June 12, 2015

Beyond Ferguson: A Nation's Struggle with Race and Criminal Justice


2015 ACS National Convention, Ferguson, Michael Brown, racial discrimination

Chris Hayes

MSNBC
Begin: 0:00

Elise Boddie

Rutgers Law School
Begin: 6:57

Delroy Burton

Washington D.C. Police Union
Begin: 11:12

Walter Mack

Doar Rieck Kaley & Mack
Begin: 16:30

Nick Mosby

Baltimore City Council
Begin: 2:21

Hon. Shira Scheindlin

U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York
Begin: 9:20
Since the shooting death of Michael Brown, Ferguson, MO has gained notoriety for its unjust policing practices. However, can we tell similar stories about New York City, Cleveland, Baltimore, and any number of American cities and towns. These stories offer a lesson about racialized inequality, low opportunity, and their intimate ties with the criminal justice system. Understanding Ferguson and how it came to be sheds light on how we manufacture inequality in communities of color across the country, the role of law enforcement in the production of that inequality, and how the criminal justice system is used to police separate and vastly unequal spaces. What effect will various reforms recommend in the wake of Ferguson have in a criminal justice system many believe is pervaded by racial bias? How has the Supreme Court's narrowing of Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendment protections impeded our ability to achieve racial justice? 
 
Speakers:
  • Chris Hayes, Host, "All In with Chris Hayes," MSNBC; Editor-at-Large, The Nation
  • Elise Boddie, Professor of Law, Rutgers Law School
  • Delroy Burton, Chairman, Washington D.C. Police Union
  • Walter Mack, Partner, Doar Rieck Kaley & Mack
  • Nick Mosby, Councilman, Seventh District, Baltimore City Council
  • Hon. Shira Scheindlin, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York