Sunday, September 23, 2007

Gary W. King, #100


Gary W. King, 20
Killed 9/20/07 4:45 pm
5300 block of MLK Jr. Way

Gun






5 comments:

  1. Racist Violence from Jena to Oakland


    by George Ciccariello-Maher

    September 24, 2007
    It's Not Just a Southern Thing
    Racist Violence from Jena to Oakland



    While tens of thousands of well-meaning activists travel to Jena,
    Louisiana to rightly protest the miscarriage of justice in the case of the
    "Jena 6," police killings continue unabated in Oakland. Gary King is only
    the most recent victim.

    "See you when I get there"

    As the sun climbs slowly down the sky over 54th Street in North Oakland,
    shafts of light come down between the tracks of the BART train above. We
    are standing on the patch of ground that divides Martin Luther King, Jr.
    Way. Next to us, in the northbound lanes, is a large patch of blood.

    A makeshift shrine has been erected here, under the BART tracks, to
    memorialize the life and death of 20-year-old Gary King Jr., a.k.a.
    G-Money. T-shirts with pictures of the dead teen smiling among friends sit
    alongside flowers, stuffed animals, and bottles of Hennessey and Grey
    Goose with lit candles in them. While much of the Henny has been spilled
    on the ground and poured on the blood patch by those mourning their fallen
    comrade, an equal amount has been drunk by those who have been here since
    10am, attempting to grapple with their grief and rage.

    Such memorials are all-too-common a sight on the streets of Oakland, where
    this year's murder count is currently pushing the 100-mark. As one penned
    inscription reads: "2007 is a fucked up year for our people in the Bay."
    This feeling of desperation and inevitability is also expressed in another
    discreet note, which says quite simply, "U in a better place, see you when
    I get there." But King's memorial is less sadness than anger and outrage:
    on Thursday afternoon, Gary King was shot in the back and killed as he
    fled from the Oakland Police, but it is unlikely that his death will ever
    enter into the city's "homicide" tally.

    Shortly after I approached the shrine with a photographer friend, a young
    man rolled across the crosswalk on a low-rider bicycle. "Who you with?" he
    asked suspiciously. When he realized we weren't with the mainstream press,
    his suspicion dissipated. Pointing across the street at the news van, he
    made clear why he was suspicious: "They tellin' lies," he asserted. And
    indeed, during the four hours that we remained at the shrine, the
    reporters remained across the street, broadcasting "from the scene" only
    in the loosest of senses. They interviewed no one. They didn't need to:
    they had already gotten their story from the police.

    Suspected of being a suspect

    The day before, at about 4:30pm, Gary King and a group of friends were
    walking out of East Bay Liquors. A patrol officer, Sgt. Pat Gonzales, was
    headed southbound on the other side of MLK, near the 55th Street light.
    The officer claims to have identified King as a potential suspect in a
    murder that had occurred nearby a month prior (note here the words
    "potential" and "suspect"). For anyone that knows the geography of the
    incident, this "identification" was quite a feat: a full block away,
    looking diagonally across six lanes and between the thick pillars
    supporting the BART tracks, Gonzales was allegedly capable of identifying
    King.

    The officer crossed under the tracks, tires squealing, to confront the
    group of teens in front of the liquor store. According to witnesses,
    Gonzales grabbed King by his dreads, while it remains unclear if the
    officer was attempting to carry out an arrest. After King pulled away from
    Gonzales, the officer used his Taser to try to incapacitate this
    "potential suspect." When this didn't work, King took off fleeing across
    the MLK crosswalk. Before even reaching the divider, Gonzales had shot him
    twice in the back. No fewer than a dozen witnesses corroborated this to
    me, which isn't surprising since the shooting took place in broad daylight
    on a busy street.

    According to a witness, who identifies himself as King's cousin, after
    shooting King, Gonzales grabbed him. "He held his gun in my face and told
    me I better watch it." The officer then approached the dying King to
    handcuff him, before leaving him lying in the street to call backup.
    According to witnesses, it was only after the backup arrived that an
    ambulance was called. After being left bleeding, handcuffed on the
    pavement for nearly 15 minutes, Gary King was dead by the time he reached
    Highland Hospital. He was the third fatal victim of an "officer-involved
    shooting" this year, a polite term the OPD likes to use when it kills
    people.

    Dozens of police cars then maintained a blockade, shutting down the
    six-lane street for more than four hours. According to one witness to the
    shooting, this was "to prevent a riot," and also to give the officers a
    chance to cover-up the details of the killing and, according to some,
    plant a gun on the victim. King's cousin is clearly suffering when I speak
    with him: "They shot my cousin right in my face We traumatized, we fucked
    up." The victim's brothers, too, are paying their respects. One is a
    teary-eyed 17-year old wearing a sweatshirt with pictures of King and the
    message "R.I.P. G-Money."

    According to Gonzales, via a statement from the OPD, the officer felt a
    gun in King's pants, and after the young man attempted to flee, Gonzales
    claims that he was seen reaching into his waistband. The press has largely
    reiterated the official story: King was an "armed suspect" who threatened
    an officer. Case closed. One local news outlet even went out of its way to
    outdo the Police statement, writing that King had "pulled a gun" on the
    officer. Perhaps most shocking is the fact that King is consistently
    reported as a "murder suspect," without qualification. Even the police
    department had argued that he was merely a "potential suspect," that is,
    Gary King was suspected of being a suspect. Most shocking is the fact
    that, days after the fact, the OPD downgraded this initial statement: King
    is now posthumously considered to have been a "person of interest" in the
    murder, not even a suspect.

    But the police story, repeated by the mainstream press, doesn't square
    with the numerous witnesses who described the shooting to me. Firstly,
    everyone on the scene denies that King was carrying a gun, or that a gun
    was found on the scene as the OPD is claiming. "He ain't no gangbanger,"
    an aunt tells me. Moreover, even "neutral" witnesses like the cashier at
    East Bay Liquors (who nevertheless claims that King was friendly and
    well-liked) never saw King reach for a weapon: as he fled, they say, he
    was holding up his pants by his belt, and the officer shot him in the back
    without provocation.

    As the train passes overhead, a woman who identifies herself as a senior
    financial officer at UC Berkeley asks, "we hear so much about
    Black-on-Black crime, why don't we hear about white-on-Black crime?" It
    has emerged since the shooting that Gonzales has been involved in two
    other shootings in recent years, one of which resulted in a fatality. On
    that occasion, the officer was cleared of any wrongdoing. He has now been
    placed on "paid administrative leave," standard OPD procedure, while he
    waits to be cleared once more.

    "Panther Country"

    This is, as one small handwritten note makes clear, "Black Panther
    Country." This is true in the most literal of senses: Huey Newton, Bobby
    Seale, David Hilliard, and Bobby Hutton all grew up on the MLK corridor
    within a 5-block radius of the shooting. Moreover, East Bay Liquors
    (formerly Bill's Liquor Store) was boycotted by Panthers in 1971, before
    current Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums negotiated a truce. While North Oakland
    has largely been replaced by East Oakland as the center of the city's
    Black population, the gentrification that has affected this area has only
    made life for the remaining Black population even more difficult. As more
    middle-class whites enter North Oakland, spilling over from Berkeley in
    the North, security becomes increasingly a priority of the OPD.

    While the Panthers aren't around any longer, the King memorial is not
    lacking in revolutionary messages. Scrawled across the BART pillar is the
    accusation: "The Police did this," and "Fuck 5-0." Another mourner, using
    a phrase popularized by hip-hop group dead prez, claims to be
    "revolutionary but gangsta." Perhaps more ominously, one message reads:
    "The streets iz watching justice will be served 4 my brother in arms." A
    middle-aged man arrives, clearly angry, and begins to address some
    onlookers. "A boy was murdered here! Why ain't this intersection closed?
    We need to shut this intersection down for a week!"

    But this isn't the only message that appears at the memorial. An older man
    arrives on the scene, telling the young men who saw King murdered that
    they shouldn't blame the killer. Instead, they should "accept Jesus." The
    discussion is occasionally very heated, and one witness to the killing
    responds politely: "I'm not tryin' to hear that right now." Minutes later,
    a mourner heaves a 40 bottle, which explodes next to a passing cop car.

    "He gets those when he stressed"

    As dusk approached, the mood was understandably somber. A young mourner
    and friend of G-Money began to stumble erratically. He crashed into my
    friend before falling into the rush-hour traffic streaming down MLK.
    There's a moment of chaos, as we attempt to block traffic to prevent a
    second death in as many days. The commuters are uncooperative and
    oblivious as they head northward toward Berkeley, Kensington, and Albany,
    and it is only with difficulty that we clear the lane while the young man
    is lifted back onto the median. A flurry of calls are made simultaneously
    to 911. He is curled up, muscles tense and writhing as drool pours from
    his mouth.

    The very same young, Black men so often criminalized by the police crowd
    around their fellow mourner. One strokes his head while another removes
    his own shirt as a pillow for the young man. An ambulance pulls up ten
    minutes later, despite the fact that we are a mere block from a hospital.
    That's about ten minutes longer than the police backup took the day
    before, and today, no police respond to the emergency call. "He's having a
    seizure," King's cousin explains, gold teeth glinting "he gets those when
    he stressed."

    A gallery of photographs taken by Jeff St. Andrews at the Gary King
    memorial is available at:
    http://flickr.com/photos/jeffstandrews/sets/72157600255850241/.

    George Ciccariello-Maher is a Ph.D. candidate in political theory at the
    University of California, Berkeley. He lives somewhere between Oakland and
    Caracas, Venezuela, and is currently writing about the history of Oakland
    hip-hop. He can be reached at gjcm(at)berkeley.edu.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I went to jr. high and some of high school with Gary... he was a good kid with a big smile.He was always friendly to people. Its a shame that he had to go like this... now his parents are looking for answers and are left without a son and his brothers and family are also without him. please yall take care of each other. stop this violence! peace and blesings!

    ReplyDelete
  3. MY NEPHEW LORANTE WAS ALSO SHOT BY OPD. BETWEEN THEM AND THE STREETS, OUR MEN DON'T STAND A CHANCE. RIP GARY. SAY HI TO ROOSEVELT FOR ME!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I KEEP SEEING PICTURES OF THIS YOUNG MAN ON MYSPACE! HE WAS WELL LOVED!

    ReplyDelete
  5. IVE BEEN SEEN HIM BEFORE AND ID JUST LIKE TO SAY THAT I WILL MISS HIM REST IN PEACE

    ReplyDelete