Elijah Cummings’ Wife Maya Rockeymoore Expected To Run For His House Seat

Karu F. Daniels

Late con­gress­man and civ­il rights activist Elijah Cummings’ grave isn’t even cold and there’s already news swirling about some­one gun­ning for his House of Representatives seat.

It’s the nature of many busi­ness­es — espe­cial­ly pol­i­tics — but the “who” tongues are wag­ging about is his younger, polit­i­cal­ly ambi­tious (and high­ly edu­cat­ed) widow.

Maya Rockeymoore Cummings is like­ly the suc­ces­sor to fill his con­gres­sion­al seat, accord­ing to a report from The Washington Examiner.

The long­time Democrat’s death — on Thursday, at age 68, caused by “long­stand­ing health chal­lenges” — came as a shock to many polit­i­cal observers.

Rockeymoore, 48, wed the long­time polit­i­cal lion in 2008, cur­rent­ly serves as the Maryland Democratic Party chair­woman and ran unsuc­cess­ful­ly for state gov­er­nor in 2017.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has 10 days to sched­ule a spe­cial elec­tion for Cummings’ 7th District seat and accord­ing to polit­i­cal sources will like­ly set the date by the mid­dle of next week.

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In January, a pri­ma­ry elec­tion is expect­ed to take place with the gen­er­al elec­tion is set for March.

The win­ner will serve out of the remain­der of Cummings’ term, which expires in December of 2020.

An uniden­ti­fied polit­i­cal oper­a­tive said Rockeymoore Cumnmings has no imme­di­ate plans to run for the seat, which remains a Democratic strong­hold, and will pass on the spe­cial election.

It could be bad for “optics” — but great grist for the mill if she just went ahead and do what some think is inevitable.

But tim­ing is everything.

Rockeymoore Cummings, a moth­er of three, has not com­ment­ed on any spec­u­la­tion but the Maryland Democratic Party did release a state­ment on Friday ask­ing for privacy.

We ask the pub­lic and the press to allow Maryland Democratic Party Chair Dr. Maya Rockeymoore Cummings — and the rest of the Cummings fam­i­ly — time and space to grieve their loss,” said the par­ty, accord­ing to Patch.

A grad­u­ate of Purdue University, the Texas native is the founder of polit­i­cal con­sult­ing firm Global Policy Solutions. She pre­vi­ous­ly served as vice pres­i­dent of research and pro­grams for the Congressional Black Caucus and authored The Political Action Handbook: A How-To Guide for the Hip Hop Generation in 2004.

Maya Rockeymoore Cummings is the chairwoman of the Maryland Democratic Party.

Mexico & Jamaica’s March Into Failed Statehood…

MB
Image result for cartel members free guzmans son from security officers in Calcium

As Mexican troops moved in to arrest Ovidio Guzman Lopez, Mexican nar­co King, and one of the sons of Joaquin El Chapo Guzman serv­ing time in an American Prison, armed gun­men sur­round­ed the sol­diers forc­ing the release of Guzman who was being arrest­ed on an American extra­di­tion war­rant.
Sounds eeri­ly like Déjà vu, where have we heard this before?

The sol­diers were humil­i­at­ed, as events unfold­ed in Culiacan the strong­hold of the Sinaloa Cartel, but not as much as the Government of President Manuel Lopez Obrador.
*Ironically, Lopez Obrador has been high­ly crit­i­cal of what he calls the mil­i­ta­rized approach to law enforce­ment by his pre­de­ces­sors, accord­ing to the Los Angeles Times.
*In our own Jamaica, we have heard the very same idi­ot­ic argu­ments prof­fered by some in the high­est lead­er­ship posi­tions.
In oth­er words, they want to put an end to the stark and ram­pant vio­lence and killing in our coun­try but they want to do so with feath­ered gloves and pow­dered hand­ker­chiefs.
When the house is on fire, you want water or foam to put it out, and it requires skilled fire­men, not talk­ers and pon­tif­i­cates.

The Mexican gangs went around the city set­ting fires to vehi­cles and block­ing the egress of the sol­diers. Several sol­diers were dis­armed and paci­fied by the heav­i­ly armed gangs.

Image result for cartel members free guzmans son from security officers in Calcium

In a weak attempt at face-sav­ing Mexico’s Security Secretary AlfansoDurazo said: “There was no pact with crim­i­nals, there is no failed state.” “There was a failed oper­a­tion.” Typical politi­cian, it is remark­able how they man­age to blame the secu­ri­ty forces when they fuck up and allow crim­i­nals to gain con­trol.
The equal­ly pathet­ic Defense Secretary Luis Cresencio blamed the group of secu­ri­ty offi­cials for what he called eager­ness to pur­sue Guzman with­out autho­riza­tion from super­vi­sors.
Those who are ratio­nal fair and awake will remem­ber that Jamaican author­i­ties did the very same thing after the secu­ri­ty forces valiant­ly annexed the law­less Tivoli Gardens to Jamaica, instead of receiv­ing a tick­er-tape parade they received a tongue lash­ing by the dirt­bags in gov­ern­ment who are total­ly unwor­thy of the posi­tions they held. As if their dis­gust­ing response was­n’t bad enough, they brought in a for­eign­er in the per­son of a for­mer Bajan jurist, to fur­ther dis­re­spect our secu­ri­ty forces.

Image result for cartel members free guzmans son from security officers in Calcium


There was a report­ed 60 secu­ri­ty offi­cers in a con­voy of vehi­cles and they were eas­i­ly over­pow­ered.
Mexico’s secu­ri­ty cab­i­net decid­ed to call off the oper­a­tion alleged­ly with the goal of ( get this), “safe­guard­ing the well-being and tran­quil­i­ty of Culiacan soci­ety.“
If this was­n’t so stu­pid it would be fun­ny. the tran­quil­i­ty of a city run by nar­co-ter­ror­ists and gang­sters.
It was just the pre­vi­ous Monday that nar­co-ter­ror­ists had mur­dered 14 police offi­cers in the state of Michoacan.

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According to reports, con­voys of trucks dri­ven by masked gun­men patrolled the city cen­ter, at least one of the mount­ed with a .50-cal­iber machine gun. They seized and set fire to dozens of vehi­cles includ­ing a bus and a police car, and block­ing at least 14 roads.
The specter of armed gang­sters parad­ing the streets of Kingston before the secu­ri­ty forces went into Tivoli Gardens is still fresh in the minds of many Jamaicans. After all, it was just nine (9) years ago.
One Mexican woman bemoaned what she char­ac­ter­ized as the gov­ern­men­t’s sur­ren­der. “The peo­ple who real­ly are in charge here are the nar­cos”.
As are the gang­sters in Jamaica!
In response to the shock­ing humil­i­a­tion of the secu­ri­ty forces, the Mexican President said: “The cap­ture of one crim­i­nal can­not be worth more than the lives of peo­ple”.

Image result for mexican security forces embarrassed in Culiacan

It is the lan­guage being used today even as crime con­tin­ues to esca­late in Jamaica. This year alone, over a thou­sand peo­ple have been mur­dered with over two months to go in the year.
Jamaica’s Prime Minister Andrew Holness, told a group of peo­ple who sur­round­ed him com­plain­ing about the police, that the police may have caught a crim­i­nal, but they alien­at­ed the com­mu­ni­ty. Imagine a law­less Jamaican crim­i­nal-lov­ing inner-city com­mu­ni­ty being alien­at­ed from the rule of law?
No oth­er Jamaican Prime Minister has so immersed him­self into the day to day affairs of law ‑enforce­ment, in which he has no busi­ness, as Andrew Holness has. As such he will bear the full respon­si­bil­i­ty for the con­tin­ued ero­sion of the rule of law in our coun­try.
That is the kind of talk the Mexican President and Defense Secretary Luis Cresencio used against their own secu­ri­ty forces, instead of lay­ing blame where it belongs with the blood-thirsty narco-terrorists.

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In recent weeks the Jamaican Justice Minister Delroy Chuck lam­pooned the secu­ri­ty forces for arrest­ing Ruel Reid and oth­ers of their clique on cor­rup­tion charges.
Chuck, who had no idea what the evi­dence was against Reid when he spoke, and whose daugh­ter, an attor­ney, is rep­re­sent­ing Ruel Reid, berat­ed the police for mak­ing the arrest.
He has since with­drawn the broad­side but the dam­age was done.
Additionally, the youth arm of the rul­ing JLP also came out and accused the police of wrong-doing even though there has been no evi­dence of any wrong-doing so far.

The Jamaican Government of the day, as has the one before it, con­tin­ued to mis­use and abuse the secu­ri­ty forces in an attempt to con­tin­ue the inep­ti­tude of the inves­tiga­tive capa­bil­i­ty of the police.
It con­tin­ues to pro­mote to senior posi­tions in the JCF, men, and women who are inca­pable of for­mu­lat­ing a crime strat­e­gy, much less exe­cut­ing one under com­mand.
As a con­se­quence, the JCF is a top-heavy low capa­bil­i­ty force. As was the sit­u­a­tion, two and three decades ago, the JCF use work­horse offi­cers to sup­press out of con­trol hot-spots, while recent­ly pro­mot­ed senior offi­cers sit in cushy offices.
Well-know com­man­ders who have a proven track record of suc­cess are passed over for pro­mo­tions, while lack­eys and lap­dogs receive pro­mo­tions to posi­tions they can­not justify.

As the blood-let­ting con­tin­ues in Saint Andrew South, for exam­ple, this pub­li­ca­tion wish­es the new­ly installed com­man­der, Superintendent Wayne Cameron all the best in this new com­mand.
Superintendent Cameron’s intel­lect and stel­lar com­mand suc­cess­es in Portland, Manchester, and places beyond, were enough to get him thrown into the morass of Saint Andrew South.
Those very same attrib­ut­es were not enough to get him pro­mot­ed in the last go-around, nor the time before that, nor the time before.
We wish you well Wayne Cameron.….…

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.

Govt.& Opp. Know Crime Solutions, But Continue To Deceive The People.…..

MB

We con­tin­ue to speak out about the spi­ral­ing crime rate in Jamaica and the tone-deaf­ness with which the author­i­ties are han­dling the prob­lem.
Gunmen con­tin­ue to kill at will, even as the gov­ern­ment roll out Zones of Special Operations and declare states of emer­gen­cies.
Despite these stop-gap mea­sures which take the place of real strate­gies, the gov­ern­ment and oppo­si­tion, con­tin­ue to delude them­selves that this is real­ly no big deal.
My friend’s wife once told me of her love for pork, she said she had white rice and pork, and she fell ill. She said she knew the pork had made her ill, but she decid­ed to stop eat­ing rice.
The Administration and the oppo­si­tion in Kingston know what to do about the gang­sters run­ning around killing the inno­cent but they are too in love with them.
So the con­vene con­fer­ences to pull the wool over the peo­ple’s eyes, to cre­ate an illu­sion that they are doing some­thing rad­i­cal about it.
I say to the peo­ple of Jamaica they aren’t!
There is one solu­tion to the gang­sters run­ning unop­posed in our coun­try, and that is strong leg­is­la­tion and no-non­sense polic­ing.

Delusion, how­ev­er, is fool’s gold. Our peo­ple do not like to fol­low rules, we don’t like to obey laws, until of course, we move to places where they will have none of that non­sense.
And so instead of tack­ling the prob­lem head-on, they con­tin­ue to twid­dle their thumbs and pre­tend that this is a mere nui­sance on the path to pros­per­i­ty, or what­ev­er the hell their mantra is.
The real­i­ty is that even if pros­per­i­ty was pos­si­ble in this hotbed of killings and oth­er vio­lent crimes, the stan­dard of liv­ing would still be sub­stan­dard as a result of the pal­pa­ble fear in the coun­try.
The fact of the mat­ter is that there can, and will be no pros­per­i­ty or real growth in an atmos­phere in which so many have access to ille­gal guns.
In the mean­time, the Prime Minister, and the min­ions in his gov­ern­ment con­tin­ue to inject them­selves into indi­vid­ual cas­es where police are forced to take action against crim­i­nals. This fur­ther mud­dies the water and ren­ders the work of the secu­ri­ty forces more difficult.

Image result for jamaica's crime summit
A show designed to fool the peo­ple into think­ing they will take the nec­es­sary steps to remove the crim­i­nals in their garrisons

A recent­ly con­vened con­fer­ence between the Prime Minister and the Opposition leader, had the very same group of peo­ple who should nev­er ever be part of pol­i­cy­mak­ing in atten­dance.
Seated at the table were Jamaicans For Justice, the nation’s pre­em­i­nent anti-police agi­ta­tor, and oth­ers. At a time when five peo­ple lost their lives in one day in one small sec­tor of the city.
They con­tin­ue to fol­low the same path of obsti­na­cy, embrac­ing the very same band of idiots who present them­selves as experts and yet they expect dif­fer­ent results, and so the gang­sters laugh and con­tin­ue to kill with impuni­ty. Which makes one won­der whether they are killing with immu­ni­ty from the polit­i­cal leadership? 

They con­tin­ue to lis­ten to so-called experts like the squir­rel­ly Horace Levy who once stat­ed that the police’s assess­ment of what con­sti­tutes gangs was wrong. In his esteemed knowl­edge, the col­lec­tion of men who hang on the cor­ners in the dan­ger­ous inner-city com­mu­ni­ties were not gangs, they were mere ‘cor­ner-crews.’
These are the peo­ple who are influ­enc­ing pol­i­cy. These are the secu­ri­ty experts advis­ing on crime.
As a for­mer street cop who tra­versed almost every square yard of the tough and for­bod­ing inner-city areas of Kingston and Saint Andrew under the per­il of death, I nev­er heard any­thing so non­sen­si­cal. But these are the self-impor­tant buf­foons that the anti-police admin­is­tra­tion in Jamaica House sub­scribe to.
Instead of strong and unequiv­o­cal sup­port to the law enforce­ment agen­cies, the admin­is­tra­tion’s efforts are direct­ed at strength­en­ing JFJ and INDECOM at the expense of the hard-work­ing peo­ple in law enforce­ment.
I nev­er for­got my great Aunt always talk­ing about “what a ting wen dish tow­el tun table claat.“
That is where the nation’s secu­ri­ty is now pre­cip­i­tous­ly posi­tioned, in the hands of rank ama­teurs and self-pro­claimed experts.

The prob­lem for Jamaica is not that we haven’t seen this tem­plate that the crim­i­nals are using. In 201 we saw where their heads were. Earlier this year we got anoth­er glimpse of their capa­bil­i­ties in Guinep Tree May Pen. So it’s not as if there isn’t prece­dent.
Out of 2010 encounter with the entrenched pseu­do-gov­ern­ment of Christopher, Duddus Coke , was more than enough data-points from which the Government could eas­i­ly have extrap­o­lat­ed strate­gies, and cre­at­ed a seri­ous set of laws which would once and for all set a course for­ward which would secure the coun­try for gen­er­a­tions to come.
The incom­pe­tence and crim­i­nal com­plic­i­ty of the then PNP admin­is­tra­tion cou­pled with the full acqui­es­cence of the JLP, ensured that there would be no lessons learned from what could eas­i­ly be a sit­u­a­tion in which the coun­try became a nar­co-state.
These are the kinds of things the two polit­i­cal par­ties have sub­ject­ed the coun­try to. The rea­son being that with­in their ranks are crim­i­nals who are ben­e­fit­ting from the mur­der-may­hem.
As one per­son puts it yes­ter­day, they are turn­ing our coun­try into a dynasty where their chil­dren fol­low into their foot­steps by own­ing seats in the par­lia­ment and the atten­dant unen­cum­bered access to pub­lic funds.
Rather than thank the secu­ri­ty forces the two bunch of crim­i­nals in both polit­i­cal gangs band­ed togeth­er to demo­nize the secu­ri­ty forces for their valiance in annex­ing Tivoli Gardens to the Island.
Several mem­bers gave their lives. The filthy politi­cians on both sides, in an effort to appease the thugs and the rab­ble, blamed the secu­ri­ty forces for their own failures.

October 17th; Heavily armed fight­ers sur­round­ed secu­ri­ty forces in a Mexican city on Thursday and made them free one of drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman’s sons, after his cap­ture trig­gered gun­bat­tles and a prison break that sent civil­ians scur­ry­ing for cov­er. Security Minister Alfonso Durazo said a patrol by National Guard mil­i­ta­rized police first came under attack from with­in a house in the city of Culiacan, 1,235 km (770 miles) north­west of Mexico City.

After enter­ing the house, they found four men, includ­ing Ovidio Guzman, who is accused of drug traf­fick­ing in the United States. The patrol was quick­ly out­matched by car­tel gun­men, how­ev­er, and it was with­drawn to pre­vent lives being lost, the gov­ern­ment said. Simultaneously, fight­ers swarmed through the city, bat­tling police and sol­diers in broad day­light. They torched vehi­cles and left at least one gas sta­tion ablaze. “The deci­sion was tak­en to retreat from the house, with­out Guzman, to try to avoid more vio­lence in the area and pre­serve the lives of our per­son­nel and recov­er calm in the city.

This is what hap­pens when cor­rupt gov­ern­ments side with crim­i­nal ele­ments against the secu­ri­ty forces. This is not hap­pen­ing in an abstract sense, nor in some dis­tant lands thou­sands of miles away. This hap­pened in Mexico, a part of the same Latin-American and Caribbean region of which Jamaica is a part.
I incor­po­rat­ed this sto­ry into this arti­cle because this hap­pened time and again in Jamaica, and the excuse is always the same. “The secu­ri­ty forces with­drew to save lives”. What a load of crock.
I saw the Jamaican Prime Minister at a scene hold­ing a baby while one woman explained her side of a sto­ry to him. Of course, the police are always wrong, and the crim­i­nals are always choir­boys. After lis­ten­ing, Holness told the crowd that the police may have caught the crim­i­nal but they alien­at­ed the com­mu­ni­ty.
Never mind that the police have a duty to go wher­ev­er crim­i­nals are and haul them off to jail under the col­or of law, regard­less of whether the crime-infest­ed com­mu­ni­ties like it or not.
Holness is the head of the gov­ern­ment, he was hear­ing one side of the sto­ry, he had no idea where the truth lay. Instead of telling the peo­ple that there are agen­cies and pro­to­cols in place to take care of com­plaints, he went on to berate the police, with­out any evi­dence.
These are the kinds of bla­tant­ly moron­ic and sopho­moric things he brought to the table as the leader of our coun­try. His anti-police bias is beneath the office of the Prime Minister’s office and should not be tol­er­at­ed.
It is for this rea­son that I won­der at the intel­lec­tu­al capac­i­ty of the police offi­cers who place their lives at risk to pro­tect peo­ple like these in both polit­i­cal par­ties.
It is the same kind of char­ac­ter defi­cien­cy and lack of moral char­ac­ter which char­ac­ter­izes Mexico’s lead­ers. A cor­rupt and duplic­i­tous con­nivance with the crim­i­nal under­world which makes Mexico a per­pet­u­al third world coun­try. It is the same char­ac­ter­is­tic that defines Jamaica.

Since this admin­is­tra­tion fails to see this threat for what it is, and since the polit­i­cal oppo­si­tion is worse at gov­er­nance, we are left with the hope that the tail will even­tu­al­ly wag the dog. Maybe then we can pick up the pieces and start over.
At least that is my dream, the pool is far too filthy and contaminated.


Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.

Police Chief Says It’s Perfectly Fine An Officer Was Part Of A Hate Group Because The Cop Already Retired From Racism

In this Nov. 14, 2018 photo, East Hampton Police Chief Dennis Woessner addresses the Town Council in East Hampton. Woessner has concluded that an officer's membership in a far-right group infamous for engaging in violent clashes at political rallies didn't violate any department policies. Woessner said that officer Kevin P. Wilcox is no longer associated with the Proud Boys group.
In this Nov. 14, 2018 pho­to, East Hampton Police Chief Dennis Woessner address­es the Town Council in East Hampton. Woessner has con­clud­ed that an offi­cer’s mem­ber­ship in a far-right group infa­mous for engag­ing in vio­lent clash­es at polit­i­cal ral­lies did­n’t vio­late any depart­ment poli­cies. Woessner said that offi­cer Kevin P. Wilcox is no longer asso­ci­at­ed with the Proud Boys group. (Jeff Mill/​AP)

Michael Harriot

What would hap­pen if a police chief found out one of his offi­cers was a part of a white nation­al­ist orga­ni­za­tion known for vio­lent attacks? What if a jury had already deter­mined that the offi­cer was guilty of vio­lat­ing a citizen’s con­sti­tu­tion­al rights in a vio­lent attack? What if some­one could prove this cop had actu­al­ly paid dues to the vio­lent, white suprema­cist orga­ni­za­tion? Could you imag­ine what would hap­pen? Well, if this hap­pened in the lily-white vil­lage of East Hampton, Conn., the answer is:

Nothing at all.

The FBI clas­si­fies the Proud Boys as an “extrem­ist group with ties to white nation­al­ism.” The Southern Poverty Law Center has des­ig­nat­ed them a “hate group.” The New York Times and Wall-Street Journal calls them “far-right.” They were kicked off of most social media plat­forms for espous­ing white nation­al­ist ide­ol­o­gy. 

Proud Boys were con­vict­ed of gang vio­lence in New York and par­tic­i­pat­ed in the White Lives Matter ral­ly in Tennessee. Former Proud Boys mem­ber Jason Kessler orga­nized the “Unite the Right” march in Charlottesville, Va., and if you were so inclined, you could have met mem­bers of the “alt-right” fra­ter­nal orga­ni­za­tion protest­ing with neo-Nazis and attack­ing anti-racists in Berkeley, Calif.

Or, if you just hap­pen to be cruis­ing through Connecticut, you can just stop in East Hampton and ask to meet offi­cer Kevin P. Wilcox.

In June, Kristen Clarke, pres­i­dent of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, sent a let­ter to East Hampton Police Chief Dennis Woessner noti­fy­ing the depart­ment that Wilcox, a 10-year-vet­er­an of the force, was a known white suprema­cist. The June 24 let­ter also not­ed that a fed­er­al grand jury had deter­mined that Wilcox vio­lat­ed the con­sti­tu­tion­al rights of Alan P. Clark dur­ing a 2008 inci­dent that some­how result­ed in Clark get­ting beat in the head with Wilcox’s flash­light. The city even­tu­al­ly reached a con­fi­den­tial set­tle­ment in that case and Wilcox con­tin­ued his employ­ment as an officer.

Officer Wilcox’s asso­ci­a­tion with white suprema­cists on pub­lic plat­forms, as well as his his­to­ry of vio­lence, risks inter­fer­ing with your department’s oper­a­tions by dis­rupt­ing the work­ing rela­tion­ships between the East Hampton Police Department and the com­mu­ni­ty it serves,” wrote Clarke in her let­ter to Chief Woessner.

In response, the chief’s posi­tion was basi­cal­ly: “Yeah, but why y’all always bring­ing up old shit?” explain­ing that Wilcox has retired from racism.

The Hartford Courant reports:

The East Hampton offi­cer, Kevin P. Wilcox, “stopped his asso­ci­a­tion” with the Proud Boys in February, about five months before the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law inquired about his social media con­nec­tions with oth­er group mem­bers, Police Chief Dennis Woessner said.

In a let­ter to the Washington-based civ­il rights group, the police chief acknowl­edged that Wilcox had been a Proud Boys mem­ber and made online pay­ments to a group leader. The rights group described those pub­licly vis­i­ble, online trans­ac­tions as month­ly dues that helped fund the Proud Boys’ “vio­lent or oth­er­wise ille­gal” activities.

But the chief said he reviewed the mat­ter, received an “explana­to­ry report” from Wilcox and closed the department’s inquiry as being “unfound­ed,” with no evi­dence to sup­port a pol­i­cy vio­la­tion. Wilcox “adamant­ly denies being asso­ci­at­ed with white suprema­cists’ groups,” the chief wrote in a let­ter dat­ed Sept. 13.

Woessner claims “there’s no ques­tion” that Wilcox is not a white suprema­cist for a num­ber of reasons:

First of all, Woessner said he inves­ti­gat­ed the Proud Boys’ his­to­ry of vio­lence and hate by using a ground­break­ing inves­tiga­tive tech­nique: He Googled them. That’s not a joke. When reporters asked the god­damn police chief what he knew about the orga­ni­za­tion that has ter­ror­ized peo­ple across the coun­try for years, the chief responded:

Only what I searched on the Internet.”

Ok, to be fair, maybe Chief Woessner used Bing. Proud Boys say they aren’t racists, they are “anti-polit­i­cal cor­rect­ness” and “anti-white apol­o­gists.” The chief also claims he looked at all of the stops Wilcox made since 2018 and not­ed that Wilcox has only stopped white people.

Oh.

Maybe I was wrong. Maybe Wilcox isn’t racist and this is proof. I would expect that a racist police offi­cer would prob­a­bly tar­get black peo­ple all the time, so I agree with Chief Whitesplainer that Wilcox might not be a white suprema­cist. Of course, the fact that East Hampton is 88 per­cent white and only 1 per­cent black prob­a­bly has noth­ing to do with that.

The Lawyers Committee is demand­ing that the city con­duct a thor­ough review of Wilcox’s traf­fic stops and any com­plaints that may have arisen before the offi­cer turned in his let­ter of res­ig­na­tion to the Proud Boys. The group also wants Wilcox fired and a Department of Justice inves­ti­ga­tion into whether anyone’s civ­il rights have been violated.

The infil­tra­tion of white suprema­cists into police depart­ments is a nation­al cri­sis,” Clarke said in a state­ment. “As com­mu­ni­ties con­tend with ris­ing hate crimes, it is crit­i­cal that African Americans and peo­ple of col­or have faith in local law enforce­ment. Police offi­cers who affil­i­ate with white suprema­cist groups con­tribute to a cli­mate of fear and mis­trust, infect the ranks with bias and racism, and exac­er­bate the divides between com­mu­ni­ties of col­or and the police.”

Although Chief Woessner’s log­ic makes no sense, I would like to declare to the East Hampton Police Department and racist cops every­where that I have for­mal­ly resigned from being stopped, frisked, arrest­ed and shot by white suprema­cists with badges.

Damn. I wish I had known it was that easy

When Words Cannot Say It !

Donald Trump report­ed­ly believed the let­ter had been some­thing to be proud of, and mul­ti­ple reports cit­ed a Democratic aide from the meet­ing who said Trump opened the meet­ing by boast­ing about his “nasty” let­ter to Erdogan. 

Trump’s let­ter to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan 

Circle Of Soft-on-crime Patsies Sits To Discuss Rising Crime…

MB

So Andrew Holness and Peter Phillips are hold­ing talks report­ed­ly regard­ing the nation’s crime epi­dem­ic. This is a good thing that should always have been the way for­ward from the begin­ning. Crime should nev­er be a polit­i­cal foot­ball.
Better late than nev­er. It is a start, if they are seri­ous about doing what they can to work togeth­er on this all-impor­tant issue.

According to one local pub­li­ca­tion, the meet­ing will com­mence at 2:00 pm; both Prime Minister Andrew Holness and Opposition Leader Peter Phillips, as well as Minister of National Security, Horace Chang and the Opposition’s spokesman on nation­al secu­ri­ty, Fitz Jackson will rep­re­sent the rul­ing Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) and the Opposition People’s National Party (PNP), respec­tive­ly; and the event is being orga­nized by the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce.
A num­ber of stake­hold­ers, includ­ing the pri­vate sec­tor bod­ies such as the Jamaica Manufacturers and Exporters Association (JMEA); the church­es; the trade unions; civ­il soci­ety organ­i­sa­tions; and human rights advo­cate are expect­ed to attend the meet­ing, which will be a fol­low up to an ini­tial meet­ing last week Thursday between Holness and Phillips
.

Image result for holness and phillips
Holness & Phillips

Maybe I missed, it but I did not see any­thing about the police or the mil­i­tary being there in their capac­i­ty as experts. You know since they are the ones who have to strate­gize and exe­cute what­ev­er comes out of this crap­shoot.
How in God’s name can there be a con­fer­ence con­vened with­out the prin­ci­pal experts being front and cen­ter with the data, detail­ing the chal­lenges, explain­ing what they need to get the job done?

No, Horace Chang does not know, nei­ther does Fitz Jackson, nei­ther has any expe­ri­ence in law enforce­ment or secu­ri­ty mat­ters, they are polit­i­cal hacks.
This is anoth­er exam­ple of why crime con­tin­ues to trend upward to the point that these two groups of jok­ers are forced to sit down togeth­er.
Why are so-called human rights activists even allowed into that conference?

So we have the very same bunch of self-right­eous all-know­ing nean­derthals sit­ting around talk­ing about how not to be hard on crim­i­nals. That should absolute­ly work at crime reduc­tion.
The Prime Minister not­ed in the par­lia­ment that crime had gone down 35% in the west­ern parish­es in which the (SOE’s) has been in effect. Of course, he did not both­er men­tion­ing that over­all crime has gone up across the Island.
It is like flog­ging a dead horse, but what do I know?
There is one solu­tion which works against crim­i­nals, it is an all-out assault on their meth­ods, on their oper­a­tions, tak­ing their mon­ey, tak­ing their hous­es, and putting them away for good.
Oh, wait.……This can­not come out of this con­fer­ence, because in that group are crim­i­nals, who will not leg­is­late against them­selves.
Therein lies the problem.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.


R.I.P Elijah Cummings

Rep. Elijah Cummings (D‑Md.) dead at 68 The world is indeed a less hon­or­able and noble place today.
R.I.P.…

It May Be Time To Require That Cops Purchase Malpractice Insurance …

MB

Doctors, lawyers, and oth­er pro­fes­sion­als study for many years to qual­i­fy for their cho­sen dis­ci­plines. They also have to stay informed on new find­ings, new rec­om­men­da­tions, and new poli­cies in their respec­tive fields, even though they under­went mul­ti­ple years of train­ing, and do not have the pow­er to take the life of any­one.
Additionally, they are required to car­ry large mal­prac­tice insur­ance in order to be able to prac­tice their trade. 

Police offi­cers are trained for six months and thrown out in the streets with awe­some pow­ers, (includ­ing the pow­er to kill peo­ple). Yet many of them do not even know the laws they are try­ing to enforce. In many cas­es, their inter­ac­tions with the gen­er­al pub­lic are ego-dri­ven, dis­re­spect­ful pow­er trips.
They are not required to pur­chase mal­prac­tice insur­ance to com­pen­sate for their mis­takes. And so when they step out­side the line as many often do, on the rare occa­sions they are held account­able civil­ly, tax­pay­ers are forced to pick up the tab. Sometimes to the tune of mil­lions of dol­lars.
It may be time for police to car­ry mal­prac­tice insur­ance.
It will not be a panacea for fix­ing reck­less and vio­lent cops but it is one more thing that ought to go toward rein­ing in rogue ele­ments with­in police departments. 

Fort Worth inter­im police chief Ed Kraus stressed at a news con­fer­ence on Tuesday that it “makes sense” that Jefferson “would have a gun if she felt she was being threat­ened or if there was some­one in the back­yard.”
“It’s only appro­pri­ate that Ms. Jefferson would have a gun,” Merritt said, accord­ing to the Dallas Morning News. “When you think there’s some­one prowl­ing around in the back at 2 in the morn­ing, you may need to arm your­self.”
Kraus said Tuesday that there was “absolute­ly no excuse for this inci­dent and the per­son respon­si­ble will be held account­able.”

The inter­im chief also acknowl­edged that his department’s ear­li­er deci­sion to release a still image of a gun found at Jefferson’s home — but with­out any con­text or expla­na­tion of its link to the case — had not been the right one.
The depart­ment had faced crit­i­cism for the image. Merritt, the attor­ney for Jefferson’s fam­i­ly, accused police of attempt­ing to alter the nar­ra­tive of the case and blame the vic­tim. Kraus said at a Monday press con­fer­ence that the depart­ment had released the image to show there had been a weapon “involved.” “However, we’re home­own­ers in the state of Texas. I can’t imag­ine most of us, if we thought we had some­body out­side our house who shouldn’t be, and we had access to a firearm — that we wouldn’t act very sim­i­lar­ly to how she act­ed,” Kraus said, CBS News report­ed. 
“The offi­cers, they try hard every day to try to make this city bet­ter,” Kraus said. “I likened it to a bunch of ants build­ing an anthill, and if some­body comes with a hose and wash­es it away they just have to start from scratch.”
Story orig­i­nat­ed
@ ; https://​www​.huff​post​.com/​e​n​t​r​y​/​a​t​a​t​i​a​n​a​-​j​e​f​f​e​r​s​o​n​-​f​o​r​t​-​w​o​r​t​h​-​g​u​n​_​n​_​5​d​a​6​c​a​6​b​e​4​b​0​0​2​e​3​3​e​7​7​3​f6c

The release of the gun was designed to cre­ate the impres­sion that the vic­tim of this trag­ic mess was jus­ti­fi­ably killed.
Police offi­cers con­tin­ue to act out­side their train­ing and oper­a­tional pro­to­cols cre­at­ing tremen­dous pain for cit­i­zens and at extreme costs to tax­pay­ers.
Police offi­cers are peo­ple, they are allowed to make mis­takes, but when they make mis­takes they are expect­ed to fess up to those mis­takes.
Police offi­cers are giv­en extreme­ly wide lat­i­tude to do their jobs. Some would argue too much lat­i­tude.
Every cop, even the last joined rook­ie, has the pow­er of life and death in his hands. It is for that rea­son that this writer has con­sis­tent­ly argued that train­ing should not and can­not be suf­fi­cient as a one-off event.

Image result for lawless police

No one will hear a peep out of me when crim­i­nals threat­en the lives of the inno­cent, or law-enforce­ment offi­cers, and are shot if nec­es­sary.
What I have a prob­lem with is the gung-ho atti­tudes of far too many police offi­cers for what­ev­er rea­son, which leads to the harm, and killing of inno­cent peo­ple.
It is shock­ing to watch the behav­ior of police offi­cers these days, when they deal with cer­tain com­mu­ni­ties. One would think that instead of ser­vants they are over­seers and mas­ters deal­ing with their slaves.
Police are esca­lat­ing triv­ial and incon­se­quen­tial non­sense and mak­ing them arrestable events, even though they insti­gat­ed the unrest in the first place.
This rests with their civil­ian boss­es in the state leg­is­la­tures, they should be held accountable.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.

If Only The JCF Would Stop Being Cartoon Characters…(video Inside)

MB

There are very good lessons to be learned from tak­ing the time to look close­ly at nature. As humans, we are mere­ly one of the many species which inhab­its this plan­et, how­ev­er, those of us who refuse to adapt to changes hap­pen­ing around us gen­er­al­ly do poor­ly and may even­tu­al­ly become extinct.

If ever there was a police depart­ment which should dot every (i’) and cross evert (T’), that depart­ment would be the Jamaica Constabulary Force(JCF).
As a result of its own actions, the JCF gave itself INDECOM and has con­tin­ued to bleed com­pe­tent peo­ple, much the same way that the coun­try on a broad­er scale, has not found a way to retain it’s best and brightest.

A screen­shot image of an alter­ca­tion between police in Westen Kingston and a man they were try­ing to arrest

Whether we are in the dig­i­tal age or not, police offi­cers are pro­fes­sion­als and they should act like it. Today peo­ple are more intent on video­tap­ing police than crim­i­nals. Many will argue the lines between the two are some­times indis­tin­guish­able. I tend to agree.
Police, how­ev­er, have strict rules and pro­to­cols which they should fol­low. When they fol­low those rules they have noth­ing to fear from cit­i­zens who choose to video­tape their actions, this new real­i­ty is part of the land­scape and police offi­cers must adjust to it.

When offi­cers fol­low strict pro­to­cols those very same videos are excul­pa­to­ry. I have always said that the great­est asset a police offi­cer has is knowl­edge of the laws he is enforc­ing. Strict adher­ence to pro­to­cols is ger­mane to being safe and insu­lat­ed from crim­i­nal and civ­il lia­bil­i­ties.
When police offi­cers do not fol­low sim­ple pro­to­cols bad things happen.

And so they did, in that case in Western Kingston a few days ago. Regardless of the rea­sons that the police decid­ed to arrest Romaine Abrahams, there were enough offi­cers on the scene to sim­ply col­lar Abrahams and place him in hand­cuffs.
He was abu­sive, he was dis­re­spect­ful, he resist­ed arrest, and he assault­ed the offi­cers, but all of that could have been avoid­ed if offi­cers act­ed deci­sive­ly and pro­fes­sion­al­ly, by sim­ply plac­ing him in hand­cuffs quick­ly and deci­sive­ly mov­ing him from the scene.
Interestingly, there was a sub-offi­cer on-scene even­tu­al­ly act­ing as peace-mak­er when he should have ordered the sus­pect cuffed from the start.

Jamaica is not the eas­i­est place to be a police offi­cer. Regardless of where an offi­cer is sta­tioned, he will be forced to deal with dis­re­spect­ful, opin­ion­at­ed, igno­rant, pompous and aggres­sive peo­ple. Officers must adjust by being delib­er­a­tive, pre­cise, no-non­sense, and they must fol­low pro­to­col.
The media will not report the truth, they are in it for the sen­sa­tion­al and sala­cious con­tent, so the police should expect no objec­tiv­i­ty from what exist as media there.

I am tired of hear­ing about how great the train­ing is, and how offi­cers are trained dif­fer­ent­ly now. (As if dif­fer­ent­ly equates to bet­ter)
Unfortunately, I haven’t seen that train­ing man­i­fest­ed in their actions on the streets. Instead, what we see time and again, are car­toon­ish dis­plays which makes one cringe and which are sure to land offi­cers in hot water. In a coun­try where police work is already hot water.

Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.

Unlawful Police Killings Highlight A Culture Of Complicity Behind Them…

The mad­den­ing real­i­ty that a cop could be sent to per­form a wel­fare check at a res­i­dence and ends up shoot­ing the home­own­er to death has got to be the dubi­ous opti­mum of the débâ­cle that American polic­ing has become.
Before we talk about the un-real­i­ty of this, we must not for­get the inevitable but oblig­a­tory attempts at char­ac­ter assas­si­na­tion that these police depart­ments embark on when they unlaw­ful­ly mur­der inno­cent unarmed peo­ple.
Botham-Shem-Jean had weed dust in his home after Amber Guygher gunned him down in his own home; remem­ber that? Of course, after infor­ma­tion emerged that Jean was as clean as a whis­tle, clean­er than the cops and those who super­vise them, they aban­doned that tact.

the image of a gun sur­faced in media reports after Fort Worth, cop Aaron Dean gunned down Atatiana Jefferson in her own home. The idea was to lie that the dece­dent had pulled a gun. It is both legal to own guns in Texas and to open car­ry. So hav­ing a gun in her home had noth­ing to do with what the cops did. But they are stu­pid and crim­i­nal, so they decid­ed to bring the nar­ra­tive that there was a gun.
To the cred­it of the police chief and the may­or, they lashed out against that attempt at smear­ing the unfor­tu­nate young lady.
Continued pres­sure and atten­tion to these events today no doubt brought swift action in this case, as Aaron Dean resigned before the depart­ment could fire him, and he has since been charged with mur­der.
But it was hard for us to have missed that attempt­ed smear; it is one of the go-tos in their play­book. Criminalize, mur­der, demonize.

Police offi­cers are called upon to do all kinds of things and be all things to all peo­ple, and I get that. I hap­pen to know a lit­tle some­thing about that, hav­ing served a decade as a police offi­cer in a tough coun­try, Jamaica.
I can­not imag­ine a sce­nario where I could have fired a gun at some­one inside a house even if the per­son inside was armed with a gun [while mak­ing a wel­fare check]. (And yes, we did many).
Here’s why!
(a)The per­son inside the house may very well be the home­own­er; it is the thing that any offi­cer in that sit­u­a­tion must first think about. You were sent there to ensure the safe­ty of the home­own­er, for God’s sake)
(b) Even if armed, the per­son inside may have a right to be armed. © Under what cir­cum­stances does the police show up with­out announc­ing “Police,” then shoots some­one inside, with­out know­ing who the per­son is, or whether he/​she had a right or rea­son to be there?

We should not get caught up in the non­sen­si­cal excus­es of the police.
The call was a non-emer­gency wel­fare check call.
This means that the offi­cer was not told that there was a bur­glary in progress (not that that would have giv­en him a rea­son to employ lethal force killing a bur­glar). Burglary is not a death penal­ty case.
And so the idea of the call, even though cops have to be care­ful at all times, was about check­ing on who­ev­er was in the house. The lights were report­ed­ly on, and the door was part­ly ajar after 2: 00 am.
Neither of the two cops thought enough to approach the front door and announce, “Police, this is a wel­fare check” and see what hap­pens?
No.….….….….….. Just shoot at what­ev­er the hell moves and be done with it. Never mind that it is sup­posed to be a wel­fare check.

Police apol­o­gists would have you believe that an offi­cer’s job is so darn dan­ger­ous that you must give them the ben­e­fit of the doubt. It would help if you sus­pend­ed real­i­ty and good judg­ment a sup­plant your objec­tiv­i­ty with their inter­pre­ta­tion of real­i­ty.
You must give them more and more lat­i­tude to do their jobs; that’s what their apol­o­gists say. Unfortunately, that lat­i­tude has now giv­en the police so much pow­er and immu­ni­ty that they have lit­er­al­ly become the great­est threat to the lives of peo­ple of col­or and pret­ty soon to every­one else.
It is a trag­ic irony, but more than enough apol­o­gists will tell you about how dan­ger­ous their jobs are.
Well, let me tell you some­thing, I have met count­less cops who have told me they have nev­er been in a sit­u­a­tion where they have had to pull their ser­vice weapon.
On the oth­er hand, pulling a ser­vice weapon does not mean an offi­cer must use lethal force.
After all, an offi­cer has to ensure that he pro­tects his life; first, he is no good dead to any­one. Given a night­time sit­u­a­tion with unknown cir­cum­stances, I have no prob­lem with an offi­cer being prepared.

To the aver­age per­son who has nev­er been a police offi­cer, the hyper­bole about the sky-high dan­ger of every­day polic­ing gives police license to be reck­less and wan­ton.
The scene is set, an offi­cer is shot or almost run over by a perp, and the entire brass and their union come out, flanked by their civil­ian boss­es who con­tin­ue to give them more and more pow­er to kill you while tak­ing more and more of your rights away.
And don’t for­get that the courts are there to rub­ber-stamp what­ev­er they do, no mat­ter how egre­gious; they may even throw in a hug and a Bible to boot.
On and on, they go about what police face every day in their quest to keep you safe[sic].
So they take more pow­er, and you are no safer because the pow­er they take is nev­er about you; it is to sat­is­fy their frag­ile egos, not to ensure your safe­ty because their jobs are not about your safe­ty; it is about keep­ing you in line. But that is not exact­ly what is killing all of these Black peo­ple. It is out­ra­geous that any per­son can be killed on the streets by police offi­cers sup­posed to serve and pro­tect when they are unarmed and have com­mit­ted no crime.
Now mul­ti­ply that a hun­dred times in your head, that a per­son could be in the sanc­ti­ty of their own home and be mur­dered by state agents?
Agents of the state; because that is exact­ly what they are, the minute they approach a pub­lic mem­ber, their hands go to their weapons because they see the pub­lic as their ene­my.
Maybe they should not be giv­en weapons because research shows that if you give a man a gun, he will try to find a rea­son to use it.


(Psychology today​.com) Research also shows that dri­vers with guns in their cars are more like­ly to dri­ve aggressively.[2] A nation­al­ly rep­re­sen­ta­tive sam­ple of over 2,000 American dri­vers found that those who had a gun in the car were sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to make obscene ges­tures at oth­er motorists (23% vs. 16%), aggres­sive­ly fol­low anoth­er vehi­cle too close­ly (14% vs. 8%), or both (6.3% vs. 2.8%), even after con­trol­ling for many oth­er fac­tors relat­ed to aggres­sive dri­ving (e.g., gen­der, age, urban­iza­tion, cen­sus region, dri­ving fre­quen­cy). Recent research repli­cat­ed this find­ing in a dri­ving sim­u­la­tion exper­i­ment. https://​www​.psy​chol​o​gy​to​day​.com/​u​s​/​b​l​o​g​/​g​e​t​-​p​s​y​c​h​e​d​/​2​0​1​3​0​1​/​t​h​e​-​w​e​a​p​o​n​s​-​e​f​f​ect

Many pub­li­ca­tions have start­ed pay­ing atten­tion to these unlaw­ful killings in recent times, and some have start­ed to keep a record of them because your gov­ern­ment does­n’t. Gee, I won­der why?
In August, the Los Angeles Times report­ed that about 1 in 1,000 black men and boys in America could expect to die at the hands of police, accord­ing to a new analy­sis of deaths involv­ing law enforce­ment offi­cers. That makes them 2.5 times more like­ly than white men and boys to die dur­ing an encounter with cops.
This is not a prob­lem; it is a cri­sis; it is an exis­ten­tial cri­sis. And there is no real polit­i­cal lead­er­ship. Not from the fed­er­al, state, nor local lev­els. This state of affairs suits them just fine.
The Black Lives Matter – affil­i­at­ed group Mapping Police Violence dis­putes the idea that police only kill peo­ple when oper­at­ing under intense con­di­tions in high-crime areas. 
Mapping Police Violence found few­er than one in three black peo­ple killed by police in 2016 were sus­pect­ed of a vio­lent crime or armed.

Simply put, the option to pull the trig­ger has pre­cious lit­tle to do with the stress asso­ci­at­ed with work­ing in a vio­lent high crime area.
As a cop work­ing the tough neigh­bor­hood of Arnett Gardens, sure, I would be on edge if a young man walked up to me, but I would be less inclined to be on edge if that very same young man approached me in Cherry Gardens. It does not mean that I would be more inclined to shoot that young man sim­ply because I was in a height­ened sense of aware­ness in Arnett Gardens.
Not so for the American police, Black is Black, and that col­or deserves the very same dis­re­spect wher­ev­er they are found, regard­less of their inno­cence or guilt.
The unde­ni­able truth is that no cop would fire a weapon inside a per­son­’s house in a Lilly-white neigh­bor­hood. The deval­ued qual­i­ty of black lives and the impuni­ty with which they are allowed to treat peo­ple of col­or with vio­lence and dis­re­spect are the major rea­sons that we end up with all of these inno­cent peo­ple los­ing their lives.….. even in their own homes.
They are taught to dis­re­gard the human­i­ty of peo­ple who do not look like them and shoot and go home to their fam­i­lies.
Some peo­ple will argue about the job’s dan­ger­ous nature all day even though they have nev­er donned a uni­form or even done a ride-along.
What they relate to are the sto­ries told them by police unions.
I know all too well how dan­ger­ous the job can be; I was shot in the line of duty.
Instead of being gung-ho about shoot­ing peo­ple, my law enforce­ment expe­ri­ence taught me just how sacred the trust placed in me to be judi­cious with that pow­er was.
Over the years, I wrote a series of blogs implor­ing police offi­cers not to shoot sim­ply because they can get away with killing some­one.
Doing so dis­torts and destroys the very rea­son and mean­ing of good polic­ing.
Years ago, in some cas­es, police offi­cers would plead with sus­pects to drop their weapons. They would only resort to lethal force when it became essen­tial and clear that the assailant meant to harm some­one.
Today, in a sit­u­a­tion in which there are dozens of cops fifty feet away from a knife-wield­ing per­son (even of clear unsound mind), police open fire, killing that per­son!
They then claim that the per­son posed an exis­ten­tial threat to offi­cers who had no choice but to gun him down.
What would have hap­pened to that dis­turbed per­son if we did not allow police offi­cers to car­ry guns and shoot peo­ple with them?
It’s all lies .….….…. They know it, and you should too.

There has been evi­dence over the years that police depart­ments are not train­ing their offi­cers to de-esca­late sit­u­a­tions; in fact, the oppo­site is true.
Cops arrive on the scene, and as soon as they arrive, the dan­ger lev­el in what­ev­er was occur­ring imme­di­ate­ly esca­lates expo­nen­tial­ly. This is giv­ing con­sci­en­tious peo­ple pause, “do we even call the police know­ing that they may sim­ply kill who­ev­er is being a lit­tle dis­rup­tive”?
You may won­der what is hap­pen­ing and think to your­self, “how can the police be allowed to oper­ate this way? Who super­vis­es them”?
To begin with, many of America’s police depart­ments oper­ate as laws unto them­selves. Police depart­ments and their unions oper­ate along the mar­gins, and they flout the rules with impuni­ty.
They are giv­en wide lat­i­tude to do as they please, and they oper­ate with impunity.


They refuse requests for doc­u­ments until forced to by a judge. Prosecutors are so chum­my with the unions they become almost a part of the police appa­ra­tus rather than the oth­er way around.
Some say they are close to the police because they depend on the police to bring cas­es. It’s more like they depend on the police unions for endorse­ments and mon­e­tary sup­port in the polit­i­cal cam­paigns for pros­e­cu­tors and judges.
This prob­lem is far greater than the aver­age per­son imag­ines, and those elect­ed to look after the peo­ple do not care because they are not at risk of being gunned down in the streets or in their homes by police.
God for­bid that they would step for­ward and speak out and hav­ing to face the wrath of, you guessed it.…. the police unions who believe that no one should ques­tion them.

What obtains in America today is a cul­ture that encour­ages and active­ly par­tic­i­pates in police mis­con­duct and allows it to flour­ish. That runs the gamut, as pros­e­cu­tors and police depart­ments flout the laws, there­by help­ing to cre­ate the arro­gance and sense of impuni­ty with which some police offi­cers and even entire depart­ments oper­ate.
On October 15th, (USA Today) detailed damn­ing evi­dence that pros­e­cu­tors are not fol­low­ing the laws across the coun­try in an eye-open­ing arti­cle.
In let­ting the defense have evi­dence of offi­cers’ improp­er con­duct.
According to the report, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1963 that pros­e­cu­tors must tell any­one accused of a crime about all evi­dence that might help their defense at tri­al. That includes shar­ing details about police offi­cers who have com­mit­ted crimes, lied on the job, or whose hon­esty has been called into doubt.
People are being con­vict­ed and spend­ing decades in prison because pros­e­cu­tors and police depart­ments fail to fol­low the laws.
Over the years, hun­dreds of peo­ple have been released after evi­dence shows that they were improp­er­ly impris­oned or that police or pros­e­cu­tors have act­ed improp­er­ly to secure their convictions.

The investigation found:

  • Thousands of peo­ple have faced crim­i­nal charges or gone to prison based in part on tes­ti­mo­ny from law enforce­ment offi­cers deemed to have cred­i­bil­i­ty prob­lems by their boss­es or by prosecutors.
  • At least 300 pros­e­cu­tors’ offices across the nation are not tak­ing the steps nec­es­sary to com­ply with the Supreme Court man­dates. These places do not have a list track­ing dis­hon­est or oth­er­wise untrust­wor­thy offi­cers. They include big cities such as Chicago and Little Rock and small­er com­mu­ni­ties such as Jackson County, Minnesota, and Columbia County, Pennsylvania.
  • In many places that keep lists, police and pros­e­cu­tors refuse to make them pub­lic, mak­ing it impos­si­ble to know whether they fol­low the law. 
  • Others keep incom­plete lists. USA TODAY iden­ti­fied at least 1,200 offi­cers with proven his­to­ries of lying and oth­er seri­ous mis­con­duct that pros­e­cu­tors had not flagged. Of those offi­cers, 261 were specif­i­cal­ly dis­ci­plined for dis­hon­esty on the job.

See the arti­cle here; https://​www​.usato​day​.com/​i​n​-​d​e​p​t​h​/​n​e​w​s​/​i​n​v​e​s​t​i​g​a​t​i​o​n​s​/​2​0​1​9​/​1​0​/​1​4​/​b​r​a​d​y​-​l​i​s​t​s​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​o​f​f​i​c​e​r​s​-​d​i​s​h​o​n​e​s​t​-​c​o​r​r​u​p​t​-​s​t​i​l​l​-​t​e​s​t​i​f​y​-​i​n​v​e​s​t​i​g​a​t​i​o​n​-​d​a​t​a​b​a​s​e​/​2​2​3​3​3​8​6​0​01/.

Sure, they want you to believe these inci­dents are iso­lat­ed and fix­able by remov­ing that one rogue ele­ment. It is not true that it is a sys­temic cul­ture that breeds this con­tempt and lack of respect, and it’s not all the police’s fault.
This is a mat­ter that the Federal and state leg­is­la­tures should tack­le if they want to change.
It has to be tack­led in how judges oper­ate, and it rests with pros­e­cu­tors and police depart­ments.
The police offi­cer’s atti­tude treats a cit­i­zen like crap because he was giv­en a gun and badge, and six months of train­ing comes from what he was told he could do and get away with.
It comes.…..
(1)From brief­ing ses­sions where street crimes unit com­man­ders deval­ue entire com­mu­ni­ties’ lives, giv­ing license to their under­lings to exact vengeance on entire com­mu­ni­ties.
(2) From neo-nazis, white suprema­cists, and skin­heads infil­trat­ing police depart­ments.
(3)From the mil­i­ta­rized Israeli train­ing many American cops are receiv­ing in the state of Israel.
(4) From the over-pop­u­la­tion of police depart­ments with mil­i­tary vet­er­ans who have done sev­er­al com­bat zone tours.
(5)From police depart­ments’ acqui­es­cence, rogue cops can rack up dozens and dozens of dis­ci­pli­nary actions and refuse to fire them, there­by endan­ger­ing the pub­lic.
(6)And from Judges who see them lie under oath ( a felony) in their court­rooms and do noth­ing about it. The aver­age per­son who lies under oath com­mits per­jury and may be sen­tenced to five(5) years in prison.

PERJURY

(1)hav­ing tak­en an oath before a com­pe­tent tri­bunal, offi­cer, or per­son, in any case in which a law of the United States autho­rizes an oath to be admin­is­tered, that he will tes­ti­fy, declare, depose, or cer­ti­fy tru­ly, or that any writ­ten tes­ti­mo­ny, dec­la­ra­tion, depo­si­tion, or cer­tifi­cate by him sub­scribed, is true, will­ful­ly and con­trary to such oath states or sub­scribes any mate­r­i­al mat­ter which he does not believe to be true; or(2)in any dec­la­ra­tion, cer­tifi­cate, ver­i­fi­ca­tion, or state­ment under penal­ty of per­jury as per­mit­ted under sec­tion 1746 of title 28, United States Code, will­ful­ly sub­scribes as true any mate­r­i­al mat­ter which he does not believe to be true; is guilty of per­jury and shall, except as oth­er­wise express­ly pro­vid­ed by law, be fined under this title or impris­oned not more than five years, or both. This sec­tion is applic­a­ble whether the state­ment or sub­scrip­tion is made with­in or with­out the United States. https://​www​.law​.cor​nell​.edu/​u​s​c​o​d​e​/​t​e​x​t​/​1​8​/​1​621

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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. 

Fort Worth Police Officer Aaron Dean Resigns After Fatally Shooting Atatiana Jefferson In Her Home, Could Face Charges

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A Fort Worth police offi­cer who fatal­ly shot a woman in her home while she played video games with her 8‑year-old nephew has resigned from the force but still could face crim­i­nal charges, the inter­im police chief said Monday. 

Chief Ed Krauss said Aaron Dean, who is white, would have been fired and is con­sid­ered dis­hon­or­ably dis­charged from the depart­ment. Krauss also said the U.S. Justice Department will exam­ine the case for pos­si­ble civ­il rights violations.

Atatiana “Tay” Jefferson, 28, was shot through her bed­room win­dow ear­ly Saturday by an offi­cer con­duct­ing a wel­fare check. Hours before Krauss spoke Monday, fam­i­ly mem­bers held their own news con­fer­ence demand­ing that the offi­cer be fired and crim­i­nal­ly charged. 

Ashley Carr told reporters her sis­ter was killed by the “reck­less act” of the offi­cer and said the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment should take over the investigation.

There is sim­ply no jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for his actions,” she said. “We demand jus­tice for Atatiana thor­ough an inde­pen­dent and thor­ough investigation.”

Added Jefferson’s broth­er, Adarius Carr: “This man mur­dered some­one. He should be arrested.”

Investigators were sched­uled to inter­view the offi­cer Monday, police Lt. Brandon O’Neil said. Police also released audio of a neigh­bor’s calm call to a non-emer­gency phone num­ber that sent police to the home.

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Jefferson, who was black, worked as a phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal sales rep­re­sen­ta­tive. The offi­cer has served on the force for 18 months, police said. The shoot­ing took place less than two weeks after for­mer Dallas police offi­cer Amber Guyger was con­vict­ed of mur­der­ing Botham Jean, a black man shot in 2018 as he ate ice cream in his home.

S. Lee Merritt, a lawyer for Jefferson’s fam­i­ly, said police not only vio­lat­ed Jefferson’s rights but also made “com­mon sense” mis­takes. And he called the release of a pho­to of a gun found in the bed­room “obscene,” say­ing no con­nec­tion had been made between the gun and the shooting.

Why this man is not in hand­cuffs is a source of con­tin­ued agi­ta­tion for this fam­i­ly and for this com­mu­ni­ty,” Merritt said

Carol Harrison-Lafayette protests the police shooting of Atatiana Jefferson during a community vigil for Jefferson on on Oct. 13, 2019, in Fort Worth, Texas. A white police officer who killed the black woman inside her Texas home while responding to a neighbor's call about an open front door "didn't have time to perceive a threat" before he opened fire, an attorney for Jefferson's family said.

Mayor Betsy Price, speak­ing before Krauss, agreed Monday that the gun found in Jefferson’s home was “irrel­e­vant.” 

Atatiana was a vic­tim… unjust­ly tak­en from her fam­i­ly,” Price said.

Merrit said the vic­tim’s nephew told him the duo had been up late play­ing “Halo” – with the doors open to enjoy the cool fall breeze – when they heard noise out­side her bed­room window.

They looked at each oth­er and lis­tened more intent­ly when they heard it again,” Merritt said in a social media post. “Someone was outside.”

Merritt said the nephew described how his aunt went to the win­dow to see who was there.

Suddenly a man’s voice was scream­ing some­thing he could­n’t make out, and then ‘bang,’ ” Merritt said. Jefferson fell to the floor. Merritt said he did­n’t ask the child what he saw next because he did­n’t want him “to have to relive that” with him.

Image result for Atatiana Jefferson
Neighbor who called the police non- emer­gency num­ber over after see­ing an open door late at night

I’m hurt. I’m angry. I’m a lit­tle afraid when I’m hon­est,” Merritt said. “I hate this hap­pened to (the nephew). I hate it hap­pened to Tay and her beau­ti­ful fam­i­ly. This has to stop now. Enough.”

O’Neil said neigh­bor James Smith called police at 2:23 a.m. Saturday morn­ing, telling the dis­patch­er it was “not nor­mal” for his neigh­bors to have the doors open and lights on at that hour.

Two offi­cers arrived six min­utes lat­er. They did not park in front of the house, O’Neil said. Body cam­era video released by police shows offi­cers, armed with guns and flash­lights, cir­cling the home. An offi­cer stops at a window.

The video ends with an offi­cer shout­ing, “Put your hands up, show me your hands” before the sound of one gun­shot. Jefferson was killed with a bul­let fired through her bed­room window.

O’Neil con­firmed what the video appeared to show – that the offi­cer nev­er iden­ti­fied him­self as police. He also con­firmed that Jefferson’s nephew was in the room.

Image result for Atatiana Jefferson

Activist Cory Hughes said the com­mu­ni­ty want­ed more than a sus­pen­sion for the officer.

What we are look­ing for is for this offi­cer not only to be fired but to we are demand­ing that his offi­cer be charged as well, like the crim­i­nal that he is,” Hughes said. “This life mattered.

This fam­i­ly mat­ters. Story orig­i­nat­ed here; https://​www​.usato​day​.com/​n​e​ws/

PM’s Comments Welcome, But He Should Still Remove Delroy Chuck…

MB

It was refresh­ing to hear the Prime Minister talk about the ensu­ing cor­rup­tion imbroglio involv­ing Ruel Reid, Fritz Pinnock and oth­ers recent­ly.
Addressing a JLP Area Council One meet­ing at the Girl Guides Association of Jamaica head­quar­ters in St Andrew, the PM said he was sad­dened by the débâ­cle that has engulfed his admin­is­tra­tion.
There is no ques­tion that it (Reid’s arrest) sad­dens me, that it sad­dens the entire par­ty, and I know you who sit here as well, you are indeed very sad­dened, very con­cern about what hap­pened.

I want to make it clear that … the Jamaica Labour Party that now has lead­er­ship and respon­si­bil­i­ty for the future of this coun­try, the insti­tu­tion of the par­ty, is strong­ly against any­thing that could be char­ac­ter­ized as cor­rup­tion, malfea­sance, and abuse of pub­lic funds,” Holness stat­ed, adding that con­cerns being raised are being tak­en seri­ous­ly by the par­ty.

We will do every­thing in our pow­er to ensure that wher­ev­er there is cor­rup­tion, wher­ev­er there is the mis­use of pow­er, mis­ap­pro­pri­a­tion of pub­lic resources, that this admin­is­tra­tion will ensure that the mech­a­nisms are in place to fer­ret it out and bring them before the courts.” 
This Government under­stands that, so when we sit togeth­er as a Cabinet, when we sit togeth­er as a par­ty, we have to look into our­selves, we have to reflect on what it is that we need to do, and the first thing is that the Government must nev­er inter­fere in the inde­pen­dent process­es to inves­ti­gate and pros­e­cute cor­rup­tion.”

More than any­thing else he said, the Prime Minister said the fol­low­ing; “You play a very impor­tant role in hold­ing Government to account. And what I know about the del­e­gates and work­ers of the Jamaica Labour Party is that dem love dem par­ty bad, but dem love dem coun­try more.” 

So he does get it. That was a charge to par­ty faith­ful as to where their loy­al­ties ought to be. Of course, many in atten­dance who were cheer­ing the Prime Minister com­plete­ly missed that charge, and one would guess it went over the heads of the major­i­ty of the hyper-par­ti­sans in the par­ty.
That is what this writer has been say­ing to laborites. Nations have polit­i­cal par­ties for nation­al devel­op­ment. Not the oth­er way around.
We make the grave mis­take in believ­ing that our loy­al­ties ought to be with the polit­i­cal par­ties of our choice. Our loy­al­ties should be to our nation.
No, I don’t care about the argu­ment that Comrades loy­al­ty is to their par­ty. We do not become our adver­saries, we set exam­ples for them to fol­low.
The People’s National Party has always had a cult-like per­sona. Members of the Jamaica Labor Party should not try to out-cult mem­bers of the PNP.

The over­ar­ch­ing point as far as I am con­cerned is that even though the Prime Minister said the Government must nev­er inter­fere in the inde­pen­dent process­es to inves­ti­gate and pros­e­cute cor­rup­tion.” It sends a chill down my spine, because that state­ment demon­strates that there is a lot more work to be done to build fire­walls around our crim­i­nal jus­tice process.
Even though I applaud the Prime Minister for open­ly mak­ing the state­ments he did, I wished he had gone far­ther by address­ing the state­ments made by Delroy Chuck his Justice Minister who can­not seem to keep his mouth shut.
There are many ways to inter­fere in the crim­i­nal jus­tice process. Chuck’s assault on law-enforce­ment was clear­ly a gra­tu­itous and cor­rupt attempt at influ­enc­ing a case which we are told is still under inves­ti­ga­tion.
That kind of inter­fer­ence is cor­rup­tion and it needs to be called out for what it is.
Since we can­not un-hear what we already heard, I am not inclined to be respon­sive to the idea that he with­drew the state­ment he made.
That a Minister of Government would inter­vene, (ver­bal­ly or oth­er­wise) in an active inves­ti­ga­tion, and a case that has not come to a res­o­lu­tion, which involves a for­mer col­league, is the very def­i­n­i­tion of corruption.


Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.

Texas Police Officer Shoots Woman To Death Inside Her Own Home

Another Black per­son lost her life at the hands of the very peo­ple who are sup­posed to pro­tect them.
This time anoth­er cop, in the state of Texas fired from out­side into a wom­an’s home killing her on the spot.
How on earth can police offi­cers who are trained con­tin­ue to lie that they are threat­ened or afraid when they can sim­ply take cov­er and wait to see what’s going on?
In this case, a beau­ti­ful 28-year-old young woman was mur­dered in her own home as a white cop could­n’t both­er to step back, when he could sim­ply shoot her. And shoot her he did, killing her on the spot.
Now wait for the cam­paign of lies and the char­ac­ter assas­si­na­tion to begin. This is sure to fol­low, as a form of jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for Unlawful killing her.
Another beau­ti­ful life is snuffed out by state-fund­ed mur­der­ers.
It has become clear that African-Americans can­not, and should not call the police for any­thing.
Calling for police ser­vices, which the black com­mu­ni­ty pays for, has become a mat­ter of life and death.
Whether wrong or right, black peo­ple are mur­dered as soon as they come in con­tact with police.
When will this out­ra­geous assault come to an end?
Would this cop have fired into a home in a white neigh­bor­hood, you be the judge?

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Atatiana Koquice Jefferson, 28 

SEE STORY BELOW

A Fort Worth police offi­cer check­ing out a res­i­dence with an open door opened fire on a 28-year-old woman inside her home. 

A Fort Worth police offi­cer check­ing out a res­i­dence with an open door opened fire on a woman inside her home, killing her, author­i­ties said.

The shoot­ing ear­ly Saturday occurred less than two weeks after a police offi­cer in near­by Dallas was found guilty of mur­der for fatal­ly shoot­ing a man in his home in 2018. In both cas­es the offi­cers are white and the vic­tims were African American.

In the Fort Worth shoot­ing at 2:25 a.m. Saturday, author­i­ties have the offi­cer’s body-cam­era footage.

According to NBC Dallas-Fort Worth, the imagery shows the per­spec­tive of the offi­cer out­side a home, peer­ing inside a win­dow using a flash­light, spot­ting some­one inside stand­ing near a win­dow and telling her, “Put your hands up — show me your hands,” before open­ing fire.

Fort Worth police say one shot was fired.

Officers entered the home and began pro­vid­ing emer­gency med­ical care to the woman but she was pro­nounced dead, police said.

The Tarrant County med­ical exam­in­er iden­ti­fied her as Atatiana Koquice Jefferson, 28, accord­ing to NBC Dallas-Fort Worth.

A gun was found inside the home, police said, but it was­n’t clear if the woman was near it at the time of the shooting.

Neighbor James Smith said he called a police non-emer­gency num­ber when he noticed the open door.

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If you don’t feel safe with the police depart­ment, then who do you feel safe with?” he said.

Amber Carr, Jefferson’s sis­ter, ques­tioned the offi­cer’s train­ing. “I just don’t under­stand,” she said.

The offi­cer, who has been with the depart­ment since April 2018, was placed on admin­is­tra­tive leave while the shoot­ing is under inves­ti­ga­tion. The depart­men­t’s major case and inter­nal affairs units and the Tarrant County dis­trict attor­ney’s law-enforce­ment inci­dent team will con­duct the investigation.

Police said evi­dence would be for­ward­ed to the dis­trict attor­ney “to deter­mine the final outcome.”

The body-cam­era footage, with the excep­tion of imagery of the inte­ri­or of the home, would be released, police said.

The September 2018 killing of Botham Jean in Dallas sparked nation­al head­lines. The then-offi­cer accused of mur­der­ing her neigh­bor said she had mis­tak­en­ly entered the wrong apart­ment after a long shift on patrol when she believed some­one was in her home and opened fire.

Amber Guyger was sen­tenced to 10 years behind bars.Dennis 

Police Officer Acquitted After Killing Unarmed Black Man Who Was Running Away

Zechariah Presley, white cop who was acquitted

Camden County, GA — Zechariah Presley, a for­mer police offi­cer from Georgia who killed Tony Green, a 33-year old unarmed Black man, after shoot­ing him mul­ti­ple times while he was flee­ing, has been acquit­ted of his manslaugh­ter charges. 

He was only found guilty of vio­lat­ing his oath of office, and will face one to five years in jail if con­vict­ed. He was ordered to be jailed pend­ing sen­tenc­ing on October 18.

The case stemmed from the inci­dent in June 2018 where­in Presley fol­lowed Green’s car as he thought he was dri­ving with a sus­pend­ed license. As seen on a dash cam­era video, Green even­tu­al­ly stopped the car, went out then ran away before he briefly returned to the car to grab an uniden­ti­fied object then ran again.

Presley then chased Green on foot. Presley’s body­cam caught the inci­dent, but it was not clear­ly vis­i­ble. Only the sound of the repeat­ed taser­ing fol­lowed by eight gun­shots can be heard.

According to an autop­sy report, Green was hit all eight times, one to his chest and the rest was to his back and hips. Small amounts of alco­hol, mar­i­jua­na, cocaine, and a tran­quil­iz­er were alleged­ly found in his system.

He admit­ted that he killed Tony Green in cold blood,” Pastor Mack De’Von Knight, whose church Green attend­ed, told the Associated Press. “To me, it’s hunt­ing sea­son for the young black man and we’re being gunned down in the streets and there’s no reper­cus­sions, there’s no con­se­quences for these officers.”

However, Presley’s lawyers claimed that he feared for his life since he thought that what Green grabbed when he returned to the car was a gun. Investigators deter­mined the object was a cellphone.

Tony Green was not shot because of mis­de­meanor offens­es,” defense attor­ney Adrienne Browning said in her clos­ing argu­ment. “He was shot because of bad deci­sion after bad deci­sion, until the threat was over­whelm­ing and Zech feared for his life.”

The Minnesota Congresswoman Who Can Criticize Israel…

St. Paul’s Betty McCollum is rad­i­cal­ly pro­gres­sive on U.S. pol­i­cy toward Israel. Why don’t you ever hear about it?

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By Jessica Schulberg

Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.) has stood up to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. 
Rep. Betty McCollum (D‑Minn.) has stood up to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. 

Over the past few years, one mem­ber of Congress has stood up to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), denounced Israel’s poli­cies, which she likened to “apartheid,” and pushed laws that would place human­i­tar­i­an con­di­tions on U.S. mil­i­tary aid to Israel. Human rights advo­cates praise her, and she is pop­u­lar in her pro­gres­sive dis­trict. But she is nei­ther the face of the pro­gres­sive left nor the bogey­man of Fox News. Unless you’ve lived in Minnesota — or read MinnPost — there’s a good chance you’ve nev­er heard of her. 

Her name is Betty McCollum, and she has rep­re­sent­ed St. Paul for almost 20 years. 

President Donald Trump — who loves to attack Rep. Ilhan Omar (D‑Minn.), one of the first Muslim con­gress­women, for her crit­i­cism of Israel — has nev­er once tweet­ed McCollum’s name. That the Democratic con­gress­woman who leads the van­guard of pro­gres­sive U.S. pol­i­cy toward Israel in Congress is not the sub­ject of con­stant bad-faith attacks from the right is a tes­ta­ment to her prag­ma­tism. But it also expos­es the incon­sis­ten­cy of the out­rage cam­paign direct­ed at Omar and the oth­er mem­bers of the so-called “Squad,” a group of pro­gres­sive first-term law­mak­ers who are all women of color.

Rep. Omar has a his­to­ry of launch­ing vir­u­lent anti-Semitic screeds,” Trump claimed at a cam­paign ral­ly in Minneapolis on Thursday. “She is a dis­grace to our coun­try and she is one of the big rea­sons that I am going to win and the Republican Party is going to win Minnesota in 13 months,” he continued. 

Trump’s attacks on the Squad, which also includes Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D‑Mich.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D‑N.Y.) and Ayanna Pressley (D‑Mass.), “are inten­tion­al­ly done to rile up the racist instincts of a por­tion of his base,” said Dylan Williams, of the left-lean­ing pro-Israel group J Street. “This dou­ble stan­dard that’s being applied to these con­gress­women is very clear, and it’s not a stan­dard that has been applied to oth­er con­gres­sion­al crit­ics of Israeli pol­i­cy and the occu­pa­tion.” Omar, who is Black, Muslim and an immi­grant from Somalia, rep­re­sents “a per­fect storm of char­ac­ter­is­tics that they could try to attack and por­tray as the prob­lem to a white evan­gel­i­cal base,” said Yousef Munayyer, the exec­u­tive direc­tor of the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights. 

Rep. McCollum,” Munayyer added, “didn’t fit the poster.”

Rep. Betty McCollum was told she'd "written her death sentence" by slamming AIPAC.
Rep. Betty McCollum was told she’d “writ­ten her death sen­tence” by slam­ming AIPAC

McCollum, who grew up in South St. Paul, trained as a social stud­ies teacher. After she grad­u­at­ed, she had a hard time find­ing full-time work, so she took on long-term sub­sti­tute teach­ing jobs and worked part-time at Sears. In 1984, McCollum’s tod­dler daugh­ter frac­tured her skull falling off a play­ground slide that didn’t have enough sand at its base. The girl recov­ered quick­ly, but the city didn’t do any­thing about the play­ground until after McCollum pushed for it at a City Council meet­ing — a vic­to­ry that prompt­ed her to run for local office. She served on the City Council and in the Minnesota state­house before she was elect­ed to Congress in 2000. 

There is no one moment that prompt­ed McCollum to become one of the most out­spo­ken mem­bers of Congress on Israel and Palestine. She tends to talk about the con­flict as just one of the many human rights crises bedev­il­ing the world. As a law­mak­er, she has shown a par­tic­u­lar inter­est in pol­i­cy aimed at pro­tect­ing vul­ner­a­ble kids: She has worked to pro­vide HIV-AIDS assis­tance to orphans, pre­vent child mar­riage and fix crum­bling schools for Native American chil­dren

In 2006, rep­re­sen­ta­tives of groups that pro­vide human­i­tar­i­an assis­tance to Palestinians warned McCollum of a loom­ing human­i­tar­i­an dis­as­ter. At the time, law­mak­ers were prepar­ing to vote on the Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act, a bill osten­si­bly intend­ed to iso­late Hamas, the group that has been des­ig­nat­ed by Israel and the U.S. as a ter­ror­ist orga­ni­za­tion and that had recent­ly won a major­i­ty in the Palestinian par­lia­ment. The bill, human­i­tar­i­an work­ers explained, would make it hard­er for aid orga­ni­za­tions to pro­vide life­sav­ing med­ical care to Palestinians. McCollum lis­tened and was one of two mem­bers who vot­ed against advanc­ing the bill out of committee.

The bill, which was backed by AIPAC, passed eas­i­ly in the House. But McCollum’s dis­sent­ing vote set her up for a feud with one of the most pow­er­ful lob­by­ing groups in the coun­try. On a Friday after the vote, McCollum’s chief of staff, Bill Harper, got a phone call from Amy Rotenberg, an AIPAC mem­ber who had met with McCollum on behalf of the orga­ni­za­tion. McCollum’s “sup­port for ter­ror­ists will not be tol­er­at­ed,” Rotenberg said, accord­ing to Harper. Rotenberg, who declined an inter­view, described Harper’s char­ac­ter­i­za­tion of the con­ver­sa­tion as a “seri­ous distortion.”

Bill Harper’s descrip­tion of the con­ver­sa­tion with me was false in 2006 and it is false now,” Rotenberg wrote.

McCollum was shocked. She wrote a let­ter to AIPAC’s exec­u­tive direc­tor slam­ming the group for attempt­ing to use “threat and intim­i­da­tion to sti­fle legit­i­mate pol­i­cy dif­fer­ences.” She banned AIPAC rep­re­sen­ta­tives from her offices pend­ing a for­mal apol­o­gy from the lob­by­ing group. It was a lone­ly time to go up against AIPAC. J Street, the left-lean­ing alter­na­tive to AIPAC, didn’t exist yet. Members told McCollum that she had “writ­ten her death sen­tence,” she said. 

I went, ‘OK, if I lose an elec­tion over stand­ing up for med­ical sup­plies for kids, OK, I’m ready to go!’” McCollum said. “When I came back, the whis­per kind of was, ‘You can survive!’”

McCollum nev­er got a pub­lic apol­o­gy, but she did even­tu­al­ly let AIPAC rep­re­sen­ta­tives back into her office. “But they don’t bul­ly her or do what they do to oth­er mem­bers,” said Brad Parker, a senior advis­er at Defense for Children International Palestine.

McCollum wins reelec­tions in her pro­gres­sive dis­trict by huge mar­gins — she received 91% of the vote in the 2018 pri­ma­ry and beat her Republican oppo­nent by 36 per­cent­age points. She has no inter­est in run­ning for Senate, she said. 

In 2015, when a group of activists start­ed orga­niz­ing in oppo­si­tion to Israel’s mil­i­tary deten­tion of Palestinian chil­dren, McCollum’s office was one of the first places they vis­it­ed on Capitol Hill. Palestinian human rights is an out­lier issue on Capitol Hill — “You don’t even have access to a lot of offices; they don’t want to deal with Palestinian orga­ni­za­tions,” said Parker, whose group briefed McCollum’s team on the issue. “Those bar­ri­ers don’t exist with Betty.”

They showed McCollum’s team a 2013 UNICEF report that described Israeli sol­diers remov­ing Palestinian kids from their homes in the mid­dle of the night, blind­fold­ing them and tak­ing them to an inter­ro­ga­tion cen­ter. The kids were beat­en, deprived of sleep and forced to sign con­fes­sions in a lan­guage they did not under­stand, with­out a lawyer present, the report said. 

It’s like, ‘Wait a sec­ond. We’re giv­ing mon­ey, the U.S. gov­ern­ment, to UNICEF, to do this report — and we’re giv­ing mon­ey to the Israeli gov­ern­ment to do the things that the report is about,’” Harper, McCollum’s chief of staff, said. “What’s wrong with this picture?”

The U.S. cur­rent­ly gives Israel $3.8 bil­lion a year in mil­i­tary aid. Since World War II, it has received more U.S. for­eign assis­tance than any oth­er coun­try, accord­ing to the Congressional Research Service. Most coun­tries that receive U.S. assis­tance are sub­ject to exten­sive restric­tions on how the aid is used. But for Israel, much of the mon­ey goes direct­ly into its Ministry of Defense, with lit­tle American over­sight, Harper said.

In 2017, McCollum intro­duced a bill to block U.S. aid to Israel from being used to “sup­port the mil­i­tary deten­tion, inter­ro­ga­tion, abuse, or ill-treat­ment of Palestinian chil­dren in vio­la­tion of inter­na­tion­al human­i­tar­i­an law.” She rein­tro­duced the bill in April, this time with lan­guage that would amend the so-called Leahy law, which pro­hibits the U.S. from pro­vid­ing mil­i­tary assis­tance to for­eign gov­ern­ments that com­mit “a gross vio­la­tion of human rights.” The cur­rent bill would also set aside mon­ey to fund non­govern­men­tal orga­ni­za­tions that pro­vide phys­i­cal, psy­cho­log­i­cal and emo­tion­al treat­ment for Palestinian chil­dren who have been detained by the Israeli military. 

Last March, the Minnesota del­e­ga­tion of American Muslims for Palestine trav­eled to Washington to meet with McCollum and talk about her bill. At the end of the meet­ing, McCollum tweet­ed out a pic­ture of her pos­ing with the group. The con­gress­woman didn’t think much of it — she tweets pic­tures of groups she meets with all the time. But Palestinian activists are used to being ignored by their elect­ed offi­cials, AMP chap­ter lead Mariam El-Khatib said. When El-Khatib saw the tweet, she thought, “Wow, she doesn’t mind being asso­ci­at­ed with AMP or Palestinians doing this kind of work.” 

The bill has 21 co-spon­sors, all Democrats. Two addi­tion­al Democrats with­drew their names as co-spon­sors. When Rep. Debbie Dingell (D‑Mich.) pulled her name, she tweet­ed that her “heart has always been with the chil­dren of Palestine” and that she was push­ing lead­er­ship “hard” for a vote on a “res­o­lu­tion sup­port­ing a two-state solu­tion.” 

McCollum pushed back: “Rep. Dingell removed her name from HR 2407, call­ing it ‘coun­ter­pro­duc­tive to a peace­ful, two-state solu­tion,’” McCollum tweet­ed. “Does ongo­ing U.S. fund­ing for Israeli mil­i­tary deten­tion and abuse of Palestinian chil­dren pro­mote peace or human rights violations?”

McCollum esti­mates that if all of the mem­bers who told her in pri­vate they liked the bill were will­ing to sup­port it pub­licly, she’d have anoth­er 20 co-spon­sors. But she also knows the bill has almost no chance of mak­ing it out of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, head­ed by the staunch­ly pro-Israel Rep. Eliot Engel (D‑N.Y.) — much less becom­ing law. Engel and Dingell did not respond to requests for comment. 

It’s the obvi­ous bill that still won’t get passed,” said Jaylani Hussein, head of the Minnesota chap­ter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. 

From right, Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.), Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.) and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) address the members
From right, Rep. Don Beyer (D‑Va.), Rep. Betty McCollum (D‑Minn.) and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D‑D.C.) address the mem­bers of the Dar Al-Hijrah Mosque in Falls Church, Virginia, on Dec. 4, 2015.

Last year, McCollum accept­ed an award from the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights. During her accep­tance speech, she described Israel’s nation-state law — which reserves the right to self-deter­mi­na­tion in Israel for Jewish peo­ple — as a sys­tem of apartheid. For a sit­ting mem­ber of Congress to use the word “apartheid” in ref­er­ence to Israel is rad­i­cal — almost incon­ceiv­able. But her com­ments attract­ed almost no nation­al attention. 

With the excep­tion of fringe actors, such as Zionist Organization of American President Mort Klein, most of the peo­ple from the pro-Israel com­mu­ni­ty who weighed in on her speech offered mea­sured crit­i­cism. Steve Hunegs, of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas, expressed dis­ap­point­ment with her word choice and her deci­sion to attend the event, but he also empha­sized her past sup­port for a two-state solu­tion. He didn’t accuse her of anti-Semitism. 

McCollum thinks the con­ver­sa­tion about Israel is shift­ing among her col­leagues. The lead­er­ship of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — who has vowed to annex parts of the West Bank — has Democrats con­cerned that prospects for a two-state solu­tion are disappearing.

Without a two-state solu­tion, “do we have apartheid in Israel?” McCollum asked. “Do we have some­thing sim­i­lar to Jim Crow laws, which we had a strug­gle with in this coun­try and we’re still fac­ing the reper­cus­sions that are with race rela­tions? Do we not say anything?”

The con­ver­sa­tion is slow­ly shift­ing, but it’s not hard to imag­ine what would have hap­pened if Omar, the con­gress­woman who rep­re­sents the dis­trict across the riv­er from McCollum’s, had used the word “apartheid” in ref­er­ence to Israel. Like McCollum, Omar has spo­ken out against the influ­ence of AIPAC and crit­i­cized the right-wing gov­ern­ment in Israel. But, unlike the more senior law­mak­er, Omar’s crit­ics usu­al­ly assume the worst inter­pre­ta­tion of her words.

In the week imme­di­ate­ly fol­low­ing Omar’s “It’s all about the Benjamins, baby” tweet — an obser­va­tion that mem­bers of Congress are will­ing to infringe on Americans’ right to crit­i­cize Israel because of mon­ey direct­ed their way by pro-Israel lob­by­ists — Omar was round­ly accused of traf­fick­ing in anti-Semitic tropes about the influ­ence of wealthy Jews. Her name was men­tioned in 21 Fox News shows, 51 CNN shows and five MSNBC shows, The Intercept report­ed. Her name also appeared in near­ly 500 news­pa­per arti­cles, accord­ing to a Lexis Nexis search. 

Omar apol­o­gized after the “Benjamins” tweet and said she was grate­ful for col­leagues and allies who edu­cat­ed her on the “painful his­to­ry of anti-Semitic tropes.” Later that month, she spoke at a pro­gres­sive pol­i­cy town hall about her fear that her legit­i­mate crit­i­cisms of Israel will be mis­con­strued as anti-Semitism because she is Muslim. She asked why she is allowed to crit­i­cize the influ­ence of the National Rifle Association and Big Pharma but not the influ­ence of the pro-Israel lob­by. But peo­ple paid atten­tion to only one line in her remarks: “I want to talk about the polit­i­cal influ­ence in this coun­try that says it is OK for peo­ple to push for alle­giance to a for­eign country.”

Omar was talk­ing about an effec­tive polit­i­cal lob­by­ing oper­a­tion — one that includes plen­ty of evan­gel­i­cal Christians and is opposed by lots of American Jews. But Omar’s crit­ics, includ­ing some lib­er­als, insist­ed she was ques­tion­ing the loy­al­ty of American Jews. New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait pro­claimed she no longer deserved “the pre­sump­tion of good faith,” and Engel accused her of “invok­ing a vile anti-Semitic slur.” Within days, the House passed a res­o­lu­tion con­demn­ing all forms of anti-Semitism, list­ing “accu­sa­tions of dual loy­al­ty” along­side the neo-Nazi ral­ly in Charlottesville, Virginia, and the mas­sacre at a syn­a­gogue in Pittsburgh. 

McCollum’s staff say that the rea­son she doesn’t evoke the same reac­tions as Omar is because she is care­ful with her words and has spent years cul­ti­vat­ing close rela­tion­ships in Congress, includ­ing with lead­er­ship and mem­bers on the oth­er side of the polit­i­cal spec­trum. McCollum works “excru­ci­at­ing­ly” hard to make sure that what she says about Israel is “based on evi­dence” and is backed on reports, Harper said. She goes out of her way to make clear that she is not attack­ing Jews or Israelis, but the poli­cies of a gov­ern­ment, Harper continued. 

I asked more than a dozen pol­i­cy advo­cates and Capitol Hill staffers who work on Israeli-Palestinian issues about the dis­parate treat­ment between McCollum and Omar. All of them agreed that McCollum is care­ful and that she ben­e­fits from close rela­tion­ships with her col­leagues. But racism and Islamophobia are also part of the rea­son why Omar faces vit­ri­olic back­lash every time she weighs in on Israel while McCollum has gone rel­a­tive­ly unno­ticed, almost all of the advo­cates and Capitol Hill staffers said. 

Undoubtedly, Rep. McCollum is one of the lead­ing human rights cham­pi­ons on Palestinian human rights on the Hill, con­sis­tent­ly for years, with­out fail,” said Beth Miller, the gov­ern­ment affairs man­ag­er at Jewish Voice for Peace. “The fact that she has nev­er been attacked in the way that Reps. Tlaib and Omar have been speaks to the racism and Islamophobia that is very present in this conversation.”

Even if Omar used the same lan­guage that McCollum has in crit­i­ciz­ing Israel, she would still be maligned as an anti-Semite, Munayyer argued. “You can try to be as care­ful as you want with your lan­guage, obvi­ous­ly it’s impor­tant that every­one should be care­ful with their lan­guage on this issue,” he said, “but when no mat­ter what you say, you’re being attacked because of who you are. It’s not about what you’re say­ing, it’s about you hav­ing a voice on this issue.”

From the out­side, McCollum and Omar seem like the per­fect duo to bring real change to the U.S. con­ver­sa­tion around Israel: a vet­er­an law­mak­er who has good­will among her col­leagues and a fiery new­com­er who isn’t afraid of rais­ing hell. 

People like Reps. Omar and Tlaib — and, to a cer­tain degree, Bernie Sanders — are bring­ing much-need­ed atten­tion to the occu­pa­tion in ways that we’ve nev­er seen before in Congress. But you also need work­hors­es like Rep. McCollum to qui­et­ly build con­sen­sus around leg­is­la­tion,” a senior Democratic Hill staffer said. “As in any move­ment, the two roles are com­ple­men­tary. You can’t make real change with­out both an inside and an out­side strategy.”

Omar, who, through a spokesper­son, declined an inter­view, is a co-spon­sor of McCollum’s bill — but most of the time, the two mem­bers do their own thing. 

Ilhan is on the oth­er side of the Mississippi River, and we talk some­times in the break room in between votes,” McCollum said, adding that the same was true with Omar’s pre­de­ces­sors. But, at times, McCollum has seemed vis­i­bly annoyed with Omar and the con­tro­ver­sies that sur­round her. 

In March, McCollum put out a rare state­ment on her Minnesota col­league: “Rep. Omar has the right to speak freely, and she also must take respon­si­bil­i­ty for the effect her words have on her col­leagues, her con­stituents, and the poli­cies Democrats seek to advance,” McCollum said. “Democrats have an impor­tant agen­da to advance and for any Member of Congress to be suc­cess­ful it takes the sup­port of at least 217 col­leagues to pass a bill. No one does this job alone.”

McCollum’s chief of staff put it more blunt­ly, “My own take on it is that she real­ly derailed a lot of our work,” Harper said. 

But as any­one who has tried to talk, write or argue about Israel and the Palestinians knows, there’s no way to do it that will please everyone. 

Given how detached the D.C. debate on Israel-Palestine is from the actu­al real­i­ty of what goes on there, there may be no way we move this debate clos­er to real­i­ty in a way that avoids ten­sion entire­ly,” said Matt Duss, a for­eign pol­i­cy advis­er to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I‑Vt.). “We just have to do our best to be as hon­est and sen­si­tive and con­struc­tive as we can, but it’s a debate we need to have.”

Disrespecting The Security Forces Is A Mistake, JLP Flunkies Have Not Learned That Lesson…

(MB)

One of the things which kept the Jamaica Labor Party out of elec­tive office after Edward Seaga lost to Michael Manley in 1988 for an unprece­dent­ed 1812 years, many Jamaicans will tell you, is arro­gance.
Arrogance on the part of the elites inside the par­ty who get their tail feath­ers up their own ass­es as soon as they taste polit­i­cal pow­er.
A sense of enti­tle­ment that ulti­mate­ly alien­ates the aver­age strug­gling Jamaican from a par­ty they see as anti­thet­i­cal to their own inter­est.
The PNP a far less effec­tive par­ty at good gov­er­nance, nev­er­the­less has been far more effec­tive at find­ing com­mon cause with the man on the street.
The irony of ironies is that the par­ty of (Bustamante, the tra­di­tion­al work­ing guy), could effec­tive­ly be pro­pa­gan­dized and viewed as the par­ty of uptown elites.

For bet­ter or for worse, the peo­ple vot­ed out the JLP and gave Bruce Golding a very slim major­i­ty in September of 2007. Before he could fin­ish the first term, Bruce Golding was forced to step aside as he was embroiled in the imbroglio of the Mannat Phelps and Phillips affair in which he alleged it was the par­ty, not he which paid the afore­named American law firm to lob­by the American Government not to demand the extra­di­tion of transna­tion­al, now con­vict­ed and incar­cer­at­ed crim­i­nal Christopher (Duddus)Coke.
Golding made way for Andrew Holness, a young man whom many saw as a new direc­tion for the par­ty, but the dam­age was done. Holness sought his own man­date, but he was round­ly reject­ed at the polls, set­ting up anoth­er PNP admin­is­tra­tion, this time under the lead­er­ship of the hap­less Portia Simpson Miller.
Jamaica was not nec­es­sar­i­ly a PNP coun­try, as the com­rades would like to believe or have you believe, but the major­i­ty of the Jamaican peo­ple were not hap­py with the deci­sions the JLP was mak­ing. Neither were they enam­ored with the elit­ist atti­tude of the par­ty’s top-tiered functionaries.

But Holness was giv­en a new man­date, after he demon­strat­ed to the Jamaican peo­ple that he could hum­ble him­self and show that he cared about their needs.
On inau­gu­ra­tion day Thursday, March 3rd. 2016 Andrew Holness was sworn in at Kings House for a sec­ond time as Prime Minister. In his inau­gur­al address on the sub­ject of cor­rup­tion Holness said the fol­low­ing;

With this man­date: There is no major­i­ty for arro­gance. There is no space for self­ish­ness. There is no place for pet­ti­ness. There is no room for com­pla­cen­cy and, There is no mar­gin for error. I am under no illu­sion as to the mean­ing of this man­date. We have not won a prize. Instead, peo­ple are giv­ing us a test.

But it seems that despite the many suc­cess­es of the new Administration, there are some with­in the par­ty whose fin­gers con­tin­ue to have crazy glue attached.
And to the hyper-par­ti­sans, I don’t give a damn about your sud­den feal­ty to the idea of [inno­cent until proven guilty]. Save it.
The lat­est arrests of Ruel Reid and oth­ers may not end in con­vic­tions, after all, Jamaica’s upper Saint Andrew elites do not go to prison, worse yet if they have polit­i­cal con­nec­tions.
And so the bar­rage of unfor­tu­nate crit­i­cisms have start­ed to pour out of the JLP and its min­ions. Delroy Chuck, whose daugh­ter is rep­re­sent­ing Reid we are reli­ably informed, blast­ed the secu­ri­ty forces for doing what?
Doing their jobs!
The shame­less Chuck is one of the old crus­taceans of Jamaican pol­i­tics. One who still leech­es off the Jamaican tax­pay­ers. In a shock­ing dis­play of what may amount to tam­per­ing, Delroy Chuck used his posi­tion as Minister of Justice to demean and berate the secu­ri­ty forces for arrest­ing his cronies, even though he admit­ted he did not know what evi­dence the secu­ri­ty forces had.
Even if we were to set that aside, what right does a min­is­ter of gov­ern­ment have berat­ing the secu­ri­ty forces for doing their job?
Worse yet, his daughter,(an attor­ney) is rep­re­sent­ing one of the arrest­ed per­sons. While Delroy Chuck is rep­re­sent­ing the very same gov­ern­ment under whose lead­er­ship the secu­ri­ty forces fall.
I was stunned at the broad­side and we made it known in a not too intel­lec­tu­al arti­cle, after which Chuck backed away from his state­ments, but did not apol­o­gize.
But Chuck did not back away because he saw any­thing wrong with his under­min­ing the inves­ti­ga­tions with his com­ments, he backed away because there was pushback.

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

They are not quit­ting, they fun­da­men­tal­ly believe that politi­cians and their cronies are above the nation’s laws. Young Jamaica; the youth arm of the JLP said the raids appeared staged…No one should pay atten­tion to polit­i­cal par­ty sur­ro­gates, and farm teams in my esti­ma­tion, so I won’t be set­ting prece­dent here.
However, Hugh Wildman; Attorney rep­re­sent­ing Fritz Pinnock blast­ed the actions of the secu­ri­ty forces; Siad Wildman “The Gestapo-like oper­a­tion yes­ter­day was sole­ly for embar­rass­ing per­sons and boost­ing the wan­ing polit­i­cal for­tunes of some.
No dude, your clients embar­rassed them­selves when they allowed them­selves to be caught up in these alle­ga­tions. Now if ever I was arrest­ed for some­thing I would want my lawyer to go to the mat for me, so I’m going to be lenient with Wildman, despite his unfor­tu­nate use of words.
“The Gestapo-like oper­a­tion yes­ter­day was sole­ly for embar­rass­ing per­sons and boost­ing the wan­ing polit­i­cal for­tunes of some.”
Wildman seemed to bounce from defense lawyer to polit­i­cal oper­a­tive, need­less to say, he needs to acquaint him­self with exact­ly what Hitler’s Gestapo was. He may be more judi­cious with the use of that term after he does so.
The con­tin­ued JLP talk­ing point that the accused men and one woman could have been asked to come in to be charged miss­es the fact that there is deter­rence in the perp-walk. Police have no oblig­a­tion to call any­one to come in, arrest­ing crim­i­nal sus­pects is the law.
What the JLP and its mouth­pieces are ask­ing for is spe­cial treat­ment for Reid, Pinnock, and the Parish Councillor.

The idea that any mem­ber of the Jamaican Legislative House, much less a min­is­ter of gov­ern­ment, or the legal pro­fes­sion would demean the mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces by using terms like Gestapo to attack them for doing their duties, demon­strates a woe­ful mis­un­der­stand­ing of what the Gestapo was and a crass attempt to over­dra­ma­tize at the expense of the hard-work­ing mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces.
These igno­rant state­ments should be direct­ed at the thieves and fraud­sters who were placed in hand­cuffs because of their alleged sticky fin­gers.
(I hope they were placed in hand­cuffs)
The fact that any mem­ber of the JLP would lam­bast the secu­ri­ty forces for doing their sworn duties instead of chastis­ing their cohorts for engag­ing in crim­i­nal­i­ty, demon­strates to the nation the lev­el of cor­rup­tion and immoral­i­ty which per­vades this admin­is­tra­tion.
Jamaicans always believed that this par­ty hat­ed the police, these dumb morons are mak­ing it crys­tal clear.
I have no fear of being labeled a com­rade. The com­rades label me Laborite when I step on their corn, Oh well.….

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.

All Three Accused In Ruel Reid Case Granted Bail…

The mat­ter of Former Education Minister Mr. Ruel Reid wife Sheron Thomas-Reid and Daughter Sherrele Reid, also charged along­side them is President of CMU Fritz Pinnock and Kim Brown-Lawrence for the offens­es of Conspiracy to Defraud, etc.
The mat­ter was heard in the Kingston & St. Andrew Parish Court. Senior Parish Judge Mr. Vaughn Smith presided over the mat­ter.
(1) Bail appli­ca­tions were made by Attorney Hugh Wildman on behalf of Pinnock. He was offered bail in the sum of $2million with 1 – 2 sure­ty, sur­ren­der trav­el doc­u­ments, stop order made, report to Greater Portmore Police Station every Wednesdays and Saturdays between the hours of 6am to 6pm. Not to inter­fere with Witnesses.
Not to be seen at the Ministry of Education or CMU


(2) Bail appli­ca­tion made by Attorney Mr. Christopher Townsend on behalf of Ms. Kim Brown-Lawrence. Bail was offered in the sum of $1million with 1 – 2 sure­ty, report to Browns Town Police Station every Wednesdays and Saturdays between the hours of 6am to 6pm. Not to inter­fere with Witnesses.
Not to be seen at the Ministry of Education or CMU.


(3) Bail appli­ca­tions were made by Attorney Carolyn Chuck on behalf of The Reid’s fam­i­ly. Ruel Reid was offered bail in the sum of $3million with 1 – 2 sure­ty, Wife $1million with 1 – 2 sure­ty and daugh­ter $500,000 with 1 – 2 sure­ty. All are to sur­ren­der trav­el doc­u­ments, stop order made, report to Matildas Corner Police Station every Wednesdays and Saturdays between the hours of 6am to 6pm. Not to inter­fere with Witnesses. Not to be seen at the Ministry of Education or CMU. Accused (s) bail are extend­ed. Fingerprint Ordered. Disclosure by the end of the month. All out­stand­ing doc­u­ments are to be sub­mit­ted for the 23.1.2020

Dirty Delroy Chuck Wants Special Privileges For Arrested Cronies…

MB

Dirty Delroy Chuck has once again opened his mouth and fur­ther embar­rassed the par­ty and gov­ern­ment of which he is a part, by stick­ing his nose where it does not belong.
Again, Chuck who is part of the yel­low-skinned uptown bour­geoise has con­vinced him­self that there ought to be two sets of rules, one for his kind and anoth­er for every­one else.
In his own words, and clear­ly in an inci­dent that no min­is­ter of Government ought to be crit­i­ciz­ing law-enforce­ment, Chuck decid­ed to inject him­self into the Ruel Reid arrest, on the sole basis that he believes peo­ple like him­self, Ried and Fritz Pinnock, should get spe­cial privileges.

Chuck; The DPP seems to have had no addi­tion­al mate­r­i­al or evi­dence, and what seems so unfor­tu­nate is that the arrests took place (in a man­ner that) looks like Nicodemus in the night.

Why would a Minister of Government pub­licly crit­i­cize the DPP in a sit­u­a­tion where he admit­ted that he does not have the facts?

Chuck; speak­ing to the arrests of his cohorts; “I don’t get the impres­sion that these per­sons are actu­al­ly run­ning away. They have made them­selves avail­able on all occa­sions, so in fact, if an arrest should have been made, they could eas­i­ly have been asked to come in so that they could be charged.

Chuck; On bail; If charges were to be laid against the per­son now arrest­ed as a result of the probe: “I sus­pect they could eas­i­ly have been grant­ed their own bail, or they could be asked to sur­ren­der their trav­el doc­u­ments, as the case may be.”

Chuck is demand­ing spe­cial treat­ments for his cohorts whom he clear­ly believes should not be sub­ject to the embar­rass­ment of arrest as reg­u­lar folks.

Chuck; On the offi­cers involved in the raid; “ the cops are sala­cious, in that you put so many peo­ple at these per­sons’ gates”.
based on the lit­tle I’ve heard, it’s a fur­ther search for more mate­r­i­al, so it seems like the author­i­ties are still not sure what they are look­ing for?”

What Delroy Chuck is say­ing, is that regard­less of the fact that Ruel Reid, and Fritz Pinnock may have com­mit­ted crimes against the Jamaican peo­ple, they should be spared the humil­i­a­tion of a pub­lic arrest.
That is exact­ly what that fuck­ing retard is say­ing. The fact is that pub­lic sham­ing is exact­ly the right thing to do, it is a part of the deter­rent effect which ought to work at pre­vent­ing poten­tial offenders.

Chuck; Come to a con­clu­sion. If you don’t have the mate­r­i­al, report that there’s not enough mate­r­i­al to charge. But if you go and you charge, be care­ful that you (don’t) charge on very lim­it­ed evi­dence, with the end result that the cas­es might not go very far, and that would under­mine the sort of con­fi­dence that you would have in the insti­tu­tion if you pro­ceed to charge on very lim­it­ed evi­dence and the cas­es turn out to be weak or dis­missed by the court.”

Even though he has no idea what the evi­dence is, Delroy chuck the Minister of Justice, is work­ing assid­u­ous­ly to work the ref­er­ees, (judges) in a case in which he does not know the evi­dence.
This is an unscrupu­lous and under­hand­ed method of under­min­ing the case against his friends.

Chuck; admit­ted that he does not know of the evi­dence that is involved in the probe, but stressed that at the end of the day, “we must be very pro­fes­sion­al in what we do”. He expressed the hope that the man­ner in which the law enforce­ment agen­cies car­ry out their oper­a­tions can be accept­ed as being professional.

So even though he has zero facts on the case, and even though there has been zero alle­ga­tion of impro­pri­ety or unpro­fes­sion­al behav­ior on the part of law-enforce­ment, this filthy Minister was pre­pared to begin the work of under­min­ing the case which has not even gone to court.
The Prime Minister has an oppor­tu­ni­ty, in the inter­est of the par­ty and coun­try, to ask Delroy Chuck to step aside.
It is enti­tled, uptown mulat­toes like Delroy Chuck who are left­overs from our colo­nial past that we must eschew.
If Delroy Chuck expects his friends to avoid arrest and embar­rass­ment he should encour­age them to obey the laws.
Not once has he as a par­a­site on the pub­lic pay­roll, spo­ken to the crimes alleged against his cronies. That is all we need to know about this asshole.

Since this arti­cle was first pub­lished we have been reli­ably informed that Delroy Chuck has with­drawn his com­ments.
But that is not enough, he should hand his reg­is­tra­tion to the prime min­is­ter. He is a dis­grace.
Furthermore, we are now learn­ing that Chuck’s daugh­ter who is a lawyer, is one of the attor­neys who will be rep­re­sent­ing Ruel Reid.
This makes Chuck’s state­ments even more insid­i­ous and trans­par­ent.
Delroy Chuck should resign now !!!!

This arti­cle has been updated.


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Mike Beckles is a for­mer Jamaican police Detective cor­po­ral, a busi­ness own­er, avid researcher, and blog­ger. 
He is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast all free to you of course.