Vigil Honors Dion Johnson, Other Black Americans Killed In Police Actions

Antoinette Cuspard attended the vigil for “everybody that doesn’t have the opportunity to be out here.” She said her uncle was shot to death by police in 2001. She urged others in the Black community to vote to enact positive change. (Photo by Allie Barton/Cronkite News)

By Isabella Martillaro

PHOENIX – Violence has marred some protests across the country after Kentucky prosecutors declined to charge officers in the shooting death of Breonna Taylor, but a peaceful gathering Thursday night in Phoenix City Hall Plaza struck a more somber note.

More than a hundred people gathered for a candlelight vigil to honor Black Americans killed by police violence – including Dion Johnson, 28, a Phoenix man killed during a traffic stop May 25 – and to protest the lack of charges filed against the officers responsible for his death and Taylor’s.

On Monday, Maricopa County Attorney Allister Adel declined to pursue criminal charges against George Cervantes, the Arizona Department of Public Safety trooper who shot and killed Johnson in his vehicle near a freeway on-ramp. Cervantes told investigators Johnson tried to grab his gun during a struggle.

On Wednesday, a Louisville, Kentucky, grand jury declined to indict the three officers who fired multiple rounds into Taylor’s apartment while executing a no-knock search warrant March 13. A former officer was charged with wanton endangerment.

At Thursday’s vigil, a famous quote of civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer – “I am sick and tired of being sick and tired” – seemed to resonate in many speeches given by attendees.

The evening began calm and quiet, as a muted crowd of activists, families and friends gathered outside City Hall with candles, signs and T-shirts that listed the names of victims of police brutality.

But the silence quickly crescendoed into demands for change and declarations of hope as leaders of the W.E. Rising Project, which organized the vigil, addressed the crowd.

(Video by Faith Abercrombie/Cronkite News)

“The reason behind these candles was nonexistent months ago,” said Jacob Raiford, a member of the project. “The reason why we’re gathering here was not needed months ago. We continue to exist in a society where certain members of this society are stratified because of their intrinsic differences.”

Raiford mentioned Johnson and shouted, “Say his name!” and the crowd responded with loud, passionate chants.

“He sought to protect his life by pulling over to ensure his safety, to ensure his survival,” Raiford said. “And instead, these officers can decide what to do with their lives based on the contents of their skin, the color of their skin.”

Among the crowd of supporters was Johnson’s mother, Erma Johnson. As she spoke, the crowd circled around her and knelt.

“I don’t know how you are living, if you’re happy, if you’re sad, if you’re miserable, what you’re doing, but you made my life a living hell,” she said, referring to Cervantes.

“I heard something when I was listening to the audio that you told my son, you told him, ‘Get your M-F out of the car or I’ll shred your insides.’ So that being said, I hope you go to prison. I hope you go for the rest of your life.”

The W.E. Rising Project describes itself as a movement that “is creating systemic change through peaceful protests and legislature,” according to its Facebook page.

“We’ve been out here, you know, with these other organizations and hosting other events to bring attention and awareness to the Black Lives Matter movement and fighting for Black and brown lives,” project member Jazlyn Geiger said. “So that’s why we’re out here for tonight, due to the injustice.”

RELATED STORY

State trooper who killed Dion Johnson will not face charges, county attorney says

Throughout the evening, attendees spoke, many whose stories mirrored Dion Johhnson’s.

“My uncle lost his life, we’ll never know why, we’ll never know the true story behind it, all we know is that he was shot dead outside of a McDonald’s, an Army veteran,” Antoinette Cuspard said.

Cuspard said she attended the vigil to do what she couldn’t do in 2001 when her uncle was gunned down in downtown Phoenix.

“People are dying for no reason. People are not getting their right to trial,” she said. “The police think that they’re the judge, jury and executioner and they’re taking people’s lives … for what purpose?”

Raiford said the prominent issues no longer are those concerning policy or politics, they are about humanity.

“We stand up every time,” he told the group. “Look among you, different races, creeds, orientations, age bracket, political orientation. People are fed up. It’s not about bipartisanship anymore. It’s about humanity.”

After the speakers were finished, organizers noted that separate groups planned a march in downtown Phoenix, but their vigil was over.

“Be the change that we wish to see,” Geiger said. “So that’s that’s why I’m here. And I’m not going to stop. None of us are going to stop. None of us.”

About Cronkite News 4001 Articles
Cronkite News is the news division of Arizona PBS. The daily news products are produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.