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After a second black man was found dead of a drug overdose in the home of wealthy, white Democratic donor and West Hollywood resident Ed Buck, activists showed up in front of his apartment building to protest what they see as the protection of white privilege which prevents Buck from being arrested in connection with the deaths.
Buck, 64, is a gay man who is rumored to be in the business of offering young black men money for their company. Prior to his death in Buckβs apartment in July 2017, Gemmel Moore told friends and wrote in his diary that Buck had a penchant for drugging young black men in his home.
On Monday, news broke that 55-year-old Timothy M. Dean was found dead in Buckβs apartment. Activists staged an action in front of Buckβs home later that evening, where they were met with news crews, cameras and reporters. Among them was Kacey Montoya, a reporter for KTLA News in Los Angeles.
As activists expressed their dismay about a second black body being found in Buckβs home, Montoya interrupted them to say that the situation was βnot about race.β
Jasmyne Cannick, a public-affairs and media-strategy professional who is also an activist in the community, was one of those in attendance. She told The Root that emotions were high that night in front of Buckβs home.
She said with the situation already tense, Montoya centered herself in the protest and became very vocal and opinionated about what was going on.
Cannick said she βseemed to be making the story about herself and her feelings.
βShe started engaging with people in a negative way,β Cannick told The Root.
βKacey Montoya started arguing with a lot of the people outside. The attention shifted to her and she just wouldnβt let it go,β Cannick said. βThere was a lot of back and forth between her and the people in the crowd.β (The Root reached out to KTLA to get a response from Montoya and will update if they do.)
When activists confronted Montoya about her statements and told her that it wasnβt her turn to speak when black people were advocating for black lives, she became more upset.
One activist told her that it was people like her who were enabling Buck and making him feel comfortable, and Montoya responded by saying, βPeople like me? Thatβs why people are racist.β
βHer comment is a very odd comment for an unbiased reporter to make,β Cannick said. βEveryone who was out there was understandably upset about the deaths of Gemmel and Timothy. People are confused, they already were after Gemmel, and now we have a second man dead. People are questioning why white privilege matters more than the lives of black people.
βWe are all clear that as black people, if we had one person dead from a drug overdose in our home, we would be in trouble. Here is a white man who has now two dead bodies in his home because of drug overdoses, and he is still a free man.
βIf you are reporting the story, you canβt be the story. The way Kacey was acting, it seemed as though she was a resident of the building or a friend of Ed Buckβs,β Cannick said.
Many in the crowd felt that Buckβs neighbors may be somewhat complicit in their silence about the events. They felt the neighbors should have been at least a little suspiciousβespecially after the death of Mooreβseeing black men going in and out of Buckβs apartment all the time.
Monday, Jan. 14, would have been Gemmel Mooreβs birthday. His mother will be in town, and activists are planning another action in front of the home of Ed Buck.
βHopefully his mother wonβt come across the Kacey Montoyas of the world,β Cannick said.
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