365 Days of Marching: The Amadou Diallo Story, Veronica Keitt, 2008, 90 min. - February 4, 1999, Amadou Diallo was gunned down in a hail of 41 bullets by four New York City Police Officers. The people took to the streets charging the NYPD with police brutality and over the next two years that followed, a series of marches and protests was set into motion that would forever change the lives of New Yorkers. 365 Days of Marching recounts that bitter and yet compelling part of New York City history.
Justifiable Homicide, Jon Osman and Jonathan Stack, 2002, 85 min. - On Jan. 12, 1995, two young Puerto Rican residents of the Bronx, Anthony Rosario and Hilton Vega, were shot to death by detectives of the New York Police Department. The officers said they were acting in self-defense, firing on two men in the act of committing an armed robbery. A grand jury believed them, and no charges were brought against them. The filmmakers suggest that the subsequent firings of the director of the review board and the investigators assigned to the Rosario-Vega case were a result of the Giuliani administration's desire to make the case go away. Justifiable Homicide is an exploration of the killings and their aftermath.
Post-screening Q&A with Veronica Keitt and Margarita Rosario, the mother of the late Anthony Rosario.
New York City, NY; NYC