Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Monday, December 29, 2014
Faith & The Intelligence
Sunday, December 28, 2014
The WHITE Man With A BLACK Face
A white man who pleaded guilty to six robberies in Ohio used a mask resembling an African-American man that was so lifelike that police initially arrested a black man for one of the crimes!
The mother of the wrongly accused man even thought a photo of the robbery suspect she saw on television was a photo of her son.
Conrad Zdzierak, 30, pleaded guilty last week in Hamilton County Ohio to one count of aggravated robbery and five counts of robbery in a plea deal with prosecutors.
'Conrad apologises to everyone, is sorry for any harm he has caused and accepts responsibility for his actions,' his lawyer Christopher McDowell said.
Zdzierak stole about $15,000 in the robberies of four banks, a credit union and a pharmacy that occurred in March and April - crimes in which witnesses reported that the robber was black and surveillance video appeared to show a black man.
Zdzierak's masked resemblance to the black man who was initially arrested was so similar that some witnesses even identified a photo of the black man as the one who robbed them, McDowell said.
The prosecutor's office would not release the name of the wrongly accused man.
Zdzierak was arrested at a hotel after his girlfriend called police after seeing reports of the robberies and finding two masks and money stained by dye that is used to track robbers, The Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
McDowell said his client purchased the masks from SPFXmasks, based in Van Nuys, California. The silicone masks 'look and behave like real flesh and muscle,' the company's website says.
Owner Rusty Slusser said his company's masks are normally bought for movies, Halloween, haunted houses and stage shows, but the Ohio case was not the first time they have been used for criminal purposes.
This sounds like it could be an isolated incident. But is it?! The owner of the company that makes the masks admitted that this is not the first time that his product has been used for criminal purposes. So as far as we know the practice of donning a "black mask" to committ crimes could actually be more widespread than we think. For all we know this could be a common practice amongst white criminals seeking to take advantage of a system which has been known to incarcerate African-American's at a much faster rate than their white counter parts. The prison industrial complex has provided instant suspects to make this conspiracy possible.
PR
Saturday, December 27, 2014
........Another Police Shooting
It happened in the area of Lakeland Street and Truman Street around 10 p.m.
A department spokesperson said Officer J.T. West was sitting in his marked patrol car working on a report when he saw two suspicious men coming up from behind his car near an abandoned apartment building.
West got out of his car to speak to the men, but before he could say a word, one of them pulled a handgun from his waistband and fired six shots at the officer. One of the bullets struck the police vehicle.
West returned fire, getting off two shots as he ran for cover across the street. West dove behind a staircase in the abandoned apartment complex, injuring his wrist as he fell.
West called for backup, and a police dog was called in to track the two suspects. The track ended on South Alston Street with no sign of the men.
Police say they don't know if West's bullets hit the gunman or the man with him. Area hospitals have been put on alert.
The man who fired the gun was described as a black male, 18 to 25 years old, approximately 6 feet tall with a skinny build. He was wearing an oversized black hoodie. The second suspect was described as a black male, 18 to 25 years old, 5 feet 8 inches to 6 feet tall and weighing 180 to 200 pounds. He was wearing a light-colored jacket.
Officer West was treated at the hospital for his injured wrist and released.
Joshua Lassiter works as a crossing guard at an elementary school nearby. He said he's frustrated with recent attacks on police.
"Whether you think you're in the right or not you still respect them because they got to do their job," he said. "It's getting critical. It needs to stop."
Friday, December 26, 2014
Just When You Thought You Heard It All News (12-26-14)
When a New Jersey public school principal was reassigned last week, the writing was on the wall.
Actually, it was on the school sign which was misspelled at least twice.
Antoinette Young, the principal of Public School Number 20 in Paterson, New Jersey, was demoted to a vice principal position at another school after parents discovered a sign in front of the school's side entrance had two serious spelling errors that went unnoticed for more than a week.
December was misspelled as "Dicember" and reports was spelled incorrectly as "reepor." The number '1' was also placed backwards on the sign.
Thirty-one-year-old Jack Daniels Leathers of Gray says he and his 23-year-old wife, Lydia Leathers, chose the name well before their marriage.
He says that they talked about baby names on their first date, and thought Jim Beam would be a good idea.
Jim Beam Leathers was born Nov. 14, turning grandparental pique into tradition. Jack Daniels Leathers says his parents named him to upset their parents.
He says that if they have another baby, a boy will be Evan Williams after the bourbon and a girl would be named Sherry.
The alcoholic names extended to the Terrebonne Parish judge who officiated at their wedding: Judge Johnny Walker......
Red or Blue?
No birthday shenanigans for this cat this party is tame and the guests are well behaved and in order.
This feline, appropriately decked out in a "Hello Kitty" birthday hat, is playing host to guests who are clearly just there for the cake.
The kitty's owner sings a rousing birthday song, but it seems this kitty might rather be taking a cat nap.
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
THE REASON FOR THE SEASON
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
A Christmas Prayer
Saturday, December 20, 2014
2 Cops Executed In N.Y. & 1 Killed In Florida
Both were shot in the head, one of the sources said. Few other details were available.
They were rushed to a hospital in critical condition, said police spokesman Sgt. Lee Jones.
The families of the fallen officers were at Woodhull Medical Center on Saturday, as dozens of police officers gathered in a show of support.
The officers, one with two years' experience, the other with seven years on the job, were normally assigned to downtown Brooklyn but were working a "critical response" detail in an area with higher crime, police said.
Police were investigating posts he allegedly made on Instagram.
The shooting occurred near Myrtle and Tompkins avenues in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn.
Neighborhood residents were jolted.
"This can't happen. If you mad at somebody, be mad at the person that you are mad at. Now, we have two families that (are) missing somebody for the holidays," Shaniqua Pervis said.
"Where is your humanity? I know it's a war going on and shoutout to Eric Garner's family and everybody else who lost somebody, but you're not at his house, on his lawn. This is two (officers). You don't even know if they were good or bad. I don't condone this, and I'm not with it."
The woman was referring to the controversial July death of an unarmed black man after New York police officers on Staten Island wrestled him to the ground, with one of the officers wrapping his arm around Garner's neck in a chokehold.
A grand jury's decision not to indict the police officer in the Garner case, as well as a separate grand jury's refusal to indict an officer in a controversial police shooting of unarmed teen Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, led to nationwide protests against the police.
In a statement, activist the Rev. Al Sharpton said the Garner family was outraged by news of the shootings.
"Any use of the names of Eric Garner and Michael Brown, in connection with any violence or killing of police, is reprehensible and against the pursuit of justice in both cases," the statement said. "We have stressed at every rally and march that anyone engaged in any violence is an enemy to the pursuit of justice for Eric Garner and Michael Brown... The Garner family and I have always stressed that we do not believe that all police are bad, in fact we have stressed that most police are not bad."
But what the uniform represents a is painful reminder of injustice.
Last Saturday, two New York officers were assaulted on the Brooklyn Bridge during demonstrations that have been mostly peaceful. Police arrested four people.
Tensions between the community and police have heightened around the country since the Brown and Garner deaths.
"This could not have come at a worse time," City Councilman Robert Cornegy said.
So far, police have not commented on the motive for the Brooklyn shootings, except to say the officers were not engaging the shooter in any way when they were shot.
The city's police union and Mayor Bill de Blasio have sparred over the treatment of officers.
The Patrolmen's Benevolent Association recently sent a form for members to sign requesting the mayor not attend funerals of anyone killed in the line of duty, accusing de Blasio of "consistent refusal to show police officers the support and respect they deserve."
The mayor's office expressed disappointment with the PBA.
"Incendiary rhetoric like this serves only to divide the city, and New Yorkers reject these tactics," the city said in a letter. "The mayor and the speaker both know better than to think this inappropriate stunt represents the views of the majority of police officers and their families."
And in Florida......
A police officer was shot and killed early Sunday morning officials said. The Pinellas County Sheriff's office said the shooting occurred at around 3 a.m. EST in Tarpon Springs, about 30 miles from Tampa, Florida. The sheriff's office said the suspect is in custody but did not provide further details on a possible motive.
The shooting came hours after the Brooklyn shooring, which investigators now suspect was done possibly out of revenge for the deaths of two unarmed black men who died in confrontations with police.
PR
Man Or Monster
Ralphael Brown, 19, of Hempstead, NY is charged with second-degree robbery, two counts of second-degree assault, second-degree strangulation and endangering the welfare of a child. He was scheduled for arraignment Friday.
According to the Nassau County Police Department, a 39-year-old woman was at a 24-hour laundry, holding a customer's 1-year-old idaughter.
Police said Brown approached the victim, choked her, then stole the necklace. During the struggle, the suspect also pushed the infant, and began kicking and stepping on the baby right before he fled.
The infant suffered contusions to the head, chest, and back, and was taken to a local area hospital. The woman suffered a hurt hand and chest, but refused treatment at the scene.
Friday, December 19, 2014
Just When You Thought You Heard It All News (12-20-14)
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Stealing From A Blind Boy?!
Rachel Nafzinger said the driver took away her blind 8-year-old son's cane and replaced it with a floppy pool noodle, a sick and twisted punishment for acting out on the bus.
Dakota Nafzinger was born without eyes, and the cane is the only way he can get around, she said.
"That's his eyes," the Kansas City mom said.
The driver took the cane, which is school property, after the Gracemor Elementary School student hit another bus rider with it, North Kansas City School District Spokeswoman Michelle Cronk said.
Dakota's parents said he was written up for acting up on the bus, but the punishment was just plain cruel.
"Why would you do that? Why would you take the one thing that he's supposed to use all the time?" his mother asked. "He's gone through so much in his life already, 8 years, 8 years."
The penalty left Dakota virtually immobilized.
"It's a lot harder with this," Dakota said, pointing to the noodle. "Can't feel things."
Dakota's parents said he was written up for acting up on the bus, but the punishment was just plain cruel.
"Why would you do that? Why would you take the one thing that he's supposed to use all the time?" his mother asked. "He's gone through so much in his life already, 8 years, 8 years."
The penalty left Dakota virtually immobilized.
"It's a lot harder with this," Dakota said, pointing to the noodle. "Can't feel things."
The 8-year-old was originally sentenced to noodle duty for two weeks, but the school district apologized Wednesday and returned the cane.
His parents said strangers have offered to buy Dakota cane of his very own so he doesn't have to rely on the school's property.
The sad thing is the fact that this boy has better sight than that bus driver, yet he has no eyes.
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Man Who Filmed Eric Garner Video Indicted!
Unlike in NYPD officer Daniel Panteleo’s case, a Staten Island grand jury panel was less sympathetic to Ramsey Orta, the man who filmed Eric Garner’s fatal police encounter.
A Staten Island grand jury decided not to indict Pantaleo, who put Garner, an unarmed Black man, in a chokehold shortly before his death. As a result Pantaleo literally got away with murder.
But nearly a month after filming the July 17 incident between the officer and Garner, who was accused of selling loose, untaxed cigarettes, a grand jury indicted Orta on weapons charges that stemmed from an arrest by undercover officers in August. Okay, I know what your think, if he was carrying a weapon he should be charged. But, read on.
Police charged that Orta tried to conceal a .25 caliber handgun in the waistband of a teenage accomplice while standing outside a New York hotel.
Orta argued that the charges were trumped up by police as payback for his role in filming Garner’s death. The grand jury, however, rejected Orta’s allegation, charging him with single felony counts of third-degree criminal weapon possession and criminal firearm possession.
In Panetaleo’s case, however, jurors decided there was not probable cause that the officer had committed a crime in Garner’s death. A medical examiner ruled the death a homicide, resulting in part from the chokehold, a restraining move banned by the NYPD in 1993.
This charge sounds erroneous, fake, and phoney and unlike the crime that officer Panteleo committed, there is no footage that we know of, indicating that the charges are based on facts. Just the word of the police officers who "observed" the crime. What a coincidence!
PR
Monday, December 15, 2014
Cops Taze Woman In Baltimore And A 76 Year Old Man In Texas
Kianga Mwamba, 36, claims she was tasered and arrested by Baltimore Police Department officers in March while filming the arrest of another man on her mobile phone. After she was released, she noticed someone had tampered with her mobile phone – erasing the arrest video. Charges against her were eventually dropped in September, but Mwamba recently served the police department with a lawsuit seeking $7 million.
The lawsuit filed with the Circuit Court for Baltimore City last Thursday said the police "attacked" her, "dragged" her from her vehicle, and "threw her onto the street, handcuffed her, tasered her, called her a 'dumb bitch,' and kept her restrained."
The suit alleges the officers arrested Mwamba to "prevent the disclosure of the video taken of them beating a handcuffed man."
Video of the March 30 melee surfaced online this week. Police erased the 135-second recording from Mwamba’s phone, but it was recovered from her cloud account, according to the lawsuit.
Mwamba was driving home from a family gathering in March. Stopped in traffic, she began filming the nearby arrest of a man who she says was kicked by police. On the video we hear the following:
"You telling me I can't record," the woman says on the video as police tell her to move on.
"I'll park. I'll park. I'll park," the woman is heard saying in her own recording.
All of a sudden an officer says,"Out of the car. Out of the car."
After she is reportedly yanked out of her car, the woman is heard screaming, “He burning me. He burning me.”
Mwamba was arrested on charges of assault for allegedly trying to run over two officers. Charges were dropped, and she suffered cuts and bruises.
At the end of the tape, an officer says, "You a dumb bitch, you know that?"
"What did I do?" she asks.
"You just tried to run over an officer," the officer responds.
While in custody, she gave her phone to an officer to show that in the video she didn't try to run over anyone. The video was allegedly erased from the phone in what her attorney, Joshua Insley, described in a telephone interview as a "cover-up."
The police department said in a statement that the language the officer used was "both offensive and unacceptable."
"The video does not capture enough information to draw definitive conclusions about what transpired before, during, and after the arrest," the department said. "What is clear is that the language used is unacceptable and will not be tolerated."
Meanwhile, the handcuffed man was Cordell Bruce, who faces assault charges on allegations of striking an officer outside a nightclub – charges Bruce denies. The video does not capture him being beaten by police.
The lawsuit comes as the Baltimore Police Department has been undertaking broad reforms due to a pattern of forceful of arrests and complaints. This year, there have been 66 complaints over forceful arrests, compared to 122 in all of 2012. The department has also received 55 notices from lawyers planning to sue police. Those have dropped a third from the number in 2012, the Sun reported.
But the Sun found that some Baltimore officers were involved in multiple lawsuits and there were gaps in monitoring misconduct at the department.
“The police department has asked the U.S. Justice Department to review how the city paid $5.7 million in court judgment and settlements in 102 civil suits alleging police brutality since 2011,” the newspaper reported.
And in other police brutality news........
A police officer from Victoria, Tex., was placed on administrative leave on Friday after he used a stun gun on a 76-year-old driver he had pulled over for driving a car with an expired inspection sticker.
Dashboard camera video shows the officer, Nathanial Robinson, tackling Pete Vasquez to the ground in an attempt to handcuff him. Police said that Robinson, 23, used the a Taser on the man twice.
The incident occurred on Thursday, when Vasquez, who works as a mechanic, was pulled over while driving a dealer car back to the lot at Adam’s Auto Mart. Robinson left his patrol vehicle and pointed out the expired sticker, the dashboard camera shows. He appears to reach for Vasquez’s arm, but the man pulls away.
“I’m putting the handcuffs on. Put your hands on the back of your back,” Vasquez said Robinson told him “And then I turn around, and he pulls that Taser, and he shot me with it. And, you know, it looked like he’s enjoying that.”
According to the audio of a conversation with another officer on the scene, which was included in the dashboard camera footage, Vasquez said: “He came over here and got nasty with me. I’m not going to put up with it, I don’t care who it is. Then he grabbed me an throw me on the pavement there, almost knocked my head on that d— poll, then he started Tasing.”
“I hit my knees and my back… my shoulder and everything else,” Vasquez said.
According to Vasquez, the officer discharged the Taser once to his chest when they fell to the ground, then again in the leg when Robinson demanded that Vasquez stand up.
Several witnesses saw the incident, including Larry Urich, a 62-year-old sales manager at the dealership
“I told the officer, ‘What in the hell are you doing?’ This gentleman is 76 years old,” Urich said, according to the Advocate. “The cop told me to stand back, but I didn’t shut up. I told him he was a [expletive] Nazi Stormtrooper.”
The department has launched an internal investigation into the arrest as well as a criminal investigation. According to the Advocate, Robinson was hired by the police force two years ago after he graduated from the police academy.
Urich said Vasquez tried to explain to Robinson that the car belonged to the dealer and had special dealer’s plates that did not require a current inspection sticker, KPRC reported. The dashcam video clearly shows Vasquez pointing out the car’s license plate to the officer.
Victoria Police Chief J.J. Craig confirmed that while an expired inspection sticker is usually addressed with a citation, cars with dealer tags are exempt.
Craig said he personally apologized to Vasquez, who was not charged with any wrongdoing, according to the Advocate.
“Public trust is extremely important to us,” said Craig, according to the Advocate. “Sometimes that means you have to take a real hard look at some of the actions that occur within the department.”
Vasquez was taken to the hospital, still handcuffed, in a police car.
“There should have been an ambulance called for this elderly gentleman,” Urlich, who followed the police car to the hospital, told the Advocate. “He should not have been handcuffed to go to the emergency room when he had not done anything wrong.”
“It sickens me,” Urich said.
It sickens me too!
PR
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Stranger Fruit (A Black Teen Found Hanging)
On Saturday, protesters marched through the heart of town to call for a thorough examination of what happened to Lennon Lacy, who was found hanging by two belts from a playground swing set near his home Aug. 29. The case had appeared to stall for months, but in recent days the demand for answers and suspicions that local authorities allowed the case to founder have grown. It was announced Friday that the FBI would look into the case.
“We know it was a hanging,” NAACP state chapter president the Rev. William Barber II said before Saturday’s march. “But the question is, ‘Was it self-inflicted? Was it a staged hanging? Or was it a hanging or lynching homicide?’ ”
The state NAACP chapter organized Saturday’s protest after pushing for weeks to have federal authorities look into Lacy’s death, which has caused quite a stir in this town of fewer than 2,000 residents, where 80 percent are white and 18 percent are black. Barber said there is evidence “that suggests possible race-based foul play,” including details about Lacy’s romantic relationship with a white woman. But Barber said he and the family have not reached any conclusions about what happened. They just want a full-fledged investigation.
Lacy’s mother, Claudia Lacy, who led the march, said she wants the truth about how her youngest son died.
“When the facts add up,” she said, “I’ll be satisfied.”
The state medical examiner, who performed an autopsy, ruled Lacy’s death a suicide. Some residents criticized authorities for not investigating further, even if to support the suicide finding. But on Friday, amid calls for federal authorities to step in, Bladen County prosecutor Jon David said in a televised news conference that the case remains open and that he welcomed help from the FBI.
“I’m asking the community to withhold their judgment on what this case is until all the facts are in,” David said.
The NAACP and the Lacy family said they do not believe state and local authorities have an interest in probing all facets of the case.
Barber said the community’s “suspicions are deeper than feelings.”
The state NAACP launched its own investigation, including hiring an independent pathologist to review the state’s examination. The NAACP said several details raised questions about how the police investigation was conducted and how the finding of suicide was reached. Lacy, who was to start a new high school football season the day he died, was found hanging from a black belt and blue belt tied together items that his mother said she did not recognize as his. She also said the Nike shoes her son had been wearing were missing. The NAACP said he was found wearing unfamiliar sneakers two sizes too small.
Before his death, Lacy had been dating a 31-year-old white woman who was a neighbor. Claudia Lacy said that her son told her about the relationship and that she did not approve of it. At some point, the couple broke up. The day before Lacy died, he had attended the funeral of his 78-year-old great-uncle. Claudia Lacy said her son was upset but not depressed.
She said he left their house about midnight for one of his usual training runs. He preferred running at night when the heat and humidity had eased. She next saw him about 7:30 a.m., when police called her to a wooden swing set about a quarter-mile from her home to identify her son’s body.
The protest Saturday echoed the protests in other parts of the country over the police-related deaths of black men such as Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner in Staten Island, N.Y. Those names were on the lips of many people here, and that larger protest movement appeared to energize the local marchers.
But the details of Lacy’s case and how the march unfolded with none of the rancor that has reverberated in the streets of Ferguson also appeared to recall the earlier civil rights era of the 1960s. Barber noted it, too, mentioning that Lacy died Aug. 29, one day after the 59th anniversary of the death of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black boy murdered in Mississippi after reportedly flirting with a white woman. The irony is chilling to say the least.
Walking through the streets, Deborah Belle could not believe she was here. She participated in the 1960s civil rights marches. That seemed to belong to a distant era.
But, now 58, here she was, holding a sign calling for justice and singing civil rights-era songs along with about 250 other marchers.
“It’s crazy we have to do this now,” said Belle, a school principal. “Something’s wrong. And it’s sad.”
Rena McNeil had traveled two hours from Scotland County to attend the protest.
“Anytime there’s strange fruit hanging from the tree,” she said, citing the Abel Meeropol poem that was inspired by lynchings and made famous in song by Billie Holiday, “you have to hit the streets.”
AND MANY OF US WILL.
Bad decisions, and insane choices. There is no justification for hanging a child, or anyone else for that matter, period, end of story. But one has to wonder if the "affair" that he had with this older white woman has anything to do with his murder. According to reports the Ku Klux Klan held a rally in the town in the weeks before Lennon was killed. While I don't particularly agree with this young mans choice to date an older women, especially an older white woman in a small southern town. I do not thing that he deserved to die for it. But unfortunately he became the moral in an ominous story, the roots of which go just as deep as the tree baring the trees baring strange fruit.
PR