Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2008 Source: Lima News (OH) Copyright: 2008 Freedom Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.limanews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/990 Author: Brian Evans Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Tarika+Wilson (Tarika Wilson) HUNDREDS MARCH TO PROTEST POLICE SHOOTING LIMA - Standing in front of a large crowd marching north, Ivory Austin demanded justice for the death of his daughter. Austin, a 55-year-old resident of Lima, blended with the crowd and spoke fondly of his daughter, Tarika Wilson, 26, who was shot and killed Jan. 4 by a Lima police officer during a raid at her 218 E. Third St. home. Wilson was holding her 1-year-old son, Sincere Wilson, who was also shot and injured, but survived. A crowd of more than 160 demonstrators began marching at 5 p.m. Saturday from the Cheryl Allen Center on South Central Avenue, demanding justice for Wilson. The crowd grew in size as it traveled to the front door of the Lima Police Department, where the demonstration reached a climax shortly after 6:30 p.m. "They have not come to me and said nothing," Austin said, holding a cane and keeping pace with the crowd. "No apologies to anyone, except when they want to make themselves look good on TV. Now I have six grandchildren without a mother. We have to raise them now, me and my daughter's mom." Austin said he'll miss the calls he got from his daughter every day. "She'd call me every day or every other day and said, 'Dad, I love you,'" Austin said. "She loved all her kids and brothers and sisters. She was the runt of the bunch, the shortest one. She loved living. She loved life. She was a good girl. She was daddy's girl." On Friday, Austin and the rest of Wilson's family buried her. Austin said he tries not to think about it. He said he tries to think she is off some place resting. "The pain is indescribable," he said. "I've never felt a hurt like this before, not even when my father died. I will never get over this. I will feel this the rest of my life; it's a heavy burden on my heart." Bringing the officer to justice, he said, will bring some relief and closure, Austin said. Although many in the crowd would disagree, Austin said he doesn't want to believe his daughter's death was racially motivated. "On the same side, there's a lot of profiling on the south side," he said. "I don't understand how a 30-year veteran can make a mistake like this. What was the purpose? Did he feel threatened? How can you feel threatened by a 4-foot-11 woman holding a baby? He's got to realize how many lives he's wrecked, and not just black lives. My daughter's mom is white. Half my daughter's family is white." Austin said he wants to see the officer go to prison. And, he's not the only one. "She was murdered in cold blood and we want justice," said Thelma Flint, who works at the Cheryl Allen Center. Flint marched a short distance behind Austin, among a crowd carrying signs, singing songs and chanting. "Justice is prison, not paid vacation," Flint said. "That officer should be brought up on murder charges and attempted murder charges. I have four kids and it's a shame that I can't teach them to trust the police." Allen County Sheriff Dan Beck and numerous deputies atop horses patrolled the event and escorted the crowd through a packed downtown Lima. People gathered to watch the demonstration from all around, from porches and storefronts to spots along the road. Many showed support. Some looked on with blank stares. "It makes me feel wonderful that a community can get together without violence," Austin said. "I don't want violence. It will just hurt more people." However, quoting Malcolm X, he said he believes violence might be necessary if justice is not served. "If he's not charged, violence might be necessary," Austin said. When asked what he meant, he replied "What happened to Rome?" "I have to look at my grandbabies every day and answer every day about their mommy," Austin said. As the march grew closer to downtown, more and more people joined in, running up to the crowd from behind. Throughout the south side, the crowd was vocal, but still somewhat docile until it reached downtown, at about 6 p.m. By then, after a fight nearly erupted among a small group, the chants grew louder and more aggressive. There were more than 200 people marching, followed by a string of about two dozen cars showing support. A man who said he represented the Nation of Islam in Toledo, Marques X, said he was marching to stand up for his sister, "who was brutally murdered." He said he was the only person from the Nation of Islam at the event and he went because Lima is his hometown. Joining local residents were several local pastors and community leaders and representatives from the Dayton office of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference Another person marching, Willie Hall, 35, said he was close to Wilson growing up. "She was like a little sister to me," he said. "She called me big brother." Hall said he believes the shooting was racially motivated and, he said, "the Lima police have been getting away with it for years." "If he was a black officer, he'd be prosecuted," he said. "Everybody wants answers. Everybody wants the truth. They're covering this up." lass - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake