Skip to playerSkip to main content
He represents families of victims of police brutality and has become known as “America’s Black attorney general.”

Ben Crump told Brut what keeps him going, as a new documentary, “CIVIL,” explores his life’s mission … #tribeca2022

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00What keeps me fighting for civil rights and social justice is for the future of our children.
00:06Our children are worth the fight.
00:19An adult follows and kills a child and nothing happens to him.
00:24Remember George Floyd who was tortured, who was tortured to death.
00:41I am an unapologetic defender of black life, black liberty and black humanity.
00:50I believe that we cannot let society try to marginalize people of color, especially black people,
00:58try to tell us that our lives are irrelevant.
01:03No, our lives matter and every opportunity I get to challenge the system,
01:08whether in the court of law or in the court of public opinion, I'm going to do so.
01:14What we fight to do is to get out there and frame the narrative
01:18because the police have all these resources, black and brown people don't have any resources,
01:23so we're trying to even the playing field.
01:26The entire world has seen that with their eyes.
01:40When you think about the history of criminal justice system,
01:44the police normally get away with murder literally when they kill us.
01:49If anything America understands, America understands money.
01:54We are a capitalistic society.
01:56And so if we keep making these towns pay millions and millions of dollars
02:02when they shoot marginalized people of color, especially black people,
02:08and busting our doors and choke us to death,
02:11then we believe based on this capitalistic definition of society
02:19that they're going to say we can't afford this anymore.
02:25I think about Trayvon often.
02:39It is still heartbreaking that America chose to see the stereotypical narrative
02:48that they put on our black children when they looked at Trayvon.
02:52He couldn't just be a 17-year-old kid walking home with a bag of Skittles
02:57and a can of iced tea, talking on the phone with his high school classmate.
03:01No, no.
03:02He had to be somebody nefarious.
03:04He had to be a menace to society.
03:06So I look at that 17-year-old portrayal of this black kid who didn't kill anybody,
03:12and then I look at how America portrays 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse
03:17who shot three people and killed two of them, and it couldn't be more different.
03:23And so I'm fighting for our children to get equal consideration as well.
03:29It was in the fourth grade that they bussed us little black children from South Lumberton,
03:47which was the black part of Lumberton, North Carolina, a small southern rural conservative town,
03:56and they bussed us literally across the tracks to North Lumberton, to the white part of town.
04:03And I just remember coming home on the school bus one day,
04:07coming back across the tracks to South Lumberton,
04:11seeing all of the dilapidated buildings in the black community,
04:16seeing the broken down cars sitting on bricks,
04:21looking at my old elementary high school that had the lead paint cracking on the walls.
04:28And I said, why do they have it so good and we have it so rough?
04:33And I made the decision as a little nine-year-old nappy-headed black boy
04:39that when I grow up, I'm going to be a civil rights attorney like Thurgood Marshall.
04:46And I said, I'm going to be like him to try to make it better for people in my black community.
04:53You know, I got a death threat last week.
04:56There's a lot of people out there who don't want to see black people do well or get a claim.
05:03We need to stay in our place.
05:17My cousin was just murdered by a Minneapolis police officer.
05:23His name is George Perry Floyd.
05:27I quickly noticed that these interactions that he was happening with these families was just so incredible, so emotional.
05:36I mean, in a short time, he has to go in there and say, tell me about your loved one.
05:41We need to do a press conference.
05:43These are your talking points.
05:44I know it's going to be hard.
05:46What is he going to wear to the funeral?
05:48You know, and I just developed such a deep respect for Ben in those moments.
05:54Well, everything that happens, all the racism and bigotry, I am absolutely confident.
06:07I don't have a shadow of doubt in my mind.
06:11We will win this war.
06:14The enemies of equality will not win.
06:19Precedent is on the side of us as black people.
06:23We overcame the middle passage.
06:25We overcame slavery.
06:27We overcame segregation.
06:29We overcame Jim Crow based on precedent.
06:33Anything the racist enemies of equality throw at us people of color, us black and brown people, we going to be all right.
Comments

Recommended