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Since its inception in 1909, the NAACP has been steadfast in the belief that
racial segregation and discrimination limit and diminish human potential,
ultimately denying the full benefits of freedom to African Americans. The NAACP
has been at the forefront of the struggle to eliminate racial disparities in
the criminal justice system.
African Americans and America itself are eternally indebted to W.E.B. DuBois,
Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Henry Moscowitz, Mary White Ovington, Oswald Harrison
Villiard and William English Walling answered the clarion "call" for human and
civil rights in response to the widespread lynching of blacks that was
occurring in 1909 by the National Association of Colored People. Thereafter,
when federal, local government and civil authorities failed or refused to stop
the daily lynching, the NAACP took action.
In 1925 the NAACP provided legal representation for Detroit, Michigan's Dr.
Ossian Sweet. Dr. Sweet faced a mob of angry whites after moving into an all
white neighborhood. When the mob attacked his home, gunfire erupted killing one
person in the crowd. Dr. Sweet and his brother were charged with murder. Famed
attorney Clarence Darrow, retained by the NAACP, represented Mr. Sweet. The
first trial ended in a mistrial when an all-white jury could not agree. The
second trial ended in a "not guilty" verdict. This early NAACP supported case
coined the phrase, "a man's home is his castle."
Racism within our criminal justice system has changed its face, having become
more subtle and sophisticated, but just as destructive as in the past. Today,
the struggle continues as we combat not lynching, but racial profiling and
driving while black. From the beating of Rodney King to the shooting of Amadou
Diallo, citizens' distrust of law enforcement officers is growing.
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