Each Case Brings Us Closer to Ending Qualified Immunity for Killer Cops

Convicted ex-cop Derek Chauvin seemed genuinely stunned to learn he actually will be held responsible for the murder of a Black man

Keith Reed
Momentum

--

Protesters hold their fists in the air at a rally in downtown Minneapolis near the courthouse calling for justice for George Floyd after closing arguments in the Chauvin trial on April 19, 2021. Photo: Getty Images

For an instant, Black America and Derek Chauvin aligned in a singular emotion: disbelief. It flashed in Chauvin’s eyes just as the weight of decades of unjust acquittals was shifted from our shoulders onto the murderer’s, where it had always belonged. The convicted killer cop couldn’t conceive that a jury would dare hold him accountable.

Neither could many of us.

Chauvin will now wait eight weeks for sentencing but relief was much briefer. The verdict hadn’t even been read before a Columbus, Ohio, cop killed Ma’Khia Bryant, a 16-year-old Black girl, in front of her own house. Police said Bryant had a knife, but witnesses added the context that she was armed in self-defense and that Bryant herself had called the police because she was being jumped by other girls. As the news spread, our collective sigh flipped back to anger and exhaustion at yet another flashpoint in the battle to bring a permanent end to police violence against Black bodies.

New York’s city council voted to end the use…

--

--

Momentum
Momentum

Published in Momentum

Momentum is a blog that captures and reflects the moment we find ourselves in, one where rampant anti-Black racism is leading to violence, trauma, protest, reflection, sorrow, and more. Momentum doesn’t look away when the news cycle shifts.

Keith Reed
Keith Reed

Written by Keith Reed

Keith Reed is a writer, commentator and consultant whose work has appeared in ESPN the Magazine, the Boston Globe, Essence, CNN, MSNBC and elsewhere.

Responses (1)