On CNN’s Starting Point Monday morning, host Soledad O’Brien asked Sanford City Manager Norton Bonaparte Jr. about the bounty, and while she correctly identified the group, a chyron that ran during the 2-minute segment read “Black Panthers Offer Bounty.”
Here’s the clip, from CNN’s Starting Point:
That is not to pick on CNN. They’re not the first to conflate the two groups, and they probably won’t be the last, but it is an important distinction to make. This isn’t a “tomato/tomahto” difference; The New Black Panthers are not affiliated with the original Black Panther Party in any way. In fact, leaders of the original Panthers have denounced the NBPP, even suing them for use of the
I’ve done a lot of reporting on the New Black Panthers, who are adept at receiving media attention that’s disproportionate to their size and influence. Over the years, I’ve pressed NBPP Chairman Malik Zulu Shabazz for details on the actual
So, as City Manager Bonaparte urges calm, and speaks to Soledad O’Brien about “taking security very seriously” during this “tense moment,” it’s important to realize that, while bounties and “Wanted: Dead Or Alive” posters are, as Soledad O”Brien says, “a horrible new development,” the degree to which anyone is alarmed by this should be tempered with the recognition that people are not going to take up arms just because the New Black Panthers went to Kinko’s.
According to April Kellogg of Fox’s Tampa Bay affiliate, even the NBPP might not pursue Zimmerman. She reports that the Sanford Police talked with members of the group yesterday, telling them “they had the investigation under control,” and that “handing out those wanted fliers was doing nothing but inciting violence,” at which point, Kellogg says, “the group backed off and stopped their protests.”
Here’