Cleveland, Ohio. But we know this, as Tamir’s parents said: “the police officers acted quickly”–a measured but incisive understatement. Officer Timothy Loehmann shot him twice, 1.5-2 seconds after he got out of his car. And we also know that 4 minutes after the shooting, it was an FBI agent, not Loehmann or his partner, who began administering first aid before paramedics arrived. Despite having no audio, the video has shed a good deal of disturbing light on the killing. (But it is a critical absence: Deputy Chief Ed Tomba asserted that Tamir was instructed 3 times to put his hands up before he was shot. So far, there…

There is still much to be learned about the Tamir Rice killing in Cleveland, Ohio. But we know this, as Tamir’s parents said: “the police officers acted quickly”–a measured but incisive understatement. Officer Timothy Loehmann shot him twice, 1.5-2 seconds after he got out of his car. And we also know that 4 minutes after the shooting, it was an FBI agent, not Loehmann or his partner, who began administering first aid before paramedics arrived. Despite having no audio, the video has shed a good deal of disturbing light on the killing. (But it is a critical absence: Deputy Chief Ed Tomba asserted that Tamir was instructed 3 times to put his hands up before he was shot. So far, there has been no one but the police officers to corroborate that contention, but the video shows some damning inconsistencies with the officers’ initial statements.) Of present concern is one major local media’s coverage of the tragedy.

One day after the shooting, news website Cleveland.com posted an article by the Northeast Ohio Media Group reporter Brandon Blackwell. The NEOMG, while sharing content with The Cleveland Plain Dealer, provides the majority of the Cleveland.com content. In his first story, Blackwell wrote about of Tamir’s mother’s criminal history. Then, days later, Blackwell, along with writer Bob Sandrick, wrote a piece on Tamir’s father’s criminal history.

The story on Samaria Rice is ostensibly about the attorney the family hired to represent them in this tragedy. The headline: “Lawyer representing Tamir Rice’s family defended boy’s mom in drug trafficking case.” Six of the 9 paragraphs however, have nothing to do with the attorney, but everything to do about Samaria’s criminal record’ and two sentences about its possible impact on her son.

The story about Tamir’s father, Leonard Warner, is astounding in its bias, making no attempt whatsoever to connect his father’s history to why a police officer killed a 12-year old boy. This is journalism as it most tin-eared and irresponsible. If NEOMG were comprised of more diverse and conscientious voices, I highly doubt these stories would have ran as they did, if at all.

Cleveland.com editor Chris Quinn and other NEOMG writers made things worse with attempts to justify the reasons for and content of those articles. Blackwell updated his Warner article, adding a third paragraph sentence to explain that “[p]eople from across the region have been asking whether Rice grew up around violence.” According to the Cleveland Scene, NEOMG member Mark Naymik tweeted Blackwell “[g]ives small window into this young boy’s life. A frame of reference, perhaps for why he had toy gun?” Quinn wrote that Cleveland.com ran with the stories about Samaria and Leonard because they “shed further light on why this 12 year old was waving a weapon around a public park.”

The post-hoc justifications for irresponsible reporting are trite, and nothing less than insulting. As the Plain Dealer employee, in an open letter to Plain Dealer and NEOMG staff wrote, “some people” in the region are wondering whether race was a factor in the shooting. “Some people” are wondering whether the officer’s parents have a criminal history. Why did Blackwell and Quinn not lead with articles for “those people” across the region? Blackwell’s facile explanation explains nothing. And for Quinn to claim Tamir was “waving a weapon” is more than disingenuous; it is a gross misrepresentation, but one that suits his feeble Blackwell defense.

Cleveland.com’s justifications for the stories also defy reason. I’m trying to pin down the logic here: Tamir’s parents have a criminal history. Tamir had a toy gun. Tamir was shot by police. So their criminal history explains why Tamir had a toy gun? If they had been law abiding citizens, their son would not have a toy gun? Parents with criminal histories should not let their children have toy guns? Or maybe this is it: all and only law-abiding citizens, without fail, teach their children to behave responsibly with toy guns? I am at a loss.

Cleveland.com stories about Tamir’s parents were nothing less than an attempt to create an insidious “blame the victim” narrative (or rather, blame the parents) one day after the child was tragically killed. That narrative presumes law enforcement reaction is justified when such killings occur, one that says “Look at the parents; Tamir was congenitally prone to violence.” And in the context of yet another African-American boy being killed by a white police officer, that narrative takes on an even more noxious tone. That Tamir, or more precisely, his parents are to blame for letting their child have a toy gun, and thus for his death is precisely what “some” people want to believe, and, if the comments under the Blackwell stories are any indication, Cleveland.com articles did not disappoint, reinforcing the worst, and of course the most racist, prejudices.

In the wake of the Michael Brown and now Eric Garner grand jury decisions, we are again wondering about the circumstances surrounding an African-American’s killing at the hands of a police officer, and the systems and law-enforcement reactions that bring about these devastating results. But we should also consider the role and impact of those whose responsibility it is to report these tragedies when they occur. We should applaud the Plain Dealer employee’s open letter to NEOMG, calling out the journalistic irresponsibility of those articles and their defenders. We should hope that more people like that employee are at the table when these stories are being reviewed.

Bryan Adamson Teaches at Seattle University School of Law

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Don’t Understand the Connection Between Tamir Rice’s Killing and His Parents’ History? Join the Club

Tamir Rice’s Uncle Calls For Change

CLEVELAND (AP) — The uncle of a 12-year-old boy who had a pellet gun when he was shot by a Cleveland police officer told mourners at a memorial service Wednesday that they must be advocates for change through peaceful protest and civil disobedience. Tamir Rice’s uncle also said that police need to revamp how they train officers while also looking closer at police brutality and the use of excessive force. Surveillance video released by police shows Tamir being shot within 2 seconds of a patrol car stopping near him at a park on Nov. 22. It shows the boy reaching in his waistband for what police discovered was an airsoft gun, which shoots non-lethal plastic projectiles. He died the next day. Police …

CLEVELAND (AP) — The uncle of a 12-year-old boy who had a pellet gun when he was shot by a Cleveland police officer told mourners at a memorial service Wednesday that they must be advocates for change through peaceful protest and civil disobedience.

Tamir Rice’s uncle also said that police need to revamp how they train officers while also looking closer at police brutality and the use of excessive force. Surveillance video released by police shows Tamir being shot within 2 seconds of a patrol car stopping near him at a park on Nov. 22. It shows the boy reaching in his waistband for what police discovered was an airsoft gun, which shoots non-lethal plastic projectiles. He died the next day.

Police said rookie officer Tim Loehmann believed the boy had a real firearm.

Loehmann joined Cleveland police in March after spending six months in 2012 with the police department in suburban Independence.

Personnel files released Wednesday showed police supervisors in Independence decided he lacked the maturity needed to work in their department. A letter in his file said there was a pattern of a lack of discretion and of not following instructions.

“In law enforcement there are times when instructions need be followed to the letter, and I am under the impression Ptl. Loehmann, under certain circumstances, will not react in the way instructed,” the letter said.

Loehmann resigned from the Independence police department in December 2012 after meeting his supervisors about their concerns.

Cleveland police said in a statement Wednesday night that the agency did not review Loehmann’s department personnel from Independence before hiring him. However, detectives talked to the human resources director in that suburb and were told there were no issues that would make him an undesirable candidate. The detectives were told Loehmann had resigned from the Independence department for personal reasons.

A grand jury will consider whether charges are merited.

Just days after the shooting, protesters marched past City Hall and temporarily blocked rush-hour traffic on a busy Cleveland freeway.

Several hundred people attended the memorial service for Tamir at Mount Sinai Baptist Church.

Family members and friends, some wearing shirts with Tamir’s picture, filed past displays of photos at the front of the church and stopped to hug his mother.

One of his former teachers said Tamir liked to draw, play basketball and the drums.

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Tamir Rice’s Uncle Calls For Change

Ta-Nehisi Coates Says Fatalism Is Not An Option In Battle Against Racism

While many of the recent protests around the country have focused on racism and the police, the officers themselves may only be part of the problem. During MSNBC’s “All In with Chris Hayes” on Wednesday night, Ta-Nehisi Coates, national correspondent at The Atlantic, said police are just doing what society wants them to do. “We have this long history of racism in this country, and as it happens the criminal justice system has been perhaps the most prominent instrument for administering racism,” Coates said. “But the racism doesn’t actually come from the criminal justice system. It doesn’t come from the…

While many of the recent protests around the country have focused on racism and the police, the officers themselves may only be part of the problem.

During MSNBC’s “All In with Chris Hayes” on Wednesday night, Ta-Nehisi Coates, national correspondent at The Atlantic, said police are just doing what society wants them to do.

We have this long history of racism in this country, and as it happens the criminal justice system has been perhaps the most prominent instrument for administering racism,” Coates said. “But the racism doesn’t actually come from the criminal justice system. It doesn’t come from the police. The police are pretty much doing what the society that they originate from want them to do.”

However, Coates also told Hayes that it was important to avoid fatalism.

“I’m the descendent of enslaved black people in this country. You could’ve been born in 1820, if you were black and looked back to your ancestors and saw nothing but slaves all the way back to 1619. Look forward another 50 or 60 years and saw nothing but slaves.

There was reason at that point in time to believe that emancipation was 40 or 50 years off. And yet folks resisted and folks fought on. So fatalism isn’t really an option. Even if you think you’re not going to necessarily win the fight today in your lifetime, in your child’s lifetime, you still have to fight. It’s kind of selfish to say that you’re only going to fight for a victory that you will live to see.

As an African-American, we stand on the shoulders of people who fought despite not seeing victories in their lifetime or even in their children’s lifetime or even in their grandchildren’s lifetime. So fatalism isn’t really an option.”

Check out the full video above, which also includes remarks from former RNC chair Michael Steele.

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Ta-Nehisi Coates Says Fatalism Is Not An Option In Battle Against Racism

Ferguson Protesters Speak Out Against Eric Garner Decision

FERGUSON, Mo. — Protesters demonstrated in front of a federal building in St. Louis and outside of the Ferguson Police Department on Wednesday night in response to a New York grand jury’s decision not to indict the police officer who placed Eric Garner in a chokehold that led to his death. Dozens of demonstrators, many of them veterans of protests in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson following the death of Michael Brown, chanted “This stops today” as they stood in front of the Thomas F. Eagleton Federal Courthouse, where four protesters reportedly were arrested. A smaller group of protesters gathered across from the Ferguson Police Department, as they have nearly …

FERGUSON, Mo. — Protesters demonstrated in front of a federal building in St. Louis and outside of the Ferguson Police Department on Wednesday night in response to a New York grand jury’s decision not to indict the police officer who placed Eric Garner in a chokehold that led to his death.

Dozens of demonstrators, many of them veterans of protests in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson following the death of Michael Brown, chanted “This stops today” as they stood in front of the Thomas F. Eagleton Federal Courthouse, where four protesters reportedly were arrested. A smaller group of protesters gathered across from the Ferguson Police Department, as they have nearly every night for the past several months.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that one man was arrested in St. Louis’ Central West End after he drove through a group of demonstrators and flashed a weapon. Protest leaders claimed four demonstrators were hit by the vehicle, but no one was seriously injured.

Douglas Hollis, a 38-year-old pastor from St. Louis, was one of those who gathered outside the Ferguson Police Department on Wednesday night. Hollis said he feels justice has not been served to those who died in the hands of police officers.

“If we couldn’t get Darren Wilson indicted, we already knew we couldn’t get the police officer who choked Eric Garner to death indicted. The system let us down once again,” Hollis said. “Being a first cousin of Mike Brown and a cousin of Vonderrit Myers, I feel the system had let us down a whole lot. Not only in St. Louis, but nationwide.”

Hollis said the vast majority of Ferguson demonstrators have been peaceful and did not cause the destruction that engulfed the city last week. “The only thing we’re out here doing is peaceful protesting for justice,” he said. “We just want our voices heard. We are not looters or thieves. We are pastors, preachers, taxpayers, lawyers, most of us have good jobs. We’re not out here for no kind of harassment, we’re just out here to get our voices heard, that’s all we’re here for.”

Kurtinya Baker, 43, also was demonstrating in front of the Ferguson Police Department. Baker said she feels that now more than ever, her 26-year-old son has to be “more aware” than people of other races because of police killings.

“I think it’s messed up. I think there should be more justice. The non-indictment of the officer showed that it’s clearly OK to kill a black person,” she said.

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Ferguson Protesters Speak Out Against Eric Garner Decision

Your Black Friend’s Thoughts on Ferguson

As an avowed Neo-Marxist, I’m used to my opinions not being taken seriously. I’m often met with polite explanations that my “ideas are good” but would “never work in real life.” I’m sometimes met with laughter and outright derision. So I do not take it lightly, nor do I expect any kind of widespread approval, when I say that the decision not to indict Officer Darren Wilson for the shooting of Michael Brown did not outrage me. Did it sadden me? Deeply. Did it scare me? Definitely. But outrage requires shock, and I’m past the point where I expect justice …

As an avowed Neo-Marxist, I’m used to my opinions not being taken seriously. I’m often met with polite explanations that my “ideas are good” but would “never work in real life.” I’m sometimes met with laughter and outright derision. So I do not take it lightly, nor do I expect any kind of widespread approval, when I say that the decision not to indict Officer Darren Wilson for the shooting of Michael Brown did not outrage me.

Did it sadden me? Deeply. Did it scare me? Definitely. But outrage requires shock, and I’m past the point where I expect justice for the shooting of an unarmed black man. In 1991 Rodney King was savagely beaten on camera by several police officers, the city he lived in rioted, and nothing happened to the officers. In 2012 Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by a neighborhood watchman, and nothing happened. Now Michael Brown is killed in Ferguson, the city he lived in rioted, and nothing happened to the officer involved. The worst thing about it is that these are not unusual cases. They are statistics, and we occasionally give a few of them national attention.

This kind of thing makes me tired. I’m not that old yet, only pushing 20, but I’m already tired. I spend the time that I’m not at Wesleyan University at home in Houston, one of the places where this kind of killing is most prevalent. It is not an uncommon occurrence, and I know I could easily be next. Going to a fancy liberal-arts school won’t protect me when I’m staring down the barrel of a policeman’s pistol. I still have in my ears the words of my black mother, who tells me to be careful every night I leave the house, because “you’re not white, and your white friends can’t protect you.” I’ve memorized the warning I get from my white father, guilt and fear in his eyes, each time I tell him I’ll be out late: “If you’re stopped, keep your hands on the wheel. Tell him you’re going to call us. Explain everything you are doing as you do it. No sudden moves.” I know that this is the same warning I’ll someday have to give my son when he leaves the house each night, and I’m still coming to terms with that.

I don’t like to be told how to feel. I don’t like to be made to feel like an outsider because I don’t feel the same call to action that a lot of people do. New York City organizer Tahira Pratt wrote on Facebook that she’s tired of liberal white and non-black people of color “using these moments of black murder and injustice as times to say … we need a sustained [movement] to end racial injustice … [b]ut then … be ghost and crickets a month after the rallies die down.” The hashtag #blacklivesmatter is a helpful tool for compiling the accounts of resistance to this horrendous tragedy, but it’s quickly become an inane way for non-black liberals to simultaneously show off their compassion and demonize those who don’t have the same passion for their cause du jour.

In recent weeks dozens of diatribes have appeared on Facebook that, to me, say so much more about the people writing them than they do about the situation itself. Pratt goes on to ask, “Have you actually talked to black people about how we are feeling during these times? Are you just pressuring us to hit the streets with you to lend cred to your cries?” I know for a fact that I’m a lot of people’s only black friend, and not one person has asked me how I feel about this. I’ve already said I haven’t been around long, but I’ve already noticed the pattern myself. I appreciate the solidarity, but when you retreat back into your own struggles, I’m still going to be here, and people who look just like me are still going to get shot by the hundreds.

I’ll quote Pratt one more time: She says that “Sometimes mass mobilizations works. But we keep doing it to protest police brutality and legal injustice again black people, and shit actually seems to get worse. [For example,] [t]he proposed bill to stop the sale of military equipment to police precincts [across] the country just stalled and died yesterday.” These valorizations of black victims as the front lines of protest against an unjust system leave the roots of the problem untouched. The game is rigged. The system pushes black people until we snap, then calls us “animals” for being angry.

And we play into it every time. We can build something for ourselves, but they will burn it down like Black Wall Street. We can beat them at their own game, but they will call the president a socialist and assault Professor Henry Louis Gates in his own home. We can lash out, but then they twist the narrative so that we’re the ones who are out of control. Until the rules of the game are changed, we’ll never have a fair shot at winning, or even being competitive. In my opinion, this type of discrimination has its roots in class inequalities and the capitalist construction of race in early American history, but even if you don’t agree, that discussion needs to be had, and it simply isn’t.

I’m tired of being ostracized for choosing to focus on the bigger picture here. The day after the decision not to indict Darren Wilson, it was suggested that people wear black out of respect. I didn’t, and when I went to Wesleyan’s USDAN cafeteria facility for lunch, I saw black-clad protestors holding signs with the #blacklivesmatter hashtag. I felt their eyes on me, noticing that I wasn’t conforming to their mode of protest, and instead of getting the usual greeting from the ones I knew, I was met with confused and upset stares. Do you really think I’m on the other side? Do you really believe I think Mike Brown should have been shot? I’ve been discriminated against, belittled, and assaulted for the color of my skin, and I’m still not “down” enough with the cause for these people. I live in the kind of place where the cops actually do the killing, and I’m still not black enough to garner your mutual respect on a difference of opinion. Once again, I’d be outraged, but that would require surprise. This is the same kind of pressure that I and many who aren’t part of the approved black-experience narrative face every day.

Recently I was having a conversation with one of my best friends, who’d made a Facebook photo album called “Browsing Facebook,” filled with a litany of unflattering pictures of himself logged on to Facebook, to lampoon the fact that this aspect of people’s lives (one in which they all undoubtedly partake) is never documented. When posting the album he used the hashtag #blacklivesmatter to mock the hashtag’s use as merely a way for people to garner attention. This turned out to be a very controversial choice, garnering dozens of “likes” as well as comments condemning his apparent flippancy. At least two people “defriended” him altogether. While you may or may not agree with what he did, what was interesting to note was that not a single black person was involved, on either side, besides me. (I took many of the pictures for the album, I am in one of the pictures, and when he asked me if the hashtag was going too far, I told him to do what he wanted, but that I didn’t care.) To all the people who posted that hashtag, and to all the people who got outraged on my behalf: Thanks, but I got this. I outlined earlier in this blog post why I’m not 100-percent comfortable with you co-opting our movement (as surface-level as that co-opting is) in order to lend credence to your own sense of moral outrage coupled with vainglorious self-promotion, and neither I nor any black person gave you the license to form a mob against what was, in this case, satire.

That friend told me I should write this blog post. I told him that it might make me the most hated black person on campus. He told me he was already the most hated white person in his immediate vicinity. I think that that is where he and I part mentally. While I applaud him for sticking to his principles, there is a major difference. There is no white community at Wesleyan (that just is Wesleyan), but there is a small black one, and as at-the-fringes as I already am, I anticipate something like this pushing me all the way out, and I’m running out of options. White people are often made uncomfortable by my brand of black militancy, and because it isn’t what black people want to hear either, they aren’t into it, so I’ve resigned myself to being adrift. If that weren’t the case after this, then I really would be surprised.

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Your Black Friend’s Thoughts on Ferguson

NY Daily News Makes Huge Statement With Front Page On Eric Garner Decision

The New York Daily News is making it clear where the paper stands on the decision by a grand jury not to indict New York City police officer Daniel Pantaleo for the choking death of Eric Garner. “WE CAN’T BREATHE,” the paper declares on its front page, along with a photo showing Garner before he was brought down by a chokehold at the hands of Pantaleo. (function(d, s, id) var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = “//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js#xfbml=1”; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); (document, ‘script’, ‘facebook-jssdk’)); Post by New…

The New York Daily News is making it clear where the paper stands on the decision by a grand jury not to indict New York City police officer Daniel Pantaleo for the choking death of Eric Garner.

WE CAN’T BREATHE,” the paper declares on its front page, along with a photo showing Garner before he was brought down by a chokehold at the hands of Pantaleo.

The cover echoes some of the last words of Garner, who cried out “I can’t breathe” several times before collapsing on July 17. A medical examiner later said the death was the result of the chokehold, a move banned by the NYPD, and ruled it a homicide.

Already, the cover is the topic of conversation on social media.

Inside the paper is an editorial that says the grand jury’s decision “has the earmarks of a gross miscarriage of justice.”

The ruling is painfully far harder to understand than the Missouri grand jury’s decision not to indict for the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson,” the editorial states, pointing to the widely circulated video of Garner being brought down by Pantaleo.

The editorial also predicts that the decision will have consequences.

The grand jury’s apparent determination that Pantaleo had properly subdued Garner will heighten raw racial friction over the killings of black men by white cops here and elsewhere, and, still worse, intensify a belief that the justice system offers no redress.

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NY Daily News Makes Huge Statement With Front Page On Eric Garner Decision

Ravens Deny Telling Janay Rice To Apologize For Getting Punched By Her Husband

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — The Baltimore Ravens say they didn’t write a script for Ray Rice and Janay Rice during their joint news conference on May 23. In an interview this week on the “Today” show, Janay Rice said the team suggested to her that she apologize for her involvement in the February incident in which Ray punched her in an elevator. Janay Rice also said the Ravens gave the couple “a general script” for the news conference. Janay Rice told Today: “I was ready to do anything that was going to help the situation. Help the way we looked in the media, help his…

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — The Baltimore Ravens say they didn’t write a script for Ray Rice and Janay Rice during their joint news conference on May 23.

In an interview this week on the “Today” show, Janay Rice said the team suggested to her that she apologize for her involvement in the February incident in which Ray punched her in an elevator. Janay Rice also said the Ravens gave the couple “a general script” for the news conference.

Janay Rice told Today: “I was ready to do anything that was going to help the situation. Help the way we looked in the media, help his image, help obviously his career. They told us earlier that week we would do the press conference, and I was fine with it.”

“I was basically … not doing what I was told, but at the same time, I didn’t think it was completely wrong for me to apologize because at the end of the day, I got arrested, too. So I did something wrong, too. Not taking any light off of what Ray did because I agree with everybody else. It was wrong.”

Kevin Byrne, Senior Vice President of Public and Community Relations for the Ravens, said in a statement Wednesday that the team provided talking points to Ray, but not Janay.

“At no time prior to the May 23 session did we provide talking points, a script or suggested script to Janay or speak with her about the press event,” Byrne wrote. “We did not recommend or suggest to Ray or Janay that she apologize in any way.”

After Ray Rice told the Ravens he wanted Janay to speak to the media at the news conference, Byrne said he asked the running back “on two different days if Ray wanted me to speak with Janay in advance of the press session. Both times, Ray declined and said: ‘She’s good. She knows what she wants to say.'”

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AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org and www.twitter.com/AP_NFL

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Ravens Deny Telling Janay Rice To Apologize For Getting Punched By Her Husband

Reflections on Fergurson: Two Deeply Disturbing and Highly Conflicting Stories

By any measure, what happened in Ferguson is deeply disturbing. It is nothing less than a monumental tragedy. How could the death of yet another unarmed black teenager fail to ignite widespread outrage and, unfortunately, violent demonstrations? The death of one unarmed black teenager is one death too many. However, there is another aspect of the tragedy that I also find disturbing. This aspect has received virtually no acknowledgement, and hence no discussion at all. As we know, there are essentially two widely conflicting and, on the surface, at least, deeply incompatible stories of what happened. For most people, to believe one story is to automatically judge the other totally wrong. …

By any measure, what happened in Ferguson is deeply disturbing. It is nothing less than a monumental tragedy. How could the death of yet another unarmed black teenager fail to ignite widespread outrage and, unfortunately, violent demonstrations? The death of one unarmed black teenager is one death too many.

However, there is another aspect of the tragedy that I also find disturbing. This aspect has received virtually no acknowledgement, and hence no discussion at all. As we know, there are essentially two widely conflicting and, on the surface, at least, deeply incompatible stories of what happened. For most people, to believe one story is to automatically judge the other totally wrong. In contrast, I believe that both stories are “right” and “wrong” in the sense that both have elements of credibility. That is, neither is totally right or totally wrong. Of course, merely to say this is to incur the wrath of both sides, for how could they be equally credible, if indeed they are?

In one story, Michael Brown is clearly the villain. According to this version of events, Officer Darren Wilson acted out of dire fear for his life. Brown had just committed petty theft. A surveillance tape shows him pushing a convenience-store clerk and making off with stolen cigarillos. According to his friend Dorian Johnson, who was with him during the theft and at the encounter with Wilson, Brown was planning to use the cigarillos to roll marijuana cigarettes. Because Wilson had been alerted to the recent theft over the police radio, he was on the lookout for the perpetrator. When he came upon Brown and Johnson walking in the middle of the street, he realized Brown fit the profile. When Wilson, sitting in his car, asked Brown to step out of the street and onto the sidewalk, Brown, instead of complying as he should have, became belligerent. Wilson attempted to get out of the car, but Brown slammed the door shut, knocking Wilson back into the car. Brown then violently confronted Wilson through the car window, savagely punching him in the face. Rightly fearing for his life, Wilson reached for his gun, but Brown wrestled him for it, and in the tussle the gun went off in the car and left an unmistakable injury on Brown’s thumb, demonstrating that he had indeed been at close range at the time. Brown fled, and Wilson got out of the car and pursued him, firing multiple shots when Brown turned back around and appeared to be charging Wilson. At least one of the shots was fatal. Brown’s intimating size and weight figured into Wilson’s decision to use deadly force. Because the grand jury believed Wilson’s testimony, they voted not to indict him. The grand jury also voted not to indict so as not to undermine police authority.

In the other story, Officer Wilson is the clear villain. According to this version of events, Wilson was the aggressor. Unaware of the convenience-story theft, he came upon Michael Brown and Dorian Johnson walking in the middle of the street and, from inside his car, rudely ordered them to get on the sidewalk using profanity. When Brown didn’t comply quickly enough, an enraged Wilson attempted to get out of the car, but the car door ricocheted off Brown’s body, knocking Wilson back into the car and further enraging him. He seized Brown through the car window, and a tussle ensued, with Wilson’s gun going off inside the car and Brown fleeing, fearing for his life. Wilson got out of the car and pursued him, firing multiple shots. Realizing he’d been struck, Brown stopped and turned back around, facing Wilson and putting his hands up in surrender, but Wilson fired several more shots, killing Brown. The death of another innocent and unarmed black teenager understandably outraged the black community. Michael Brown was not a thug, as some in the media portrayed him, but a “gentle giant” who was getting ready to go off to college. There is no way that he was a threat to law and order. The grand jury was wrong in failing to indict Wilson. If Wilson had been brought to trial, then he would have been cross-examined in a proper manner. Once again, black people were denied justice. The shooting of Michael Brown is another example of the racism that is rampant in American society.

On the surface, it is seemingly impossible to reconcile these two sharply conflicting stories, yet this is exactly what we must do if we are to learn from the tragedy and get beyond it, if one can ever truly get beyond a horrific tragedy.

Both stories have elements that ring true. Brown clearly committed a theft, for which he needed to be apprehended and arrested. Moreover, his considerable size and weight would have intimidated most officers, who, by virtue of the nature of their jobs, live in perpetual fear for their lives. On the other hand, it is not difficult to believe that Wilson also inappropriately provoked Brown, thereby leading to an avoidable tragedy. For this reason I believe that Wilson should have been indicted, if only on a lesser charge like involuntary manslaughter, so that he and the witnesses to the tragedy could have been cross-examined publicly in a court of law.

One of the most difficult tasks for human beings is to accept that there are elements of truth in widely conflicting accounts of horrific tragedies. But that is the task with which we humans are charged repeatedly. What single story ever has a monopoly on truth? If there is ever anything approaching the truth, is it not arrived at and known through the clashing of two widely conflicting accounts of events?

All of this suggests what is required if we are to move on, and why it’s so difficult for us to do so. Those who believe the first story have to accept that in not indicting Wilson, justice was not done in the eyes of those who believe the second story. And those who believe the second story have to accept that Michael Brown was not entirely innocent. But in no way does the theft justify his being shot, let alone fatally.

In short, both sides have to accept a fundamental part of the other’s story.

F. Scott Fitzgerald put it best when he wrote that “the test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.” We are far indeed from even approaching a society with “first-rate intelligence.”

Ian I. Mitroff is a professor emeritus at USC. He is a senior research associate in the Center for Catastrophic Risk Management at UC Berkeley. He is currently at work on a book, Dumb, Deranged, and Dangerous: A Brief Guide to Combating Dumb Arguments.

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Reflections on Fergurson: Two Deeply Disturbing and Highly Conflicting Stories

‘Hell No!’: Eric Garner’s Widow Rejects Officer’s Condolences Amid Shock Over Grand Jury’s Decision

The family of Eric Garner addressed the nation Wednesday after a grand jury announced its decision not to indict an NYPD officer in Garner’s death. Garner, a Staten Island man who had asthma, died on July 17 after Officer Daniel Pantaleo placed him in a prohibited police chokehold during an arrest. Police suspected Garner, who was black, of selling untaxed cigarettes on the sidewalk. The incident was captured on video, where Garner can be heard repeatedly telling officers “I can’t breathe!” before his body goes limp. At a press conference Wednesday at the Harlem headquarters of the National Action Network, the advocacy group founded by Al Sharpton, Garner’s widow, Esaw Garner, and his…

The family of Eric Garner addressed the nation Wednesday after a grand jury announced its decision not to indict an NYPD officer in Garner’s death.

Garner, a Staten Island man who had asthma, died on July 17 after Officer Daniel Pantaleo placed him in a prohibited police chokehold during an arrest. Police suspected Garner, who was black, of selling untaxed cigarettes on the sidewalk. The incident was captured on video, where Garner can be heard repeatedly telling officers “I can’t breathe!” before his body goes limp.

At a press conference Wednesday at the Harlem headquarters of the National Action Network, the advocacy group founded by Al Sharpton, Garner’s widow, Esaw Garner, and his mother, Gwen Carr, expressed their disappointment with the grand jury’s decision and their frustration that Pantaleo would not be held accountable by a court.

Esaw Garner became visibly angry when asked if she accepted the apology Pantaleo had issued earlier that day. In a statement, Pantaleo offered his condolences to the family and said he never intended to harm Garner.

“Hell no!” Garner replied. “The time for remorse would have been when my husband was yelling to breathe.”

“No, I don’t accept his apology. No, I could care less about his condolences,” she continued. “He’s still working. He’s still getting a paycheck. He’s still feeding his kids, when my husband is six feet under and I’m looking for a way to feed my kids now.”

“Who’s going to play Santa Claus for my grandkids this year?” she said. “Who’s going to play Santa Claus?”

Garner and Carr, along with Sharpton — who has worked closely with the family since Garner’s death — have reportedly met with Attorney General Eric Holder, and the U.S. Justice Department has confirmed that it will conduct a civil rights investigation into the case.

“I’m determined to get justice for my husband,” Garner said Wednesday. “My husband’s death will not be in vain. I will fight till the end.”

Matt Sledge contributed reporting.

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‘Hell No!’: Eric Garner’s Widow Rejects Officer’s Condolences Amid Shock Over Grand Jury’s Decision