Updated April 12
On campuses around the country
In the neighborhoods
Harlem, NYC
Stolen Lives Truck Rolls: A Sense of Collective Hope and Defiance is Getting Born
April 8, 2015
This Generation MUST Say NO MORE!
Bringing Forward Cores on the Campuses Through the Stolen Lives Days
April 2, 2015
Double Down on the Moral and Political Challenge Posed by the Stolen Lives Poster
April 4, 2015
Letter from Young Revolutionary
Get With A14! Struggle with No Apology to Get Free
April 2, 2015
Stolen Lives Day at UC Berkeley: Thousands Confronted with the Epidemic of Police Murder, Challenged to Fight Back
April 6, 2015
April 1 Stolen Lives Day at Seattle University
April 6, 2015
Stolen Lives Day on a Houston Campus
April 3, 2015
Anecdote from Stolen Lives Days on a Campus
April 3, 2015
Chicago Stolen Lives Dinner:
Families Tell Their Stories of Heartbreak, Outrage, and the Fight for Justice
April 1, 2015
Read more and view videos of the evening
Chicago Fundraising Dinner Honors Stolen Lives Families
April 1, 2015
On March 21, at a fundraising dinner for A14, the Stop Mass Incarceration Network, Chicago Chapter welcomed and honored six families who have lost loved ones to police murder. Over 50 people of all ages and nationalities attended this fundraiser at the Wicker Park Lutheran Church.
The families honored were those of Freddie Latise Wilson, Roshad McIntosh, Darius Pinex, Rekia Boyd, Marcus Landrum, and Ronald "Ronnieman" Johnson. Through their collective voices, the families and supporters celebrated the humanity of their loved ones, honored the families, and strengthened all our determination to fight for justice for all those murdered or brutalized by the police.
Check out correspondence on the dinner from a student who is part of the Stop Mass Incarceration Network, Chicago chapter:
How many more? How many more grieving families? How many more dead sons and fathers? How many more lies have been told and how much evidence buried in other cases that we will never know about? How many more excuses to justify these stolen lives? How much more does it take to get people to pay attention and demand justice? What else do these people have to do, and suffer through, for us to finally hear them?
Allene Person