Photo: A’Miya Braxton (Courtesy photo/Change.org)

The cry of Black Lives Matter has gone out worldwide since the police killing of George Floyd.
It has resonated as Breonna Taylor’s case remains untouched and unsolved, and since the deaths of Michael Brown, Eric Gardner, Trayvon Martin, Atatiana Jefferson, Botham Jean, and Sandra Bland, Ahmaud Arbery, and others.
However, in North Pontotoc, Miss., one death remains largely un-noticed: Nine- year-old A’Miya Braxton, a Black girl who had just exited her school bus on the afternoon of Oct. 4, 2016 when Karen Michelle Carpenter, a white woman, ignored the bus’s stop sign, swerved onto the sidewalk, and struck and killed her.
Two grand juries had failed to indict Carpenter, saying there was no evidence that the driver was texting or using her cell phone when the incident occurred.
Reportedly, a toxicology report found no substance use, and authorities said they couldn’t determine how fast Carpenter may have been driving.
“This was a difficult case,” North Pontotoc District Attorney John Weddle told reporters. “I know they [ the grand jury] struggled with it, based on the questions they asked. When you hear about it, the first thought is (the motorist) needs to pay. I completely understand that. That’s human nature. But when you start looking at the law and how it applies, it becomes a difficult issue.”
A’Miya’s family said the only complicated issue for prosecutors and the grand jury is that Carpenter is white, and A’Miya life as a Black person doesn’t matter.
The family said Carpenter violated Mississippi’s “Nathan’s Law,” which requires motorists to stop at least 10 feet from a school bus when loading or offloading children.
They have blamed Weddle for the decisions not to indict Carpenter, noting that the district attorney told both grand juries that the motorist’s intent was an element. “We believe Weddle introduced this element of ‘intent’ and we have called on the state Attorney General to investigate,” the family said in a statement.
They have asked the Mississippi attorney general to investigate whether Weddle or someone in his office deliberately introduced the element of intent despite the apparent absence of it in state law.
They also seek to ascertain whether Weddle should have recused himself because of possible ties to Carpenter and whether he was derelict in his duties by not providing the grand juries with clear guidance about “Nathan’s Law,” and about state law covering negligent and vehicular homicide.
A petition on change.org has gathered more than 716,000 signatures asking a special prosecutor to look at the case.
“Neither of them [Waddle or Assistant District Attorney Sadie Gardner] took the case seriously, and it showed because shortly after that, my family was informed that Karen Carpenter would not be charged,” A’Miya’s sister, Nabreshia Jackson, wrote in the petition.
“My family started doing press conferences, and still nothing happened. Now it’s almost four years later, and we still have no justice for A’Miya. By signing this petition, you will help the family get one step closer to getting justice for her.”
Earlier this year, A’Miya’s parents, Charles and Andrea Braxton unveiled a sign along the northern part of Pontotoc County on Old Highway 9, designated as the “A’Miya Braxton Memorial Highway.”
“You know we are talking about justice…like I told them from day one, that part I’m not even worried about because it’s going to happen,” A’Miya’s father, Charles Braxton said.
“From day one to right now, it’s a mixture of people out here. I don’t see white. I don’t see black. I see people, and the same people I see are going to be the same people that’s going to get this justice.”
Added Andrea Braxton:
“Everybody has been speaking and saying that she made her mark on Pontotoc, but she made her mark around the world.
“And we’re not going to stop fighting, because justice is justice, and I’m going to fight. I’m going to build an organization. I’m going to build more and more until justice is for A’Miya and not just for A’Miya, but for everybody that has ever been wronged by the law.”

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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3 Comments

  1. How can this woman not be charged with a crime? Number one, she took a life; number two, she disobeyed the law about stopping when you see a school bus loading or unloading children. Number three, SHE DROVE UP ON A SIDEWALK.

  2. And we as Black people are killed for a traffic violation.What a disparity in the law and it’s implantation?

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