I just got home. Tonight I learned how seeing police
officers get away with killing black and brown people has affected me. I was
traveling home after my Council dinner in Omak and just getting to Wenatchee
when there were red and blue lights in my rear view mirror.
My first thought
was “Please Jesus, let me make it home to my family.”
I signaled, pulled over,
put my car in park and then put both hands on the wheel. “Please, God. Just let
me make it home.” The officer gets to my window and signals for me to roll it
down. I do. He tells me his name. I don’t remember it. He asks if I know why he
pulled me over. “No, sir. I don’t.” He tells me I have a headlight out. “Oh.
Okay.”
My hands start to shake. He asks me if my name is La Vasha, but he
mispronounces it. I correct him and then say “Yes, sir.” He asks for my
license. I look at my purse on the passenger seat and see that it’s zipped. I
look back at him and tell him that I have it, but it’s in my purse. “I’m going
to unzip it, okay?” He says it’s okay. Hands still shaking, I open my purse and
am relieved that my wallet is still on top and visible. I pull it out and
struggle to release my license from the pocket. I hand it over and he looks at
it and asks me where Kittitas is. “Um... it’s ten miles left of Ellensburg.”
Yeah, I know, but I couldn’t think to say “East.”
He asks me for my
registration. I point to my glove box. “It’s in there. I’m going to open that,
okay?” He says it’s okay. I fumble through the pocket that holds the manual and
the registration. I pull out the old one. Nope. Keep looking. I find it and
can’t hold it steady, but he manages to take it.
He asks if I have insurance.
“Yes, sir. It’s in here, too.” I look in the pocket. I can’t find it! In my
head, my prayer has been cut to “Please, God. Please. Please, God. Please.” He
tells me he’s going to go check my information and he’ll be right back. Okay. I
keep looking. By the time he comes back, I still haven’t found the current one.
The only one I have on me that I have torn my wallet apart for is 8 years old.
He looks at me and I tell him I can’t find it.
He tells me that I look nervous.
“Yes, sir. I am very nervous.” He asks me why. “Because I’m a black woman on
this side of the mountains and you just pulled me over.” His eyes are brown. He
says it’s going to be okay. He asks if I’m sure that’s the only reason? He
smiles at me. “It’s okay. I just wanted to make sure that you aren’t nervous
because you have a trunk full of cocaine or something.” I think he’s trying to
make a joke to put me at ease. I don’t laugh, but I say “No, you can check it
if you want. I’m a teacher and I’m coming from a meeting in Omak. I’m just
going home.”
He tells me he’s going to let me go with a warning to find my
insurance card because that’s a $500 ticket if it’s not with me in the vehicle
and since I’m almost home, make sure to get my light fixed. Actually to maybe
stop at Fred Meyer and pick one up. I tell him I’m going to have my husband
take care of it first thing in the morning. My hands were still shaking when he
gave me my stuff back. My stomach was jumpy. He goes back to his car. I put my
car in gear, signal and head home. I was still so nervous. I had intended to stop
and gas up in Wenatchee. I didn’t. I just kept driving until I got home. I got
into my house, saw my husband who has always been my safe space and just
started to shake and cry.
In telling my husband this story, I asked him if it were
him, would his first thought have been that he wasn’t going to make it home.
Would he have thought he was going to die? His answer... no.
This is what privilege looks like and feels like.
That officer was nice to me. He could have given me a ticket
for not finding my insurance card. He didn’t. He saw that I was nervous and he
could have easily escalated the situation. He didn’t.
But let me say this, I am a law abiding citizen and I was
terrified that because I’m black I was going to be killed over a traffic stop.
You think I’m overreacting? Philando Castile. Freddy Gray. Samuel DuBose.
Natasha McKenna. Countless others.
Tonight, I just thank God that La Vasha
Murdoch didn’t join that list. I really didn’t know how all of this has been
playing on my psyche.
Now I know.
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