Mourners including local politicians lined up for more than an
hour outside the DuPage African Methodist Episcopal Church in Lisle,
Illinois to file past an open casket and attend the funeral.
"This is not a moment of defeat, this is an hour of victory ... We
are not funeralizing a martyr or a victim, we are celebrating a
hero," said Reverend James Miller, who led the funeral service. He
asked everyone to pressure the government for a federal
investigation into Bland's death.
Bland, 28, was pulled over by a white Texas state trooper on July 10
near Prairie View, Texas, northwest of Houston, for failing to
signal a lane change. After the stop escalated into an altercation
between her and the trooper, Bland was taken into custody and
charged with assaulting an officer. She was found hanging in her
jail cell on July 13 with a plastic trash bag around her neck.
An autopsy preliminarily confirmed an initial finding by a medical
examiner that Bland's death was a suicide.
Her mother and four sisters, however, have expressed strong doubts
that Bland, passionate about civil rights and excited about a new
job, would take her own life.
At the funeral, her mother, Geneva Reed-Veal, said she had recently
traveled with her daughter, who had decided her purpose in life was
to stop the injustice against blacks in the American South.
"That baby did not take herself out of here," Reed-Veal said. "I'm
the momma and I still want to know what happened to my baby."
The trooper, who has been placed on desk duty for violating protocol
in the arrest, pointed a stun gun at Bland and said he would drag
her out of the car. Another video, taken by a bystander, showed the
officer forcing Bland to the ground as they argued.
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Illinois politicians U.S. Senator Dick Durbin and U.S.
Representative Bill Foster spoke at the funeral and drew applause
when they called for a full investigation of Bland's death.
An overflow crowd was directed to the church's basement to watch the
funeral on a live video feed. Many sang, clapped and danced after
viewing Bland's body.
Her former sorority sisters from her alma mater, Prairies View A&M
University, read an obituary highlighting her religious faith and
her blogs about social injustice, race politics and police
brutality.
Bland, originally from the Chicago area, had been about to start a
temporary job at Prairie View A&M, when she was stopped by the
trooper.
Bland's family acknowledged she had posted on social media about
struggling with depression but has disputed the suicide ruling.
(Reporting by David Bailey in Minneapolis and Ben Klayman in
Detroit; Editing by Mohammad Zargham, Hugh Lawson and Steve
Orlofsky)
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