Pubdate: Fri, 6 Nov 1998
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Contact:  http://www.chron.com/ 
Copyright: 1998 Houston Chronicle
Author: Stephen Johnson

DOZENS GATHER TO DEMAND JUSTICE IN OREGON KILLING

Calling the shooting of Pedro Oregon Navarro "murder," protesters,
activists and relatives of those slain previously by Houston police
demanded justice in Oregon's killing.

Saying the firing of the six officers involved in the unauthorized
raid that resulted in Oregon's death is insufficient, dozens of
protesters gathered outside the Harris County Criminal Courthouse on
Thursday.

They called for the resignation of District Attorney John B. Holmes
Jr. and prosecution of the officers for the July 12 killing of Oregon,
who was shot 12 times.

A grand jury no-billed all the officers except for indicting one on a
charge of misdemeanor criminal trespass.

"We feel the evidence is clear," said Toylean Johnson of the Justice
for Pedro Oregon Coalition.

The protesters' anger was fanned by a Houston Chronicle story Thursday
that Officer David R. Barrera fired 24 of the 33 rounds discharged
during the raid.

HPD Chief C.O. Bradford fired all six officers on grounds that they
violated the law as well as procedures.

The protesters included Susan Hartnett, whose son Derek Jason Kaesman,
25, was shot 14 times in a hail of gunfire after leading Houston
police on a chase Oct. 25.

"We have returned to the wild West where the posse acts as judge, jury
and executioner, said Hartnett, who accused the police of murdering
her son.

Another adding her voice was Janie Torres, whose brother Joe Campos
Torres was beaten by Houston police in 1977 and drowned after falling
or being pushed into Buffalo Bayou.

"Everyone else in this city who (commits) a crime is expected to pay
for that crime," said Torres. "This (Oregon's killing) is murder."

The officers involved in Oregon's shooting were "cold-blooded
murdering cowards," Torres said. "We did not ask for this and we do
not deserve this."

Noel "Skip" Allen, whose son Travis, 17, was shot to death by Bellaire
police in 1995, called the lack of a felony indictment in Oregon's
killing "typical of the good old boy justice in Texas."

"Police brutality is not a thing of color," said Allen. "We have
police out there who have no business being in uniform."

Local NAACP President Howard Jefferson called on city leaders to "come
together and right this wrong."

Justice of the Peace Al Green warned the gathering, "Unless we take a
firm stand, the next victim can be one of our own relatives."

Green decried what he called the lack of public interest in the
shooting of Oregon because he was not an affluent member of society.

"Someday," Green said, "they (police) are going to kill the wrong
person.

"When they break into the wrong house and kill the wrong person, then
we'll see lawyers and doctors and politicians rise up."