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Is the Pasco Police Shooting The 'Ferguson' For Latinos?

Pedestrians view a memorial in Pasco, Wash., on the sidewalk where Antonio Zambrano-Montes, an unarmed man who was fatally shot by police.
Nicholas K. Geranios
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AP
Pedestrians view a memorial in Pasco, Wash., on the sidewalk where Antonio Zambrano-Montes, an unarmed man who was fatally shot by police.

Charles Herrmann, the attorney who represented the families of Michael Brown and Trayvon Martin is now taking on the case of Antonio Zambrano-Montes, an unarmed Mexican national who was shot and killed by police in Washington State.

Zambrano-Montes was allegedly throwing rocks at moving cars in a busy intersection. Police showed up, tried to stop him, then tazed him.

This undated photo provided by Agapita Montes-Rivera via Fabian Ubay, shows Antonio Zambrano-Montes, an unarmed Mexican man fatally shot by police officers in Washington state Feb. 10
/ AP
/
AP
This undated photo provided by Agapita Montes-Rivera via Fabian Ubay, shows Antonio Zambrano-Montes, an unarmed Mexican man fatally shot by police officers in Washington state Feb. 10

Zambrano-Montes ran across the intersection and shots were fired. He ran again, then turned to face police, more shots were fired, this time killing him. Police say he assaulted them with rocks several times during the incident.

The incident is under investigation. Kennewick Police Sargeant Ken Lattin, a spokesman for a task force investigating the shooting, said on Wednesday that a preliminary autopsy showed that Zambrano-Montes was hit by five to six rounds out of seventeen shot, none of which hit him in the back.

Herrman says an independent autopsy contradicts that. He says in fact, 2 bullets struck him in the back. The family is urging the U.S. Justice Department to take over the local investigation.

The shooting has sparked protests in Pasco and Seattle.

The small quiet farmtown of Pasco has seen unusual activity as hundreds have turned out to protest since Zambrano-Montes was killed by police earlier this month.

It is not the first confrontation between police and Latinos in the area, says David Cortinas, who has been reporting on the shooting for La Voz Hispanic News, Pasco's Spanish-language newspaper.

"One of the officers was involved already in a big lawsuit," he says. "He slammed a Hispanic woman onto the front end of a vehicle, and burnt her face."

That suit was settled out of court. Activists say something's got to give in a town that is over 50 percent Hispanic, but whereless than a quarter of the officers are Latino.

In a statement, the Pasco police Department said the officers involved are on administrative leave and the shooting is under investigation.

Cortinas says while recent protests have been peaceful so far, but he believes that could change if there's a perception that justice wasn't served. Pasco could become a national focus for Latino rights, much like Ferguson was for African Americans.

"We, as the US Latino community as a whole, haven't even begun to have honest discussions about race, and class."

But University of Southern California Professor Roberto Suro says While many African-American communities have a long standing history of tensions with the police, when it comes to Latinos there are some differences.

"Police violence has been an issue, but not with the same consistency and with the same level of sensitivity that we see in African American communities," he says.

Univision anchor Leon Krauze agrees that Ferguson and Pasco are two very different stories but the outrage is the same.

Pasco has a lot of 3rd and even 4th generation Mexican-American families, but it also has a population of undocumented seasonal workers who might hesitate to speak up, Krauze says.

"It's just a matter of a simple cost benefit analysis," he says. "Would you run the risk of deportation in order to pursue an abstract benefit."

Latinos are not responding to the shootings on a national scale partly because there is no strong unified voice among Latinos in the U.S., says Julio Ricardo Varela, the founder of the Latino Rebels blog.

"We, as the US Latino community as a whole, haven't even begun to have honest discussions about race, and class," he says. "And that's when we need to look each other in the eye and say, you know, we have our own issues here. We better start working together."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Jasmine Garsd is an Argentine-American journalist living in New York. She is currently NPR's Criminal Justice correspondent and the host of The Last Cup. She started her career as the co-host of Alt.Latino, an NPR show about Latin music. Throughout her reporting career she's focused extensively on women's issues and immigrant communities in America. She's currently writing a book of stories about women she's met throughout her travels.