Leading RI African American Men and the Police - the Experience

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Leading RI African American Men and the Police - the Experience

With America and Rhode Island debating the issues of race and policing, GoLocalProv interviewed eight prominent Rhode Island African-American men about their experience with police. See them and learn about their experiences.

 

Chace Baptista

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST


How many times have you been stopped by the police?

"Asking me this question is like asking someone, how many times have they caught a cold?  I would estimate it at over 30 times.  This includes, walking, driving, and while riding my bike," Chace Baptista, community organizer currently with Concerned Citizens for John Hope Settlement House.


Jim Vincent

How many times have you been stopped by the police?

"Most of the times there wasn't an issue, however, a few times the officer acted unprofessionally.  Nothing serious, but it is dehumanizing," Jim Vincent, President of the NAACP Providence Branch.

 

Keith Oliviera

What has your experience been with police stops -- how did it make you feel?

"The first time I was stopped and detained by the police I was 15-years-old. I was walking home to Fox Point from the Brown Bookstore on Thayer St. As I was walking, three or four police cruisers pulled up all around me with lights flashing. They got out the cars, grabbed me and pushed me spread eagle against one of the cruisers. I was told that there was a break-in on the next street over and I fit the description of the suspect. The phrase "you fit the description" sounds so cliché but it all so common. I was put in the back of a cruiser and driven through my neighborhood for all my friends and neighbors to see and driven to the house that was broken into. When it was determined that I wasn't the suspect I was allowed to walk home. While walking home I felt angry to be treated like a criminal and I felt humiliated to be seen as a criminal by my friends and neighbors. I also felt vulnerable and helpless that my freedom could be taken away so easily for being nothing more than a black kid walking down the street," Keith Oliviera, Chairman of the Providence School Committee.

 

Ray Watson

How many times have you been stopped by the police?

"Too many to count to be honest.  I say Rhode Island because my encounters haven't just been while in the City limits of Providence. In fact, I feel less likely to be stopped by law enforcement while in Providence than I do outside of the City," said Ray Watson, Executive Director of the Mount Hope Neighborhood Association.

 

R.J. Evans

What has your experience been with police stops -- how did it make you feel?

"There were times that I felt I was treated differently because of my race. For instance I was pulled over with my best friend on a Saturday night once, just headed home from a friends house and the police officer made us both get out of the car and he frisked us and asked if 'we had guns or knives on us." This made me feel like there was already an assumption that because I was a black male I automatically had to have weapons on me and be up to no good. Little did they know I was a Division 1 athlete at Holy Cross who had never even seen a gun before in his life," R.J. Evans, Digital Media Consultant, GoLocalProv.com

 

Ray Rickman


How many times have you been stopped by police?

“If you are actually asking how many negative encounters I have had with police officers, the answer is twelve. My first entanglement involved being beaten by four Detroit policemen for leading a walk-out at my junior high school. Foch was built to accommodate 2,000 students; when I arrived in the 7th grade it had 4,400 students. We demanded a new building. After the superintendent paid no attention, I was elected to lead a student protest. With a little help from several adult advocates, we were able to attract the media and the police to our walk-out. The four officers bloodied me with Billy-clubs just in time for the evening news. Four months later I was given a silver shovel to help dig the foundation for the new junior high school. That success has given me faith in non-violent protest. Two years later I marched with James Meredith outside Jackson, MS, where the local sheriff arrested us for trespassing after one of his deputies ran us off the road with his truck onto private property. That night in the Sunflower County Jail, two officers took turns punching me, after which one bludgeoned me, leaving two scars on either side of my head. I tell people that when I am bald, my civil rights scars will show. As head of the Providence Human Relations Commission in the 1980s, I knew of scores of young Black men being stopped by police for nothing other than being Black on the “wrong” street," said Ray Rickman, former State Representative and founder of The Rickman Group.

 

Mike Van Leesten


 

What has your experience been with police stops -- how did it make you feel?

"My experience has to do with a police brutality suit years ago, stemming from an incident that occurred in South Providence.  Hundreds protested, and that's when the coalition of black leadership formed.  After talking with people, I knew the only way was through the courts. I was told that I should talk to top notch civil rights attorneys.  We got Alvin Bronstein -- he's a foremost civil rights attorney -- and I had to get affidavits from people who alleged police brutality -- I got 150.  This would have been in 1971," said Mike Van Leesten, 
 

Kobi Dennis

What's your suggestion for officers? 

"Professionalism!! I believe our officers should be taught to remain professional at all times regardless of the situation. When an officer is unable to remain professional, they should face the consequences just as any other professional in any other field of work. Absolutely no passes!! The only way to become a professional in your field of work is through extensive training and research about the subject matter or population. My suggestions include: professional development training, mentor, volunteerism, community events, coaching, school events, etc. The officers will never see "Eye to Eye" with the community they serve unless they stand "Shoulder to Shoulder," said Kobi Dennis, Community Organizer, Founder of Project Night Vision 


Male African American Leaders in RI - 2015

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.