The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 16, 1992- Page 7 Officers charged in Green DETROIT (AP) - Two police officers were charged yesterday with murder and one with manslaughter in the beating of motorist Malice Green. A fourth officer was charged with assault with intent to do great bodily harm. Three other officers who also had been suspended after the Nov. 5 beating were not charged. "I feel justice is done.... I think they handled it very well," said the victim's father, Jessie Green Jr. "He's dead, andanychargesaren't going to bring him back. I got to live on." Malice Green, who was black, died of head injuries after being beaten on a street near a suspected drug house. Officers Larry Nevers and Walter Budzyn were charged with second- degree murder and can get sentenced to life in prison if convicted. Sgt. Freddie Douglas was charged with involuntary manslaughter, which carries amaximum 15-year sentence, and willful neglect of duty, a misde- meanor punishable by one year im- prisonment. The ranking officer on the scene, Douglas was accused of failing to try to stop the beating. "He certainly is in a more difficult position because he's got supervisory duties," said Douglas' attorney, Armand Bove. "And when you have a scene out on the street with police officers and a supervising sergeant, that supervising sergeant certainly beating takes the brunt of responsibility." The four were arraigned before De- troit District Judge Willie G. Lipscomb Jr. as about a dozen people gathered at the site of the beating to urge justice. The Rev. Edward Collins of God's Word Tabernacle thought the charges were too lenient, but he urged for no violent protest. "There will be no violence," he told demonstrators. "We're not looking for violence. We're not burning our busi- nesses. We're not burning our stores." Tye Hull of Detroit said citizens would wait for a trial outcome. "But if the system fails, the city will erupt," he warned. "This is a pressure cooker. People here don't have a lot of hope. They're going to feel they have nothing to lose." Detroit Police Officer David Malhalab said the officers involved in the beating have already been "tried, convicted and found guilty" by the mayor and the .media. "What you will find is that the offic- ers are victims of a department that has failed in its responsibility to provide adequate training, supervision and equipment," Malhalab said. While the beating of an unarmed motorist drew parallels to the Los An- geles case involving King, NAACP officials have said the Detroit case is different. They credited quick action by Police Chief Stanley Knox in suspend- ing the officers allegedly involved. Tales from vets may help locate MIAs in Vietnam Detroit Police Officer Larry Nevers and police Sgt. Freddie Douglas listen to charges against them during their arraignment in Detroit yesterd ay. HANOI, Vietnam (AP)-War sto-_ ries of Vietnamese veterans who fought the Americans could provide important clues to help resolve the fate of the 2,265 U.S. service members missing and still unaccounted for in Indochina. Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), leading a team of three senators from the Select Committee on POW-MIA Affairs, asked Vietnamese officials if Pentagon researchers could attend the first meet- ing of a veterans' association to gather oral histories that might shed light on. the missing. "That would be a very historic be- ginning of a soldier-to-soldier process of answering questions," said Kerry, who served a tour of duty in 1968-69 as a navy officer on a gunboat in the Mekong Delta. Vietnamese officials with the group applauded the idea of collecting such oral histories, but said they would have to consult with other officials. Kerry and Sens. Tom Daschle, (D- S.D.),and Hank Brown, (R-Colo.), yes- terday began a three-day visit to Hanoi with a promise from Deputy Foreign Minister Le Mai to get the "clearest possible answers" to any questions they raised. Kerry said he canied a letter from President Bush to the Hanoi leadership. Although he would not disclose its con- tents, he said it was a "sign of the importance of direct contact to get this matter resolved." Although Kerry did not speculate on low quickly normalization could pro- ceed, he said he had been told that if cooperation on the MIA issue was forth- coming, Bush would want to recipro- cate. Kerry suggested that facilitating an end to the embargo could ease the way for looking into the MIA issue. The senators helda21/2-hourmeet- ing yesterday with officials of the Viet- nam Office Seeking Missing Persons, an interagency organization dealing with the question of the missing. At the meeting, which was open to reporters, the senators sought answers to questions about specific MIA cases and explanations of Vietnamese failure to provide certain information. When asked why it was difficult to find the remains of sOme Americans whom witnesses said died in captivity, Dich said, "When you have people who were maybe buried along the trail, in transit, in a wartime situation, can you remember where you buried them? And maybe the person who buried him is dead now"~ Dich turned over a dossier of 46 cases in which the Senate committee took a particular interest. He said the report was a compilation of information gathered during 20 "joint field activi- ties" undertaken with U.S. searchers inside Vietnam. Mayor Coleman Young publicly de- nounced the beating. Knox has said he did not believe the beating was racially motivated, and Wayne County Prosecutor John 0' Hair said yesterday that no witnesses re- portedhearing racial epithets during the beating. Detroit is known for its integrated police force. Fifty-eight percent of the 3,850-member force is black in a city that is 75 percent black. Knox suspended seven officers Nov. 6, the day after Green's death. 0'-lair said there was too little evidence to charge the other three officers. Suspensions will continue indefi- nitely for the three officers who don't face criminal charges, police Sgt. Christopher Buck said. Jack Gravely, National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Colored People national director of special projects, said Sunday that quick ac- tion by Detroit officials headed off violence like that in Los Angeles. "What is different in Detroit is the leadership," Gravely said. "When we compare what hap- pened in Detroit with what happened on the other coast, it does make a difference. Without it, this city prob- ably would still be burning at its walls today." Detroit-area NAACP president to step down DETROIT (AP) -The president of the NAACP's Detroit branch will step down at the end of the year to devote more time to his newly expanded posi- tion at Wayne State University. Arthur Johnson, who has served as president of the civil rights group since 1986, saidhe won'tseekre-election.He is a senior vice president at the Detroit university. "I must tell you, I really didn't want toquit,"JohnsonsaidSunday atamem- bership meeting of the National Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Colored People. "I wanted to keep serving the branch, so I'm leaving with mixed feel- ings." The two men vying to replace. Johnson aspresidentare Charles Boyce, vicepresidentof urban affairs forMichi- gan Bell Co., and the Rev. Wendell Anthony, pastor of the Fellowship Chapel. Because of Malice Green's beating death at the hands of Detroit police earlier this month, Johnson said it was all the more difficult to step down. Charges were brought yesterday against four of seven officers suspended from thepolice forceafter Green's death. "We want to see justice done ... punishment for the wrongdoing," he said. "I feel it will happen." Johnson isn't severing his 42-year ties with the NAACP; he is running for a seat on the organization's executive board on the Unity Action slate. Duringhispresidency, Johnson filed a lawsuit accusing auto insurers of dis- crimination inrate-setting and launched a campaign encouraging Detroit resi- dents to buy goods in Detroit. His efforts have been heralded by his colleagues. "Dr. Johnson has been a magnifi- cent president," NAACP Executive Director Joann Watson said. "His im- portance cannot be measured in words. He has shown a great sense of lifelong commitment, both personally and pro- fessionally, with strong words and ad- needs Arts writers, News writers, Opinion writers, Photographers, and Sports writers. The Daily needs you. The University of Michigan Salary Supplement Will be Available November 30 at The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Room 206 $6.00 The Department of English Language and Literature presents GRADUATE SCHOOL IN ENGLISH: . GETTING IN Come talk with graduate students; admissions committee members and faculty about applying to graduate school in English. Wednesday, November 18 at 7:30 pm Haven Hall (Lounae) 7th Floor