Not A Single American State Has Lifted A Finger To Stop Police Violence Against Blacks…

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The inci­dent below is sim­i­lar to the 1997 inci­dent in New York City in which Rudolph Guiliani’s NYPD thugs tor­tured and sex­u­al­ly assault­ed mis­ter Abner Loumima in a sta­tion house bath­room result­ing in grave injury to him.
This is what pass­es for polic­ing in the United States 26 years after the Louima night­mare; not a damn thing has changed.
The Abner Louima tor­ture by NYPD ani­mals was one of the more egre­gious inci­dents that cap­tured the imag­i­na­tion and atten­tion of the world, but it was far from the first.

The United States has a sor­did his­to­ry of vio­lence against Black peo­ple, with the vio­lence per­pet­u­at­ed against Black cit­i­zens usu­al­ly per­pet­u­at­ed by those in police uni­form or with their acquiescence.
Almost two decades after the FBI warned about white suprema­cists, skin­heads, and oth­er white nation­al­ists infil­trat­ing police depart­ments that were already bas­tions of white suprema­cy, police racial vio­lence gets worse by the day.
Even as the lynch­ings of Black peo­ple have been seen as basi­cal­ly end­ed, police con­tin­ue to lynch hun­dreds of Black peo­ple each year. These killings are car­ried out not by hang­ing on trees in some back­woods but by racist thugs in police uni­forms using the full pow­er and author­i­ty of the state. 
No state, Democrat or Republican-run, has lift­ed a fin­ger to stop it. (MB)
https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​k​i​l​l​-​b​l​a​c​k​-​m​en/

Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey

JACKSON, Miss. — Deputies accused of beat­ing and sex­u­al­ly assault­ing two Black men before shoot­ing one of them in the mouth, prompt­ing a fed­er­al civ­il rights inves­ti­ga­tion, have been fired, a Mississippi sher­iff announced Tuesday. 
The announce­ment comes months after Michael Corey Jenkins and his friend Eddie Terrell Parker said six deputies from the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department burst into a home with­out a war­rant. The men said deputies beat them, assault­ed them with a sex toy and shocked them repeat­ed­ly with Tasers in a rough­ly 90-minute peri­od dur­ing the Jan. 24 episode, Jenkins and Parker said. Jenkins said one of the deputies shoved a gun in his mouth and then fired the weapon, leav­ing him with seri­ous injuries to his face, tongue, and jaw. 
Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey announced Tuesday that deputies involved in the episode had been fired, but he would not pro­vide the names of the deputies who had been ter­mi­nat­ed or say how many law enforce­ment offi­cers were fired. Bailey would not answer addi­tion­al ques­tions about January’s episode.

Due to recent devel­op­ments, includ­ing find­ings dur­ing our inter­nal inves­ti­ga­tion, those deputies that were still employed by this depart­ment have all been ter­mi­nat­ed,” Bailey said at a news con­fer­ence. “We under­stand that the alleged actions of these deputies has erod­ed the public’s trust in this depart­ment. Rest assured that we will work dili­gent­ly to restore that trust.”
Bailey’s announce­ment also fol­lows an Associated Press inves­ti­ga­tion that found sev­er­al deputies who were involved with the episode were also linked to at least four vio­lent encoun­ters with Black men since 2019 that left two dead and anoth­er with last­ing injuries. Deputies who had been accept­ed to the sheriff’s office’s Special Response Team — a tac­ti­cal unit whose mem­bers receive advanced train­ing — were involved in each of the four encounters.
Deputies said the raid was prompt­ed by a report of drug activ­i­ty at the home. Police and court records obtained by the AP revealed the iden­ti­ties of two deputies at the Jenkins raid: Hunter Elward and Christian Dedmon. It was not imme­di­ate­ly clear whether any of the deputies had attor­neys who could com­ment on their behalf.

The Justice Department opened a civ­il rights inves­ti­ga­tion into the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department after the episode. There is no body cam­era footage of the episode. Records obtained by The AP show that Tasers used by the deputies were turned on, turned off or used dozens of times dur­ing a rough­ly 65-minute peri­od before Jenkins was shot. Jenkins and Parker have also filed a fed­er­al civ­il rights law­suit and are seek­ing $400 mil­lion in damages.

If We Attend To Poverty & Injustice We Won’t Need So Many Cops

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We have all been duped by politi­cians, Police, and their cor­rupt Unions into believ­ing that hir­ing more offi­cers is the solu­tion to the per­cep­tion of grow­ing or esca­la­tion in vio­lent crime statistics.
In many cas­es, the fear and appre­hen­sion ginned up by politi­cians about increas­es in vio­lent crime do not match the real data. Nevertheless, with a large part of the pop­u­la­tion steeped in the roman­ti­cized Hollywood idea of polic­ing, every­one is forced to dole out more tax­es to hire more police, which pro­duces no rec­og­niz­able dividend.
Republicans have used the smoke­screen of esca­lat­ing vio­lent crime to gen­er­ate fear among white vot­ers. Of course, many of these peo­ple do not read or have the com­pre­hen­sion skills to think for them­selves. The way the nar­ra­tive is framed is that Black crim­i­nals in large cities are on a tear; they must be stopped before they devour the frag­ile and inno­cent white population.
When the nar­ra­tive is framed that way, there is no need for it to be fac­tu­al; entrenched racial big­otry is enough to get them to do what­ev­er the par­ty wants, includ­ing rais­ing tax­es to hire more police officers.
Democrats, for their part live in fear of being brand­ed weak on crime, so they too run on the fic­ti­tious idea that vio­lent crime [must] be con­tained, and the way to do it is to hire more offi­cers and con­tin­ue to mil­i­ta­rize the police.
This plays right into the hands of the cor­po­rate pow­ers who need the police, which has become a pri­vate army behold­en to those who con­trol the ‘prison indus­tri­al complex.’

There needs to be an under­stand­ing that peo­ple kill who they are around. Blacks kill Blacks. Whites kill whites, and so on. At the same time, when we look at crime data, the great­est threat to America does not come from Blacks killing Blacks in under­served com­mu­ni­ties. It does not come from Islamic ter­ror­ists seek­ing to exact Jihad on America. The great­est threat posed to American secu­ri­ty comes from the very peo­ple who frame them­selves as patri­ots. People who would have you believe that attack­ing the United States House of Representatives, destroy­ing prop­er­ty, and shit­ting in the hall­ways are acts of patriotism.
From this group comes young men who feel a sense of enti­tle­ment, and when they are not allowed to extract what they feel is owed them, they go out and kill, usu­al­ly slaugh­ter­ing defense­less chil­dren, peo­ple of col­or in places of wor­ship, super­mar­kets, movie the­aters, and oth­er pub­lic places. Young white males gen­er­al­ly car­ry out those killings.
It is gen­er­al­ly under­stood that no mat­ter how wealthy a soci­ety is, some peo­ple will decide to engage in crim­i­nal con­duct. In fact, even rather wealthy peo­ple with enor­mous resources are some­times drawn to the lure of the dark side. Some become wealthy by evad­ing the long arms of the law because of their skin col­or; oth­ers of a dif­fer­ent hue are not so lucky. The pris­ons and ceme­ter­ies are filled with the bod­ies and remains of the latter.

In January 2012, the con­ser­v­a­tive pub­li­ca­tion The Christian Science Monitor not­ed: The last time the crime rate for seri­ous crime – mur­der, rape, rob­bery, assault – fell to such low lev­els, gaso­line cost 29 cents a gal­lon and the aver­age income for a work­ing American was $5,807.……That was 1963.
In the past 20 years, for instance, the mur­der rate in the United States has dropped by almost half, from 9.8 per 100,000 peo­ple in 1991 to 5.0 in 2009. Meanwhile, rob­beries were down 10 per­cent in 2010 from the year before and 8 per­cent in 2009.
The report went on, how­ev­er: Despite strong evi­dence of crime drop­ping over recent decades, the pub­lic sees the reverse. “Recent Gallup polls have found that cit­i­zens over­whelm­ing­ly feel crime is going up even though it is not,” says Professor Fox. “This is because of the growth of crime shows and the way that TV spot­lights the emo­tion­al. One case of a ran­dom, hor­rif­ic shoot­ing shown repeat­ed­ly on TV has more vis­cer­al effect than all the sta­tis­tics print­ed in a newspaper.”
That report also went on to cred­it tech­nol­o­gy and what it char­ac­ter­ized as more effec­tive polic­ing. I dis­agree then, as I do now. Police had no idea what caused the decades-long drop in crime.
The fact is that since the 1980s, there has been a rev­o­lu­tion­ary change across America with the advent of the inter­net and the ush­er­ing in of the dig­i­tal age. As new oppor­tu­ni­ties abound, peo­ple’s lives have been expo­nen­tial­ly changed for the bet­ter, at least for a few decades.
Unfortunately, like every­thing else, there is a down­side to the growth the nation expe­ri­enced, begin­ning large­ly dur­ing the Clinton years, through and despite Bush and through the Obama years.
The COVID pan­dem­ic changed that tra­jec­to­ry, and we are back to the per­cep­tion that the sky is falling, so we need more police.
If the growth of crime shows on tele­vi­sion and the way TV spot­light­ed the emo­tion­al was a fac­tor dur­ing the 1980s, imag­ine what social media has done in ampli­fy­ing crime sto­ries today and why there is the per­cep­tion that crime is going up.

It is exact­ly what pow­er­ful police unions want us to think. The NYPD, the nation’s largest police gang, is very hap­py with the per­cep­tion that the sky is falling, so more mon­ey is made avail­able to pur­chase new toys like more Robos con­trolled by arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence, drones, and all kinds of gad­gets. And, of course, the oblig­a­tory more police bodies.
In the mean­time, home­less­ness con­tin­ues to increase among the poor in major cities, usu­al­ly run by Democrats who fell for the hok­ie doke of build­ing out large police depart­ments. Or the fake Democrats like the wolf in sheep­’s cloth­ing in New York City who still thinks he is a cop.
All of this, while the large behe­moth of a police force 37,000 strong swarms poor, under­served minor­i­ty com­mu­ni­ties among the city’s 8.5 mil­lion res­i­dents and arbi­trar­i­ly stops and frisks men as if the laws and their con­sti­tu­tion­al rights mean nothing.
In the Subway, the home­less lives on the trains, and white vig­i­lantes kill a home­less man who asks for food. All around the city, poor home­less peo­ple sleep on bench­es at the sides of buildings.
No one cares about the poor, but they keep hir­ing more cops.

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Corrupt Supreme Court Would Shame Even The Grossly Imperfect Founders…

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According to American History, these sev­en men are con­sid­ered the founders of the American Republic as the new nation extri­cat­ed itself from Britain. The sev­en are George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison.
Battlefields .org argues that while many oth­ers con­tributed to the United States’ found­ing, these sev­en are con­sid­ered by most as the Founding Fathers. They all played key roles in the secur­ing of American inde­pen­dence from Great Britain and the cre­ation of the gov­ern­ment of the United States of America.

These were not right­eous or moral­is­tic men by any stretch of the imag­i­na­tion. They were not men of prov­able con­science or integri­ty. Sufficient to say they for­mu­lat­ed a nation enshrined in the con­cept of slav­ery and all its atten­dant ignobility.
One pos­i­tive that can­not be ignored is the found­ing doc­u­ment, the Constitution they cre­at­ed, and the Bill of Rights, which arguably is pure genius.
I have always mused that the men who cre­at­ed the Constitution knew in their hearts what was right, even if they chose not to do what was right.

As imper­fect as they were, the sev­en and all the oth­ers would have been dis­mayed were they to see what America has evolved into. They fought against the British Monarchy to estab­lish a set­tle­ment of free men para­dox­i­cal­ly, even as they enshrined a sys­tem of enslave­ment for Africans. They chose a Republic style gov­ern­ment of the peo­ple as a direct oppo­si­tion to rule by decree. That is now all gone. We now live in an oli­garchy in which nine (9) unelect­ed bureau­crats decide which rights should be plucked away at their decree.
Forty-nine years (49) of prece­dent in Roe Versus Wade were struck down. Fifty-one years (51), sec­tion 4‑B of the 1965 Voting Rights Act was demol­ished, open­ing the flood­gates of anti-abor­tion and anti-vot­ing rights laws. Citizens United affirmed flood­ing the American Electoral space unleash­ing an avalanche of dark mon­ey into pol­i­tics, effec­tive­ly shut­ting out the voic­es of the ordi­nary American voter.

But these are only a few of the shock­ing acts the founders must be turn­ing in their graves over; this ille­git­i­mate body of cor­po­rate shills is much worse than we know.

They have effec­tive­ly placed them­selves above the laws, con­tra­ven­ing the very intent of the Republic and the Constitution. It is the only body not guid­ed by checks and bal­ances. It insists that in the inter­est of main­tain­ing the sep­a­ra­tion of pow­ers, the arti­cle one branch of gov­ern­ment (con­gress) has no pow­er to reg­u­late how it operates.
Even as it asserts these fic­ti­tious rights, it is hard at work evis­cer­at­ing the rights of Americans, usu­al­ly the poor­est and most dis­en­fran­chised among us. Even as I write this arti­cle, this ille­git­i­mate court is get­ting ready to strike down affir­ma­tive action that has sought to cor­rect some of the racial imbal­ances in schools and work­places for hun­dreds of years.
If the robed mon­archs were men and women of integri­ty, the affront might have been more palat­able and digestible.
But they are not. Bit by bit, tiny drips of infor­ma­tion are begin­ning to seep out from this walled-off citadel of duplicity.
We are learn­ing of lav­ish trips paid for by wealthy oli­garchs, col­lege tuition paid by wealthy friends, refusal to recuse them­selves from cas­es they are hear­ing con­nect­ed to peo­ple they have accept­ed lav­ish gifts from, and lav­ish vaca­tions, and that is only a tiny drip of what is being revealed to the American pub­lic that has become increas­ing­ly wary of this body.
This body con­tin­ues to claim it has no army to enforce its rul­ings and relies on the con­sent and acqui­es­cence of the American peo­ple for its valid­i­ty and legitimacy.
It is a lie!!!!
It cre­at­ed the anti-American doc­trine of “qual­i­fied immu­ni­ty’ that has turned what now obtains for law enforce­ment into an aggres­sive, vio­lent, racist organ of oppres­sion against Americans of col­or and poor white people.
It is time for this ille­git­i­mate court to come under the checks and bal­ances that forms a safe­guard of the American demo­c­ra­t­ic sys­tem. The coun­try can ill-afford to have a group of unelect­ed cor­rupt bureau­crats mak­ing deci­sions inju­ri­ous to the peo­ple while claim­ing they are not sub­ject to the rules the rest of us must live by.

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Mother Pleads For Justice After Cop Who Shot Her Son Is Not Indicted…

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The moth­er of a man shot and killed by police says she can’t under­stand why a grand jury decid­ed not to indict the offi­cer who pulled the trig­ger. Vakelvion Holmes staged a one-woman protest out­side the cour­t­house where the grand jury met to raise aware­ness about what she calls an injustice.
“Justice for Eric is all I want. 19 years old,” Holmes shout­ed from a bull­horn near the steps to the cour­t­house recent­ly. “I miss my son. I real­ly do,” she said, with Eric’s 3‑year-old son rest­less and agi­tat­ed near­by. Holmes used her voice to voice con­cern over the grand jury choos­ing not to indict the Clayton County police offi­cer who shot her son, Eric Holmes, back in November.

I’m going to come here, and I’m going to make sure that you guys do your jobs,” she said while look­ing at the win­dows of the cour­t­house. Holmes says she still can’t believe the grand jury decid­ed the offi­cer shouldn’t face charges. “He walked out of court. Free. With no charge, I don’t get it,” she offered. The GBI says the offi­cer locat­ed a stolen car at a busi­ness on Commerce Road near Morrow that day. Eric Holmes was at work and came out and talked to the offi­cer. Agents say he then jumped in the stolen car. “The next thing you know, the offi­cer gets out with his gun raised. Get out (of) the car. Get out (of) the car. Eric did pull off, and he just opened up shots in the back,” Holmes described. Investigators say there were two guns in the car, one stolen. Police allowed the offi­cer to resign in lieu of ter­mi­na­tion for how he han­dled the shooting.

Clayton County District Attorney Tasha Mosley says she took the case before the grand jury because she believed at the time a crime had been com­mit­ted. She says she is going through the grand jury tran­scripts and body­cam video to see if there’s some­thing her office missed. Mosley says she is also decid­ing whether to take the case back before a grand jury. Holmes had a mes­sage for Mosley dur­ing her protest at the cour­t­house. “Tasha Mosley I thank you. I thank you too to the pros­e­cu­tor. But I’m ask­ing that when you guys go back in front of that grand jury that you explain to them the truth,” Holmes said in her bull­horn. Holmes says the truth is her son wasn’t a threat that day. “We want jus­tice. That’s all I want,” she said. Community activist Meia Ballinger was there to sup­port Holmes. Mosley says she can take the case before the grand jury one more time. She did not offer a time­line for when she would make a deci­sion. Meanwhile, Holmes says she will keep protest­ing until some­one hears her cry.

Cops Killed An Unarmed Black Man, But They Could Be Back On The Force

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This is stan­dard prac­tice when cops mur­der against African Americans. On the rare occa­sion there is an inves­ti­ga­tion; it is car­ried out by, you guessed it, oth­er cops from anoth­er depart­ment if they want to seem like they are doing an actu­al inves­ti­ga­tion. At oth­er times the same depart­ment will do a sham inves­ti­ga­tion and find no wrongdoing.
But worse yet, the politi­cians gave away so much lever­age to police unions that even when cops are charged with mur­der and manslaugh­ter and are fired, arbi­tra­tors can decide that the fired mur­der­ers be reinstated.
These arbi­tra­tors are usu­al­ly a sin­gle lawyer bought and paid for by the police unions. This seri­ous­ly is what pass­es for a jus­tice sys­tem in America.
Additionally, as soon as they are fired, anoth­er depart­ment quick­ly hires them to con­tin­ue their mur­der­ous spree against the Black community.(MB)

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This image from police body cam video provided by the City of Lawton, OKla., shows police approaching Quadry Sanders after he was shot by police on Dec. 5, 2021
This image from police body cam video pro­vid­ed by the City of Lawton, OKla., shows police approach­ing Quadry Sanders after he was shot by police on Dec. 5, 2021

Two Oklahoma police offi­cers charged with manslaugh­ter may be back on the streets soon. Arbitrators ruled that the two for­mer offi­cers must be rein­stat­ed and receive back pay even though they fatal­ly shot an unarmed Black man. In 2021, offi­cers Nathan Ronan and Robert Hinkle shot unarmed 29-year-old Quadry Sanders. They were placed on leave before being fired in January of 2022. And last May, they were charged with manslaugh­ter in con­nec­tion with the shooting.

In 2021, Police respond­ed to a call about a man was wav­ing a gun inside of the home of some­one who had a pro­tec­tive order against him. The New York Times speak­ing with the District Attorney, wrote about what hap­pened next:

Mr. Sanders com­plied with an officer’s com­mands to show his hands, accord­ing to the dis­trict attorney’s office, before run­ning back inside. When Mr. Sanders exits the house again, an offi­cer wear­ing the body cam­era moves toward him, direct­ing him to put his hands up and get down on the ground.

The only object vis­i­ble in his hands is a base­ball cap, accord­ing to the dis­trict attorney’s state­ment. Mr. Sanders appears to try to move behind a refrig­er­a­tor sit­ting out­side, and just as he rais­es his hands above his head, one of the offi­cers shoots at Mr. Sanders four times.

Mr. Sanders then falls to the ground, at which time an offi­cer once again says, “Hands! Hands! Hands!”

The footage then shows Mr. Sanders sit­ting up with his hands above his head, and at that moment he is repeat­ed­ly shot, the video shows. Officers shout at Mr. Sanders to “stay down” and “roll over on your stom­ach.” Mr. Sanders, writhing, appears to say “I’m down” and “I can’t breathe.

Sanders was tak­en to the hos­pi­tal, where he suc­cumbed to his injuries. Despite the fact that there was suf­fi­cient evi­dence to bring a manslaugh­ter indict­ment, arbi­tra­tors con­clud­ed that the two offi­cers were unjus­ti­fi­ably ter­mi­nat­ed and had a rea­son­able belief that the use of force was necessary.

This is hard­ly the first time that a police offi­cer who shot an unarmed Black American has been rein­stat­ed. The for­mer Louisville police offi­cer who shot Breonna Taylor in her apart­ment was hired by anoth­er Kentucky police department.

The Lawton Police Department has not made a state­ment about when these offi­cers will return to the police force and how they plan on han­dling the ruling.

From The Root

Even Those Discriminated Against, Discriminate Against Others

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It is said that hate begets hate. 
Nowhere is this more self-evi­dent than in American soci­ety, where even those dis­crim­i­nat­ed against have learned to dis­crim­i­nate against and foment hatred for oth­ers dif­fer­ent than they are.
Is this phe­nom­e­non a nat­ur­al human reac­tion of lash­ing out after being hurt, or is this an intrin­sic, built-in, true rep­re­sen­ta­tion of American cul­ture? That may be a ques­tion for oth­ers, yet it appears to me that it is more the lat­ter than the former.

BLACKS

One thing is cer­tain: a large swath of American vot­ers vote against their larg­er self-inter­est. Let us begin with Black peo­ple. I dare any­one to show me a piece of leg­is­la­tion put forth by the Republican Party at any lev­el in the American Government that ben­e­fits Black Americans’ inter­est. In fact, let’s scratch that; show me a piece of leg­is­la­tion that does not have built-in bias­es against Blacks. Yet you may be sur­prised at the num­ber of Black men, in par­tic­u­lar, that I have come across sym­pa­thet­ic to Trump and the Republican Party.
The usu­al spiel I hear from them is what have the Democrats giv­en us?
How pathet­ic is that? Donald Trump want­ed the mil­i­tary to exe­cute the pro­test­ers in DC dur­ing the George Floyd protests, make that sink in. So what is it with the Blacks, some of whom are out there wear­ing white T‑Shirts defend­ing Dotard, I mean Donald Trump, in his lies as he faces Federal indict­ments for his alleged crimes?
I believe some of the men secret­ly envy the progress some Latino Groups (Mexicans in par­tic­u­lar) are mak­ing due to their hard work. Tim Scott, the shame­less South Carolina Republican US Senator, long sur­ren­dered what lit­tle dig­ni­ty he may have pos­sessed to be accept­ed as a lap­dog at the feet of the table of white supremacy.

HISPANICS

I hope I don’t go to hell for this, but I have always felt that Hispanics/​Latinos in the United States tend to lean Republican because they see the American con­struct of white­ness as ben­e­fi­cial. Cubans are par­tic­u­lar­ly right-lean­ing because of their hatred of the Castro broth­ers. However, they vote for Republicans even though the Republican Party, a xeno­pho­bic fas­cist par­ty, is the par­ty of insur­rec­tion and totalitarianism.
Miami, Florida, is filled with these Hispanics, Cubans, and their descen­dants in par­tic­u­lar, who con­tin­ue to attach them­selves to the Republican Party for no rea­son that makes sense except that they would like to con­sid­er them­selves whites in wait­ing. Some are even ashamed of their Hispanic her­itage; Raphael Cruz, for exam­ple, would nev­er refer to him­self as Raphael but rather goes by “Ted.” How sad!
Don’t get me start­ed with the lit­tle one named Marco Rubio, anoth­er self-loathing Cuban who once referred to the classy Barack Obama as hav­ing no class because the then-pres­i­dent invit­ed some rap­pers to the White House.
This insignif­i­cant incon­se­quen­tial has noth­ing to say about the dis­hon­or Donald Trump brought to the White House and the country.
Even the Mexicans who arrived late in the United States and were the tar­get of Donald Trump’s xeno­pho­bic hatred when he launched his 2016 Presidential cam­paign have vot­ed Republican because the Republican Party pro­motes a far­ci­cal front of being Christian and for families.
Never mind that when the thin veneer of fraud is peeled back, the Republican Party is any­thing but for fam­i­ly or Christianity and is instead a Satanic cult that is behold­en to the god of mon­ey and hatred.

EAST INDIANS

Here is anoth­er group, par­tic­u­lar­ly those from India or first-gen­er­a­tion Americans of Indian ori­gin. These peo­ple come from a vicious caste sys­tem in India that dis­crim­i­nates against their own peo­ple based on skin col­or. Here is the rub, many Indians are of a dark­er hue than the dark­est African. Yet they treat their own coun­ty’s men and women with total dis­re­gard based on entrenched igno­rance. India is arguably one of the most hate­ful coun­tries on our planet.
Though not total­ly con­fined to British rule, the vicious caste sys­tem in India today is inex­tri­ca­bly asso­ci­at­ed with the big­otry and asso­ci­a­tions devel­oped in that coun­try due to European colonialism.
The likes of Bobby Jindal, Nimarata Nikki Randhawa (Nicky Haley),Vivek Ramaswamy, and oth­ers, all Republicans, would soon­er reject their ances­tral names than give up their quest for accep­tance into the con­struct of American whiteness.

Among the spat­ter­ing of oth­er eth­nic groups that make up much small­er shares of the American demo­graph­ic pie, Native Americans, Chinese, and oth­ers, pri­mar­i­ly from Asia, the num­ber who asso­ciate with the Republican par­ty opposed to their very exis­tence is shocking.
In the final analy­sis, it is alarm­ing that even on the most seri­ous and exis­ten­tial issues fac­ing these groups, being asso­ci­at­ed with pow­er and the idea of belong­ing takes prece­dence for many.;

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Cop Shoots Wife In The Face With Rifle

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A police offi­cer accused of shoot­ing his wife in the face has been arrest­ed and relieved of his duties, accord­ing to a Texas police chief. Houston Police Chief Troy Finner said in a news brief­ing the shoot­ing hap­pened just after mid­night Monday, June 12, at an apart­ment on the north­west side of the city. 
Officers found the 30-year-old female vic­tim had been shot in the face by her hus­band, an offi­cer with the Houston Police Department, Finner said.
The woman was tak­en into surgery, and her con­di­tion is unknown. “We pray that she’s going to be alright and recov­er,” the police chief said.

Houston Police Department video screengrab

It’s believed that a rifle was used in the shoot­ing, accord­ing to the police chief. The Houston Police Department does not issue rifles, so the weapon may have been pur­chased by the offi­cer, Finner said. Police said it’s unclear what led to the shoot­ing. The accused shoot­er and gun­shot vic­tim were the only peo­ple inside the apart­ment, the chief said. The offi­cer, who has been with the depart­ment for two years, was arrest­ed and faces a charge of aggra­vat­ed assault with a dead­ly weapon, Finner said. Because for­mal charges have not been filed, his name has not been pub­licly released. Finner said the offi­cer was “imme­di­ate­ly relieved of duty.” An inves­ti­ga­tion will be con­duct­ed. “We all took an oath of office to serve and pro­tect, but we’re human as well. This hurts. It hurts all of us,” Finner said.

We all took an oath of office to serve and pro­tect, but we’re human as well. This hurts. It hurts all of us,” Finner said.
This sounds like a weak defense, I hope they have more that we are all human as a defense.

Mississippi Civil Rights Lawyer Arrested Filming Traffic Stop, Attorney Says

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The next time you hear Americans talk about police brutality or human rights abuses in another country.

A Mississippi civ­il rights lawyer was arrest­ed Saturday after film­ing a traf­fic stop con­duct­ed by offi­cers from a police depart­ment she is suing in fed­er­al court, her attor­ney says.

Jill Collen Jefferson is the pres­i­dent of JULIAN, the civ­il rights orga­ni­za­tion that filed a fed­er­al law­suit last year against the Lexington Police Department on behalf of a group of city res­i­dents. Michael Carr, Jefferson’s attor­ney, told The Associated Press she was arrest­ed late Saturday evening after she filmed offi­cers after they pulled some­one over.

The Lexington Police Department did not imme­di­ate­ly respond to request for com­ment in voice­mails and phone calls.

Jefferson was arrest­ed nine days after Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division trav­eled to Lexington to meet with com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers about alle­ga­tions of police bru­tal­i­ty in the small town.

Jefferson’s law­suit claims police have sub­ject­ed Lexington res­i­dents to false arrests, exces­sive force and intimidation.

As an advo­cate for her clients, Jill Jefferson believes that this pat­tern and prac­tice has hap­pened to cit­i­zens in Lexington,” Carr said. “Through this expe­ri­ence, she is show­ing the state, the area and pos­si­bly the nation the cor­rupt prac­tices of this city.”

Carr said Jefferson com­plied with a request to pro­duce iden­ti­fi­ca­tion and ques­tioned why the offi­cers had approached her as she filmed on a pub­lic street. She was arrest­ed and charged with three mis­de­meanors: fail­ure to com­ply, dis­or­der­ly con­duct and resist­ing arrest.

Jefferson was booked in the Holmes County Jail, where she remains pend­ing a court hear­ing, which had­n’t been sched­uled as of Sunday morning.

Carr said Police Chief Charles Henderson even­tu­al­ly agreed to release her with­out post­ing a bond. But Jefferson refus­es to pay a $35 pro­cess­ing fee levied by the jail for her release because she believes her arrest was unlaw­ful.

Im not sure why she pro­duced her iden­ti­fi­ca­tion except to say , “I am an attor­ney”?

Clarence Thomas Wrote A Scathing, Nearly 50-page Dissent About Why The Supreme Court Should Have Gutted Voting Rights

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  • Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas dis­sent­ed in Thursday’s 5 – 4 rul­ing on Allen v. Milligan.
  • He wrote a near­ly-50-page dis­sent about his dis­agree­ment with the ruling.
  • Thursday’s rul­ing found that Alabama vio­lat­ed the Voting Rights Act’s ban on racial gerrymandering.

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas wrote a scathing, 48-page dis­sent in the court’s rul­ing that Alabama vio­lat­ed a ban on racial ger­ry­man­der­ing. The Supreme Court ruled 5 – 4 on Thursday, hold­ing a low­er fed­er­al court’s deci­sion that Alabama vio­lat­ed the Voting Rights Act with con­gres­sion­al dis­tricts that dis­crim­i­nate against Black vot­ers in the state by large­ly clump­ing them togeth­er into one dis­trict. The sur­prise rul­ing pre­vent­ed the court from gut­ting the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, both con­ser­v­a­tives, joined the Supreme Court’s lib­er­al-lean­ing jus­tices in the ruling.
Thomas was one of four con­ser­v­a­tive jus­tices who opposed Thursday’s rul­ing. In his dis­sent­ing opin­ion, Thomas wrote that the court’s deci­sion has turned Section 2 — the part of the Voting Rights Act that bans ger­ry­man­der­ing based on race — into “noth­ing more than a racial enti­tle­ment to rough­ly pro­por­tion­al con­trol of elec­tive offices — lim­it­ed only by fea­si­bil­i­ty — wher­ev­er dif­fer­ent racial groups con­sis­tent­ly pre­fer dif­fer­ent candidates.” 

Tom Azz.

Thomas said the Voting Rights Act does­n’t require Alabama “inten­tion­al­ly redraw its long­stand­ing con­gres­sion­al dis­tricts so that black vot­ers can con­trol a num­ber of seats rough­ly pro­por­tion­al to the black share of the State’s pop­u­la­tion.” “If it did, the Constitution would not per­mit it,” he wrote. More dra­mat­i­cal­ly, Thomas said he would have ruled that the Voting Rights Act had no pow­er at all to pre­vent state leg­is­la­tors from racial­ly ger­ry­man­der­ing dis­tricts — group­ing minor­i­ty votes along racial lines to dilute their power. 
Thomas said he’s “long been con­vinced” that the Voting Rights Act only reg­u­lates vot­ers’ abil­i­ty actu­al­ly to get to the bal­lot or cast it. The ger­ry­man­dered maps were used in the 2022 elec­tion. Republicans won all six non-Black-major­i­ty con­gres­sion­al dis­tricts. The sole Black-major­i­ty dis­trict went to Democrats. Alabama will now need to redraw its elec­toral maps.

Two Police Officers Arrested In Connection With Robbery Of Chinese Businessmen

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Two police­men were arrest­ed for the rob­bery at the Norman Manley International Airport in Kingston as they attempt­ed to flee the Island. The two cops were arrest­ed in con­nec­tion with charges of Robbery with aggra­va­tion. The two were arrest­ed in con­nec­tion with a mul­ti-mil­lion dol­lar rob­bery of two Chinese nation­als in Kingston.
According to reports about 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 6, the two Chinese nation­als were at their whole­sale when they were vis­it­ed by the two police offi­cers dressed in plain clothes.
The police offi­cers showed their ID and pre­sent­ed a doc­u­ment that they said was a war­rant from the Constant Spring Police for the prop­er­ty to be searched for uncus­tomed goods. They were grant­ed access to the busi­ness estab­lish­ment. One of the Chinese nation­als was led to the fam­i­ly’s liv­ing quar­ters upstairs, where a search was conducted.
The police offi­cers found and took J$8.5 mil­lion, along with US$40,000, from a met­al fil­ing cab­i­net and an iPhone 14.
 The vic­tims object­ed and told the offi­cers not to take the fam­i­ly’s mon­ey because it was to pay for cred­it­ed goods.

The offi­cers report­ed­ly told them the mon­ey would be returned and that he should dri­ve behind them to the police station.
However, as the vic­tim was about to get into his vehi­cle to fol­low the police­men, the offi­cers sped off with the mon­ey. The iPhone was tracked and was found dam­aged in the Queensbury com­mu­ni­ty in Kingston. The two cops,Constable Adian Howard Dawkins, 36, of the Saint Andrew South Division and Cons. Norval Warren, 44 years old, also of the Saint Andrew South Division.
The two were arrest­ed as they sought to board a flight for the John F Kennedy Airport in New York.

NYC Prosecutor Drops Over 300 Convictions Tied To Officers Found Guilty Of Crimes

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Yesterday I wrote about the cor­ro­sive cor­rup­tion that poi­sons polic­ing in the United States that is not being addressed in any sys­temic way. There are some­times con­sci­en­tious District Attorneys who are not total­ly afraid of the police or are too deeply com­pro­mised by their Unions to deal with the prob­lem of police cor­rup­tion. Exceptions, like Larry Krasner in Philadelphia and a few oth­ers who are try­ing to do the right thing by address­ing this seri­ous problem.
The fight is not with­out mas­sive push­back from the right wing in the coun­try that has man­aged to suc­cess­ful­ly con­vince a large swath of impres­sion­able peo­ple that integri­ty in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem is the equiv­a­lence of being soft on criminals.
Of course, the peo­ple they dis­par­age as crim­i­nals are usu­al­ly poor, Black, and deemed disposable.
For those peo­ple, the sys­tem is work­ing just fine. The Black peo­ple ensnared and incar­cer­at­ed and even sent to death row is a sys­tem work­ing as intend­ed. https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​u​n​c​o​r​r​o​b​o​r​a​t​e​d​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​t​e​s​t​i​m​o​n​y​-​a​-​t​r​a​v​e​s​t​y​-​t​o​-​j​u​s​t​i​ce/

Writing this arti­cle a mere day ago, I had no idea that this move was afoot to redress this can­cer of police cor­rup­tion. But I also rec­og­nize that this move by these New York City top pros­e­cu­tors is mere­ly the tip of the ice­berg and mere­ly a tiny drip in the buck­et across the country.
It is also impor­tant to process this vic­to­ry with the somber real­i­ty that none of these actions will hap­pen in coun­ties with Republican District Attorneys here in New York State. That includes the racist Staten Island, which is a bas­tion of white suprema­cy right here in New York City. None of this will hap­pen in states run by Republicans because Prosecutors who attempt to do jus­tice to the wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed cit­i­zens in those states are hound­ed out of office by the fas­cist Republicans who run those states.
Even with the actions of DA Alvin Brag and oth­ers in New York City, this does pre­cious lit­tle to rat­tle the cage of the cor­rupt NYPD that has oper­at­ed as a crime syn­di­cate since its incep­tion. The idea that adding col­or to this behe­moth will change its char­ac­ter is the same as say­ing that adding new wall­pa­per to rot­ten walls makes a bet­ter house.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg speaks to reporters dur­ing a news con­fer­ence at police head­quar­ters, April 18, 2023, in New York.

Manhattan’s top pros­e­cu­tor on Tuesday dis­avowed over 300 con­vic­tions tied to police offi­cers who were them­selves found guilty of crimes, the lat­est in over 1,000 dis­missals city­wide of cas­es con­nect­ed to offi­cers who were charged or con­vict­ed. The lat­est aban­doned con­vic­tions, almost all mis­de­meanors, date back as far as 1996. Each involves one of nine offi­cers who were lat­er con­vict­ed of on-the-job offens­es — among them tak­ing bribes, ille­gal­ly sell­ing guns, lying under oath, and plant­i­ng drugs on sus­pects — and are no longer on the force. The cas­es put more than 50 peo­ple behind bars and imposed fines on 130, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said.
“We can­not stand by con­vic­tions that are built on cas­es brought by mem­bers of law enforce­ment who have vio­lat­ed the law,” Bragg, a Democrat, said in a state­ment after 308 mis­de­meanor cas­es were thrown out Tuesday. A sim­i­lar pro­ceed­ing was planned for eight felony cas­es Wednesday.

Since the start of 2021, Bragg and at least three of New York City’s four oth­er dis­trict attor­neys — in Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens — have arranged the dis­missal of a total of more than 1,200 cas­es con­nect­ed to offi­cers who had been con­vict­ed or charged, accord­ing to a tal­ly com­piled by The Associated Press. The dis­missals began with drug con­vic­tions built by a for­mer nar­cotics detec­tive, Joseph Franco, who was charged with per­jury — until the case against him was thrown out, mid-tri­al, this January. The case col­lapsed when Bragg’s office acknowl­edged fail­ing to turn over evi­dence as required to his defense. By then, pros­e­cu­tors in Brooklyn, Manhattan and the Bronx had got­ten hun­dreds of Franco-relat­ed con­vic­tions thrown out, and sev­er­al pub­lic defense and exon­er­a­tion advo­ca­cy groups had writ­ten a let­ter urg­ing the city’s DAs to do like­wise with cas­es involv­ing 22 oth­er offi­cers. Twenty had been con­vict­ed of crimes and two oth­ers engaged in seri­ous mis­con­duct relat­ing to their duties, accord­ing to the legal groups. Their list includ­ed the nine offi­cers linked to the cas­es that Bragg is get­ting tossed out this week. One of the let­ter-writ­ers, Elizabeth Felber, of the Legal Aid Society, applaud­ed the dis­missals and urged Bragg and his fel­low DAs to keep going. “The same lens used on our clients charged with crim­i­nal con­duct must be applied to those in law enforce­ment,” she said in a statement.

Uncorroborated Police Testimony A Travesty To Justice…

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Judges are expect­ed to “ensure due process, order, and deco­rum, and always act with dig­ni­ty and respect to pro­mote the integri­ty and impar­tial­i­ty of the judi­cia­ry.”
Hmmm, if only.
Well, it is at least what one States Judicial Qualifications Commission had to say about the con­duct of one Judge it was inves­ti­gat­ing. The alle­ga­tions are that the judge was extreme­ly def­er­en­tial to the pros­e­cu­tion team and simul­ta­ne­ous­ly dis­re­spect­ful and con­fronta­tion­al to the defense team in a sen­tenc­ing phase of a tri­al in which she was the judge picked to over­see the case.
The com­mis­sion com­pris­es judges, lawyers, and ordi­nary cit­i­zens, who review the judge’s con­duct, after which the supreme court of that state gets to make a final decision.
After tes­ti­fy­ing before the com­mis­sion, the judge announced that she would be retir­ing from the bench on June 30. The com­mis­sion said her deci­sion had noth­ing to do with the com­mis­sion’s work.
The com­mis­sion report­ed that the judge acknowl­edged dur­ing her tes­ti­mo­ny that her con­duct dur­ing the tri­al “fell short” of what’s expect­ed of judges and that “her treat­ment of mem­bers of the defense team was at times not patient, dig­ni­fied or courteous.”

I includ­ed the fore­gone para­graph in this short arti­cle because it demon­strates that jus­tice is not always served in the court­room. Even with a team of lawyers, defen­dants are not guar­an­teed a fair tri­al or sen­tenc­ing. In fact, judges are some­times biased even in the motions they grant dur­ing tri­als. A moun­tain of data points to the dis­parate way tri­al judges oper­ate with obvi­ous bias, usu­al­ly to the detri­ment of crim­i­nal defen­dants. This is in addi­tion to pros­e­cu­tors who go out of their way to pros­e­cute cas­es they know are weak and with­out mer­it out of def­er­ence and fear of police and their unions.
One of the dilem­mas the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem faces today is the irrefutable truths of police vio­lence, lies, cor­rup­tion, and out­right bla­tant vio­lent crim­i­nal­i­ty being exposed thanks to social media.
The trav­es­ty is that despite the out­cry and pain of the vic­tims of police cor­rup­tion and vio­lence, courts con­tin­ue to rely on uncor­rob­o­rat­ed police evi­dence to arrive at guilty verdicts.
Instead of uphold­ing the laws equal­ly and fair­ly against cit­i­zens and police alike, begin­ning with the Supreme Court at the top, courts have sought to restrict the rights of the American cit­i­zen to broad­en the pow­ers of the police state.
A cit­i­zen caught lying under oath faces the full force and wrath of the crim­i­nal jus­tice system.
A cop caught lying under oath faces absolute­ly no penal­ty at all.

In a 2010 Abstract on the Department of Justice’s web­site, Melanie D Wilson wrote; The U.S. legal sys­tem regards police offi­cers as impar­tial fact gath­er­ers, trained to col­lect facts that sup­port guilt and inno­cence. This per­cep­tion is far from the truth, and in real­i­ty, police offi­cers are biased advo­cates attempt­ing to dis­prove inno­cence.
Unfortunately, this real­i­ty con­tin­ues every day in court­rooms across the United States. Police lie, and courts use their lies to con­vict inno­cent cit­i­zens. Black cit­i­zens are at the great­est risk of being vic­tim­ized by this inher­ent bias in most judges and prosecutors.
Some prison reform and abo­li­tion sup­port­ers have argued that race and gen­der are the top rea­sons for the dis­par­i­ty in sen­tenc­ing. Blacks receive almost 10 per­cent longer sen­tences than whites arrest­ed and con­vict­ed for the same crimes.
Some argue that the dis­par­i­ty comes from the way police gin up charges on black arrestees and the way pros­e­cu­tors choose to pros­e­cute those charges. Of course, this expla­na­tion does lit­tle to assuage the claims of racism and fur­ther reveals the intri­ca­cy and sys­temic nature of the racism woven into the crim­i­nal jus­tice system.
It is impor­tant to process this infor­ma­tion with the knowl­edge that this injus­tice is not some­thing being done to for­eign­ers, which it was would be inher­ent­ly wrong, but that has been this way against American cit­i­zens, albeit of a dif­fer­ent col­or than white.
In one year, more than 50 mil­lion per­sons in the U.S. have come in con­tact with police dur­ing traf­fic stops, street stops, arrests, traf­fic acci­dents, or res­i­dent-ini­ti­at­ed con­tacts, and 1 mil­lion expe­ri­ence the use of or threat of force. I encour­age cit­i­zens to con­tin­ue to film police action uti­liz­ing the court’s guid­ance by allow­ing them space to do their jobs effec­tive­ly and safe­ly. However, do not be bul­lied when they tell you that you must move so far away that you can­not see what they are doing. They will also tell you they do not mind if you record them. Well, it does­n’t mat­ter whether they mind; they do not get to make those decisions.
If the young lady who stu­dious­ly record­ed George Floyd’s mur­der had been afraid and not record­ed the event, Derek Chauvin and his cronies would still be patrolling the streets of Minneapolis.
Remember, they lied that he died from a med­ical emer­gency before they changed their sto­ry after her video sur­faced. America’s pris­ons and jails are filled with crim­i­nals and inno­cent peo­ple. People the police fal­si­fied reports on and per­jured them­selves in court to gain con­vic­tions. In many cas­es, the pros­e­cu­tors know the infor­ma­tion is rid­dled with lies, and so does the judges.
This is what pass­es for justice.

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

In The Black Community The Police Is Usually A Greater Danger Than Regular Criminals

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Those who would give up essen­tial Liberty to pur­chase a lit­tle tem­po­rary Safety deserve nei­ther Liberty nor Safety. (Benjamin Franklin).
Policing in the United States was nev­er intend­ed to secure the Black pop­u­la­tion. It was cre­at­ed from the prac­tice of slave catch­ing. Slave-catch­ing was done by poor whites, most of whom were for­mer white bonds­men who were kicked out of Europe to the colonies by European pow­ers. This prac­tice of bond­ed slav­ery con­tin­ued up to the civ­il war. 
The poor whites who became plan­ta­tion over­seers and slave catch­ers had no love for the rich plan­ta­tion own­ers. Still, they were more than hap­py to accept the roles of slave catch­ers and over­seers, not just for the perks of sex­u­al pow­er it gave them over Black women and the vio­lence they vis­it­ed over Black men whom they hat­ed the most, but because it gave them a sense of pow­er, some­thing they envied about the planter class.
Replete with guns, whips, and vicious dogs, the slave catch­er was a force of ter­ror against Black enslaved peo­ple who har­bored the thought of flee­ing slavery.
Today polic­ing has not evolved much except that it has got­ten a more sophis­ti­cat­ed arse­nal of tools to harass the African-American population.
When we say ‘defund the police,’ those who ben­e­fit from the ser­vices of the role of police know exact­ly what we mean. Still, they fight vehe­ment­ly, using dis­tor­tions and dis­in­for­ma­tion to ensure that instead of scal­ing back the expens­es wast­ed on police depart­ments, more mon­ey is poured into policing.


Even those who claim to be friend­ly to the Black com­mu­ni­ty fold to the dis­in­for­ma­tion out of polit­i­cal expe­di­en­cy and vote to give more, rather than less mon­ey, to polic­ing. This usu­al­ly means few­er dol­lars for oth­er, more impor­tant func­tions the com­mu­ni­ty needs. But it suits the white pow­er class whose only inter­est is to ensure Blacks are kept in their place.
At the same time, res­i­dents in large cities, usu­al­ly pop­u­lat­ed heav­i­ly by Black cit­i­zens, are expo­nen­tial­ly more ter­ri­fied of police than they are of oth­er crim­i­nals. The sad real­i­ty is that ordi­nary crim­i­nals are usu­al­ly arrest­ed and made to pay for their crimes. Criminal cops are sel­dom held account­able, and even when arrest­ed and pros­e­cut­ed for the most egre­gious crimes, judges go out of their way to give them lighter rather than harsh­er sentences.
Consequently, the African-American com­mu­ni­ty has pre­cious lit­tle faith in the sys­tem and an even greater hatred for the idea of polic­ing, and under­stand­ably so.
The NYC​.Gov web­site claims that the New York City Police Department has (approx­i­mate­ly) 34,000 cops, which means one of two things, either the Agency has no idea how many mem­bers it has, which I do not believe is the case, or it delib­er­ate­ly fudges the num­bers it reveals to the pub­lic so it can con­tin­ue to make the case to jus­ti­fy hir­ing more and more peo­ple to that stand­ing army.
Despite the 34,000-man-strong stand­ing mili­tia that is the New York City Police Department, crime con­tin­ues to be a major prob­lem in the city of over 8 mil­lion res­i­dents. If the police were the solu­tion to end­ing crime, New York City would be crime free.
Many of the assaults and oth­er crimes com­mit­ted in New York City are com­mit­ted by the army of uni­formed thugs who roll upon inno­cent youths in their neigh­bor­hoods, harass, bru­tal­ize, and arrest them for com­mit­ting no crimes. That is not to say there aren’t vio­lent civil­ians. Still, the prob­lem is made expo­nen­tial­ly more volatile by the police, who are seen as a source of ter­ror for young men whose only crimes are their black skin and liv­ing in their neighborhoods.

One com­mu­ni­ty in Brooklyn is exper­i­ment­ing with the idea of not call­ing the police. Men in the com­mu­ni­ty are step­ping up to the plate and pro­tect­ing their com­mu­ni­ty from the civil­ian preda­tors who prey on the weak as well as the uni­formed thugs who ter­ror­ize their com­mu­ni­ty and who the res­i­dents are more ter­ri­fied of than the ordi­nary criminals.
See the sto­ry here:https://​news​.yahoo​.com/​h​a​p​p​e​n​e​d​-​b​r​o​o​k​l​y​n​-​n​e​i​g​h​b​o​r​h​o​o​d​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​d​-​i​t​s​e​l​f​-​1​5​3​0​5​8​7​0​5​.​h​tml

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

Massachusetts Cop Convicted For Violent Attack On Innocent Handcuffed Victim

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In the fol­low­ing arti­cle, you will see a vio­lent cop who was allowed to remain unchecked for his entire career, con­tin­ued to bru­tal­ize inno­cent civil­ians until tech­nol­o­gy caught up with him. It was only then that the pow­ers that pro­tect offi­cers like him had no choice but to take action.
You will also see a pros­e­cu­tor bemoan the fact that the cop was con­vict­ed for his crimes even as he pledged that he would pro­ceed with oth­er crim­i­nals against the con­vict­ed cop, declar­ing it a somber moment, speak­ing of the ver­dict. The pros­e­cu­tor also bent over back­ward in oblig­a­tory praise of police, usu­al­ly a sign that they are afraid of the wrath of the police unions that are sup­port­ers of the vio­lent thugs in uni­form regard­less of their crimes against the public.
You will also see the police chief mak­ing the regres­sive argu­ment that it was his depart­ment that inves­ti­gat­ed the com­plaints, which led to the charges against the crim­i­nal cop. It is impor­tant to jux­ta­pose that asser­tion with the pros­e­cu­tor’s state­ment; with­out the video­tape evi­dence, there would have been no case’.
They were forced to act because of the irrefutable evi­dence enshrined in the video evi­dence. That is why it is crit­i­cal­ly impor­tant to record these crim­i­nals when­ev­er you encounter them. Had the young woman not stu­dious­ly record­ed Derek Chauvin’s mur­der, George Floyd Chauvin would not have faced any con­se­quences. In fact, the police depart­ment lied that Floyd suf­fered a med­ical emer­gency and died before know­ing that the video­tape exist­ed of the day­light murder.
The abu­sive cop was found guilty, but the ver­dict is what matters.
The good old boys’ net­work of cops, pros­e­cu­tors, and juries, is what gives rise to cops like this one. It should come as no sur­prise if he receives a slap on the wrist. Judges are a large part of the impuni­ty that char­ac­ter­izes police vio­lence in the United States.
Instead of expand­ing the rights of ‘we the peo­ple’, the courts, start­ing with the Supreme Court, have sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly con­strict­ed the rights of cit­i­zens while expand­ing the police state. (mb)

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Former Fall River police offi­cer Michael Pessoa has been found guilty of assault and bat­tery with a dan­ger­ous weapon, wit­ness intim­i­da­tion, civ­il rights vio­la­tions and fil­ing false reports in the case involv­ing city res­i­dent David Lafrance.

Michael Pessoa in court Wednesday, May 24.

The for­mer city cop was tak­en out of the court­room in hand­cuffs Wednesday after the jury deliv­ered the ver­dict slight­ly after 1 p.m. fol­low­ing a five-day tri­al. Bristol County Deputy District Attorney William McCauley asked Superior Court Judge Renee Dupuis if they could post­pone sen­tenc­ing until Thursday because the vic­tim in the case, David Lafrance, was not at the cour­t­house. Both sides agreed to a June 7 sen­tenc­ing date.

Pessoa’s bail revoked

Defense Attorney Frank Camera asked Dupuis to allow Pessoa to remain free on the $5,000 cash bail. He has been out on bail since his indict­ment in June 2019. “He comes in with no record, he has ties to the com­mu­ni­ty, and he’s not been in any vio­la­tion of pre­tri­al con­di­tions, and he’s been in con­tact with pro­ba­tion for the past four years. I would ask that the court allow him to remain with his lib­er­ty,” said Camera. “Mr. Pessoa has been found guilty of very seri­ous charges,” said Dupuis before revok­ing the vet­er­an city police offi­cer’s bail 
On February 2019, Fall River police respond­ed to Lafrance’s South Main Street apart­ment to inves­ti­gate a neigh­bor dis­pute. Lafrance was detained and hand­cuffed for a few min­utes, and when police offi­cer Thomas Roberts was uncuff­ing him to release him with­out fil­ing any charges, he and Pessoa exchanged insults. 
The inci­dent was cap­tured on a sur­veil­lance cam­era. Video footage shown in court cap­tured Pessoa tak­ing Lafrance to the ground. Lafrance said Pessoa struck him in the face with a closed fist. Pessoa steps off a stoop, stands in front of Lafrance, and lunges at him, where Lafrance tum­bles to the ground backward.
Pessoa ini­tial­ly failed to fill out a required “use of force” report and was called back to the sta­tion by Lt. John Martins after see­ing Lafrance’s mugshot, which revealed he had a bloody lip and a facial contusion.

Bristol County District Attorney Thomas M. Quinn III speaks out­side of the Fall River Justice Center after the jury deliv­ered the guilty ver­dict in the Michael Pessoa case.

In June 2019, Pessoa was indict­ed on 15 counts for alleged­ly assault­ing four men in sep­a­rate inci­dents, all while they were in cus­tody. One case was dis­missed, and Dupuis ordered that the remain­ing cas­es be sep­a­rat­ed. This is the first of three tri­als he will face. After the ver­dict, Bristol County District Attorney Thomas Quinn III said, “The evi­dence showed that Mr. Pessoa crossed the line in his behav­ior that night and he and oth­er offi­cers par­tic­i­pat­ed in a cov­er-up to con­ceal what happened.
All evi­dence is impor­tant, but the video­tape is sig­nif­i­cant because with­out the video­tape, there would have been no case.” Quinn said his office will be pur­su­ing the two oth­er pend­ing cases.
Quinn, after the ver­dict, called it a “somber moment.” “Because a major­i­ty of police offi­cers are serv­ing their com­mu­ni­ty and try to pro­tect them when they do with­in an appro­pri­ate way. He had to be held account­able based on the evi­dence, but it’s still not a reflec­tion on the vast major­i­ty of police offi­cers.” Fall River Police Chief Paul Gauvin said the Pessoa ver­dict is “cer­tain­ly a sad day in the depart­men­t’s his­to­ry.” “But I think it’s impor­tant to note that the Fall River Police Department inves­ti­gat­ed this mat­ter inter­nal­ly, lead­ing to his ter­mi­na­tion. We inves­ti­gat­ed this mat­ter crim­i­nal­ly and assist­ed through all phas­es of the pros­e­cu­tion,” said Gauvin. Despite the fact that the pros­e­cu­tion of Pessoa is over in this case, “we need to move for­ward and con­tin­ue the all-impor­tant work of regain­ing trust and con­fi­dence of this com­mu­ni­ty and restor­ing pride, dig­ni­ty and hon­or of the Fall River Police Department.”

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This arti­cle orig­i­nal­ly appeared on The Herald News: Former Fall River cop found guilty in police bru­tal­i­ty case

KD Knight’s Views On The Monarchy Sound/​wrong Forum

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Former PNP Member of Parliament and Minister of National Security KD Knight recent­ly asked a Judge for per­mis­sion to sit dur­ing the start of court ses­sions in which an offi­cer declares the pro­ceed­ings open.
Knight, as many peo­ple are, is uncom­fort­able with the idea of ask­ing God to save the King. Parish Judge Maxine Ellis did not grant Knight’s wish, upon which he told the judge that he would not be there for the open­ing of the court, which the judge agreed to. This was no great com­pro­mise as there is no rule that makes it manda­to­ry for a lawyer to be present in court for the open­ing proceedings.

KD Knight

Knight has had the title of Queen’s Counsel for years now; how­ev­er, since the pass­ing of Queen Elizabeth and the ascen­sion of Charles to the British throne, that title became King’s Counsel. Pressed by Journalists as to his rea­son for not relin­quish­ing the title ‘King’s Counsel’, Knight said the fol­low­ing.‘There is no oth­er appro­pri­ate or accept­able way, at this time, of address­ing senior lawyers”. 
This made me laugh. These peo­ple, even those who are so-called edu­cat­ed, are so hung up on titles and for­mal­i­ties that they miss the for­est for the trees. Why is it impor­tant that peo­ple know that you are a senior lawyer? I believe every­one can see that you are damn old. Give me a f*****g break, dude.
KD Knight is a bril­liant Attorney who ought to know bet­ter. However, indoc­tri­na­tion and social­iza­tion into the colo­nial way of think­ing are still evi­dent even when we try to extri­cate our­selves from the same indoc­tri­na­tion and socialization.

KD Knight is per­fect­ly right about not want­i­ng to pray for God to save the King. He is also cor­rect about the injus­tices met­ed out to our peo­ple for hun­dreds of years by the very same British Monarchy, but the court is hard­ly the place to make a stand. Inside the court is hard­ly the hill KD Knight should wage this fight.
“The only save I would like God to save him is to allow him and the monar­chy to adhere to Christian prin­ci­ples, one of which is ‘Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s’, and they have things for us that they need to give. I don’t want any mon­ey from them,” Knight said. “My race has a right to repa­ra­tion, and I don’t want them to give a mil­lion dol­lars here and a bil­lion dol­lars there. I want them to give three things. I want them to deal with health, because they suf­fered bad­ly, my fore­par­ents. I want them to put in place in the coun­try a First World health sys­tem which includes build­ings, equip­ment and trans­porta­tion. I want them to deal with edu­ca­tion because they had me on a farm when I should be in school and there­fore I want a First World edu­ca­tion sys­tem. We need a prop­er rail and trans­porta­tion sys­tem. When we tried to run away, they chased us with dogs, and they had their guns, and we felt inse­cure.” Knight said.


Knight’s argu­ment to the court was mis­placed and is bet­ter served in edu­ca­tion­al forums in which he, as a senior mem­ber of the bar, can effec­tive­ly edu­cate the pub­lic on the neces­si­ty for not just a new con­sti­tu­tion but for repa­ra­tions from the British Monarchy.
Let us hope the bril­liant KD, as we affec­tion­ate­ly call him, will be an inte­gral part of the dis­cus­sions around a new con­sti­tu­tion and what will be in it…

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Police Detective, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer, black achiev­er hon­oree, and cre­ator of the blog mike​beck​les​.com.

The Highest Court Rules By Decree And Gives Police Immunity Resulting In Impunity…

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About Those Hefty Increases For Politicians

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DECEMBER 1991: Minister of Mining and Energy Horace Clarke resigned over the scan­dal involv­ing a waiv­er of $29.5 mil­lion in duties that Shell Company West Indies should have paid to the Government on import­ed gaso­lene. He remained a mem­ber of parliament.

MAY 2001: Minister of State in the Ministry of Finance Errol Ennis resigned on May 29, fol­low­ing rev­e­la­tions that at least sev­en cheques he had ten­dered to set­tle gam­bling debts had bounced. A state­ment from the Office of the Prime Minister said that Ennis had resigned his min­is­te­r­i­al post with imme­di­ate effect.

APRIL 2002: Dr Karl Blythe resigned as min­is­ter of water and hous­ing in the wake of a report from a four-mem­ber com­mis­sion that sug­gest­ed that he act­ed improp­er­ly as min­is­ter with respon­si­bil­i­ty for the Operation PRIDE pro­gramme. The report said Blythe inter­fered in the day-to-day man­age­ment of the Operation PRIDE schemes and flout­ed guide­lines. He resigned on April 13, 2002.

OCTOBER 2006: Information and Development Minister Colin Campbell was forced to resign from the Cabinet and as gen­er­al sec­re­tary of the People’s National Party in October 2006, approx­i­mate­ly a week after Opposition Leader Bruce Golding divulged infor­ma­tion that Trafigura Beheer, a Dutch com­pa­ny with busi­ness arrange­ments with the Government, made a $31-mil­lion trans­ac­tion to an account called CCOC Associates which bore Campbell’s sig­na­ture. Campbell’s res­ig­na­tion took effect on October 9, 2006.

OCTOBER 2007: Kern Spencer resigned as par­lia­men­tary sec­re­tary in the Ministry of Science and Technology, fol­low­ing ques­tions over the Cuban light bulb pro­gramme when it was divulged that the People’s National Party spent more than $276.5 mil­lion to dis­trib­ute four mil­lion free light bulbs donat­ed by the Cuban gov­ern­ment. Spencer open­ly wept in Parliament upon hear­ing news that the Fraud Squad and the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions were inves­ti­gat­ing the inci­dent. Years lat­er, he was freed of the charges after the pros­e­cu­tion failed to prove its case against him and then co-accused Coleen Wright.

JULY 2009: Jamaica Labour Party’s State Minister for Transport and Work Joseph Hibbert resigned six months after he was named a sub­ject in a cor­rup­tion probe by inves­ti­ga­tors in the United Kingdom. Hibbert, in a let­ter to Prime Minister Bruce Golding, said: “This res­ig­na­tion will allow me the time and free­dom to clear my name and my integri­ty as for­mer chief tech­ni­cal direc­tor in the Ministry of Transport and Works dur­ing the 1990s to which the alle­ga­tions refer.”

MAY 2010: Government Senator and State Minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, Dr Ronald Robinson, resigned as sen­a­tor and junior min­is­ter in wake of the Manatt, Phelps & Phillips affair that dogged the Government of Jamaica in rela­tion to the Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke extra­di­tion affair. In his res­ig­na­tion let­ter to the prime min­is­ter, dat­ed May 20, 2010, Robinson apol­o­gised for his role in the Manatt scan­dal and not­ed his wife’s ill health as anoth­er rea­son for his resignation.

NOVEMBER 2011: Transport and Works Minister Mike Henry sub­mit­ted his res­ig­na­tion to Prime Minister Andrew Holness due to con­cerns over the man­age­ment of projects by the National Works Agency (NWA). Henry’s res­ig­na­tion fol­lowed rev­e­la­tions that more than $60 mil­lion was spent on fur­ni­ture for the NWA’s offices. This was in addi­tion to a $102-mil­lion refur­bish­ing project that sparked con­tro­ver­sy when it was revealed in the audi­tor general’s spe­cial report on the Jamaica Development Infrastructure Programme.

SEPTEMBER 2013: Richard Azan, junior min­is­ter in the Ministry of Transport, Works and Housing, resigned in September 2013 under pub­lic pres­sure over his role in the improp­er con­struc­tion of shops on land owned by the Clarendon Parish Council. Within two months, he was rein­stat­ed by Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller after the direc­tor of pub­lic pros­e­cu­tions announced that no crim­i­nal charges would be laid.

JULY 2018: Science, Energy and Technology Minister Dr Andrew Wheatley resigned in the wake of scan­dals that erupt­ed at state-run enti­ties Petrojam and the National Energy Solutions Limited that fell under his portfolio.

MARCH 2019: Minister of Education, Youth and Information Ruel Reid was forced to resign over alle­ga­tions of cor­rup­tion and mis­use of pub­lic funds involv­ing a num­ber of insti­tu­tions tied to the min­istry. That inves­ti­ga­tion is ongoing.

Facts do not lie sim­ply because some peo­ple would pre­tend that facts do not mean anything.

This Is Not OK.’ Mother Of 11-year-old Shot By Mississippi Police Pleads For Answers

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Daily we see these events occur, they are far too many to doc­u­ment, at least on this web­site, and the same is true for most web­sites, even those with large staffs and huge bud­gets. We are a small site that is attend­ed to by a sin­gle per­son. So read­ers will under­stand that we are con­strained as to the num­ber of these events that we can bring to your attention.
The prob­lem is that this prob­lem is [not] get­ting bet­ter. It is get­ting worse dai­ly because author­i­ties in munic­i­pal­i­ties refuse to take action against cops because they are behold­en to police unions. (mb)

Courtesy Nakala Murry

Days after an 11-year-old boy was shot in the chest by an Indianola, Mississippi police offi­cer, fam­i­ly and com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers are call­ing for answers and for the officer’s ter­mi­na­tion. Community mem­bers iden­ti­fied the boy as Aderrien Murry. He was shot ear­ly Saturday morn­ing when offi­cers respond­ed to a domes­tic call at his home, accord­ing to a state­ment from the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, which is inves­ti­gat­ing the shooting.
As of Tuesday, Murry is in the inten­sive care unit at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, the family’s attor­ney Carlos Moore said. He was placed on a ven­ti­la­tor because he has a col­lapsed lung, and he has oth­er injuries includ­ing frac­tured ribs and a lac­er­at­ed liver.
Information about why the unarmed child was shot has not been released, said Moore, who is rep­re­sent­ing the boy’s fam­i­ly and joined them and com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers at a Monday press con­fer­ence out­side of Indianola City Hall.

This can­not keep hap­pen­ing. This is not OK,” said Nakala Murry, the boy’s moth­er, dur­ing the press con­fer­ence. “If a non-police offi­cer was to shoot some­one, you know it’s not OK. When the police do it, they have pro­to­col. He was trained. He knows what to do.”
Nakala Murry said her son is strong, but Aderrien does not under­stand what hap­pened to him.
“His words were: ‘Why did he shoot me? What did I do?’ and he start­ed cry­ing,” she said. She remem­bers hold­ing her son, apply­ing pres­sure to his wound and see­ing blood run from his mouth — an image she sees every time she clos­es her eyes. Nakala Murry said police were called to the house because the father of her oth­er child came over and was act­ing irate. When he act­ed this way, she knew some­thing could poten­tial­ly hap­pen and want­ed “to stop it right there.” She snuck her phone to her son and asked him to call her moth­er and the police. Investigators did not name the Indianola police offi­cer, but Moore said his inves­ti­ga­tion uncov­ered that the offi­cer is Greg Capers, who was named the department’s “best officer.”
“If he’s your best, Indianola, you need a clean house from top to bot­tom,” Moore said.

After the con­fer­ence, the group attend­ed the Board of Aldermen meet­ing. On Monday evening, the board vot­ed to place Capers on paid admin­is­tra­tive leave pend­ing fur­ther inves­ti­ga­tion, Moore said. He said there is always a pos­si­bil­i­ty for the board to call a spe­cial meet­ing to take fur­ther action with Capers. Murry’s fam­i­ly and sup­port­ers are call­ing for Capers and Police Chief Ronald Sampson to be fired and body cam­era footage to be released with­in 48 hours. Moore is also ask­ing the Sunflower County dis­trict attor­ney to pros­e­cute the offi­cer for attempt­ed mur­der. If the city does not act, Moore said Murry’s fam­i­ly and sup­port­ers plan to hold a sit-in at Indianola City Hall start­ing Thursday morn­ing. Moore direct­ly addressed Mayor Ken Featherstone, telling him to take the shoot­ing seri­ous­ly, and Sampson, telling him to give the fam­i­ly and com­mu­ni­ty answers and ques­tion­ing why he didn’t take past mis­con­duct from Capers seri­ous­ly. Moore said the offi­cer has not been dis­ci­plined for tas­ing anoth­er client of his, Kelvin Franklin, while the man was in hand­cuffs in December 2022. On Tuesday, Sampson declined to com­ment, but he said he and the may­or are like­ly to make a state­ment once MBI com­pletes its inves­ti­ga­tion. Featherstone did not respond to a request for com­ment. “What are you wait­ing on? Someone to actu­al­ly die?” Moore said dur­ing the press con­fer­ence. “An 11-year-old almost died. By the grace of God, he is alive. The peo­ple of Indianola are not going to wait until some­body dies.”