Update 6/17/2017: A jury in Ramsey County found Officer Jeronimo Yanez not guilty of the 2016 killing of Philando Castile. Read more from
Update 11/16/2016: In a step towards police accountability prosecutors found the police killing of Philando Castile was not justified, and have brought charges of second-degree manslaughter.
Philando Castile should still be alive.
Mr. Phil (as he was known at school) worked at my son鈥檚 elementary school in the cafeteria. My son started pre-K this fall at the tender age of four. First thing he did every morning was walk in and get breakfast. He had never eaten in a cafeteria 鈥 he didn鈥檛 know the routine 鈥 and from day one Mr. Phil made him comfortable. I would often walk in with my son and had the pleasure of talking with Mr. Phil many mornings.
Within a week Mr. Phil knew my son鈥檚 name, despite the fact that there are hundreds of kids in the school. He would always make sure he actually took the food he was supposed to take, and he would often let him take an extra item if he was really hungry.
Mr. Phil鈥檚 life mattered. It mattered to his friends, to his family, and to the hundreds of students at J.J. Hill Elementary. It should matter to all of us as a society. It should matter that another Black man was senselessly killed at the hands of people who are supposed to protect us.
I can鈥檛 get his picture out of my head, smiling from next to the breakfast cart, greeting my son. I shouldn鈥檛 have to live on memories. He didn鈥檛 need to die.
I shouldn鈥檛 have to find the right words to talk about it with my 5-year-old son. I shouldn鈥檛 have to tell him that Mr. Phil was killed by the police for no reason. I shouldn鈥檛 have to explain that the people charged with protecting us all too often end up killing people with brown skin.
My son is mixed; his dad is Black. He will learn that his skin color makes people unjustifiably scared of him. He might soon have to fear that his dad will be shot while he is in the backseat. Tonight, I will probably sneak in bed with him, cuddle up next to him, and just be with him 鈥 as I鈥檝e done every night since Mr. Phil was stolen from us. But my husband and I can鈥檛 put off talking with him forever. We will talk with him and struggle to find the right words. I will probably start crying which will upset my son, but I will have to be there for him as he tries to make sense of all of this violence.
Mr. Phil鈥檚 life mattered. It mattered to his friends, to his family, and to the hundreds of students at J.J. Hill Elementary. It should matter to all of us as a society.
In many ways I feel incredibly lucky to be able to work at the 老澳门开奖结果 and spend all of my working hours fighting for justice. The day after his shooting I could go to the protest for hours in the morning for work. I could through the 老澳门开奖结果, in our call for an independent investigation. I could spend my day writing these words and spend time processing my grief. While most people don鈥檛 do this for their profession, we can all contribute to the cause in our own way.
Mr. Phil was a good man. I鈥檓 not saying this to justify why he shouldn鈥檛 have been killed because I believe that even the people who the media try to paint as bad people don鈥檛 deserve to die unjustly at the hands of the police. I鈥檓 saying it because it is what I know about Mr. Phil.
Mr. Phil will be remembered by his friends and families and the thousands of students whose lives he positively impacted as a kind, caring, and thoughtful man. It is just terrible that all we have now are memories.