Ramarley Graham (1993-2012)

November 10, 2017 
/ Contributed By: Davon White

Ramarley Graham

Fair use image

Ramarley Graham was born on April 12, 1993, to Constance Malcolm and Franclot Graham in The Bronx, New York. At the time of his death, he was a student at the Young Scholars Academy of The Bronx, where he aspired to travel the world and become a veterinarian. Graham died on February 2, 2012, at the age of 18, after being shot by a New York Police Department officer in his grandmother’s bathroom.

Ramarley Graham was spotted adjusting the waistband of his pants during an NYPD narcotics squad surveillance of a bodega near his home. Officers assumed Graham was concealing a gun. When plainclothes officers approached Graham, they reported that he ran to the house of Patricia Hartley, his grandmother, a few blocks away. However, surveillance footage from outside the front entrance to Hartley’s building shows Graham calmly walking up to the door and entering without urgency.

The same surveillance footage shows two officers running up to the building with their guns drawn just moments after Graham enters. As the two officers tried to force their way through the locked door, other NYPD officers gained entrance through the rear of the building and opened the front door. One officer ran upstairs to Hartley’s apartment and broke down the door without a search warrant or announcing that he was a police officer.

Plainclothes Officer Richard Haste then ran into the apartment and discovered Graham in the bathroom attempting to flush a bag of marijuana down the toilet. Without any orders to comply, Graham was shot once in the chest in front of his little brother, Chinoor Campbell, and grandmother. Haste later reported that Graham reached into his waistband for a gun, but no weapon was found in the Hartley apartment. Twenty minutes after the shooting, Graham was removed on a gurney from Hartley’s home by police officers. His family suspected he had already died, but he was officially pronounced dead at 3:53 PM at the Montefiore Medical Center.

Patricia Hartley was arrested, detained, and questioned by NYPD about the series of events that occurred in her home for seven hours at the local precinct after watching her grandson, Graham, die at the hands of Haste. Graham’s body was also misidentified after his death, which prevented his parents from seeing his body for four days after his murder.

In 2012, a grand jury voted to indict Haste, but the indictment was tossed out due to a prosecutorial mistake. A second grand jury declined to indict Haste, allowing him to walk free. After further investigation during a departmental trial in March 2017, Haste was found guilty on all charges and turned in his badge and gun before Deputy Commissioner of Trials Rosemarie Maldonado asked Police Commissioner James O’Neill to fire him. Although Haste is no longer employed by NYPD, many people are still fighting to see justice for Ramarley Graham.

Author Profile

Davon White is a senior at the University of Washington, Seattle, studying Communications with a focus on Public Relations. He is a leader of Project Pilgrimage which takes inter-generational communities to the deep South to learn about African American history and the Black Freedom Struggle. Born and raised in Tacoma, Washington, he is passionate about writing and developing media content that brings equal representation to marginalized populations.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

White, D. (2017, November 10). Ramarley Graham (1993-2012). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/graham-ramarley-1993-2012/

Source of the Author's Information:

ohn Rudolf, “Ramarley Graham, Unarmed Teen, Unlawfully Shot By New York Police, Lawyer Says”, Huffington Post, February 09 2012, https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/09/ramarley-graham-new-york-police-_n_1266715.html; Amy Goodman, “Ramarley Graham, Unarmed Black Teen Slain by NYPD, Remembered at Weekly Vigils Outside Bronx Home,” Democracy Now!, June 19 2012, https://www.democracynow.org/2012/6/19/ramarley_graham_unarmed_black_teen_slain; Christopher Mathias, “We Still Don’t Know What Happened to Ramarley Graham,” Huffington Post, September 4 2014, https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/04/ramarley-graham_n_5765862.html; Chris Perez & Larry Celona, “Cop who killed Ramarley Graham quits after guilty ruling,” New York Post, March 26 2017, http://nypost.com/2017/03/26/cop-who-killed-ramarley-graham-quits-after-guilty-ruling/; “Biography of Ramarley Graham”, Ramarley’s Call – Official Website For Ramarley Graham, http://ramarleyscall.net/pages/about-ramarley/.

Further Reading