Friday, June 14, 2013

JERRY ROAD HIS BIKE ON A SIDEWALK AND WENT TO JAIL

NOT BLACK
NOT ARRESTED
NOT JAILED
HMMM.....


The post below is both fortunately about something that happened that usually doesn't.  It is also about what usually does and the good that did happen should have never had to happen...and even the fact that the outcome was better than usual doesn't excuse what one young man had to go through.

Are you confused?

This is the story of Jerry who made the mistake of riding his bike on the sidewalk and ended up in jail.  The good news is Jerry had a community that rallied around him, raised his bond money, and got him out to fight the bogus charges.  The bad news is 1) Jerry got arrested, 2) Jerry had to sit in jail, 3) Jerry has to go to court, 4) people had to pay to give him his freedom back.

There is more bad news, of course.

Most Jerrys out there don't have this sort of immediate support, don't get out of jail, and plead guilty because they have no choice.

Those Jerrys, of course, are black kids and young black men.

The place this time is Chicago.

The place is everywhere, USA.

That this stuff goes on is bullshit.  It is a blatant example of the white supremacist society that so many call America.  

There is no reason to think this crap will ever stop until WE stop it...

The following post for Prison Friday is from Prison Culture and is merely a day in the life of millions African Americans living in the USA.




The Abduction of Young Black Men in Chicago…


Jerry rode his bike on a sidewalk. He was arrested. At the police station, an officer said that Jerry kicked him in the shin. He was sent to jail. At Jerry’s hearing, the judge ordered a $20,000 bond. He has no money and could not post $2,000 bail.

So the community rallied in record time to raise the funds to bail him out of jail. Since the funds were not immediately available, Ethan, co-founder and facilitator of Circles and Ciphers, offered to use his personal credit card to post the bond.


At 10 am this morning, Ethan arrived at Cook County Jail and paid $2,000 to free Jerry. He stood in line with dozens of other people waiting for the release of their friends and loved ones. Minutes turned into hours. People who were waiting began to talk about being disrespected and feeling dispirited. There was radio silence; no information about when anyone would be released. The system dehumanizes.

Seven hours later Jerry walked out of jail and Ethan was there to meet him. He waited those long hours for Jerry’s release. Standing with the others who were anxiously and apprehensively waiting the (perhaps temporary) return of their missing…

I’ve been really sick for days and decided to leave my house because I was going stir-crazy. I returned to hear Jerry’s voice on my answering machine and for the first time in days, I felt the knot in my stomach begin to loosen just a little.

Jerry’s next court date is June 24th. He is like countless young men in Chicago ensnared in the web of a corrupt criminal legal system intent on devouring him. The system is voracious and insatiable.

Jerry is unlike countless young black men in Chicago because he had a community who could and did rally to his support. A community that refused to allow the system to feed on his body until he was fully consumed.

As Jerry sat in jail for days, he contemplated his “choices” — plead guilty to a crime that he didn’t commit or sit in jail until his next court date nearly three weeks away. Jerry would have pleaded guilty had he not been informed yesterday that funds had been raised to post bond. He said that he didn’t think that he would have lasted much longer in jail.

So for now, the system has not succeeded in abducting another young black man. Jerry will survive to fight another day against the bogus charges he faces. And I can only say thank you to each person who made this outcome possible. As I sit here tonight to write these words, I am also shedding a few tears for the thousands of Jerrys sitting in Cook County Jail facing a similar ‘choice.’ They’ve been accused and are waiting for their cases to be heard. They are behind bars in a jail that is a living hell. They are mostly black and brown bodies who don’t have a community and who must face the beast alone.

I breathe deeply and recommit to resisting the injustice of this criminal legal system. I vow to continue to fight for all of the Jerrys and the Jennys in this city and I hope that you will too. Thank you and peace to you all.

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