Calendar

9896
Jun
20
Tue
Special Berkeley Hearing on Urban Shield! Out Now! @ Longfellow Middle School
Jun 20 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Mark Your Calendars
Special Berkeley Hearing on Urban Shield:

The Berkeley City Council will be voting on the city’s participation in Urban Shield.

On Tuesday May 16 more than 200 people turned out to the Berkeley City Council in anticipation of the Council’s vote on whether or not to continue Berkeley’s participation in Urban Shield. After waiting six hours for the agenda item to be heard and after giving powerful testimony, we were told that the Council once again decided to postpone the vote. The coalition and supporters staged a walkout to show the Council that we won’t stand for this kind of manipulation.

LET’S TURN OUT STRONGER AND MORE ORGANIZED!
We want to redouble our efforts at the upcoming meeting in showing the Berkeley City Council that they need to stand on the side of the people and not on the side of militarization and oppression.

In the meantime, please call and email the mayor and Council people to urge them to vote No To Urban Shield!

Mayor Jesse Arreguin/ (510) 981-7100mayor@cityofberkeley.info

District 1/Linda Miao/(510) 981-7110/  lmaio@cityofberkeley.info /

District 2/Cheryl Davila/ (510) 981-7120cdavila@cityofberkeley.info

District 3/  Ben Bartlett/ (510) 981-7130/  bbartlett@CityofBerkeley.info

District 4/ Kate Harrison / (510) 981-7140 kharrison@CityofBerkeley.info

District 5 / Sophie Hahn/ 510) 981-7150 shahn@CityofBerkeley.info

District 6 / Susan Wengraf / (510) 981-7160 swengraf@CityofBerkeley.info

District 7/ Kris Worthington / (510) 981-7170 kworthington@CityofBerkeley.info

District 8/  Lori Droste / (510) 981-7180 ldroste@CityofBerkeley.info

63196
Naomi Klein presents her new book No Is Not Enough @ First Presbyterian Church of Berkeley
Jun 20 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm

sm_frontcover_300dpi.jpg Join us for a discussion of resistance in the Trump era with internationally acclaimed journalist and bestselling author Naomi Klein.

Donald Trump’s takeover of the White House is a dangerous escalation in a world of cascading crises. His reckless agenda — including a corporate coup in government, aggressive scapegoating and warmongering, and sweeping aside climate science to set off a fossil fuel frenzy — will generate waves of disasters and shocks to the economy, national security, and the environment.

Acclaimed journalist, activist, and bestselling author Naomi Klein has spent two decades studying political shocks, climate change, and brand bullies. From this unique perspective, she argues that Trump is not an aberration but a logical extension of the worst, most dangerous trends of the past half-century — the very conditions that have unleashed a rising tide of white nationalism the world over. It is not enough, she tells us, to merely resist, to say no. Our historical moment demands more: a credible and inspiring yes, a roadmap to reclaiming the populist ground from those who would divide us — one that sets a bold course for winning the fair and caring world we want and need.

This timely, urgent book from one of our most influential thinkers offers a bracing positive shock of its own, helping us understand just how we got here, and how we can, collectively, come together and heal.

Book signing to follow. Copies of No Is Not Enough will be available for purchase at the event. A discounted ticket/book bundle is also available in advance.

http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/296…

63207
Jun
21
Wed
Historic Vote on Refinery Greenhouse Gas Caps – ALL HANDS ON DECK! @ BAAQMD Offices
Jun 21 @ 8:45 am – 1:00 pm

 ALL HANDS ON DECK!
We Need GREEN ​
HOUSE ​
GAS​
Caps,
Not Massive Emissions Increases!

11th-hour Air District staff changes to Rule 12-16, scheduled for a vote this coming Wednesday, effectively sabotage what was to be the first-in-the nation rule to regulate local refinery-emitted greenhouse gases. In a stunning reversal, the Air District is now trying to grandfather in horrendous emission increases. Staff’s history of reckless permitting is causing them to propose a total gutting of the caps by raising permissible emissions levels by 25% – the equivalent to adding a whole other Chevron or Shell refinery to our air load! We must pack the house and express our outrage.

We need the GHG emission limits that were in Rule 12-16 when the staff proposed it at the continued adoption hearing on May 31, and which Board voted to direct staff to bring for adoption on June 21.

The Board must resist staff chicanery and stay the course. Now more than ever the community needs to stand up in support of meaningful caps on refinery GHGs, not faux-caps that allow massive emissions increases.

Read the Sunflower Alliance update at http://www.sunflower-alliance.org/urgent-defend-real-ghg-caps-not-allowances-for-increased-emissions-june-21/

Please arrive no later than 8:30 AM so that we can fill the hearing room. There will be massive oil industry & building trades turnout, so come early to stand at the head of the line.
============================

Original note:

This is really it—the culmination of a very long and often difficult effort to cap local refinery pollution.  The Board of Directors of the Bay Area Air Quality Management District are expected to adopt Rule 12-16, retailored at the last hearing to focus exclusively on greenhouse emissions.  Be prepared to throw your own cap in the air when the vote is tallied and history is made.  This rule will be the first in the state and in the nation to regulate local refinery-emitted GHGs.

Regulating criteria pollution—included within the original proposal for 12-16—will not be considered at this time.  But it will be addressed in other rule-making, including Rule 13-1, to be presented by staff for consideration in a few months.

Air District staff dropped its opposition to capping GHGs after the Air Resources Board delivered a game-changing letter on April 5th.   Richard Corey, ARB’s executive officer, declared his support for Rule 12-16 and Rule 13-1, the related staff proposal to limit greenhouse gases via an emissions-per-barrel approach.  “We support the intent of these rules and agree more can and must be done to deliver real reductions in pollutants that are impacting the health of residents living near refineries,” Corey wrote.  “We agree both approaches could help to ensure that these sources do not add to the state’s overall emissions of greenhouse gases and criteria or toxic pollutants.”

The co-pollutants emitted by refineries along with greenhouse gases have very local impacts, which state policy is beginning to address.  A growing body of research shows that people who live closest to refineries are most heavily impacted by these toxic and criteria emissions.  Bay Area public health experts have estimated that a cap on local refinery emissions could save 800–3,000 lives regionally over 40 years.  Without it, fenceline communities would face an 8–12 times worse per capita mortality impact.

Rule 13-1 does not currently call for directly controlling particulate matter and could allow refinery-wide emissions to increase.  Making sure that rule is loophole-free is our next big struggle.  But for now, this first step towards GHG caps is a very giant step in the right direction.

Please arrive at 8:45 AM so that we can fill the hearing room.   There will be massive oil industry turnout, so come early to stand at the head of the line.

Additional Information

Here is the analysis, conducted by local public health experts, of the deadly local health impacts of a tar sands transition.

For background, listen to this April 19th KALW report, which includes interviews with members of the Richmond community whose very lives depend on the passage of this rule.  (Both the broadcast and a transcript are available.)

Reporter Will Parrish has done excellent investigative work on the issue.  See his recent articles in the Monthly and the Nation.

Finally, follow this link to more detailed background on this website of the four-year struggle to cap refinery emissions.

63204
Tasers: SF Police Commission @ San Francisco City Hall, Room 400
Jun 21 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Via 48 Hills

The Police Commission will be talking about Tasers Wednesday/21. This is an ongoing debate, and took center stage when the supes Rules Committee voted to allow Petra DeJesus to stay on the commission for another term. The cops want Tasers, and say they are a good alternative to shooting people. A lot of activists who have studied the issue (and some police departments that have abandoned the devices) say there are really serious problems with giving officers what is generally considered a less-lethal, but still lethal, weapon.

The presentation from the “experts” will no doubt focus on how Tasers can keep people alive – if someone with a knife is threatening an officer or a civilian, zapping and thus immobilizing the suspect is better than shooting and killing them.

But what if the cops use the Taser not as an alternative to a firearm but as an alternative to de-escalation, to controlling the situation, to calling in for support from someone trained in handling mentally ill suspects? That’s what we’ve seen in other cities – the Taser is a crutch, a quick and easy way to avoid taking more peaceful steps to resolving a situation.

Interesting to see what the presentation to the commission addresses, and who the experts are. I am hearing that this is going to be a big push in the next few months.

 

63288
Prisoners Literature Project @ Grassroots House
Jun 21 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm

Volunteer with us!

The Prisoners Literature Project is based in Berkeley, California, and we’re always looking for volunteers to help answer letters, send out books, learn more about the prison system, and assist in other ways.

We currently meet on Sundays from 2-5pm and on Wednesdays from 6:30-9:30pm at the Grassroots House.  This is located at 2022 Blake St. (at Milvia), Berkeley, CA 94704.  (Map – there’s plenty of local parking, and the office is walkable in 11-15 minutes from downtown Berkeley BART or Ashby BART  – also, AC Transit bus #18 stops nearby.)

(Please note that we can’t accept prisoner book requests at this address.  Book requests from U.S. prisoners must be mailed to PLP; c/o Bound Together Books, 1369 Haight St, San Francisco, CA 94117.)

We welcome helpers of any age and experience at our volunteer sessions (here’s what they look like!), and are also very happy to host students looking for community service.  You should read a lot, have neat legible handwriting, and be able to follow the rules to get books into prisons. We don’t make the rules, but we do have to follow them!

Bringing more than four people? Please contact us first so we can better accommodate your group. (BTW, we maintain ‘call for volunteer’ listings on VolunteerMatch.org, on Idealist.org, and on AllForGood.org, so you might have seen us there!)

Other ways to help?

If you can’t make it in-person to our volunteer sessions, we’d still love your help.  In particular, we’re looking for donations — both one-time and recurring — to help pay for postage on the hundreds of book packages we send out monthly.

Other things we’d love help with include:  fundraising efforts, publicity, and contacting publishers and distributors to get multiple copies of our most sought-after books.  We need to keep building our reserves — and further reduce our request backlog.

Got more ideas?  Come to a meeting and share them with us!

63037
What Democracy Could Look Like: Presentation on Proportional Representation @ Bobby Bowens Progressive Center
Jun 21 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Join the RPA in an interactive presentation which will provide an overview of local election systems, and discuss possible reforms, including ranked choice voting and forms of proportional representation.  Speakers will include Pedro Hernandez, Deputy Director of FairVote California; Steve Chessin, President of Californians for Electoral Reform (CfER); and Joan Strasser, Board Member of CfER, and a teacher at Richmond High School.
There will be plenty of time for questions and answers.

63285
Whistleblower at the CIA: Melvin Goodman with Daniel Ellsberg @ First Presbyterian Church
Jun 21 @ 7:15 pm – 9:30 pm
sm_goodman_ellsberg._bernstein.jpg Both Edward Snowden and Daniel Ellsberg have asked more whistleblowers to step into the public light and speak out. Several brave individuals have responded. One of them is Melvin Goodman.

Melvin A. Goodman was a Soviet analyst at the CIA and the Department of State for 24 years, and a professor of international relations at the National War College for 18 years. He served in the U.S. Army in Athens, Greece for three years, and was intelligence adviser to the SALT delegation from 1971–1972.

Currently, Goodman is the Director of the National Security Project at the Center for International Policy in Washington, DC, and adjunct professor of government at Johns Hopkins University. He has authored, co-authored, and edited seven books, including his “National Insecurity: The Cost of American Militarism”, (published by City Lights) Gorbachev’s Retreat: The Third World; The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze; The Phantom Defense: America’s Pursuit of the Star Wars Illusion; Bush League Diplomacy: How the Neoconservatives are Putting the World at Risk, and Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA.

Dennis J Bernstein will host, raising the topic of Syria and US Government lies.

Tickets at brownpapertickets.com and indie bookstores

63208
Anti Police-Terror Project General Meeting @ EastSide Arts Alliance
Jun 21 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm

Monthly APTP meeting, held on every 3rd Wednesday of the month.

– Strategize on addressing proposed changes to the BART police use of force policy.
– Find out ways you can use your talents and resources to support APTP and get involved with the work, including how to join various committees such as the Black Leadership Committee, First Responders, Action, Policy, Media, and Security committees.
– Find out more about the #DefundOPD campaign.

The Anti Police-Terror Project is a project of the ONYX ORGANIZING COMMITTEE that in coalition with other organizations, like Idriss Stelley Foundation, Community READY Corps and Workers World Party – Bay Area, is working to develop a replicable and sustainable model to end police terrorism in this country.

We are led by the most impacted communities but are a multi-racial, mutil-generational coalition.

For the July meeting:

There will be report backs on some of our recent actions including the Defund OPD campaign around the city budget process, including our shutdown of the Council budget meeting. You’ll also hear about our action to protest the promotion of rapist OPD Cops at their “secret” promotions ceremony.

We’d also love to have you get involved with APTP on a regular basis, by joining one of our committees. We will have committee breakouts as part of Wednesday’s meeting, so you can learn about what the different committees do. We know you all have lots of ideas and talent, so please contribute to further APTP’s on-going work.

Some of the committees include:
– Black Leadership
– First Responders
– Action
– Comms/Media
– Policy
– Security
– Fundraising

See you all on Wednesday!

63209
Whistleblower at the CIA: Melvin Goodman with Daniel Ellsberg @ First Presbyterian Church
Jun 21 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm

sm_goodman_ellsberg._bernstein.jpg KPFA Radio and City Lights Books present:

Both Edward Snowden and Daniel Ellsberg have asked more whistleblowers to step into the public light and speak out. Several brave individuals have responded. One of them is Melvin Goodman.

Melvin A. Goodman was a Soviet analyst at the CIA and the Department of State for 24 years, and a professor of international relations at the National War College for 18 years. He served in the U.S. Army in Athens, Greece for three years, and was intelligence adviser to the SALT delegation from 1971–1972.

Currently, Goodman is the Director of the National Security Project at the Center for International Policy in Washington, DC, and adjunct professor of government at Johns Hopkins University. He has authored, co-authored, and edited seven books, including his “National Insecurity: The Cost of American Militarism”, (published by City Lights) Gorbachev’s Retreat: The Third World; The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze; The Phantom Defense: America’s Pursuit of the Star Wars Illusion; Bush League Diplomacy: How the Neoconservatives are Putting the World at Risk, and Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA.

Dennis J Bernstein will host, raising the topic of Syria and US Government lies.

Tickets at brownpapertickets.com and indie bookstores. $12 for advanced tickets. $15 at the door.

63246
Jun
22
Thu
BART Board : Stopping Harrassment, Protecting Immigrants
Jun 22 @ 9:00 am – 11:30 am

The BART Board will vote on on a proposal to rescind the ordinance that would have BART police ticket people who take up more than one BART seat. BART has limited police resources, and police should be focusing on serious crimes. This ordinance would increase BART delays, 17% of which are already caused by police interactions. And according to the BART Police Officers Association, this ordinance would likely target homeless people and increase use of force incidents.

BART should not criminalize etiquette violations. Instead Bart Board Chair Saltzman will be proposing an educational campaign to ask riders to use one seat.

The Board will also be voting on the Safe Transit Policy introduced by Directors Lateefah Simon and Nick Josefowitz, who wrote an op-ed this weekend about the policy:

We understand how critical our system is for residents to get where they need to go. With more than 500,000 people living in the Bay Area without legal permission, we must ensure that all riders are protected when using BART in their professional and personal lives. Immigrants, including those who are undocumented, are an indispensable part of our community and economy, and their contributions to our cities are an important reality in the Bay Area.

“The policy would forbid BART from spending its resources to enforce federal immigration law and prohibit BART police officers and employees from questioning riders about their immigration status.”

There’s more on Thursday’s agenda, including approval of the annual budget, expanding the youth fare discount to youth 13-18 years old, and considering additional parking at the Dublin/Pleasanton BART station. Read the full agenda here.

63289
Sanctuary Transit – Keep Immigrants Safe On BART @ BART Boardroom, 20th Street Mall, Third Floor
Jun 22 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am

BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) Board of Directors Meeting.  Agenda.

Directions:

The BART Board Meeting Room is entered on Webster Street between 20th and 21st, to the north of the large CVS store at 20th and Webster.

BART will be considering newly-elected BART rep Lateefah Simon’s proposal for “sanctuary transit” i.e instructions to BART’s police department to not cooperate with immigration enforcement activities on the Bay Area’s rail system and to ensure unfettered travel to and from work, family and leisure for all residents regardless of status.

Op-Ed in the SF Chronicle

…The risks to our undocumented riders are real. On May 14, after being questioned about his immigration status, a rider on the Metro Transit system in Minneapolis was tased and arrested. Within days, he was transferred to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and a federal immigration judge ordered him deported. The right to use public transit should never come with exposure to such danger. Implementing the Safe Transit Policy is essential for preventing similar incidents on BART.

The Safe Transit Policy ensures that regardless of ethnic or national origin, gender, gender identity, race, religion, sexual orientation or immigration status, riders can count on a safe and secure environment on BART.

Specifically, the policy would forbid BART from spending its resources to enforce federal immigration law and prohibit BART police officers and employees from questioning riders about their immigration status.

63280
Decarcerate Alameda @ CURB office
Jun 22 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

We will be having our next Decarcerate Alameda meeting this Thursday, June 22nd. If you can, please bring some snacks to share.

Our agenda will include planning for the July 24th hearing on mental health alternatives, our upcoming art build, jail outreach and more.

63287
No walls, no borders in the peoples struggles @ Workers World
Jun 22 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Trans Power! Queer Power! Im/Migrant & Worker Power!

IN THE SPIRIT OF STONEWALL, LETS UNITE TO SMASH OPPRESSION!

Teresa Gutierrez, lesbian Im/Migrant rights socialist activist, presenting:

“No walls, no borders in the peoples struggles”

Teresa is a member of the national Secretariat of Workers World Party and National Director, International Action Center Latin-America/Caribbean and Immigration Projects. For many years, she was also the Coordinator of the NYC May 1st Coalition. In 2004, she ran for Vice-President on the Workers World Party ticket.

Note that location may change, watch this space for updates.
Refreshments will be served and the space will be wheelchair accessible.

63263
Film Screening: From the Ashes – the legacy of the coal industry and its future @ La Pena Cultural Center
Jun 22 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm


No Coal in Oakland is hosting a free screening of a new National Geographic documentary about coal, From the Ashes.

Join us to watch this film together in community.  We will also share any updates about the coal campaign in Oakland and talk more generally about the struggle for environmental and climate justice as we resist the new administration in Washington.

You can see a trailer for the film at https://vimeo.com/user21699071/review/212647120/507d57d428

From the Ashes captures Americans in communities across the country as they wrestle with the legacy of the coal industry and what its future should be under the Trump Administration.

From Appalachia to the West’s Powder River Basin, the film goes beyond the rhetoric of the “war on coal” to present compelling and often heartbreaking stories about what’s at stake for our economy, health, and climate. From the Ashes invites audiences to learn more about an industry on the edge and what it means for their lives. Learn more: https://www.fromtheashesfilm.com/ 

Please spread the word about this opportunity to see the film and discuss the issues.  The screening is free, but donations will be accepted, and No Coal in Oakland tee shirts will be available for sale.

63155
Jun
24
Sat
Movement School For Revolutionaries @ Richmond Progressive Alliance
Jun 24 @ 8:30 am – 4:15 pm

This conference is sure to be an inspiring journey for all in attendance. This is our opportunity to come together and shake off the dust from the 2016 election season and start anew with a revived and refreshed determination to transform the political ground under our feet!

Check out these sample agenda items and let us know what you think!
Explore the context we are operating in, under our present political reality, and flesh out the norms embedded in our cultural assumptions.
See also:
Movement School For Revolutionaries | event | Richmond

https://www.facebook.com/events/630917560446700/
.
[The conference is being presented by Green Party members David Cobb (who was Jill Stein’s 2016 campaign manager) and Meleiza Figueroa (who was Jill Stein’s 2016 media coordinator).].

Imperialism
White Supremacy
Capitalism
Patriarchy
9:30-10:30
(60 min.)

Current Historical Moment
Introduce and explore concept of conjuncture Neofascism
Mel
10:30-12:00
(90 min.)

LUNCH
12:00-12:30

Analytical Toolbox
Why the electoral terrain is important
Political realignment in the 2016 election
Translating revolt into revolution
Real Pragmatism: the Philosophy of Praxis
Hegemonic apparatus
12:30-1:30
(60 min.)

How Should Revolutionaries Engage in Elections?
Changing the strategic question
Developing symbiotic relationships
Rebel cities
1:30-2:30
(60 min.)

Brief presentations of revolutionary opportunities
Democratic Party
Green Party
Progressive Alliances
2:30-3:00
(30 min.)

Looking Ahead
How can we collaborate in our County?
3:00-4:00
(60 min.)

Wrap Up
Workshop evaluation
Likes / Wishes
4:00-4:15
(15 min.)

Note: We will be accepting donations for food costs to cover breakfast and lunch. No one will be turned away for inability to pay.

63278
East Bay DSA – Intro, Election and General Meeting @ California Nurses Association
Jun 24 @ 9:30 am – 1:30 pm

9:30 AM:

If you’re new to DSA, come learn how we are organizing locally, what our plans are for the future, and how you can get involved!

This orientation is open to members and nonmembers alike who are interested in DSA. It is open to the public and you do not need to be a member to attend.

Those interested in becoming members can sign up at: https://dsausa.nationbuilder.com/join.

10:30 AM

On June 24, we come together for a beautiful demonstration of democracy and solidarity. We’ll elect the new Local Council (formerly the Executive Committee) to carry out the chapter’s bold vision of a socialist East Bay through the organizing structure outlined in our new bylaws. We need your participation!

Be sure to check out the candidates before the meeting.

63211
Free Health Screenings, Free Legal Assistance – Oakland Family Festival @ Verdese Carter Park
Jun 24 @ 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm

63290
SOLAR SIMPLIFIED II: THE DEEPER DIVE @ Ecology Center
Jun 24 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm

Residential solar technologies are evolving at a fast clip, as are the policies that support solar generation. Expert Doug McKenzie will discuss the latest solar products and technologies that can extend solar’s reach in your life, plus the policies that are advancing or limiting the future of solar in our region, state, and country. This presentation and Q&A is useful for people who have already gotten solar, and those who are still considering and want to take a deeper dive. Bring your questions!

Topics include:

  • Panels & Inverters
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Batteries: Can you be independent from the grid? Even in a power outage?
  • Getting Off Gas: electrification of the systems in your home
  • Community Choice Energy: what CCE is and how it works with solar customers.
  • Policies: policies and efforts that promote or stymie solar
  • The Future of Solar

Bio: Doug McKenzie retired early from HP after almost 20 years in software development and customer support. Before HP, he received a degree in Applied Math from UC Berkeley. After HP, he is living his dreams as a solar educator and consultant and as a career coach helping people through career transitions. He’s the East Bay development manager for non-profit solar installer SunWork.org and is on the Board of NorCal Solar. Doug lives in Berkeley and drives an electric car powered by rooftop solar.

Co-sponsored by Sierra Club, San Francisco Bay Chapter.

Space is limited for this free event — RSVP online appreciated.

63230
Theater of the Oppressed Workshop @ Fellowship Hall, BFUU
Jun 24 @ 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Jiwon ChungTheatre of the Oppressed (TO) is a set of techniques, games & practices for using theater as a vehicle for transforming individuals and their communities, and effecting social and political change. It is a method of harnessing the theatrical process as a powerful tool for healing communities and breaking cycles of oppression; resulting in empowered and engaged individuals and groups that have the tools to dialogue, educate, problem-solve, and effect change. TO is a collective, creative, whole-brained problem-posing/solving technique of learning and transformation.

Jiwon Chung studied with Augusto Boal, the creator of Theatre of the Oppressed and has been teaching Theatre of the Oppressed for over 30 years in several countries.

 

63121
Justice4Pedie Community Meeting @ Richmond Public Library, Whittlesey Community Room
Jun 24 @ 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm

Members of the Oscar Grant Committee and the Perez family are organizing a special community meeting to review the Pedie Perez case and discuss how we can ensure justice is done. Co-sponsored by Richmond Progressive Alliance

Justice4Pedie Update, June 2017 Special Investigator Hired to Look into Perez Shooting

The City of Richmond has hired Mr. Lucky Narain, for the part-time position as special investigator for the Richmond Citizens Police Review Commission. Relatively unknown to the Richmond community, Mr. Narian was a candidate for Oakland School Board in 2016, when he listed his occupation as “Military Lawyer.” Narain’s first assignment, we understand, will be a full and independent investigation of the police shooting of Richard “Pedie” Perez III, shot and killed by Richmond Police Officer Wallace Jensen just minutes after midnight on September 14, 2014.

The shooting—and subsequent efforts by the Richmond Police Chief Chris Magnus and Contra Costa County District Attorney Mark A. Peterson to justify the shooting and blame Pedie for being shot—have raised serious concerns within the Richmond community, concerns which led to changes in the City code on the police commission and the hiring of a Special Investigator. In February 2016, responding to public concern following exposure of law enforcement’s cover-up in the shooting of Perez, the Richmond City Council voted 4-3 to instruct the police commission to hire an independent investigator not connected to the police department to investigate the Perez murder. At the same time, the name of the Richmond Police commission was changed to “Richmond Citizens Police Review Commission.” The City Council also voted to require the Police Commission to automatically investigate any future police shootings and/or use of physical force resulting in serious injuries.

These accomplishments result from the efforts of the Perez family with the support of the Oscar Grant Committee (OGC) and the Richmond Progressive Alliance (RPA) to bring this miscarriage of justice to the attention of the people of Richmond and the Bay Area. Members of the Perez family and OGC have been active in raising Justice4Pedie issues in a variety of venues, including the May Day celebration of the ILWU, which included “Stop Police Terror” as one of its demands. In another development earlier in May 2017, DA Peterson, who played a key role in the cover-up of Pedie’s killing, was accused of “willful or corrupt misconduct” by a Contra Costa grand jury that recommended that he be fired. These impressive accomplishments do not mean we can rest on our laurels. We must continue our vigilance to make sure that those who led the earlier cover-up do not attempt to influence the course and conclusions of this special investigation. Special Investiagator Narian owes his job and allegiance to the community, rather than to city officials and the politicians ________________________________________________________________

63286