*to join the immigrant Solidarity Network daily news litserv, send e-mail to: isn-subscribe@lists.riseup.net or visit: http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/isn
==================================================================================
2/11 Warren, MI: Michigan Hmong teen shot 27 times by police
From: Committee to Support the Xiong Family
Dear Friends,
An egregious killing by police of Hmong teenager Chonburi Xiong in
Warren, Michigan occurred last September. Xiong was shot 27 times in
his home, reminiscent of far too many incidents of violence against
people of color -- New York's Sean Bell, Detroit's Vincent Chin,
Wisconsin's Cha Vang.
Many questions surrounding the killing remain unanswered: Why did the
police resort to such violence? Under what circumstances and conditions
is this style of force and violence necessary?
The Warren police has ruled the killing "justified", and even the city's
lawyer states, "One thing was certain: This guy pointed a loaded weapon
at these police officers. The 27 times means nothing. The only thing the
officers needed was the justification to shoot one time. The 27 bullets
don't matter." (Excerpt from article below).
This mindset and approach towards "justice" must be challenged.
An ad-hoc committee composed of Hmong and other Asian Pacific Americans,
people of color, community activists, youth, teachers and lawyers have
formed to support the Xiong family. You can find past news articles
posted on the website of Detroit Asian Youth Project
(http://www.xanga.com/DAY_Project), who has been documenting the
mobilization efforts that are happening.
Sincerely,
Committee to Support the Xiong Family
Contact: warrenincident@yahoo.com
- - - - - - - - - -
DETROIT FREE PRESS
Memorial, rally held for slain Warren teenager
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070204/NEWS05/702040585/1001/BUSINESS05
- - - - - - - - - -
METRO TIMES
Shooting pains
Questions about Hmong teen's death galvanize tightly knit community
by Sandra Svoboda
2/7/2007
http://metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=10159
After a ceremony last week to honor and remember his teenage son, who
was fatally shot last September by four Warren police officers, Pang
Blia Xiong rested his head in his hands and tried to answer questions
about his family.
Yes, his three other children are back in school. Yes, his family is
overwhelmed by the community support. No, they will never return to live
in the house where 27 police bullets struck their son in his basement
bedroom.
"If somebody kills one of your children, it's not right to go back
there," Xiong said through a translator.
The Xiong family is part of the Detroit area's Hmong population, an
ethnic group from northern Laos and Vietnam. Some Hmong fought alongside
U.S. troops in the Vietnam War or otherwise worked for U.S. interests in
the region during the conflict. For that, after the U.S. military left,
many of the Hmong landed in Laotian camps in the 1970s and 1980s before
coming to the United States as refugees.
The Asian Hmong are a rural people and their arrival in Detroit is often
their first urban experience with modern conveniences and institutions.
Living primarily on Detroit's northeast side and in Warren, southeast
Michigan's Hmong (pronounced "mung") community is known for its insular
nature, close family ties and low profile.
But with the shooting death of 18-year-old Chonburi Xiong in September,
the family's pending $5 million federal civil rights and gross
negligence lawsuit and a growing number of supporters concerned about
the shooting's justification, the Hmong community is drawing new
attention and raising old questions about police behavior and racial
injustice.
Wayne County Commissioner Tim Killeen attended Saturday's event, his
first formal interaction with the Hmong community, thought to number a
few thousand.
"I'm trying to get a better definition of what some of the issues are,"
says Killeen, who is in his first term on the commission. "They're part
of my district."
The biggest issue for the community right now is the follow-up to the
shooting. An internal police investigation and a review by the Macomb
County Prosecutor's Office cleared the officers and pronounced the
shooting justified, but that hasn't given much satisfaction to
Xiong's family and peers.
"There are questions that are unanswered and unexplained," says Chong
Lor, a teen who emceed Saturday's ceremony.
Nearly 200 people attended the event at Our Lady of Good Counsel Church
on Detroit's east side. The afternoon ceremony included poetry, music, a
statement from the Xiong family and information from the civil rights
groups, including recommendations for interacting with police and
improving understanding of ethnic and racial groups.
"We're all in this together. Any injustice to one is an injustice to all
of us. We continually have to stand together to fight and eradicate
these kinds of injustices," says Ruthie Stevenson, president of the
NAACP Macomb County branch.
27 SHOTS
According to police reports, family members and their attorneys, the
Xiong family called Warren police on Saturday, Sept. 16, after the
parents denied Chonburi Xiong use of the family car and he fired a gun
in the home. He left before officers arrived.
It wasn't the first time Warren cops went to the Xiong house for
domestic issues, but both family and police refused to elaborate on
details of earlier incidents.
Sometime overnight, the teen returned to the home on Martin Road near
Hoover Road. Police on patrol saw the car at the house and stopped there.
From that point, reports vary. Police have said the family allowed them
to enter the home. The family disputes that account.
"They entered the house without a search warrant or arrest warrant,
snuck down the basement and ambushed him," says Vince Colella, the
Southfield attorney representing the Xiong family in the federal suit.
It's also claimed that cops entered the home without first receiving
permission.
John J. Gillooly, the lead attorney for the city and the officers,
describes it differently. When the family allowed the officers to enter
the house, he says, they knew to look in the basement for Xiong since
they had been there the previous day on reports he had "shot up the
house." The officers wanted to retrieve his weapon and when they reached
the basement, Xiong pointed it at them.
"To suggest that these officers walked into the home and simply fired
their weapons 27 times for absolutely no reason is a disservice, is
irresponsible, and is without any merit whatsoever," he says.
All of the officers' shots came within a matter of seconds since their
guns are semiautomatic, Gillooly says.
"One thing was certain: This guy pointed a loaded weapon at these police
officers. The 27 times means nothing. The only thing the officers needed
was the justification to shoot one time. The 27 bullets don't matter,"
he says. "There's no doubt it was an unfortunate incident."
When the headlines hit about the shooting, Xiong's peers were shaken. A
private blog message about it began circulating among teens and adult
mentors involved with the Detroit Asian Youth Project, a nonprofit,
largely volunteer group. Formed two years ago, the project
works with Hmong teens in Detroit to build leadership skills and
community awareness.
"We were on it," says Lan Pham, a mentor. "We all thought, 'We've got to
do something and gather around it.'"
In the beginning "it was people wanting to get information and see what
they could do," Pham says. It evolved into the idea of a memorial. In
December, about 10 people attended the first planning meetings. By the
evening before the event, 30 organizers gathered. They met in church
basements, recruited community leaders, found adults willing to help, a
restaurant willing to donate food, a church to host the event and put
together Saturday's service. They sent out press releases and posted
fliers in Hmong businesses.
"There's tons of youth connecting with the older generation for this,"
says Stephanie Chang, one of the DAY Project founders.
Throughout the service - held in English and Hmong - speakers wondered
why the shooting happened, if justice is served and how the Hmong
community will move forward. It makes the incident, in some ways,
reminiscent of the Vincent Chin killing 25 years ago.
Chin, who was Chinese, was beaten to death by two white auto workers who
mistakenly thought he was Japanese. At the time, resentment was
widespread toward Japanese automakers as they gained shares of the Big
Three's market and Detroit's economy slumped.
Following the judge's sentence of probation for Chin's attackers,
Detroit's Asian community mobilized for the first time and pressed for a
federal civil rights suit. Former Metro Times columnist Helen Zia
included a chapter about it in her book, Asian American Dreams, and has
spoken frequently about it.
"It took a huge community outcry to find out what happened, to get
interviews of the eyewitnesses at the scene in the Vincent Chin case,"
she tells Metro Times. "It may take that kind of outcry here too."
At the time of Chin's death, Detroit's Asian American community was not
well-known, similar to the current situation with the more recently
arrived Hmong, Zia says. But because of the grassroots community effort
then, the Chin case became more high-profile and was used as a rallying
cry by Asian-Americans nationally to raise awareness of discrimination
and civil rights violations.
"That's something: That out of a tragedy some of the dialogue has moved
forward in changing things for all people in a positive way," she says.
For his part, Chonburi Xiong's father, Pang Blia, says the family is
grateful for the community's response and believes the incident should
inspire everyone to take a stand against injustices.
"As parents, we truly believe our son's death could have been avoided if
police had taken the proper measures. We find it hard to believe the
shooting was ruled justified. No matter how hard the struggle may be, we
will continue to seek justice for our son," he says.
PHOTO CAPTION: Pang Blia Xiong (left) watches supporters enter a
memorial service for their son.
Sandra Svoboda is a Metro Times staff writer. Contact her at
313-202-8015 or ssvoboda@metrotimes.com
LEGAL ACTIVISTS OF COLOR
News, Events, Actions and Commentary on law and social justice. Welcome to the official blog of the United People of Color Caucus (TUPOCC) of the National Lawyers Guild.
News, Events, Actions and Commentary on law and social justice. Welcome to the official blog of the United People of Color Caucus (TUPOCC) of the National Lawyers Guild.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment