Table of Contents
| Jinn Home Page
| Search
| Net-Links
Voices
| Heresies
| Vectors
| Pacific Pulse
| The Americas
| California
| Movements
| Civil Conflicts
| YO!

"Iverson Bill" -- A Tribute To A Murdered Child, A Weapon Against Predators
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Date: 09-14-00
One sad example of selective media coverage is the scant
attention paid to non-white victims of crime. This is true even when the
crime has "sensational" elements, as in the murder of a seven-year-old
African American child in 1997. A law named after that child now awaits the
governor's signature. PNS commentator Earl Ofari Hutchinson is the author
of "The Disappearance of Black Leadership." His e-mail address is
ehutchi344@aol.com.
"California Governor Gray Davis has a chance to make history.
In August, the California state legislature passed the Sherrice Iverson
Bill. If Davis does sign the bill--he has until September 30--it will be
the first law in the history of the American criminal justice system
named after an African-American.
Davis' signature would help bring closure to one of the most tragic and
sordid cases in recent memory. On May 25, 1997 Iverson, a
seven-year-old African American girl, was kidnapped, raped and
strangled in a bathroom stall at the Primadonna Casino 45 miles South
of Las Vegas by Jeremy Strohmeyer, 18, a white high school student
from Long Beach, California.
After an initial burst of public rage directed at Leroy Iverson, the girl's
father, for leaving her unattended at a gambling casino in the early
morning hours, the case dropped quickly from sight.
Then, in July 1998, the public learned that David Cash, a friend of
Strohmeyer, witnessed at least part of the attack on Iverson and did
nothing. He made things worse when he told the Los Angeles Times
that he wasn't troubled by her death.
This touched off a furor of protest -- marches, demonstrations and
rallies demanding that Cash be prosecuted as an accessory to the
murder. The media finally began to pay some attention after Iverson's
mother publicly demanded that Nevada authorities prosecute Cash.
Even this did not draw the sort of media coverage that would lead to
human interest stories on Iverson and her family. Instead, the media
sniffed sensationalism and played it as the story of an angry black
mother going after a young, devil-may-care, white kid.
In covering the story, both Time and People magazine focused almost
exclusively on the protest against Cash, again probing into his life and
the lives of his parents and friends.
In the process, Cash was given human dimensions. Iverson and her
family were little more than an afterthought. Newspapers featured
lengthy interviews with, and profiles on, Strohmeyer, Cash, their
parents, friends, and students at the school they attended.
There was not one word on the pain and suffering of those in Sherrice's
family.
This was hardly surprising given the stark racial and class contrasts of
those involved. Strohmeyer was considered an extremely bright kid
from a stable, comfortable middle-class home in Long Beach and had
traveled widely.
Iverson lived in South Central Los Angeles. Her father and her mother
Yolanda Manuel -- estranged at the time of her murder--are low
-income workers.
This seems yet one more sad example of the media's readiness to
probe the background, lives, feelings of middle-class whites, while
minimizing if not outright ignoring blacks, even when they are the
victims.
The killing of Sherrice, though heinous and shocking, did not ignite the
hyper-charged media frenzy that surrounded the cases of Louise
Woodward, the British au pair convicted of manslaughter in a baby's
death in Massachusetts, or Melissa Drexler, an 18-year-old high school
student in New Jersey who abandoned her baby at the prom. Neither
did it spark the kind of coverage that brought widespread public
attention to the plight of Megan Kagan, a seven-year-old raped and
strangled in New Jersey, or of Polly Klass, an 11-year-old murdered in
California.
The victims were all young, and none were black. An even more
dramatic contrast is the coverage of the murder of JonBenet Ramsey, a
three year old white girl. Hundreds of magazine and newspaper articles
have delved into Ramsey's background, and her family, with much
speculation on whether they had any role in the killing.
Three years after Iverson's murder, only one article has appeared on
her and her family. When the rage over Cash died down, the Iverson
tragedy again receded into oblivion.
The murder of Sherrice Iverson is a near textbook example of media
insensitivity and disdain for poor victims, no matter how young and
innocent.
But the law now on the governor's desk offers a chance to make sure
that her murder makes a lasting imprint on law and public policy.
Two years of pushing, prodding and cajoling state legislators in Nevada
and California, led by Najee Ali, director of Project Islamic Hope, led to
passage of a Sherrice Iverson bill in both states.
The law makes it a crime to witness a malicious act against a child and
not report it to authorities. This is much-needed legislation that will
provide another safeguard for children who are at grave risk from
sexual predators and abusive adults.
Nevada enacted the law. Now all it takes is a signature from Davis to
become law in California. This would give Sherrice Iverson the fitting
tribute that she and children everywhere deserve. Phone: (213)
897-0322 Fax (213) 897-0319 E-mail: graydavis@governor.ca.gov.

Pacific News Service,
660 Market Street, Room 210, San Francisco, CA 94104,
tel: (415) 438-4755.
Jinn Magazine: <http://www.pacificnews.org/jinn/>
Email:
<pacificnews@pacificnews.org>
Copyright © 1900 Pacific News Service. All Rights Reserved.
Please do not reprint our stories without our permission.
This article is available for reprint.
For rates and information, call (415) 438-4755 or e-mail
<pacificnews@pacificnews.org>
|