Who is Quawan โ€œBobbyโ€ Charles, and why are some comparing his death to Emmett Till?

The 15-year-oldโ€™s death has sparked demonstrations in rural Iberia Parish, Louisiana, a densely populated county where African Americans comprise about 31 percent of its residents.

According to multiple reports and photos circulating the internet, Quawanโ€™s battered body was found by authorities sometime during or after Halloween night.

Police have not confirmed where or when they found Quawanโ€™s body, but family members have claimed it was discovered in a sugar cane field not far from his home.

A photo shows the teenโ€™s face badly discolored and swollen, with parts of his jaw exposed and skin missing. There are bruises on his forehead.

โ€œMany say Charlesโ€™ body resembles 14-year-old Emmett Till who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955 after being accused of offending a white woman in her familyโ€™s grocery store,โ€ reported news website The NC Beat, which published a side-by-side photo comparison of Quawan Charles and Emmett Till.

Law enforcement officials in Louisiana have not confirmed the authenticity of Quawanโ€™s photo.

Investigators have noted that theyโ€™re still processing evidence, interviewing various individuals, and are awaiting autopsy results.

โ€œThe disrespect [from law enforcement] and lack of transparency are unacceptable,โ€ ACLU of Louisiana executive director Alanah Odoms Hebert wrote in a statement.

โ€œWe join the family in demanding a full and transparent investigation into the circumstances surrounding Bobbyโ€™s death,โ€ Hebert continued. โ€œThis family is grieving and deserves answers โ€“ not disrespect and stonewalling.โ€

Demonstrators have reportedly questioned the possibility that the case involves foul play.

Many gathered along with Quawanโ€™s family on Wednesday, Nov. 11, outside of the Iberia Parish Courthouse to demand more information be released.

โ€œWe are here to demand justice for a family of people who gruesomely lost their loved one, a 15-year-old child who was found in a way that just breaks my heart,โ€ demonstrator Jamal Taylor told Louisianaโ€™s WAFB-TV.

โ€œMembers of law enforcement have done what they do well, which is deny and hide behind a pending investigation. This family deserves answers,โ€ Taylor remarked.

Ron Haley, the attorney representing Quawanโ€™s family, also chided authorities for their lack of transparency.

โ€œThere are certain circumstances where I absolutely understand โ€“ and I think anybody would โ€“ why things arenโ€™t made [available] to the public,โ€ Haley told WAFB.

โ€œBut letโ€™s talk specifically about Bobby Charles. His family should knowโ€ฆHis mother and father should be made aware of every step of this investigation.โ€

Racial tensions have routinely boiled over in Iberia Parish, where lynching of Black people became a regular occurrence following Reconstruction.

A blistering 2018 article published in The Acadiana Advocate reported that the Iberia Parish Sheriffโ€™s Office had employed a violent gang with racist tendencies and batons.

According to the report, deputies in the Sheriff Departmentโ€™s elite narcotics squad routinely beat suspects, and sometimes just random African Americans they confronted.

โ€œSome of the same deputies fabricated reports, made bogus arrests and lied under oath to cover their tracks,โ€ the newspaper reported. โ€œAnd to hear federal prosecutors tell it, Sheriff Louis Ackal was the architect of the whole thing.โ€

Not long after he took office, in 2008, three of Ackalโ€™s drug agents got caught jumping two young Black residents just for kicks.

Ackal allegedly dismissed the matter as โ€œjust another case of n*****-knocking,โ€ a comment deputies said made the rounds of the narcotics squad and set a free-swinging tone for years of abuse.

Nearly a dozen Iberia Parish deputies would eventually confess to civil rights violations, and several agreed to testify against their boss over the biggest policing scandal in Louisiana in a decade.

But then Ackal beat the rap in 2016 and came back to town.

Quawanโ€™s family has started a GoFundMe page to help pay for an independent autopsy. The site also contains a graphic photo of the teenโ€™s body.

So far, the effort has raised more than $65,000 against its original $15,000 goal.

โ€œAccording to Eugene Weatherspoon Collins of the Baton Rouge NAACP, Quawan Charles was lynched just like Emmett Till,โ€™โ€ Baton Rouge activist Gary Chambers wrote this week on Facebook. โ€œThere is no other way to put it.โ€

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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