Cop killer.
No, we are not talking about Mumia Abu-Jamal. After a
trial that the National Journal�s Stuart Taylor called
"grotesquely unfair" and that included "fabricated
evidence," Abu-Jamal was convicted of killing a Philadelphia police
officer. He now sits on death row.
We are talking about alleged
cop killer Stuart Charles Alexander. If convicted, will Alexander
end up on death row? Not likely.
That�s because Abu-Jamal is Black, while Alexander
is white. Abu-Jamal is a journalist, Alexander is a businessman.
Alexander, who owns a sausage factory in San Leandro,
California, allegedly shot and killed two federal meat inspectors and
one state meat inspector who were visiting his factory.
According to news reports, after killing the three
inspectors, Alexander chased a fourth inspector for a couple of blocks
down the street, took one shot and missed. He then returned to his
sausage factory, walked inside, fired some more shots, went outside and
surrendered to police without resistance.
A videotape from a security camera inside Alexander�s
Santos Linguisa sausage factory "clearly depicts" Alexander
killing the three meat inspectors, San Leandro police told reporters.
Alexander and one of the inspectors each placed a
call for help to local police minutes before the shootings. State
officials charged Alexander with three counts of murder.
Federal officials charged Alexander with two counts
of murder�two of the federal inspectors worked for the U.S. Department
of Agriculture.
According to news accounts, meat inspectors closed
the facility in January for not properly heating sausage that was
labeled as fully cooked and for not using expiration dates on meat. The
inspectors shut down the facility in January after Alexander refused to
comply with the law.
The plant was reopened in June.
A sign outside Alexander�s sausage factory read:
"To all of our great customers, the USDA is coming into our plant
harassing my employees and me, making it impossible to make our great
product. Gee, if all meat plants could be in business for 79 years
without one complaint, the meat inspectors would not have jobs.
Therefore we are taking legal action against them."
Nowhere in any of the more than 60 articles that have
appeared about Alexander�s alleged killings have the words "cop
killer" appeared. Yet, when referring to Abu-Jamal, news reporters
feel obliged to refer to him as "cop killer" as if it were his
newly adopted name, as when the Philadelphia Inquirer earlier
this year headlined an article: "Antioch College Invites Cop-Killer
as Commencement Speaker."
Every day in this country, meat inspectors and other
law enforcement officials are cracking down on corporate crime and
violence. And every day, they meet resistance, harassment and threats
from corporate executives indoctrinated in a radical, reckless, and
lawless political ideology.
"There is a great deal of friction and turmoil
on the front lines of federal meat inspectors," said Bobby Harnage,
president of the American Federation of Government Employees. "The
deaths of the three meat inspectors was senseless�they were killed
trying to protect consumers."
Recent surveys indicate that corporate crime and
violence is on the uptick. According to a survey released earlier this
year by KPMG�s Integrity Management Services unit, employees are
observing a high level of serious illegal and unethical conduct on the
job, workers perceive management as unable or unwilling to deal with
unethical conduct, and employees are discouraged from reporting
unethical conduct.
And earlier in June, a survey by the National White
Collar Crime Center found that one in three American households are now
the victim of white collar crime and that there is growing public
concern with the seriousness of white collar crime and the criminal
justice system�s ability to control it.
Neither of these surveys was reported in the
mainstream corporate media.
Nor did the mainstream corporate media report on a
survey conducted by former Washington Post reporter Morton Mintz
and published this month in Nieman Reports.
Mintz�s survey found that corporate newspaper
editorial writers rarely condemn corporate crime and other wrongdoing.
He surveyed 124 leading editorial writers, columnists, and commentators
about what they had said about egregious corporate behavior during the
ten years ending December 1998.
Mintz concluded from the responses he received, and
from the large number of writers who failed to respond to his inquiry,
that "it�s fair to say that it�s a rare day in 3,650 days when
the national media exposes Americans to opinions on corporate
wrongdoing."
Political, corporate, and media
elites have little time for and little respect for the victims of
corporate crime and violence. They will rant and rave about Abu-Jamal,
but hardly give the time of day to Alexander and his rampage.
It�s time that we begin to give a little respect to
those who put their lives on the line to protect us against the ravages
of the corporate criminals. Call your local newspaper editorial offices
and urge them to take a strong stance against corporate crime. Support
your local corporate crime police. Condemn corporate brutality.
(Russell Mokhiber, editor of the Washington,
D.C.-based Corporate Crime Reporter, and Robert Weissman, editor of the
Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor, co-authors of
"Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on
Democracy." For more information visit www.corporate-predators.org.
(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman.)