Shortly after the Kent County Prosecutor decided he would not re-charge the ex-GRPD cop who shot Patrick Lyoya in the back of the head, the City of Grand Rapids released a statement.
Part of what Mayor LaGrand said was:
“While the criminal case has concluded, our city’s journey has not. The work of healing, of building a more equitable and just Grand Rapids, and of strengthening the bonds of trust between our community and all who serve it, including our police department, must continue with even greater resolve. We are committed to the ongoing reforms and dialogues necessary for this progress. We also recognize and support the dedicated GRPD officers who serve our city honorably and professionally every day.”
“The legacy of Patrick Lyoya’s tragic death must be one of enduring commitment to positive change. I implore every resident to channel their emotions into peaceful, constructive action. Let us come together to support one another and continue the hard work of building a city where everyone is safe, valued and respected.”
City Manager Mark Washington echoed some very similar sentiment:
“The City of Grand Rapids’ commitment to accountability, constitutional policing and our comprehensive police reform agenda remains unwavering. During my tenure, we’ve made great strides in improving policing in our community – many of which have occurred over the last three years – and were just recently highlighted by our Police Chief to our Public Safety Committee on May 20, 2025. We recognize that today’s announcement may intensify the need for trust-building with some segments of our community, and we are fully dedicated to that ongoing work. We also deeply value our GRPD officers who perform their challenging, and often dangerous, duties with integrity, professionalism and commitment to our community every day.”
“I know for some in this is very difficult day and for others a great relief. Regardless, I expect for any and all community expressions to be lawful and civil as we navigate the path forward together.”
Here are some of my immediate responses to these comments from members of the Grand Rapids political class:
First, you can toss around words like equity, justice and healing all you want, but the actions of the City of Grand Rapids do not put into practice meaningful actions/policies to promote equity, justice and healing.
Second, both Mayor LaGrand and City Manager Washington go out of their way to praise the GRPD, using words like commitment, trust-building, comprehensive police reform, dedicated, honor and professionalism. Even on the heals of a three year fight to win justice for Patrick Lyoya, the treatment of community organizers in this fight, or any other struggle for justice that has occurred in the past decade – primarily led by BIPOC organizer – LaGrand and Washington have the audacity to still praise a police department that continues to surveil, intimidate, harass, arrest and abuse members of the community.
Third, both LaGrand and Washington make comments with the intent of both trying to control public responses to Becker’s decision to not re-charge Schurr and to demonize anyone who doesn’t operate within the parameters of state-dictated responses. LaGrand wants everyone to be “peaceful” and use “constructive action.” Washington wants everyone to be “lawful and civil.” These are merely code words designed to control and to demonize anyone who doesn’t follow the state-sanctioned script for proper behavior. In other words, nothing that disrupts business as usual, nothing to challenges systems of power and oppression, which ultimately means performative actions and respectability politics.
Getting back to Mayor LaGrand’s point about building a more equitable and just Grand Rapids, it is interesting (but not surprising) that he offers no concrete examples of how this city can be more equitable or just.
We know that City Manager Mark Washington has demonstrated his commitment to order, and we have already witnessed the Mayor’s response to critical issues in his first 5 months in office – not listening to the undocumented immigrant’s demand to adopt Sanctuary policies, being dismissive of those who have been abused by the GRPD, his bizarre response to the housing crisis and his commitment to policing, which was reflected in his State of the City address – “Public order is the bedrock of a strong city.”
In the end, there cannot be meaningful outcomes of equity or justice in Grand Rapids as long as city leaders continue to pander to the members of the Capitalist Class, continue to fund developers and the GRPD, ignore demands from the undocumented immigrant community and remain complicit in the repression of those involved in movement work in recent years. The statement from the City of Grand Rapids should just be one more reminder that we cannot work towards collective liberation when the political system is commitment to state repression, what they like to call law and order.
Palestine Solidarity Information, Analysis, Local Actions and Events for the week of May 25th
It has been more than 19 months since the Israeli government began their most recent assault on Gaza and the West Bank. The retaliation for the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack in Israel, has escalated to what the international community has called genocide, therefore, GRIID will be providing weekly links to information and analysis that we think can better inform us of what is happening, along with the role that the US government is playing. We will also provide information on local events and actions that people can get involved in. All of this information is to provide people with the capacity of what Noam Chomsky refers to as, intellectual self-defense.
Information
International Solidarity Movement Volunteers Speak On Building Solidarity In The West Bank
Netanyahu’s Endgame: Isolation and the Shattered Illusion of Power
Genocide is the Currency of Western Domination
Gaza’s Graveyard of Illusions: How Israel’s Narrative Collides with Military Failure
Israel kills 100 Palestinians on Nakba Day
STUDENTS AND TEACHERS IN GAZA: “EDUCATION ITSELF IS A FORM OF DEFIANCE”
Netanyahu: Gaza Aid Scheme Offers Israel Symbolic Cover to Finish the Genocide
How NYT Reports on Weaponized Famine So You Don’t Have to Give a Damn
Gaza First Amendment Alert (May 16, 2025)
Analysis & History
Why Didn’t The Democrats Strike a Ceasefire in Israel | Norman Finkelstein
Making Gaza Unlivable: Israel Intensifies Attacks as Netanyahu Vows to Seize All of Gaza
Israel Is Attempting to Execute a Final Solution in Gaza
Image used in this post is from https://visualizingpalestine.org/visual/killing-the-story-april-2025/
There are reasons why the Kent County Prosecutor will not re-charge Schurr for murdering Patrick Lyoya
Late Thursday morning, Kent County Prosecutor Chris Becker made the announcement that he would not re-charge former GRPD cop Christopher Schurr for shooting Patrick Lyoya in the back of the head. Simply put, Becker said, “I just don’t see a place where we get 12 people to agree.”
We may never know the real reasons that Chris Becker decided to not re-charge Schurr, but there are certainly some factors that play into the Kent County Prosecutor’s decision.
First, the GRPD union contributed $1,000 to Becker’s campaign in 2016, according to the campaign finance records found online. However, the GRPD police union is not the only law enforcement entity to contribute to Becker’s campaign over the years. Former Kent Count Sheriff Larry Stelma and current Kent County Sheriff Michelle LaJoye-Young have both made contributions. In addition, there was a $1000 contribution in 2016 from the Kent County Sheriff Law Enforcement (How it was listed on the campaign finance document), which I can only conclude is the Sheriff’s Department union.
Equally important are the contributions that Kent County Prosecutor Chris Becker has received from the legal system. Looking at the records for the past two election cycles, Becker has received campaign contributions from at least 30 different lawyers, with several of them connected to the Kent County Prosecutor’s office, along with 6 current or retired judges. These are all people who are part of the punishment system, also known as the Criminal Justice System.
Second, there are the contributions from member of the Grand Rapids Power Structure over the past three election cycles.
2016 Election
- J.C. Huizenga $500
- Peter Secchia $2,500
- Steven Van Andel $500
- Cheri DeVos $1,000
- Dan DeVos $1,000
- Pam DeVos $1,000
- Dick DeVos $1,000
- Betsy DeVos $1,000
- Richard DeVos $1,000
- Helen DeVos $1,000
- Doug DeVos $1,000
- Maria DeVos $1,000
2020 Election
- Cheri DeVos $4,000
- Dick DeVos $2,000
- Dan DeVos $2,000
- Doug & Maria DeVos $4,000
- Pam DeVos $2,000
2024 Election
- TGIF Victory Fund – $20,000
- Cheri DeVos – $8,325
- Steve Ehmann – $8,325
- Doug DeVos – $8,325
- Maria DeVos – $8,325
- Dick DeVos – $8,325
- Betsy DeVos – $8,325
- Daniel DeVos – $8,325
- Pamela DeVos – $8,325
- Joan Secchia – $4,000
- Charlie Secchia – $2,000
- John Kennedy – $2,000
- Jim Williams – $2,000
- David Van Andel – $2,000
- Carol Van Andel – $2,000
- Mike Ellis – $1,000
- Mark Murray – $1,000
- Tom Bylenga – $1,000
- Mark Bissell – $1,000
The DeVos family alone contributed $89,600 to Chris Becker over the past 3 election cycles, which is small change for them, but it still makes their family the single largest contributor to Becker’s campaign. There is one point about the contributions in 2020 and 2024, which I believe to be relevant as well, as it speaks to the longterm interests of Billionaires like the DeVos family.
You can see that the amount of money given by each DeVos family member increased from 2016 to 2020 to 2024. In looking at the contributions from the DeVos family in 2020, all of those contributions were made on July 10th, 2020. Why is that important? Well, it was only six weeks after the riot/uprising in Grand Rapids because of the police murder of George Floyd. It is my contention that Becker received an increase in campaign funds from the most power family in Grand Rapids, just weeks after the riot/uprising, since the DeVos family knew that Becker would be prosecuting people arrested during the riot/uprising.
The DeVos family has all of their foundation offices, their financial investment firm, RDV Corp, Windquest and a slew of hotels they own, all of which are located in downtown Grand Rapids. The Capitalist Class has vested interests that must be protected by the state and Becker has not disappointed in the cases he presided over regarding property destruction during the riot/uprising of 2020.
It is deeply troubling that Chris Becker has relied on the DeVos family and other members of the Grand Rapids Power Structure to get elected to the Prosecutor’s Office, and that their contributions increased after their investments were threatened by protestors in 2020 and the continued resistance since then up until today.
I can’t help but believe that the DeVos family continues to have conversations with Grand Rapids and Kent County elected officials over the potential threat to their downtown interests in the aftermath of the GRPD murder of Patrick Lyoya. After all, this is how systems of power function and we need to come to terms with this. The legal system in Kent County is not broken, it is doing exactly what it was designed to do – protect property and the financial interests of those with power. Once we understand this, we can develop more effective strategies of resistance.
Funding Cops and Developers: Grand Rapids City Commission unanimously approves FY2026 Budget
On May 20th, the City of Grand Rapids released the following statement:
“The Grand Rapids City Commission on Tuesday unanimously adopted a $735 million fiscal year 2026 (FY26) budget, advancing a comprehensive plan to maintain essential services, invest in community priorities and sustain transformational projects across the city.”
The issue of “sustaining transformational projects” means things like using public money for the Amphitheater and the Soccer Stadium. Grand Action 2.0, which was founded in part by the DeVos family, is the entity that pushed both of these projects, which will create even more of a parking nightmare in downtown Grand Rapids. The Amphitheater has contracted with Live Nation to book shows, even though Live Nation is facing a major lawsuit by the US Department of Justice. The Soccer Stadium will be called the Amway Stadium and both the DeVos and Van Andel families will own the team, which is what anyone who has been paying attention would expect.
In addition, the City’s Press Release on the budget fails to mention the amount for the GRPD and everything that is connected to the GRPD. According to the Grand Rapids City Budget, the GRPD will be receiving $69.1 million. However, this amount is misleading, since the GRPD is part of a system of state carceral violence. You can see from the graphic above how many budgetary categories are connected to the GRPD, which includes items with a red arrow. In fact, if you add up all of those items, the total budget for the state carceral system would be $92.7 million.
Then there are other budgetary items, what falls under the category of Safe Community. This category is listed as “proposed” and would allocate an additional $154.6 million. Here is what is included under the Safe Community proposal:
- $5.9 million to reduce Police and Fire department vacancies, right-size to meet demand for public safety services, and augment services through partnerships and contracting.
- $2.7 million for crime prevention and violence reduction through community partnerships and innovative approaches to improve community safety by addressing root causes of crime and violence, and by redirecting non-violent individuals toward supportive resources rather than into the criminal justice system.
- $6.6 million for other public safety services responsive to community needs and concerns including court representation for low-income defendants, residential fire safety, and the SAFE Task Force.
- $20.8 million in Safe Community capital investments, including emergency protection equipment and 800MHZ backup radio system replacement for Police, updated radios at each siren site for Dispatch, ballistics forensics, three kits to allow off-site 911 Dispatcher call- taking and dispatch capabilities, and continued construction of Kendall Street and Division Avenue fire stations and fire training center.
If we add the cost for all the items in graphic above, along with the proposed Safe Community costs, it would be $247.3 million for policing and the state carceral system.
You can download Resident’s Guide to Fiscal Year 2026, by going to this link.
Editors Note: Last week, Chief Winstrom made the claim that if the GRPD was not short handed, Chrisopher Schurr would not have shot Patrick Lyoya in the back of the head. Such a claim should cause any of us to question everything that Winstrom has to say. In addition, during the public comment at last week’s Grand Rapids City Commission meting, dozens of people called out the GRPD for their abusive treatment of people during the Schurr trial. The Grand Rapids City Commission’s response was reprehensible.
Episode seven begins with a GRPD cop responding to a call of gunshots heard in the northwest park of Grand Rapids, just west of US 131. When the GRPD arrives they find a man who has been shot sitting in his car. Two Black men show up on the other side of the fence barrier for US 131, but quickly leave when the cops start asking questions.
The GRPD then was able to ID the shooting victim, which appears to be a Black man, based on the photo they used. More GRPD cops show up at the scene of the shooting and they find lots of money in the car and several phones.
The shooting victim’s car is brought back to police headquarters, where the forensic unit finds more money and more drugs in the car. At one point, one of the cops – talking to the camera – states, “It is unusual to find this much money and this much drugs, but with no gun.” Chief Winstrom also chimes in to say that with that amount of money and drugs, “it is usually connected to violence.”
The cops then turn to the social media of the man who was shot and find out that he had recently posted a self-made rap video, or at least that was what the GRPD was calling it. Another Detective speculates that he has seen this before, that when someone gets some fame they end up being a target of violence. Talk about another racist trope, the GRPD keeps making statements about things they know nothing about.
The cops then respond to more shots at College & Leonard, with shots coming from a grey Dodge Charger. The two Black men who came to the scene of the shooting near US 131, also drove a grey Dodge Charger, thus the GRPD is speculating that these two shootings are linked.
The GRPD then finds the grey Dodge Charger and takes into custody a Black man, where the cops are demanding he exist the car with his hands up walking backwards towards the police. No weapons are found, but the episode doesn’t say if this Black man has been arrested.
A SWAT team then goes to a hotel looking for a suspect and they find one of the suspects, who is another Black male. Once again, the GRPD makes the suspect walk backwards towards them with his hands up. The cops bring this Black man back to the GRPD headquarters and then interrogates him. The suspect says he won’t say anything without a lawyer.
What is rather instructive about what happens next is that the Black man they were interrogating was wearing a tether on his ankle. Even though the GRPD detained him at gun point, they apparently didn’t check him for any weapons, otherwise they would have found the tether. Embarrassed, the GRPD cops laugh about it, and one says, “we should probably edit this out.”
The GRPD Detectives then go and speak with the Kent County Prosecutor about the case and he says they have to let this guy go because they do not have any real hard evidence. The show ends with several cops and Chief Winstrom feeling sorry that they couldn’t resolve this case.
Like the previous episodes, Episode #7 continued with representing Black people as suspects in gun violence, as drug traffickers, then added a new stereotype, by associating guns and drugs with rap music. The All Access PD Grand Rapids show has been consistent through 7 episodes, with the GRPD hunting down Black people who commit gun violence, often involving drug trafficking and and the victims are always Black people.
One of the 10 principles of journalism is that it must serve as an independent monitor of power.
Now, I don’t claim to be a journalist, more of a media watchdog, but I do engage in movement media. Movement media is reporting and documenting what social movements are doing, which is what I have been trying to do with GRIID since 2009.
However, since I have been monitoring what I call the Grand Rapids Power Structure for nearly two decades, I thought I would start a new segment – Monitoring the Rich and Powerful in Grand Rapids.
The Monitoring the Rich and Powerful in Grand Rapids segments will offer brief commentary on those who have power over others in this community. These segments will not replace my regular reporting on the Grand Rapids Power Structure, since those stories will offer more in depth writing.
As we navigate a second Trump Administration with the likes of Elon Musk, it seems like a perfect opportunity to shed some light on rich and powerful of Grand Rapids, or to frame it the way that radical media from the 60s and 70s would do regarding the Capitalist Class, using the phrase, “up against the wall motherfucker!”
Our first example comes to us from an announcement from the West Michigan Policy Forum, stating that former State Representative Jase Bolger is the new President & CEO of the West Michigan Policy Forum.
Bolger left political office a few years ago and formed the Tusker Strategies LLC group, which represents groups working on public policy changes in Michigan. According to the Tusker website, the West Michigan Policy Forum (WMPF) was Bolger’s only client. In addition to representing the WMPF, Bolger also joined the board of the Great Lakes Education Project, the entity created by Betsy DeVos to undermine public education across the state.
Last November, GRIID posted an article about Bolger and Doug DeVos, who had a video conversation with the WMPF board member Doug DeVos, where they talked about dismantling public education. In that video, Bolger bragged about what he had done to attack public education in Michigan through the state legislature, such as:
- Expanding School Choice options in Michigan, which has always been about the dismantling of Public Education.
- Undermining teachers retirement plans by getting the state to move public school district teacher pensions to a 401K plan, claiming the district would be able to spend more on students.
- Putting in place a system to attack teachers for “under-performing”, based on students grades.
In our second example, there has been more uncritical news coverage of the new DeVos-owned coffee shop, known as the Foxtail Coffee Co. The MLive story does not mention that the cafe is owned by the DeVos family, only that it is part of the Baton Collective.
The Baton Collective is actually owned by Cheri DeVos, which is a commercial real estate and business management company. Cheri also is the founder of Michigan Sports Academies, plus she recently added Otter Air Services as part of the Baton Collective portfolio, which offers concierge charter air travel services. Like the rest of the second generation of the Amway family, Cheri DeVos is always interested in expanding her wealth.
Below is a graphic that has been circulating on social media for a few months, which has a fabulously harsh message for the DeVos family.
On May 11th, MLive posted an article entitled, DeVos Institute program helps 14 Grand Rapids nonprofits build capacity.
The MLive article uncritically centers the work of the DeVos Institute of Arts and Non-Profit Management. The article goes on to say:
Fourteen Grand Rapids area nonprofits are participating in the DeVos institute’s two-year program, Capacity Building: Grand Rapids. It provides participants with personalized consultations, group training sessions, and help with strategic planning and building effective boards, according to a release.
The DeVos Institute website provides us with a framework for what they will be doing with the fourteen Grand Rapids nonprofits that they will be working with:
Our approach is grounded in The Cycle, a practical management framework designed to optimize organizational performance in five essential areas: market position, programming, marketing, governance, and revenue development.
I don’t know about you, but based on what the DeVos Institute says it does, it seems to me that they focus on money, maximizing wealth and expanding wealth. The fourteen groups in Grand Rapids that will be working with the DeVos Institute are non-profit groups and arts-centered organizations. The MLive article lists the following groups:
- Artists Creating Together
- ArtPrize
- Broadway Grand Rapids
- Children’s Healing Center
- Festival of the Arts
- Girls Choral Academy Grand Rapids Art Museum
- Grand Rapids Ballet
- Grand Rapids Children’s Museum
- Grand Rapids Civic Theatre
- Grand Rapids Symphony
- Lowell Arts
- Opera Grand Rapids
- West Michigan Trails
- West Michigan Youth Ballet
Ways in which the DeVos family has undermined local art in Grand Rapids
Being an artist in a Capitalist world is difficult and deeply problematic. When art is seen as a commodity, it loses meaning and it takes from us our ability to see beauty, to imagine, and it diminishes our ability for critical reflection.
When ArtPrize was created by the DeVos family, their goal was never about elevating art, it was about selling the City of Grand Rapids and expanding their wealth. This view of ArtPrize was affirmed by Sam Cummings, CEO of CWD Real Estate Investment, when he said, “Our long-term goal is really to import capital – intellectual capital, and ultimately real capital. And this (ArtPrize) is certainly an extraordinary tool.”
A major outcome of ArtPrize is that it undermined local art and local artists. ArtPrize didn’t pay artists to submit their work for the 2-week spectacle, in fact, they made them pay to submit their work. Many local artists and art venues were negatively impacted, not just during ArtPrize, but for weeks and months leading up to it, since so much capital and so much PR was centered on the spectacle of ArtPrize that artists had to adjust to that world. In addition, local arts councils disbanded and funding sources for art dried up. Hell, even Festival of the Arts was thrown on the scrap heap of the art as a commodity, since it no longer fit the tourist-driven destination that the Grand Rapids Power Structure wants to see.
A second major way that the DeVos family has undermined local art is through their involvement in shaping public policy to promote business interests over the public good. What we have been seeing in Grand Rapids and the US as a whole over the past 40 – 50 years is a push to have local and state governments adopt neoliberal economic austerity policies, which include the following:
- THE RULE OF THE MARKET
- CUTTING PUBLIC EXPENDITURE FOR SOCIAL SERVICES
- DEREGULATION
- PRIVATIZATION
- ELIMINATING THE CONCEPT OF “THE PUBLIC GOOD”
The DeVos family has been part of promoting these kinds of economic austerity measures in three main ways. First, they have provided millions of dollars to political candidates who embrace economic austerity policies. Second, the DeVos family gives millions of dollars to organizations which promote economic austerity, like the American Enterprise Institute, the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, the Acton Institute, and the Heritage Foundation. The DeVos family funds these organizations through their foundations, thus allowing them to use non-taxed funds to promote economic austerity policies. The third way the DeVos family promotes economic austerity policies is by being part of groups like the West Michigan Policy Forum, Grand Action 2.0, The Right Place Inc. and the Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce, all of which embrace the same economic policies of wealth expansion for the few and economic despair for everyone else.
The irony of all of this is that while the DeVos family has spent decades undermining local artists and the arts community, they are now swooping in to offer their services to assist art groups in order to make them more marketable and profitable. Just one more example of how sinister the DeVos family is and how they want to control so much of what happens in West Michigan.
Palestine Solidarity Information, Analysis, Local Actions and Events for the week of May 18th
It has been more than 19 months since the Israeli government began their most recent assault on Gaza and the West Bank. The retaliation for the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack in Israel, has escalated to what the international community has called genocide, therefore, GRIID will be providing weekly links to information and analysis that we think can better inform us of what is happening, along with the role that the US government is playing. We will also provide information on local events and actions that people can get involved in. All of this information is to provide people with the capacity of what Noam Chomsky refers to as, intellectual self-defense.
Information
The Price of Silence: Gaza’s Famine and the Erosion of Our Humanity – Politics For The People
EXPLOSIVE MATERIALS BOUND FOR ISRAEL ARE FLYING OUT OF JFK AIRPORT
Hamas and U.S. reach deal. “I think we’ll have to detox from US security assistance,” says Netanyahu
GOOGLE WORRIED IT COULDN’T CONTROL HOW ISRAEL USES PROJECT NIMBUS, FILES REVEAL
“People Are Starving to Death”: Oxfam Warns Israel’s Blockade on Gaza Is Catastrophic
Israeli Forces Bombed Two Gaza Hospitals in One Day
Surveillance Humanitarianism”: As Gaza Starves, U.S.-Israeli Plan Would Further Weaponize Food
One Side Routinely Uses Human Shields in Gaza—But Not the Side That’s Usually Blamed
Analysis & History
New Podcast Series: Histories of the Palestinian Left
Image used in this post is from https://visualizingpalestine.org/visual/gaza-stripped/
GRIID weekly audio digest – #5
In the fifth installment of the GRIID audio digest, we bring you the following six stories from this week:
- Marching for workers and immigrant justice, the Cosecha May Day action was met with constant GRPD threats to arrest people
- During the Cosecha cultural event, SECOM announces it will also be a Sanctuary space for undocumented immigrants
- Day 3 of Cosecha action: Salsa shutdown at Walmart demonstrates that interrupting capitalism will bring out the cops
- Responses to the mistrial of ex-cop Schurr who killed Patrick Lyoya – Part I
- Responses to the mistrial of ex-cop Schurr in the death of Patrick Lyoya – Part II
- Responses to the mistrial of ex-cop Schurr in the death of Patrick Lyoya – Part III
GRIID invites our readers to share this audio digest and suggest platforms that we can share these weekly audio versions of our posts.












