O.C. public defenders gather hundreds outside Sheriffâs headquarters to protest police brutality
Eight minutes and 46 seconds â itâs a lot longer than you would think it is.
Hundreds of protesters displayed that on Monday afternoon as they knelt in silence for that long outside the Orange County Sheriffâs headquarters to protest the death of George Floyd as Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin pressed his knee against Floydâs neck for 8 minutes and 46 seconds.
As they raised their fists, the silence was deafening.
The peaceful demonstration was organized by the Orange County Public Defenders office as part of a national move by public defendersâ departments to protest the unjust police killings of black people.
âDaily, we witness the injustice and inequality visited upon our clients by police officers, disproportionately those of color,â said Bobby Waltman, a deputy public defender. âLike the police, we have all sworn an oath to the Constitution. We view the militarization of police forces and the resulting excessive force particularly against marginalized communities as a clear and present danger to that oath.
âWe stand united with the movement to fight oppression of the black community and all other marginalized communities by the weaponized arm of the state: the police.â
The protest began at the Old Orange County Courthouse on Santa Ana Boulevard. Hundreds gathered, chanted and listened to attorneys from the Public Defenders office speak.
âAll of us have to do something,â attorney Darren Thompson said. âI am especially talking to our white brothers and sisters ... You may not have a racist bone in your body, and thatâs good. But itâs not enough.â
Thompsonâs fiery speech was met with cheering and shouts of support.
âBlack people donât have the luxury of standing on the sidelines,â he said.
Attorney Michele Bell, who is black, spoke of the struggles of raising her child to be aware of police brutality.
âI have to teach my son that one day when he is pulled over, make sure itâs in a well-lit area thatâs well-populated,â Bell said.
Many protesters wore shirts that said âPublic Defenders for Black Lives.â One childâs shirt read âFuture Public Defender for Black Lives.â
After the speeches, protesters marched to the sheriffâs headquarters. The police presence throughout the event was minimal.
Deputy Alternate Defender Sylvia Pham, who led the protest, said the office should look to engage more with the community moving forward.
âThese are issues that public defenders have been screaming about for a long time,â Waltman said.
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