NAMED BEST CAMPUS NEWSPAPER IN CALIFORNIA FOR 2022 BY THE CALIFORNIA COLLEGE MEDIA ASSOCIATION
Thursday, April 6, 2023
Volume 160 No. 28 SERVING SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1934
WWW.SJSUNEWS.COM/SPARTAN_DAILY
Community reacts to police scandal By Mat Bejarano STAFF WRITER
ENRIQUE GUTIERREZ-SEVILLA | SPARTAN DAILY
William Armaline, director of the Human Rights Institute, speaks to the press in front of San Jose City Hall on Wednesday.
Community organizers gathered outside San Jose City Hall on Wednesday to demand accountability for the alleged drug trafficking of a San Jose Police Executive. Joanne Segovia, who served as the executive director of the San Jose Police Officers Association, turned herself in last Friday after being charged with attempting to import fentanyl from overseas, according to a March 31, 2023 ABC 7 article. Segovia has since been placed on paid leave and faces a maximum of 20 years in prison if convicted according to a March 31, 2023 KTVU article. Gilroy city councilmember Rebeca Armendariz said Segovia needs to be held accountable as Gilroy is one of the hardest hit communities regarding fentanyl poisoning. “This is a slap in the face to all of the families working hard to find accountability to keep their families and their children safe,” Armendariz said. “They need to be transparent and they need their feet to be held to the fire. They cannot do this, they cannot poison our families and get away with it.” Segovia had worked as the executive director of the San Jose Police Officer’s Association for 20 years and had been shipping pills internationally as recently as March 15, 2023 according to the same KTVU article. Sociology senior Kat Adamson, who serves as a member of Students Against Mass Incarceration said it was important to attend the gathering in order to hold the police department accountable. “Fentanyl is just devastating our communities,” Adamson said. “Having this large trafficking organization really makes things a lot easier for people to get injured or even die from fentanyl deaths.” Fentanyl-related deaths in Santa Clara County DRUGS | Page 3
SJSU documentary highlights social inequities By Brandon Nicolas STAFF WRITER
The San Jose State Human Rights Institute released a documentary alongside its 2022 Silicon Valley Pain Index report, providing a statistical overview of structured inequalities to inform policy practice in the Silicon Valley. William Armaline, director of the Human Rights Institute and sociology professor, along with Scott Myers-Lipton, lead author and sociology professor, released the third annual report earlier this year. The report exposes the social injustices and human rights issues regarding African Americans, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Americans and the Latinx community in the Silicon Valley. “The whole point of the pain index is for us to give an annual measure to how our county is doing regarding social issues, like police violence, housing and the wealth gap,” Armaline said. With the help of a grant from the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, former SJSU professor and documentary filmmaker, Bob Gliner, started production on the documentary shortly after the 2022 Silicon Valley Pain Index report was released. “Basically, [Gliner] got a hold of Scott after we put out the 2022 index,” Armaline said. “He had the idea of giving some faces and some visual narrative to the realities that we exposed in the index, and folks were open to it.” Gliner said he produced
around 50 films and documentaries for PBS stations around the country. “The challenge was taking what was rather dry statistics and putting flesh and blood on them – putting people behind the statistics,” Gliner said. Myers-Lipton said he had the idea for a Silicon Valley Pain Index after seeing Bill Quigley’s Katrina Pain Index in 2016, a report on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Following the May 25, 2020 murder of George Floyd, Myers-Lipton said he was committed to producing a pain index pertaining to Silicon Valley. “I asked myself, ‘What if I put together a pain index to show how institutionalized racism and white supremacy play out right here in the Silicon Valley,’ ” Myers-Lipton said. Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors declared it as a “Human Rights County” in 2018 – a title that Armaline and the Human Rights Institute wants to uphold. “Each year, we try to organize around themes that make sense for that year in terms of what is going on in the communities,” Armaline said. In 2021, 250 houseless people died on the streets of Santa Clara County – a 55% increase from pre-pandemic levels, according to the 2022 Silicon Valley Pain Index. In addition, 46% of children in Silicon Valley live in households that don’t earn enough income to cover basic needs, according PAIN INDEX | Page 3
INFOGRAPHIC COURTESY OF SCOTT MYERS-LIPTON