But before a situation gets to the point where people feel they have to use the number, Landau suggests trying some magic phrases — phrases he then acts out in a series of sketches: "Have I done something wrong, officer?," "Am I free to go?," "I do not consent to this search," "I'd like to speak to an attorney" and "I'd like to remain silent." At the end of the lecture, he and the evening's two other organizers ask audience members to write their goals for a better Denver — anything from "community gardens" to "more stoplights" — on a piece of colored paper shaped like a leaf; together these goals will create a "vision tree."
As participants step forward to announce their hopes and attach their leaf to the tree, CPC racial-justice director Mu Son Chi remembers the people whose lives were cut short. Paul Childs, Alonzo Ashley, Marvin Booker: three men whose names, like that of Alex Landau, have come to mean something to the community for all the wrong reasons. And when the tree has grown to full size, Landau finally adds his own entry, taping a yellow leaf down near the base.
Alex Landau was beaten by Denver cops in 2009.
Brandon Marshall
Chief of Police Robert White has launched many changes.
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It reads, "Satisfactory police discipline."
Over the past few months, anti-police-brutality marches and rallies have grown more commonplace in Denver, with actions splitting the focus between national names (Trayvon Martin) and local ones (Marvin Booker, Alex Landau). The CPC and Colorado ACLU had a "Summer Against Police Violence" message ready to release last month, but postponed it for a few weeks out of respect for fallen DPD officer Celena Hollis. On July 18, the CPC will host a vigil with the family of Alonzo Ashley.
While Landau waits for the feds to finish their investigation and perhaps deliver some satisfactory police discipline, some doubt he'll ever really get it. "Closure for Alex would be knowing that people can't do this to him," Holland says. "The public has told him this is unacceptable, and the city has told him that, but the police department's deliberation is causing him concern."
"If, right now, we had the finish of the DOJ investigation and it gave us nothing, we'd be done," Martinez says. "But I don't know if this community will ever really get resolution on this."