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Death of Angelo Quinto, Who Died Like George Floyd,  Haunts Filipino American Family

The full Quinto story broke around the time of the Tiger Woods accident. Everyone knows about Woods’ roll-over in Southern California that nearly killed him. Thankfully, he’ll walk again. Angelo Quinto won’t.

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Angelo Quinto, courtesy NY Times

George Floyd is back in the public eye as the Minneapolis trial begins with jury selection.  That should be good news for one Filipino American family preparing to sue the City of Antioch for the wrongful death of their son, Angelo Quinto.

If you don’t know who Angelo Quinto is by now, copy a link to this column right now and send to all  your friends. Everyone needs to know about Angelo Quinto.

The full Quinto story broke around the time of the Tiger Woods accident. Everyone knows about Woods’ roll-over in Southern California that nearly killed him. Thankfully, he’ll walk again. Angelo Quinto won’t.

Woods, you see, wasn’t the only Asian American who deserved some headlines. Sure, Quinto got local coverage in the San Francisco Bay Area and mentions on a few internet outlets after what happened to him was finally released.

But his story deserved more, especially when people understand that he died the “George Floyd way.”

Floyd, as we know, was the African American man,  handcuffed behind his back, facedown, as an officer put a knee to the back of his neck for nearly nine minutes. He died on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis.

Quinto, an Asian American of Filipino descent, was handcuffed behind his back, facedown, as an officer put a knee to the back of his neck for over five minutes.

That’s according to his mother and sister, who saw it all play out in a San Francisco East Bay suburb last Dec. 23.

Five minutes was enough to kill Quinto.

Quinto, a 30-year-old U.S. Navy veteran born in the Philippines, was at his family’s home in Antioch, California, when he experienced what has been described as a mental health episode.

Quinto’s 18-year-old sister, Bella Collins, said she called 911 for help when she saw Quinto holding their mother and feared he would hurt her. She said her brother was dishonorably discharged from the Navy in 2019 due to food allergies but had suffered from depression.  She said that after her brother was in an altercation and hospitalized in 2020; he had moments of paranoia and anxiety.

As they all waited for help that night just days before Christmas, Quinto’s mother, Cassandra Quinto-Collins, says she hugged her son and tried to calm him down.

Then the police arrived.

Quinto-Collins described her son’s reaction when the police arrived: “[Angelo] said, ‘Please don’t kill me. Please don’t kill me,’ as they were putting him on the ground. They handcuffed him and one officer put his knee on the back of his neck the whole time I was in the room.”

The family’s lawyer, local civil rights attorney John Burris, said Quinto was “snatched” from his mom. Quinto’s sister said one officer held him by the legs while another knelt on Quinto’s neck for nearly five minutes.

In a videotape released by the family’s attorney, Quinto can be seen unconscious on a bedroom floor, his face bloodied. You can see him handcuffed from behind his back as police tried to assess the situation. After a minute, Quinto was carried out on a plastic sheet into a hallway. After another minute, finally an attempt was made to resuscitate him.

“Does he have a pulse, what is happening?” Quinto’s mother could be heard saying. The responders could be heard pumping Angelo Quinto’s chest in vain.

Quinto-Collins later expressed her shock. “I trusted the police because I thought they knew what they were doing, but he was actually passive and visibly not dangerous or a threat. So, it was absolutely unnecessary what they did to him,” she said.

Angelo was unconscious when taken to the hospital and died three days later on Dec. 26.

It’s remarkable how the story had been kept under wraps for nearly two months.  Not a peep from the police. Even the mayor of Antioch said he hadn’t heard about it until he saw it on social media.

It shouldn’t be that way.

We only heard about it  because the family’s legal counsel, led by Burris, announced on Feb. 18,  that a claim had been filed against the Antioch Police Department. The city now has 45 days to respond before wrongful death and civil rights lawsuits are filed on behalf of Quinto, his mother, and his sister.

How Quinto died makes this case important not just to Antioch, but to the nation.

“I refer to it as the George Floyd technique; that’s what snuffed the life out of him and that cannot be a lawful technique,” Burris said, indicating the similarities between Quinto’s death and the death of Floyd, a Black man who yelled, “I can’t breathe” as a police officer placed a knee to his neck.

“We know the young man’s dead as a consequence of police activity,” Burris said, adding that officers didn’t have to “snatch him from his mother’s person,” but rather talk to him in order to de-escalate the situation. “All they had to do is follow the rules.”

But they didn’t. And that’s why this story must be heard.

People call for de-funding the police, but that doesn’t address some underlying problems. Police need retraining, so that they can gauge a situation and be a respectful presence rather than a disruptive one that only makes things worse.

Given the range of issues officers face, from domestic violence to mental health, police need to be better problem solvers, rather than just crime-busters, maybe someone who is a combination EMT/psychologist/cop.

Angelo Quinto’s life depended on that new model of policing, that new kind of cop. The ones that didn’t show up in Antioch the night of Dec. 23.

So, let’s hope Quinto’s case gains more media attention, an important factor in the quest for justice. The family’s attorney Burris, an African American, said winning that fight will take a community to “rise up” and ask the uncomfortable questions of people in power. “Like the late great John Lewis would say, ‘Make good trouble,’” Burris said as he stood with the family in front of gift-wrapped boxes–Angelo Quinto’s unopened Christmas presents.

“That’s what we intend to do,” he said

This isn’t just a local Bay Area story. This is a national story that goes beyond the Filipino American community.

But are we going to, in the words of Burris,  “Rise up?”

Together?

Professor Daniel Phil  Gonzales of San Francisco State University mentioned in my podcast, “Emil Amok’s Takeout,” something rarely mentioned. There is  a gnawing sense that racism in the Filipino American community toward others, specifically Blacks,  prevents a united community outrage. Gonzales’  students say they recognize it among older generations.  Is it true that the Filipino American community is too insular  to join in coalition with others like the #BLM movement to create that “good trouble” that might bring justice to all?

Gonzales said the Japanese American community is one of the rare examples of Asian Americans to reach out to fight injustice along race lines, mostly due to their WW2 incarceration experience.

They shouldn’t be the only ones.

I’ve told the community that at the very least we need to let people know that a Filipino American has been a victim of police and has died in the manner of George Floyd, handcuffed with a policeman’s knee to the back of his neck. That means what happens to Angelo Quinto’s case is the true test of the value of being Filipino in America.

But it’s also a test  if a true sense of solidarity can really exist among all people of color.

George Floyd’s trial is a reminder that he is the rallying call for all of us seeking justice and the modernization of policing in America.

George Floyd? Angelo Quinto?  Common ground.

Emil Guillermo is a veteran Bay Area  journalist and commentator.  See his vlog on www.amok.com or on Facebook/Emil Guillermo.Media.

 

 

 

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Oakland Post: Week of January 8 – 14, 2025

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of January 8 – 14, 2025

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Supreme Court Decision Confirms Convicted Felon Will Assume Presidency

NNPA NEWSWIRE — In a 5-4 ruling, the court stated that Trump’s concerns could “be addressed in the ordinary course on appeal” and emphasized that the burden of sentencing was “relatively insubstantial” given that Trump will not face prison time. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court’s three liberal justices in the majority, with four conservative justices dissenting.

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By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
@StacyBrownMedia

The Supreme Court on Thursday rejected President-elect Donald Trump’s emergency request to block criminal proceedings in his New York hush money case, ensuring that a sentencing hearing will proceed as scheduled on Friday. The decision makes it official that, on January 20, for the first time in its history, the United States will inaugurate a convicted felon as its president.

In a 5-4 ruling, the court stated that Trump’s concerns could “be addressed in the ordinary course on appeal” and emphasized that the burden of sentencing was “relatively insubstantial” given that Trump will not face prison time. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court’s three liberal justices in the majority, with four conservative justices dissenting.

Trump was convicted in May for falsifying business records related to a $130,000 payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg argued that the Supreme Court lacked jurisdiction to intervene in a state criminal case, particularly before all appeals in state courts were exhausted.

Trump’s legal team claimed the sentencing process would interfere with his transition to power and argued that evidence introduced during the trial included official actions protected under the Supreme Court’s prior ruling granting former presidents immunity for official conduct. Merchan, the New York judge who presided over the trial, ruled in December that the evidence presented was unrelated to Trump’s duties as president.

Prosecutors dismissed Trump’s objections, stating that the sentencing would take less than an hour and could be attended virtually. They said the public interest in proceeding to sentencing outweighed the President-elect’s claims of undue burden.

Justice Samuel Alito, one of the four dissenting justices, confirmed speaking to Trump by phone on Wednesday. Alito insisted the conversation did not involve the case, though the call drew criticism given his previous refusals to recuse himself from politically sensitive matters.

The sentencing hearing is set for Friday at 9:30 a.m. in Manhattan. As the nation moves closer to an unprecedented inauguration, questions about the implications of a convicted felon assuming the presidency remain.

“No one is above the law,” Bragg said.

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Activism

Barbara Lee Launches Campaign for Mayor of Oakland

“At this critical moment, we must not be a city divided, but a community united,” she Lee. “If elected I will bring my hands-on leadership, new ideas and decades of experience in identifying billions in resources for our great city, so all residents and businesses are stronger and safer and our community has optimism and confidence in Oakland’s future.”

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By Post Staff

Barbara Lee on Wednesday morning formally announced her candidacy for Mayor in Oakland’s April 15 special election.

“Time and time again, Oaklanders have faced our toughest obstacles by uniting to meet our challenges,” said Lee.

“At this critical moment, we must not be a city divided but a community united,” she said. “If elected, I will bring my hands-on leadership, new ideas, and decades of experience in identifying billions in resources for our great city so all residents and businesses are stronger and safer and our community has optimism and confidence in Oakland’s future.”

“As Mayor, I’ll address our homelessness crisis, prioritize comprehensive public safety and mental health services, and lead with fiscal responsibility to deliver the core City services residents and business owners deserve. Let’s do this – together.”

“I’ve never shied away from a challenge,” said Lee. “I’m always ready to fight for Oakland.”

Watch her campaign video here, which is online at BarbaraLee4Oakland.com

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