A
reader recently asked me if I think justice will finally
come to Stephen
Lawrence. This came after news that two
men, David Norris and Gary Dobson, will face trial for
his 1993 murder.
Who
is Stephen Lawrence, you ask? If you’re from the U.S., chances are that you’ve never heard of him,
although there was a PBS
docudrama about the case some years ago. He was a black
teenager from south-east London, an honors student and an aspiring architect
who was studying physics. On the evening of April 22, 1993,
Lawrence and his friend Duwayne Brooks were waiting at a
bus stop when a racist white mob descended upon them. One
of the attacker yelled “what, what n****r?” The group of
five or six men quickly crossed the road and stabbed him
twice in his upper torso to a depth of five inches, severing
two auxiliary arteries. In this horrific incident that lasted
no more than 15-20 seconds, Lawrence
fled 130 yards and then bled to death.
According
to the pathologist’s
report, “It is surprising that he managed to get 130
yards with all the injuries he had, but also the fact that
the deep penetrating wound of the right side caused the
upper lobe to partially collapse his lung. It is therefore
a testimony to Stephen’s physical fitness that he was able
to run the distance he did before collapsing.” Due to the
heavy layers of clothing he was wearing, Laurence was drenched
in blood.
Stephen’s
body was flown to Jamaica,
where he was buried. Dobson was tried for the murder but
was acquitted.
A
damning inquiry
conducted by Sir William Macpherson blamed “professional
incompetence, institutional racism and a failure of leadership”
for the blunders in the investigation of Stephen Lawrence’s
murder. The 1999 report also concluded that from the very
top of the ranks, London’s
Metropolitan Police Service was riddled by "pernicious
and institutional
racism” in the investigation of this crime; the racial
disparity in “stop and search figures”; the underreporting
of racial crimes, and the failure of police training in
racial sensitivity.
Duwayne
Brooks, who was also a victim, was treated by the police
as a witness. “We are driven to the conclusion that Mr.
Brooks was stereotyped as a young black man exhibiting unpleasant
hostility and agitation, who could not be expected to help,
and whose condition and status simply did not need further
examination or understanding,” according to the Macpherson
report. “We
believe that Mr. Brooks’ colour and such stereotyping played
their part in the collective failure of those involved to
treat him properly and according to his needs.”
Macpherson
made 70 recommendations in the Stephen Lawrence inquiry,
including reforms of the police force, the justice system,
the schools and the civil service, making the use of racial
language in private a criminal offense, and the aggressive
recruitment of black and Asian police officers. Perhaps
one of the most significant recommendations, now the law,
is the abolition of the centuries-old double
jeopardy rule, which prevented a person from being tried
twice for the same crime.
And
now, after years of allegations of official corruption and
the withholding of evidence, David Norris and Gary Dobson
- whose 1996 acquittal was quashed by an appeals court -
now stand trial for an 18-year-old murder.
I
first heard about the Lawrence case
in 1998, when I was in London working with Amnesty International. Subsequently,
I produced some news segments on the killing and its aftermath
as a producer for Democracy
Now! in New
York. For Britons, the Stephen Lawrence case was a watershed
moment in race relations in that country, and a turning
point on the problems of hate crimes, racial violence and
the issue of police corruption and misconduct. In that regard,
the significance of this incident was not unlike that of
the 1960s riots throughout America’s
urban centers, the Rodney King beating in Los
Angeles, the police torture of Abner Louima, or the fatal
police shooting of Amadou Diallo and Sean Bell in New York.
And
still today, some black observers, including Stephen’s
mother Doreen Lawrence, say that little has changed
in the way black Britons are treated by the police. Five
years after the Macpherson report, an investigation
into diversity and the policies, procedures and employment
practices in the Metropolitan police called for change.
Meanwhile, today, the London police still maintain a white
male culture. Hate crimes against minority groups continue.
Parliament could pass legislation that would dismantle the
Independent
Police Complaints Commission, the regulatory body established
after Lawrence’s death that brought transparency and
structure to the handling of complaints against the police.
And a British prison system eager to emulate the U.S. - that is, the “land
of the free” with its pernicious war on terror and its prison-industrial-complex
- incarcerates black, Asian and increasingly Muslim men
at a disproportionate rate.
So,
will the family of Stephen Lawrence finally find justice
in a London courtroom? I don’t have the answer, but we can only hope. In
any case, there’s much work to do,
in Britain
and here in America.
BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David
A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based
in Philadelphia, is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania
Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service,
In These
Times and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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