Calendar

9896
Sep
29
Tue
Optik Allusions Meeting and Workshop @ Omni Commons
Sep 29 @ 7:00 pm – 10:30 pm

OptikAllusions is a digital filmmaking collective dedicated to social change, based in Oakland, California. We share resources, skills and knowledge to help each other tell stories that might otherwise remain untold. We make films in a spirit of collaboration and solidarity, share a lending library of film equipment for creative projects, organize free, at cost or donation-based workshops.

Join us for our weekly meeting and a workshop!

We usually, meet briefly and then work on projects. It’s open to all!

https://omnicommons.org/wiki/Optik_Allusions

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Sep
30
Wed
Vigil for Antonio Ramos
Sep 30 @ 9:30 am – 11:00 am

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City Council Special Hearing on Affordable Housing Crisis @ City Hall, Council Chambers
Sep 30 @ 5:30 pm – 10:00 pm

The City of Oakland is facing a serious affordable housing crisis, with numerous residents being displaced from their homes. A hearing is scheduled on the housing crisis at Oakland City Hall (click this link for agenda calendar: https://oakland.legistar.com/calendar.aspx).

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Oct
1
Thu
Together We Rise: Join With the Ella Baker Center, Fundraiser et al @ Lake Chalet
Oct 1 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm

At Together We Rise, we will celebrate those who have sustained the Ella Baker Center’s work over the years and invite attendees to join our team.

Come and learn about our recent wins, and what’s coming up next for us. More details about Together We Rise.

There will be light appetizers, a photobooth, and entertainment from a soon-to-be-announced special guest. One drink ticket comes with admission.

If you become a sustaining donor of the Ella Baker Center today with a donation of $10 a month or more, you will receive complimentary admission to Together We Rise!

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Film Screening: TAPPED @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists’ Hall
Oct 1 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

TAPPED is a beautifully filmed, compelling documentary in which Stephanie Soechtig and Sara Olsen explore the environmental consequences of bottled water. TAPPED does to bottled water what Food, INC and Super Size Me did to the food monopolies. The film begins with: By 2030, two thirds of the world will not have access to clean drinking water. The film also covers chemical pollution, plastic pollution, mile wide plastic soups in the ocean, water privatization and community water rights.
This event is a result of our partnering with Food and Water Watch, a national organization that champions healthy food and clean water for all. We will be joined by Liz Solorio of FWW, Juliana Gonzales of The Watershed Project and Matt Freiberg, chair of our own Berkeley Climate Action Coalition water committee for a discussion after the film.
Please bring finger food and/or drinks to share at 6:30 for Meet and Greet before the film. In keeping with the film’s message let’s try not to bring any plastic containers!

For more info: info [at] transitionberkeley.com
website: http://www.transitionberkeley.com

This event is co-sponsored by Transition Berkeley, Food and Water Watch and BFUU’s Social Justice Committee.
Suggested donation $5-$10. No one turned away.
Wheelchair accessible.

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Oct
2
Fri
CANCELLED: Demand Alameda County Release Yuvette’s Henderson’s Autopsy Report! @ Alameda County Forensic Sciences Complex
Oct 2 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm

“We have cancelled the event at the Alameda Coroner’s office this Friday because they have released the autopsy report. This is a victory and couldn’t of happened without your support! More details to follow.”

— APTP   https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=647064612099995&id=513658562107268

Nearly nine months have passed since Yuvette Henderson was gunned down by Emeryville Police on the Oakland Emeryville border and the Alameda County Coroner has yet to release her autopsy report.

The family and community of Yuvette Henderson have been seeking justice and closure only to be met with with a wall of silence from the various agencies involved. Crucial to getting answers on exactly what happened that day is a full release of the Coroner’s autopsy report. The fact that a full nine months have passed since since her death on February 3, 2015 and still no autopsy report has been released makes serious doubt about the State’s willingness to be transparent in the interest of justice.

Gather with us this Friday to demand that they immediately release the long overdue report.

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Great Wall: Eyes on Oakland: Attitudes Towards Surveillance. @ Great Wall of Oakland
Oct 2 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

THIS EXHIBIT CONTINUES THROUGH NOVEMBER 1ST.

Join us for our opening screening of the 2015/2016 season on October 2nd at 5:00pm!

Eyes on Oakland is a community-powered, art-meets-journalism initiative that seeks to inform and engage residents across Oakland about the different types of surveillance technology used by local police. A collaboration between the Mobile Arts Platform and The Center for Investigative Reporting, Eyes on Oakland featured two key venues: a participatory installation in the “Who Is Oakland?” exhibit at the Oakland Museum of California, and pop-up outings around Oakland with the Mobile Arts Platform, a classic Ford Falcon van retrofitted as a roving newsroom. The work was sourced by information from CIR’s reporting, and driven by creative insights gathered from Oakland residents. So far, Eyes on Oakland has directly incorporated attitudes on surveillance from hundreds of residents, and inspired a host of fact-based conversations on the balance between privacy and public safety in communities across the city and at the Oakland Museum.

Hope to see you there!

The Great Wall located on West Grand Avenue between Broadway and Valley Street, next door to Luka’s Taproom and Lounge.

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Wombyn Divine @ Alan Blueford Center for Justice
Oct 2 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm
This First Friday come see young bay area women express their divinity.

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Oct
3
Sat
Bernie and Beyond. Socialist Perspectives on the Sanders Campaign. @ Starry Plough
Oct 3 @ 2:00 pm – 4:30 pm

Is it enough to “Feel the Bern?” Or do we need to build a movement that will last beyond 2016 and transform America and Mother Earth? Our Suds, Snacks and Socialism forum is inviting speakers from different political perspectives to join us discussing these are other important questions.

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Caravan For Justice Kickoff @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Oct 3 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

We are in a state of emergency. Law enforcement violence against black and brown communities is increasing at an alarming rate, and we need to be ready to respond.

At an early age we learn how to prepare for emergencies and natural disasters. We learn how to put out fires, how to board up our homes, or how to drop under a desk. Communities of color now need training on how to respond to more frequent incidents of violence both on the streets and inside of jails and prisons.

So the Ella Baker Center, in partnership with the ACLU of California, is organizing a #CaravanForJustice from October 3-10 that will travel throughout the state to mobilize communities against police violence and spread awareness about the Mobile Justice CA app.

The caravan willl launch at a rally in Oakland on Saturday, October 3 from 2-4 pm at Oscar Grant Plaza. The rally, co-sponsored by the Anti Police-Terror Project and Black Lives Matter Bay Area, will feature testimonials from Oscar Grant’s uncle, as well as from family members of victims of police violence in the United Kingdom, who are joining the caravan.

Come out and learn how you can get involved in local and statewide work to end police violence in California! RSVP here.

During stops in 9 counties throughout the state, the #CaravanForJustice will:

  • Educate community members about how to use the Mobile Justice CA app
  • Gain support for the Racial and Identity Profiling Act of 2015 (AB 953)
  • Highlight the presence of regional Justice Teams for Truth and Reinvestment
  • Engage people in a global conversation about police violence

Join us and be part of a movement in motion to end law enforcement violence.

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Arts & Abolishing Prisons
Oct 3 @ 3:00 pm – 11:00 pm

Embedded image permalink

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Strike Debt Bay Area – Fighting Back Against Unjust Debt @ Oscar Grant Plaza amphitheater
Oct 3 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

 photo debtors-assembly-6-6-15-fp_zpsd4iiri17.jpg

Come and help us draw awareness to and fight unjust debt!
Come get connected with SDBA’s many projects!
  • student debt resistance
  • organizing for public banking.
  • advocating for Postal banking.
  • ongoing study group
  • helping out America’s only non-profit check-cashing organization and fighting against usurious for-profit pay-day lenders and their ilk
  • our famous Strike Debt radio program
  • staging Debtors’ Assemblies
  • Restaging our recent presentation on money and debt at the US Social Forum
  • Working on debarring US Banks that have been convicted of felonies from municipal contracts
  • saving the Berkeley Post Office and stopping the Staples non-union takeover of good Post Office jobs
  • and much more!
 Also check out our website, our twitter feed, and our Facebook page.
Strike Debt Bay Area is an offshoot of Occupy Oakland and Strike Debt, itself an offshoot of Occupy Wall Street.

Strike Debt – Principles of Solidarity

Strike Debt is building a debt resistance movement. We believe that most individual debt is illegitimate and unjust. Most of us fall into debt because we are increasingly deprived of the means to acquire the basic necessities of life: health care, education, and housing. Because we are forced to go into debt simply in order to live, we think it is right and moral to resist it.

We also oppose debt because it is an instrument of exploitation and political domination. Debt is used to discipline us, deepen existing inequalities, and reinforce racial, gendered, and other social hierarchies. Every Strike Debt action is designed to weaken the institutions that seek to divide us and benefit from our division. As an alternative to this predatory system, Strike Debt advocates a just and sustainable economy, based on mutual aid, common goods, and public affluence.

Strike Debt is committed to the principles and tactics of political autonomy, direct democracy, direct action, creative openness, a culture of solidarity, and commitment to anti-oppressive language and conduct. We struggle for a world without racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and all forms of oppression.

Strike Debt holds that we are all debtors, whether or not we have personal loan agreements. Through the manipulation of sovereign and municipal debt, the costs of speculator-driven crises are passed on to all of us. Though different kinds of debt can affect the same household, they are all interconnected, and so all household debtors have a common interest in resisting.

Strike Debt engages in public education about the debt-system to counteract the self-serving myth that finance is too complicated for laypersons to understand. In particular, it urges direct action as a way of stopping the damage caused by the creditor class and their enablers among elected government officials. Direct action empowers those who participate in challenging the debt-system.

Strike Debt holds that we owe the financial institutions nothing, whereas, to our friends, families and communities, we owe everything. In pursuing a long-term strategy for national organizing around this principle, we pledge international solidarity with the growing global movement against debt and austerity.

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Should Socialists Support Bernie Sanders? @ The Woman's Building
Oct 3 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

The Democratic primary campaign of Bernie Sanders has ignited a new enthusiasm among many who are fed up with the status-quo of politics in the United States. Tens of thousands have joined rallies to hear Sanders decry the billionaire class and call for an end to inequality. Many on the socialist left have embraced the campaign. Others have argued against support for Sanders, calling instead for socialists to organize independently of the Democratic Party.

Join the International Socialist Organization in a panel discussion on the question of support for the Sanders campaign and socialist strategy during elections. Speakers will represent both support and opposition to supporting the Sanders primary campaign.

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Oct
4
Sun
Movie Night at the Omni: “Black Ain’t Black” @ Omni Commons ballroom
Oct 4 @ 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Black is… Black Ain’t is a 1994 award-winning feature-length documentary by Marlon Riggs. It explores the multiplicity of expressions of African American identity with a backdrop of Creole cooking.

Synopsis: Riggs uses his grandmother’s gumbo as a metaphor for the rich diversity of Black identities. The film traverses the country interviewing African Americans young and old, rich and poor, Northern and Southern, rural and urban, gay and straight, as they discuss the numerous, often contested definitions of Blackness. Riggs mixes performances by choreographer Bill T. Jones and poet Essex Hemphill with commentary by noted activist Angela Davis, and cultural critics bell hooks, Cornel West, Michele Wallace, Barbara Smith and Maulana Karenga to create a flavorful stew of personal testimony, music, and history.

While Black Is…Black Ain’t looks at Black diversity, many speakers tell of their pain at having been silenced or excluded because they were perceived as “not Black enough” or conversely “too Black.” Black Is…Black Ain’t also provides a critique of sexism, patriarchy, homophobia, colorism and cultural nationalism in the family, church and other Black institutions.

Riggs himself is a participant in the film. He is shown in a race against time to finish the film, struggling with his precarious health and mortality. Riggs died of AIDS in April 1994 at the age of 37 before the film was completed. Adhering to Riggs’ notes, his colleagues on the production team completed the film.

Sponsored by Optik Allusions. Doors open at 6, screening at 6:30. Suggested donation of $5, and there will be complimentary popcorn as usual!

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Oct
5
Mon
Lessons from the Landless: Food Sovereignty, Occupation, and Public Universities @ Fireside Room
Oct 5 @ 6:00 pm – 7:45 pm

Lessons from the Landless: Food Sovereignty, Occupation, and Public Universities

What is the connection between occupations, food sovereignty, and public education? The Landless Workers Movement (MST) in Brazil has some answers! As important educational spaces, their occupations challenge the capitalist orientation of agricultural education in the conflicts between agribusiness and agroecology, private property and the public good. A leader from the MST will facilitate a discussion on how occupations of University farmland in Brazil and California can create bridges for important exchanges of experience and help build the Food Sovereignty movement.

Joelci Dannacena has been a militant organizer with The Landless Rural Workers Movement of Brazil (MST) sector of the MST for over twenty years, with degrees in economics and cooperative administration. Her main tasks have been the organization of agroindustries for the produce of agrarian reform settlements. She is currently hosted here in the Bay Area as one of several young organizers sent by the MST to deepen relations with US-based movements for food sovereignty, agrarian reform, and anti-oppression.

Joelci will introduce the MST and explain why they struggle for land, agrarian reform, and the transformation of society. Then she will talk about the current MST occupation of farmland owned by the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil. (http://www.mstbrazil.org/news/students-declare-support-landless-families-occupying-esalq-area).

She welcomes and invites all those interested in food sovereignty and justice to join in discussion, especially those who have participated in Occupy the Farm and the local food sovereignty struggle over the Gill Tract Farm at UC Berkeley.

Also present will be:
– Gustavo Oliveira, a PhD candidate in geography at UC Berkeley. He has worked as translator for La Via Campesina since 2009 and currently participates in the Friends of the MST solidarity network in the US.

– Rebecca Tarlau, part of the national coordinating committee of the Friends of the MST in the United States and also a scholar of the MST Education system. She is currently a Postdoctoral Scholar in Education at Stanford University.

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Occupy Forum: The fight against environmental racism and injustice, climate change, and gentrification in Bayview @ Unite Here Local 2 Hall
Oct 5 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm


information, discussion & community! Monday night Forum!!
OccupyForum is an opportunity for open and respectful dialogue
on all sides of these critically important issues!

Occupyforum presents

Report from the Frontlines: The fight against environmental racism and injustice, climate change, and gentrification in Bayview Hunters Point

With Marie Harrison and Bradley Angel (Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice) and Dr. Ray Tompkins, (Clean Air Health Alliance)

Bayview/Hunters Point has historically served as an industrial dumping ground and suffers from a shockingly high degree of environmental degradation. This predominately low to very-low income community suffers from chronic health problems as a direct result of the toxic environment. Within BVHP, residents experience among the highest rates of breast, cervical and prostate cancer, asthma and respiratory illnesses in California.

Environmental Racism refers to the institutional rules, regulations, policies or government and/or corporate decisions that deliberately target certain communities for locally undesirable land uses and lax enforcement of zoning and environmental laws, resulting in communities being disproportionately exposed to toxic and hazardous waste based upon race. Environmental racism is caused by several factors, including intentional neglect, the alleged need for a receptacle for pollutants in urban areas, and a lack of institutional power and low land values of people of color. It is a well-documented fact that communities of color and low-income communities are disproportionately impacted by polluting industries (and very specifically, hazardous waste facilities) and lax regulation of these industries.

Come to OccupyForum to hear updates and discussion about fighting back in the Bayview including:

Toxic and radioactive contamination and gentrification;

New information on incorrect government air quality monitoring; and new community monitoring and October 6th 2 pm meeting of San Francisco Health Commission at 25 Van Ness, Room 338;

The new Bayvieew Hunters Point Environmental Justice Task Force and how it is helping residents file pollution complaints and hold industry and government accountable;

Impacts of climate cchange and sea level rise;

Proposal from Greeenaction for an action this fall targeting the notorious developer/gentrifier Lennar Corporation, and government, on these issues of pollution, climate change and gentrification.

http://www.ejnet.org/ej/principles.html

Time will be allotted for Q&A, discussion and announcements.

Wheelchair accessible, ride shares announced.

Donations to occupy forum to cover costs are encouraged; No one turned away!

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Oct
6
Tue
Oct 6 @ 12:49 am – 1:49 am
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Nurses on the Picket Line @ Contra Costa Medical Center
Oct 6 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

 

 

Please join nurses in their demand that Contra Costa County Supervisors invest in the health and wellbeing of  county residents.  This is a matter of life and death. Every budget cycle in the last few years Contra Costa County Supervisors have attempted to divest from the Contra Costa County Health System.  Last year 63,000 Contra Costa County residents visited the ER, and 100 nurses left the System, leaving short staffing.  Nurses are scrambling to provide appropriate patient care.

Please join the nurses on their picket line. Any time is fine, but they are particularly looking for community support at noon on both days.

The flyer announcing the strike and asking for our support is here.

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Solitary Confinement: Settlement Hearing in Ashker v Brown @ Oakland Federal Courthouse
Oct 6 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

There will be a hearing on the joint motion for preliminary approval of the settlement agreement in Ashker v. Brown before JudgeWilken.

Her order for the hearing stated that she was leaning in favor of issuing a preliminary approval.

Everyone is welcome to attend.  It’s a public hearing.

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Berkeley City Council Worksession on Tasers @ Berkeley Old City Hall
Oct 6 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

Worksession:
Stanford Study: Electronic Control Weapons Study (e.g. Tasers ©)
Public Comment – Items on this agenda only

Here is the Stanford Criminal Justice Center Report on Tasers, which will be discussed:

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/35320626/2015-10-06%20Agenda%20Packet.pdf

 

TASING MINORITIES, HOMELESS, AUTISTIC, MENTALLY ILL AND ANY OTHER HUMAN IS NOT THE SIGN OF AN ENLIGHTENED SOCIETY.

NO TO TASERS FOR THE BERKELEY POLICE!
YES TO DE-ESCALATION AND POLICE DE-MILITARIZATION.

Come speak out against the madness. Tell the City Council no to police tasers at Old City Hall, Allston & MLK.

=====

Taser Fact Sheet

TASERS CAN CAUSE DEATH

Police say that Taser use saves lives because they don’t have to shoot someone if they use Tasers effectively. However, Tasers are NOT AN ALTERNATIVE to using lethal force. Sure, it would be nice, but police are trained to meet a lethal threat with a gun-not a taser. In fact, Tasers are mostly used against unarmed people, not people who could really kill or injure an officer!

From 2001 until February of 2014, the ACLU and the website www.electronic village.blogspot.com have documented 547 Taser related deaths. There have been even more since then.

In May of 2012, the American Heart Association’s premier journal, “Circulation” published a study by Dr. Douglas Zipes, of Indiana University’s Krannert Institute of Cardiology. He found that a shock from the Taser “can cause cardiac electric capture and provoke cardiac arrest” as a result of an abnormally rapid heart rate and uncontrolled, fluttering contractions. Yes, Taser shocks, especially to the chest, can kill.

TASERS DON’T REDUCE IN CUSTODY DEATHS OR OFFICER INJURIES

According to a recent study published in the American Journal of Cardiology, the main reason to employ Tasers is the belief that they reduce officer injuries and in custody deaths. After a comprehensive study involving 10 years worth of data from over 100 departments from across the country, this myth was disproved. “In conclusion, although considered by some a safer alternative to firearms, Taser deployment was associated with a substantial increase in in-custody sudden deaths in the early deployment period, with no decrease in firearm deaths or serious officer injuries.” (Am J Cardiol 2009;103:877� 880)

MISUSE OF TASERS

After completing an analysis of Phoenix Police Department use-of-force reports, The Arizona Republic found 377 incidents involving the use of a Taser. In nearly nine out of ten of the incidents, the subjects had posed no imminent threat to officers with any weapons.

As of May 28, 2014, the ACLU has called on Baltimore Police to put a moratorium on the use of Tasers since their use by police has DOUBLED since 2009.

According to Gabriel Russell in Law Enforcement Magazine (September 2013), Tasers are so “safe” and “effective” that they are “overused” by police. “So much so that over-dependence on it has resulted in an avalanche of use-of-force lawsuits and unfavorable court decisions across the county.”

TASERS CAN INVITE LITIGATION

Courts have found Tasers constitute the use of “excessive force” and thus violate the Fourth Amendment, provided the Taser was used in an instance when its deployment was unjustified. Victims of Taser use can seek compensation, but only if an agency’s use guidelines are deficient and if training is so poor that it could be considered “deliberately indifferent.

In September, 2009, Taser changed its product warnings. Taser’s ECDs weapons are now branded as “less lethal” instead of “non lethal,” and its training materials warn that “exposure in the chest area near the heart � could lead to cardiac arrest.”<

80-90% of those who are tasered, were unarmed when they were arrested and tased. Most policies guiding Taser use allow police to follow a “Continuum of Force” that directs officers to use Tasers as an alternative to the use of hands, feet and a baton. It also instructs them to use Tasers to overcome “active resistance” by an individual, including behavior that does not pose a physical threat to anyone. This is basically giving police license to use Tasers against little old ladies who ask too many questions (as happened recently in Texas and elsewhere across the country).

POLICE CHOOSING ALTERNATIVES TO TASERS

As taser-related deaths and injuries have continued to rise (as well as the amount of Taser litigation), many departments are starting to abandon the weapon in favor of other means of suspect control. Currently, Memphis, Tennessee, San Francisco, California, and Las Vegas, Nevada have opted to ban the use of tasers by law enforcement. Additionally, a federal court has ruled that the pain inflicted by the taser gun constitutes excessive force by law enforcement. The courts don’t want police to electrocute people with their tasers unless they pose an immediate threat.

TASERS CONSTITUTE A FORM OF TORTURE

In 2007, The United Nations Committee on Torture declared that TASER electronic stun guns are a form of torture that can kill. At the time, it was recommended that Portugal “should consider giving up the use of the Taser X26,” as its use can have a grave physical and mental impact on those targeted, which violates the UN’s Convention against Torture”.

TASER STUDIES BIASED AND SAFETY OVERRATED

Peyman N. Azadani, MD, research associate at UCSF’s Department of Medicine and senior author Byron K. Lee, MD, associate professor of medicine in UCSF’s cardiology division, set out to gauge the accuracy of 50 published studies on the potential dangers of using TASER® products. The new study’s authors report that among the product safety studies they analyzed, the likelihood of a study concluding TASER® devices are safe was 75 percent higher when the studies were either funded by the manufacturer or written by authors affiliated with the company, than when studies were conducted independently.

PEOPLE OF COLOR AND THE MENTALLY ILL EXPERIENCE PROFILING

A 2011 report by New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) found widespread misuse of tasers. Albany police disproportionately deployed Tasers on blacks compared to whites. In the Albany incidents analyzed, 68 percent involved a Taser being used on a black person, while 28 percent of the city’s population is black. (10-18-14 The Times Union)

Approximately 30% of Taser incidents are against a people with mental illness.

In addition, the June 2014 issue of “The Psychiatric Bulletin” explains that”… the psychological effects of Taser use have not been investigated.”

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