June 2008 All Articles
The Sean Bell Tragedy
May 1, 2008
By Kevin Powell
I am sick to my stomach and I really do not know what to say right this second. My cell
and office phones have been blowing up all day, and people have been emailing me
nonstop, to let me know that Detectives Michael Oliver, Gescard Isnora, and Marc
Cooper, the three New York City police officers accused of shooting 50 times and
murdering Sean Bell, were found not guilty on all counts: Oliver, who fired 31 times and
reloaded once, and Isnora, who fired 11 times, had been charged with manslaughter,
felony assault and reckless endangerment. They faced up to 25 years in prison if
convicted on all charges. Cooper, who fired four times, faced up to a year in jail if
convicted of reckless endangerment.
And that's it: Sean Bell, a mere 23 years of age, out partying the morning before the
wedding to the mother of his two small children, dead, gone, forever. Sean Bell and his
two friends, Trent Benefield and Joseph Guzman, all unarmed, ambushed by New York's
finest. His last day, November 25, 2006, is marked as another tragic one in New York
City history. How many more? I once heard in a protest song. How many more?
But I knew this verdict was coming. I have lived in New York City for nearly two
decades and, before that, worked as a news reporter for several publications throughout
the city's five boroughs, and I cannot begin to tell you how many cases of police brutality
and police misconduct I covered or witnessed, more often than not a person of color on
the receiving end: Eleanor Bumpurs. Michael Stewart. Amadou Diallo. Sean Bell.
This is not to suggest that all police officers are trigger-happy and inhumane, because I
do not believe that. They have a difficult and important job, and many of them do that job
well, and maintain outstanding relationships with our communities. I know officers like
that. But what I am saying is that New York, America, this society as a whole, still views
the lives of Black people, of Latino people, of people of color, of women, of poor or
working-class people, as less than valuable. It does not matter that two of the three
officers charged in the Sean Bell case were officers of color and one White. What matters
is the mindset of racism that permeates the New York Police Department, and far too
many police departments across America. Shooting in self-defense is one thing, but it is
never okay to shoot first and ask questions later, not even if a police officer "feels"
threatened, not even if the source of that "feeling" is a Black or Latino person.
That is a twisted logic deeply rooted in the America social fabric, dating back to the
founding fathers and their crazy calculations about slaves being three-fifths of a human
being. And in spite of Barack Obama, Oprah Winfrey, Tiger Woods, and other successful
Black individuals, by and large the masses of Black people, and Latino people, are
perpetually viewed through this lens of not being quite human. William Kristol of the
New York Times wrote what I felt was an incredibly ignorant and myopic March 24th
column implying, strongly, that we should not have conversations about race in America,
that such talk was dated. This piece was in response to Barack Obama's now famous
meditation on race. But Kristol, like many in denial, had this to say: "The last thing we
need now is a heated national conversation about race... Racial progress has in fact
continued in America. A new national conversation about race isn't necessary to end what
Obama calls the 'racial stalemate we've been stuck in for years- because we're not stuck in
such a stalemate... This is all for the best. With respect to having a national conversation
on race, my recommendation is: Let's not, and say we did." Well, Mr. Kristol, what,
precisely, do you think Black New Yorkers are feeling this very moment as we absorb the
Sean Bell verdict? Or do our thoughts, our feelings, our wounds, not matter?
"Black male lives are meaningless in America," a female friend just texted me, and what
can I say to that? Who's going to help Nicole Paultre Bell, Sean Bell's grieving fiance,
explain to their two young daughters that the men who killed their daddy are not going to
be punished?
I remember that November 2006 day so vividly, when word spread of the Sean Bell
killing. And I remember the hastily assembled meetings by New York City's de facto
Black leadership- the ministers, the elected officials, the grassroots activists- at Local
1199 in midtown Manhattan where it was stated, with great earnestness and finality, that
after all these years, we were going to put together a comprehensive response to police
brutality and misconduct. There were to be three levels of response: governmentally
(local, state, and federal bills were going to be proposed, and task forces recommended);
systemically within the police department (comprehensive proposals were called for to
challenge police practices or to enforce ones already in place); and via the United States
Justice Department, since any form of police brutality or misconduct is a violation of
basic American civil rights. We met for a few months after the Sean Bell murder, divided
into committees, then the entire thing died- again. There was a lot of research done, many
hearings that were transcribed, much talk of a united front, then nothing, not even an
email to say the plan was no longer being planned.
Anyhow, in the interim I spent a great deal of time, more time than I've spent in my entire
New York life, in Queens, mainly in Jamaica, Queens, getting to know Sean Bell's
family. I was particularly struck by Sean Bell's mother, Valerie Bell, and his father,
William Bell. Two very decent and well-intentioned working-class New Yorkers, who
had raised their children the best they could, who were now, suddenly, activists thrust
into a spotlight they had never sought. The parents are what we the Black community
calls "God-fearing, church-going folk." Indeed, what was so incredible was how much
Mr. and Mrs. Bell believed in and referenced God. But that is our sojourn in America:
when everything else fails us, we still have the Lord. And there they were, holding a 50-
day vigil directly across from the 103rd precinct, on 168th Street, right off Jamaica
Avenue and 91st Avenuein Jamaica, Queens, in the dead-cold winter air. They and their
family members and close friends taking turns monitoring the makeshift altar of candles,
cards, and photos. And I remember how we had to shame local leaders a few times into
supporting Mr. and Mrs. Bell with donations of money, food, or other material needs.
While much of the media and support flocked to Nicole Paultre Bell, Sean Bell's fiance,
and the sexiness of her being represented by the Reverend Al Sharpton and his lawyer
pals Sanford Rubenstein and Michael Hardy, the media did not pay much attention to
Sean Bell's parents and their kinfolk at all.
What was especially striking was the fact that Mrs. Bell got up every single morning,
made her way to the vigil area, then to work in a local hospital all day, then to her church
every single evening. She reminded me so much of my own mother, of any Black mother
in America who has had to be the backbone of the family, often sacrificing her own
health, her own wants and needs, her own hurt and pain, to be there for others in their
time of need.
Mrs. Bell always told me that she truly believed justice would be done in this case. She
really did. I never had the heart to tell her that it is rare for a police officer to be found
guilty of murdering a civilian, no matter how glaring the evidence. Nor did I have the
heart to tell Mrs. Bell that the media and the defense would seek to destroy her son's
image and reputation, that Sean Bell would be reduced to a thug, as an unsavory
character, to somehow justify the police shooting. Nor did I have the heart to tell Mrs.
Bell that this pain of losing her son would be with her the remainder of her life. I did not
share my suspicion that the parade of Black leaders, Black protests, media hype- all of it-
was all part of someone’s carefully concocted script, brushed off and brought to the
parade every single time a case like this occurred. I have seen it before, and as long as we
live in a city, a nation, that does not value all people as human, there will be more Sean
Bell's.
"I am Sean Bell," many of us chanted in the days and weeks immediately following his
death. Yet very few of us showed up to the hearings after, and even fewer had the
courage to question the vision, or lack thereof, of our own Black leadership who
accomplished, ultimately, little to nothing at all. And very few of us realized that the
powers-that-be in New York City have come to anticipate our reactions to matters like
the Sean Bell tragedy: we get upset and become very emotional; we scream "No Justice!
No Peace!"; we march, rally, and protest; we call the police and mayor all kinds of names
and demand their resignations; we vow that this killing will be the last; and we will wait
until the next tragedy hits, then this whole horrible cycle begins anew.
Plain and simple, racism creates abusive relationships. It does not matter if the
perpetrator is a White sister or brother, or a person of color, because the most vulnerable
in our society feel the heat of it. Real talk: this tragedy would have never gone down on
the Upper Eastside of Manhattan or in Brooklyn Heights. I am not just speaking about the
judge's decision, but the police officer's actions. Those shots would have never been fired
at unarmed White people sitting in a car. Until we understand that racism is not just about
who pulled the trigger in a police misconduct case, but is also about the geography of
racism, and the psychology of racism, we are forever stuck having the same endless
dialogue with no solution in sight.
And until America recognizes the civil and human rights of all its citizens, systemic
racism and police misconduct, joined at the hip, will never end. That is, until White
sisters and brothers realize they, too, are Sean Bell, this will never end. Save for a few
committed souls, most White folks sit on the sidelines (as many did when we marched
down Fifth Avenue in protest of Sean Bell's murder in December 2006), feel empathy,
but fail to grasp that our struggle for justice is their struggle for justice. They, alas, are
Sean Bell, and Amadou Diallo, and all those anonymous Black and Brown heads and
bodies who've been victimized, whether they want to accept that reality or not. And the
reality is that until police officers are forced to live in the communities they police, forced
to learn the language, the culture, the mores of the communities they police, forced to
change how they handle undercover assignments, this systemic racism, this police
misconduct, will never end. And until Black and Latino people, the two communities
most likely to suffer at the hands of police brutality and misconduct, refuse to accept the
half-baked leadership we've been given for nearly forty years now, and start to question
what is really going on behind the scenes with the handshakes, the eyewinks, the head
nods, and the backroom deals at the expense of our lives, this systemic racism, this police
misconduct, these kinds of miscarriages of justice, will never end.
Our current leadership needs us to believe all we can ever be are victims, doomed to one
recurring tragedy or another. It keeps these leaders gainfully employed, and it keeps us
feeling completely helpless and powerless. Well, I am not helpless nor powerless, and
neither are you. To prevent Sean Bell's memory from fading like dust into the air, the
question is put to you, now: What are you going to do to change this picture once and for
all? Mayor Bloomberg said this in a statement:
"There are no winners in a trial like this. An innocent man lost his life, a bride lost her
groom, two daughters lost their father, and a mother and a father lost their son. No verdict
could ever end the grief that those who knew and loved Sean Bell suffer."
No, the grief will never end, not for Sean Bell's parents and family, for his fiance and
children. But Mayor Bloomberg, you, me, we the people, can step up our games, make a
commitment to real social justice in our city, in our nation, and, for once, penalize people,
including police officers, who just randomly blow away lives. Sean Bell is never coming
back, but we are here, and the biggest tragedy will be if we keep going about our lives, as
if this never happened in the first place.
And a long as we have leadership, White leadership and Black leadership, mainstream
leadership and grassroots leadership, that can do nothing more than exacerbate folks' very
natural emotions in a tragedy like this, we will never progress as a human race. Instead a
true leader needs to harness those emotions and turn them into action, as Dr. King did, as
Gandhi did. In the absence of such action, so many of us, especially us Black and Latino
males, will continue to have a very nervous relationship with the police, even the police
of color, for fear that any of one of us could be the next Sean Bell.
Kevin Powell is a Brooklyn, New York-based writer, community activist, and author of 8
books. He can be reached at kevin [at] kevinpowell.net.