-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Sept. 12, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

COMMUNITY OUTRAGED OVER DEATH OF ERNEST PRATHER: 
NYC POLICE KILL ANOTHER UNARMED BLACK MAN

By Michelle Quintus
Brooklyn, N.Y.

Police terror continued here Aug. 27 when cops from the 79th 
Precinct in the community of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, 
shot and killed Ernest Prather, a 39-year-old African 
American man. Residents who knew him described him as an 
intelligent, nonviolent man who rode a bicycle around the 
neighborhood.

Just before the killing, Prather had been volunteering at a 
church that serves food to the homeless on Tuesdays, the "So 
Great a Salvation Ministries" located at 345 Franklin Ave. 
Police were called to the church after a verbal dispute over 
some juice. Laura Prather had suggested to her husband that 
the argument was "not worth it" and that he should leave to 
cool off.

When Prather tried to return to the church at 2:49 p.m., he 
was met by four cops with their guns drawn on the corner of 
Franklin and Greene avenues. He lifted up his T-shirt to 
reveal a bright orange plastic squirt gun in his waistband. 
Many witnesses say he never even reached for the toy many 
residents carry on hot summer days to keep cool.

A witness who identified himself as Mr. Carey, who has lived 
in the neighborhood for 38 years, said Prather kept 
repeating, "Look, this is not a gun; this is not a gun," 
with his hands raised. Then, Carey said, the cops started 
shooting.

All witnesses to the shooting reported six to 10 shots to 
the abdomen.

When this reporter arrived at the scene just minutes before 
3 p.m., Prather's body lay motionless on the sidewalk 
surrounded by six police vehicles. His eyeglass case was 
there, but no "realistic-looking toy gun," as cops described 
it, was present anywhere on the sidewalk or near Prather's 
body.

Meanwhile, cops were pushing witnesses--including Laura 
Prather and many neighborhood children--back with loaded 
guns. Outraged community members shouted, "Diallo" and "You 
can't go around killing Black men."

Witnesses were pointing at the man they called the shooter, 
who had already removed his badge and the top of his uniform 
to be unidentifiable.

An ambulance arrived shortly after 3 p.m., late enough for 
Prather to bleed to death. Contrary to police reports that 
say he died later at Woodhull Medical and Mental Health 
Center, Prather was taken from the scene of his murder in a 
body bag, as evidenced by a Daily News photo of Aug. 28 and 
many witnesses.

By 3:05 p.m., all witnesses had been pushed back to where 
they could not see the crime scene. Community residents were 
not allowed within two blocks of the shooting for hours, 
even to go home.

Prather's killers were taken to a nearby hospital and, 
according to the Aug. 28 New York Times, treated for 
"trauma."

Later that night, Laura Prather, along with her husband's 
friends and community members, lit a single white candle in 
his honor on the corner of Franklin and Greene avenues where 
he had died.

At this spontaneous street corner memorial, one outraged 
resident, Zukirah Brown, said: "We're all tired of the 
police brutality against Black people. I'm tired of the cops 
shooting down Black men. It's got to end. ... It's got to 
end now."

- END -

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