Remember
the name Aramis
Ayala.
She is a black woman and a Florida prosecutor who is taking a stand
against the death penalty, and she is catching hell for it. It’s
a lesson we know all too well: when high-profile black professionals
in positions of power take a stand against injustice, the system will
attempt to put them down and silence them.
Ayala,
the Orange-Osceola County State’s Attorney in Orlando, is the
first black prosecutor elected in Florida state history. She has
decided not to seek the death penalty in capital
murder
cases. As a result of her
move not to seek the death penalty for Markeith Loyd - who was
charged with killing both his pregnant girlfriend and an Orlando
police officer - Gov. Rick Scott removed her from the case. A special
prosecutor is now handling the case, and Ayala has
filed
a motion
to stay on it.
“To
put it bluntly, law enforcement officers throughout Florida are
outraged over the decision that was made in this case,” said
Orange
County Sheriff Jerry Demings
regarding Ayala. “I’ve
also heard from many citizens who share the same feeling.” A
Seminole County court employee was fired for advocating on Facebook
that Ayala “should be tarred and feathered if not
hung
(sic) from a tree.”
Described
as a “long shot” by the
Orlando
Sentinel, Aramis
Ayala received $1.4 million from George Soros in her campaign bid for
the top prosecutor spot, one of a dozen reform-minded D.A. candidates
the philanthropist supported. In Central Florida, which is becoming
increasingly
black and Latino,
Ayala’s principled death penalty stance makes sense.
A
2015 Pew Research Center survey found that
support
for the death penalty has been on the decline.
And while a majority of whites (63 percent) have supported executions
in recent years, only 34 percent of African-Americans and 45 percent
of Latinos have approved of death sentences. There is a reason for
this racial disparity in support for the death penalty: People of
color are the ones being put to death, a remnant of Jim Crow
lynching, and a reflection of an unjust system rife with abuse,
corruption and racial bias, in which
95
percent of the elected prosecutors are white,
and 83 percent are men.
Florida
is particularly concerning because it has
the
highest number of exonerations of death row inmates due to innocence,
which is 23 people. Only this month, and only because the Florida
Supreme Court declared Florida’s death penalty law to be
unconstitutional, did the state pass a law requiring a
unanimous
jury recommendation
before judges can impose the
death penalty. Previously, only 10 jurors sufficed.
Both
history and current events have shown that when prominent black folks
use their positions to stand up for racial justice, they find
themselves under the gun. Some of the more recent examples include
Marilyn
Mosby,
the Baltimore State’s Attorney who took a stand and went after
the cops involved in the death of Freddie Gray. Three officers were
acquitted, and the charges against the others were dropped, and now
the officers are going after her.
Another
example is Colin Kaepernick, the
NFL
star who took a stand by
taking a knee during the national anthem in protest of police
violence against black people. Now, Trump
is taking credit
for the former San Francisco
49ers quarterback’s unemployment.
Aramis
Ayala is only doing what black leaders are expected to do when placed
in positions to effect change. Now, the community must back her up,
along with all those who stand up and speak up for justice.
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