Everything about Amadou Diallo totally explained
Amadou Bailo Diallo (
September 2,
1975 –
February 4,
1999) was a 23-year-old immigrant to the
United States from
Guinea, who was shot and killed on
February 4,
1999, by four
New York City Police Department plain-clothed officers: Sean Carroll, Richard Murphy, Edward McMellon and Kenneth Boss. The four men fired a total of 41 rounds. Diallo was unarmed at the time of the shooting, and a firestorm of controversy erupted subsequent to the event as the circumstances of the shooting prompted outrage both within and outside
New York City. Issues such as
police brutality,
racial profiling, and
contagious shooting were central to the ensuing controversy.
The shooting took place at 1157 Wheeler Avenue in the
Soundview section of
The Bronx. The four officers involved were part of the now-defunct
Street Crimes Unit. All of the officers were exonerated by jury trial of any wrongdoing.
Biography
One of four children of Saikou and Kadiatou Diallo, Amadou's family is part of an old
Ful?e (Fula or Fulani people) trading family from the
Fouta Djallon highlands of Guinea. He was born in
Sinoe, Liberia while his father was working there, and grew up following his family to
Togo,
Bangkok, and
Singapore, attending schools in Thailand, and later in
Guinea and
London, including
Microsoft's Asian Institute. In September of 1996, Amadou came to New York City where he and a cousin started a business, and to where other family members had immigrated. There he planned to enroll in college to pursue a
computer science degree.
Amadou Diallo is buried in the village of
Hollande Bourou in the Fouta Djallon, where his extended family resides.
Events surrounding death
Diallo had come to New York City to study
biochemistry, but hadn't enrolled in school. He sold videotapes, gloves and socks from the sidewalk along 14th Street during the day and studied in the evenings.
In the early morning of
February 4 Diallo was standing near his building after returning from a meal. Police officers Edward McMellon, Sean Carroll, Kenneth Boss and Richard Murphy passed by in a
Ford Taurus when they thought Diallo matched the description of a (since-captured) serial
rapist and approached him. The officers were in plain clothes.
The officers claimed that they loudly identified themselves as NYPD officers and that Diallo ran up the outside steps toward his apartment house doorway at their approach, ignoring their orders to stop and "show his hands." As the suspect reached into his jacket, Carroll believed Diallo was drawing a firearm and yelled "Gun!" to alert his colleagues. The officers opened fire on Diallo and during the burst McMellon fell down the steps, appearing to be shot. The four officers fired forty-one shots, hitting Diallo nineteen times. Investigation found no weapons on Diallo's body; the item he'd pulled out of his jacket wasn't a gun, but a wallet.
On
March 25 a
Bronx grand jury indicted the officers on charges of second-degree
murder and reckless endangerment. On
December 16 a New York
appellate court ordered a
change of venue to
Albany,
New York, stating that pretrial publicity had made a fair trial in New York City impossible. On
February 25,
2000, after two days of deliberations, a jury unanimously voted to acquit the officers of all charges.
Aftermath
Diallo's death, the change of venue, and the verdict each sparked massive demonstrations against
police brutality and
racial profiling, resulting in more than 1,700 arrests over the course of many weeks. Those arrested in the daily protests at the entrance of One Police Plaza came from all walks of life, and included former NYPD officers, former mayor
David Dinkins, Congressmen
Charlie Rangel and
Gregory Meeks, the Revs.
Al Sharpton and
Jesse Jackson, actress
Susan Sarandon, more than a dozen rabbis and other clergy, and numerous federal, state, and local politicians. Charges against the protesters were later dropped. In 2001 the
Justice Department announced that it wouldn't charge the officers with having violated Diallo's
civil rights.
On
April 18,
2000, Diallo's mother, Kadiatou, and his stepfather, Sankarella Diallo filed a US$61,000,000 ($20m plus $1m for each shot fired) lawsuit against the City of New York and the officers, charging gross negligence, wrongful death,
racial profiling, and other violations of Diallo's civil rights. In March 2004, they accepted a US$3,000,000 settlement. Kadiatou and Sankarella Diallo have remained in the United States thus far. The settlement was one of the highest against the City of New York for a single man with no dependents under New York State's restrictive wrongful death law, which limits damages to pecuniary loss by the decedent's next of kin.
Anthony H. Gair a partner in the law firm of
Gair, Gair, Conason, Steigman & Mackauf, lead counsel for the Diallo family, argued that Federal Common Law should apply pursuant to Section 1983 of the civil rights act.
The shooting death of Diallo also highlighted the presence and plight of West African immigrants (about 50,000 as of 1999) living in New York City. Many are single males who work as street peddlers (as did Diallo) or as employees in wholesale and retail establishments.
In April of 2002, as a result of the killing of Diallo and other controversial actions, the
Street Crime Unit was disbanded.
In 2003, Amadou Diallo's mother Kadiatou published a
memoir,
My Heart Will Cross This Ocean: My Story, My Son, Amadou with the help of author
Craig Wolff (ISBN 0-345-45600-9).
Diallo's death became an issue in the 2005 mayoral election in
New York City. Bronx borough president, and mayoral candidate,
Fernando Ferrer, who had protested the circumstances of Diallo's death at the time, told a meeting of police sergeants that although the shooting had certainly been a tragedy, there was subsequently a move to "over-indict" the officers involved. This led to criticism of Ferrer by the Diallo family.
Cultural references to Diallo
In music, Diallo and the shooting incident has been referred to in works by
88 Keys,
Aesop Rock,
Akon,
Anthony David,
Army of the Pharaohs,
Bambu Station,
Beanie Sigel,
Beastie Boys,
Big Stan,
Brothers Keepers,
Bruce Springsteen,
Capone-N-Noreaga,
Cold Duck Complex,
Common,
Countdown To Putsch,
Cunninlynguists,
Dead Prez, Dietrich Schoenemann,
DMX,
Feature & VarCity,
Elliott Sharp,
Erykah Badu,
Fabolous,
The Game,
Greenhouse Effect, Holistic,
Immortal Technique,
INDK,
Jay-Z,
Jedi Mind Tricks,
Jen Chapin,
KRS-One,
Lauryn Hill,
Le Tigre,
Leftöver Crack,
Mash Out Posse,
Mike Ladd,
Mischief Brew,
Morning Glory,
Mos Def,
Northern State, The Overprivileged,
Organized Noise,
Papoose,
Paris (rapper),
Pharoahe Monch,
Public Enemy (band),
Rage Against the Machine, Ras Mykkal,
Roni Size,
Roy Campbell,
Spooks,
State Radio,
Sun Rise Above,
Talib Kweli,
Terry Callier,
Tiye Phonix,
Trivium,
Shyne,
Wyclef Jean,
Youssou N'Dour,
Mastah Poet,
Zack de la Rocha,
Bunny Wailer,
Damien Marley,and
Ziggy Marley.
In books and poetry, there are references in works by
Mumia Abu-Jamal,
Ross Gay,
Carlos Andrés Goméz,
Corbet Dean,
Dave Eggers,
Malcolm Gladwell,
Jeffrey McDaniel,
Inga Muscio, Claudia Rankine (in
Don't Let Me Be Lonely), Ed Roberson (in
City Eclogue), and
Bassey Ikpi
.
In film and television, there are references in
25th Hour,
Phone Booth,
Double Take,
The Awful Truth,
NYPD Blue,
Law & Order,
The Boondocks (TV series),
Film School (TV series),
Children of Men and
Tell No One.
In other art, there's a reference in a tapestry by William Wiley.
Films
2006 — Death of Two Sons
. Directed by Micah Schaffer. Produced by Alrick Brown and Micah Schaffer.Further Information
Get more info on 'Amadou Diallo'.
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