Carney bans choke-holds by state officers, closes state offices for Juneteenth

256
Carney speaks at announcement in Delaware City.
Advertisement

New Castle County, Wilmington and JPMorgan Chase also declare  holiday

Governor John Carney announced he will close the State of Delaware offices on Friday in recognition of Juneteenth.

Carney’s decision was followed by similar announcements from County Executive Matt Meyer and Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki. Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase also made a similar announcement. JPMorgan Chase is the largest for-profit employer in Delaware.

The governor also issued an executive order banning choke-holds by state law enforcement agencies. Legislation has been introduced to ban the practice as part of a package of reforms.

The holiday originated in Texas and marked a two-year period when slaves in the state did not know that President Lincoln had issued the Emancipation Proclamation. At the time, Texas was a frontier state with many isolated areas. 

Advertisement

The day of celebration spread to nearby states as freed slaves left plantations and reunited with family members in nearby states.

Carney issued the following: 

“Over the last several weeks, we have seen largely peaceful protests demanding racial justice and equality across our state. I have spent much of this time listening, and trying to chart a productive path forward. We can make meaningful change, and I believe we will.

As we move forward, I believe the least that each of us can do is commit to learning the lessons of our history. The good and the bad. That’s why on Friday, June 19, we will close state offices in recognition of Juneteenth, which commemorates the emancipation of the last enslaved African Americans in the United States. This holiday offers an opportunity to encourage open dialogue, and to recommit to treating one another with more respect.

We are also working with the Delaware Heritage Commission to create an educational program around issues of race and slavery in Delaware and the U.S.  If we don’t educate ourselves and acknowledge our ugly history around race, we can’t begin to understand the anger and frustration that I’ve heard from so many Delawareans in the last several weeks.

But we shouldn’t stop there.

Next week, I will sign an executive order to ban the use of choke-holds at the Delaware State Police and Capitol Police, and require additional de-escalation training. We will stop posting mugshots of children, mandate participation in the national use-of-force database, and increase crisis intervention training and mental health services for police officers. These are first steps that we can take administratively to improve the relationship between law enforcement and communities of color.

Talk is cheap. We are committed to moving forward productively – and in good faith – to make real change in Delaware. That starts with recognizing our shared history, and learning the lessons of the past.”

At 11 a.m. on Friday, June 19,  Carney will host a live discussion about Juneteenth with Dr. Reba Hollingsworth, Vice-Chair of the Delaware Heritage Commission; local historian Sylvester Woolford; Dr. Donna Patterson, Chair of the Department of History, Political Science, and Philosophy at Delaware State University; and Dr. David Young, Executive Director of the Delaware Historical Society. Watch the Juneteenth discussion on Governor Carney’s Facebook page, or at de.gov/live.

 

 

Advertisement
Advertisement