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HomeNewsTen years after her lynching – Sandra Bland: still ‘Say her name!’

Ten years after her lynching – Sandra Bland: still ‘Say her name!’

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Sandra Bland

If Sandra Bland were alive today, she would be 38 years old. This July 13 will mark the 10th anniversary of her lynching in a Waller County, Texas, jail following her arrest on July 10 for an alleged minor traffic violation. The white state trooper who arrested her was only charged with perjury. Her unjust arrest and death sparked protests all over the country, and still to this day, activists demand justice for her, similar to other victims of police terror. 

Monica Moorehead, a Workers World managing editor, stated in 2019: “The murder of Sandra Bland was the lightning rod for the hashtag #SayHerName as a component within the Black Lives Matter movement. It was a grim but important reminder that her case shined a bright light on how Black women and all women of color are victims of police terror, but many still don’t get the national and international attention that Bland’s case did.” (workers.org/2019/02/41109)

The following article first appeared online on July 23, 2015, and can be found at workers.org/2015/07/21114. The article was lightly edited.

Sandra Bland, a 28-year-old African American woman, drove from her home in a Chicago suburb to Prairie View A&M (PVAM) University, her alma mater in rural southeast Texas, to begin a new job as a student ambassador to the alumni association. She called it her dream job.

Bland was found hanging with a trash bag around her neck in a Waller County Jail cell in Hempstead, Texas, on July 13.

There have been almost daily protests, vigils, rallies and marches since the news broke.

On July 17, this writer joined hundreds who protested at the jail and then marched to the Waller County Courthouse. There a rally was chaired by Kofi Taharka, chair of the National Black United Front. Anti-racist activists from Houston and Austin were joined by local residents of Hempstead, Waller’s county seat of just over 40,000 people, where 60% are white and 30% are Black. Speakers included friends of Bland, a sorority sister, PVAM alumni and outraged activists.

A few women from Hempstead who were unable to march set up a card table at the jail, offering free cheese sandwiches and sweet tea for protesters. One woman, who goes by Jen Jen, said she was 49 years old and could give 49 reasons why no one should ever want to find themselves inside the jail. “The last time I was picked up, I was beaten black and blue, with splotches darker than this skin you see today.”

When asked what she was charged with, Jen Jen responded: “Oh, the cops didn’t charge me. After they beat me, they let me go, that’s all. And you don’t even want to hear the stories about things that happen right inside these walls,” she said, pointing to the Waller County Jail.

On July 19, PVAM students gathered at the school’s fountain to remember and honor Bland. PVAM was founded in 1876 when the Alta Vista plantation near Hempstead was bought and turned into what is now the second oldest state-funded school of higher education in Texas.

Bland was already familiar with Texas and its horrific racist history. She graduated in 2009 from Prairie View, a historically Black university just 45 minutes from Houston.

Bland outspoken against police brutality

Bland was active in condemning the deaths of Black people at the hands of cops, from Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, to Eric Garner in Staten Island, New York. She posted on Facebook about the danger from cops and even made videos condemning murders by police. Now her friends and supporters are tweeting at #SandraBland, #JusticeforSandy and #IfIDieInPoliceCustody.

Over the last year, exposure of U.S. cop killings of young Black people has escalated. In response, the Black Lives Matter movement is now active all over the country.

Texas has a sordid history of racist murders. In the early 1900s there were lynchings of Black people all over the state. Two of the most infamous were in Waco of Allen Brooks in 1910 and Jesse Washington in 1916.

During Brooks’ trial, allegedly for assaulting a white child, an angry mob took him from his armed guards in the courtroom and hanged him from a pole at Elk’s Arch, reported the Dallas Morning News.

In recent decades the cops in every major city in Texas have murdered and maimed African Americans — including Black Panther leader Carl Hampton in Houston in 1970.

Nationally, there is now a list of women who go with the Michael Browns and Eric Garners killed by the cops: Sandra Bland, Kindra Darnell Chapman, Tanisha Anderson, Yvette Smith, Rekia Boyd and seven-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones — to name a few.

Emily DePrang, writing in the progressive weekly The Texas Observer in 2014, noted that Houston cops are literally getting away with murder. She wrote that between 2007 and 2012, according to Houston Police Department records, deadly police shootings happen in Houston on average of one every three weeks. Every shooting by a HPD officer is investigated by HPD’s Internal Affairs and Homicide divisions.

DePrang writes: “Every killing was ruled justified. Harris County (Houston) grand juries have cleared HPD officers for on-duty shootings almost 300 times in a row. No Houston officer has been indicted for a shooting in a decade.”

Texas has more killer cops

In Texas, the saying goes, “Everything’s bigger in Texas!” The saying is true when it comes to the legacy of lynchings and the number of killer cops. Texas is also number one in uninsured people, and it executes more people than the next eight states combined. However, Texas is near the very bottom in funding education.

In one year’s time, three instances of terrorizing Black women in Texas have become national news.

Last August, cops pulled over Kametra Barbour and her four young children and held them at gunpoint in Forney. Neither the car nor the passengers matched the description given to police in a 911 dispatch.

In June near Dallas, 15-year-old Dajerria Becton was thrown down, her head shoved to the ground, and she was held down by a McKinney cop’s knee after a pool party.

And now Sandra Bland, stopped for failure to use her traffic signal and arrested in Waller County while en route to begin her new job, was found lynched in jail under suspicious circumstances a few days later.

How someone can go from driving to a new job to dead in jail in a matter of days is unfathomable — except perhaps for African Americans in Texas. Black activists often point out that driving while Black can be a capital offense in Texas, resulting in an unofficial, on-the-spot death penalty.

More protests, vigils and demonstrations are planned for Sandra Bland as communities await the results of her family’s independent autopsy. Many questions must still be answered. Those who are involved in the anti-racist movement have absolutely no confidence in either the Texas Rangers or the FBI, which are now investigating Bland’s death. Outrage, sadness and determination to find justice will not dissipate easily, nor should it.

Rubac is a longtime spokesperson for the Texas Death Penalty Abolition Movement in Houston.

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