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  • We actually have a line that we do at our house.

  • We practice this thing, what is it?

  • I'm Ariel Sky Williams.

  • I'm eight years old.

  • I'm unarmed and I have nothing that will hurt you.

  • It's just kind of a thing that we practice at our house.

  • (somber instrumental music)

  • There are great police officers out there.

  • There's also some police officers who are not so good.

  • And my fear is that you run across one of those bad ones.

  • For some reason, people of color have always been a target by the police.

  • For they became a policeman, they were a person.

  • And that person took all their ideas

  • and all their thoughts and all their prejudice

  • into their job.

  • Why would a police officer assume

  • that you did something bad?

  • Maybe because of my skin color.

  • I remember being put in handcuffs

  • for something that had nothing to do with me.

  • I was literally walking in the mall,

  • cops slammed me on the ground,

  • busted my lip, chipped my tooth.

  • That actually made me really mad.

  • How about the time they pulled us over?

  • With me in the car, and arrested me,

  • and left all of you guys sitting in the car

  • and nobody knew how to drive, on the side of the road,

  • because the "bumper" on the car was kind of hanging off.

  • No.

  • You know, we live in Puyallup,

  • there's people that don't even have a bumper on their car.

  • My "rear brake light" wasn't working.

  • And I got to my destination, and they were working.

  • When I was about your age actually,

  • they grabbed me.

  • Why?

  • I didn't know at the time, they just grabbed me.

  • They threw me onto the police car.

  • I got tasered that time.

  • That time they tasered me

  • because they said I wasn't complying.

  • Ariel, are you okay?

  • What's wrong baby?

  • (Ariel crying)

  • I'm okay, I'm alive, alright?

  • Every day I get to see you, I get to do this, right?

  • Okay, come on, let's calm down, let's finish this, alright?

  • You good?

  • Hey, you making me cry.

  • You have to be careful when you're out there

  • in this world cause this world's not gonna always be honest

  • or fair to you.

  • I know Sean, you got a little bit lighter

  • than the rest of them, so there's a possibility

  • you won't get stopped.

  • [Man] Tell him if you just pulled him over.

  • Okay.

  • If you're driving, cop pulls you over.

  • Police gets out of the car, comes to the window,

  • (imitates knocking)

  • what would you do?

  • License and registration please, ma'am.

  • Why do you think I pulled you over?

  • I don't know, tell me.

  • When a police officer says something to you,

  • you don't...you don't, you're black.

  • You can't be looking at them saying,

  • oh, I don't know, why don't you tell me.

  • - Well I mean-- - That right there is giving them

  • to them, the license to pull you out of your car

  • and physically harm you,

  • because it will be done.

  • Don't get upset, don't get sad,

  • say, why did you pull me over?

  • You don't have, I don't know, just follow instructions

  • and stay calm.

  • Okay.

  • Do you think just being a police officer

  • and pulling you over, regardless of if you feel

  • you've done something or not,

  • they should get your respect?

  • That's a tricky question.

  • - The answer is yes. - Yes.

  • If you gotta go to your wallet to get your ID,

  • say, can I go reach in my back pocket to get my ID out?

  • You could do what I do and I show them my hands

  • so when they're walking up,

  • they see I don't have anything in my hands.

  • I'm Ariel Sky Williams and I have nothing to harm you

  • or hurt you.

  • And what's the next place you put your hands when you're driving?

  • Or on the steering wheel, with your hands out.

  • If at all possible, turn your phone on.

  • On and call someone and put it on speaker.

  • But whatever you're doing, I want you to say

  • what you're doing before you do it.

  • You don't write any statements.

  • Well you have to write a statement.

  • You don't have to write anything,

  • you're a minor.

  • I'm responsible for you, no one can tell you anything else.

  • If he tells you to be quiet, be quiet,

  • do everything that you can to get back to me.

  • I see it weighing on you

  • and I don't want it to weigh on you.

  • I'm just worried about Donovan.

  • I'm worried about him now.

  • [Man] Who are you guys talking about?

  • Her, my nephew, and her cousin.

  • I don't want him to be shot.

  • I don't want him to go to jail.

  • [Man] You guys, if you could say anything to police,

  • what would you say?

  • Learn about people.

  • learn about their problems.

  • Take some diversity training.

  • I mean, it should be like,

  • at this point, like a monthly requirement.

  • You know, there's really nothing at this point

  • that they could do that would make me feel any safer

  • with them without them just point blank

  • clearing them all out, and starting all over from scratch.

  • So don't always assume that all of them are bad.

  • Mm hmm, but... but I see on the news

  • and in newspapers and it keeps happening.

  • It's just in a different way.

  • It's like how people are like,

  • "You should forgive so and so"

  • but they keep doing it to me.

  • I forgave them but they keep doing it to me,

  • it gets harder and harder to forgive them.

  • Wow.

We actually have a line that we do at our house.

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