74
Note: Boldface page numbers
indicate illustrations.
Ahmed, Ziad, 28
American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU), 10
Anthony, Carmelo, 7
Atlanta, Georgia, 59
Baltimore, Maryland, 57
Belmar, Jon, 56
Beyoncé, 6
Black Lives Matter
critics of
after killings of police in Dallas,
Texas, 34–35
all lives matter, 7
Blue Lives Matter, 7,
36,
36–37,
41
confrontational and divisive
tactics used, 38–40
message as anti–law
enforcement, 37
White Lives Matter, 34
currently, 5–7
founding and growth, 5, 20, 23,
25, 26–27, 30
goals, 8, 21
leadership
absence of structured hierarchy,
22
condemnation of attacks on
police by, 32–33
disagreements about tactics
among, 29–30
informal, 22–26
women in, 40
Black Youth Project, 10, 12
blue code/wall of silence, 47–50
Blue Lives Matter, 7,
36,
36–37, 41
body cameras/cams
described,
51,
52
as evidence in trials, 52, 63
influence on police behavior, 63
killing of Edwards, 43
survey of police departments
using, 62–63
as training tool, 64
use in Dallas, 61
use in Minneapolis, 60
Bridge Summit, 59–60
“broken window” policing, 56–58
Brown, David O., 31, 32, 60–62
Brown, Michael, Jr.
Black Lives Matter as national
movement and, 20, 22, 23,
24–25, 26–27, 30
killing of, 15–16, 52
See also
Ferguson, Missouri
Bryant, Kobe, 47
Bynes, Patricia, 16
Campaign Zero, 26, 56–58
Castile, Philando, 31
Causey, James E., 19
CBS News, 40
celebrity support, 6–7
Center for Media & Social Impact,
26–27
Chapman, William, II, 51–52
Charleston, South Carolina, 48
Chicago, Illinois, 49–50
Chism, Doug, 34
choke holds, 44–47
Civic Engagement Award (Los
Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable),
48
civil rights movement of 1960s, 38
Cleveland, Ohio, 13, 18
Cobb, Jelani, 20–21, 30
Columbia, South Carolina, 25
community policing, 60,
61
Confederate flag, 25
Covington, Kim, 59
INDEX