Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Video of Boston Cop Questioning Black Pedestrian Draws Outrage (Watch)

[videowaywire video_id=”2B35B10D23319D33″]

Boston Police Officer Zachary Crossen
Boston Police Officer Zachary Crossen

*In the latest Walking While Black incident, the Boston Police Department is facing criticism from civil rights activists after video surfaced showing a white police officer stopping and questioning a black pedestrian because he fit the description of someone named Kevin. (Watch above.)

The man says he was walking to the barbershop last week in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood when he noticed an unmarked police cruiser circle around him and stop, ABC Boston affiliate WCVB reported. In the video, recorded on the man’s cellphone, the officer in the passenger seat of the car asks the man if his name is Kevin.

“You look like someone we’re looking to speak to,” the officer is seen saying in the video.

Boston Police Officer Zachary Crossen

After the man tells the officer that his name is not Kevin, the officer replies, “You sure?” before asking for his name again.

“Why you wanna know my name?” the man behind the camera responds.

The officer, sporting jeans, a beanie hat and a Boston Police vest, then exits his car and continues to question the man.

“It’s noontime on a Thursday,” the officer said. “What are you doing today?”

The officer goes on to ask the man where he lived and whether he was “killing time,” The Boston Globe reported. The man asks the officer why he was being stopped and why the officer was “bothering” him.

“Are your parents proud of you for flipping off the police?” the officer asks at one point, apparently after the man gave him the middle finger.

Keith Antonio
Keith Antonio

The man involved in the incident was identified by the Globe as Keith Antonio, while the officer was identified as Zachary Crossen.

On Monday, Antonio appeared in a press conference alongside Boston civil rights leaders, who called for a department-wide directive focusing on street patrol training, among other issues.

“This has been an ongoing situation, when the interactions between the police department and members of our community, particularly those who are black and brown and male, are not friendly,” said Jamarhl Crawford, an activist with both Blackstonian, a newspaper for “black Bostonians,” and Mass Police Reform, an organization “working to reform police practices to improve respect for basic human and civil rights,” according to their respective websites.

Watch below:

Boston Police spokesperson Michael McCarthy told the Globe that officers were in the area to monitor a house “known for gun activity.”

In a statement to ABC News, a spokesperson for the department said Boston Police Commissioner William Evans is aware of the incident and that the video is being reviewed “to determine if any rules or regulations were violated during the encounter.”

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