Last night, I met an eighteen-year old white girl from Concord, N.C. She just graduated from Concord High and she's an incoming freshman at Carolina. A lot of her friends are black, and her Dad is a Lutheran pastor at a predominantly African-American church in Concord. He's also on the board of the Concord, N.C. NAACP.
So this girl has had access to lots of relatively detailed, reliable information about what happened to a twenty-two year-old black football player named Angelo Robinson on the night he was killed recently in Concord. His death precipitated five nights of rioting by the local black community. She provided me with second-hand eyewitness accounts of what happened that night via some of her friends who were in the crowd at the Waffle House when things went down.
Seems that 180 or so kids from Concord, almost all of them black, had been out clubbing that night in Kannapolis. They all turned up at the Waffle House later that night, and were greeted by an off-duty Concord, N.C. white police officer who has a history of racial harassment and who works as a Waffle House nighttime security guard.
The incident escalated immediately. The white security guard ordered the black youths who had crowded into the Waffle House to go back outside. He then ordered the entire crowd to all line up in the parking lot, under the scrutiny of several street lights, and wait to be served. At this point, Angelo Robinson began to protest. He was twenty-two years old, a local kid, and had a full football scholarship to Elon College. He had been drinking a little that night, and had previously arranged for his sister to drive him home. His close friends maintain that he was nowhere near drunk. Now, confronted by an unjust situation, he was speaking out. Angelo was "talking shit" about what was going on, and the security guard didn't take too kindly to that.
Spartanburg Herald-Journal, 8/31/93
He told Angelo that unless he shut up, he would call local police for "backup" and Angelo would be arrested. Angelo wouldn't back down, and remained as vocal as he wanted to be. Backup was called. When a police van arrived, another officer took Angelo aside and reached a compromise that would have defused the entire incident. Angelo was told that if he was to leave and go right home, he would not be arrested. When this compromise was agreed to, Angelo and his sister began walking in the direction of their car.
Then, the fateful mistake was made. The white security guard who had threatened Angelo with arrest saw him walking away from the other officers, and, fully unaware of the agreement which they had reached with him, ran at Angelo and tried to tackle him. In a flash, Angelo was defending himself and the other police officers rushed over and began spraying him with pepper mace.
Immediately, Angelo began screaming at them to stop, saying he had asthma. As the astonished crowd looked on, the officers then carried Angelo to the back of their police van, dumped him on the floor, locked the doors and immediately drove away from the Waffle House, headed directly for the Concord police station.
While enroute to the station, Angelo began throwing up in the back of the police van. The officers up front could see him and hear him doing so, but did nothing, because they assumed he was throwing up because he was drunk. He was unconscious when they arrived at the station and opened the van's doors. Despite efforts to revive him, he died right there in the custody of the Concord police.
So essentially, because of an off-duty cop's racism, ignorance, and belligerence, an innocent kid was killed.
Wilmington Star-News, 7/18/93(Click for larger size)
1 comment:
i have the real story because I also was there. You are portraying the police in the wrong way. Several points in your story are wrong. You claim the white police officer was racist, but you've never spoken to him. The facts of your story are so far from the truth. Be responsible and do some investigating before shooting your mouth off. Angelo Robinson was drunk and looking for a fight that night. In fact, he was the loser of a fight at the Blue Lantern Lounge before going to the Waffle House. There were approximately 200 people that arrived at the Waffle House at 3:15 am on 07-11-93 to eat. The restaurant was already full at that time. The 2 police officers that were present were there because of repeated acts of violence perpetrated by the very "innocent" people you are defending. Also, maximum occupancy of that building was 27 people. Of course they had to line up to be served. Even white people have to stand in line in similar circumstances. Angelo Robinson wasn't speaking out, he was looking for a fight. He happened to cross the path of a dedicated police officer that never shied away from confrontation. Robinson never told the officers he had asthma. He had a blood alcohol level of .12, legally drunk. He never agreed to leave peacefully and he was not anywhere near his sister that night. The officer you are referring to tried desperately to get this young man to leave but Robinson instead swung his fists at the officers. He sought an opportunity to beat on someone in front of the same people that had just witnessed his defeat at the Blue Lantern Lounge at the hands of another black youth. Your comments illustrate ignorance and racism. Yes, I said it, blacks are a lot of the time more racist than whites. Angelo Robinson was no angel, he was drunk, angry, and looking for trouble that night. Unfortunately, he lost his life to a freak reaction to pepper spray. I know this to be true for I am the police officer you've tried to discredit. During the time of this terrible incident, I received more support from the Logan community from which Angelo Robinson hailed. I've been unjustly accused of being racist by many uninformed people because of this incident. Even Jesse Jackson came to Concord and spoke many falsehoods. When the truth came out he was asked by a reporter about these incorrect statements and his response was, " well that's what I was told by some of the people present at the scene. Angelo Robinson was drunk, angry, and looking for a fight that night, unfortunately he lost his life in a freak reaction to what the Concord Police used for "nonlethal" defense. Do a little research, his autopsy report shows no sign of violence except for an abrasion on his forehead that he received from another black patron of the Blue Lantern Lounge before coming to the Waffle House. I'll pray for you to receive some wisdom of which you obviously are lacking.
Post a Comment