‘The work continues’: Black Americans stress that police reform is still needed

The Obamas and Bernice King were among those to encourage justice for other victims of police brutality after the Derek Chauvin guilty verdict

Prominent Black Americans expressed relief after the white former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of murdering George Floyd, but warned that police reform, and justice for other victims of police brutality, are still necessary.

While Chauvin was found guilty of all the charges he faced – second- and third-degree murder, and manslaughter – by the jury in Minneapolis, the families of other Black Americans killed by police in recent years have yet to see their killers jailed, or even face a jury.

Former president Barack Obama was among those to call for change, tweeting: “Today, a jury did the right thing. But true justice requires much more.”

Bernice King, the daughter of Martin Luther King Jr and CEO of the Martin Luther King Jr Center for nonviolent social change, was among those to mark the guilty verdict.

“Oh, that George Floyd were still alive. But I’m thankful for accountability. The work continues. Justice is a continuum. And America must bend with the moral arc of the universe, which bends toward justice,” King wrote on Twitter.

She added: “God knew just how much we could bear. This is a turning point. Let’s continue to correct everything that stands against love. That is true #justice.”

Oh, that George Floyd were still alive.

But I’m thankful for accountability.

The work continues.

Justice is a continuum.

And America must bend with the moral arc of the universe, which bends toward justice.

— Be A King (@BerniceKing) April 20, 2021

King’s call for justice was echoed by Jamaal Bowman, a prominent progressive Black congressman for New York.

“We’ve known Chauvin was guilty since the second we saw him murder George Floyd on film – but we also know of the racism inherent in our carceral and policing systems. This verdict doesn’t change that racism, or the work ahead needed to transform those systems to serve us,” Bowman said.

He added: “We need justice for Daunte Wright, Adam Toledo, Tamir Rice, Breonna Taylor[.] And everyone else we’ve lost.”

We've known Chauvin was guilty since the second we saw him murder George Floyd on film — but we also know of the racism inherent in our carceral and policing systems.

This verdict doesn't change that racism, or the work ahead needed to transform those systems to serve us.

— Jamaal Bowman (@JamaalBowmanNY) April 20, 2021

In their statement, Barack and Michelle Obama said they “stand shoulder-to-shoulder with all those who are committed to guaranteeing every American the full measure of justice that George and so many others have been denied”.

“True justice requires that we come to terms with the fact that Black Americans are treated differently, every day,” the Obamas said.

“It requires us to recognize that millions of our friends, family, and fellow citizens live in fear that their next encounter with law enforcement could be their last. And it requires us to do the sometimes thankless, often difficult, but always necessary work of making the America we know more like the America we believe in.”

For Derecka Purnell, a human rights lawyer, organizer, and author of the upcoming book Becoming Abolitionists: Police, Protests and the Pursuit of Freedom, the conviction of Chauvin did not represent true justice.

“I cannot emphasize enough that convictions are not justice for George Floyd,” Purnell wrote on Twitter.

“We will never know because justice requires the participation of the people impacted by it. The dead cannot participate. There is relief, punishment, but not ‘justice’.”

i cannot emphasize enough that convictions are not justice for George Floyd. We will never know because justice requires the participation of the people impacted by it. The dead cannot participate. There is relief, punishment, but not “justice”

— derecka (@dereckapurnell) April 20, 2021

Cliff Albright, founder of the Black Voters Matter organization which seeks to enhance Black voter engagement, pointed out the lengths it took for George Floyd’s killer to be found guilty, including the bystander’s video and the ensuing historic summer of protests.

Reflecting on how much had to happen to get to this verdict:
1. A bystander’s video
2. Historic summer of protests
3. Assignment of case to an AG/prosecutor who would actually prosecute the case aggressively
& more.

It shouldn’t be this hard to get some justice. #chauvinverdict

— Cliff Albright (@cliff_notes) April 20, 2021

Keith Boykin, founder of the National Black Justice Coalition civil rights organization, pointed out the importance of bystanders on the scene filming Chauvin’s actions.

Boykin posted the press report Minneapolis police initially sent out in relation to Floyd’s death, which said: “Officers were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and noted he appeared to be suffering medical distress. Officers called for an ambulance. [Floyd] was transported to Hennepin County Medical Center by ambulance where he died a short time later.”

Boykin said:

“This fabricated police story might have become the official account of George Floyd’s death if concerned citizens had not intervened and recorded the police.”

Color of Change, a civil rights organization founded by Van Jones and James Rucker, echoed the message of others that the guilty verdict brought a sense of relief, rather than any cause for celebration.

“We’re relieved this Hennepin county jury has held Derek Chauvin accountable for the murder of George Floyd. We’re holding the Floyd family in our thoughts right now,” Color of Change tweeted, adding: “This doesn’t get George Floyd back.”

The organization joined calls for serious reform of police departments in the US.

“We need to divest from the police and invest in communities because even guilty convictions don’t get Black community members back.

“This fight for accountability is about more than a cop or a police department. It’s about upending a system that fails to keep Black people safe.”

We need to divest from the police and invest in communities because even guilty convictions don't get Black community members back.

This fight for accountability is about more than a cop or a police department. It’s about upending a system that fails to keep Black people safe.

— ColorOfChange (@ColorOfChange) April 20, 2021

Contributor

Adam Gabbatt

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Derek Chauvin trial: police expert witness says ‘excessive force’ used on George Floyd – as it happened
Day seven of murder trial over George Floyd’s death underway

Joanna Walters in New York

06, Apr, 2021 @8:50 PM

Article image
Daunte Wright and George Floyd: another chapter in America’s recurring tragedy
The latest instance of a black man killed by a police officer added fuel to the fire already burning in Minneapolis

Oliver Laughland and Amudalat Ajasa in Minneapolis

18, Apr, 2021 @6:00 AM

Article image
Night of flames and fury as Minneapolis swells with outrage over George Floyd killing
The 3rd precinct station was not the only building that burned overnight, as furious protesters’ demand for justice intensified

Chris McGreal in Minneapolis

29, May, 2020 @5:09 PM

Article image
Derek Chauvin found guilty of murder of George Floyd
Jury finds ex-Minneapolis police officer, who knelt on Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes, guilty on all counts

Chris McGreal, Lois Beckett, Oliver Laughland and Amudalat Ajasa in Minneapolis

21, Apr, 2021 @7:42 AM

Article image
Democrats unveil ambitious plan for police reform: 'This is a first step'
The legislation would ban chokeholds by police, set up a national database for tracking police misconduct and would bar types of ‘no-knock’ warrants

Daniel Strauss in Washington and agencies

08, Jun, 2020 @5:14 PM

Article image
Derek Chauvin trial: defense claims bad heart and drug use killed George Floyd
Dr David Fowler, testifying for the defense, also said vehicle exhaust may have played a part in Floyd’s death

Chris McGreal

14, Apr, 2021 @9:20 PM

Article image
Will the Derek Chauvin guilty verdict change policing in America?
George Floyd’s death at the hands of a white police officer touched off a new civil rights uprising that rippled across the world

Joanna Walters

20, Apr, 2021 @9:14 PM

Article image
George Floyd: Donald Trump under fire as violence flares across America
President tweets from White House as cities struggle and Democrats give voice to a national plea for leadership

David Smith in Washington

31, May, 2020 @5:22 PM

Article image
George Floyd killing: protests flare as Americans await verdict in Chauvin trial
Outcome is expected to resonate nationwide, particularly in cities that have seen continuing demonstrations over police violence

Lois Beckett in Minneapolis

18, Apr, 2021 @6:39 PM

Article image
Minneapolis: police and protesters clash for second night over death of Daunte Wright
Police deploy teargas and flash-bangs in Brooklyn Center as Wright’s father Aubrey rejects police claim that officer intended to fire Taser

Oliver Laughland in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota and Martin Pengelly in New York

13, Apr, 2021 @4:41 PM