LISLE, Illinois — Sandra Bland was remembered as a sister, friend, her mother’s “baby” and, in the words of her pastor, a hero, during her funeral here on Saturday.
Bland was laid to rest at her home church of DuPage African Methodist Episcopal, as nagging questions about her death in a Texas jail cell, and the arrest that preceded it, continue. Bland was found dead in her cell in a Waller County, Texas, jail three days after she was arrested during a traffic stop in Hempstead, Texas. Authorities have ruled her death a suicide by hanging. The case is under investigation.
“We’re not funeralizing a martyr or a victim, we’re celebrating a hero,” said DuPage AME’s pastor, Rev. Dr. James F. Miller, who called Bland “a strong black woman. And I think the authorities in Waller County are gonna find out: you can disrespect a strong black woman, but you’re gonna pay for that.”
The church was filled to capacity with mourners. White-gloved ushers showed the overflow crowd into the sanctuary, and as it filled, mourners flowed into the basement fellowship hall, the vestibule, the upstairs chapel and an overflow room. Hundreds of people filed in, past the white, open casket, surrounded by floral wreaths, as the black-clad choir filled every space on either side of the dais, singing songs that ranged from rousing to plaintive. As they sang “You’re important to me, I need you to survive,” a trio of teenage girls in the vestibule held one another and wept.
More than two dozen members of the Sigma Gamma Rho sorority — of which Bland was a member — marched into the sanctuary as the service began, wearing white: the color worn by Bland’s family and by many who attended the closed service, or decked out in signature blue and gold. They included members of the national leadership. Bland had joined the sorority in college, and two of her line sisters participated in the service, tearfully remembering the young woman who one sister called her “backbone,” and the glue that held the chapter together.
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Elton Mathis, the Waller County district attorney, and Warren Diepraam, the assistant district attorney in charge of the forensics in the investigation into the 28-year-old woman’s death, said Thursday there is no evidence to suggest Bland was murdered inside the Waller County Jail, where she was found hanging on the morning of July 13. Authorities on Friday released autopsy results for Bland. Both the traffic stop and Bland’s death remain under investigation. Mathis has said no evidence of criminal behavior has been uncovered in the investigation so far.
Bland’s funeral drew Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin and Rep. Bill Foster, who came to pay their respects to the family, and to announce that they sent joint letters to Attorney General Loretta Lynch calling for a “fair and thorough federal investigation” into Bland’s death.
Durbin drew rousing applause as he pointed out that on the drive from Chicago to Lisle, his car passed many vehicles that were changing lanes without signaling, the minor offense for which Bland was pulled over in Texas.
Foster, who is white, lamented that more than half a century after his own father helped write the enforcement rules for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 “we still have to fight these battles.” He said Bland could have been his own 28-year-old daughter.
Bland’s death sparked a fresh round of outrage and activity for the Black Lives Matter movement, along with new hashtags: #JusticeForSandraBland and #IfIDieInPoliceCustody, where African-Americans poured out pain and anger in plaintive messages to friends and family warning that such deaths should not be allowed to be brushed aside as suicide or accidental.
Bland’s family has resisted accepting the official account of her death. Bland was in Texas to start a new job at her alma mater, and her family insists she was looking forward to a new start.
“We know that she didn’t commit suicide,” said Rev. Theresa Dear, an assistant pastor at DuPage AME who has known the family for 20 years. “She was killed, and it’s just so hurtful.”
Dear expressed concern over inconsistencies in the information released by authorities, including a dashcam video of Bland’s arrest that appeared to include edits. The Texas Department of Public Safety blamed the irregularities on a “technical issue during posting.”
Dear said Bland was part of an “extremely close family and community here in Lisle,” and she said Bland had a bright future ahead of her.








