The autumn of Charlotte’s discontent
The autumn of Charlotte’s discontent
High-velocity beanbags, rubber bullets, megaphones, masks, and love — the humans and the humanity of protesting police brutality
By David Dennis, Jr. @DavidDTSS
October 10, 2016
The first thing I noticed was the choppers overhead. Constantly circling. The whipping pitter-patter of the propellers never ends.
It was about 11 p.m. on Sept. 23 and Charlotte, North Carolina, was under a midnight curfew. Due to “civil unrest,” North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory had declared a state of emergency.
I made it through mostly empty streets, and National Guard checkpoints, and at the front of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department Law Enforcement Center, young black men were writing names in chalk on concrete. These names included Keith Lamont Scott, who was gunned down by police on Sept. 20 as he was on the way to pick up his son from school and Justin Carr, a protester whose death — during a Charlotte protest held a night later over the circumstances surrounding Scott’s death — is still shrouded in mystery.
A portly man with dreads and Kendrick Lamar Reeboks has a megaphone. He gives a speech from the police department steps to protesters below. One protester is in a dashiki and wears a golden mask like the ones worn by the Sons of the Harpy in Game of Thrones. Mr. Megaphone: We need those tapes! They need to show us the tapes! We’re tired of bodies in the street! The masked man watches with his fist raised.
He was hit in the back with a beanbag, blasted with tear gas, and sprayed with Mace. He’s walking gingerly.
I saw men and women, young and old, black, white, Asian and anything in-between. Their backpacks were loaded with phone chargers and extra phone batteries, snacks, and cardboard for signs. A small group of protesters sang and danced to old playground songs. Dozens offered bottled water, and small cartons of milk were passed around — in case anyone got tear gassed and needed it to help with the pain. People seemed to be buckling in for a rough week. Preachers prayed over anyone who seemed to need it.
“We’re here to do our parts,” said Pastor Milton Williams of Walls Memorial AME Zion Church, who was flanked by four other members of the clergy that night. “We’re angry just like everyone else. We support what’s going on here [with the protests]. We’re praying … and making sure the energy is where it needs to be.” Protesters with megaphones encouraged strangers to say “I love you” to the person standing nearest them. All of this happened between impassioned pleas and organized chants about the killing of Scott.
The first person I recognize near the police department is Toussaint Romain. He’s surrounded by admirers and protesters who ask questions and take selfies with the public defender. Romain is a bald man with a muscular build. He’s been protesting in the streets of Charlotte since the day Scott was killed — in a shirt and tie, no matter how unforgiving the Charlotte heat. He’s become a local folk hero for standing between protesters and riot gear-clad police, and for enduring tear gas and high-velocity beanbags.
Protesting is a disruptive expression of extreme love and I wouldn’t have known that if I hadn’t been there.
“We were protesting peacefully,” said Romain. He’s talking about Sept. 20, when he found himself on the same street as the Scott killing just hours after it happened. He’d just finished a gym session after teaching a class at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte. “Officers started to push us back, and started to throw tear gas at us. I got hit with a [concussion blast] in the back … and I turned around to face the police and got on my knees. They then threw three tear gas canisters at me, and hit me.” After protester Carr was shot, Romain again found himself between police and protesters, trying to keep the peace. He was hit in the back with a beanbag, blasted with tear gas, and sprayed with Mace. He’s walking gingerly.
As I was waiting for a chance to introduce myself to Romain, I finally ran into Braxton Winston, who, via a series of extraordinary events, has been a figure in local Charlotte news for almost a year.
Protesters write the names of police shooting victims on the sidewalk while National Guard soldiers look on during another night of protests over the police shooting of Keith Scott in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. September 23, 2016.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
Last November, Winston heard an explosion from a neighbor’s house. He went over to investigate and saw a woman and her 2-year-old son struggling to escape their burning home. Before setting the house on fire, the woman’s boyfriend had choked her and beaten her until she was unconscious. Winston pulled the son from the fire and helped the mother to safety. The story was all over local news channels. A year later, he’s one of the most recognizable figures of the Charlotte protests, thanks to his constant Facebook streaming of events and iconic photos of him standing in front of police with his fists raised.
Winston has a disarming personality that’s only enhanced by his friendliness and Brooklyn accent. Plus he’s smart and a Phillips Academy Andover graduate. He knows many Charlotte police officers by name, jokes with them about their long shifts, and defuses tense situations. Winston, when I first saw him, seemed happy to enjoy the spirit of community that tends to form in cities where these uprisings take place. However, I could tell — his voice broke when relating details from earlier, more volatile nights of protest — that he was reeling. After all, he’d seen a man get killed right in front of him just 48 hours earlier.
After all, he’d seen a man get killed right in front of him just 48 hours earlier.
I’ve known Winston for a long time. He’s a fellow black alum of Davidson College, which means we have a bond that’s hard to break. It’s no exaggeration: Every black person who is on campus at Davidson at the same time knows one another. Most known for being the tiny college where NBA star Stephen Curry made his name, fewer than 10 percent of 2,000 students who make up Davidson College are black. The school is a tight-knit community altogether — according to Winston, Davidson administration has reached out to offer support for his work — but the black alumni community? We’re deeply invested in each other’s well-being. Even back in school, Winston and his classmates, three years older than me, helped me keep my head on straight while trying to adjust to a small town, seemingly impossible classes, and a whole lot of white people.
A protester with a painted face joins the demonstrations during another night of protests over the police shooting of Keith Scott in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. September 22, 2016.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
The autumn of Charlotte’s discontent
High-velocity beanbags, rubber bullets, megaphones, masks, and love — the humans and the humanity of protesting police brutality
By David Dennis, Jr. @DavidDTSS
October 10, 2016
The first thing I noticed was the choppers overhead. Constantly circling. The whipping pitter-patter of the propellers never ends.
It was about 11 p.m. on Sept. 23 and Charlotte, North Carolina, was under a midnight curfew. Due to “civil unrest,” North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory had declared a state of emergency.
I made it through mostly empty streets, and National Guard checkpoints, and at the front of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department Law Enforcement Center, young black men were writing names in chalk on concrete. These names included Keith Lamont Scott, who was gunned down by police on Sept. 20 as he was on the way to pick up his son from school and Justin Carr, a protester whose death — during a Charlotte protest held a night later over the circumstances surrounding Scott’s death — is still shrouded in mystery.
A portly man with dreads and Kendrick Lamar Reeboks has a megaphone. He gives a speech from the police department steps to protesters below. One protester is in a dashiki and wears a golden mask like the ones worn by the Sons of the Harpy in Game of Thrones. Mr. Megaphone: We need those tapes! They need to show us the tapes! We’re tired of bodies in the street! The masked man watches with his fist raised.
He was hit in the back with a beanbag, blasted with tear gas, and sprayed with Mace. He’s walking gingerly.
I saw men and women, young and old, black, white, Asian and anything in-between. Their backpacks were loaded with phone chargers and extra phone batteries, snacks, and cardboard for signs. A small group of protesters sang and danced to old playground songs. Dozens offered bottled water, and small cartons of milk were passed around — in case anyone got tear gassed and needed it to help with the pain. People seemed to be buckling in for a rough week. Preachers prayed over anyone who seemed to need it.
“We’re here to do our parts,” said Pastor Milton Williams of Walls Memorial AME Zion Church, who was flanked by four other members of the clergy that night. “We’re angry just like everyone else. We support what’s going on here [with the protests]. We’re praying … and making sure the energy is where it needs to be.” Protesters with megaphones encouraged strangers to say “I love you” to the person standing nearest them. All of this happened between impassioned pleas and organized chants about the killing of Scott.
The first person I recognize near the police department is Toussaint Romain. He’s surrounded by admirers and protesters who ask questions and take selfies with the public defender. Romain is a bald man with a muscular build. He’s been protesting in the streets of Charlotte since the day Scott was killed — in a shirt and tie, no matter how unforgiving the Charlotte heat. He’s become a local folk hero for standing between protesters and riot gear-clad police, and for enduring tear gas and high-velocity beanbags.
Protesting is a disruptive expression of extreme love and I wouldn’t have known that if I hadn’t been there.
“We were protesting peacefully,” said Romain. He’s talking about Sept. 20, when he found himself on the same street as the Scott killing just hours after it happened. He’d just finished a gym session after teaching a class at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte. “Officers started to push us back, and started to throw tear gas at us. I got hit with a [concussion blast] in the back … and I turned around to face the police and got on my knees. They then threw three tear gas canisters at me, and hit me.” After protester Carr was shot, Romain again found himself between police and protesters, trying to keep the peace. He was hit in the back with a beanbag, blasted with tear gas, and sprayed with Mace. He’s walking gingerly.
As I was waiting for a chance to introduce myself to Romain, I finally ran into Braxton Winston, who, via a series of extraordinary events, has been a figure in local Charlotte news for almost a year.
Protesters write the names of police shooting victims on the sidewalk while National Guard soldiers look on during another night of protests over the police shooting of Keith Scott in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. September 23, 2016.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
Last November, Winston heard an explosion from a neighbor’s house. He went over to investigate and saw a woman and her 2-year-old son struggling to escape their burning home. Before setting the house on fire, the woman’s boyfriend had choked her and beaten her until she was unconscious. Winston pulled the son from the fire and helped the mother to safety. The story was all over local news channels. A year later, he’s one of the most recognizable figures of the Charlotte protests, thanks to his constant Facebook streaming of events and iconic photos of him standing in front of police with his fists raised.
Winston has a disarming personality that’s only enhanced by his friendliness and Brooklyn accent. Plus he’s smart and a Phillips Academy Andover graduate. He knows many Charlotte police officers by name, jokes with them about their long shifts, and defuses tense situations. Winston, when I first saw him, seemed happy to enjoy the spirit of community that tends to form in cities where these uprisings take place. However, I could tell — his voice broke when relating details from earlier, more volatile nights of protest — that he was reeling. After all, he’d seen a man get killed right in front of him just 48 hours earlier.
After all, he’d seen a man get killed right in front of him just 48 hours earlier.
I’ve known Winston for a long time. He’s a fellow black alum of Davidson College, which means we have a bond that’s hard to break. It’s no exaggeration: Every black person who is on campus at Davidson at the same time knows one another. Most known for being the tiny college where NBA star Stephen Curry made his name, fewer than 10 percent of 2,000 students who make up Davidson College are black. The school is a tight-knit community altogether — according to Winston, Davidson administration has reached out to offer support for his work — but the black alumni community? We’re deeply invested in each other’s well-being. Even back in school, Winston and his classmates, three years older than me, helped me keep my head on straight while trying to adjust to a small town, seemingly impossible classes, and a whole lot of white people.
A protester with a painted face joins the demonstrations during another night of protests over the police shooting of Keith Scott in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. September 22, 2016.
REUTERS/Mike Blake

