Black Law Student’s Association put rich white kids in firing line

The Black Law Students Association at the University of Connecticut School of Law in Hartford, in the US struck out at mostly white law students who attended a party dressed up in stereotypical “Black” attire – baggy jeans, puffy jackets, sideways baseball hats, with some holding machine guns and 40-ounce malt liquors. The students then published the photos over the internet.

The law school’s Black Law Students Association held an impromptu press conference in a mock courtroom in the building after the event.


With about a dozen members standing behind her, Association President Natalie Braswell explained that the group initially was reluctant to speak out about the party because it didn’t start the issue and didn’t want to put the law school in a bad light.

“Our position was this was a community issue, not a black issue or a white issue,” she said. “People shouldn’t be looking at the BLSA for answers. It’s a bigger issue. That has to be addressed before anything else can be addressed.”

The issue has caused hurt feelings on campus and attracted unwanted media, including CNN. During the event, students applauded Student Bar Association President Ryan Greco when he scolded reporters for attending an event he said he hoped would be a therapeutic healing session. Many students also refused to speak to reporters.

Interim Law School Dean Kurt Strasser began the event by outlining the basics of the house party that had attracted about 75 law students Saturday night. He said the party photos, which seemed like harmless fun to some partygoers, were deeply offensive to other students “by exploiting and, to a degree, making fun of racial stereotypes.”

He also chided the students for acting unprofessionally and said they have a responsibility as future lawyers to understand how their actions affect other people.

“As lawyers, you’re going to be leaders in the society. Many of you are going to be important people, influential people, which means you are going to have to do better on these issues.”

“If you don’t understand why this is harmful to the community then you need to start asking questions and learn,” he said.

Strasser said he hoped the roundtable would start mending the tear in the law school community, where black students comprise 5.9 percent of the 622-member student body.

After his talk, students and staff broke up into smaller groups gathered around tables and held intense discussions.

Greco said he had initially questioned the effectiveness of the approach, noting that many students expected more of a town hall format. But he said he was pleased about how candid and serious students were being.

Greco, who did not attend the party, said he has heard from students on all sides of the issue.

Chaia Odoms, a black law student who said she was not speaking on behalf of BLSA, said the event highlighted what she described as a pervasive problem.

“There are incidents on campus and the party this week is part of that. That is the very problem: that they didn’t know it was a problem,” she said.

Maurice Headley, another black law student, described it as an example of “unconscious racism,” racism so institutionalized in the power structure of today’s society that someone doesn’t have to actually call someone a racial slur to be insulting.

From: The Hartford Courant

3 comments so far

  1. ISRAEL MZUMYA on

    THIS CENTER SHOULD BE FOR EXCHANGING MATERIAL AND KNOWLEDGE AT LARGE.AS LAWYERS UNITY IS REQUIRED SINCE THE WORLD NOW IS LIKE A SINGLE VILLAGE.FOR THE BETTERMENT OF OUR CARRIER JUSTICE,PEACE,DELIGENCY AND PRUDENT LET THEM BE OUR CREDITS

  2. ISRAEL MZUMYA on

    RACISM IS A BIG PROBLE ESPECIALLY IN CASES INVOLVING INTERNATIONAL CRIMES.PROSECUTORS DO LIKE TO WIN THE WEAKER RACE BUT THEY FORGET TO MAINTAIN AND OBSERVE THE PRINCIPLES OF NATURAL JUSTICE WHICH STATES CLEAR THAT NO BIAS HOULD BE PRACTICED,EQUAL TREATMENT AND JUSTICE SHOULD MANIFESTLY BE SEEN DONE

  3. ISRAEL MZUMYA on

    MY ADVICE TO ALL LAWYERS AS A TANZANIA I CAN SAY LAW IS GUDED BY PROCEDURES BU T THE PROCEDURE SHOULD NOT DEFEAT JUSTICE BECAUSE THERE ARE SOME CIRCUMSTANCES WHERE WE CAN AVOID REGULARITIES FOR THE SAKE OF OBSERVING NATURAL JUSTICE IN PRACTICAL SENCE AND NOT THEORETICAL ONE.


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