The rally this past weekend for Peter Liang, a rookie New York officer convicted of recklessly firing a bullet that killed an innocent man in a dark stairwell, marked an unexpectedly large outpouring of activism from an ethnic group that often has to struggle to be heard above the din in the city.
Many said they believe Liang is being made a scapegoat for acts of police brutality largely committed by whites. Demonstrations were also held in Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Francisco and Seattle.
"We feel of one of our own is sacrificed because we don't make noise," she said.
Other Asian-Americans have looked on the protests with dismay, saying Liang is no victim and the demonstrators are taking on the wrong fight.
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The officer was on routine patrol in a public housing project when he entered the stairwell with his gun drawn and accidentally fired a shot when he was startled by a noise. The bullet ricocheted and struck Akai Gurley, 28, killing him.
A jury convicted Liang of manslaughter on February 11. He could get up to 15 years in prison, or as little as probation.
"I believe, a lot of people believe, they're using him as a scapegoat," said Steve Chung, a demonstrator from Brooklyn.
Annie Tan, an activist and educator in Chicago, said she sympathizes with those who see injustice in the way so many white officers who have shot black men have been acquitted or have not faced charges. She said Asian-Americans have also been ill-treated by the criminal justice system, citing the case of Vincent Chin, who was beaten to death in Michigan in 1982.
"But does that mean we free Peter Liang for what he did? No, absolutely not," she said.
New York City has a long history of fraught racial politics, and complaints by Asian-Americans about being ignored politically are not new. In 1990, Mayor David Dinkins was heavily criticized for failing to quickly intervene when black activists organized a boycott of Korean grocers.