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Community BBQ at Arroyo Park

Saturday, April 13, 1-5pm

Olive St. & Ritchie St., Oakland, CA

The Justice 4 Alan Blueford coalition is hosting a community BBQ in Arroyo Park on Saturday, April 13th. We hope you’ll come out with friends and family to eat from the best offset smoker in town, play, and connect as we build the strength of our community.

Expect delicious home-cooked food, great music, powerful speakers, kid-friendly activities, a nurse’s station – all donated to this community event in honor of Alan Blueford, a Skyline High School student who was murdered by OPD Officer Miguel Masso almost one year ago on May 6th, 2012.

Letter to OPD Compliance Director Thomas Frazier

Dear Mr. Frazier, 

The Justice 4 Alan Blueford Coalition[i] was created after the death of 18-year-old Alan Blueford at the hands of Oakland Police Officer Miguel Masso on May 6th, 2012. Eight months after Alan’s death, investigation reports have not yet been completed, Officer Miguel Masso remains on paid leave, and justice has not been served. We seek redress for these wrongs.

The Justice 4 Alan Blueford Coalition has made specific demands[ii] of Oakland and its Police Department regarding Alan’s death, two of which are directly in your purview.

Specifically, the Justice 4 Alan Blueford Coalition demands that

  • Officer Miguel Masso be fired from the Oakland Police force.
  • The de facto ‘Stop & Frisk’ policies of the Oakland Police which ultimately resulted in Alan Blueford’s death be terminated immediately.

We note that the refusal of the Oakland Police Department to even consider these demands is evidence that they have no commitment to enforcing their own policies and are uninterested in fulfilling their obligation to protect the safety and civil liberties of those they interact with. Therefore we believe you need take action on these demands, and we request a face-to-face meeting with you as soon as possible to discuss these issues and other concerns we have about the Oakland Police.

Officer Masso must be fired because factual evidence exists that:

  • he participated in an illegal ‘Stop & Frisk,’ precipitating Alan’s death
  • he did not activate his lapel camera as required by OPD protocols[iii]
  • he executed Alan Blueford, firing three shots at someone who was unarmed
  • he lied after the fact about the events of May 5th & May 6
  • he should never have been hired in the first place because of his NYPD record[iv]
  • he refused a prisoner medical treatment, as documented by NYPD Internal Affairs[v]
  • he is not psychologically fit to be a police officer, as evidenced by his own statements in the District Attorney’s report[vi].

The Compliance Director must be the one to fire Miguel Masso because:

  • the investigation into Alan’s death has been a farce[vii]
  • OPD, in light of their record, cannot be trusted to investigate one of their own
  • the Oakland Police have rarely fired one of their own

The Compliance Director has the authority to fire Miguel Masso under the remit authored by Judge Henderson:

In addition to the reasons listed above, the Order authored by Judge Henderson provides the grounds and the authority for firing Miguel Masso. Specifically, the Order grants the Compliance Director authority to deal with racial profiling, illegal stops, problems with use of force, and personnel, as follows:

“The Compliance Director will have the authority to direct specific actions by the City or OPD to attain or improve compliance levels, or remedy compliance errors… (2) personnel decisions, including but not limited to promotions; engagement of consultants; assignments; findings and disciplinary actions in misconduct cases and use-of-force reviews;”

This language by necessity directs that the Compliance Director act to intervene where the OPD has, through its actions or omissions, failed to be in compliance with the professional standards set forth in the Complaint that led to Judge Henderson’s Order.

The Compliance Director must stop OPD’s racially motivated de facto ‘Stop & Frisk’ policies.

  • Alan Blueford is dead because of racial profiling. The D.A.’s report and the officer’s statements therein are full of the racially biased codewords officers use (e.g. “baggy pants,” “waist band,” “hoodie”) to create “reasonable suspicion” for the stop of Alan and his friends.
  • Unless these policies are ended, racial profiling will continue in defiance of the negotiated settlement agreement and Judge Henderson’s order. New York City’s experience shows that simply recording racial data about stops is not sufficient to change police behavior. (Cf. Daniels v City of New York[viii])
  • Unless these practices are forbidden and violations sufficiently punished, police will continue to use any and every excuse to stop young men or color and terrorize them.
  • Unless these policies are ended, more deaths like those of Gary King[ix] and Alan Blueford will inevitably happen.
  • Unless these policies are ended, there will never be any possibility of community cooperation with police.

The Compliance Director must be the one to promulgate and implement policies which put an end to OPD’s de facto ‘Stop & Frisk’ protocols.

  • OPD has shown that it is incapable of following its own best procedures and practices, let alone implementing additional ones.
  • OPD has gone out of its way to hire as a consultant someone who believes that ‘Stop & Frisk’ is an effective policy tool, in direct opposition to Judge Henderson’s order and the Negotiated Settlement Agreement.

The Compliance Director has the authority to implement policies that put an end to de facto ‘Stop & Frisk’

The Compliance Director has the power and the responsibility to promulgate procedures that will stop racial profiling, thereby effectively halting OPD’s de facto Stop & Frisk policies, employed almost exclusively against young men of color. In particular, again quoting from Judge Henderson’s order

“The Compliance Director may, at his or her sole discretion, develop a corrective action plan for any task for which the Monitor finds Defendants to be out of compliance.”

“Within 60 days of his or her appointment, the Compliance Director will file a list of benchmarks for the OPD to address, resolve, and reduce… (2) incidents of racial profiling and bias-based policing;”.

We urge the Compliance Director to examine New York City’s proposed Community Safety Act[x] for ideas on how to create a constitutional environment for policing that will stop racial profiling and de facto ‘Stop & Frisk’ actions on the streets of Oakland. We encourage you to review Floyd v City of New York[xi], the ongoing lawsuit to curtail ‘Stop & Frisk’ in New York City, and to take note of the recent Federal District Court order instructing NYPD to cease and desist its ‘Stop & Frisk’ policies in and around private apartment complexes[xii].

Thank you for your time. We looking forward to meeting with you to further discuss how the civil rights of Oakland’s citizens can be protected and how Justice 4 Alan Blueford might be obtained. To contact us please call (510) 839-1200 and ask for Anne Weills or Dan Siegel.

The Justice for Alan Blueford (JAB) Coalition.


[iii] http://informant.kalwnews.org/2011/03/lapel-cameras-are-now-part-of-oakland-polices-uniform/

“Officers are required to turn their cameras on when they conduct a traffic or walking stop of a person”

[iv] Raphael Santiago v City of New York, Van Horn, Reveron and Masso, US District Court, Southern District of NY

[v] NYPD Internal Affairs Group #22, Investigating Officer’s Report, Case 07-0612, Bronx Case 07-050

“Mr. Santiago… asked one of the involved officers for medical treatment which was refused. A review of the Roll Call, pedigree information of the involved officers and the CCRB investigation led to the identification of PO Miguel Masso… as the officer who refused his request.”

Letter to Attorney General Kamala Harris

2/27/2013

JUSTICE FOR ALAN BLUEFORD

To: California Attorney General Kamala Harris

From: The Justice for Alan Blueford Coalition

We call upon you as the Attorney General for the State of California to prosecute Oakland Police Officer Miguel Masso for the murder of Alan Blueford.

Alan Blueford was 18 years old and was about to graduate from Skyline H.S. in Oakland. Just after midnight, on May 6, 2012, Alan and two of his friends were waiting for some girls to pick them up on 90th Ave, when a car slowly pulled up with its lights off. It was an OPD vehicle. Alan ran. OPD Officer Masso gave chase. A few blocks later, Alan was shot and killed by Masso. Masso also shot himself in the foot. Over a dozen witnesses said that Alan had no weapon and posed no threat to the officer.

Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley is derelict in her duties with respect to the Oakland Police Department. Despite the findings of continued non-compliance of the OPD by Federal Monitor Robert Warshaw, O’Malley has functioned as a rubber stamp for the OPD. She has failed to charge a single OPD officer for any criminal wrong-doing. Specifically on the killing of Alan Blueford, our coalition did a thorough analysis of the DA’s findings and found them to be biased, unprofessional and extraordinarily selective in its use of witness statements.

Some excerpts from our report:

ALAN BLUEFORD SHOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN STOPPED.

Mr. Blueford’s stop and subsequent death were the result of racial profiling. The officers had no reason to stop these individuals other than their own racial prejudices.  OPD statistics indicate that had the three individuals spotted across the street by Officers Masso and Fesmire been white, they would not have been stopped.”

THE USE OF DEADLY FORCE BY OFFICER MASSO WAS UNJUSTIFIED, BECAUSE THE EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT ALAN BLUEFORD DID NOT HAVE A GUN WHEN HE WAS SHOT.

The DA’s report states: ‘Officer Masso fired a third round at Mr. Blueford, which he fired because Mr. Blueford was still looking directly at him with the gun in his hand.’ At this point — by everyone’s account — Alan was on the ground, lying flat on his back.  Alan Blueford was mortally wounded by this third shot, and yet the only gun that could have been in Alan’s hand was found twenty feet away.” from where Alan lay, up an inclined driveway, ‘atop a pile of garden rocks’ and was only noticed several minutes later.”

We also call on you to reopen all the cases of OPD officer-involved shootings from the Riders case in 2003 to the present, due to the pattern of flawed and biased investigations which has shown an unprincipled relationship, lacking objectivity, between the D.A’s office and the Oakland Police Department which continues to lead to OPD officers being unjustly cleared and immune from criminal charges for brutality and murder.

Finally, we demand that you create a strategy and policy to end the criminalization of the Black and Brown Communities, stop the militarized Oakland Police Department from terrorizing Black and Brown Communities, and allow the Black and Brown communities of Oakland to exercise their right to political, social and economic self-determination.

We are holding a rally on Tuesday, March 5th at 3pm at Nancy O’Malley’s office at 12th and Oak St in Oakland. We demand that you announce the prosecution of OPD’s Miguel Masso for the murder of Alan Blueford.

See our website for our detailed analysis of the D.A.’s “investigative” report: http://justice4alanblueford.org

email us at:  alanblueford@yahoo.ca

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OPD receivership press conference

OUTREACH

For anyone interested in helping to pass out flyers to advertise the March Against Racial Profiling and to End Police Brutality happening this Saturday, here is today’s outreach action (Wednesday Nov. 7th):

  • Fruitvale BART 5-7pm
  • JAB members Tova, Ingrid, Dave, and Scott will be there, but not all at the same time, more people will only make a stronger statement to the rush hour BART crowd as well as be more attention grabbing.
  • If you are able, please pick up extra flyers at either The Brown Couch Cafe (340 14th St open till 5pm) or The 25th St Collective (477 25th St open till 6pm) before joining the JAB outreach team at BART.

 

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Blueford family meets with Mumia Abu-Jamal

Mumia speaks on Alan Blueford:


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Dignity and Resistance Coalition endorses Nov. 10 march

The Dignity and Resistance Coalition votes to endorse the November 10 March Against Police Brutality organized by the Justice for Alan Blueford Coalition.

The Dignity and Resistance coalition is actively organizing with workers at the Mi Pueblo grocery store chain (20 to 30 stores across Northern California, including two in Oakland) united in support of a boycott called by unions, community and religious groups here in opposition to racial discrimination, sexual harassment, unsafe working conditions, anti-union actions by the Mi Pueblo chain’s owner and the use of anti – immigrant policies being used to break up all the on-going organizing efforts against all the previously mentioned challenges. Dignity and Resistance was the main organizing coalition of the Mayday march from Fruitvale BART to San Antonio Park and onto Oscar Grant Plaza in May of 2012.

In opposition to racial profiling and opposition to killing by police officers, we stand in solidarity with those for justice for the victims of the police shootings, across the USA and across all borders.

ILWU Local 10 calls for Justice 4 Alan Blueford

The following letter was approved by the membership of ILWU Local 10 on October 18, 2012.

10/19/2012

To: U.S. District Court Judge Thelton Henderson;

Alameda District Attorney Nancy O’Malley

CC: Alameda Labor Council

Subject: Justice for Alan Blueford

On behalf of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, Local 10, we demand that the following actions be taken with respect to the case of the killing of Alan Blueford, an 18 year old Black youth, by Oakland Police Department Officer Miguel Masso:

  1. Stop the OPD from racial and ethnic profiling and violence against people of color;
  2. Institute stricter background checks, training, apprehension and gun use policies within the OPD;
  3. Fire Officer Masso and charge him with murder.

These demands are based on the following findings:

  • A Black person is killed by law enforcement once every 36 hours, per the Malcolm X Grass Roots Movement’s study
  •  The federal report monitoring the Oakland Police Department states that the Oakland Police Department pulls guns on Black and Latino people disproportionately to the number of times guns are pulled on whites and  two new reports by the  federal monitor criticized the OPD’s handling of officer-involved shootings and Occupy Oakland protests;
  •  Alan Blueford, an 18 year old Black youth, who was about to graduate from Skyline H.S., was killed by OPD Officer Masso on May 6;
  •  OPD has provided at least four versions of what happened the night Alan Blueford was killed, including the claim that the Officer Masso was shot in a gun battle with Alan Blueford, when he later admitted that he shot himself in the foot;
  •  The OPD:
  1. Engaged in racial profiling and violated numerous OPD policies;
  2. Engaged in a cover-up (Made numerous false statements and repeatedly changed their story);
  3. Showed complete disregard for the life of Alan Blueford and the dignity of the family;
  4. Had the coroner’s report withheld from the family for 3 months, and the police report for5 months;
  • The Coroner’s Report reveals that Alan Blueford had no gun residue on his hands, no alcohol or drugs in his system, and implies that Alan Blueford was shot while lying on his back;
  •  Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley’s report shows strong bias, for example, relying on Masso’s statement that Alan was standing when he first shot him, despite 11 out of 12 witness statements to the contrary

 

J4AB response to the DA’s investigation

Petition: Demand the full police report for Alan Blueford

It has been almost 5 months since since Officer Miguel Masso killed Alan Blueford on May 6. Alan Blueford’s family has sought clear answers from Oakland Police Department — they just want the truth about what happened to their son.

Oakland Police Department has consistently thwarted the Blueford family’s attempts to learn what happened to their loved one. They have released a series of conflicting stories about what happened on the night Alan was killed and are now refusing to provide the police report.

Oakland Police Department has had more than enough time to complete an investigation and release the report. It’s time to stop the misinformation and deception.

Demand that Mayor Jean Quan, City Council President Larry Reid, City Administrator Deanna Santana and Police Chief Jordan immediately release the full police report.

Click here to sign the petition hosted by the Ella Baker Center.