Elizabeth Vega waits outside Memphis courtroom |
And arrested.
It was astonishing that Elizabeth Vega of St. Louis could
joke about it.
A veteran of four years in the Navy, a former journalist
and an activist, Vega came to Memphis during
MLK50 week. Unlike many wide-eyed, Beale Street-trekking, rib-munching tourists
that the City of Memphis had spent millions to woo to town, Vega had a
different idea.
Street theater actors call attention to abuses in ICE detention centers; Elizabeth Vega in light blue top |
Vega took part in a street theater performance in front of the Shelby
County Justice Center. Wearing scrubs to simulate prison garb and chained together with about 10
other women -- and led by an ICE agent male “actor” -- they were bringing attention
to forced labor and other abuses in ICE detention centers.
WHAT WOULD MLK
DO?
Vega displays her Memphis 'souvenir' |
“We have nothing to lose but our chains,” they chanted,
highlighting the irony of MLK 50, that although society has progressed in some
ways, in many ways things are the same or worse – such as poverty in Memphis and such as
police spying on and suppressing organized protest.
“No change, 50 years. All these police,” Yuleiny Escobar
shouted into a megaphone amid a massive presence of police tactical officers
and equipment, including a surveillance van and officers filming the crowd with
a DSLR camera.
Police pulled Vega down by her hair Photo by Andrea Morales for MLK50: Justice in Journalism |
This was how “the people” honored Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.’s legacy. What would MLK do? Would he show up in the streets with these
brave women, or would he be sitting at a luncheon or banquet among elected
officials and “dignitaries?”
‘POLICE LOST
THEIR DAMN MINDS’
“Memphis police violated civil rights and lost their damn
minds,” Vega said, awaiting her fate in court inside the very building where
she had stood less than 24 hours earlier and only a handful of hours after she
had been released from jail after getting bonded out.
Police try to wave away our camera as they handcuff Yuleiny Escobar |
“They grabbed Manuel (Duran), and he was a journalist,”
Vega said. “As a former journalist, I take that very serious. I pointed out he
was a journalist. I was like, Let him go.
Manuel Duran broadcasts live, moments before arrest |
“Next thing I know they grabbed me by my hair. And then
the rest is just sort of a blur. It was so brutal that I kind of checked out a
little bit. I didn’t really pass out; I
think I just went into myself. I’ve been
arrested a lot of times for civil disobedience, and this is one of the most
brutal encounters I have had with police. It was on another level. And we hadn’t done anything.
TARGETING ACTIVISTS
“Part of it was they were targeting folks. There had been
an incident the day before. They didn’t
arrest me then. They came to the sidewalk and they threatened to arrest me for
refusing to show my ID.”
At that encounter, citizens in a North Memphis
neighborhood were handing out flyers urging others to boycott a small, corner store
after a store clerk allegedly shot a 17-year-old for stealing an 89-cent watermelon wine
cooler. The young man, Dorian Harris, died, but his body was not found until
two days later.
“I don’t have to show you my ID,” Vega told police, who
somehow decided to hassle her and local government watchdog Hunter Demster out
of 30 or so persons standing on a sidewalk across the street from the store.
“And then they said that they were going to arrest me,
and I sat down on the sidewalk and began to sing. Then they said that were
going to get me, and I guess they kept their promise (the next day).
“I’m still not afraid, more resolved,” Vega said. “They
are the ones who showed their inhumanity and disregard for everything that our
country is supposed to represent."
‘I’M SURPRISED
PEOPLE ARE NOT RISING UP’
“They do whatever the hell they want to do here in
Memphis. I’m surprised people are not
rising up.
“I am a veteran, a grandmother, a former journalist. I do
believe some of those patriotic things that we talk about. That’s why I fight so
hard. I believe in that ideal.
“That’s how Memphis treats its women and veterans, and on
the eve of the anniversary of MLK’s assassination. All the pomp and circumstance,
and where have we gone; what have we accomplished 50 years later?
Officer yanks Zyanya Cruz by the arm |
Of the nine persons arrested, one pleaded no contest for
“time served” – his one night in jail – and paid costs. Seven others saw their
next court date set for later in April or May.
DID ‘WASHINGTON’ TARGET LATINO REPORTER?
While local police seemed to be going after well-known
and often spied-upon activists, the Multi-Agency Gang Unit and Organized Crime Unit detectives and officers seemed to
have one more target: the Latino journalist. Although Duran was shooting video
of the action and reporting – you know, doing his job and not stealing a
bicycle or punching anyone’s nose -- he was grabbed off the sidewalk as Vega
and other female “ICE prisoners” shouted to police, “He’s a reporter!”
Duran’s family paid his $100 cash bond at 9 that night, but he was
not released like the others who had made bond and gotten out in the wee hours
of April 4. A native of El Salvador, Duran allegedly was not a citizen or
resident alien. Duran’s case was reset until the following day, April 5, and it
was dismissed – nolle prosequi – with no costs.
Good news, right? Not so fast. It’s the Trump era.
Later, courthouse sources told us that Duran’s capture
came from “the top” – meaning high up in the Trump administration. Sure enough,
not only had Duran been targeted, two ICE agents were in the courtroom waiting
for him. They did not grab him in front of media or supporters as some have
reported. But after he was seized by ICE during jail release-processing out of
the public eye, they skipped over two stages of detention – one temporary
center in Memphis and one 30 miles away in Mason, Tennessee – and sent him
directly to LaSalle Detention Center in Jena, Louisiana, about 350 miles away
and the last stop before deportation.
POLICE TRAP: PERFECT STORM
The difficulty for Duran and other First Amendment
practitioners was they were marching into a three-part, perfect storm of a
police trap:
1—This was supposed to be Tourism Week, and like homeless
people, demonstrators were not what City Hall wanted visitors to see. What a
great idea if we just rounded up activists to get them off the streets?
Further, outside law enforcement, including the FBI, was in town. It is likely that the extra law enforcement presence, surveillance and tension heightened the likelihood of a confrontation.
Further, outside law enforcement, including the FBI, was in town. It is likely that the extra law enforcement presence, surveillance and tension heightened the likelihood of a confrontation.
2—Activists had promoted on Facebook a “Rolling Block
Party” to occur April 3, the day before the 50th anniversary of
MLK’s murder in Memphis. The only time and location widely publicized on social media
was 2:01 p.m. at 201 Poplar, the address of the county courthouse and jail.
Since police and fusion centers now monitor social media of known activists,
law enforcement was waiting for them en masse.
There were also limited posts on social media about the "Rolling Block Party" taking the fun to Graceland at 4:44 p.m. and the Hernando-DeSoto Bridge at 6:30 on April 3.
There were also limited posts on social media about the "Rolling Block Party" taking the fun to Graceland at 4:44 p.m. and the Hernando-DeSoto Bridge at 6:30 on April 3.
Activists turn out at FedEx -- with purple airplane tails in the background |
3—Earlier in the day, the “rolling block party” rolled
into a four-lane street just outside the FedEx terminal and stopped their cars.
Partiers jumped out, danced to music
coordinated on every car radio and held signs with messages like, “Things are
not OK,” “Poorest City in the Nation,” and “Economic Apartheid: Profits to the
Top, Misery to the Bottom.”
The police showed up, but they stood back. They had never
seen anything quite like this and were unsure what to do. In fact, they told
organizers that they were waiting on command staff to show up. Eventually, after they threatened to arrest
the drivers, the block party rolled away.
Standing down was a wise move as there were no arrests,
and no one got hurt. Motorists were inconvenienced – some were perturbed and some
were amused -- for about 25 minutes.
Nonetheless, no doubt there was some sentiment among MPD
command staff and maybe at City Hall that these people had made us look bad –
at the edge of the city’s corporate crown jewel, with purple FedEx airplane
tails in the background, and smack dab in the middle of MLK50 week. These
activists, who were more aligned with MLK values than the politicians who waxed
and waned over the civil rights martyr at banquets, had telegraphed their next
blow, and it was at the epi-center of criminal justice, or injustice, in this
city.
Vega (light blue top) watches police arrest an action marshal |
Officers were waiting for them, and they were not going to get fooled again. In fact, it was not uniformed officers waiting in the street at 201 Poplar – it was officers in TACT gear, some or all part of a Multi-Agency Gang Unit which operates to disrupt concerted efforts in the community – which apparently includes First Amendment practitioners as well as Vice Lords, Ghost Mob and Gangster Disciples.
“What they did was absolutely egregious,” said Vega, who
was able to press out a laugh amid the injustice and outrage over the seizing
of a journalist. As she pushed up her sleeve to demonstrate:
“I came to Memphis, and all I got was this big bruise.”
Filmmaker Gary
Moore operates the educational non-profit Citizens Media Resource and Moore
Media Strategies consultancy.