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Eyewitness: Student arrest emblematic of wider racial distrust

Students' immediate reactions just as disturbing as force used to arrest student in the Reg

I witnessed the student arrest on the A-level last Wednesday night. As a second-year student from a rural town in Virginia that’s still plagued by racism, I’ve grown increasingly disillusioned as I’ve realized that race relations in Chicago aren’t much better than those I’ve left behind in the South. I strongly believe that if I had walked into the Reg laughing loudly with a group of other white students, we would have been seen as loud and obnoxious, but not “unruly and disorderly,” as the police incident report describes the group of black students in the Reg. I understand that the UCPD can request to see students’ IDs at any time; however, it should have been clear that the “disruptive” person in question was a student, as we all have to use our IDs to swipe into the Reg in the first place. The UCPD is meant to protect students, not to harass and scare us, and the Reg is oppressive enough without the added threat of spending an entire night in jail after being wrestled to the ground by a UCPD officer. The force with which the officer pushed the student to the ground and handcuffed him was alarming and unnecessary, but what bothered me the most was some of the reactions I heard after the officer escorted the student out of the A-level. When a group of students began collecting names of witnesses, a girl at the table next to mine refused to sign her name because she “didn’t really see what happened,” when I clearly saw her craning her neck to see what was going on just like the rest of us. There seemed to be an assumption that, because it was a young, black male being arrested, the UCPD must have had a good reason for arresting him; thus, many students returned to studying without questioning the scene they had just witnessed. I’m upset because this arrest is not an isolated event—it points to an underlying climate of racial distrust on our campus (and, unfortunately, a racial distrust that permeates much of our society at large). At the forum Tuesday night, many students shared their own stories of being racially profiled by the UCPD, but it wasn’t until after the forum that one of my close friends told me her own recent encounter with a UCPD officer, who flashed his headlights and told her that she and a group of Hispanic friends “needed to leave soon” while waiting for a shuttle in front of a dorm one night. No student should have to put up with such behavior from our own University police. More students should speak out about what they saw on the A-level, because such treatment of minority students perpetuates a distrust that harms everyone, regardless of race.

— Anna Akers-Pecht is a second-year in the College and a Maroon Copy Editor.

 

4 comments on “Eyewitness: Student arrest emblematic of wider racial distrust

  1. reply
    Welcome to the Real World: Hyde Park

    First of all, it’s not difficult to get into the reg without an ID. Really.

    What people like you don’t seem to realize is that the officers are playing the odds (in these other instances). In Hyde Park, in South Chicago, it’s worth the risk of yuppy 20-year olds complaining about “racial profiling” if it means occasionally catching an actual threat. This may come as a shock to you, but black police officers tend to not be racist against normal black citizens. It’s their job, and it’s a pretty important one. Without the police presence, we might get, I don’t know, people breaking into University buildings and stealing thousands of dollars worth of equipment. Oh wait…

    Seriously, get in touch with reality. If you’re so concerned about this, why don’t you walk down to 63rd and Cottage Grove and start spreading the word of the upcoming cross-cultural pax. Or go to Princeton and shut up.

  2. reply
    welcome to the real world?

    “black police officers tend to not be racist against normal black citizens”

    really? does that even make any sense to you? who are “abnormal black citizens?” what are you talking about and what world do you currently live in?

    the issue here is not an issue of police presence, it is an issue of police misconduct and excessive use of force. the officer in question failed to respond to the questions that the student in question and other student witnesses asked him, he did not communicate with the student in question at all, he placed the student in a choke hold and aggressively wrestled the unresisting student to the ground. this may come as a shock to you, but that is how many police officers (irrespective of race) act towards “normal black citizens.”

  3. reply

    No, he means that studies of police-citizen interaction have shown that police officers of all races generally treat people of all races more fairly than is commonly believed.

    hxxp://pqx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/4/1/4

    hxxp://scienceblogs.com/cognitivedaily/2008/07/police_usually_are_able_to_cur.php

  4. reply
    Is Hyde Park Ever the Real World?

    Abnormal = those who rob, shoot, assault other denizens of HP.

    Normal = those who don’t do the above. On second thought, this is HP we are talking about. And if you would like for us to consider attacking one’s neighbors normal, you might have just demonstrated that you have been an HP resident for far too long.

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