Los Angeles

Black Lives Matter Submits Petition With 8,000 Signatures Demanding LAPD Chief's Ouster

The petition calls on Garcetti to fire police Chief Charlie Beck in the wake of police shootings

Black Lives Matter activists who have been camped outside Los Angeles City Hall since early last month delivered a petition with more than 8,000 signatures to Mayor Eric Garcetti's office Monday to demand that he fire police Chief Charlie Beck.

The activists were joined by the mother of a woman who died in a detention cell earlier this year, actor Matt McGorry and representatives of the Asian-American, Latino and faith communities.

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The delegation handed over two boxes of signatures, gathered through an online petition at Color of Change, to Deputy Mayor Jeff Gorell, Garcetti's adviser on public safety issues.

Gorell said he will pass the signatures on to Garcetti, who has been out of town for most of the 28 days that Black Lives Matter activists have staged a sit-in outside City Hall. The sit-in began after the Police Commission upheld the actions of officers involved in the fatal shooting of 30-year-old Redel Jones, a black woman.

Over the past several weeks, Garcetti has attended the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, taken a four-day vacation and is now observing the Olympics in Rio as part of a delegation seeking to host the 2024 Olympics in Los Angeles.

Prior to leaving on his trips, Garcetti expressed strong support for Beck. He said he offered to meet inside City Hall with a small delegation from Black Lives Matter, while suggesting that he does not want to be met with shouting. The activists have responded by calling for a public meeting with the entire group.

Black Lives Matter member Jasmine Abdullah Monday characterize Garcetti's absence as part of a pattern that began when he appeared to "run away from us" at other protests and encounters with the group.

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Abdullah warned there will be "political consequences" if Garcetti continues to ignore them.

"We are not sitting out here just to sit out here," but are taking actions such as circulating the online petition and amassing more support from the community, she said.

"If you really care about this city like you say you do, and you want to win in this next election, you better come home," Abdullah said, directly addressing Garcetti in what she jokingly described as a "love letter."

She acknowledged that Garcetti has offered to meet with five of the Black Lives Matter members in his office, but she such an arrangement puts their group at a disadvantage.

"They are doing what they do best, which is divide and conquer, and try to pick their leaders," she said. "We decided he needs to come downstairs. It's all right, he can come downstairs, these are his stairs, and ours, he can come talk to everybody as a whole."

After being pursued from public event to public event by Black Lives Matter members, and since being shouted down at a South Los Angeles town hall by the group's members, Garcetti has had minimal engagement with Black Lives Matter members.

He has instead increased his interactions with other faith leaders, nonprofit organizations, activists and even hip-hop artists like The Game and Snoop Dogg, often referring to these relationships as evidence black leaders are working with his office and the Los Angeles Police Department to improve

policing and public safety.

Despite LAPD's rollout of community policing and other programs to enhance relations with black and minority communities, Black Lives Matter activists contend LAPD still has the highest number of police shootings of any department in the country. They also allege Beck has been too lenient on officers who have fatally shot residents, and is unresponsive to families regarding the deaths of people in police custody.

Lisa Hines, the mother of Wakiesha Wilson, a 36-year-old black woman who was found dead in her cell on Easter Sunday, spoke during the news conference Monday about her experience trying to find her daughter after she failed to show up for a court hearing.

Hines said the police department unnecessarily delayed telling her of her daughter's death, and that she had to make several phone calls to the LAPD before she was given a phone number — without any further explanation — to the coroner's office.

"If this was your child and you were looking for her, and somebody gave you a number to call ... and when you do call the number, the coroner's office answers, what would be going on in your body mind and soul?" she said.

Hines said she is "still devastated" and has so far not gotten any more information about how her daughter died, which she blames on Beck.

"He's the leader of the police station, and all he can do at the Police Commission meetings is sit there with a blank stare on his face when I'm talking," she said.

The Black Lives Matter activists' demand for Beck to be fired was echoed by representatives of other groups who also expressed dissatisfaction with the chief.

McGorry, who stars in the Netflix show "Orange is the New Black" and the ABC drama "How to Get Away With Murder," said he was there "in solidarity with White People 4 Black Lives," a group of white people who support the Black Lives Matter movement.

McGorry, noting that Black Lives Matter activists "have been camped out here for nearly a month now and have been requesting a meeting," said Garcetti's absence comes off as "incredibly disrespectful."

He added he was recently "disgusted" by an encounter with an officer who casually assured him that he shouldn't "worry," because "we beat him up,'' apparently referring to a person involved in a police incident in his neighborhood.

"A police chief that has an environment that allows that to be OK, a police community where that can thrive...is not OK," McGorry said.

Audrey Kuo, from API for Black Lives, said, "We are rising in solidarity with Black Lives Matter Los Angeles and we are demanding that Eric Garcetti fire Chief Beck."

Copyright CNS - City News Service
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