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NAACP takes hate crime concerns to Clearlake council PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elizabeth Larson   
Friday, 26 October 2007

THIS STORY HAS BEEN UPDATED, WITH A CORRECTION ABOUT THE COSTS FOR A HATE CRIME VICTIM TO HAVE HER PROPERTY RESTORED. 

 

CLEARLAKE – Leaders of the Lake County Branch of the NAACP called on the Clearlake City Council Thursday night to do more to encourage diversity in the city and to work to solve a number of hate crimes that occurred earlier this year.


National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Branch President Aqeela El-Amin Bakheit and First Vice President Rick Mayo gave presentations to the council.


A third presentation later in the meeting was offered by Booker Neal, senior mediator of the Community Relations Service wing of the US Department of Justice.


Mayo, who spoke first, referred to symbols that are both beloved – such as the American flag – and hated, such as swastikas and other Nazi symbols.


As a free society, said Mayo, we should have gotten past crimes based on race. “Yet in this year, 2007, we are still addressing hate crimes in our community.”


Mayo's comments were a prelude to El-Amin Bakheit's remarks, which expanded on the theme of concern.


“We are here tonight, Madam Mayor, to charge this city to do more, to offer more, to be more open and honest with your citizens, the citizens who elected all of you to represent us, in the hopes of real representation,” she said.


El-Amin Bakheit said NAACP group members met with at least two department heads from February until about a month ago about diversity and social justice issues.


She said the group saw no real willingness on the part of certain city staffers to work with them, and asked the council to address that with staff.


“One of your department heads compared us to the Aryan Brotherhood, and we were appalled at that comment,” El-Amin Bakheit said, adding that the comment represented the lack of cultural diversity and sensitivity that concerned the group.


“We are truly under no illusion that we have been truly included in the city,” she said.


Concerns about hate crimes, racial insensitivity


Then, on May 7, seven properties and vehicles within the city were spray painted with hate speech, gang symbols and “filthy, degrading language,” El-Amin Bakheit said.


Residents in the affected neighborhood belong to a broad ethnic mix, she said.


NAACP is concerned about the status of the investigation into the crimes.


“To date, as far as we know those crimes have been unsolved,” she said.


El-Amin Bakheit added, “It is truly sad that in the year 2007 our concerns are not addressed, and when they are they’re not taken seriously.”


She discussed briefly the history of NAACP and explained that, nearly a century after the group’s founding, many of the obstacles to racial equality in the United States remain in place, with social injustices and civil rights violations continuing today.


NAACP’s founders, she said, were both black and white, and the local branch includes a mixed ethnic base as well, she said.


Referring to a commentary written earlier this year by Mayor Judy Thein, El-Amin Bakheit said, “We charge you to breath life and energy into the words written in your commentary about opportunity, hope and the will to make changes.”


She added that NAACP wanted to work with the council to create a better city.


City administrator offers apology


City Administrator Dale Neiman said he needed to apologize to NAACP members, and took responsibility for the comment about the Aryan Brotherhood.


Neiman explained that during one of the meetings earlier this year the group had asked him and interim Police Chief Larry Todd to agree to a statement of cooperation with NAACP.


A copy of that statement, provided to Lake County News by the NAACP, explains that the NAACP and city representatives were specifically discussing “insensitivities and other citizen concerns” relating to Clearlake Police Department.


The group asked Clearlake Police for information about its most recent cultural sensitivity training, to improve its recruitment among black candidates and to update its citizen complaint procedures, according to the statement.


Neiman said he and Todd didn't feel the agreement was necessary, as they already felt obligated to fulfill the NAACP's requests.


He said he had made the comment, which he regretted, in the context that if the city made such an agreement with NAACP, they’d have to do so with any group that came forward, and that include groups such as the Aryan Brotherhood.


He said he should have done “a better job” of explaining himself.


Neiman said his nephew is half African-American and he also has lived in the South and was appalled at the discrimination he saw there.


“I think we have an obligation to enforce the laws equally across the board,” said Neiman, adding that he also would like to see more diversity among city and police staff.


DOJ representative offers services


Booker Neal, who arrived later after being caught in traffic on the way from San Francisco, said the US Department of Justice's Community Relations Service wing was founded in 1964 to address race relations, and is founded on the belief that problems can be resolved.


Neal has made eight trips to Clearlake this year to advise with NAACP and local officials on diversity issues, said El-Amin Bakheit.


He explained that hate crimes, such as those the NAACP brought to the council’s attention, are often invisible but still very present.


“Statistics will show that they are probably the most underreported situations that we can imagine,” Neal said. “Don’t assume that you don’t have issues in your community.”


He suggested the city should have a plan to deal with hate crimes so that, when they happen, they can react properly.


To help with that, he said, “I offer the services of our agency.”


He commended the NAACP, Police Chief Allan McClain and the council for working on the issues.


Update on hate crime investigation


The homes hit by the May hate crimes were painted with swastikas, “thunderbolts” a symbol commonly worn by Hitler's Nazi SS officers on their uniforms, Mayo told Lake County News.


Photographs supplied to Lake County News also showed the number 14 painted on one home. The number among white supremacists refers to a 14-word quote by imprisoned white supremacist David Lane, "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children,” according to the Center for Democratic Renewal and Education.


In addition, one resident's car had curse words painted across the hood in red spray paint. The owner may have to pay thousands of dollars to have the car and her garage door repainted, said Mayo.


After the council meeting Police Chief Allan McClain gave Lake County News an update on the hate crime investigation.


He said investigators found some fingerprint evidence and entered it into the fingerprint tracking system, but so far have not found matches for the prints.


About two months ago, the case was reassigned to School Resource Officer Carl Miller, said McClain.


The crimes are believed to have been committed by juveniles, and McClain. “We hoped he'd be able to develop some leads in that area.”


McClain said the investigation is continuing.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .


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more questions
written by smurf, October 26, 2007
I'd like to see those gripes about the Clearlake PD the NAACP was worried about. There is some kind of white supremicist element based over there in the Clearlake/Lower Lake area, it may be just a few kids but it shouldn't be tolerated.
Racism all over
written by Donna Christopher, October 26, 2007
this county, not just CL/LL area. When I first moved here 33 years ago I was asked if I wanted to come to a KKK gathering in the Oaks. Uh, that would be a NO. I was living in a single wall construction cabin at Saratoga Springs at the time and was told there was a Bachelor Valley meeting that was closer to me - Yuck! Some of those folks involved in it still walk the streets of Lake County today. I was dismayed when the Nice Market had "Sand N****ers" spray painted on it when the new owners took over. In the Sheriffs logs it was called "vandalism". Can anyone explain how this is only vandalism but a swastika is racism?
here we go again
written by lcsage, October 26, 2007
spare me, please. The cracker mentality goes with the turf. As long as it continues to be a dumping ground for parolees, sex offenders and other social degenerates, the problem will continue ad inf.
I will regret this
written by Donna Christopher, October 26, 2007
but please do elaborate lcsage. The folks I'm talking about are pillars of the community and have been elected to public office. Then again, maybe they do fit into the "parolees, sex offenders and other social degenerates", it will compliment their racism quite nicely eh? And whose turf does the "cracker mentality" go with? Is it the City Counsel or Police Department or are the members of the NAACP crackers now.
I am familiar with some
written by lcsage, October 26, 2007
of those who you made reference to. I should have been more specific: SOUTHERN cracker mentality abounds in this county in regards to racism although it is common for citizens to label the man racist because he is the one who busts you. Lake County is well known as a "closed shop" to obtain any employment of any significance unless you have someone to shoe you in. The good old boy system is in full swing here in all aspects of local business and govt.
Sinking ship
written by get smart, October 26, 2007
Discrimination is the boat; and we are all in the same boat in one way or another whether we realize it or not. The name of that boat is called the world; and that boat is fast sinking because of the huge gaping hole caused by the iceberg we hit yesterday called discrimination.

Even as we climbed into our own little lifeboat called Lake County we do not realize we all have value. The residents of the City of Clear Lake feel the residents of Lakeport look down on them, and the citizens of Lakeport feel they are better than the citizens of the City of Clear Lake; do you remember there was a time when Glenhaven was referred to as Gayhaven. I guess it is just human nature to have to feel one is better than another. Sad when ones address is what validates who they are. For some it is the value of the stuff they have accumulated that make them feel important. The Non-Indian feels they are being discriminated against because of the gambling issue. I guess by nature humans have to look down their nose at somebody in order to find their own value. I wonder will we humans ever really grow up. Even our school sports pit one school against another; leading our children to disdain one another. Yes we are a society with many social ills; and it is our many individual fears that feed our need to discriminate against one another. Our children come with a clean slate; and it is we adults who fill those slates with our fears and judgments. Even our many diverse religions preach exclusion rather than inclusion.

While we may not be able to repair the gaping hole in the sinking ship; we can affect change here in our own little life boat if we make the commitment to do so. Holding our elected officials accountable is a good place to start. To affect change; each of us; has to make a personal commitment to not fall prey to gossiping about one another; knowing that our children learn by our examples that we set forth for them.

Sad to say for many of us it is too late to overcome the prejudice of our lifetime; but maybe; just maybe you understand; we can do better by our children. The next time you as an adult find it necessary to poke fun of; or snicker about someone; maybe you will fine it in your being not necessary to do so; knowing that by not doing so; you could be affecting a positive change here in the community you live in.
Yes sir
written by James, October 26, 2007
Your handle says it all.

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