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How the Police Could be Defunded [newyorker.com]

 

By Alexis Okeowo, The New Yorker, June 26, 2020

On June 11th, near twilight, Camara Jackson was in Marcus Garvey Village, a sprawling low-income housing complex in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Brownsville, checking in with residents and handing out hand sanitizer, masks, and gloves. Jackson is the executive director of Elite Learners, a community anti-violence organization that tries to mediate conflict on the street without the involvement of the police. Jackson was with her team of crisis-management-system, or C.M.S., workers, who also provide counselling and connect people to social services. On the way over, we had passed two police officers sitting on a street bench, whom Jackson called a “steady”—cops who station themselves in the neighborhood to watch goings on, but who do not engage with residents except when there is a problem.

We walked up to a group of young men talking in front of a building. “Hello! You guys want hand sanitizer?” Jackson called out. “Remember that day?” she went on, referring to an incident a few weeks prior when a police officer had physically assaulted a resident.


“The fight?” one man said.

[Please click here to read more.]

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