Searching for Answers to a Police Killing

by Darwin Bond-Graham

Originally published at CounterPunch

Oakland.

All summer long the slaying of teenager Alan Blueford by a police officer festered in the city of Oakland, a metropolis already stained by its troubled police department which for nearly ten years has been spiraling toward federal receivership due to its institutionalized culture of brutality and misconduct. It was no surprise then that the first meeting of the City Council last night, in its new session after the Summer recess, was met by over one hundred outraged protesters and the family of the young man whose death at the hands of OPD frustratingly remains a mystery, with all known facts indicating an unjustifiable murder. The internal police department investigation of Alan Blueford’s killing drags on, as do virtually any and all other official investigations, studies, and reports intended to bring about transparency and accountability within Oakland’s police department. Nothing seems to be working.

“According to the Coronor’s report, my son’s body was removed at 1:25 in the morning,” said Alan’s father, Adam Blueford, before the council, describing the haste with which the police cleaned up the scene of Alan’s demise. “How can a murder investigation be done in less than one hour?!” he asked incredulously.

Alan Blueford was shot by officer Miguel Masso around 12:25 am on the morning of May 6 around 92nd Avenue and Birch Street in deep east Oakland after a brief foot chase. Alan had been waiting with a friend for a ride home after watching a boxing match. Police initially said Alan was in a “gun battle” with the officer, but then backpedaled when evidence showed Blueford hadn’t fired a shot. There had been no shootout, only a one way volley of gunfire. Blueford had committed no crime or offense prior to being confronted and chased by the police.

The next police claim, that Blueford was taken to the hospital after being wounded, was also later proven false; days after his death it became known that Alan died on the scene from gunshot wounds. The officer, who it turns out also shot himself in the leg, was taken to the county medical center. These were only the first false reports in a series of troubling claims. “Lies,” say the family.

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Demanding justice at City Hall

From Oakland North:

 

Rally demands justice for Alan Blueford

by Terri Kay

Originally posted at Workers.org

Oakland, Calif. — More than 100 people rallied at City Hall on July 31 to demand justice for Alan Blueford. An 18-year-old Black youth, Blueford was killed by a police officer just days before he would have graduated from Skyline High School. Guilty only of standing on a corner while Black, Blueford was shot three times by Officer Miguel Masso of the Oakland Police Department on May 6 and left to bleed out and die on the street.

The coroner’s report, released this month after mass pressure, stated that there was no gunpowder on Alan’s hands and no drugs or alcohol in his system. The July 31 rally demanded that Officer Masso be fired; that he be tried for murder for Blueford’s death; and that the Oakland City Council use their authority to push for the immediate release of the police report.

Justice for Alan Blueford

Speakers at the rally included Blueford’s parents, Jeralynn Blueford and Adam Blueford; and attorneys Dan Siegel and Walter Riley. Hip-hop artist Jabari Shaw performed. Boots Riley, the final speaker, spoke about how the mainstream media have hyped people into believing that cops are really trying to protect them. He said, “When police do kill, they are usually pre-justified by the media and [TV] shows like ‘Law and Order.’”

In a lead-up to the rally, Tanesha Blye, Blueford’s cousin, addressed the City Council on July 26, and then served people’s subpoenas to the eight city council members and Mayor Jean Quan, demanding their attendance at the rally. None of the council members nor the mayor showed for the event, so the Justice 4 Alan Blueford Coalition posted a huge “notice of termination” announcement on the doors to City Hall. The notice included the demands stated above, a repeal of the Officers’ Bill of Rights and an end to the “stop and frisk” laws, which have become “stop and kill” laws.

Tribute to Alan Blueford in Tracy

‘Justice 4 Alan Blueford’ campaign gears up

Originally posted at Workers.org

by Terriy Kay

Oakland, Calif. – The “Justice 4 Alan Blueford” campaign went into high gear during mid-July, culminating in the family receiving the coroner’s report, after two months of stalling, and the filing of a federal civil rights and wrongful death lawsuit. The campaign also held a large coalition meeting, broadening the support base.

Blueford was just 18 years old when he was killed by Officer Miguel Masso of the Oakland Police Department on May 6. A Black youth, Blueford was a month away from graduating from Oakland’s Skyline High School when he became the victim of a random OPD stop and frisk, and was detained without cause with two of his friends. The OPD has changed its stories several times about why they stopped the three Black youths, how Masso was shot (Masso later admitted shooting himself), how Blueford was shot, and any medical care Blueford did or didn’t receive.

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Blueford family subpoenas the Oakland City Council

Tanesha Blye subpoenas the Oakland City Council

Family members of Alan Blueford subpoenaed the Oakland City Council today, demanding they attend a rally outside City Hall on Tuesday, July 31. The City Council previously had a meeting planned for that date, their last of the summer, which they Blueford family planned to attend in order to speak out about the misinformation spread about Alan and his killing by Oakland police officer Miguel Masso. Since that meeting was canceled, the family decided to organize a rally instead so they could tell their story directly to the people of Oakland.

Alan’s cousin, Tanesha Blueford, addressed the City Council during the Open forum, which was also attended by a number of supporters of the Justice 4 Alan Blueford campaign. After stating the details of the case and how the Oakland Police Department had lied both to the Blueford family and the people of Oakland–including stating that Alan had been in a “gun battle” when it is now clearly false–she subpoeaned the 8 members of the City Council and Mayor Jean Quan.

Each member of the Oakland City Council was given a copy of the following subpoena on Thursday, July 26, 2012. The family and their supporters will rally outside of Oakland City Hall on Tuesday, July 31 at 5pm.

Rally at City Hall, Tuesday July 31!

Tuesday, July 31 was supposed to be the last Oakland City Council meeting of the summer. The Blueford family had planned to return to the City Council on that date to describe how they have been lied to by city officials and OPD, but the meeting was canceled. Instead, the Blueford family will rally in front of City Hall and they are calling on their supporters to come downtown, hear their story and fight for Justice 4 Alan Blueford!

Demand Justice 4 Alan Blueford!

Tuesday, July 31, 5pm

Oakland City Hall, 14th & Broadway

The Blueford family is demanding the release of the police report on Alan’s killing and the firing and prosecution of Miguel Masso, the officer who killed him.

Oakland Police Officer-Involved Shooting of Alan Blueford Raises Questions

Originally posted at East Bay Express

The family of Blueford, who was shot and killed by an Oakland police officer, files a federal lawsuit.

By Ali Winston

Oakland is once again in an uproar over a fatal police shooting of an African-American man. In 2007, it was Gary King Jr. In 2009, it was Oscar Grant. In 2010, it was Derrick Jones. In 2011, it was Raheim Brown. This year, it’s Alan Dwayne Blueford. The eighteen-year-old Skyline High student was shot and killed on May 6 at 92nd Avenue and Birch Street after fleeing a stop by two Oakland police officers, just weeks before his graduation.

The shooting doesn’t just mark another incident in the Oakland Police Department’s history of killing unarmed suspects, especially young black men, but it also raises questions about the department’s vetting process. The officer involved had been accused of excessive force before, while working for the New York Police Department.

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Alan Blueford Would Have Graduated High School in June

 

By Dady Chery
Haiti Chery

Alan_BluefordEighteen-year old high-school senior and Oakland resident Alan Blueford was shot to death by police on May 6 under curious circumstances. The policeman who killed Blueford was also shot, but the origin of this officer’s wounds, his type of injury, and even his name were initially shielded by the California Police Officers’ Bill of Rights as numerous versions of the incident were disseminated from the police to the press.

According to Alan’s father Adam Blueford:

“When they told me my son had exchanged gunfire, I knew it wasn’t Alan they were talking about…. I’ve heard so many stories since then that I couldn’t believe and now I want the truth.”

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Alan Blueford Tribute