Oakland Sick to Death
Oakland Sick to Death
Posted by Wilmer Tejada on June 30, 2010 at 12:03pm

Courtroom coverage: OAKLAND & LOS ANGELES--Former BART police officer Johannes Mehserle has been sentenced to two years in state prison in the New Year's Day 2009 shooting death of 22-year old Oscar Grant. Protesters gathered in the downtown Oakland City Center (above) to express outrage and sadness over the sentence.

This post will update with the latest headlines, and you can read on for our previous coverage of the case. We've broken down our previous coverage into the following themes: The Case, Citizen Journalism, Impact, and Protests.

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Posted by King Anyi Howell on April 2, 2009 at 11:22am

As heard on KQED-FM's Perspectives Series.

As Oakland says goodbye to four police officers, I feel my hometown's aspiration of becoming a 'model city' is dead and gone.

I've been living in L.A. for seven months now, and while I miss my hometown of Oakland, I couldn't have picked a better time to blow this popsicle stand.

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Posted by King Anyi Howell on March 27, 2009 at 11:05am

My mother told me that even though she misses me, she’s glad I’m away.  I moved to Los Angeles from Oakland seven months ago, and ever since I left, my home city has been experiencing one tragedy after the next. 

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Posted by Denise Tejada on March 27, 2009 at 09:57am

Politicians including California's governer joined Oakland residents and crowds of police in uniform at a public funeral today for the four Oakland officers slain last weekend.

An overflow crowd was directed to the Oakland Coliseum, where the event was broadcast on a massive screen. The line to get into the Coliseum stretched past the end of the parking lot.  

Governer Arnold Schwarzenegger was joined by Senators Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer.

Boxer said in a speech that the officers who died defined courage and bravery.

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Posted by Leon Sykes on March 26, 2009 at 12:04pm

Residents marched through East Oakland Wednesday paying tribute to Lovelle Mixon, who shot and killed four Oakland police officers over the weekend. The International People's Democratic Uhuru Movement organized the event to bring attention to what they describe as police brutality.

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Posted by Denise Tejada on March 25, 2009 at 04:25pm

The atmosphere at Oakland's City Hall Wednesday was quiet in the lobby where dozens have paid their respects to the four police officers killed over the weekend. Even though there weren't a lot of people signing the condolence books that afternoon, there were some visitors who felt the killing of the four police officers will help bring people back to their senses.

A firefighter who had been dispatched to the shooting scene said it's heart warming seeing how Oakland residents have come together to pay respect, and respect is just the beginning to a brighter day.
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Posted by Devonte Swag on March 23, 2009 at 03:18pm

I’ve lived on the 7400 block of Holly Street in East Oakland since November. I went in knowing that on the outskirts of my block were drugs and the bi-products of those drugs. Fiends, dealers, and riff raff.

My quiet street is just four long blocks away from where the police officers were shot this weekend.

I’m not surprised that it happened, but the crime was so gruesome -- shooting officers right in the face -- that it gives me a jolt. In theory, these types of things have been happening in the neighborhood for a long time.
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Posted by brett on March 23, 2009 at 02:25pm

The relationship between Oakland, California residents and the Oakland Police Department has been difficult for decades. On one side, there are arguments about a history of corruption and police brutality, and on the other, a contention that Oakland, a city with high rates of violent crime and murder, requires a firm hand from police.

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