Washington
Why I got arrested in Washington | Anabaptist World
“If you’ve never been there, why do you care?” Anna Johnson asked Kelsey Cramer (my sister-in-law) and me on our way from South Bend to Goshen, Ind., in a 12-passenger van to pick up the rest of our carpool heading to Washington, D.C., on a subzero January morning.
Anna is a Ph.D. candidate in peace studies and sociology, researching the possibilities of peace-and-justice tourism in Palestine. Having grown up Lutheran, she became Mennonite after encountering Mennonite Central Committee workers in Palestine, where she lived for seven years.
For Anna, the atrocities in Palestine are personal. But why, she wondered out loud, were we joining her in an act of civil disobedience?
Kesley described how her heart broke for Palestinians as she watched the atrocities on social media. I stumbled through a response, but the question haunted me throughout the whirlwind of the next two days.
We drove 11 hours through snow to a church in Washington, where Mennonites from across the country were gathered. The next morning, we gathered at another downtown church. The mood was both festive and tense as we ate breakfast. Participants had already decided whether to join an outdoor service or enter the congressional building for civil disobedience.
After prayers and instructions, we were off in groups, adrenaline rushing. I partnered up with Ana Neufeld Weaver, a music education major who had been tapped as a song leader. “Have you ever done anything like this before?” I asked. “I’ve led music plenty of times,” she responded, “but never like this!”
We passed through security checks and wandered the halls like tourists. Then our group leader signaled for us to enter the rotunda, merging into a stream of Mennonites. We unrolled banners, opened song books, sat in a circle and began singing, “Lord, listen to your children praying” — all before the police knew what was happening.
They soon learned, as we transitioned to chanting, “Let Gaza live!” They surrounded us, one warning us to disperse over a megaphone, drowned out by our singing, “We are marching in the light of God!”
After a final warning, they moved in, grabbing banners and going for song leaders. We tried to tighten the circle, but they threatened to increase charges if we resisted. As they removed song leaders, new ones kept emerging.
I was nearly unable to sing, filled with a surge of solidarity and joy. Tears in our eyes, we sang “The world is about to turn!” in harmony unbroken by the removal of friends.
An officer tapped me on the shoulder and zip tied my wrists behind me. We continued to sing as we were invasively patted down. “This will be uncomfortable for both of us,” an officer said before feeling my crotch.
Still singing, we were taken down an elevator to await transportation. On the ground level, an officer commanded, “Stop singing!” We complied.
Loaded into a windowless police vehicle on a bench with barely enough room for our knees, we craned our necks to introduce ourselves and encourage each other through the claustrophobia and increasing wrist and shoulder pain.
After what felt like an hour, the back door opened, and we were led into a warehouse to be patted down again before having zip ties removed, only to be zip tied again from the front. “You’re on my time now,” an officer taunted.
Seeing others from our group already sitting in rows of plastic chairs, I was heartened. We sat and talked as names were called to come forward for a mugshot and processing.
My seminary dean, Bev Lapp, called to me, “If I wasn’t on sabbatical, I would let you cancel your Thursday class!”
An officer began calling out names of those processed. When my name was called, I got zip ties removed, received personal items, paid a fine, signed and received a release form and was sent out alone through a back door.
As I exited the warehouse, familiar faces greeted me with cheers, snacks and a ride back to the church, where others greeted us with applause and hugs. We shared stories over pizza until everyone was released.
Driving home the next day, the answer to Anna’s question hit me. It’s Anna.
At a local Mennonite action in December, Anna had shared about the suffering of her friends in Palestine. Here before me was a Mennonite sibling asking for her pain to be acknowledged. How could I keep from acting?
Mennonites often talk about unity, which can’t be forged by talking about it. When Paul writes of unity, he makes it tangible: “Rejoice with those who rejoice; weep with those who weep” (Romans 12:15).
I participated to weep with Mennonite siblings who weep for Gaza. What I discovered was this: The Spirit binds us together when together we are bound — in zip ties and in love.
David C. Cramer is pastor of Keller Park Church, a Mennonite Church USA congregation in South Bend, Ind., and managing editor at the Institute of Mennonite Studies at Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary.
Washington
Trial for murder at Catholic University stalls after detective charged with misconduct
The murder trial of a man accused of killing a teacher on the campus of Catholic University in 2023 was supposed to start Wednesday. But that case has been thrown into turmoil after defense attorneys say the lead D.C. police detective was removed from the case and charged with misconduct.
New court documents reveal the detective is accused of having sex on the job and recording it on a police-issued cellphone.
In a hearing one of the supervisors admitted was highly unusual, the judge and the defense attorneys wanted to know why the U.S. Attorney’s office did not disclose until last week that the lead detective in the murder of 25-year old Maxwell Emerson was removed from the case just weeks after an arrest was made and placed under investigation for alleged misconduct.
In a motion filed Tuesday, the defense said, in part “The government withheld evidence that its lead detective, Detective Thomas Roy, had engaged in conduct so concerning that the Metropolitan Police Department proposed his termination, removed him as a lead detective, transferred him out of the homicide section and instituted a last chance agreement”.
The defense attorneys wrote in their motion that Roy neglected his duties in Aug. 2022 “when he engaged in sexual intercourse with another homicide detective in his unit at her home while on duty and recorded two videos of their sexual encounter on an MPD issued cell phone.”
According to the motion filed by the defense, the detective was not placed under investigation until after Jaime Macedo was charged with the murder that occurred on catholic university campus back in July 2023.
News4 reported extensively on the case at the time. Police say Macedo is accused of following Emerson from the Brookland metro station on the morning of July 5. Surveillance video released by police show Emerson at one point walking with his hands raised in the air before the two ended up in a park near Alumni Lane.
Police say the two got into a struggle before Macedo is accused of shooting Emerson one time in the abdomen.
Emerson was a Kentucky teacher visiting D.C. for a conference at the Library of Congress Teacher Institute.
In the motion filed by the defense, in which they argue the indictment should be dismissed, the attorneys cite an internal affairs document that says, “Detective Roy’s misconduct had cast a shadow over his credibility and reputation as a law enforcement officer.”
It’s unclear when this case may go to trial. The judge still must rule on the motion by the defense.
D.C. police say Roy was disciplined and lost his job in homicide but is still employed as a detective.
Washington
FAA mandates radar separation for helicopters and planes after deadly DC midair collision
Air traffic controllers will use radar, not just visual checks, to ensure that helicopters maintain a safe distance from arriving and departing airplanes in the wake of last year’s fatal midair collision near Washington, D.C., federal officials announced Wednesday.
The Federal Aviation Administration said recent near-misses show that previous guidelines for pilots to maintain visual separation between helicopters and airplanes have failed to provide adequate protection around busy airports.
Under the new guidelines, air traffic controllers must use radar to keep helicopters and airplanes apart by specific lateral or vertical distances. The new requirement applies to more than 150 of the nation’s busiest airports, extending a restriction already put in place at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
“Today, we are proactively mitigating risks before they affect the traveling public,” FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said in a news release. “Following the mid-air collision near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA), we looked at similar operations across the national airspace. We identified an overreliance on pilot ‘see and avoid’ operations that contribute to safety events involving helicopters and airplanes.”
Officials also specifically mentioned a Feb. 27 near-miss in which a police helicopter had to turn to avoid an American Airlines flight that was landing at San Antonio International Airport in Texas. A similar close call happened on March 2, when a helicopter had to turn away from a small aircraft that had been cleared to arrive at California’s Hollywood Burbank Airport, officials said.
The January 2025 collision between an American Airlines jet and an Army Black Hawk helicopter killed 67 people, making it the deadliest plane crash on U.S. soil since 2001. Among other factors contributing to the crash, investigators said controllers in the Reagan tower overly relied on asking pilots to spot aircraft and maintain visual separation.
The night of the crash, the controller approved the Black Hawk’s request to do that twice. However, investigators say the helicopter pilots likely never spotted the American Airlines plane as the jet circled to land on the little-used secondary runway.
Many of the people who died were young figure skaters and their parents and coaches who had just attended a development camp in Wichita, Kansas, after the U.S. Figure Skating Championships were held there.
Washington
Washington faces Detroit on 6-game home skid
Detroit Pistons (49-19, first in the Eastern Conference) vs. Washington Wizards (16-52, 14th in the Eastern Conference)
Washington; Thursday, 7 p.m. EDT
BOTTOM LINE: Washington takes on Detroit looking to end its six-game home losing streak.
The Wizards are 11-32 against Eastern Conference opponents. Washington allows 123.8 points to opponents and has been outscored by 11.0 points per game.
The Pistons are 33-11 in conference games. Detroit ranks seventh in the Eastern Conference with 27.0 assists per game led by Cade Cunningham averaging 9.9.
The Wizards’ 13.0 made 3-pointers per game this season are only 0.3 more made shots on average than the 12.7 per game the Pistons give up. The Pistons average 11.0 made 3-pointers per game this season, 2.7 fewer made shots on average than the 13.7 per game the Wizards give up.
The teams meet for the fourth time this season. In the last matchup on March 17 the Pistons won 130-117 led by 36 points from Jalen Duren, while Bub Carrington scored 30 points for the Wizards.
TOP PERFORMERS: Carrington is averaging 10 points and 4.5 assists for the Wizards. Tre Johnson is averaging 1.9 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.
Duren is averaging 19 points and 10.6 rebounds for the Pistons. Cunningham is averaging 17.6 points and 3.8 rebounds while shooting 46.8% over the past 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Wizards: 0-10, averaging 117.6 points, 38.1 rebounds, 23.8 assists, 6.8 steals and 4.6 blocks per game while shooting 48.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 129.5 points per game.
Pistons: 5-5, averaging 116.9 points, 44.1 rebounds, 28.3 assists, 9.4 steals and 6.0 blocks per game while shooting 48.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 110.9 points.
INJURIES: Wizards: Anthony Davis: out (finger), Cam Whitmore: out for season (shoulder), Alex Sarr: day to day (hamstring), Leaky Black: day to day (ankle), Kyshawn George: out (elbow), D’Angelo Russell: day to day (not injury related), Trae Young: day to day (quad), Bilal Coulibaly: day to day (heel).
Pistons: Cade Cunningham: day to day (back), Isaiah Stewart: out (calf).
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
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