A woman looks down at red and pink flowers as people stand nearby on a gray, rainy day. One man holds a partially obscured sign with the message "No justice, no peace."
Maria Hamilton, mother of Dontre Hamilton, is handed flowers during a “Dontre Day” event at Milwaukee's Red Arrow Park in 2016. (Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service)
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Nearly 10 years after her son, Dontre Hamilton, was shot and killed by a Milwaukee Police Department officer, Maria Hamilton is still fighting for change.

“The system failed me and my family, and I still want justice,” she said. “It wasn’t about Dontre being mentally ill, it was about a system created to do exactly what it did.”  

What the system did, she said, was fail to protect her son and hold people accountable for his death. 

Dontre Hamilton, who was 31 and suffered from schizophrenia, was approached by officers while sleeping at Red Arrow Park in downtown Milwaukee on April 30, 2014.

A confrontation ensued before he was shot 14 times and killed by officer Christopher Manney. Manney was fired for violating police department policy for patting down Dontre without cause but was never charged in his death. 

Hamilton said she’s still upset that Manney was not prosecuted, and she’s disappointed that a new policy mandating the release of police body cam footage within 48 hours is being held up in the courts. She said it’s another example of the police department lacking transparency. 

“We need for (police) to start giving the community information, start recording data and come out and tell the people: ‘Hey, we’ve tackled this; we’ve changed this; we’re working on this,’” she said.

Other policies have improved since killing, family says

Still, Hamilton said, there have been some wins since her son’s death. 

Officers who are assigned body cameras must wear them at all times on duty. Use-of-force policies have been updated, and crisis intervention training is mandatory for officers. The city now deploys Crisis Assessment Response Teams, which pairs officers and clinicians, to mental health calls.

In a statement to NNS, the Milwaukee Police Department said: “The Milwaukee Police Department (MPD) has worked tirelessly to rebuild our community’s trust and have made great strides. MPD can proudly claim its Use of Force policy is consistent with the nationally recognized ‘8 Can’t Wait’ campaign.  In addition, all our officers are trained in Crisis Intervention, De-Escalation Training and in Active Bystandership for Law Enforcement.”    

“MPD believes that no one should cause harm to our community, and that includes our own.  We hold our members to the highest professional standards and work hard to instill a culture of professionalism and community engagement.”

Nate Hamilton, Dontre Hamilton’s older brother, said he’s happy with those changes, adding the leadership transition at MPD from Alfonso Morales to current Chief Jeffrey Norman has also been positive.

“Where we are now is probably better than before Dontre died,” said Hamilton, who chairs the Community Collaborative Commission, or CCC.

The CCC has worked with the MPD to develop standards for community-oriented policing and to improve law enforcement practices.

“We want to create a different outlook on how police engage with the community,” he said.

‘There’s still some strain’

When asked if he felt that police and community relations have improved since his brother’s death, he said it depends on the situation.

“There’s still some strain,” he said. “I personally have had some positive police interactions over the past 10 years.” 

Markasa Tucker-Harris, a community activist, started organizing by working with the Hamilton family in 2014. She said nothing has changed since Dontre Hamilton’s death, because there has been no divestment from MPD. 

“Policing as a system is violent; the roots historically and systemically are violent and continue to be,” said Tucker-Harris, executive director of the African American Roundtable, or AART. “People don’t need to be murdered to experience harm, which they are.” 

A man wearing a white Indianapolis Colts knit hat, a blue sweatshirt beneath and unzipped white coat stands tall as he speaks into a handheld microphone as people stand in the background, beneath a blue canopy.
Nate Hamilton, brother of Dontre Hamilton and chair of the Community Collaborative Commission, speaks during a “Dontre Day” event at Milwaukee’s Red Arrow Park in 2016. (Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service)

Milwaukee County Board Supervisor Sequanna Taylor, who sponsored the effort to install a memorial bench and plaque in Hamilton’s memory at Red Arrow Park in 2022, said she believes policy changes have improved policing but have not created the level of change that people need.

“In some ways, it may be a smaller snail walk than some want to see,” Taylor said. “We would all like to see more.” 

Promoting peace on Dontre Day

With the 10th anniversary of her son’s death on April 30, Maria Hamilton and her supporters want to use Dontre Day as a time to honor her son’s memory and to promote peace and unity in Milwaukee.

Each year, community members come together at Red Arrow Park to celebrate the life of Dontre Hamilton. 

This year’s activities include a rescreening of “The Blood is at the Doorstep,” a documentary highlighting the Hamilton family’s fight for justice, at the Oriental Theatre, 2230 N. Farwell Ave., at 7 p.m. on Friday, April 26. 

A community event will be held at Red Arrow Park from noon to 6 p.m. on Saturday, April 27. The family also is hosting a fundraiser dinner from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday, April 28 at Trendsetters, 6633 W. Mill Road.

Maria Hamilton said mothers from around the world who have lost children to violence will be in Milwaukee this weekend to support each other.

She said her work with Mothers for Justice United, a group she founded to provide therapy and other support for women, “Dontre Day,” and other advocacy efforts are part of her healing process. But, most important, they support the change she wants to see.

“We have to keep fighting for policy change to be the city we know we can be instead of being known as the worst place to raise a Black child,” Hamilton said. “It’s a daily uphill battle but I’m in it for the long haul.” 

A version of this story was originally published by Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service, a nonprofit news organization that covers Milwaukee’s diverse neighborhoods.

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Edgar Mendez is a senior staff reporter for the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service. He won a 2018 Regional Edward R. Murrow Award and 2014, 2017, and 2018 Milwaukee Press Club Awards for his reporting on taverns, marijuana law enforcement, and lead in water service lines.

In 2008, he won a Society of Professional Journalists’ regional award for columns dealing with issues such as poverty, homelessness and racism. His writing has been published by the Associated Press, Reuters, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and other media.

PrincessSafiya Byers is a Report for America corp member working as a staff reporter at Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service where she covers health, minority businesses, faith, jobs, housing and transportation. A proud Milwaukee native, Byers is a 2020 graduate of Marquette University. She has had internships with the Milwaukee Community Journal, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service. Byers has also co-produced a community podcast and written for community newsletters.