Beacon's Mayor Lee Kyriacou Speaks At Protest; Is Interrupted By Young Adults Rejecting Police Union's Letter; Young Beaconites Share Their Stories Of Abuse
/Mayor Lee Kyriacou is speaking during the 3rd protest march on Beacon that happened on June 6, 2020. As he reads the letter issued by Beacon’s Police Union, the Patrolman’s Benevolent Association, he is interrupted by young adults who reject the letter. The contents of the letter, which condemn the killing of George Floyd, prompt several people who are black, brown, or a person of color, to come forward and share their stories of abuse and assault from the Beacon police.
What follows below is the beginning of the Mayor’s speech, and shared stories at the microphone that follow.
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BEGIN
Mayor Lee Kyriacou + Young Adults In Response
Hi everybody. I’m the new mayor. I got in January 1. Little did I know I’d have a health crisis and then you have this here.
Let me read two other things, I’ll be brief in all of them. One I’m reading for the County Executive Marc Molinaro. He and I share a special bond in that we both have children with autism. He could not be here. He led the march in Poughkeepsie. And he wrote “Once again our nation’s soul has been cracked open wide by the senseless and heinous killing of George Floyd. This inhumane act has revealed once again that America’s fundamental promise that all men are created equal is a promise yet fulfilled. It is heartbreaking that his final… (this part is unintelligible) … and true equality and universal application of rights has not been achieved. We can and we must do better.”
So that’s his piece. I won’t read it all. Know that we have his support.
This one is a letter from Beacon’s Police Union, and again I won’t read it all. “To our community, friends in Beacon. Since the unconscionable murder of George Floyd by the Minneapolis police officers last week, we, the members of the Beacon PBA (that’s the union) have been struggling to find the words to express our emotions. It should not have to be said but absolutely needs to be said that each and every member of the Beacon PBA condemns the murder of Mr. Floyd and the actions by all four of the involved officers in Minneapolis. As police officers, we take our oath seriously to protect, and serve each and every one of you and your constitutional rights regardless of race, gender, religion, political party, sexual preference or age.”
It goes on, “We stand tall and strong with you to protect your right to express your voices, and causes in a peaceful and safe setting.” And I think they did their job today.
Finally some words from me. The reason…
Hang on. I’m sorry?
(Interruption)
NEW SPEAKER ENTERS
Something’s not sitting right with me today. Hasn’t been sitting right with me yesterday. That’s why I haven’t spoke today. And I’m sorry to interrupt you Mr. Mayor, but that letter from the Beacon Police was bullshit.
Come on! Come on! I understand that you have to read this from the police, but I can’t listen to something that’s not true. And I’ve been scared to speak today cause I don’t wanna be a target and I need y’all to be here behind me. (audience member calls out)
They can’t be here ‘cause they’d be too uncomfortable to be here, I promise you that.
I met this woman today. Her son was shot in 2006 by the Beacon police. For no reason, for no reason he was shot in his stomach. Targeted shot in his stomach, in his arm, in his back. She told me he went to prison. I said “Who went to prison? The cop?” NO, her son’s in prison.
[UPDATE: The Beacon Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association (the Union) has issued a statement in response to story, which you can read here.]
Why? Why?
And where is that cop today? He’s not working for Beacon Police and that’s fine, but he’s in Rockland County now. He’s still a cop. He’s still out here. And let’s talk about it. Let’s talk about it.
Let’s talk about the cop who pulled me and my ex-boyfriend over a few years ago and took him to jail and left me in the middle of the street with no thought and no reason. 2 o’clock in the morning, left me there for no reason. So what’d I do? I found that ticket. I looked up his name, right, and last night I found that in 2009 there’s a lawsuit. In 2009 he arrested somebody outside of Dunkin’. Arrested him, tased him, beat him, and let the dog bite him. And he’s still working for Beacon! WHY?
(Audience screaming support, etc)
I’m sorry. (Mayor tries speaking…)
Okay, so let’s talk about it even further. When I looked at that thing I was reading last night, there was two other cops names on there that also were involved. Also didn’t give a fuck and also did the same thing. Let’s talk about how this cop came up to me today and asked to take a picture with me and said: “You know, like, I’m here to help whatever” and I look at his name tag and it was the same name I seen on the thing I read last night.
Let’s talk about it. Why are you here? Why are you here? Uggghhhhhh.
I wanna say his name so bad. But can you believe I’m actually scared? Can you believe that I’m actually scared someone come down to my house and hurt my family if I say his name. That shouldn’t have to be! … watching my house at night. I don’t know what’s gonna happen at night. I don’t know what’s gonna happen to me in five months from now if I say this person’s name, but I will sit down and I will sit down in the office and I will make sure they don’t have their jobs no more and you will go back to working at the bank! Just so you know who I’m talking about, you will go back to working at the bank!
And not just that. Let’s talk about every person who’s been harassed by the Beacon police. Let’s talk about it. We got my brothers right here next to me, all harassed by the police every day. (Audience calling back about their own harassment.)
“Put your fist up if you can hear her?” (FISTS GO UP)
Yes, and I don’t wanna disrespect the Mayor, but I wanna let him know it’s time to take action and you gotta, you gotta look and you gotta open your eyes. (Crowd cheers)
You might not be able to feel my personal pain, you might not be able to feel all our personal pain, but you’re not deaf. You’re not blind. You can see what’s going on, and you’re the one. You can take power, you can take control of this.
Systems fucked, y’all. it’s fucked up. This country is fucked up. This country is so fucked up. We gotta do something. We gotta do something for our small town, regardless, this is a small part of a big world and we gotta start somewhere.
NEXT SPEAKER
Mr. Mayor, your entire city is with us in solidarity. We do not want to hear a letter from the cops talking about how they stand with us. Where are they? Are they here? NO. They’re waiting for someone to act up so they can do what they always do.
Mr. Mayor, what are you doing for us? Your whole city is here talking to you. What are you gonna do for us? What are you gonna change. How are you gonna hold the police department accountable? How are you gonna make sure this does not happen in our city ever again? I don’t want no letter!
MAYOR LEE KYRIACOU:
Wow. Let me start with a historical note. What I wanted to say, that someone said that what we need now is action and change. I agree. I think what we need now is a resolve and progress, and I want to offer you three quotes.
Just a moment, I do need the opportunity to speak. (person in crowd yells “we can’t hear you!”)
Let me start with a historical note. Those who have been here long enough recall that as a City Councilman, almost two decades ago, I had to challenge at first alone, but eventually with the unanimous council agreement, and despite repeated lawsuits leveled against me personally, and the rest of the city, I had to challenge the leadership and the practices of our police department. This was in the 2000s, not in the 2020, which led to Justice Department oversight, change of leadership, departure of certain officers, and the gradual transition to a professional and more community oriented police department.
That was in the last 15 years. That doesn’t mean we don’t have progress to do. But I’ve been taken on this battle and when I started it, I was alone on the Council, alright?
And to say that there is nothing to be done now is wrong. But to say that there has been no past of progress is also wrong. So let me just offer you that history. We have work to do. So I ran [for Mayor] in part to make change, and I hear you. Right? I look forward - (interruption)
Let me offer a couple of quotes. One, of course, (interruption…mention of the next public City Council meeting at which the Chief of Police was going to be attending, which he did) well you’d be better if you dialed in but there is some room for public, uh, in person. Everyone can dial in and there’ll be opportunity for input and we will have that dialogue and input.
Let me offer a quote from Frederick Douglass, the abolitionist orator who spoke here in Beacon at the Dutch Reform Church that we walked past. This quote was on my wall as a graduate student and an undergrad. “If there is no struggle, there is no progress. We will have to struggle. If we want progress, there will be struggle. How that struggle occurs…
(audience member yells: “if you really believed it put the paper down and speak from the heart!”)
(audience cheers)
I’m sorry, I wrote my heart on this sheet of paper, alright? I wrote my heart on this sheet of paper. Uh, how we should do it, I look to Ghandi. Ghandi said “Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind.” And finally I have a quote from King, and King said and offered us hope. And this is President Obama’s favorite quote from King. “The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends towards justice.”
We have work to do, we have to make resolve here, and we have to make progress. Thank you.
FIRST SPEAKER
I didn’t wanna pull a Kanye west right here but I almost had to. Um, that…I don’t have any fuckin’ words. Let’s go.
NEXT SPEAKER
How y’all doin’? This guy, that this, the Mayor, our Mayor, what he just said about the Beacon police is not true. They don’t mean nothing they say, don’t mean nothing they say.
I used to go to school in Albany. When I came home, I worked for the city of Beacon. And we came down here [to Riverfront Park] one day. We had to cut the grass. I parked the truck next to a water fountain and I hit, I tapped the water fountain.
So our job is to report back to the boss, and they, they write it up, they tell the cops and they file a police report. So the cop called my boss and told me I had to come back down here. I came back down to the riverfront. The cop slammed me on the car and arrested me and told me I did a hit and run. If I work for the City of Beacon, and I hit city property, I did a hit and run on my own property? They brought me down to the station and chained me to the wall for like an hour. Fuck what the Beacon police gotta say.
NEXT SPEAKER
By show of hands, how many people here have been harassed or beaten by the Beacon police? Put your fists up. Someone, you know somebody, you’ve seen a video of it.
FORMER SPEAKER
If you’ve been harassed, let’s take everyone who’s been harassed step at the front. (Interruption)
Everyone who’s been harassed by the Beacon police, if you’re still left here, I know a lot of people left because they couldn’t even bear listen to the bullshit anymore. I’m ready to leave my damn self but we gon’ stand up.
NEXT SPEAKER
I’m…I’m so humbled to stand up with all of you today, to fight for what you actually believe in. I had no idea what it’s like. But I refuse to let my kids grow up because (words are unintelligible) scared still. So I wanna know how many people does it take to get an Accountability Bill against the police? Is there a way to get insurance so that it stops coming from their pockets and comes from the people doing the damage instead? Is there a way to make that happen now, instead of putting it off, putting it off, and putting it off and we have to keep having protests to fight for it? And I say this with all due respect because I know you are a man of authority but I need you to act as a man for all of the people.
NEXT SPEAKER
Chris
Hey what’s up everyone. My name is Chris. Let me talk about my experience. So back in 2009, probably like in the beginning of August, me and two other gentlemen got arrested over in front of Citizen’s Bank on Main Street. Now we got arrested because I guess we were hanging out in the back of the building and some, we were there kinda late, too, kinda like 10:30/11pm, and I guess there was a lady who was still in the bank and they called the cops.
The cops came, you know, chased us over by the gas station which is now known as Valero. And they arrested us, it was two Hispanic cops. So pretty much, the other guy arrested with me was Black and the other one was Hispanic, both of them close friends of mine. So pretty much, the cop came, and while we were running, he hopped in the car and said “freeze before I tase you.”
So we all stopped, he handcuffed us against the wall. They asked us what we were doing behind the bank. Pretty much I told him we were hanging out. We were 17 years old. We just didn’t happen to be 18. Another friend of mine was 17, his birthday was…he was actually gonna be 18 at 12 o’clock am, right before they arrested us.
So while he was questioning us, he told me since he didn’t like what I had to say, he told me that he was gonna take me to the back of the building and beat the shit out of me. And then he talked to my other friend who was Hispanic in Spanish, and I don’t know what he said to him but he let him go, and he kept me and the other dude and he was Black. And they waited until 12 o’clock, until he was able to turn 18 so they could put it on his record. And they arrested him. (Person in crowd yells)
Yeah. So uh, I had other experiences too, but I could say that letter was bullshit as well, you know, so.
NEXT SPEAKER
Yes. Imma talk loud so everybody can hear me. I was born in Poughkeepsie, but raised in Beacon. From 3 years old until I say about 21 years old. I was maced, doused in mace, in the face 7 months pregnant with my son. Not my younger son. I have two boys, a 16 year old and I have a 12 year old. (Person yells)
Because they were beating the shit out of the person I was with at the time and I refused to sit back and watch it. And as I was about to reach over and grab the officer from the back, he turned around, doused me in mace, threw me to the ground, clearly 7 months pregnant, so it wasn’t like you couldn’t tell. Thrown to the ground.
When my son was born, six months after, he had breathing problems. None of my family members wanted to watch him because they were scared. At the time, I was 19 years old. I wasn’t thinking about a lawsuit, or justice served, anything like that. So to see this right now, this is close to my heart and this is beautiful. This is beautiful to see.
So, so, I had two boys…I gotta really fear like with my kids like this lady said earlier when they get their first car they’re just getting pulled over for a routine traffic stop. And that what it was that time, it was a routine traffic stop. He happened to be driving without a license. And the cops, these two cops, that was just mentioned, I don’t know where they are, don’t, Imma say their name, Patro (?) And Paul Pillio (?) was both, and they were both around and I don’t know what happened to them, I’m scared as hell to even say the names which is, is, is sad but it is what it is.
And I shouldn’t be scared. I shouldn’t be scared to have my kids go out in public to ride around in a car, even go out and hang out with their friends and walk around. But, but, I just wanna say it traumatized me for a long time and kinda I felt bad to let it, you know, I kinda, I don’t wanna say let it go, but I put it in the back of my head and i thought, you know.
It just brought out a lot of memories with this shit happening. And it’s just, I don’t have…I do wanna say that love outweighs hate. So thank you, guys.
NO Justice, NO Peace! No Racist Police! No Racist Police! No Racist Police!