Black Teen With White Parents Mistaken For Burglar, Assaulted By Cops In His Own Home
‘Put your hands on the door, I was like, ‘For what? This is my house.’ Police pointed at photos of white people hanging on the wall and told him that he was lying.
A North Carolina teen was recently assaulted and pepper sprayed by police in his own home, after he was mistaken for a burglar. 18-year-old DeShawn Currie has been living with foster parents Ricky and Stacy Tyler in Wake County, North Carolina for about a year.
The Tylers love DeShawn as their own son and they have taken him into their home, in hopes to provide him the safe and loving environment that he needs to thrive in the most important years of his life.
Unfortunately, some of the Tyler’s neighbors were not familiar with the family dynamics of the home, and decided to call the police to report a burglary when they saw the young man entering his home after school one day. DeShawn did not climb through a window or struggle to get inside, but simply walked through the unlocked door of the home. The only thing that actually made his neighbors suspicious, was the color of his skin.
When police arrived on the scene they treated DeShawn like a criminal without asking any questions.
“They was like, ‘Put your hands on the door, I was like, ‘For what? This is my house.’ I was like, ‘Why are y’all in here?” DeShawn said in an interview.
When DeShawn asked the officers why they were in his home, they pointed at photos of white people hanging on the wall and told him that he was lying.
“I’m feeling comfortable, I had moved into my room, and I’m feeling like I’m loved. And then when they come in and they just profile me and say that I’m not who I am. And that I do not stay here because there was white kids on the wall, that really made me mad,” DeShawn later told reporters.
During the entire altercation, police were shouting profanity at the young man, and pointing multiple guns at his face. When DeShawn stood firm and insisted that he was in fact in his own home, police attacked him with pepper spray.
When Stacy Tyler came home from work she saw her son DeShawn in the driveway being treated by paramedics for the injuries that police had inflicted.
“My 5-year-old last night, she looked at me and said, ‘Mama I don’t understand why they hated our brother, and they had to come in and hurt him,”Stay Tyler told reporters.
“Everything that we’ve worked so hard for in the past years was stripped away yesterday in just a matter of moments,” father Ricky Tyler added.
The police department has defended their actions, saying that that DeShawn did not obey the officer’s orders to the letter, despite the fact that they were intruders in his home and had no right to be there barking orders at him.
Now this is something to bring attention to.
Yes
im ashamed i live in this county
Burn it all down.
When people say they hate the police and don’t trust them and think they’re racist it’s not always because of a shooting (though that is part of it), incidents like this certainly add to it. And before anyone is like “not all police officers are like that” while that may be true we need to also acknowledge that some police officers ARE like that and stop trying to excuse their actions with, “but they were just doing their jobs,” and, “you don’t know the whole story yet,” when stuff like this comes up.
Also, stop with this whole “it’s not always about race” thing because clearly this was about race when neighbors decide to call the cops because a black kid walks into his home. He was living with his white foster parents for almost a year you mean to tell me that in an entire year these neighbors didn’t know who he was? Right. But I’m sure someone will spin this in an, “Police work is hard and adrenaline gets going and they just react,” sort of way. I hope this young man’s parents really go up to bat for him, maybe their voices will be heard since they’re white. Harsh? Yeah. Truthful? Double yeah.
A hydra is a snake right? So basically Nick fury is trying to get hydra off the helicarrier right? Does that mean he’s trying to get those motherfucking snakes off his motherfucking plane?
So no matter who you are or where you’re at, it’s your duty to give “the nod.” Even in the most extreme of circumstances, we always found a way to let each other know, “I see you, bruh.”
lmao the babies tho
But why is this so true tho….
No joke, this is a thing. I remember starting college at Iowa State, which was predominantly white, and I was moving into my dorm and my parents were there, and this black girl walked down the sidewalk past our car and she nodded to me, I nodded back, and my mom was like, “That girl was just like, thank god, another black person,” and I laughed it off…
This is the story of a geeky anime/gaming gal by the name of Chibi. Please fasten your seat belts and prepare for... some sort of ride? Oh! I love to write, and I also love doing crafty things. I go to conventions with my partner and sell woodburned things, clocks, mirrors, and more! So expect to see those on here too :)