3.2 Partie III, Chapitre III
Note 78: shoulder to 'pop,' tearing her
rotator cuff and causing severe injury,» according to the lawsuit.
Note 79: A 74-year-old grandmother is suing
three Oklahoma City Police Department officers for excessive force after she
said they allegedly broke her arm while serving an arrest warrant for her son
last year.
Note 80 McDonlad: Chicago's police watchdog,
the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, has finished a 16-month
investigation into the police raid of Anjanette Young, a social worker who was
handcuffed naked by police when they wrongfully targeted her home to serve a
search warrant for someone else.
Note 81 Linly: The Root reported that a
9-year-old Black girl was handcuffed and pepper-sprayed for seemingly no other
reason than because she was panicked and refused to get into the back of a
police car before seeing her father who she feared was hurt. And if you need an
even clearer picture of white people's inability to recognize that a Black
child is indeed a child, before she was pepper-sprayed, one officer literally
told the girl, « You're acting like a child.»People who--like these
officers--lose their ability to recognize a child being a child when Blackness
is involved will likely see the cops' threats as warnings that the girl should
have heeded, but if officers' handling of a visibly distraught 9-year-old who
is crying and screaming for her father would also be appropriate for
interrogating a terrorism suspect, cops might want to rethink the way they
protect and serve.
Note 82 GUPTA: On March 13, a little after
midnight, three police officers punched down the door of Ms. Taylor's apartment
in Louisville, Ky. using a no-knock warrant in a late-night drug raid. Her
boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fearing an intruder, reached for his gun and let off
one shot, wounding an officer. Another officer and the wounded officer returned
fire, while a third began blindly shooting through Ms. Taylor's window and
patio door. The two officers who shot Ms. Taylor six times face no charges,
while a former police detective, Brett Hankison,
178
was indicted on a charge of « wanton endangerment»
for firing recklessly into a neighbor's apartment. Few police officers who
cause deaths are charged or convicted. Since 2013, law enforcement officers
across the country have killed about 1,000 people a year and Black people are
about three times more likely to be killed by the police than white people,
according to the crowdsourced database Mapping Police Violence. And since 2015,
nearly 250 women in total have been killed by police officers, of which 48 --
about a fifth -- were Black, according to a Washington Post database. By
comparison, there have been five cases since 2015 in which officers were
charged with manslaughter or murder in an on-duty shooting of a white woman and
three of them resulted in a conviction.
Note 83 The insider: A year after the launch
of the #SayHerName campaign-- founded in 2014 to bring attention to
Black women harmed by police violence-- officers in California shot Yuvette
Henderson several times in the head and back with an AR-15. They had suspected
her of shoplifting at a Home Depot and alleged that she had pointed a gun at
them. While protesters closed the store and demanded surveillance footage of
the fatal shooting, national news organizations, including Insider, barely
covered Henderson's death. #SayHerName has become an integral part of the Black
Lives Matter movement and mobilized grassroots operations nationwide to
acknowledge the lives of Black women, girls, and femmes lost to police
violence. Names like Atatiana Jefferson and Breonna Taylor entered the national
conversation as organizers leveraged the campaign « to change the popular
narrative about police violence in the wake of the killings of Black
women,» said Karissa Lewis and Charlene Carruthers, activists with the
Movement for Black Lives. « In 2015, this work led to the first national
day of action calling for an end to state-sanctioned violence against all Black
women and girls,» Lewis and Carruthers told Insider. « Over a dozen
cities held actions, leading us to campaign work that shapes our movement
today. That work plays a large role in more people and communities seeing
themselves being valued for the first time in a mass movement for
liberation.» Insider tracked 100 officers involved in the killings of
these Black women. Through research, conversations with activists, court
documents, and records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, we
found that most of the officers involved did not face any consequences. Insider
identified 14 of those 100 officers who had been fired or charged. One officer
-- Scott Kadien, who killed Sandy Guardiola in 2017 -- resigned, though it
wasn't clear whether he did so because of the shooting. No officer has been
convicted.
Note 84 Maxouris: The #SayHerName campaign,
launched in 2014, serves to raise awareness and support the families of the
Black women and girls who fall victim to police brutality -- and who are often
overlooked and forgotten. « #SayHerName is grounded in the sad reality
that
179
Black women and girls who are targeted, brutalized, and killed
by police are all too often excluded from mainstream narratives around police
violence, Including Black women and girls in police violence and gender
violence discourses sends the powerful message that indeed all Black lives
matter,» it says. The campaign has worked to highlight the cases of dozens
of Black women, including Atatiana Jefferson and Michelle Cusseaux, both killed
by police in their home. « We're still in a period of time where we have
to make people see that Black women are also the subject of anti-Black police
violence,» Crenshaw said. « It's one of the most consistent aspects
of our experience across history.
Note 85 Owens: Back in 2014, AAPF and the
Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies (CISPS) at Columbia
launched the campaign to bring awareness to often forgotten or invisible
victims and give their families support. The following May, « we hosted
the first #SayHerName vigil in New York's Union Square,» she said.
Relatives of at least 16 Black women killed by police assembled from around the
country. Soon after, AAPF and CISPS released a groundbreaking report: «
Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality Against Black Women.» Co-written
by Crenshaw and Andrea J. Ritchie, a lawyer and activist, outlined the
objectives of the movement, providing an intersectional framework for
understanding Black women's susceptibility to police brutality and
state-sanctioned violence.
Not 86 BBC: « The officers who entered
Ms Taylor's apartment were not wearing body cameras that could record the
unfolding events. Now, the Louisville police department says all officers must
wear body cameras. « No-knock» search warrants have been temporarily
suspended. And the Louisville police chief was removed from his post when it
was discovered that officers present at the fatal shooting of a black man
during a protest did not have their body cams turned on.
Note 87: Crenshaw Launched in December 2014
by the African American Policy Forum (AAPF) and Center for Intersectionality
and Social Policy Studies (CISPS), the #SayHerName campaign brings awareness to
the often-invisible names and stories of Black women and girls who have been
victimized by racist police violence, and provides support to their families.
Black women and girls as young as 7 and as old as 93 have been killed by the
police, though we rarely hear their names. Knowing their names is a necessary
but not a sufficient condition for lifting up their stories which in turn
provides a much clearer view of the wide-ranging circumstances that make Black
women's bodies disproportionately subject to police violence. To lift up their
stories, and illuminate police violence against Black women, we need to know
who they are, how they lived, and why they suffered at the hands of police. On
May 20th, 2015, at Union Square in New York City, AAPF hosted #SayHerName: A
Vigil in Memory of Black
180
Women and Girls Killed by the Police. For the first time,
family members of Black women killed by police came together from across the
country for a powerful vigil designed to draw attention to their loved ones'
stories. The family members of Alberta Spruill, Rekia Boyd, Shantel Davis,
Shelly Frey, Kayla Moore, Kyam Livingston, Miriam Carey, Michelle Cusseaux, and
Tanisha Anderson were present and supported by hundreds of attendees,
activists, and stakeholders. That same week, AAPF and CISPS, in partnership
with Andrea Ritchie, released a report entitled Say Her Name: Resisting Police
Brutality Against Black Women, which outlined the goals and objectives of the
#SayHerName movement. The report provides an intersectional framework for
understanding black women's susceptibility to police brutality and
state-sanctioned violence and offers suggestions on how to effectively mobilize
various communities and empower them to advocate for racial justice. Over the
past five years, the #SayHerName campaign has expanded and increased its focus
on direct advocacy. Since 2015, AAPF has hosted its annual #SayHerName Mothers
Weekend in New York City, bringing together a group of mothers who have lost
their daughters to police violence. The weekends served as a chance to learn
more about the specific needs of the family members of Black women who are
victims of racist state violence and provide a space where these mothers can
begin to construct a community of support and a network for activism. Including
Black women and girls in police violence and gender violence discourses sends
the powerful message that indeed all Black lives matter. If our collective
outrage around cases of police violence is meant to serve as a warning to the
state that its agents cannot kill without consequence, our silence around the
cases of Black women and girls sends the message that certain deaths do not
merit repercussions. Please join us in our efforts to advance a
gender-inclusive narrative in the movement for Black lives.
Note 88: found hanging in her jail cell three
days after being arrested following a confrontational traffic stop.
Note 89: The Times's visual investigation
team built a 3-D model of the scene and pieced together critical sequences of
events to show how poor planning and shoddy police work led to a fatal outcome.
The Time's magazine used crime scene photos to create a precise model of
Taylor's apartment. They forensically mapped out and retraced the first bullet,
fired by Taylor's boyfriend, and the 32 bullets that police shot in return --
through windows, walls and ceilings. Using interviews officers gave to
investigators, The Magazine's team charted their movements as they carried out
the raid. And they analyzed hours of 911 calls, grand jury proceedings and
footage by the SWAT team that arrived after the shooting. Seven officers began
the raid at
181
12:40 a.m, they didn't conduct a knock-and-announce raid.
Inside, Taylor wakes up. Whether the police announce themselves clearly enough
is a critical issue
in this story that we'll return to later on. Not knowing who's
at the door this late, Walker grabs his licensed handgun. They rush to get
dressed and walk toward the door. The bullets that go into the living area pass
over Taylor's sofa and kitchen table and smash her clock. Three penetrate the
wall and enter her neighbor's apartment. Those bullets also smash the kitchen
table, hit a wall and shatter the patio doors at the rear. A pregnant woman,
her son and partner were home. Hankison has been charged with wantonly
endangering their lives. In total, the police fired 32 bullets, penetrating
almost every room in Taylor's apartment. In 911 calls immediately after the
shooting, Taylor's neighbors don't know police are carrying out a raid. And in
statements police took afterwards, none of Taylor's neighbors heard the
officers announce. This apartment's patio door was open. Two teenagers in this
apartment heard a commotion but didn't hear the police announce through their
open window, their mom said. And the family who lived directly above Taylor
also heard nothing.
Note 90 RAY: While the founders of Black
Lives Matter intended the motto to encompass all Black people, regardless of
gender or sexual orientation, a study we conducted with a team of researchers
at the University of Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities found
a gender discrepancy in how the message of Black Lives Matter played out when
it became a hashtag on Twitter. We analyzed a collection of 31 million tweets
generated between August 2014 and August 2015 on Ferguson after the killing of
17-year-old Missouri resident Michael Brown by Darren Wilson, an officer for
the Ferguson Police Department at the time. Our findings indicate that
opponents to police violence used hashtags for multiple reasons, one of which
was to name Black people killed by police. However, of the nearly 300
phrases
used as hashtags we collected, not even one named a Black
woman or girl. Though
Black women are 13% of the women population in the United
States, they represent 20% of women killed by police and nearly 30% who are
killed while unarmed. About 36% of women killed by police since 2015 were
killed in their homes, like Taylor. It is a troubling pattern of Black women's
killings being justified as « caught in crossfire.» Still, we have to
wonder how a $12 million settlement leads to justifiable police killing with
none of the officers being held accountable for that killing. Instead,
taxpayers' money, including Taylor's own, was used to pay her family for her
death. In a subsequent study conducted in 2016, we found that beyond the
differences in public outcry for Black women, news outlets also mentioned male
victims of police brutality more often than female victims of police brutality.
We analyzed over 460,000 tweets generated between January 2016 and October 2016
and explicitly included the phrase
182
#SayHerName. While journalists or news organizations retweeted
nearly 40% of user accounts that mentioned Ferguson, only 18% of the retweeted
users that tweeted about #SayHerName fell into that category. Our results show
how news outlets contribute to police violence against Black women receiving
less attention.
Note 91 KELLY: Crenshaw told NPR. « So
Say Her Name is trying to raise awareness by insisting that we say their names
because if we can say their names we can know more about their stories. What we
want to do is say: That's a risk factor, but also when a Black woman is driving
a car and a police officer doesn't like her response and so he threatens to
taser her and that escalates into that person being dead. These are also
moments of anti-Black police violence, but they happen in different spaces than
we imagine, they happen to different bodies than we can see, and so we want to
insert awareness of these other moments so that the movement and the reforms
can actually be more inclusive and we hope more productive.
Note 92 FAYARD: « Counterintuitively,
thinking about a single person activates our humanity, compassion, and
perspective-taking and makes us value lives in a way that thinking about a
large number of people at once does not. This is explained by two related
phenomena psychologists call the identifiable victim effect and the singularity
effect. Numerous studies have indicated, under a variety of conditions, that
learning about single individuals' stories moves us more than thinking about
what researchers call statistical victims, or the large number of people
affected by a situation. Thinking about single, identifiable victims may cause
us to donate more money to help them and feel more distress and sympathy toward
them. A likely reason for this difference is that thinking about identifiable
versus statistical victims activates different thought processes. Identifiable
victims prompt emotional responses, which then promote greater action on that
person's behalf , whereas thinking about statistical victims initiates a more
deliberate mode of thought, which may allow us to more easily rationalize not
giving or not caring.
Note 98 Cooper: But when Black women and
girls like Aiyana Stanley-Jones, Tanisha Anderson, Atatiana Jefferson and
Charleena Lyles are killed, it is often out of the public eye. And in a world
where the pains and traumas that Black women and girls experience as a
consequence of both racism and sexism remain structurally invisible and
impermeable to broad empathy, these killings recede from the foreground
quietly. Femininity is a weapon only if you're white. Black women have no such
protections. Breonna Taylor's boyfriend tried to take care of his partner but
could not. We keep missing the intersection of race and gender when it comes to
Black women.
183
Note 99: Coles Previous research has found
that Blackness is associated with masculinity, leading to errors when
categorizing Black women's gender or recognizing Black women's faces. Other
studies have found that Black women and girls are more associated with threat
and danger than are White women and girls. Feminist movements that focus only
on issues that predominantly affect White women without addressing racialized
sexism ignore the needs of Black women, who face higher rates of police abuses,
including sexual violence, Coles said. Previous research also has found that
Black women experience much higher rates of domestic and sexual abuse from
partners than White women, and Black women are less likely to report this
violence than White women.
Note 100: the specific hatred, dislike,
distrust, and prejudice directed toward Black women. Misogynoir is rampant in
ways that may not even be realized. The hashtag #SayHerName was created in 2014
to highlight misogynoir and how stories of Black women and girls often go
overlooked, unnoticed and untold. These experiences range from police violence
to sexual
assault and often go unreported. Two very apparent examples of
misogynoir in the public sphere can be found in the stories of musician
R.Kelly's victims and most recently, the events that transpired with rapper
Megan Thee Stallion. Throughout R.Kelly's 30-year career, a number of women and
girls, mostly Black and underaged, have made claims that R.Kelly has sexually
abused them. Despite the growing number of accusations that have been made, it
wasn't until recently when the 2019 documentary Surviving R.Kelly came out that
these stories were given credence. Black women and girls who share experiences
of abuse, trauma,
and assault are largely shunned, criticized and ignored. These
experiences are questioned, scrutinized and dissected more than any other
group. Many people are still unaware of misogynoir and how it manifests to
collectively harm Black women. The first step to dismantling and disrupting
misogynoir is awareness. Anti-racism education should explore misogynoir to
increase awareness and understanding. When Black women share an experience,
rather than questioning the experience or engaging in racial gaslighting and
tone policing, it's imperative to simply listen. Also important is avoiding
behaviors such as white
centering and defensiveness during these conversations. The
voices of Black women are often muffled, stifled and silenced. Ask yourself
what you are currently doing to amplify the voices of Black women. Lastly,
consider how you are using your privilege, access and opportunity to uproot
misogynoir any time it rears its ugly head.
Note 101 Wingfield: Research indicates that
Black women are more ambitious and more likely to say that they want to advance
in their companies than their white women counterparts, but are less likely to
find mentors who will aid their climb up the corporate ladder. As
sociologist
184
Tsedale Melaku points out, sometimes this is a function of
white executives' unfamiliarity and discomfort with Black women. As one
attorney in Melaku's study notes, executives who rarely, if ever, have Black
people in their personal or professional circles may be uncertain or
uncomfortable interacting with them as peers. Other times, this lack of
mentoring is a consequence of intentional exclusion when leaders make it a
point not to include Black women in teams, as mentees, or on important
projects. But either way, these patterns thwart Black women's mobility in
organizations and their ability to realize ambitions and secure leadership
roles. And Black women are left to struggle harder to access and advance in
these professions, with occupational underrepresentation and wage disparities
to show for it. Working in a profession dominated by men, Black women doctors
are very attuned to the ways that sexism impacts their lives.
Note 102 Chapagain: African American women
have been the victims of racist and sexist oppression for a long time. Being
black in color of skin, female in gender and economically underprivileged in
male dominated society, African American women have been carrying triple
consciousness. Despite this triple oppression, they have been resisting the
repressions of different kinds and searching for their identity. Oppressed from
black men and white men and women, African American women are in a persistent
struggle to render meaningful participation and contribution in their society.
Black men in America also do have the pungent experience of racism for being
black and a former slave of whites. However, being dependent on black males, a
black woman suffers more than her male partner because her man remains helpless
even to question a white man's misbehavior upon his woman. Since, black men
have been victims of racism; black women have been victims of racism, sexism
and classicism.
Note 103 The Independent: Black women make up
just 10 percent of the population and account for 33 percent of all women
killed by the police. They are « the only race-gender group to have a
majority of its members killed while unarmed,» according to a study by the
Fatal Interactions with Police (FIPS) research project, and cited by Professor
Crenshaw. The same study found that 57 per cent of black women were unarmed
when they were killed.
Note 104 Ritchie: A report I co-authored, Say
Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality Against Black Women, was released on the
eve of and in support of the first National Day of Action to End State Violence
Against Black Women and Girls called for by Black Youth Project 100, Black
Lives Matter, and Ferguson Action. Over thirty communities across the country
responded to this call with vigils, direct actions, and protests. In July of
2015, a number of communities across the country similarly mounted light
actions in the wake of Sandra Bland's death in police custody.
185
Note 105: Sanchez: In June, the Louisville
Metro Council unanimously passed an ordinance called « Breonna's
Law,» banning no-knock search warrants. The ordinance regulates how search
warrants are carried out and mandates the use of body cameras during searches.
All Louisville Metro Police Department officers are to be equipped with an
operating body camera while carrying out a search. The cameras have to be
activated no later than five minutes prior to all searches and remain on for
five minutes after. All recorded data also has to be retained for five years
following an executing action, according to the ordinance.
Note 106 Lockhart: At the beginning of 2020,
a handful of cities and just two states, Oregon and Florida, had banned or
otherwise restricted no-knock warrants.
Note 108 Adia: « women make 79 cents for
every dollar men earn. But Black women earn only 64 cents on the dollar. Women
of color are usually underrepresented in professional, high status jobs in law,
medicine, academia, and business. When they do make it to these rarified roles
but are the only ones in an organizational setting, they are more likely to
doubt the company's commitment to inclusion and equity and thus are more likely
to want to pursue opportunities elsewhere.
Note 110: Taylor Race, gender and class are
at the center of the way we understand the structural, political and
iconography of resistance. We live in a patriarchal society, which means men's,
including Black men's, experiences and stories are privileged. It is by design
we know about police killings of George Floyd, Philando Castile, Freddie Gray,
Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin and Tamir Rice, but know very little about the
deaths of Alberta
Spruill, Shantel Davis, Shelly Frey, Kayla Moore, Kyam
Livingston, Miriam Carey and Eleanor Bumpurs, who all were killed by police or
died in their custody. The erasure of Black women's experiences is a resounding
denial of humanity. Beyond the fact that this country was literally built on
the backs of Black women, whiteness needs Black women to be a gender and racial
wedge to sustain the power imbalance. Reckoning with how Black women are
exposed and vulnerable in ways Black men could never be is a step toward
upending implicit and explicit bias, discrimination, structural and
institutional racism that prevents this country from being great. To redress
how a woman can be roused out of her bed by strangers at her door who refuse to
answer her calls to identify themselves, we have to understand that Black women
have never in this country's history been afforded safety and security, even
when they were innocent and resting in their own homes.
Note 111: Banks: Black women's main jobs
historically have been in low-wage agriculture and domestic service.1 Even
after migration to the north during the 20th century, most employers would only
hire black women in domestic service work.2 Revealingly, although
186
whites have devalued black women as mothers to their own
children, black women have been the most likely of all women to be employed in
the low-wage women's jobs that involve cooking, cleaning, and caregiving even
though this work is associated with mothering more broadly. Although black
women have a longer history of sustained employment compared with other women,
in 2017, the median annual earnings for full-time year-round black women
workers was just over $36,000--an amount 21 percent lower than that of white
women, reflecting black women's disproportionate employment in low-wage service
and minimum and sub-minimum wage jobs. Black families, however, are more
reliant on women's incomes than other families are since 80 percent of black
mothers are breadwinners in their families. Despite black women's importance as
breadwinners, the state has compounded the lack of protections afforded black
mothers by failing to protect
black women as workers.6 In fact, state policies have often
left black women vulnerable to workplace exploitation by excluding them from
various worker protections. New Deal minimum wage, overtime pay, and collective
bargaining legislation excluded the main sectors where black women
worked--domestic service and farming. Although there have been inclusions since
then, these sectors still lack full access to worker protections. The legacy of
black women's employment in industries that lack worker protections has
continued today since black women are concentrated in low-paying, inflexible
service occupations that lack employer-provided retirement plans, health
insurance, paid sick and maternity leave, and paid vacations. Over a third (36
percent) of black women workers lack paid sick leave.
Note 112: BlackBurnMore than 40% of Black
women will experience domestic violence in their lifetime, according to the
Institute of Women's Policy Research's Status of Black Women in the United
States. In comparison, 31.5% of all women will experience domestic violence. A
report from the National Center for Victims of Crime found that 53.8% of Black
women had experienced psychological abuse, while 41.2% of Black women had
experienced physical abuse. More disturbingly, Black women are 2.5 times more
likely to be murdered by men than white women. In the overwhelming majority of
these cases -- 92% -- the person who killed them knew their victim. 56% of
these homicides were committed by a current or former intimate partner. Nearly
all --92% -- of these killings were intra-racial, which means that they were
committed by a Black man against a Black woman. What, then, can be done about
the epidemic of violence facing Black women? The first and perhaps most
important thing that we can all do is address the root causes of domestic
violence, such as the objectification and degradation of women in media, rape
culture, harmful gender norms, the pay gap, and other forms of inequality. The
underlying causes of domestic violence are the same for all women
187
-- and are often more pronounced for Black women. By taking on
these issues directly, we can reduce the incidence of domestic violence for all
women -- and in particular, Black women who are even more impacted by these
factors. We can also work to combat racism. We know that one of the main
reasons that Black women do not report or seek help for domestic violence is
racism. By championing anti-racist policies and challenging racism in our
personal lives, we can dismantle one of the major hurdles to reducing the
incidence of domestic violence in the Black community. At the same time, we
should focus on intersectionality -- which means acknowledging the way our
different identities intersect. For example, a Black woman will experience
domestic violence differently because they face both racism and sexism. A woman
with a disability may face an additional challenge in getting access to
services. By being mindful of these realities, we can better understand and
advocate for equality.
188
TABLE DES FIGURES
Figure 1 :
Le nom de la victime
|
Date
|
État
|
Age de la
victime
|
Raison de meurtre
|
Tarika Wilson
|
Janvier 4,
2008
|
Lima, Ohio
|
26 ans
|
Abattu et tué alors qu'il tenait son bébé
de 1 an.
|
Aiyana Jones
|
Mai 16,
2010
|
Detroit, Michigan
|
7 ans
|
Tué en dormant par une grenade qui a été
lancée dans la maison, puis abattu lorsque la police est entrée
dans la maison.
|
Miriam Carey
|
Octobre
3, 2013
|
Washington, DC
|
34 ans
|
Après s'être garée par erreur près
des portes de la maison blanche avec sa fille d'un an à
l'arrière, elle a été tuée et abattue en ouvrant sa
porte pour parler à la police.
|
Shereese Francis
|
Mars 15,
2012
|
Queens, New York
|
30 ans
|
Après que la soeur de Shereese avait demandé
l'aide de la ligne d'urgence médicale pour aider Shereese qui
était
schizophrène, les agents qui
étaient censés l'aider ont attrapé Shereese, l'ont
menottée et ont maintenu son visage contre un matelas, la femme a
cessé de respirer. Le médecin légiste a
déclaré que la mort était un homicide.
|
Shantel Davis
|
Juin 2012
|
Brooklyn, New York
|
23 ans
|
La police l'a tué « par accident" en chassant un
voleur dans la rue.
|
189
Sharmel Edwards
|
Avril 20,
2012
|
Las Vegas,
Nevada
|
49 ans
|
La police l'a abattu après être sortie de la
voiture de son copain sans arme, 15 coups de feu ont
pénétré son corps.
|
Rekia Boyd
|
Mars
2012
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
22 ans
|
Alors que Rekia était au parc avec ses amis, un
policier en congé leur avait dit de se taire puis leur avait tiré
dessus.
|
Tyisha Miller
|
Trois jours après Noël 1998
|
Riverside, California
|
19 ans
|
Abattu dans sa maison alors qu'il était inconscient
après que ses amis aient demandé de l'aide, la police a
tiré 23 fois, au moins 12 balles, dont quatre dans la tête.
|
Yvette Smith
|
16
Fevrier
2014
|
Bastrop, Texas
|
47 ans
|
La police a affirmé avoir réagi tôt
à une perturbation dans une maison. Quand Yvette Smith a ouvert la
porte, la police a commencé à lui tirer dessus.
|
Figure 2 :
Catégorie
|
Nom
|
Age
|
Année
|
Profilage racial des conductrices noires
|
- Alexia Christian
|
- 26
|
- Avril 30,
|
|
- Mya Hall
|
- 27
|
2015
|
|
- Gabriella Nevarez
|
- 22
|
- Mars 30,
|
|
- Shantel Davis
|
- 23
|
2015
|
|
- Miriam Carey
|
- 34
|
- Mars 2,
|
|
- Malissa Williams
|
- 30
|
2014
|
|
- Sharmel Edwards
|
- 49
|
- Juin 14,
|
|
- LaTanya Haggerty
|
- 26
|
2012
|
|
- Kendra James
|
- 21
|
- Octobre 3,
|
|
- Sandra Bland
|
- 28
|
2013
|
|
|
|
- Novembre
|
|
|
|
29, 2012
|
190
|
|
|
- Avril 21,
2012
- Juin 4, 1999 - Mai 5, 2003
- Juillet 13,
|
|
|
|
2015
|
Criminalisation des femmes noire selon leurs classes sociaux
:
|
- Shelly Frey
- Margaret LaVerne
|
- 27
- 54
|
- Décembre 6, 2012
|
|
Mitchell
- Eleanor Bumpurs
|
- 66
|
- Mai 21,
1999
|
|
|
|
- Octobre 29, 1984
|
La guerre contre les drogues
|
- Kathryn Johnston
|
- 92
|
- Novembre
|
|
- Danette Daniels
|
-
|
21, 2006
|
|
(pregnant)
|
31
|
- Juin 8, 1997
|
|
- Frankie Ann Perkins
|
- 37
|
- Mars 22,
|
|
- Alberta Spruill
|
- 57
|
1997
|
|
|
|
- Mai 16,
2003
|
Tuées des femmes noires avec des
|
- Tanisha Anderson
|
- 37
|
- Novembre
|
problèmes mentales
|
- Michelle Cusseaux
|
- 50
|
13, 2014
|
|
- Pearlie Golden
|
- 93
|
- Aout 13,
|
|
- Shereese Francis
|
- 30
|
2014
|
|
- Kayla Moore
|
- 41
|
- Mai 7, 2014
|
|
- Tyisha Miller
|
- 19
|
- Mars 15,
2012
|
|
|
|
- Février 12, 2013
|
|
|
|
- Décembre
|
|
|
|
28, 1998
|
191
Croire que les femmes noires sont des «
suprahumains» « biais de formidables»
|
- Natasha McKenna - Sheneque Proctor - Kyam Livingston
|
- 37
- 18
- 37
|
- Février 8,
2015
- Novembre
1, 2014
|
|
|
|
- Juillet 24,
2013
|
« Culpabilité par association»
|
- Rekia Boyd
|
- 22
|
- Mars 21,
|
|
- Aiyana Stanley-Jones
|
- 7
|
2012
|
|
- Tarika Wilson
|
- 26
|
- Mai 16,
2010
|
|
|
|
- Janvier 4,
2008
|
La police tue des femmes qui souffrent de la violence
domestique
|
- Meagan Hockaday - Janisha Fonville
|
- 26
- 20
|
- Mars 28,
2015
|
|
- Aura Rosser
|
- 40
|
- Février 18,
|
|
- Yvette Smith
|
- 47
|
2015
|
|
|
|
- Novembre
|
|
|
|
9, 2014
|
|
|
|
- Février 16, 2014
|
Genre et sexualité : tuer des femmes
|
- Duanna Johnson
|
- 43
|
- Février 12,
|
LGBTQ+
|
- Nizah Morris
|
- 47
|
2008
|
|
- New Jersey 7 (group)
|
|
-Décembre
|
|
|
|
24, 2002
|
|
|
|
- Aout 18,
2006
|
La police agresse sexuellement des femmes noires:
|
- Daniel Holtzclaw the assaulter
|
|
|
|
- Ernest Marsalis
|
|
|
|
Perpetrator
|
|
|
192
Appliquer de force excessive sur les mère et leurs
enfants afro-américains :
|
- Denise Stewart - Alesia Thomas - Rosann Miller - Sonji
Taylor
|
- 47 - 35 - 27 - 27
|
- Aout 1,
2014
- Juillet 22, 2012
- Juillet 26, 2014
- Décembre
16, 1993
|
Terroriser des femmes afro-américaines qui demandent de
la justice pour leurs membres
|
- Patricia Hartley and Constance Malcolm
|
|
- Février 2,
2012
|
de la famille
|
-Tasha Thomas,
Girlfriend of John
|
|
- Aout 5,
2014
|
|
Crawford III
|
|
-Novembre
|
|
-Tajai Rice, Sister of
|
|
22, 2014
|
|
Tamir Rice
|
|
|
Figure 3 :
Nom
|
Age
|
Année
|
Anjanette Young Les policiers sont entrés par erreur
chez Young alors qu'elle se changeait et a été
immédiatement menottée alors qu'elle était nue.
|
|
2019
|
Atatiana Jefferson (Tuée par la police)
|
28 ans
|
2019
|
Breonna Taylor (Tuée par la police)
|
26 ans
|
2020
|
Crystal Danielle Ragland (Tuée par la police)
|
32
|
2019
|
Francine Graham (Tuée par la police)
|
47
|
2019
|
Helen Jones (Tuée par la police)
|
47
|
2020
|
Kanisha Necole Fuller (Tuée par la police)
|
43 ans
|
2020
|
193
Latasha Nicole Walton (Tuée par la police)
|
32
|
2019
|
Ma'Khia Bryant (Tuée par la police)
|
16 ans
|
2021
|
Nika Holbert (Tuée par la police)
|
31
|
2021
|
Nina Adams (Tuée par la police)
|
47
|
2019
|
Pamela Turner a souffert de la schizophrénie et a
été tuée après que la police l'a tasé et
après que la police lui ait tiré dessus quand elle était
en train de rentrer dans son appartement.
|
44 ans
|
2019
|
Stephanie Bottom Deux officiers l'a attrapé par la main
et ont causé des injuries sévère sur son corps
|
68 ans
|
2021
|
Tina Marie Davis (Tasséréé et
tuéé par la police)
|
53 ans
|
2020
|
Un enfant de 9 ans a été aspergée par une
bombe au poivre à New York
|
9 ans
|
2021
|
Figure 4 :
Nom
|
Année
|
Aiyana Jones
|
2010
|
Alberta Spruill
|
2003
|
Alesia Thomas
|
2012
|
Alexia Christian
|
2015
|
Alteria Woods
|
2017
|
Angel Viola DeCarlo
|
2018
|
Anita Gay
|
2008
|
April Webster
|
2018
|
Atatiana Jefferson
|
2019
|
Aura Rosser
|
2014
|
Bettie Jones
|
2015
|
Breonna Taylor
|
2020
|
194
Cariann Hithon
|
2017
|
Charleena Chavon Lyles
|
2017
|
Crystal Danielle Ragland
|
2019
|
Crystalline Barnes
|
2018
|
Cynthia Fields
|
2018
|
Danette Daniels (pregnant)
|
1997
|
Darnisha Diana Harris
|
2012
|
Deborah Danner
|
2016
|
Decynthia Clements
|
2018
|
Deresha Armstrong
|
2016
|
Dereshia Blackwell
|
2018
|
Duanna Johnson
|
2008
|
Fetus of Charleena Chavon Lyles (14-15 weeks)
|
2017
|
Francine Graham
|
2019
|
Frankie Ann Perkins
|
1997
|
Gabriella Nevarez
|
2014
|
Geraldine Townsend
|
2018
|
Helen Jones
|
2020
|
India Beaty
|
2016
|
India Kager
|
2015
|
India Nelson
|
2017
|
Janet Wilson
|
2016
|
Janisha Fonville
|
2015
|
Jessica Nelson-Williams
|
2016
|
Jonie Block
|
2017
|
Kanisha Necole Fuller
|
2020
|
Kathryn Johnston
|
2006
|
Kayla Moore
|
2013
|
195
Kendra James
|
2003
|
Kisha Arrone
|
2016
|
Kisha Michael
|
2016
|
Kiwi Herring
|
2017
|
Korryn Gaines
|
2016
|
Kyam Livingston
|
2013
|
Lajuana Phillips
|
2018
|
Laronda Sweatt
|
2016
|
LaShanda Anderson
|
2018
|
LaTanya Haggerty
|
1999
|
Latasha Nicole Walton
|
2019
|
Ma'Khia Bryant
|
2021
|
Malissa Williams
|
2012
|
Margaret LaVerne Mitchell
|
1999
|
Marquesha McMillan
|
2015
|
Meagan Hockaday
|
2015
|
Michelle Cusseaux
|
2014
|
Michelle Lee Shirley
|
2016
|
Miriam Carey
|
2013
|
Monique Jenee Deckard
|
2015
|
Morgan London Rankins
|
2017
|
Mya Hall
|
2015
|
Natasha McKenna
|
2015
|
Nika Holbert
|
2021
|
Nina Adams
|
2019
|
Nizah Morris
|
2002
|
Pamela Turner
|
2019
|
Pearlie Golden, 93 ans.
|
2014
|
Redel Jones
|
2015
|
Rekia Boyd
|
2012
|
Robin White
|
2017
|
Sahlah Ridgeway
|
2016
|
Sandra Bland
|
2015
|
Sandy Guardiola
|
2017
|
Shantel Davis
|
2012
|
Sharmel Edwards
|
2012
|
Shelly Frey
|
2012
|
Sheneque Proctor
|
2014
|
Shereese Francis
|
2012
|
Shukri Ali Said
|
2018
|
Sonji Danese Taylor
|
1993
|
Tameka LaShay Simpson
|
2018
|
Tanisha Anderson
|
2014
|
Tarika Wilson
|
2008
|
Tina Marie Davis
|
2020
|
Tyisha Miller
|
1998
|
Yuvette Henderson
|
2015
|
Yvette Smith
|
2014
|
196
Figure 5
197
Figue 6
Catégorie
|
Années
|
Nombres d'articles
|
Violence policière contre les
|
- 2014-2018
|
- 9
|
femmes afro-américaines
|
- 2019-2021
|
- 25
|
Le mouvement #sayhername
|
- 2015-2016
|
- 3
|
|
- 2019-2021
|
- 8
|
L'oppression et l'intégration
|
- 2006-2018
|
- 5
|
des femmes afro-américaines
dans la communauté américaine
(Discrimination)
|
- 2019-2021
|
- 10
|
|
|