Rev. Marvin Booker’s Story
Reverend Marvin Booker was killed by Denver Law Enforcement while held in jail on a low-level drug charge.
While being held in the Denver County Jail, Rev. Marvin Booker had gone into a waiting area to retrieve his shoes, and four deputies used handcuffs, nunchucks and a “sleeper hold” to restrain him, then applied a taser to Booker when he was already handcuffed and being held down on the floor.
About Rev. Marvin Booker
My brother, Marvin Booker, was 56 years old when he was killed. Marvin was a peaceful street preacher who also struggled with mental illness and drug use. None of this changed the fact that he was a kind and loving man. He was no risk to anyone. What haunts me when I think about his life, about all the years he worked to do good in this world, are the handful of minutes it took to end it.
Marvin’s Murder by Denver PD
A little over ten years ago, the Denver police arrested Marvin on a low-level drug charge. While being booked into the jail, my brother paused before following an officer’s order to leave the waiting area and tried to first retrieve shoes he’d left in a waiting area before being booked. In response to this small act of perceived disobedience, several officers pinned my 135-pound brother face-down to the ground with a choke-hold. Now, the Denver Sheriff’s manual itself warns that “brain damage or death could occur if the technique is applied for more than one minute.”
Yet, even as he lay motionless on the floor, the officers continued to hold my brother down, tasing him and choking him for 2 minutes and 55 seconds. They waited another 4 minutes and 48 seconds before a nurse arrived to try and resuscitate him. It took 7 minutes and 43 seconds to kill my brother in that jail.
It took 7 minutes and 46 seconds to kill George Floyd. Just three seconds separate the time it took to kill these two Black men.
I’m asking to ask you to join us in this fight towards justice. Right now, lawmakers are being asked to consider Senate Bill 21-062. There are many reasons I support this bill, but the one that compels me to write to you is that it would have likely saved my brother’s life.
Some police have talked about wanting to help victims and champion public safety. But are we too not victims? Is public safety not ensuring people aren’t jailed – or even killed – for their addiction or mental health struggles?
If we want to help victims, defend public safety and ever achieve true justice, we must build a better system where – yes, some people who really are dangerous are held in jail – but where people charged with low offenses, or people charged with higher-level offenses but who are not a safety risk to others, are allowed to remain free pretrial until and unless they are convicted.
It is time to end this cruel era where who’s in jail is more about wealth than anything else. Jails should be for people who are dangerous, and just being accused of a crime should mean something different than being convicted. In simple terms, if they haven’t done any harm, don’t be alarmed.
I ask you to please support SB21-062, for me, for my family, for Marvin, and for all the many people in your district who ask for a little grace, a little mercy, and just the possibility of a second chance.
- Reverend Spencer Lamar Booker & Mrs. Gail G. Booker | Marvin’s Brother & Sister In-Law
SB21-062 is a jail depopulation bill that limits low level arrests for people like Rev. Marvin Booker. Contact your Colorado legislators in support of SB21-062 today.