MORE PROTESTS PLANNED
Civil rights leaders said Monday that the protests against the verdict in the George Zimmerman case will continue this weekend with vigils in dozens of cities.Most of last weekend’s protests were peaceful, but more than 100 Los Angeles police officers in riot gear converged on a crowd early Monday, and police said they made seven arrests throughout the day, The Los Angeles Times reported. The civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton said his organization will hold vigils and rallies in 100 cities Saturday in front of federal buildings.
Associated Press
Nearly 70 years after Jackie Robinson was run out of town, Sanford is absorbing what some see as another blow to race relations: the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the killing of Trayvon Martin.
Some black residents of this community of almost 50,000 people where the shooting took place say that while relations between black and white have improved over the years, progress has been slow and the Martin case demonstrated that problems persist.
A mostly middle-class suburb of Orlando, about 25 miles away, it has reacted somberly — and peacefully — to the verdict. The city was mostly silent the morning after the verdict, in contrast to the rallies that drew thousands not long after the shooting.
Only a few people went past the permanent memorial built in the city’s historically black Goldsboro neighborhood to honor the Miami teen.
Standing in front of the memorial, Venitta Robinson, the minister at Allen Chapel, said she hopes the black community doesn’t dwell on the verdict.
“It’s a little disheartening, but that was the process we go through as far as having a jury, and that’s the verdict that they had, and we have to respect that,” said Robinson, who is black.
In just the 17 months since the killing, Sanford has changed: The city, which is about one-third black, now has a black police chief and its first black city manager.
The police department was heavily criticized for declining to charge Zimmerman at first, and he wasn’t arrested until 44 days after the shooting, by order of a special prosecutor.
But the distrust between Sanford’s city government and its black citizens predates the Martin case by several decades.
A large portion of the black community lives in Goldsboro, which was Florida’s second city incorporated by African-Americans when it was founded in 1891. Tensions were inflamed when an expanding Sanford annexed Goldsboro in 1911.
In 1946, Sanford was the site of the botched start of Jackie Robinson’s first steps toward breaking baseball’s color barrier.
Robinson had been sent there for his first minor league spring training. Two days after he arrived, he was shifted to another team in Daytona Beach after getting death threats from Sanford residents.
That tension has re-emerged in recent years because of several shootings of blacks and an attack on a black homeless man.
In 2010 Justin Collison, the 21-year-old son of a white Sanford police lieutenant, was videotaped punching a homeless man named Sherman Ware in the back of the head, causing serious injuries.
Police officers arrived within minutes, looked at the video and spoke to witnesses who said the attack was unprovoked, but they let Collison go after he called his father.
After the video became public, Collison was charged almost two months later with battery and disorderly conduct. He struck a plea bargain and was sentenced to probation, anger management and substance abuse counseling — but no jail time.
In February 2010, Dennis Williams was shot on the front steps of his home while he held his 9-month-old son. Police have never been able to identify a suspect.
That same month, a Sanford police investigator shot and killed Nicholas Eugene Scott in his car as officers tried to arrest him. Prosecutors ruled the shooting justified.
Cecil Smith, who became police chief earlier this year after Bill Lee Jr. lost his job in the fallout over the Martin case, promised at a prayer service on Monday to try to ease the mistrust in the community.
“Everyone is watching the people of Sanford,” he said. “We may not have liked the outcome of this trial, but we are united enough to say we are starting to move forward.”
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