Mrs France» Schoen-Newapaper R oob U n iv e rs ity o f Oregon L ib ra ry tugene, Oregon 97403 Homeless in Portland If* Boston takes fei lead African art sparkles Page 3 »■> * ® Page 6 PORTLAND OBSERVER Volume XV, Number 29 May 15. 1985 25C Copy Two Sections uS rtw aefm / f v /W W is A zn « ' o '•« /«M ■I Verdict : Homicide by Lamia Duke GRASSROOT NEWS. N .W . Deliberating for two hours and nine minutes and absorbing inform ation only worthy o f belief, the inquest ju ry ’s verdict was homicide. Tom Steenson, attorney fo r the Stevenson fam ily, defined homicide as “ the causing o f the death o f an­ other individual by another individ ual. In this case it was the police o ff i­ cers. It was more than negligence; it was not an accident and it was not natural It was caused by the sleeper hold and the failure to administer (P R Sgt. Joseph Huff, trainer for the Portland Police Department, after explaining how the application and uae of the carotid-sleeper hold is taught in the department, demonstrates how a shorter officer can overcome a height difference before applying the "hold." Some account» of the incident indicate O ffi­ cer Barbour jumped off the ground to get hia arm around Stevenson’s neck, a tactic not taught to officers. 11 i* tecting if a victim is breathing before applying CPR. Although there ere varying account» relating to Stevenson’» breathing — from constant but labored to A.A. Ambulance, there was no attempt at pulmonary resuscitation. (Photo»: Richard J. Brown) Although District Attorney Michael Schrunk's line o f questioning favored the police. Steenson was not surprised by the verdict. “ As the three days o f testimony unfolded, the evidence became com ixTIinir.” he added Ronnie Herndon, co-chair o f the Black United Front, who attended all three days o f the inquest, said he was happy, surprised and encouraged by t he verdict "T h a t was what we hoped for. I was surprised by it because o f the un­ balanced way the inquest was handled. However, the inquest jury just looked at the facts and came up with the verdict," Herndon said A grim D A left the courtroom without answers to questions except to say that he was unaware o f any procedural questions. But throughout the three day inquest, Steenson, Herndon and a number o f onlixikers confronted Schrunk outside the court­ room regarding his line o f questioning This reporter witnessed Avel Gord- ley questioning Schrunk on his refusal to pursue whether racial slurs were involved. Schrunk said he hadn't heard race brought up. But Gordlcy repled that he never asked. The inquest verdict is not admis­ sible in the grand jury proceedings which w ill begin on Thursday, May I6. Stevenson widow files $15 million damage suit by Lanttu Duke GRASSROOT NEWS, N.W . — On May 13, Susanna Stevenson, widow o f Tony Stevenson who died as a result o f police action, tiled a 15 million dollar damage suit in U.S. District Court for wrongful death and Civil Rights viola­ tions. The civil suit requested a jury tnal and listed Gary Barbour, Bruce Pantley, Thomas Mitchell, Penny Harrington and the City of Portland (Bud Clark) as defendants. filed by Tom Steenson, attorney for the Stevenson family, the preliminary statement said, " The defendants caused iv allowed the use o f the lethal carat id/ choke hold under circumstances where deadly force was not justified." Tlie suit added that the defendants failed to provide any cardiopulmo­ nary resuscitation or other timely medical treatment to Stevenson once the hold rendered him unconscious, “ until directed to do so by emergency medical personnel who arrived at the scene eight or 10 minutes later.” The suit claims, "T h e conduct o f defendants Barbour and Pantley herein is consistent with their patterns and practice o f using excessive force and racial epithets against Black c iti­ zens in Port hind.” Steenson alleges that Stevenson was maintaining crowd control to pre­ vent Blacks and whites from inter­ vening in a struggle between an al­ leged shoplifter and a store clerk. " A t the time o f the police officers’ arrival, a verbal exchange between Mr. Stevenson and the service station attendant was taking place. 'When Mr. Stevenson was approached by the police officers, both he and the w it­ nesses made every attempt to explain his role in the incident and identify himself to the police officers. Those efforts were ignored by the officers,” alleges the suit. The suit contends Stevenson did not forcibly resist or strike any o ff i­ cer, and adds, "Even if the assault and use o f the carolid/choke hold was justified in this instance, the carotid/ choke was applied improperly by said defendants." The suit also stated, "O n A p ril 20, 1985, defendants Harrington and Portland had a policy, practice or custom, either written or de facto, o f allowing the use o f the lethal carotid/ choke hold by their police officers under circumsances not justifying the use o f deadly physical force. "Defendants Harrington and P ort­ land failed, either negligently, reck­ lessly or intentionally to provide ade­ quate training discipline and supervi­ sion o f their police officers, so as to prevent the acts alleged.” Minora Yasui talk» to Kikue Kanayama and bar »on Bill Sugahiro after ha addressed a moating of the local chapter of the Japanese American Citizen League. (Photo: Richard J Brown) Yasui documents internment by Robert Lothian Minoru Yasui was an attorney prat being in Portland in 1942 when the government ordered 120,000 Japanese Americans living on the West Coast relocated to camps in Idaho, Utah and California. Yasui, who was "O regon born and b re d ," he said, thought the govern­ ment order was racist and unconstitu­ tional. He decided to resist evacua­ tion, and so did tw o other men. They were arrested, jailed and eventually sent to the camps. Yasui is a 1939 graduate o f the U n i­ versity o f Oregon Law School. Iron- ita lly, he had tried to enlist in the U.S. m ilitary before the relocation order, but was refused. Over 40 years later, Yasui is leading a legal fight to overturn the convic­ tions and declare the relocation order and a subsequent Supreme Court decision unconstitutional. He traveled from Denver, where he practices law, to Portland last week for a court hearing on the issue While here he addressed a meeting o f the local chapter o f the Japanese- American Citizens League. Yasui announced that he and Fred Korematsu had their convictions overturned recently. " I t was an out- The testimony Last week during a public inquest this version o f what occurred became public. From throwing the alleged shoplifter into a police car to ignoring Lloyd Stevenson's pleas to show his ID, witnesses pieced together this account: Burnell Wilson Jr., one o f the eye witnesses closest to the police and Stevenson, said the gas station at­ tendant (Greg (,'avic) threatened Stev­ enson with a gun or a knife. Cavic had called the police and said he was headed over to the 7-11 with a 45- caliber handgun. "Stevenson was saying, 'Come on with it.’ The police (Bruce Pantley and Gary Barbour) came over and said to break it up. We told the o ffi­ cers the whole lime that they had the wrong guy.” Four eyewitnesses said at no lime did Stevenson hit or push an officer. Wilson said tI k - officers immediate­ ly jumped on Stevenson. “ He wasn’t struggling. And all he said was, 'Let me show you my I D '.” Wilson added that the hold was applied to Stevenson while he was standing, Barbour on his back with his arm uround Stevenson's throat, Tom Mitchell and Pantley on each arm. "W hen they went to the ground, I heard Stevenson gasp and then he went lim p Jerry Crain yelled out my car window, 'You guys have killed h im '!” Wilson said Stevenson lay there for five minutes. " I don't understand why they d idn't take the lime to listen." Crain said when he and Wilson a r­ rived at the store, Stevenson was preventing onlixikers from interven­ ing in an altercation between the clerk and the shoplifter. "W e kept telling the police that they had the wrong guy but they wouldn’t listen," Crain noted. Perry Bailey, the 7-11 clerk who asked Stevenson to help, said he also told the police that Stevenson was the wrong guy. "T h e police told me to leave well enough alone.” The refusal o f the police to imme­ diately administer CPR contributed to Stevenson's death as he lay hand cuffed, face down in a parking lot ol a 7 11 in Northeast Portland. And the sleeper hold was applied tix i long, stated M ultnom ah C ounty Medical Examiner Larry Newman. Newman, who performed the au topsv, also added that the evidence he reviewed showed that Stevenson had been left on the ground for at least four minutes prior to receiving any medical treatment. His conclusion complements and corroborates what some eyewitnesses saw A p ril 20 as Stevenson’s desire to assist a volatile situation resulting in police over reaction and his death. "T h e police failed to recognize the gravity o f the situation he was ill," Newman added. The ambulance technician who arrived on the scene after Pantley ran across the street to request help had to tell the police to remove Stevenson's handcuffs. He said Stevenson wasn't breathing, nor did he have a pulse. D i. James Rilenbcrry o f Holiday Park Hospital, said Stevenson was essentially dead on arrival. Edward Meaney, one o f the eye witnesses, said he saw a man down while he was driving south on Union Avenue. "T he police weren’t doing anything. I drove around the block and the officers were in the same po­ sition. It was noticeable that nothing was happening.” Meaney said. The inquest ju ry viewed the train­ ing tapes on the use o f the carotid- artery hold. The tapes indicated that the hold should be applied after the person is down. Officer Barbour said he applied the hold after Stevenson was down, but Officer Bert Combs said Barbour definitely applied the hold while Stevenson was standing He added that he heurd Stevenson's offer to show his identification to the o ffi­ cers three times. standing victory,” he said. Gordon Hirabayashi's trial conies up soon in Seattle, he said. But on his case to have the reloca- tion order overturned and restore rights and privileges to those who cluding Yasui, spent several months in a makeshift camp at the Livestock- Exposition yards in North Portland Yasui was jailed for 10 months at Rocky Butte Jail, in solitary confine tnenl, and then he was sent to the were sent to the camps, Yasui de­ scribed government fixit-dragging. U.S. District Court Judge Robert Belloni refused to fact finding on the issue, even though Yasui’s legal team had amassed 400 pages o f documents, he said. "B c llo n i’s comment was, ‘ What are we here fo r, I haven't read these papers," according to Yasui. " I t almost seems as if they are waiting for us to die,” to avoid con­ fronting the issue," said Yasui. "W e ’ re going to wash dirty linen in public and it's not going to make certain people (in government) hap­ py,” he said. Thousands o f Japanese Americans are not willing to let the issue die, said Yasui "W e want a statement that says the government was wrong in 1942, and we won’t settle for less than that,” he said, pounding a table for emphasis. The government’s reason for the camp at Minedoka, Idaho. He hasn't forgotten the guard lowers, the harbed wire and the machine guns. He compared the experience to America's equivalent o f the H olo­ caust. Racist, anti-Japanese hysteria was evident in newspaper headlines from that time. After release from the camp, Yasui settled in Denver, where he married, began raising a family and passed the Colorado bar exam He met with resistance to practicing law. "T hey said I was a person ot bad moral char­ acter," he said. Altogether, said Yasui, the rclixa tio n experience tk four years out o f his life. Portland's Japanese-Amencans compared stories after Yasui's talk Kikue Kaneyama and her fam ily from Gresham "sold everything we had" before being sent to the camp, she said. She described the feeling o f despair that permeated the camp. Upon returning to Gresham, she said, the fam ily had to start over from scratch and laced antagonism from neighbors. "W e weren’ t welcomed, really, not in the restaurants.” said Kaneyama. " It 's just like i f a person was raped, you never forget it , " she said " It 's always with you throughbout your life tim e ." rctocMKNi was intelligence pointing toward an extensive Japanese spy system in the U.S. But Yasui con­ tends that the intelligence was false, that not one Japanese was convicted as a spy. Approximately 3,MX) Japanese Americans were relocated from P ort­ land, according to Yasui Many, in ­