[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 144 (Thursday, September 22, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H5808-H5809]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LET'S SEE TO IT THAT JUSTICE IS COLORBLIND
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, this is a historic week in the United States
as we dedicate and open the National Museum of African American History
and Culture.
It starts with a story of African Americans being brought to this
country as slaves from Africa, not citizens but property, and
considered such until they were freed, some through the Emancipation
Proclamation in 1863, and others through an amendment to the
Constitution. Even after that, they weren't really considered full
citizens, as there was Jim Crow segregation, and that continued for
over 100 years.
Today, we see African Americans are still threatened. I woke up
Tuesday morning to the shocking video of Mr. Crutcher being shot while
his hands were up and on a car, following apparent instructions from
police, and was shot to death. It is one of the most shocking videos I
have seen. There is
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no way to defend what happened. At best, it was gross negligence; at
worst, it was murder.
This has been happening too often in the United States. I support
police. My first job out of law school was an attorney for the police
department. I worked 3\1/2\ years for the police. I understand their
importance, and I support them. But police who are not well trained are
doing a disservice to their profession and to the United States.
This morning on ``Morning Joe,'' former Congressman Joe Scarborough,
a Republican Member of this House, said two things are necessary in
light of the shootings, and particularly the Crutcher shooting in
Tulsa, Oklahoma. One is body cameras and cameras on all police vehicles
so we can see, as we did in Oklahoma, exactly what occurred. And,
secondly, independent prosecutors, prosecutors from outside the
jurisdiction to see to it that justice is served.
There is a bill in this Congress that Lacy Clay, myself, every member
of the Congressional Black Caucus, and nearly 90 Members of this House
are cosponsors of. That is a bill that will require police training
towards racial sensitivity and understanding of different cultures,
independent prosecutors for States to determine how they would set it
up, and a requirement for States to have independent prosecutors in law
enforcement killings of American citizens. This is necessary for people
to believe and to know that justice is, indeed, blind and justice is
being meted out.
There is no way to look at Tulsa, but to see there was either
inadequate training or there was racial profiling and insensitivity
that ended in the death of Mr. Crutcher.
It is so sad as we open the National Museum of African American
History and Culture to see that African Americans still are not being
treated the same as others in our Nation.
It is not a mere coincidence that every shooting by a police person
videoed has an African American victim. Nobody can say that Mr.
Crutcher was resisting arrest or possibly had a gun or brandished a
pistol. None of those things occurred. He was following instructions.
I ask my Republican colleagues, none of whom are sponsors of my bill,
to consider coming on to the bill. The bill is important for justice in
America. It is important for people to know there is justice. And in
this week, as we look to the National Museum of African American
History and Culture opening and the recognition of rights that people
have, and the understanding that they are human beings and part of
America, who built America, literally built America as slaves and built
this building, we need to go forward and see to it that justice is
colorblind and justice is meted out.
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