It feels like weâve been trapped in a never-ending cycle of grief. Even as we felt palpable relief seeing Derek Chauvin be found guilty for the murder of George Floyd, we were immediately reminded that the cycle of police violence doesnât take a break. Andrew Brown Jr. was shot and killed by police officers in North Carolina last month and on Monday mourners gathered at his funeral to celebrate his life.
According to the Washington Post, the invite-only funeral was held at the Fountain of Life Church in North Carolina and attended by the likes of civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, head of the Poor Peopleâs Campaign, Rev. William Barber II, and Rev. Al Sharpton, who delivered the eulogy for Brown. Brown was fatally shot only one day after Chauvin was found guilty. He was shot and killed at his home by Pasquotank County sheriffâs deputies who were delivering a search and arrest warrant for felony drug charges.
Suggested Reading
âBefore we could get through one 24-hour cycle after the conviction of Derek Chauvin for the lynching by knee of George Floyd, a policeman killed Andrew Brown Jr.âa day that we were getting ready to go to the wake of Daunte Wright,â Sharpton said during his eulogy. âFrom Daunte Wright to Andrew Brown to Breonna Taylor to Ahmaud Arbery to Rayshard Brooks to George Floydâall of this happening during a pandemic. All within a year. And you want to talk about everything other than what the times demand we talk about.â
Now because people are awful and donât believe in the basic preservation of life, Brownâs criminal background has been cited as a potential reason for his death. Itâs the âhe was no angelâ line of reasoning the allegedly pro-life crowd like to wheel out whenever a Black person is killed by the police. While Brown had been convicted on 12 felony drug charges, 12 charges of driving with a revoked license, and various misdemeanors over the last 25 years, Sharpton argued that wasnât a reason for him to die.
âAndrew Brown Jr., if he did wrong, bring him to court,â Sharpton said. âBut you donât have the right to bring him to his funeral.â
There has been much controversy surrounding the release of body camera footage, as there has been a considerable level of fuckery at all levels. A judge has denied the release of the footage because even though itâs evidence, it would be unfair to the officers. Also, the judgeâs social media presence reveals heâs staunchly a Blue Lives Matter-type, but Iâm sure that has nothing to do with anything.
An independent autopsy acquired by the family revealed that Brown was shot five times, with one shot hitting him in the head. The state has treated their official autopsy much like the body camera footage and has refused to release it. During his eulogy, Sharpton called the stateâs handling of the case a âcon game.â
âRelease the whole tape and let folk see what happened to Andrew Brown. … If nothing is on tape, wonât be nothing on it in 45 days,â Sharpton said. âLet the world see what it is to see. If youâve got nothing to hide then what are you hiding? All we want is justice.â
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.