Archive for ‘crump’

July 23, 2013

Mastering the Tight Rope: Obama Nails Race in Remarks Following Zimmerman Verdict

Shout out On Being A Black Lawyer for the love they’ve shown of late. This is a piece which the published with reactions to the President’s remarks following the Zimmerman verdict. #noTavis.

Original Link: http://www.onbeingablacklawyer.com/wordpress/mastering-the-tight-rope-obama-nails-race-in-remarks-following-zimmerman-verdict

Enjoy.

Picture 53When I tuned into President Obama’s impromptu remarks today in the wake of the Zimmerman verdict, I was admittedly nervous and full of mixed emotions. For as much as I wanted the President to weigh in on the verdict, I knew that any comment would draw ire from at least one, if not multiple, constituent groups. Like many Americans, despite having some understanding of how it happened, I was still struggling to reconcile what was billed to be justice, yet just didn’t seem fair. I wondered what the President might say and whether commenting on the case would set poor precedent and invite future pressure or if saying anything at all would shift the focus away from the Martin family’s continued fight for equal justice.

Before he began, I braced myself because I was unsure which Obama would show up. The nation’s first black President has always had to operate from a precarious position on race matters and his approach has often drawn a wide range of reactions. In 2008, during his first campaign for the presidency, he delivered what many considered a groundbreaking speech on race, addressing the matter as someone of mixed heritage in the context of political pressure stemming from his ties to controversial clergyman Dr. Jerimiah Wright. That was Obama the candidate. As President, he has sometimes seemed too congenial on the topic, like when he invited black intellectual Skip Gates and a police officer to the White House for a beer and a “teachable moment” following the officer’s arrest of Gates in his own home. Even as the country digested the Zimmerman verdict from varied perspectives, friends and foes alike were quick to point to the coded language the President had used in addressing gun violence in his hometown of Chicago without ever squarely referencing black on black crime.

Still, as the President began to speak, all of those concerns disappeared. Any worries about a watered down or politicized speech immediately evaporated within Obama’s honest and heartfelt words. He gave a voice to the Black man in America, not as the President, but as a black man in America. The powerful irony of what he had to say was its context: a black man, the President of the United States of America, was identifying himself with a segment of the population that, despite achieving the highest office in the land, cannot escape the feeling of being marginalized to a place of second class citizenship. He took his initial remarks on the case, about having a son who would look like Trayvon Martin, and stepped even further, remarking that 35 yrs. ago, he himself might have been Trayvon. I am usually loathe to speak in hyperbole, but I believe that today’s remarks may be the highlight of the Obama administration as it relates to black America. Osama Bin Laden may have been the most wanted man in the world, but he wasn’t keeping black men unemployed. The Affordable Health Care Act is great, but hasn’t stopped folks from catching hell. This meant something. It was HUGE. One of us, the President of the United States of America, was speaking to America for all of us. More than that, he was speaking through the lens of his own personal experience, and finally using the unique advantage he holds over his 43 predecessors, speaking from a place of empathy while they could only have hoped to speak from a place of sympathy.
In today’s speech, the President displayed a mastery of the tightrope that is addressing race in 2013 America while still being the President of all Americans. He did this by not ignoring the issue or being an apologist, but by speaking directly to it while still remaining an optimist and highlighting progress. One thing that cannot be lost in terms of significance of the President’s remarks is the incredible amount of courage that he displayed. The President knows the backlash he will receive from those who prefer to act as if we are in a post-racial society. He knows the GOP, FOX News and others will accuse him of race-baiting and divisive tactics.
He knows that even some within his own community will criticize him for taking too long or not saying enough. He didn’t HAVE to say anything.
But, he did.
He was sincere, he was thoughtful, and he was candid. But, more than that, he was finally the President that black America has been waiting on in a moment where, perhaps, we needed him most.
Charles F. Coleman Jr. is a former King’s County (Brooklyn, NY) Assistant District Attorney and a federal civil rights trial attorney.  Follow him on Twitter @CFColemanJr


July 22, 2013

JUSTICE FOR TRAYVON: What Went Wrong?

JUSTICE FOR TRAYVON: What went wrong? 
An brief analysis of the trial of George Zimmerman from the perspective of a former Brooklyn, NY prosecutor.

by: Charles F. Coleman Jr.*

I never met Trayvon Martin. I never had an opportunity to see him smile or hear him laugh. I became familiar with his wonderful mother, a woman of incredible strength, through the most unfortunate of circumstances. Still, I never had the chance to actually meet Trayvon himself.

When I heard the verdict on Saturday, like many, I was confused and disappointed. The duality of being a black man who is also former prosecutor  was too much to bear and too difficult to reconcile in that moment. After stepping back and looking at the trial objectively, and the case in its entirety, I have to concede that the verdict–while unjust–is consistent with the law.

The first thing that must be understood is the difficult nature of the prosecution’s case. There are only two people who were present on that February night in 2012. Just two eye witnesses who actually know what happened. One is dead. The other is protected by his Constitutional right against self-incrimination. That means it was up to the State of Florida to tell Trayvon’s story. They were without the benefit of Trayvon himself, but were further handicapped by not having anyone else who would be able to deliver a first hand account of that night’s fateful events.
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From as early as the indictment, months before the actual trial, the prosecution struggled to stay in front of a case that was spiraling out of control on a rapidly growing stage. The inaction by Sanford police regarding Mr. ZImmerman’s arrest drew Trayvon’s death further into the national spotlight before the State’s attorneys office had concluded its investigation. The court of opinion was at the wheel, steering the ship and, in the process, giving the defense team extra time and useful insight to develop a strategy that ultimately proved effective. When the prosecution did file its indictment shortly after Mr. Zimmerman’s arrest, the indictment seemed rushed in the charges the State brought against him. In hindsight, it is even more obvious that the prosecution had not thought critically about its theory of the case. One reason for a hasty indictment may have been the state’s need to create the appearance of swift justice after such a long delay before Mr. Zimmerman’s arrest. The pressure had swelled as the case became more a part of a national dialogue and our consciousnesses all began shining a collective spotlight on small Sanford, Florida. Even President Obama lent comment on the situation.

What George Zimmerman Can Do Now
George Zimmerman following the not guilty verdict at his trial in Sanford, FL. Zimmerman was accused of murdering 17-yr old Trayvon Martin.

The result of all of this was that the prosecution lost control of the narrative of the case and never got it back. Rather than aggressively hammering home the bottom line and seeking a fair and just verdict which was consistent with common sense, the State was baited into a game of debate on marginally important details. This played directly into the defense’s strategy, and allowed too much room for reasonable doubt. The State spent its case in chief on its heels, spending as much time laying the foundation for its own case as they did trying to anticipate and counter the arguments they expected the defense to make. Meanwhile, the defense knew that the prosecution’s distraction with smaller issues was enough to give their client a fighting chance. Therefore, they goaded the State into following them deeper down that trail. The prosecution then happily obliged, and got further away from the bottom line which mattered most.


This perpetual game of “catch up” played within the context of the defense team’s narrative was a fatal flaw because the State had allowed everyone from Trayvon Martn to Rachel Jeantal to be placed on trial. Everyone except for Mr. Zimmmerman. By the time the defense had competed its case, and before closing statements, a trial which was once about a young black man’s right not to be profiled, targeted, and murdered for doing absolutely nothing, had suddenly morphed into seemingly endless small details with no one to really explain why they were so important in the context of the big picture. While the prosecution delivered an outstanding summation and rebuttal that attempted to bring back the narrative, it was simply too far gone by that time. Too little too late.

Despite the fact that the verdict in this case may be consistent with the law, the outcome hardly seems consistent with justice. A young, innocent, unarmed black boy was killed. And this verdict says that it’s no ones’s fault.

I never met Trayvon Martin. And, because of George Zimmerman, I never will.

*originally published on EBONY.com, July 15, 2013

Charles F. Coleman Jr. is a former Brooklyn, NY prosecutor and current federal trial attorney specializing in civil rights.

He can be reached at civilwriter@gmail.com and on Twitter @CFColemanJr.