May Day Rally

Immigrant Rights are Human Rights. Injustice to One is Injustice to All.

Join Copwatch at the May Day Rally on Amherst North Commons
12-2pm on May 1st, 2008

Download a PDF of the flier

Co-sponsored by Artists for Justice, SAGE, Western MA Jobs with Justice, Western MA AFSC, Greensboro Justice Fund, Western MA Interfaith Coalition for Peace and Justice, and Western MA Copwatch

For more information, email wmciwr@gmail.com.

Triggering Change: Hip-Hop Conference at UMass

Brothers & Sisters Gonna Work It Out: Sexual Politics And Hip-Hop Feminism,

“What It Look Like”: Race, Class & Hip-Hop,

Marketing A Revolution?: Hip-Hop Culture, Media Influence & You!

Sounds good? Then check out this weekend’s Triggering Change: Hip Hop, Media Justice and Social Responsibility Conference at the Isenberg School of Management at University of Massachusetts Amherst. Click here to see the full conference schedule.

After the conference on Saturday, head to Hampshire College to see Dead Prez and Rebel Diaz perform.

Demand Safe Streets for all Women

The Republican has reported on numerous street sweeps of prostitutes in both Holyoke and Springfield. Police policy refers to this as part of “quality of life” initiatives, that often results in more aggressive use of force.

(view recent articles here, here, here, and here).

These policies are enacted presumably to improve the quality of life in the neighborhoods of Holyoke and Springfield. However, it is apparent that they do little but fill the jails.

All women, particularly poor, lesbian, queer, trans, and non-white women, should not live with police abuse. Any woman who finds herself out on the streets could easily become a target for prostitution crime by the police. This is why it is critical that we work for safe and empowered communities. Therefore, as an organization, we are dedicated to the safety of women from all violence, especially from the violence that originates from the police and prison systems.

Do you feel that you have been unfairly targeted by the police? If so, please contact us.

Yale Daily News: Prisons commit greater crimes than inmates

Claire Gordon, in yesterday’s Yale Daily News, gives the rundown of some problems with the U.S. prison system. Not only does the United States imprison a higher percentage of its people than any other nation in the world, the system is hugely burdensome to taxpayers and disproportionately punishes people of color. As Gordon puts it, “Prisoners may have broken the law, but our prisons, as they exist right now, are committing crimes against humanity.” Read more about these and other issues: Prisons commit greater crimes than inmates.

Trial Date Set for Martinez and Cops

On December 18, three off-duty Holyoke Police Department officers beat up Christopher Martinez, a Holyoke resident, outside of Pal Joey’s, a bar on Route 5. At a pre-trial conference this week, the date for the cops’ (the two who are being tried) trial was set: May 27, 2008, in Palmer District Court. Until then, the officers continue their suspension with pay.

We will attend this trial, and hope to see as many Christopher Martinez supporters there as possible!

News coverage from The Republican.

Police Surveillance in Springfield

The Springfield Police Department is looking into rolling out a program to install 50 video cameras Downtown, along with four microphones that can pick up the sound of  gunshots. This program also plans to install video cameras in police cruisers, both to scan license plates in search of stolen cars, and to record police officers on the job. Although the Springfield Police Supervisors Association and Local 364 of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers has been resistant to new technology, recording police officers on the job could do a lot to prevent police misconduct. From The Republican:

As for video cameras, critics over the years said failure to install video cameras in cruisers showed a lack of accountability. The cameras record officers interacting with drivers at traffic stops and making arrests, and supporters say the devices also can protect officers from false charges of brutality. The U.S. Department of Justice in 1999 urged that cameras be installed in cruisers here to improve the department’s credibility with blacks and Hispanics.

Credibility is something the department could use. But in this plan, cameras in police cruisers would come as part of a package of civilian surveillance all over the city, and at great monetary expense to taxpayers. Is police accountability worth the price tag?

ColorLines: Killed by the Cops

A recently published series of articles in ColorLines discusses research on race, crime, and police brutality. Relevant to our work in Springfield and Holyoke, this research says that nationally, the number of Latinos killed by the police is on the rise. Focusing on the ten largest U.S. cities, these articles show that police brutality is a problem for any metropolitan area. Click below to read the series.

ColorLines: Killed by the Cops

Collecting Stories

Have you been harassed or beaten by the cops? Contact us and tell us what’s going on. Copwatch is collecting and publishing people’s stories of police harassment and brutality. Police abuse in our communities is widespread. By sharing our stories, we realize that none of us must suffer alone. We believe the struggle against police brutality is a struggle against racism.

Contact us by phone: (413) 559-8823, or by email: info@westernmasscopwatch.net

You can help

Help us collect stories by downloading our flyer, making copies and putting them up in your neighborhood. Click here to download the flyer (English and Spanish, PDF, 66 KB). Check out our resources page to download our other literature in PDF format.

“Bastards of the Party:” Video Screening and Speakout!

Speakout and Video Screening of “Bastards of the Party”

Presented by Western Mass Copwatch

Jan. 21st 12-2:30pm

Featured at the Media Education Foundation located at 60 Masonic Street in Northampton

Western Mass Copwatch will be showing “Bastards of the Party” (a film about the Bloods and Crips in LA, illustrating how the police act as catalysts for the creation of crime). Copwatch will also be hosting a speakout for people to share their experiences with police brutality and explain what Copwatch is and the work it does in the community.