Cop Charged With Murdering Speech Impaired Man And Shooting His Parents In The Back…

At some point in time, there has to be a reck­on­ing and a cost-ben­e­fit analy­sis done to deter­mine whether the col­lat­er­al dam­age done by law enforce­ment is worth the life, trau­ma, mon­ey, and oth­er costs asso­ci­at­ed with our quest for the sup­posed secu­ri­ty they offer?
As far as polic­ing is con­cerned, there are the ever-present periph­er­al issues attached to this par­tic­u­lar sub­ject, which in real­i­ty has pre­cious lit­tle to do with the sem­i­nal issue of police violence.
Black lead­ers in their zeal to attract light to the heat of police vio­lence do them­selves and the Black com­mu­ni­ty a dis­ser­vice by insist­ing that those side issues are cen­tral to fix­ing police violence.
By attach­ing Housing dis­crim­i­na­tion, men­tal health issues, pover­ty, lack of good-pay­ing jobs, or oth­er such issues to this debate, it actu­al­ly takes away from the cen­tral issue of police vio­lence because even among the Black com­mu­ni­ty’s most ardent sup­port­ers there are diver­gent points of view on each of the sub­jects named.

And so rather than gal­va­nize sup­port around the all-impor­tant issue of police vio­lence, peo­ple tend to lose inter­est as they feel the total­i­ty of what they are being asked to sup­port is too great.
Every social ill that plagues the Black com­mu­ni­ty is sep­a­rate and must be addressed separately.
Police have nev­er cared about how they treat Black peo­ple rich or poor, they know that they are pro­tect­ed statutorily.
Neither have they ever cared how they treat Black peo­ple liv­ing in big man­sions. The point is that it does not mat­ter how much mon­ey Black peo­ple have, American cops, have nev­er been mind­ful of how they treat Blacks, they know the pro­tec­tions they enjoy in law and pol­i­cy and those are the rea­sons they act with impuni­ty, dis­re­spect, and disregard.
Of the more than 18,000 police depart­ments most cops have nev­er been forced to pull their ser­vice weapons, for many of those depart­ments, polic­ing duties are con­fined to extract­ing tax­es from errant motorists, some law­ful, oth­ers manufactured.
The website(vera.org) argues suc­cinct­ly,[Police spend an inor­di­nate amount of time respond­ing to 911 calls for ser­vice, even though most of these calls are unre­lat­ed to crimes in progress. Many are for qual­i­ty-of-life issues like noise, blocked dri­ve­ways, or pub­lic intox­i­ca­tion. Others are for prob­lems like drug abuse, home­less­ness, or men­tal health crises that would be bet­ter resolved with com­mu­ni­ty-based treat­ment or oth­er resources — not a crim­i­nal jus­tice response. But even when the under­ly­ing prob­lem is minor or not crim­i­nal in nature, police often respond to ser­vice requests with the tool that is most famil­iar and expe­di­ent for them to deploy: enforce­ment. All of this exhausts police resources and expos­es count­less peo­ple to avoid­able crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem con­tacts. And man­ag­ing this large call vol­ume also pos­es oper­a­tional chal­lenges for police agen­cies.]

(Justice​.gov) stip­u­lates, Police are entrust­ed with an enor­mous amount of author­i­ty, includ­ing the author­i­ty to use force, and it is impor­tant that the police under­take these tasks in a man­ner that is legal, and also is respect­ful to com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers, and is in keep­ing with local pri­or­i­ties. (For exam­ple, dif­fer­ent com­mu­ni­ties may vary in their approach to cer­tain issues, such as the enforce­ment of fed­er­al immi­gra­tion laws or drug decrim­i­nal­iza­tion or legal­iza­tion.) Police agen­cies must also pro­mote trans­paren­cy and account­abil­i­ty to demon­strate to the com­mu­ni­ty that offi­cers act fair­ly and impar­tial­ly and that there are sys­tems in place to detect mis­takes or abus­es of police author­i­ty. Public trust and coöper­a­tion are key ele­ments of effec­tive polic­ing and are lost when police engage in uncon­sti­tu­tion­al or unpro­fes­sion­al con­duct.

On these fun­da­men­tal issues no per­son, no mat­ter how pro-police, can make the case that police agen­cies are act­ing constitutionally.

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A for­mer Los Angeles police offi­cer has been charged in con­nec­tion with a 2019 shoot­ing inside a Costco in the city of Corona, California, where a men­tal­ly ill man was killed, and his par­ents were crit­i­cal­ly wound­ed, CBS Los Angeles reports.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced Monday that Salvador Sanchez, a sev­en-year vet­er­an of the LAPD, has been charged with one count of vol­un­tary manslaugh­ter and two counts of assault with a semi­au­to­mat­ic hand­gun. He was tak­en into cus­tody Monday morn­ing in Riverside County.
On the night of June 14, 2019, Kenneth French, 32, of Riverside, and his par­ents, Russell and Paola, were shot by off-duty LAPD Officer Salvador Sanchez while in line at a sam­ple sta­tion at the CostcoKenneth, who has been described by his fam­i­ly’s attor­ney as schiz­o­phrenic and non­ver­bal, was killed. His par­ents were crit­i­cal­ly wound­ed but sur­vived. Both were shot in the back.

In September of 2019, a Riverside County grand jury declined to bring crim­i­nal charges; in the case, a deci­sion that sparked major protests at the time, per CBS LA. Grainy sur­veil­lance video appeared to show a phys­i­cal alter­ca­tion between French and Sanchez pri­or to the shoot­ing. Sanchez, who had been hold­ing his 18-month-old son, fired 10 rounds from a hand­gun. In March 2021, Corona police released body­cam footage of their offi­cers respond­ing to the scene. In the footage, Sanchez tells offi­cers that he opened fire after believ­ing that he him­self had been shot.

The shoot­ing cre­at­ed chaos in the store, send­ing shop­pers scur­ry­ing for the exits. Corona police offi­cers had ini­tial­ly respond­ed to reports of an active shoot­er. The Los Angeles Police Commission lat­er deter­mined that Sanchez act­ed out­side depart­ment policy.

The Associated Press con­tributed to this report.

Three DC Cops Suspended For Beating Man , Watch The Video.

LOOK AT THESE COPS CARRYING OUT AN ARREST. ARE THESE PROFESSIONAL COPS, OR ARE THESE COMMON THUGS WHO SHOULD BE TREATED AS COMMON THUGS IN RETURN?

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Three D.C. police offi­cers involved in an arrest of a man in Southeast Washington have been sus­pend­ed and referred for pos­si­ble crim­i­nal pros­e­cu­tion after one of the offi­cers was seen on video repeat­ed­ly punch­ing the sus­pect in the face.

Police Chief Robert J. Contee III told reporters that he was embar­rassed and ashamed by what he saw, adding that it was incon­sis­tent with the department’s train­ing, tac­tics and values.

The chief said offi­cers were arrest­ing the 23-year-old man after they saw a sus­pect­ed drug trans­ac­tion and then felt a hand­gun tucked in the man’s cloth­ing. “This is not the way we train our mem­bers to get ille­gal firearms off the streets,” Contee said.

The U.S. attorney’s office for the District said in a state­ment that it is “exam­in­ing the actions” of the offi­cers. A spokesman declined to com­ment further.

The inci­dent occurred Sunday after­noon in the 1500 block of U Street SE, near the Ketcham Recreation Center in Anacostia. The video was post­ed on Twitter by @Killmoenews, an account run by a jour­nal­ist in the D.C. area.

The video shows three offi­cers from the 7th District sta­tion sur­round­ing the man, who had his back to a fence. The offi­cers appear to be strug­gling to detain the man. An offi­cer in the mid­dle of the group uses his left hand to punch the man at least three times in the face and then punch­es him addi­tion­al times using his right hand, the video shows. It also appears that a sec­ond offi­cer ­punch­es him at least once.

The man strug­gles against the offi­cers, but the video does not show him try­ing to strike them.

Contee said offi­cers found a firearm — iden­ti­fied in a report as a .45-cal­iber hand­gun — on the man, and he was tak­en into cus­tody. Another man was also arrest­ed after police said he threw pro­jec­tiles at the officers.

Britain Must Pay Reparations, We Do Not Need Shiny Objects And Stupid Titles.….

The sem­i­nal ques­tion of Reparations to Jamaicans who are descen­dants of the British slave trade should not be allowed to die, but like fire, it must be fuelled and stoked until the British monar­chy and Government real­izes that bestow­ing stu­pid titles on a few Jamaicans will not put out that fire of demand for payment.
No amount of paci­fy­ing us will work; state­ments of mutu­al friend­ship will not be enough. Jamaicans and Jamaica need the British monarch and Government to com­pen­sate us for the free labor that has made Britain a tiny set of Islands, one of the wealth­i­est nations on earth.

Not only has Britain done noth­ing for Jamaica, but this par­a­sitic nation con­tin­ues to send peo­ple back to Jamaica who left our coun­try as babies for minor infrac­tions in their lat­est iter­a­tion of eth­nic cleansings.
Britain also invit­ed Jamaicans to work between 1948 and 1971 from Caribbean coun­tries, this gen­er­a­tion has been labeled the Windrush generation.(see the Windrush peo­ple) https://​www​.bbc​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​u​k​-​4​3​7​8​2​241
Jamaicans and oth­er Caribbean nation­als went in and rebuilt their coun­try, but that was not good for this racist good for noth­ing peo­ple; they decid­ed they want­ed a white coun­try, so they threat­ened the remain­ing sur­vivors of that era and their descen­dants with depor­ta­tion and did deport some as things came to a head in 2018.

There has nev­er been any hon­or in these peo­ple; whether it is their descen­dants who now rule America or those who nev­er left England, their word means nothing.
Therefore it is impor­tant that as Jamaicans, we speak with a stronger voice and in no uncer­tain terms that Britain com­pen­sates us for the ignominy of slavery.
As Jamaicans, we claim to be smart; if we are smart, we must under­stand that shiny objects and trin­kets in the form of stu­pid hon­orary titles and appoint­ments to their sil­ly coun­cils will no longer cut it.
We do not care that you appoint­ed our Prime Minister to the Privy Council, a pure­ly cer­e­mo­ni­al ges­ture as an act of appeasement.

We will no longer accept being brought into the big house while we remain a slave. Slavery is slav­ery, whether it is in the fields or a mansion.
It is high time that the Jamaican Government begins writ­ing a new con­sti­tu­tion and com­mences the process of extri­cat­ing our­selves from this blood­suck­ing mon­ster and demands the pay­ment we deserve and must be paid.
Yes, many Jamaicans like shiny objects and are impressed by them but the major­i­ty of us are not swayed by sil­ly titles, we need to be tak­en seri­ous­ly now.

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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. 

Deputy Brags On White Supremacist Site About Beating Black Man Sentenced On Weapons Charges…


In some munic­i­pal­i­ties across the United States shoot­ing inci­dents have gone up, accord­ing to [police] reports. In New York City, for exam­ple, there has been a 35.4% increase in mur­ders in the last two years, accord­ing to NYPD data, though mur­ders are down 2.4% in 2021 year-to-date com­pared to last year. Shooting inci­dents have sky­rock­et­ed data shows. There’s been a 15.8% increase from 2020 to 2021, year-to-date, data shows, and a 100% increase over the past two years.
My point is not to tar­get New York nor malign the NYPD, but they have been known to use all kinds of under­hand­ed tac­tics to get what they want or to make a point.
It is for those rea­sons as there are cries to defund the police after the George Floyd mur­der in 2020, and res­i­dents in large cities like New York City and oth­ers are seek­ing to reimag­ine what polic­ing looks like going for­ward, that we are wit­ness­ing these spikes in shoot­ings and oth­er vio­lent crimes.
We all remem­ber that this same police depart­ment car­ried out the first insur­rec­tion in New York City against Mayor Dinkins led by Rudolph Guiliani. We can­not for­get also that they turned their backs en masse on their boss, Mayor Bill de Blasio, as he deliv­ered an address. not exact­ly a mod­el to emulate.
In fact, this depart­ment has been noth­ing but a group of thugs, its mem­bers have rammed pro­test­ers with their tax­pay­er-fund­ed vehi­cles and bragged about run­ning peo­ple over, who were mere­ly law­ful­ly demon­strat­ing against injustice.

https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​v​i​o​l​e​n​t​-​c​r​i​m​e​s​-​o​n​-​t​h​e​-​u​p​t​i​c​k​-​b​u​t​-​w​h​o​-​a​r​e​-​t​h​e​-​p​e​o​p​l​e​-​d​o​i​n​g​-​t​h​e​-​s​h​o​o​t​i​ng/

When polic­ing is looked at in terms of what it ought to rep­re­sent, (a) to the cit­i­zens it is sup­posed to pro­tect, (b) the cit­i­zens who pay for that ser­vice; the NYPD has been a shame­ful self-serv­ing fas­cist tool that serves its own interest.
On the 25th of June of this year, I posed the ques­tion to you my read­ers; who exact­ly are the peo­ple doing the shooting”?
The ques­tion in no way negates the fact that there are many crim­i­nals out there tak­ing advan­tage of COVID-19 and the sense of uncer­tain­ty with polic­ing to com­mit crimes of opportunity.
However, it seems that some­thing is hap­pen­ing just under the sur­face, con­sid­er­ing that the FBI report­ed a large num­ber of Law enforce­ment and mil­i­tary mem­bers, past and present, were actu­al­ly a part of the January 20th insur­rec­tion at the US Capitol.|
Conspiracy?
No!!!
I pre­sent­ed you with data and a pat­tern of cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence that tends to lead toward a cer­tain conclusion.

I would not put it past police across the coun­try to have a heavy hand in this uptick in vio­lence to show that they are need­ed. I do not put it past a gullible pub­lic to lap it up and hire more of these uni­formed terrorists.

And then there is this story.
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Georgia Deputy Who Bragged About Beating Black Man, Claimed He’d Charge People with Crimes to Keep Them from Voting Is Sentenced on Weapons Charges.

Cody Richard Griggers bragged that he beat a Black man in cus­tody. (Photo: Nate_​Thayer/​Twitter)

A for­mer Georgia deputy and U.S. Marine who bragged in mes­sages with mem­bers of an extrem­ist group that he had bru­tal­ized a Black man in cus­tody and that he intend­ed to charge Black peo­ple with felonies to keep them from vot­ing were sen­tenced to three years and eight months in prison, plus one year of super­vised release on Aug. 3 in con­nec­tion with a weapons charge. Cody Richard Griggers, 28, plead­ed guilty in fed­er­al court on April 26 to one count of pos­ses­sion of an unreg­is­tered firearm and faced up to 10 years in prison. Federal author­i­ties revealed in court in April that while Griggers was still work­ing as a Wilkinson County deputy, he told mem­bers of the “Shadow Moses” group via text, “I’m going to charge them with what­ev­er felonies I can; to take away their abil­i­ty to vote.”In the mes­sages, Griggers used extrem­ist lan­guage, claim­ing he’d beat­en a Black theft sus­pect and talk­ing about killing lib­er­al politi­cians. He also dis­cussed acquir­ing ille­gal firearms, explo­sives, and sup­pres­sors and made pos­i­tive ref­er­ences to the Holocaust.

Griggers was fired from the depart­ment in November after the FBI con­tact­ed the sher­iff about an inves­ti­ga­tion regard­ing ille­gal guns and a man who had made vio­lent polit­i­cal state­ments on social media.
“This for­mer law enforce­ment offi­cer vio­lat­ed his oath of office in many ways, the most egre­gious was by threat­en­ing the very cit­i­zens he was sworn to pro­tect with his words of racial­ly moti­vat­ed vio­lence,” Chris Hacker, FBI spe­cial agent in charge of the Atlanta field office, said in a statement.
“Now he is being held account­able by serv­ing time in prison and nev­er being able to wear the blue again.”
FBI agents dis­cov­ered the group text with Griggers as part of a California inves­ti­ga­tion into a man mak­ing vio­lent polit­i­cal state­ments on social media. Authorities were search­ing the San Diego home of Grey Zamudio when they dis­cov­ered the Shadow Moses group text and saw the messages.
On November 19, 2020, a search of Griggers’ res­i­dence and his ser­vice vehi­cle yield­ed mul­ti­ple firearms, includ­ing an unreg­is­tered short bar­rel shot­gun in his home and a machine gun with an oblit­er­at­ed ser­i­al num­ber in the vehi­cle. The machine gun was not issued to Griggers, and he was not allowed to have the weapon in his law enforce­ment car. Officers found 11 ille­gal firearms in total between Griggers’ home and car.
In August 2019, Griggers texted the group about hav­ing beat­en a Black man.
“Oh, got wrapped up in my AR and for­got to tell y’all that I beat the sh‑t out of a n‑gger Saturday. (Expletive) tried to steal (a gun mag­a­zine) from the local gun store. … Sheriff’s dept. Said it looked like he fell,” Griggers said, accord­ing to an affidavit.
He described the beat­ing as “sweet stress relief.”
He also explained how he’d use polit­i­cal vio­lence to keep Black peo­ple from vot­ing. “Castrate, kill, remove vot­ing rights,” he wrote in an October mes­sage. “The only prob­lem is you can’t expect to get them all that way.”
“Law enforce­ment offi­cers should be above reproach, and the vast major­i­ty of them are. Cody Griggers dis­graced that trust by espous­ing vio­lent extrem­ism and pos­sess­ing a cache of unreg­is­tered weapons while on duty, includ­ing a machine gun with a silencer and oblit­er­at­ed ser­i­al num­ber,” said act­ing U.S. Attorney Peter D. Leary. “Officers are nev­er above the laws they swear to uphold, and I thank our law enforce­ment part­ners for help­ing us hold this dis­graced for­mer deputy account­able. On Tuesday, Griggers claimed he was only jok­ing when he made the offen­sive com­ments in the group text.
“They were jokes, but it’s noth­ing to joke about. It has a real impact,” he said tear­ful­ly, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution report­ed

On Tuesday, Griggers claimed he was only jok­ing when he made the offen­sive com­ments in the group text. “They were jokes, but it’s noth­ing to joke about. It has a real impact,” he said tear­ful­ly, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution report­ed.
Wilkinson County Sheriff Richard Chatman said there’s no evi­dence Griggers act­ed on his beliefs while work­ing as a deputy for under a year. He said the claim about the beat­en Black sus­pect did not happen.

Wilkinson County Sheriff Richard Chatman speculated that Griggers was being braggadocios when he boasted about beating up a black man
Wilkinson County Sheriff Richard Chatman spec­u­lat­ed that Griggers was being brag­gado­cios when he boast­ed about beat­ing up a black man, some­thing you would expect a coon to say.

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Even after this igno­rant racist piece of shit was bust­ed with ille­gal weapons, con­fessed that he had beat­en a black man, that he had con­coct­ed felonies and charged Black peo­ple with those felonies to pre­vent them from vot­ing, and after he com­mit­ted numer­ous felonies, not to men­tion vio­lat­ing his oath as a police offi­cer, a piece of shit judge gave him three years.
That is white privilege.
And to make mat­ters even worse, if that is pos­si­ble, the piece of shit sher­iff said he nev­er beat any Black person.
And so I ask again,” who are the peo­ple real­ly fir­ing the shots”?

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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. 

Commissioner Must Immediately Disclose What Happened At Four Paths Police Station, If Anything„

Yesterday I opined on the tem­pest in a teacup that has been brew­ing over the last sev­er­al days (speak­ing of the alle­ga­tions by Clarendon res­i­dent Nzinga King that mem­bers of the Four Paths police cut her dread­locks against her will.
https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​n​e​w​-​e​v​i​d​e​n​c​e​-​s​u​r​f​a​c​i​n​g​-​n​z​i​n​g​a​-​k​i​n​g​-​m​a​y​-​b​e​-​l​y​i​n​g​-​a​b​o​u​t​-​b​e​i​n​g​-​t​r​i​m​m​e​d​-​b​y​-​c​o​ps/

Four Paths Police Station, Ginger Ridge, Saint Catherine(+1 876-987-0429)
The Four Paths Police Station Clarendon

This inci­dent, like most oth­ers involv­ing alle­ga­tions involv­ing the police quick­ly cement­ed peo­ple into camps. The entire dis­ci­pline of polic­ing has become a light­ning rod, not just in Jamaica but across the world, as police depart­ments con­tin­ue to be tone-deaf to their pub­lic’s demand for changes in how police offi­cers are allowed to operate.
The job of polic­ing has dra­mat­i­cal­ly changed; cit­i­zens are less like­ly to stand for abus­es of their rights, a stance I whole­heart­ed­ly support.
When police offi­cers go about their duties with­out mal­ice or ill will and make mis­takes, I am always sym­pa­thet­ic to those mis­takes, under­stand­ing that humans do make mistakes.
When police offi­cers vio­late rights because of pre­con­ceived ideas and bias­es, there is no sym­pa­thy com­ing from this writer.

Every offi­cer is taught the basics of the laws they are attempt­ing to enforce. They are also taught what statu­to­ry pow­ers they have to enforce said laws. Nowhere in the JCF train­ing man­u­al are offi­cers taught to vio­late any­one’s human rights. So if an offi­cer, or offi­cers any­where in Jamaica in this day and age decides to cut the hair from some­one’s head, that per­son should have no place in the JCF.
Even if a cit­i­zen asks an offi­cer to cut their hair, that offi­cer should polite­ly decline, ful­ly under­stand­ing the poten­tial back­lash from some­one get­ting the wrong impres­sion of that action.
As a friend and for­mer offi­cer insist­ed yes­ter­day, these alle­ga­tions do not need a long-drawn-out inves­ti­ga­tion from the top brass. The ques­tion is sim­ple, “did a mem­ber of the Four Paths Police unlaw­ful­ly cut the hair from the head of Nzinga King? Who is the mem­ber, and on what author­i­ty did that member/​s engage in that act?
To instill con­fi­dence in the police, the police com­mis­sion­er [must] move swift­ly to tell the pub­lic whether or not any offi­cer actu­al­ly cut the hair from the head of Ms. King immediately.
Each day that pass­es with­out that answer feeds the fire of spec­u­la­tion, builds sus­pi­cion that the depart­ment is hid­ing evi­dence, and increas­es ani­mos­i­ty toward offi­cers, and final­ly, it gives oppor­tunis­tic vul­tures, be they polit­i­cal or anti law enforce­ment, fod­der on which to feed.

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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. 

New Evidence Surfacing Nzinga King may Be Lying About Being Trimmed By Cops…

The claim by a young Clarendon woman Nzinga King that mem­bers of the Four-Paths police cut her dread­locks, has elicit­ed much debate and a swift deci­sion by the police high com­mand to ini­ti­ate a top-tiered investigation.
All good stuff; how­ev­er, I choose to await the out­come of the inves­ti­ga­tions ini­ti­at­ed by Commissioner of Police Antony Anderson.
Frankly, I was skep­ti­cal when I heard the sto­ry, and I still am. Not because police offi­cers have stopped doing dumb things, but because Rastafarianism has become such an accept­ed part of our Jamaican cul­ture that it has been hard for me to imag­ine that any police offi­cer would be so stu­pid to engage in activ­i­ties of that sort, but I may be wrong.
In the mean­time, some politi­cians from a cer­tain polit­i­cal par­ty, one Patricia Duncan-Sutherland, jumped head­first into the fray, and have been giv­ing media inter­views on behalf of the young woman and have helped the young lady and her fam­i­ly to secure legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion in the per­son of Isat Buchanan.

It is always easy to seek and get hype off the police in Jamaica, and truth­ful­ly some offi­cers make it easy for the wannabe politicians/​vultures to hop onto their fend­ers, but I digress.
One such failed politi­cian, of the Rastafarian dis­po­si­tion, even posit­ed that he intend­ed to stop by the police sta­tion to find out for him­self what had occurred.
Now seri­ous­ly, I hope that if and when he does decide to stop by the police sta­tion, in the face of an ongo­ing inves­ti­ga­tion, the police trim the locks from his head and send that idiot on his way.
That said, there are new rum­blings that the young woman lied to her school­mates about her age, lied that the police broke her cel­lu­lar device, and told her class­mates that she trimmed her own locks and regret­ted doing so. Frankly, if she lied about one thing it brings into ques­tion every­thing else she claimed happened.
One class­mate was not shy about telling the media that she was lying about the whole thing.
If this turns out to be a lie, I hope that the police will make an exam­ple of her by arrest­ing her and ensur­ing that she is pros­e­cut­ed to the fullest extent of the law for pub­lic mis­chief, or what­ev­er else Jamaican law allows statutorily.
If how­ev­er, any police offi­cer did vio­late her rights in that way they should be pun­ished accord­ing to the rules of the JCF and where pos­si­ble, held account­able civilly.

https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​3​5​2​873 – 2/

I thought it iron­ic that they chose Isat Buchanan to rep­re­sent her, a twice-con­vict­ed felon now prac­tic­ing law.
Isat Buchanan was bust­ed twice on felony crimes, even when bust­ed and con­vict­ed he lied that he was inno­cent rather than take respon­si­bil­i­ty for what he had done.
He now rep­re­sents anoth­er poten­tial Rastafarian liar. And that a failed Rastafarian politi­cian chose this as the hill he wants to die on to gain rel­e­vance, as he pon­tif­i­cates about going to find out for him­self what real­ly happened.
Just sweet…you sim­ply can­not make this shit up.….

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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. 

Chicago Spends Hundreds Of Millions Of Dollars On Police Misconduct Cases.

We can only try to doc­u­ment a few of the atroc­i­ties they com­mit against peo­ple of col­or, lie about them in sworn state­ments and when found to be lying there are no con­se­quences to them for their actions.>
Everyone knows that when you write a state­ment it ought to be a state­ment of fact as to the best of one’s rec­ol­lec­tion. Police offi­cers do not have the right to lie to incrim­i­nate an inno­cent per­son. Police and pros­e­cu­tors are duty bound by law to turn over excul­pa­to­ry evi­dence to defen­dants coun­sel, how­ev­er, police and pros­e­cu­tors sum­mar­i­ly lie and destroy evi­dence they [know] is exculpatory.
Prosecutors sum­mar­i­ly refuse to pros­e­cute police even when they are caught lying under oath in court, noth­ing is done so they move on to the next series of lies to con­vict peo­ple they do not like.
On the oth­er hand, their state­ments which ought to depict sequen­tial­ly their encoun­ters with mem­bers of the pub­lic are arbi­trar­i­ly rid­dled with lies and incon­sis­ten­cies- again with­out con­se­quence to them.

HERE IS ANOTHER EXAMPLE

Chicago police accused of wrongfully raiding another home

A Black fam­i­ly is suing the Chicago police depart­ment for alleged­ly break­ing down their door and point­ing guns at two chil­dren before attempt­ing to cov­er up that they had no evi­dence for the raid, The Associated Press report­ed Wednesday. The Winters fam­i­ly filed the law­suit Tuesday for police wrong­ful­ly raid­ing their home, which has report­ed­ly become a fre­quent occur­rence for peo­ple of col­or in the city.
On the night of Aug. 7, 2019, the chil­dren, two girls aged 4 and 9, were report­ed­ly sit­ting on the bed when police charged in the room with­out warn­ing or a war­rant. Police point­ed their guns at the sis­ters’ father, Steven Winters, whose back was lat­er knelt on by an offi­cer with a gun to the back of his head. Another offi­cer charged into the girls’ room and point­ed a flash­light and a gun at them, while a third offi­cer point­ed a gun at the chil­dren’s sleep­ing grandfather.

The inci­dent report­ed­ly left the chil­dren with “last­ing trau­ma … in the form of night­mares, bed-wet­ting, trou­ble sleep­ing, decreased appetite, cry­ing fits and fear and dis­trust of police,” accord­ing to the AP. The police depart­ment report­ed­ly tried to cov­er up the inci­dent by claim­ing they saw and heard a sus­pect run into the apart­ment, but these claims were proven false by the body cam­era footage that Al Hofeld Jr., the fam­i­ly’s attor­ney, acquired through an open records request. The city has yet to release body­cam footage of the inci­dent. “They do not show any­one enter­ing or exit­ing plain­tiffs’ build­ing or plain­tiffs’ apart­ment,” the law­suit said accord­ing to the AP. “Officers did not find any sign that any sus­pect had entered. Officers did not arrest any­one. The ter­ror and stress to this inno­cent fam­i­ly were all for naught. ”

However, this is not the first inci­dent where police used exces­sive force dur­ing a botched raid. Chicago has report­ed­ly been plagued with false raids against peo­ple of col­or. In February 2019, a wom­an’s home was wrong­ful­ly raid­ed and she was hand­cuffed naked for 30 min­utes. Police lat­er dis­cov­ered they had the wrong home and attempt­ed to pre­vent the release of the body cam footage. The city has report­ed­ly spent hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars on police mis­con­duct cas­es. The AP noted.

American Police Behavior Tied To Supreme Court’s Dred Scott Decision…

Do you know what both­ers me the most with all of this police vio­lence toward peo­ple of col­or and African-Americans in particular?
The (“copol­o­gists”) do…
If only he fol­lowed the offi­cer’s com­mand. If only he stopped mov­ing. If only he stopped walk­ing. If only he stopped talking.
If only he rolled over. If only he did not rollover. If only he stopped breath­ing. It nev­er stops.
The white-splain­ing cou­pled with cop-splain­ing has become so nau­se­at­ing that I sum­mar­i­ly dis­miss any white per­son­’s per­spec­tives on police vio­lence, and that’s not fair because not all white peo­ple are racist jackasses.
The idea from these igno­ra­mus­es who make excus­es for the white race sol­diers, is that police are only vio­lent because the vic­tims of their vio­lence make them com­mit vio­lence on them by not bow­ing down in com­plete feal­ty to the peo­ple they hire to keep them safe.
Nowhere else in a demo­c­ra­t­ic soci­ety are the ser­vants’ over­lords over the tax­pay­ing cit­i­zens except in the United States. Nowhere else in a civ­i­lized soci­ety are police allowed to oper­ate as American cops oper­ate as race sol­diers against the cit­i­zens who hire them.
The sad real­i­ty is that the acts of sav­agery that police com­mit against peo­ple of col­or and, in some cas­es, poor whites far exceed what the American soci­ety would tol­er­ate against a dog, cat, or any oth­er animal.
And so we must con­front the sem­i­nal ques­tion of ‘why are white Americans so tol­er­ant of police vio­lence against Black people?
https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​c​o​p​s​-​s​p​e​a​k​-​t​o​-​b​l​a​c​k​-​d​r​i​v​e​r​s​-​w​i​t​h​-​l​e​s​s​-​r​e​s​p​e​c​t​-​t​h​a​n​-​w​h​i​t​e​-​d​r​i​v​e​r​s​-​s​t​u​d​y​-​f​i​n​ds/

https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​c​o​p​-​k​i​l​l​s​-​h​a​n​d​c​u​f​f​e​d​-​m​a​n​-​i​n​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​s​t​a​t​i​o​n​-​b​a​c​k​-​o​n​-​t​h​e​-​j​o​b​-​d​i​s​t​r​i​c​t​-​a​t​t​-​m​a​k​e​s​-​n​o​-​r​u​l​i​ng/

https://mikebeckles.com/a‑glimpse-at-the-astonishing-amount-of-unarmed-black-people-police-have-been-killing/

NO NEED FOR RESPECT

Michael Vick was sen­tenced to prison for allow­ing dogs to fight. Vick him­self was not inti­mate­ly involved; nev­er­the­less, he was con­vict­ed and sent to prison.
Now, as a co-own­er with my wife of our beau­ti­ful Lab-Mix Bud, I can­not imag­ine ever kick­ing Bud under any cir­cum­stances. I can’t even bear the thought of step­ping on his tail by accident.
Why then would a police offi­cer kick a human being? Why would a police offi­cer kick anoth­er human being as offi­cers in Miami Beach, Florida, and Orangeburg, South Carolina, do it anyway?
But the so-called police offi­cers who kick and oth­er­wise phys­i­cal­ly assault Black peo­ple, repug­nant though they are, pale in com­par­i­son to the repug­nant sav­ages who get on social media to give suc­cor and sup­port to their repug­nant attacks on often­times hand­cuffed, unarmed and help­less people.

When pressed by the (lame stream media), peo­ple like Kamala Harris claim that America is not a racist coun­try out of polit­i­cal expe­di­en­cy. They need to check that lie at the door and spend a few min­utes on social media plat­forms and read the com­ments com­ing from the sav­age crea­tures who dwell in the deep­est dark­est recess­es of the dark web.
There is no redemp­tion for those crea­tures; there is no rea­son­ing with them; their souls are of anoth­er world.
They are the imbe­ciles who stormed the Capitol on January 6th2021. They are those who sup­port those imbe­ciles. They are the ones who believed Donald Trump’s lie that he won the elec­tions of 2020. —-In that bunch, there is not a sin­gle one of those racist crea­tures who would not rel­ish see­ing the extinc­tion of the entire Black race and sees the police as the means to get to that outcome.

On March 6, 1857, the United States Supreme Court in a 7 – 2 deci­sion, ruled that an enslaved man who had lived in a free State and Territory where slav­ery was pro­hib­it­ed was not enti­tled to free­dom; that African ‑Americans were not, and could nev­er be cit­i­zens of the United States.
That the Missouri com­pro­mise of (1820) which declared free all ter­ri­to­ries west of Missouri and north of lat­i­tude 36º30,’
was unconstitutional.
That supreme court deci­sion added fuel to the sec­tion­al con­tro­ver­sy and pushed the coun­try clos­er to civ­il war.
That supreme court rul­ing was the deci­sion that would become known as the Dred Scott decision.
According to (Britannica)The court’s deci­sion in Scott v Sanford was wide­ly panned by Constitutional schol­ars and was wide­ly con­sid­ered to be the worst deci­sion ever ren­dered by the supreme court >
In par­tic­u­lar, it was cit­ed as the most egre­gious exam­ple in the court’s his­to­ry of wrong­ly impos­ing a judi­cial solu­tion on a polit­i­cal problem.
A lat­er chief jus­tice Charles Evans Hughes famous­ly char­ac­ter­ized the Dred Scott deci­sion as the court’s great self-inflict­ed wound.
Those con­sti­tu­tion­al schol­ars and the late Charles Evans Hughes must be turn­ing in their graves at what the John Roberts court has done to this nations’ sta­bil­i­ty in the Shelby coun­ty Alabama Versus Holder deci­sion in 2013..
The Dred Scott deci­sion was argued to have pushed the coun­try clos­er to the civ­il war, which began on April 12, 1861, result­ing in the loss of approx­i­mate­ly 750,000 sol­diers and an unde­ter­mined num­ber of civilians.

At the risk of get­ting too nerdy, I pull back, suf­fic­ing to say that the Dred Scott deci­sion still guides police actions today. The aver­age cop today is gen­er­al­ly a guy or girl that did not do too well in school.
I know we have heard that in anoth­er local­i­ty; this time, it is true. There are no short­ages of oppor­tu­ni­ties in the United States for white people.
The aver­age white cop was a fail­ure in school who grav­i­tat­ed to law enforce­ment to show that they are somebody.
I was shocked to see one depart­ment right here in New York show­cas­ing on their social media page offi­cers who were arrest­ed and con­vict­ed sev­er­al times and were still allowed to become police officers.
Police offi­cers still believe that they have no duty to respect­ful of African-Americans and the courts have sel­dom di=one any­thing to dis­suade them from that attitude.
If the Dred Scott deci­sion pushed the coun­try clos­er to the civ­il war, I won­der what Shelby County Alabama v Holder did?
Oh, wait-we have already begun to see. They stormed the Capitol in an attempt to over­throw the gov­ern­ment, and with no real con­se­quences for Trump and his white nation­al­ist army, this is just the beginning.
I hope the Roberts court is pleased with its work.
At this point, nev­er mind the court’s doc­trine of qual­i­fied immunity.

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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. 

S.C. COP Fired And Arrested After Stomping Man In Head…(Watch Video)

Wherever you read these arti­cles, that often­times gets buried by the main­stream media, unless pub­lic out­cry forces them to cov­er them, the offend­ers are usu­al­ly the same white police offi­cers egre­gious­ly assault­ing and mur­der­ing peo­ple of col­or, usu­al­ly Black Americans.
Regular Americans have become watch­dogs over police because their depart­ments, unions, and the polit­i­cal pow­er struc­ture that have author­i­ty over them refus­es stead­fast­ly to hold these racist mur­der­ers accountable.
Instead, they con­tin­ue with the false nar­ra­tive that police abus­es are iso­lat­ed inci­dents, or worse, do not exist at all.
Private CCTV cam­eras have become ene­mies of police crime to the extent that the body-worn cam­eras that tax­pay­ers pay for to hold them account­able gen­er­al­ly nev­er gets turned on when they are abus­ing mem­bers of the pub­lic, end up being manip­u­lat­ed, evi­dence removed, and the pub­lic told it has no right to those recordings.
It is a vast con­spir­a­cy between the police, their unions, pros­e­cu­tors and Judges, and polit­i­cal patrons.

The fact that any American Police offi­cer is now being held account­able is a func­tion of decades of agi­ta­tion from Black People who decid­ed that they would no longer sit still while white race sol­diers in police uni­forms con­tin­ue to mur­der and oth­er­wise abuse them.

The events in 2020 in which Derek Chauvin open­ly mur­dered George Floyd in broad day­light in Minneapolis, Minnesota, have shone an unyield­ing spot­light on police crimes across America that can longer be denied and make an abject fool of cop apologist.
The rash of evi­dence that proves that most police offi­cers are racist bul­lies or weak-kneed cow­ards who refuse to step in and pre­vent crime can no longer be denied.
Recent laws in some munic­i­pal­i­ties that seek to pun­ish offi­cers for not stop­ping their col­leagues from assault­ing mem­bers of the pub­lic are still a work in progress.
It will be inter­est­ing to see how these cas­es are treat­ed by pro-police right-wing judges, to the extent that cas­es of that nature are brought before the court, con­sid­er­ing the pro-police abuse com­plic­i­ty of so many pros­e­cu­tor’s offices.
None of these atroc­i­ties would have come to light if the pub­lic still depend­ed on Police depart­ments to do the right thing, inves­ti­gate alle­ga­tions of abuse by their offi­cers, and take the appro­pri­ate cor­rec­tive mea­sures against cops who clear­ly are abus­ing their authority.
It too cit­i­zens jour­nal­ists to gath­er footage, some­times risk­ing life and limb on high­ways when they see police abus­ing oth­er citizens.

It is not with­out risk to film their crimes as we saw just days ago in a Miami Beach hotel lob­by where a swarm of those uni­formed thugs bru­tal­ly attacked a sin­gle Black man who had already sur­ren­dered and was hand­cuffed like rabid dogs and bru­tal­ly assault­ed him and a bystander who had the courage to film the encounter.
These kinds of events are not anom­alies; they are the norm. For as long as I can recall, the main­stream media glo­ri­fied police and ignored police abuse, in my mind, gra­tu­itous­ly por­tray­ing police as heroes to be thanked and wor­shipped above every oth­er cat­e­go­ry of workers.
As a for­mer police offi­cer, I nev­er under­stood the rea­son for that until lat­er, when I began to under­stand how these insti­tu­tions were set up and lion­ized and made to be pro­tec­tors of white supremacy.
Almost two decades after the FBI warned that white suprema­cists had invad­ed police depart­ments, nei­ther the depart­ments nor gov­ern­ment at any lev­el took any steps to root out these white ter­ror­ists from their midsts.
To begin with, these police depart­ments were a mere step up from the slave patrols from which they were gen­e­sis, so, under­stand­ably, no one would take the warn­ings seri­ous­ly or con­sid­er doing any­thing about them.

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S.C. officer fired and arrested after stomping man in head, authorities say…

A 58-year-old man in Orangeburg, S.C., was stomped by a police officer on July 26, 2021.
A 58-year-old man in Orangeburg, S.C., was stomped by a police offi­cer on July 26, 2021

Orangeburg Department of Public Safety Officer David Lance Dukes is charged with first-degree assault and battery in the July 26 attack, officials said

A police offi­cer in Orangeburg has been fired and arrest­ed after stomp­ing the head of a man who was on his hands and knees, caus­ing his head to hit the con­crete, South Carolina author­i­ties said. Orangeburg Department of Public Safety Officer David Lance Dukes is charged with first-degree assault and bat­tery in the attack on July 26, accord­ing to a war­rant from the State Law Enforcement Division. Dukes ordered a 58-year-old man who walks with a stick to the ground, but he moves care­ful­ly because he has pins and rods in his leg from a pre­vi­ous injury, attor­ney Justin Bamberg told The Times and Democrat of Orangeburg.

https://​www​.face​book​.com/​W​I​S​1​0​/​v​i​d​e​o​s​/​5​5​5​5​1​2​5​9​5​8​1​1​740

Because of my client’s dis­abil­i­ty, he’s rel­a­tive­ly slow,” Bamberg said. The man suf­fered a bruise to his fore­head and was tak­en to the hos­pi­tal by para­medics, accord­ing to the arrest war­rant. Dukes’ lawyer said he ful­ly coop­er­at­ed with the state police and is tak­ing the case seri­ous­ly. “This is a dif­fi­cult sit­u­a­tion and an unfor­tu­nate sit­u­a­tion,” Jack Furse said. “He has absolute­ly no vio­lent his­to­ry, and he’s not a pro­cliv­i­ty to violence.”
Orangeburg Public Safety offi­cials said Dukes, 38, was fired after their own review of the inci­dent, which was cap­tured on a body camera.
Bamberg said he hopes the city will release that footage. (by the AP)

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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. 

Criminals, Thug Miami Cops Brutally Assault Handcuffed Black Man.

This hap­pened in Miami Florida.
View these videos and tell me if these are police offi­cers or are they plain gang­sters who should receive the same treat­ment as gangsters?

YouTube player

Five Miami Beach dirty thugs, oh sor­ry I meant police offi­cers are fac­ing crim­i­nal charges, accused of using exces­sive force dur­ing the arrests of two men at a local hotel last week.
Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle announced charges against Sgt. Jose Perez, and offi­cers Kevin Perez, Robert Sabater, Steven Serrano, and David Rivas at a news con­fer­ence Monday accord­ing to local reporting.
The five offi­cers have been charged with bat­tery, a first-degree mis­de­meanor. Additional charges may fol­low, Rundle said.

YouTube player
The event began when Daltona Crudup alleged­ly hit an offi­cer with his scoot­er, then fled into the Royal Palm hotel, Rundle said. Surveillance video shows the first respond­ing offi­cer pulling him out of an ele­va­tor, and Crudup could be seen lying face down on the ground with his hands raised. He is then handcuffed.

According to Rundle, the sur­veil­lance and body­cam footage shows Sgt. Perez and Officer Perez kick­ing Crudup. The video iden­ti­fies Officer Perez as the offi­cer who is seen slam­ming his head to the floor.

Khalid Vaughn, who is shown in the sur­veil­lance and body cam­era footage film­ing Crudup’s arrest, is first seen inch­ing away from an oncom­ing offi­cer and is then tack­led and lat­er punched by Officer Sabater, accord­ing to Rundle. He is lat­er punched again by offi­cers Rivas and Serrano, Rundle said.
The state attor­ney said charges have been dropped against Vaughn, but the case against Crudup for alleged­ly hit­ting the offi­cer with his scoot­er is going for­ward at this time.(CNN reports.)

Like I say as I report on these inci­dents dai­ly, these acts are not polic­ing. These are crim­i­nal thugs act­ing as ordi­nary crim­i­nals, they should be treat­ed as one would treat any oth­er criminal.

Taking Charge Of Our Lives Depends On Us…

It is dif­fi­cult to advise any­one with­out com­ing off as preachy, con­de­scend­ing, or both.
When it comes to our peo­ple, the chal­lenge is even greater because we do not want to accept advice or guid­ance from our own.
So the advice is gen­er­al­ly greet­ed with a healthy dose of skep­ti­cism and dis­dain and even­tu­al­ly result in ad hominem attacks on the giver.
Whenever I think about this sub­ject, I tend to be rather hes­i­tant as Bill Cosby comes to mind. Bill Cosby spoke out about what he per­ceived to be some things we could change about our­selves. People turned on Cosby because it forced them to look inward, and we tend not to like to do that.

Eggplants, I’m not a fan but my wife loves these.

So even though Cosby had the suc­cess to back up his advice, peo­ple chose to grav­i­tate to the neg­a­tives that they per­ceived in the mes­sen­ger rather than use the mes­sage to their advantage.
What was so wrong about pulling up your damn pants that are show­ing the crack of your ass? What was wrong about say­ing that women must behave respect­ful­ly to get respect or choose who they have babies with wisely?

These veg­eta­bles I plant­ed in pots above ground to keep them away from ani­mals.
I only have Sunday after­noons and nights after I get home from work after 8; 00 pm to plant and tend to them.

Like every­one else, Mister Cosby was human, and he made mis­takes like the rest of us but he had every right to speak on the sub­jects on which he spoke even as his own fail­ings and frail­ties were becom­ing evident.
I am nowhere near Bill Cosby’s suc­cess­es finan­cial­ly, but nei­ther am I car­ry­ing his shame at what he has been accused of doing. However, that does not pre­clude me from say­ing we can do some sim­ple things better.
Save some mon­ey for a rainy day and for­go spend­ing on shiny objects. Buy bur­ial insur­ance, par­tic­u­lar­ly for elders, so there will be no need to set up (Gofund me pages) that begs for mon­ey to bury a deceased loved one.

Watermelon. My per­son­al favorite. Yup in pots!

Invest a lit­tle mon­ey in stocks and bonds. Start our own busi­ness­es &, where pos­si­ble, sup­port Black-owned busi­ness­es to stop a lit­tle bit of the cash hem­or­rhag­ing out of our communities.
If you go into an estab­lish­ment and they refuse to serve you, please take your mon­ey some­place else. Sure it is impor­tant to let the pub­lic under­stand that a par­tic­u­lar estab­lish­ment refused to serve you.
I also get the need for the social media videos; racism needs to be uproot­ed and dis­card­ed, which requires that it be exposed.

Bell Peppers

Nevertheless, be advised that pri­vate estab­lish­ments have a right to refuse ser­vice to whomev­er they chose.
Your mon­ey is your pow­er, do not spend your time yelling and scream­ing at peo­ple; worse, why beg them to serve you. Do you know what they do to the food before they bring it to you, or don’t you care?
Why empow­er peo­ple who despise you?

Tomatoes

Where pos­si­ble, grow some veg­eta­bles in your front, back, side yard, in pots, wood­en box­es, flower- pots on porch­es wher­ev­er. If you can grow flow­ers, you can grow veg­eta­bles and herbs that are good for you.
I hear the fan­cy term food deserts being bandied about these days, and I do get that based on the def­i­n­i­tion below, there are regions where poor peo­ple may find it hard to get health­i­er options in gro­cery shopping.
One def­i­n­i­tion for that ter­mi­nol­o­gy is’ regions where peo­ple have lim­it­ed access to healthy and afford­able food. This may be due to hav­ing a low income or hav­ing to trav­el far­ther to find healthy food options.
Traveling far­ther to find fresh fruits and veg­eta­bles can be a chal­lenge for peo­ple with lim­it­ed resources and no transportation.

Chilli Peppers

One way to alle­vi­ate that prob­lem may be to find friends and asso­ciates who have a car and go gro­cery shop­ping where healthy foods are. Ask if you can trav­el with them and offer a few dol­lars toward their gas mon­ey. It is hard to imag­ine a friend or fam­i­ly mem­ber turn­ing down five dol­lars to pur­chase gas when they were going to go shop­ping anyway.
Essentially what I am say­ing is to build coali­tions around these events that are ben­e­fi­cial to you. Make it an out­ing to go gro­cery shop­ping, and this is also a great way for elder­ly res­i­dents to spend qual­i­ty time together.
And while you are at it, buy some veg­etable seed or seedlings; each per­son can plant two or three types of veg­eta­bles depend­ing on the space they have.

Basil

Well-tend­ed veg­eta­bles will pro­duce a har­vest which may then be shared. Those who plant­ed toma­toes and pep­pers can share with those who plant­ed let­tuce and egg­plants, and so on.….
The ideas are not panaceas, but they offer health­i­er alter­na­tives to McDonald’s and fat­ty and processed foods.

Zucchini with Cilantro plant­ed in between …

Cherry Peppers

Beets

Callalo

Every Able-bodied Voter Who Qualify Should Ensure Kevin McCarthy Never Gets To Be Speaker Of The House

While attend­ing a func­tion for Tennesse Republicans, the California Trump syco­phant told the gath­er­ing at the clown show quote, “I want you to watch Nancy Pelosi hand me that gav­el … It’ll be hard not to hit her with it.
Of course, this is the same ‘moron’ speak­er Pelosi recent­ly called such a ‘moron’ for oppos­ing new mask man­dates at the U.S. Capitol amid ris­ing COVID-19 case numbers.

Trump syco­phant, Insurrection crit­ic, now turned insur­rec­tion denier, Trump lap­dog. Kevin McCarthy.

At a time when polit­i­cal vio­lence is of great con­cern, a mere 7 months after his insur­rec­tion tried to pull off a coup de grâce and failed, here is one of the chief insur­rec­tion sup­port­ers and Trump lap­dog advo­cat­ing vio­lence while pre­tend­ing to be joking.
These dan­ger­ous peo­ple need to be removed from office and should nev­er have access to pow­er; they are dangerous.
Right here in New York, we have oth­er Trump lap­dogs, Elise Stefanik, R‑N.Y, chair of the House GOP cau­cus, she will do and say any­thing to cur­ry favor for the one-term, twice impeached abysmal fail­ure who should have already been sit­ting in a prison cell for incit­ing an over­throw of the government.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Calif., left, and Rep. Elise Stefanik, R‑N.Y.,

Where are the Democrats who should be lin­ing up to remove this teg-reg from office? These are the seats that the Democratic Party should be tar­get­ing with an all-out, take no pris­on­ers blitz to remove these dan­ger­ous racists from office and let them crawl back under the rocks from which they crawled.

Cop Apparently Caught On Video Hitting A Kid On A Bike Then Fleeing…

You cannot make these things up.
I thought that it was a serious crime for a motorist to knowingly hit a pedestrian or to be involved in any vehicular accident and leave the scene unless it is for a damn good reason like to save the life of the person injured or to avoid been killed by an angry mob etc.?
Well, obviously, I am wrong; if you are a cop, you can simply keep on going, and worse, no other cop will even bother to take a report. Talk about being above the law!!!

The offi­cer appears to have hit the boy but did­n’t stop to help him

L.A.’s KTLA5 reports, a moth­er and a com­mu­ni­ty, are out­raged after an alleged hit and run that left a 14-year-old boy injured. The car cap­tured on video hit­ting him was a California Highway Patrol cruis­er. The dri­ver fled the scene.

The inci­dent hap­pened on June 27th. The boy was attend­ing a local car show in East L.A. when it hap­pened. Luckily wit­ness­es at the event not only saw what hap­pened but record­ed it as well. What’s most shock­ing is that after the offi­cer hit the boy, he just kept going. The boy suf­fered some seri­ous injuries, includ­ing a shoul­der injury and con­cus­sion, and the effects are still being felt a month lat­er. His moth­er, Sara Cervantes, said the con­cus­sion was so bad, the boy’s speech was slurred, say­ing, “You could tell that some­thing was wrong and he couldn’t talk cor­rect­ly; he was slur­ring his words.”

What’s more out­ra­geous is that oth­er offi­cers seem­ing­ly moved to pro­tect the offi­cer in question:

Community activists and the boy’s moth­er claim that the offi­cer didn’t stop to help the boy. They also said that sev­er­al indi­vid­u­als tried to report the hit-and-run to oth­er offi­cers who were patrolling the area, but not a sin­gle offi­cer would take a report.

Now out­rage has spread with­in the com­mu­ni­ty with calls for the CHP to release the officer’s name and ter­mi­nate him.
“It was absolute­ly dis­gust­ing to see the video of them just hit him and take off, and didn’t even try to find out where his par­ent was or seek med­ical atten­tion for him,” said Alejandra Estrada, a com­mu­ni­ty activist.
There’s still been no response from the CHP.

Of course not; why would they respond to the tax­pay­ing pub­lic that hires them and pays their salaries? They are unac­count­able to anyone?
But that is exact­ly what they are allowed to do in the United States. Why?
Because in the United States, the police have always been the oppres­sors of the abused African-American com­mu­ni­ty. Police serve as a bul­wark that pro­tects white supremacy.
Therefore, the thing we know as ‘police’ has always been an ene­my of the Black com­mu­ni­ty, regard­less of whether there are Black offi­cers in their departments.

Where Are The Fathers Of These Little Black Girls As These Nazi Monsters Brutalize Their Daughters?

This is fuck­ing outrageous.
If this does­n’t stop, there will be seri­ous con­se­quences; there is no way that this kind of crazi­ness can con­tin­ue with­out seri­ous blowback.
It is get­ting from bad to worse in America but don’t just take my word for it, view this video for your­self, and then decide.
Remember that nei­ther the young lady nor her moth­er com­mit­ted a crime.

https://​www​.face​book​.com/​1​0​2​0​2​3​0​6​2​1​0​4​1​2​1​/​v​i​d​e​o​s​/​8​1​4​8​5​5​1​8​9​2​1​2​4​19/

So as a father, I am won­der­ing if my daugh­ter was walk­ing down the road and some cop pulls up, grabs her, then throws her on the ground, and com­mences to choke her with his full weight on top of her in the swel­ter­ing heat, am I sup­posed to stand there until he kills her?
Before you answer the ques­tion, let me first say that even if she had com­mit­ted a crime, this would have been out­ra­geous as there are myr­i­ad ways that a real police offi­cer, not a race sol­dier, can deal with a sit­u­a­tion that does not include throw­ing some­one to the ground and lay­ing on top of them.

https://​www​.face​book​.com/​w​a​t​c​h​/​?​r​e​f​=​s​e​a​r​c​h​&​v​=​1​7​7​6​4​7​4​9​4​4​3​0​0​6​5​&​e​x​t​e​r​n​a​l​_​l​o​g​_​i​d​=​0​8​3​d​6​f​d​5​-​4​f​e​7​-​4​3​f​f​-​8​885 – 8519a169b75f&q=black%20filter%20with%20ana%20kasparin%20black%20teen%20wrongfully%20arrested%20and%20restrained

Now remem­ber that she com­mit­ted no crime, broke no ordi­nance, so as a father, what would you do if your daugh­ter was being treat­ed that way? Would you stand by and allow some thug piece of garbage to mur­der your child with­out tak­ing action?
Where is the out­rage while all of this mad­ness is going on? Where are the fathers that need to step up and make an exam­ple out of these mur­der­ers and ensure that before they pon­der com­mit­ting these atroc­i­ties, they think long and hard about doing so?

The facts are as fol­lows as report­ed by Newsweek​.com; Someone alleged­ly con­tact­ed the Kaufman County, Texas sher­if­f’s depart­ment to report that 18-year-old Nekia Trigg was jump­ing in front of cars in traf­fic. Trigg is a res­i­dent of Forney, TexasWhen the sev­en-minute video begins, an offi­cer, iden­ti­fied as Kaufman County Deputy Conner Martin, is lay­ing on top of Trigg as women around them scream. Trigg’s moth­er, 41-year-old Antanique Ray, tells Martin, “You don’t have to ever hit her, okay? She will stay down.
Martin tells Ray, “You need to back up. You need to back up.” As Ray light­ly touch­es Martin’s hand, grip­ping her daugh­ter’s wrist, Martin starts scream­ing, “Do not touch me! Back up! Back up!”
Ray responds, “Just calm down,” as the offi­cer lays back down on top of Trigg. Ray then begins hold­ing Trigg’s hand as Martin con­tin­ues pin­ning Trigg’s wrist to the ground.
One girl says Trigg’s name and keeps telling her, “Just calm down.” Another per­son exclaims, “It’s 102 degrees out here.“Trigg, still pinned under Martin, then says, “I can’t breathe.” At some point, she vom­its as Martin con­tin­ues hold­ing her down. The cam­era zooms in to find a stream of watery vom­it coat­ing her right cheek as she heaves with labored breath.

Martin and anoth­er offi­cer then instruct Trigg to roll over. They roll her over and hand­cuff her as she cries. Ray then screams at Martin, “I need your f*cking badge num­ber and your name.” She then notices Martin’s body cam­era dan­gling from his shirt. She asks him why his cam­era was­n’t on his shirt cor­rect­ly while he was pin­ning her daughter.
As the offi­cers walk Trigg towards a patrol car, the cam­era view gets blocked by the offi­cers’ bod­ies. Then, Martin yells, “Let go of her!” twice before tack­ling Ray to the ground in the mid­dle of the street.
An offi­cer with a Taser then threat­ens bystanders to get back as Ray is arrest­ed. The afore­men­tioned sec­ond Black girl begins repeat­ed­ly scream­ing, “Put your hands up!” as the offi­cer points his less-lethal weapon at them.
Now lay­ing on her front in the mid­dle of the road while hand­cuffed, Ray says, “All I did was ask you to loosen the hand­cuffs on her.” Ray tells the offi­cers that she did­n’t touch them at all.

Near the end of the video, the girl record­ing it says, “You got sev­en police out here, for three lit­tle Black girls.”
“Nekia was sim­ply walk­ing home and some­body called the police & said she was try­ing to jump in front of cars,” the woman who post­ed the video on Instagram wrote in the video’s caption.
Ray’s cousin, Teronica Williams, told the afore­men­tioned news out­let of Trigg, “Me and our oth­er fam­i­ly mem­bers are hurt this hap­pened to her because we know what type of per­son she is.”
“It takes one per­son to watch this video and deval­ue both her and Kia’s char­ac­ter and have the world think­ing they deserve this and that — and that’s not fair,” Williams continued.
Williams attests that police arrest­ed Trigg for no rea­son as there’s not much traf­fic to inter­fere with­in the neigh­bor­hood where Trigg was arrested.
“Kids are lit­er­al­ly always out­side in the street rid­ing bikes, play­ing bas­ket­ball, etc,” she said.
Ray has alleged police bru­tal­i­ty on the part of the offi­cers. The Kaufman Sheriff’s Office said on Facebook that peo­ple should stop call­ing their office about the inci­dent because the num­ber of calls has become “unman­age­able.”

Police Arrive To Save Mother Of 3 From Being Hurt By Spouse, End Up Killing Her And Seriously Injuring Man..

Nothing like call­ing the Rambo cow­boys in because some­one is threat­en­ing to kill anoth­er in a domes­tic sit­u­a­tion .….……but has­n’t yet, at least. And what do the Rambo cow­boys do? Critically wound the per­son threat­en­ing harm and killing the inno­cent vic­tim that was being threatened.
Ends well, right?
Well, if you ask the peo­ple who stu­pid­ly believe that the answer to America’s police prob­lems is to mil­i­ta­rize the police fur­ther and not to defund them, employ more pro­fes­sion­als trained in de-esca­la­tion and domes­tic dis­putes, you will find a way to make the argu­ment that this was a pos­i­tive outcome.
It is clear­er by the day that the old cliché “give a man a ham­mer and every­thing becomes a nail” is appro­pri­ate when talk­ing about American police.
These guys show up in a hur­ry look­ing for every rea­son to dis­charge their ser­vice weapons. What their actions are demon­strat­ing is a blood-lust that dri­ves them into look­ing to dis­charge their weapons mul­ti­ple times at a sin­gle per­son, then seek to jus­ti­fy doing so.
We see this hap­pen­ing even when they arrive at a scene where they are in no dan­ger because they have all the oppor­tu­ni­ty to take cov­er and spend the nec­es­sary time talk­ing down a per­son going through a men­tal cri­sis; they quick­ly decide that fir­ing a bar­rage of bul­lets into the per­son is a bet­ter out­come than wait­ing to allow a per­son trained in deal­ing with men­tal health sit­u­a­tions to arrive. This is what has been legit­imized into accep­tance in America, sim­ply mak­ing it offi­cial for police to become on-the-spot exe­cu­tion­ers to dis­pose of peo­ple they do not want to deal with.
People of col­or, poor whites, peo­ple suf­fer­ing men­tal break­downs, peo­ple with devel­op­men­tal dis­abil­i­ties, they sim­ply kill them then cre­ate a justification.
They did this to 21-year-old Ryan Leroux, who was expe­ri­enc­ing a men­tal break­down in Maryland days ago. Ryan Leroux had just lost his grand­moth­er, his job, his long­time girl­friend, liv­ing out of his car, and was hav­ing a men­tal breakdown.
He was at a McDonald’s dri­ve-through alleged­ly with a gun on the seat of his car. Police arrived and spent some time talk­ing to him, he threat­ened no one, but that did not stop the police from fir­ing a report­ed 25-bul­lets into his car, essen­tial­ly turn­ing his car into a coffin.

THIS IS HOW THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA CHARACTERIZED THIS LATEST KILLING

Officer gunfire may have killed the mother of 3 in hostage standoff, San Antonio police say

An hours-long hostage stand­off in San Antonio end­ed with police crit­i­cal­ly wound­ing an armed sus­pect ear­ly Tuesday morn­ing and appar­ent­ly killing a moth­er of three with errant gun­fire, author­i­ties announced Wednesday.

This is an extreme­ly trag­ic event for all involved, and I give my deep­est con­do­lences to the chil­dren and fam­i­ly of the deceased vic­tim,” San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said dur­ing a press conference.

McManus iden­ti­fied the vic­tim as 29-year-old Neida Tijerina.

Officers dis­cov­ered that Ms. Tijerina had died from a gun­shot wound,” he said. “The Bexar County Medical Examiner per­formed an autop­sy this morn­ing. While they can­not yet con­clu­sive­ly state that Neida died as a result of the offi­cers fir­ing on the sus­pect, the phys­i­cal evi­dence appears to sup­port that conclusion.”

A spokesman with the med­ical exam­in­er’s office said Thursday that Tijerina’s cause of death is “bal­lis­tic injury of the chest,” and her man­ner of death as “homi­cide.”

McManus said police respond­ed to an apart­ment com­plex at about 9 p.m. on Monday “for a sui­ci­dal male threat­en­ing to kill his com­mon-law wife,” who was with her three young children.

When they arrived on the scene, McManus said police learned it was a hostage sit­u­a­tion. The sus­pect, Angel Sanchez, 28, was armed with a shot­gun and wear­ing body armor. Sanchez had a his­to­ry of domes­tic vio­lence and “indi­cat­ed to fam­i­ly that he was going to kill Ms. Tijerina and then kill him­self,” McManus said.

Police then called for addi­tion­al units, includ­ing SWAT and a hostage nego­tia­tor. Officers estab­lished a perime­ter and evac­u­at­ed near­by res­i­dents, McManus said. Sanchez then exit­ed the apart­ment and point­ed a shot­gun at officers.

Sanchez was heard taunt­ing offi­cers try­ing to get them into a con­fronta­tion,” McManus said, and attempts to de-esca­late with him were unsuccessful.

Tijerina exit­ed the apart­ment but would not go with the police because “her chil­dren were still inside, and she did not want to leave them alone,” McManus said.

Sanchez then stepped out of the apart­ment a sec­ond time, hold­ing an infant, but then went back inside.

That’s when three offi­cers got on a roof of a near­by apart­ment build­ing, McManus said. Sanchez then exit­ed a final time and point­ed the shot­gun at offi­cers on the ground, police said.

The three offi­cers who were pro­vid­ing cov­er from the roof opened fire on Sanchez, strik­ing him. Sanchez dropped his shot­gun, and offi­cers approached to take him into custody.”

That’s when offi­cers dis­cov­ered Tijerina dead inside the apart­ment, McManus said.

I want to assure Neida’s fam­i­ly and the com­mu­ni­ty that this inci­dent will be inves­ti­gat­ed in its entire­ty,” McManus said but added that body cam­era video of the inci­dent would not be released because it involved domes­tic violence.

YouTube player

Tijerina’s three chil­dren ranged in ages from 3 months to 15-years-old and were unharmed, police said. Sanchez is described as the father of the baby.

Sanchez, who was crit­i­cal­ly wound­ed, is charged with three counts of aggra­vat­ed assault of a pub­lic servant.

NBC affil­i­ate WOAI in San Antonio spoke with Tijerina’s sis­ter, Jasmine.

She told the news out­let she was strug­gling to process what happened.

Everything’s just … it’s a lot of emo­tions,” she said. “It’s just hard for me right now.”

David Thomas, a pro­fes­sor of foren­sics stud­ies at Florida Gulf Coast University, worked as a police offi­cer for 20 years in Michigan and Florida, doing duty in SWAT and as a negotiator.

Domestic vio­lence calls are gen­er­al­ly con­sid­ered among the most dan­ger­ous for police, Thomas said, and there are many fac­tors that could have led to Tijerina’s death.

It’s a night­mare sce­nario,” Thomas said.

He said that even if all three offi­cers who fired at Sanchez had hit him, a bul­let could have gone through his body and struck Tijerina.

Thomas said using a weapon while on duty can be tax­ing psy­cho­log­i­cal­ly, but acci­den­tal­ly shoot­ing some­one is a “worst-case sce­nario” for an officer.

He or she feels absolute­ly respon­si­ble for that loss of life,” Thomas said. “They car­ry that bur­den with them. (NBC reported)»»»»»

Low Life Texas Deputy AG, “Simone Biles National Embarrassment”.…

On the left is a mon­grel Texas deputy AG, and on the right, the illus­tri­ous Simone Biles great­est gym­nast ever.

You real­ly can­not make this stuff up; white racism is such degen­er­a­tive men­tal retar­da­tion that these mag­gots can­not help them­selves from being the degen­er­ate mag­gots that they are.
The Deputy Attorney General of the state of Texas, which has the high hon­or of being where Simone Biles choos­es to live-tweet­ed that the great­est gym­nast in the his­to­ry of the game is, get this, .….….. “A NATIONAL EMBARRASSMENT. ”
The low-life Trump-sup­port­ing, insur­rec­tion­ist bitch ass cow­ard has since delet­ed the tweet and issued anoth­er tweet.

No, you got caught, and now you fear the con­se­quences; that’s what’s hap­pen­ing here. Michael Phelps is the great­est swim­mer in American his­to­ry, Simone Biles is the great­est gym­nast of all times bar none. They have changed the rules of the game because she is that good. Michael Phelps stepped away from the game because of the pres­sure and returned.
Michael Jordon, arguably the great­est bas­ket­ball play­er of all time, stepped away from the game and returned to shine again. Michael Phelps is a white male; Simone Biles is a beau­ti­ful young Black woman who has brought 27 gold medals to America.
What has Aaron Reitz brought to America? Let see, sup­port­ing insur­rec­tion­ists who attacked the nation’s seat of demo­c­ra­t­ic gov­er­nance to install a nar­cis­sis­tic psy­chopath King.
Simone Biles should wear this low-life’ com­ment as a badge of hon­or. Patriots like Aaron Reitz’s idea of patri­o­tism are peo­ple who try to over­turn their coun­tries gov­ern­ment. Simone Biles is not the kind of patri­ot that ris­es against her own country.
In the real world, we call the likes of the dirty dog Aaron Reit traitors.
I won’t even both­er with the oth­er incon­se­quen­tial white degen­er­ates who would crit­i­cize her, suf­fic­ing to say that they would not be able to car­ry all the medals she has won with­out break­ing down exhausted.

More pow­er to Simone Bies for step­ping away and look­ing out for her­self; she was out there rep­re­sent­ing a coun­try that does not val­ue her or her race to hell with all of them; let them all go to hell.

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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. 

Want Proof That Prosecutors Are Complicit In Not Going After Dirty Cops, Here Is Some…

How many arti­cles have I writ­ten in which I make the case that pros­e­cu­tors are cul­pa­ble in police cor­rup­tion when they drag inves­ti­ga­tions out, hop­ing that pub­lic out­rage will dis­si­pate, then issue deci­sions claim­ing that they did exhaus­tive inves­ti­ga­tions and found no crim­i­nal conduct?
The oth­er ques­tion is, how often has this writer argued that the idea of a neigh­bor­ing police depart­ment tak­ing over an inves­ti­ga­tion, then politi­cians, pros­e­cu­tors, and police claim that that-that con­sti­tutes an inde­pen­dent inves­ti­ga­tion is laughable?
If you do not know, nei­ther do I because I have writ­ten so many of these types of pieces. I am a lit­tle trou­bled by offi­cials, whether politi­cians, lawyers, or police, who think so lit­tle of our abil­i­ty to think for ourselves.
Thanks to a spe­cial pro­vi­sion in Wisconsin Law, a Judge was asked to take a sec­ond look at a case in which a police offi­cer shot a man sit­ting in his car to death.
The black offi­cer had killed two oth­er peo­ple while on duty in his short five-year career, but pros­e­cu­tors ruled that they saw noth­ing wrong in all three cases.
The fam­i­ly of the last of the offi­cer’s vic­tims decid­ed to use the spe­cial pro­vi­sion in Wisconsin law to ask a judge to take a look, and what do you know? The judge over­ruled the pros­e­cu­tors and ordered a spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor to pros­e­cute the case with­in 60-days.
We know that pros­e­cu­tors’ offices depend on the police to do inves­ti­ga­tions, but police are not doing any­one a favor when they do their jobs; it is their job to go after criminals.
Whenever an offi­cer or a group of offi­cers believe they are too big or impor­tant for the job, they should step away; no one has a right to be a cop.
Prosecutors should not fear retal­i­a­tion from police offi­cers or their unions. The prob­lem, as I have con­sis­tent­ly point­ed out, is not the sup­posed close work­ing relationships.
It is about race in some cas­es, cam­paign dona­tions, and polit­i­cal endorse­ments. That is what’s at stake, not work­ing relationships.
Philidelphia’s District Attorney Larry Krasner, a for­mer Public defend­er, has done heavy lift­ing before and after being elect­ed District Attorney in his city. In the process, he has come up against immense pres­sure from police, police unions, police apol­o­gists, and sup­port­ers of the sta­tus quo who want things to remain the way they have always been.
DA Krasner cleaned house when he took office and estab­lished an office where the rule of law applies to every cit­i­zen with­in the reach­es of his jurisdiction.

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»>

Jay Anderson's mother, Linda Anderson, holds a sign memorializing her son during a Get Out The Vote rally in Chicago on Oct. 29, 2020.
Jay Anderson’s moth­er, Linda Anderson, holds a sign memo­ri­al­iz­ing her son dur­ing a Get Out The Vote ral­ly in Chicago on Oct. 29, 2020.

Wisconsin officer to be charged in death of Black man after judge overrules prosecutor

Milwaukee County Judge Glenn Yamahiro said prob­a­ble cause exist­ed to charge Joseph Mensah in Jay Anderson Jr.’s death.

MADISON, Wis. — A Wisconsin judge on Wednesday found prob­a­ble cause to charge a police offi­cer in the 2016 slay­ing of a Black man who was sit­ting in a parked car, tak­ing the rare step of over­rul­ing pros­e­cu­tors years after they declined to charge the officer.

Milwaukee County Judge Glenn Yamahiro said prob­a­ble cause exist­ed to charge Joseph Mensah with homi­cide by neg­li­gent use of a weapon in Jay Anderson Jr.’s death. He ordered a spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor to file the charge with­in 60 days formally.

Commission Suspends Wauwatosa Cop Who Killed 3 People in 5 Years
In the last five years, Alvin Cole, left, Antonio Gonzalez, and Jay Anderson Jr. are the three peo­ple killed by Wauwatosa Police Officer Joseph Mensah. (Photos pro­vid­ed by Attorney Kimberly Motley)

Yamahiro’s deci­sion marks a vic­to­ry for Anderson’s fam­i­ly, who took advan­tage of a lit­tle-used pro­vi­sion in state law to ask the judge for a sec­ond look at the case.

Mensah, also Black, dis­cov­ered the 25-year-old Anderson sleep­ing in his car at 3 a.m. in a park in Wauwatosa, a Milwaukee sub­urb. Mensah said he shot Anderson after Anderson reached for a gun, but Anderson’s fam­i­ly dis­putes that. The judge on Wednesday said the evi­dence did not back up Mensah’s ver­sion of events.

Anderson was the sec­ond of three peo­ple Mensah shot to death dur­ing a five-year stint with the Wauwatosa Police Department. Prosecutors cleared him of crim­i­nal wrong­do­ing in each case.

Anderson’s fam­i­ly asked Yamahiro to review that case under an obscure state law that allows judges to direct­ly ques­tion wit­ness­es in what’s known as a John Doe pro­ceed­ing. A judge who finds suf­fi­cient evi­dence for charges can file them direct­ly, leav­ing pros­e­cu­tors out of the equa­tion. At least six oth­er states have sim­i­lar statu­to­ry pro­vi­sions, but attor­neys say the process is rarely used in Wisconsin.

The judge said he decid­ed that the sin­gle charge against Mensah was war­rant­ed based on tes­ti­mo­ny about the cir­cum­stances of the shoot­ing. Mensah should have been aware that pulling his weapon on Anderson cre­at­ed an unrea­son­able risk of death, Yamahiro said.

The judge said that Mensah could have tak­en steps to de-esca­late the sit­u­a­tion, includ­ing wait­ing for back­up that was on the way.

Anderson’s behav­ior was con­sis­tent with some­one intox­i­cat­ed, had been asleep, and was try­ing but hav­ing dif­fi­cul­ty com­ply­ing with Mensah’s orders, Yamahiro said.
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