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Police Still Harassing New Orleans Relief Workers
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New Orleans, Nov 13 -- In their efforts to help the struggling residents of New Orleans, local relief activists say they have become a target for police harassment.
"We're not here for any confrontation," said Malik Rahim, co-founder of Common Ground Collective, a grassroots organization. "We are only here to serve the community." Rahim was addressing a press conference Friday after police arrested a volunteer working with the group.
Ironically, the volunteer, Greg Griffith from Ohio, had been monitoring the police when they arrested him.
Griffith said that he saw several police and immigration authorities "harassing" three young black men on Thursday night outside the community medical clinic where he volunteers in the Algiers neighborhood. A long-time activist with Copwatch, a loosely knit network of local groups that monitor and document police misconduct, Griffith went outside to videotape the exchange. He said the police let the three men go, but then proceeded to grab a man two houses down who had just walked out of his house.
"At that point we asked them why they were arresting him and what the charges were, and they told us to mind out own business," Griffith said. "I asked one of the officers what his name and badge number was and almost instantly he and two ICE [US Immigration and Customs Enforcement] cops came at me. He grabbed me, twisted my arm behind my back and slammed my face into the back of the cruiser."
Griffith, whose account was corroborated by two witnesses, told The NewStandard that the officers took his video camera, slammed it on the ground and kicked it across the street. "They justified arresting me by saying that I broke a police cordon or crossed a police line," he said. "There was no police line and I didn't cross one in any situation anyway." Griffith said that the police searched him without consent and found his pocket-knife and accused him of having an illegal weapon. "And they proceeded to say I was resisting arrest as they were slamming my face into the cruiser."
Griffith said that he was using his cell phone in the back of the police car when one officer saw him making the calls and came to the back of the car and took his cell phone, twisted his arms and slammed his face into the plexiglas barrier in the back of the cruiser.
In the car ride to the police station, the officers started joking about shooting him in the back and throwing him in the river, Griffith said. "They turned the radio up and started saying stuff like, "Yeah we're just gonna kill him, we're just gonna shoot him and throw him in the river, no one will ever know."
Griffith's ordeal increased alarm among fellow relief workers and community activists. "When did it become illegal for a person to document what the police is doing?" Rahim asked rhetorically at the press conference.
Rahim said police have constantly harassed the volunteers. "It has gone from members being pulled over and harassed to [being] threatened that if we are double-parked in front of our distribution center that that is not [just] grounds for a ticket, that is grounds for arrest," he said.
Jessica Azulay is a co-founder of PeoplesNetWorks and an editor at The NewStandard.
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