Friday, April 19,
2002
Vine
Street
What was the
excuse this time?
There was no police shooting, no reverends shouting for
justice this time — just 300 black people blocking Vine Street
on Monday night, pelting cars with rocks, bottles and eggs and
yelling “get whitey.”
Some cities would call that a
riot. Cincinnati didn't even call it a “disturbance.” The
headline over a 3-inch story in the Enquirer the next
day said, “Fight draws crowd; police close street.”
Witnesses and police reports
showed something worse: frightening attacks on cars driven by
white people, while cars driven by blacks were waved through.
Police said it started when two
girls, ages 14 and 17, started throwing punches in the street.
As cops arrested the girls, the 14-year-old struggled and spit
in the face of one officer. The 17-year-old's brother, 12,
jumped on a cop — and it took two more to restrain
him.
"Get
whitey'
The
crowd swelled to 300, and 20 to 50 people began throwing
things. The cops backed off to regroup.
Police logs show several calls
from trapped motorists.
“Group of male black suspects
threw rocks, eggs at his car; yelled things about his being
white,” says one dispatcher's report.
“They were running up and
throwing things at the windows of cars and yelling, "Get
whitey,'” said a woman who did not want to be named because
she lives nearby and fears reprisals.
University of Cincinnati
student Steve Wahoff was caught in the middle of it. “I was
giving a buddy a ride downtown. Vine is the quickest route. I
knew it was sort of dangerous. But it was still light out, so
I thought there would be no problem,” he said. “I saw this
large crowd in the street and thought, "I'd better get out of
here.' And right then, this huge rock hit the windshield.”
As he hit the gas and fled, he
noticed that black motorists were not bothered at all, and one
tried to block his escape. Damage estimates for his car were
$800, not including a windshield replacement, he said. “That's
the last time I go down Vine Street.'
"Really
scared'
Kiril
Merjanski, a Bulgarian writer and poet who has been in the
United States just three months, was also caught in the mob
with his wife. “We were really scared,” he said. “Things are
not good in Bulgaria, but this type of thing would never
happen there.”
Their car was hit with eggs and
rocks, causing about $1,000 in damage, according to police
reports.
Michael Howard, an outreach
coordinator for Mount Auburn Methodist Church, was walking on
Vine Street. “There's an element down there that is growing in
disrespect for the law,” he said.
Mr. Howard, who is black, says
Cincinnati is reluctant to face what happened because “we
don't want to return to the riots of last April.”
“But a lot of people are going
to be hurt and a lot of property is going to be damaged if we
don't take control.”
So what's the excuse? What's
the politically correct “root cause” for racial violence that
makes Cincinnati look worse than Bulgaria?
“I don't know about all this,”
Mr. Merjanski said. “I don't know what the problem is.”
Nobody does.
E-mail pbronson@enquirer.com
or call 768-8301.
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