M a rc h 8, 2000 Page A4 (Tljv ]JortUnb ©bseruer * q ü Opinion P u r tl.m il Articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views of (Tlje ^ J o rtla n b (© baeruer Justice For All? B y B ernice P ow ell J ackson Wife •Jportlanh (Obscrricr USPS 959-680 Established 1970 STA FF E d it o r P C in h ie f , u b l is h e r Charles H. Washington E d i T o it Larry J. Jackson, Sr. B u s in e s s M The judge instructed the jury to put themselves in the shoes o f the police officers. But when did they put themselves in the shoe o f Amadou D ia llo ? A lo n e , u n d o u b te d ly frightened black man from another c o u n try try in g to get into his apartment in the early morning hours and facing four armed white men in plain clothes. Maybe he was trying to get out his keys-from his wallet. Maybe he was trying to get out his identification papers or maybe just trying to hand over his billfold to those he believed w ere robbing him. We will never know what Amadou Diallo was trying to do in his last moments oflife before those 19 bullets entered his body, apparently even including the soles o f his feet after he had fallen over. We do know that at least one o f his neighbors testified that she did hear the police officers identify themselves before she heard the barrage o f bullets. We do know that Diallo had no gun, as the police testified they thought he had. We do know that what they mistook for a gun was that wallet. We do know that all that Amadou Diallo was guilty o f was, in the words o f New York Times columnist Bob Herbert, breathing while black. In A glut of law, a dearth of order bi J oe K lock SOMKltU. I lN