Facing a judge: Dawami Lenguyanga (center) had help in court from her co-worker, Felicia Jackson (right), as a witness and from her friend, Felix Mulamba, who translated. (Mary Wiltenburg)
Accused of a crime, a Rwandan refugee has her day in court
A faulty subway fare card lands her in handcuffs and court. But all is forgiven when a white reporter shows up.
By Mary Wiltenburg / November 7, 2008 edition
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Dismissed: Charges against Dawami Lenguyanga were dropped after a reporter showed up in court.
For the Monitor’s yearlong multimedia project following Congolese third-grader Bill Clinton Hadam and his charter school community in Atlanta, correspondent Mary Wiltenburg blogs several times a week about the discoveries and missteps his refugee family makes adjusting to American life. Like the roaches in their apartment that swarm as Bill tries to do homework. Or his 8-year-old brother Igey’s decision to Americanize his name. This week, Ms. Wiltenburg joined Bill’s mother, Dawami, in court. This article is adapted from her blog report.
Atlanta
Tuesday afternoon, Rwandan Dawami Lenguyanga stood before an annoyed Judge Catherine Malicki of the Municipal Court of Atlanta for her arraignment on a charge of disorderly conduct. As Dawami’s friend Felix Mulamba translated, and her co-worker Felicia Jackson tried to testify on Dawami’s behalf, the judge frowned over her glasses.
“I don’t have time [for this],” she snapped.
Dawami’s latest encounter with the American legal system (earlier, an arrest warrant had been issued after she misunderstood a traffic court summons, costing her $340) began late one night last month when she tried to catch the subway home from work. She and Felicia, a Liberian refugee who came to Atlanta three years ago and has been doing housekeeping at Georgia State University two months longer than Dawami, bought fare cards and swiped them at the entrance of MARTA, the local transit system. A man stood on the platform, watching them.
Felicia’s card worked fine, but when Dawami scanned hers, the women say, the card-reader couldn’t register it. They were running to catch the train, which connected to the 10:45 p.m. bus home; if they missed it, Bill and Igey would be alone while they waited for the next one, at 12:15 a.m. So when Dawami’s card failed to read, she piled through the gate behind Felicia and the women ran for their train.
The man, they say, followed them, shouting: “Put your hands behind your back!” Dawami – a native Swahili speaker who came to Atlanta two years ago – didn’t understand the command. Felicia, a no-nonsense mother of five, intervened, explaining that Dawami didn’t know much English. The man, a MARTA policeman, handcuffed Dawami and took her into a back room. Felicia says she waited nearly two hours for her friend’s release, frantically showing the ticket saleswomen Dawami’s receipt and fare card. She says that one ran the card through her machine, and confirmed that, as the receipt showed, it had $5 on it.
The MARTA officer, unnamed on the ticket, wrote this report: “Enter[ed] into the paid area without paying the required $1.75 fare by following a paying patron through the faregate” – and ordered Dawami to appear in court on a “disorderly conduct” charge.
There she was on Tuesday afternoon, missing work her first month on the job and baffled by prosecutor William Wansker’s explanation of possible pleas: guilty, not guilty, and no contest. As he detailed the differences, Felix and Felicia conferred in French. Twice, Mr. Wansker asked them not to talk during his instructions. Then he took questions.
Hearing Dawami’s charge on what he called a “DC-Section 5 fraudulent scheme,” and realizing that she spoke little English, he recommended her for a “pretrial release” program through which she could return to court and get the charge dismissed by performing community service.
Felix, a naturalized US citizen from Congo, advised her to plead guilty and pay the fine, so she wouldn’t miss more work. Felicia argued that Dawami didn’t deserve to have a crime on her record – but said she couldn’t afford to take off work again to come back and testify at a trial.
Dawami was torn between her belief in her innocence and her fear of losing a job it had taken a year to get. She needs to keep it if she hopes to be eligible to bring her daughter, Neema, to the US from Tanzania, where the family spent 10 years as refugees.
“I need to finish today,” Dawami said. “if I come back, I lose work.” She settled on a no-contest plea: She’d pay a fine, and the charge would remain on her record, but she wouldn’t miss work again.
When Dawami’s name was called – Ms. Lenawhanga?” the judge tried – she, Felix, and Felicia approached a microphone.
“Judge there’s a language issue here,” the prosecutor warned. Judge Malicki asked how Dawami pled. No contest, said Felix.
According to court procedure, that should’ve been it. But Felicia had missed that instruction. Animated and indignant, she launched into her account of the incident.
The judge cut in, asking who the three were, which of them were charged, and whether they were related. She got quickly frustrated.
“Who’s Dawami?” she asked. “Are y’all here to interpret? What language does she speak? Does she want a lawyer, sir?”
Felix conferred with Dawami. No, he replied, Dawami did not want a lawyer. The judge overruled them: “We’re gonna put her down for not guilty, and I’m gonna recommend her for a public defender, and she will need to come back.”
Felix started to protest that they couldn’t miss work to return to court, when the prosecutor hailed me. He’d seen me sitting with them before the trial, and called me up to join them. “Can you help?”
“Who are you?” asked the judge incredulously. I said I was a reporter following Dawami’s family for the year.
At that, the prosecutor hustled the four of us into a side room and asked us to explain what had happened, while the judge moved on to other traffic infractions.
Felicia, her fringed turban flapping, launched passionately into the story in her accented English. Felix advocated paying a fine and getting it over with. Dawami looked silently from one to the other to the bearded prosecutor.
“This is too murky for me,” said Wansker. Felicia tried to show him the fare card and receipt. He gestured for her to keep them.
“Good enough,” he said hurriedly. He was needed in the courtroom where 10 more defendants waited in line. “You know what? Dismissed. Dismissed.” He wiped his hands together, to be sure the Africans understood.
They thanked him.
“These people don’t have a clue,” he commiserated to me as we reentered the courtroom.
Outside, the group hugged, and Felicia tore the ticket to shreds. “I’m so mad at that policeman,” she said, “I say: ‘Let me testify, even [if] I’m late to work.”
As I drove the women to work to finish their shift, they and Felix talked about American racism and anti-immigrant bias. About the white MARTA cop who could’ve just explained to the newly arrived African what to do in case of a demagnetized fare card – but chose instead to handcuff her. About the court officials who treated them with impatience until my white face, fluent English, and press credentials stood beside them.
It’s true: They don’t fully understand the arraignment process.
There’s a lot about America they still don’t know. But they have a clue.
2. E.K. | 11.09.08
I too have a similar story of a metro incident in a foreign land. This one was in Budapest, Hungary. My mother and I went into the subway station. There was no line at the small desk to purchase a ticket, and we didn’t recognize it as the ticket center. We walked down the hall to try to find the ticket center, and crossed a painted line that we didn’t notice and that didn’t mean anything to us. A woman stopped us and angrily harrassed us, and said she was arresting us. Nothing we said mattered. We could not go back and buy a ticket to resolve the issue. A man came along and told us angrily to leave the station and never come back.
I agree that race probably didn’t play the primary role here (though probably a minor one). It was being foreign.
With all the violent crime in this country, and justification of letting child molesters, etc., free based on the clogged court and jail system, I am angered and stunned that this obvious miunderstanding over $1.75 ever entered a courtroom.
3. A Critical Lesson Still to Be Learned | 11.09.08
I hope someone can educate Felicia about how to communicate appropriately with authority figures and when it’s best not to say anything at all.
Talking over instructions and indignant tirades will only cause more trouble. I can only imagine what happened the night Dawami was detained.
Certainly, the US court systems are flawed and overloaded, but let’s not lose sight of the fact that it was the PROSECUTER, of all people, who looked for someone who could help in Dawami’s defense when things went completely off the rails!
They’re free to say what they will about America’s racial biases and mistreatment of immigrants, but I hope they learn some degree of appreciation and respect for our system.
4. annpatricia | 11.09.08
Here’s my not-novel (see Terms of Service): the unsung hero is the PROSECUTOR - who for whatever motives pushed the reporter into becoming active. Maybe even his remark about these people being clueless was a rushed/harried way of
saying they didn’t know how to work with the system and really advocate for themselves. Thank god that that prosecutor intervened.
5. S. Sandlin | 11.09.08
Although not unsympathetic with the defendants, I do wonder if their treatment would have been different for any other Tom, Dick or Harry in any other city or, as commented above, any other country. Too, I find it disturbing that the issue is high-lighted with what seems to me to be a slur against an accent easily accepted as southern, but just as easily discerned in the spoken drawl of blacks as well as whites and is not peculiar from one or the other. I have to ask if what appeared to have been a spoken rudeness be any less so with a Brooklyn accent?
6. backstory | 11.09.08
Please note that there are more comments from readers on this article that are posted under the original blog at:
http://features.csmonitor.com/littlebillclinton/daily-blog/
Clara Germani
Backstory Editor
The Christian Science Monitor
7. Skeptic | 11.09.08
Or, she carries a card with a few dollars on it and fake swipes it, then rushes through the turnstile in an attempt to beat the fare. Age old trick. And she’ll probably game the system to bring her friends and relatives to the US under any scenario possible. Oh boy!
8. Mary Meehan | 11.09.08
Let me get this straight. She has been in this country two years and still doesn,t understand simple words or instructions? What are these people doing here if they refuse to learn even the most basic English?
9. Jerry McIntire | 11.10.08
I am surprised that any of the commenters here could find fault with these two ladies who acted lawfully, purchasing their tickets and running them through the machine, and not recognize instead that the officials acted hastily and unjustly in arresting Dawami. The officer ignored the fact that her card had full value remaining and could have been used to allow her to be on her way. What about their kids! What’s most important here! A transit policeman needs to have some patience and willingness to get facts, and then think for himself, rather than acting as if he had just captured hardcore thieves. Dawami’s only offense was not knowing what to do when a machine malfunctioned. I would have done the same, and would have been just as incredulous at being arrested. Such an “official” act is also extremely costly to the transit district and justice system of Atlanta.
10. J.R. Hutton | 11.27.08
I certainly agree that after two years, Dawami should be responsible for learning basic English. Unfortunately, being American only means obtaining a passport to faciliate travel, and petition for others to live here and does not install a sense of pride it once did. As for the racial bias, I think the author has little experience with the Court system for if she did, she would fully aware that the Courts are bogged down and it’s officers overworked with ever dwindingly resources. It’s sad that racism still exists and ever sadder that it is the first card played.
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1. boredwell | 11.07.08
It’s easy to say that racial bias played a part in Ms Lenguyanga’s detention, ticket and court date. However, I would venture that it was also very much part of the goose-stepping MATA official’s mindset. A similarly inane and draconian incident happened to me when I lived in Paris. The metro officials detained and ticketed me. I had to appear in court. It may, in part, have stemmed from my being an American. Or my very bad French! The predicament,I believe, was the result of circumspection: the arresting officer was following the letter of the Metro’s laws. Even some of my friends said as much and recounted similar stories.
I relate this not to diminish the alleged racial aspect of this case but to enlarge upon the circumstances surrounding it. Often we arrive a foregone conclusion prior to examining the flip side of evidence. While I believe the ticket was unjustified and a waste of time, the letter of the law, though intrusive, was followed. Thankfully, now that the infraction has been expunged, Ms Lenguyanga will have learned that ignorance is not bliss. A valuable lesson for all of us who are, or may one day become, strangers living in strange lands.