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Black Man's Killing by Police Shakes Louisiana Town

by: Michael Kunzelman and Mary Foster  |  The Associated Press

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Bernard Monroe was gunned down by Homer, Louisiana police while at a family cookout. Police claim he was carrying a gun. Family and neighbors say he was holding a large sports-water bottle, such as the one he's holding in this photo. (Photo: The Los Angeles Times)

    Homer, Louisiana - For 73 years before his killing by a white police officer, Bernard Monroe led a life in this northern Louisiana town as peaceful as they come - five kids with his wife of five decades, all raised in the same house, supported by the same job.

    The black man's shooting death is attracting far more attention than he ever did, raising racial tensions between the black community and Homer's police department.

    The Rev. Al Sharpton, who helped organize a massive 2007 civil rights demonstration in Jena after six black teenagers were charged with attempted murder in the beating of a white classmate, led a peaceful march Friday afternoon in Homer to protest the killing.

    "No justice, no peace!" demonstrators chanted. "We shall overcome!"

    About 150 demonstrators marched near the neighborhood where Monroe, a 73-year-old retired power company lineman, was gunned down by police last February outside his home during a family cookout.

    The half-mile march ended without incident at a park where the longtime civil rights activist told an even larger crowd of almost 400 people that "to shoot an unarmed, innocent man ... is a disgrace."

    "We didn't come to the city to start trouble. We came to the city to stop trouble," Sharpton told the crowd. "Let (police) explain why they broke the peace and took the life of this innocent man."

    Some white Homer residents said they feared Sharpton's visit would deepen tensions.

    Linda Volentine, whose 1971 graduating class at Homer High School was the first to be fully integrated, said the town's race relations have had "ups and downs" in recent years.

    "I'm hoping Rev. Sharpton can unite us again," said Volentine, who is white. "But if it's something that is supposed to drive a wedge, it will be harmful to the community, which we don't need."

    Sharpton said afterward that he wants a thorough investigation of the killing. The FBI and State Police are investigating.

    "We're going to keep coming to Homer until we get justice," Sharpton said without elaborating.

    Rendered mute after losing his larynx to cancer, Monroe was outside his home on mild Friday afternoon in February when events unfolded during a cookout. A barbecue cooker smoked beside a picnic table in the yard. A dozen or so family members talked and played nearby.

    All seemed calm, until two Homer police officers drove up.

    In a report to state authorities, Homer police said Officer Tim Cox and another officer they have refused to identify chased Monroe's son, Shaun, 38, from a suspected drug deal blocks away to his father's house.

    Witnesses dispute that account, saying the younger Monroe was talking to his sister-in-law in a truck outside the house when officers arrived.

    All agree Shaun Monroe, who had an arrest record for assault and battery but no current warrants, drove up the driveway and went into the house. Two white police officers followed him. Within minutes, he ran back outside, followed by an unidentified officer who Tasered him in the front yard.

    Seeing the commotion, Bernard Monroe confronted the officer. Police said that he advanced on them with a pistol and that Cox, who was still inside the house, shot at him through a screen door.

    Monroe fell dead. How many shots were fired isn't clear; the coroner has refused to release an autopsy report, citing the active investigation.

    Police said Monroe was shot after he pointed a gun at them, though no one claims Monroe fired shots. Friends and family said he was holding a bottle of sports water. They accuse police of planting a gun he owned next to his body.

    "Mr. Ben didn't have a gun," said 32-year-old neighbor Marcus Frazier, who was there that day. "I saw that other officer pick up the gun from out of a chair on the porch and put it by him."

    Frazier said Monroe was known to keep a gun for protection because of local drug activity.

    Despite the chase and Tasering, Shaun Monroe was not arrested.

    Monroe's gun is being DNA-tested by state police. The findings of their investigation will be given to District Attorney Jonathan Stewart, who would decide whether to file charges.

    "We've had a good relationship, blacks and whites, but this thing has done a lot of damage," said Michael Wade, one of three blacks on the five-member town council. "To shoot down a family man that had never done any harm, had no police record, caused no trouble. Suddenly everyone is looking around wondering why it happened and if race was the reason."

    Homer, a town of 3,800 about 50 miles northeast of Shreveport, is in piney woods just south of the Arkansas state line. Many people work in the oil or timber industries. In the old downtown, shops line streets near the antebellum Claiborne Parish courthouse on the town square.

    The easygoing climate, blacks say, masked police harassment.

    The black community has focused its anger on Police Chief Russell Mills, who is white. They say he's directed a policy of harassment toward them.

    The FBI and State Police said they received no complaints about Homer police before the shooting.

    Mills declined interview requests, saying he retained a lawyer and feared losing his job.

    He and several Homer police officers stood alongside a road as marchers filed by Friday. In a town where many know each other, he shook the hands of several people.

    Several Justice Department mediators accompanied Sharpton and the other marchers.

    The Rev. Willie Young, pastor of the Baptist church where the march began, said "things begin to happen" when Sharpton lends his time to a cause.

    "I want you to meet the new South," he said at the rally. "Things will never be the same. Homer will never be the same."

  

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Comments

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It is tragic that an

It is tragic that an innocent man died like this, but it was Shawn Monroe who brought tragedy to his own family. Why would a 38 (not 28, or 18) year old man deal drugs in his family's community, then run to his father's house to hide out, knowing that the police would be after him? With all due respect to Mr. Sharpton and his efforts, racism is not always the reason things like this happen.

Maybe you should re-read

Maybe you should re-read that. Shawn had no record of dealing drugs. And he was not arrested after this incident (don't you think if he had drugs on him they would have arrested him?) Eye witness accounts place him at the house before the cops arrived. He was at a family gathering at his father's house. That isn't a crime.

Wonder if you would say the

Wonder if you would say the same thing if Shawn Monroe lived in zip code 90210 and had driven his Beemer into his lawyer father's driveway after being chased for DUI. Hmm?

It is highly likely the

It is highly likely the police officers had an "axe to grind" with the younger Monroe, and were intent on doing damage -- evidence: Tasered Shaun Monroe, but did not arrest him. So what was their beef? If the article is accurate, Shaun had no record of dealing/doing drugs, and the statement of police, in this instance, is highly suspect. Having grown up within 40 miles of Homer, I can unequivocally state that anti-black prejudice is rampant in the area, and always has been -- its almost ingrained in some people's DNA. Many folks in the area have never accepted that the Confederacy lost the Civil War, and still entertain fantasies of living in the ante-bellum South, complete with slavery. There are possibly at least two crimes here: the unwarranted killing of the elder Mr. Monroe, and the Tasering of the younger Mr. Monroe (murder and assault with a deadly weapon). Additionally, violation of civil rights is almost a given, and if the witness' statement is correct, that he saw one of the officers plant a pistol near Bernard Monroe's body (an all too common tactic), then there are additional crimes involved. I certainly would not trust the Parish District Attorney, nor the State Police to conduct an honest investigation, and I have reservations about the FBI, if the agents are from the region.

We do not have the death

We do not have the death penalty for drug offenses in this country. Neither do we have the death penalty for people who happen to live in the same house as an accused drug offender. Nor do we grant our police the authority to summarily conduct executions. I don't care what color the victim's skin was, the fact is that an innocent man was shot to death in cold blood. That's murder in the eyes of the law, and should apply to any killer, whether he wears a badge or not. Some will respond by saying: "how are the police to protect us if they cannot resort to the use of deadly force?" The only appropriate response to that is: if the police were protecting us now, no one such as the victim in this case would find it necessary to keep a firearm around for self-protection. I do not like the idea of the race card being brought into this matter as it is only marginally relevant at best. This matter needs to be investigated as a case of 2nd degree murder, nothing more, nothing less. We all bleed the same color and I for one do not want to be standing around when one of those cops screeches by and draws a bead on my because I have car keys in one hand.

Of course race was the

Of course race was the reason for the shooting. If it had been a white boy and white father pissed off at the police intrusion, they would have talked it out and left without firing a Taser or a gun. Com'on, this is the South, where they sport bumper stickers proclaiming, "Beautify the South, put a Northerner on a bus". Unfortunately, racism is still rampart in these "Glorious United States", as too, is class warfare.

This is the sort of thing

This is the sort of thing which makes us independent observers question whether Pres Obama can make a change. It seems that some prejudices and values(?) are institutionalised in the US and will never change. I happen to be "white" but are we not all "coloured", the only difference being that some of us are different shades of colour. The incidents of police being trigger-happy is also happening here in the UK, eg. the young Brazilian Jean-Paul Menendes who was thought(!) to be a terrorist. This is only one recent example of innocent people being shot by British police by mistake but nothing ever happens to the culprits. It seems to me that the protection we sometimes need is from the police themselves.

You mean Jean Charles de

You mean Jean Charles de Menezes, who was followed and shot in London. I support peace, negotiations, forgiveness, discussions, etc., but there is a time that is right for protests to divide just enough so that people divide right from wrong in their minds. I agree that deadly force is not an answer; if a neighborhood has trouble with crime, stop the crime where it is, don't kill people at a picnic. For those in neighborhoods with police harrassment: everybody should keep hidden video cameras; power-hungry individuals get away with it because they think nobody is watching.

Thanks Anonymous - I stand

Thanks Anonymous - I stand corrected. It must have been a slip of my trigger-finger!