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| Mikey Powell |
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FRIENDS OF MIKEY POWELL c/o African Caribbean Self-Help Organisation Contacttel no: 0121 523 3408 (sorry - no ansaphone service) / Mobile Phone: 0774 008 3915 (brief messages may be left) Email: mikeypowell_friends@yahoo.co.uk Website: http://mysite.freeserve.com/mikeypowell_friends Brutal cops mowed down a suspect in their patrol car before spraying him with CS gas and beating him with batons, shocked witnesses claimed last night. Officers then sat on 38-year-old Michael Powell after swooping on the helpless dad-of-three like a “flock of vultures,” according to his distraught family. Less than two hours later Mr Powell, who had suffered a mental breakdown, was pronounced dead at Birmingham’s City Hospital after being taken into police custody. The alarming allegation that West Midlands Police officers deliberately knocked Mr Powell down emerged after eyewitnesses gave detailed statements to the Powell family’s solicitor, Errol Robinson. Now the shocking allegations have led the leading black lawyer to warn of a possible backlash by the city’s black community which he claims is becoming increasingly alienated by police “strong-arm” tactics. He said: “I am not one to exaggerate but the tension among the black community at the moment is very real and could explode into something more serious. “Police are anxious to build a stronger relationship with the black community but they are not going to achieve that while some of their officers behave like thugs. “The officers involved in this incident must be suspended from duty immediately if police want to maintain the increasingly fragile relation-ship with the local community. “Detectives complain of a wall of silence when investigating incidents among the black community but it does not help when they appear to be treating black suspects like animals.” Mr Powell, who had been suffering from depression but was not on any medication, was arrested in Wilton Street, Lozells, in the early hours of last Sunday. He died after collapsing at Thornhill Road police station, sparking an immediate inquiry by the Police Complaints Authority. Last night Mr Powell’s distraught mother Claris said her “fit and active” son did not have a history of mental illness and that she had called police after fearing he would harm himself. She said: “Mikey was getting worked up because he couldn’t find his keys and had smashed a window when I called police to help me calm him down. “I thought the police might be able to talk to him and maybe even offer some form of psychiatric help. “But instead they attacked him before even talking to anyone on the scene.” She added: “I saw my son as he was being taken away by the police and all he kept saying was ‘I’m sorry mum, I’m sorry’. “That was the last time I saw Mikey alive.” Witnesses have claimed that officers drove at Mr Powell after he damaged their patrol car as they pulled up outside his mother’s house. A family friend, who refused to be identified, said: “He was not trying to get away but an officer still sprayed CS gas in his face and then others set on Mikey with their batons until he dropped to the floor. “Then at least eight officers piled in and literally sat on him until the police van arrived to take him away.” Mr Robinson added: “There is also some suggestion that one of the officers at the scene made a comment to a potential witness which could be deemed to be intimidation. “Mr Powell was completely defenceless when he was sprayed with CS gas which severely incapacitates its victim. “By then he was no danger to anyone and was not putting up any kind of struggle so why several officers felt it necessary to sit on him is beyond belief.” Mr Powell’s sister Sharon, 40, last night paid tribute to her brother who she described as a “loving father.” She added: “He had recently been promoted to team leader at his workplace and he was an avid reader who loved life and lived for his three kids. “Mikey was a devotional man who regularly read the Bible and had never been in any kind of trouble with the authorities. “When I arrived at the scene I saw a number of officers swoop down on him like a flock of vultures. “I couldn’t even see my brother because there was so many officers on top of him. “He was still alive when we saw him being bundled into the back of the police van. “The police wouldn’t tell us where they were taking him and the next thing we heard was that he had died.” Although an initial post mortem proved inconclusive police said it had helped establish that Mr Powell did not die as a result of asphyxiation, blood loss or multiple injuries. A second independent post mortem is expected to take place tomorrow at the request of the family. A spokesman for the Police Complaints Authority, which has appointed Northampton-shire Police to conduct the inquiry, said: “We will conduct a rigorous and independent inquiry to establish exactly what led to the tragic death of Mr Powell.”
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But for the success of police propaganda in creating in the public mind the stereotype of black people as a criminal population would Michael Powell’s death be just another uncontroversial statistic? This question can best be answered by looking at how police propaganda constructs the stereotype of black people as a criminal population; and what purpose it serve them to label some homicides as black-on-black crimes. Propaganda works best when it aims to reinforce existing beliefs and trends (Welch 1993:5). The novelist Aldous Huxley says: “The propagandist is a man who canalies an already existing stream. In a land where there is no water, he digs in vain”. In Britain racism is the “stream” that flows through much of British culture. British culture is rooted in an empire that collapsed forty years ago. The British Empire was predicated on racism: “The belief in the inherent superiority of one race over all others and thereby the right to dominance” (Andre Lorde). Kipling described the black and brown peoples colonized by Britain as amoral, brutish “half devil”. Today, such racist ideas underpin police propaganda. Police propaganda reflects the two elements of racism identified by George Fredrickson in Racism: A Short History. Fredrickson argues that racism has two components: difference and power. Racism divides humanity into “them” and “us”:blacks and whites. Racial difference is then used to justify or rationalise treating blacks in ways that whites would consider “as cruel or unjust if applied to members of their own” racial group (Fredrickson 2002:09). In their construction of black people as a criminal population, police propaganda brings together ideas about racial difference with public perception of people who commit crime as different, amoral, brutish devils. This can be seen at work in recent media reports of the murder of Bertram Byfield, 41, and his daughter, 7-year-old Toni-Ann Byfield. An as yet unknown assailant shot Toni-Ann once in the back and Mr Byfield several times at his flat in Kensal Green, northwest London on September 14, 2003. The motive for the double homicide is unknown. What is known is that Mr Byfield ‘was jailed for nine years for supplying crack cocaine’ (The Independent, 17/09/03). Apparently, he was shot six times last year in what is reported as a "domestic" incident. Finally, Mr Byfield grew up in Jamaica, although he is British born. The police are only the source of such information. They informed the press and television about Mr Byfield past. Hence The Guardian reports: “Police believe Toni-Ann was murder because she saw her father killer”(19/09/03). Given that the police do not know the killer’s motive, what purpose does such information about the deceased serve? The chief purpose is to define Mr Byfield as someone different, a crack-cocaine dealer. As such his homicide is less a disaster and more a consequence of his criminality, pre-mature death comes with the turf. The information, in other words, serves primarily to dehumanise Mr Byfield. It also serves to scotch any sympathy the public might feel for him as a loving parent who was caring for his child, doing a normal activity with her such as taking her shopping for a school uniform. The second purpose of such information is to link Mr Byfield to black people in general and Jamaicans in particular. That is to identify him as someone different, “a Briton raised in Jamaica” (The Telegraph 19/09/03). This reinforces just how different Mr Byfield was from white people. Furthermore, by emphasising such differences a whole box of deep-rooted racist stereotypes about blacks, especially Jamaicans, are unpacked without making explicit references to them. The information’s final purpose is to define by association all black people as criminals like Mr Byfield, a crack-cocaine dealer. Thus defined the hurdle is cleared to stereotype certain unlawful acts as different, black-only crimes. So-called gun-crime is one of several black-only crimes according to police propaganda. But what is a gun-crime exactly? How is it different from other crimes where offenders use a gun? The chief difference seems to be that gun-crime involves blacks shooting each other, so-called black-on-black crime. Two homicides involving firearms illustrate the sinister double standard behind the police label black-on-black gun crime. On April 26, 1999, Jill Dando, a TV presenter, was killed with a single bullet to the head in front of her home in Fulham, west London. George Barry, 42, was convicted of her murder on July 2, 2002 (The Guardian, 3/07/02). Dando was white, so is Barry. Neither the police nor press referred to her murder as white-on-white. Nor did they refer to Tony Martin killing of 16-year-old Fred Barras as a gun crime. In August 1999, 54-year-old Martin shot Barras with “an illegally-held pump-action shotgun” as the teenager was fleeing a crime scene in Emneth Hungate, Norfolk (BBC News 13/06/03). Unlike the Byfield homicides, race did not feature in police and press reporting of the Barras homicide. That difference points to the real purpose behind police labelling gun crime as one committed by blacks alone. Gun crime and black-on-black crime real purpose are as labels they identify a particular race on which the police can heap blame for both violent crime escalation and their inability to solve them. In other words, the labels fuse deep-rooted notion of race with ideas about criminal pathology to create a bogey that the police can use to deflect the public gaze away from the growing number of unsolved murders, especially in London. The fact is this: “Britain murder rate has risen to its highest level since records began 100 years ago” (The Sunday Times 13/09/02). Police recorded 886 homicides in England and Wales in 2001/02, an increase of 36 on the previous year; 768 were detected, which represents a decrease in the detection rate consistent with the preceding four years (Jon Simmons 2003). In the same period, there were 22 gun related deaths, which represents less than 3 per cent of all homicides (BBC News 16/09/03). The public hardly hears about the 97 per cent of murders that are not so-called black-on-black gun crime. Nor do the national media report the increasing number of black people who are unlawfully killed in police custody. Michael Powell died in a police van after officers mowed him down with a car and then while they restrained him, they sprayed teargas in his face and beat him with batons. Such inhuman treatment did not merit national headlines because police propaganda dehumanises black people, stereotypes them as different, a criminal population against whom they can wage war in the name of fighting crime. As in all wars propaganda serves to demonise the enemy in order to justify treating him in ways that would be considered cruel and inhuman if done to one of “us”. Racial difference is used to construct “them” and “us”, blacks and whites; to desensitise white people to the lot of black people, which is of course the aim of police propaganda in stereotyping black people as a criminal population. But for such propaganda Michael Powell’s death would be less an uncontroversial statistic and more a crime against humanity, like all unlawful killings in police custody. Bibliography Fredrickson G (2002) Racism: A Short History Princeton University
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