An Opportunity For Healing Despite Pain On Both Sides

Commisioner William Bratton . lets see Bratton bring the same level of determination and fortitude to demanding that a Federal grand jury indict Pantaleo for killing Eric Garner
Commisioner William Bratton .

At a time when Rafael Ramos and Wenijian Liu should be prepar­ing to cel­e­brate the hol­i­day sea­son with their fam­i­lies and friends the two New York Police Department cops are dead at the hands of Ismaaiyl Brinsley who assas­si­nat­ed both offi­cers as they sat in their patrol cars in Bedford-Stuyvesant Brooklyn.
This is a tragedy both for the depart­ment they served and their fam­i­lies. One can only imag­ine the pain the fam­i­lies are feel­ing at this sud­den and trag­ic loss of their loved ones. I can relate to that pain both as a father who lost my 20-year-old son less than a year ago and as a for­mer police offi­cer who have lost many of my col­leagues at the hands of criminals.
This is a sober­ing moment for the New York Police Department, the city of New York and indeed the nation.
In the end we are peo­ple , we all bleed, we are all God’s children.When we give life-sav­ing blood all that mat­ters is the type of the blood not the col­or of the skin of the giver.

PBA president Patrick Lynch has lost all credibility , he blames Eric Garner for his own death. A regular loud-mouth no one takes him seriously on police issues, he is more harm than good to officers
PBA pres­i­dent Patrick Lynch encour­aged rank and file mem­bers to ban Mayor deBlasio from their funer­als should they die in the line of duty

This is an oppor­tu­ni­ty for those who demand jus­tice for their loved ones killed at the hands of police and police to come togeth­er to forge a way for­ward. Listening to the same old dividers like Rudolph Giuliani, Howard Safir , the felon Bernard Kerik and oth­ers will not cre­ate the atmos­phere for that dia­logue to happen.
Talking down to sec­tions of the black com­mu­ni­ty like Giuliani and Safir did does noth­ing but cre­ate more resent­ment. For too long poli­cies employed by the divi­sive Giuliani imple­ment­ed by Bratton , Safir, Kerik, and Kelly have alien­at­ed huge chunks of new York City’s black and Hispanic com­mu­ni­ties, and result­ed in nee­dles deaths and mis­trust on both sides.

Blaming Mayor deBlasio who cam­paigned on police reform for the killing of the two offi­cers is disin­gen­u­ous, self-serv­ing, dis­hon­est and dan­ger­ous. The NYPD must change to the demands of the peo­ple it serves, the peo­ple have no oblig­a­tion to change to suit the Police which works for them. The dis­re­spect­ful approach of Giuliani which has been con­tin­ued by Michael Bloomberg dic­tates that it knows best whats good for the black com­mu­ni­ty must end. You can­not adopt a pos­ture that peo­ple you believe beneath you should shut up as you know what’s best for them. You can­not legit­i­mate­ly tell a com­mu­ni­ty who should

A disrespectful   Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop , how do they treat people with no power is the real questions those who support everything cops do
A dis­re­spect­ful Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop ,

rep­re­sent them, or refuse to meet with that com­mu­ni­ty’s rep­re­sen­ta­tives because you have pet­ty jeal­ousies and dis­likes. That was the kind of New York Giuliani cre­at­ed. These events are the consequences.

The so-called bro­ken win­dows pol­i­cy insti­tut­ed by the NYPD has been a cause of con­cern for many in the black and lati­no com­mu­ni­ties who com­plain police tar­get them for stop and frisk which results in abuse of their per­sons and their con­sti­tu­tion­al rights.

The Police depart­ment main­tains if they are able to main­tain stop and frisk poli­cies peo­ple who are like­ly to com­mit vio­lent crimes will think twice about tak­ing a gun onto the streets. No gun , no shooting.
Both sides are correct.
If the num­bers indi­cate that the peo­ple who large­ly com­mit vio­lent gun crimes in the city are Blacks and Hispanics then nat­u­ral­ly those are

Detectives Endowment Association President Michael Palladino
Detectives Endowment Association President Michael Palladino

the demo­graph­ics which will invari­ably bear the brunt of the stops. There are parts of any strat­e­gy which will invari­ably not be pop­u­lar with cer­tain inter­est groups. What the Police depart­ment can ill afford is to employ a top down approach that does not include the input and par­tic­i­pa­tion of all stake-holders. 
Whether it is a func­tion of dis­re­spect or a fail­ure to com­mu­ni­cate may be open to who you talk to. What is clear is that large sec­tions of the city’s res­i­dents believe the police do not respect them, this is untenable.
In offer­ing his cri­tique of events for­mer Giuliani Commissioner Howard Safir claim he has spo­ken to many stake­hold­ers with­in the black com­mu­ni­ty and like every­one else these peo­ple want the same things every­one else wants. Well what do you know, I won­der how long it took Safir to fig­ure this out?
Safir’s com­ments ranked up there with right-wing talk­er Bill Reilly who was fas­ci­nat­ed when he went to the famous Sylvia’s restau­rant in Harlem and no one was behav­ing bad­ly or yelling and scream­ing curse words.
The police depart­ment failed dis­mal­ly to engage the com­mu­ni­ties who would be affect­ed most­ly by it’s stop and frisk pol­i­cy on the front end, but which may have ben­e­fit­ed also in the long run from reduced vio­lent crimes.
That is not the fault of the communities. 
That is not the fault of com­mu­ni­ty lead­ers who march and demand jus­tice for res­i­dents who are abused by police.

That is not the fault of a Mayor who seek to repair those breaches.
That must be placed square­ly at the feet of the Police department .
Try engag­ing the com­mu­ni­ty in a respect­ful man­ner and explain the num­bers. Explain that young black and brown men are com­mit­ting the most vio­lent crimes in the city and as such they of course will be stopped and frisked more than oth­er groups.Try explain­ing that it is not racism why they are tar­get­ed, just what the crime stats show.
Try explain­ing to the peo­ple you stop that you are not being mali­cious just doing what you must to keep the city and them safe. Try being less abra­sive. Try being less abu­sive when you stop peo­ple who are offend­ed by being restrained from free move­ment by your stops. Try a less con­fronta­tion­al approach and see if many of the peo­ple who you actu­al­ly stop and frisk will not be far less hos­tile to being approached.
Stop and frisk as it was con­sti­tut­ed cre­at­ed a lot of ani­mus between com­mu­ni­ties and the police, this occurred because the police failed at it’s imple­men­ta­tion and it’s exe­cu­tion. Police offi­cers are not sup­posed to esca­late sit­u­a­tions so they may make arrests. The duty of cops is to main­tain peace and good order . Prevent crimes from being com­mit­ted and inves­ti­gate where crimes have been committed.

In new York City blacks arrest­ed for low lev­el drug offences like mar­i­jua­na pos­ses­sion are far more like­ly to be slapped with resist­ing arrest charges which is a class A mis­de­meanor and car­ries a stiffer penal­ty than the ini­tial offense. City-wide data shows that blacks are twice more like­ly to be charged with resist­ing arrest than their white coun­ter­parts for the same low lev­el drug offence. On Staten Island,blacks are almost two-and-a-half times more like­ly to be accused of resist­ing arrest.

Whats even more trou­bling is the fact that most of those charges can­not be sub­stan­ti­at­ed in a court of law and are even­tu­al­ly thrown out of court. Which sup­ports the the­o­ry they were unfair­ly trumped up for per­son­al reasons.

Looking for scape­goats to blame as many sup­port­ers and the depart­ment has, will not fix things. Turning their backs on the Chief exec­u­tive Officer as some of them has done, only solid­i­fy what many already know, that there are sys­tem­at­ic prob­lems of account­abil­i­ty and respect with­ing the department.
The NYPDPBA and the SBA through their respec­tive lead­ers Patrick Lynch and Ed Mullins have demon­stra­bly shown that rela­tions between the depart­ment and mem­bers of the pub­lic as well as that of the depart­ment and City Hall will not be fixed any time soon. 

cops close to where their colleagues were brutally slaughtered
Cops close to where their col­leagues were bru­tal­ly slaughtered

Ed Mullins dis­re­spect­ful­ly ref­er­eed to the Mayor as a “Nincompoop”. Lynch the loud-mouth rab­ble-rouser encour­aged rank and file cops to sign a peti­tion ban­ning the Mayor from their funer­als should they die in the line of duty. The NYPD may con­tin­ue to bury it’s head in the sand and lis­ten only to it’s chief boot-lick­ers, con­tin­u­ing the per­cep­tion it is a law-less agency or it may look to change and be respect­ed once again. Those are the choic­es which the depart­ment faces.
Mayor deBlasio is try­ing to undo two decades of testos­terone-based polic­ing which has caused the un-nec­es­sary loss of numer­ous lives, and hefty finan­cial payouts.
Bloomberg News report­ed that in 2011, Los Angeles paid out $54 mil­lion, while New York paid out a whop­ping $735 mil­lion, although those fig­ures include neg­li­gence and oth­er claims unre­lat­ed to police abuse. Oakland Police Beat report­ed in April that the city had paid out $74 mil­lion to set­tle 417 law­suits since 1990. That’s a lit­tle more than $3 mil­lion per year. The Denver Post report­ed in August that the Mile High City paid $13 mil­lion over 10 years. The Dallas Morning News report­ed in May that the city has forked over $6 mil­lion since 2011. And last month, Minneapolis Public Radio put that city’s pay­out at $21 mil­lion since 2003.
In many cas­es pay­out could have been much high­er were there not caps in place which pre­vent larg­er payouts.
Clearly the prob­lem of police abuse of cit­i­zens is not con­fined to New York City, Ferguson Missouri , or Cleveland Ohio. Citizens are made to pay for these pay­outs even as schools are starved of cash to edu­cate chil­dren. This cre­ates a dan­ger­ous cycle which requires more law-enforce­ment, more abuse alle­ga­tions and more payouts.
Cops them­selves are pre­clud­ed from hav­ing to pay when a judge­ment is made against them under the doc­trine qual­i­fied immu­ni­ty. States would much rather cap abuse pay­out than force­ful­ly deal with abuse by police of cit­i­zens. Some inter­est groups have sug­gest­ed mak­ing indi­vid­ual offi­cers who breach their oath to serve and pro­tect assume some of the pay­ments . In oth­er cas­es some even sug­gest­ed those pay­outs should come from police pen­sion funds as a deterrent.
Democratic and Republican Legislatures and Governors are too tight­ly woven into the hero wor­ship of law-enforce­ment to untan­gle this sor­did mess. In the mean­time the ani­mos­i­ty which killed Eric Garner. Tamir Rice, John Crawford, Rafael Ramos, Wenijian Liu and count­less oth­ers will con­tin­ue with no end in sight.

New York City Reaping The Bitter Fruits Of Giuliani’s Divisive Politics

We have seen nothing but police bashing from some of the highest offices in the land.

Howard Safir
Howard Safir

So said Howard Safir for­mer Fire Commissioner and police com­mis­sion­er of the City of New York . Safir was appoint­ed by Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani on January 1, 1994 and served in that posi­tion until he was appoint­ed 39th Police Commissioner of the City of New York by Giuliani on April 15, 1996. He served as Police Commissioner until his res­ig­na­tion on August 18, 2000.

Safir did not stop there he went on to say ” Police lives mat­ter. Let’s demon­strate it nationally.
 Michael Brown and Eric Garner died resist­ing arrest. Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu died doing their job. It is a very impor­tant dis­tinc­tion. Michael Brown and Eric Garner were com­mit­ting crimes. Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu were pro­tect­ing all the cit­i­zens of New York City.
Well there you have it a direct assault on the griev­ing fam­i­lies of Eric Garner and Michael Brown. Safir did not both­er to include the lit­tle annoy­ing fact that Eric Garner was mur­dered for no rea­son! If you did not com­mit a crime why would you take kind­ly to being arrested?Safir did not both­er to men­tion 12 year-old Tamir Rice who was gunned down in Cleveland Ohio by cops who drove up and just shot him, albeit he was hold­ing a toy gun. There was no men­tion of any of the oth­er sense­less killings , like that of John Crawford gunned down in a Beaver Creek Ohio Walmart , because he picked up a toy gun he intend­ed to purchase.
Safir did not care about Kajeime Powell a black man of unsound mind who was lit­er­al­ly exe­cut­ed by St Louis Police just a stones throw from where Michael Brown was exe­cut­ed in Ferguson Missouri. 

Nothing about  Akai Gurley’s killed as he exit­ed his girl­friend’s apart­ment. Was he deserv­ing of death? Did he resist arrest or did his sense­less killing not fit Safir’s narrative?

How about Michael Bell who was killed as he left his bach­e­lor’s par­ty on the day he was to be mar­ried? How about Anthony Baez, or  Amadou Diallo?
Howard Safir could not both­er to care about the inno­cent loss of black lives, too many to men­tion but like all the oth­er ver­min he crawled out to demo­nize and crit­i­cize the Mayor Attorney General, Reverend Al Sharpton and President Obama. 
No one is sur­prised about Howard Safir’s intem­per­ate self-serv­ing out­burst, after all he was hired by Giuliani, the big­ot­ed lit­tle El Duce who ruled New York City for 8 years. Combined Safir, his for­mer boss and the thugs who assault and kill peo­ple under the guise of good polic­ing are lit­er­al­ly the same class­less , uncouth and in some cas­es racists thugs who caused this whole fiasco. 
Actions have con­se­quences, fix police abuse and this prob­lem goes away. Continue in stub­born tone deaf­ness and the anger and vio­lence is bound to con­tin­ue. The police sim­ply can­not con­tin­ue to kill and cit­i­zens have no recourse in the courts.
That is where Howard Safir, Rudolph and oth­ers who place the NYPD above law abid­ing cit­i­zens and the laws should focus their ener­gies. But Safir the Giuliani pro­tégé was­n’t done, he was just get­ting start­ed , blam­ing US Attorney General Eric Holder ‚the Reverend Al Sharpton and even President Obama for stir­ring up anti-police resentment.

Racialist , race baiter Rudolph Giuliani
Racialist , race baiter Rudolph Giuliani



No one is stir­ring up police resent­ment, except the police. When cops act out­side the laws cit­i­zens are not going to roll over and die. It is incom­pre­hen­si­ble that these peo­ple who held high office could demon­stra­bly be so stu­pid. Recent events which have gar­nered nation­al and world-wide atten­tion should be enough to force these char­la­tans to use what­ev­er influ­ence they have to get police to respect human rights and human dignity.
Instead they use it to fur­ther solid­i­fy and cement what the black com­mu­ni­ty has always felt, that they do not care about their com­mu­ni­ty or their lives. No one in the black com­mu­ni­ty expect­ed any­thing bet­ter from the likes of Rudolph Giuliani or Howard Safir.

Not to be out­done the entourage of Republican hypocrisy was not con­fined to Safir, Former Republican Governor George Pataki tweet­ed Sickened by these bar­bar­ic acts, which sad­ly are a pre­dictable out­come of divi­sive anti-cop rhetoric of & . .
No one heard a word of con­dem­na­tion for the killing of Eric Garner from twist­ed mouth George Pataki..
El Deuce Giuliani, who was nev­er at a loss as to how to fix the black com­mu­ni­ty, when he is not advo­cat­ing their killing said quote, ”  It is the right time to talk about [de Blasio’s] poli­cies. His poli­cies of allow­ing protests to get out of con­trol, and of his not empha­siz­ing enough the impor­tance of father­hood, the impor­tance of edu­ca­tion, the impor­tance of an alter­na­tive to a pub­lic edu­ca­tion sys­tem that is fail­ing the black children”.

Recently released federal felon Bernard Kerik
Recently released fed­er­al felon Bernard Kerik

The most out­ra­geous of all though, are the com­ments of Federal Felon and recent­ly released pris­on­er Bernard Kerik . Former Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik tore into Mayor Bill de Blasio over his han­dling of the Eric Garner con­tro­ver­sy, claim­ing that he has sided with Rev. Al Sharpton against the police force and his own police com­mis­sion­er, Bill Bratton. Kerik, who – like Mr. Bratton – served as head of the NYPD under Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, claimed that Mr. de Blasio has let Mr. Sharpton walk all over New York’s Finest fol­low­ing Mr. Garner’s fatal encounter with cops last month. “These men and women go out every day and put their lives on the line for the peo­ple of this city,” Mr. Kerik told lis­ten­ers of the Geraldo Rivera radio pro­gram. “They’re get­ting cru­ci­fied here and thrown under the bus by the de Blasio Administration for one instance.” Mr. Kerik, once her­ald­ed as “America’s Cop” after his ser­vice dur­ing the September 11 attacks, had a pre­cip­i­tous fall from grace. He was recent­ly released from prison after serv­ing three years for tax fraud and lying to the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment when he was being con­sid­ered for the job of Director of Homeland Security.As report­ed by the new york observer.

Of all the nerve, this crim­i­nal has the nerve to open his mouth, as far as Giuliani, Safir and oth­ers who sup­port them are con­cerned, crim­i­nals like Kerik are of no liv­ing worth. They nev­er fail to trot out the record of peo­ple NYPD mur­der, as if hav­ing a record means that a per­son is prime can­di­date for sum­ma­ry police execution.
The sin­gle thread which ties Safir, Kerik, Pataki, and the destruc­tive, dis­re­spect­ful atti­tude of some with­in the NYPD like Lynch and oth­ers is Rudolph Giuliani, the race-baiter whose divi­sive poli­cies divid­ed the city along racial lines to fur­ther his polit­i­cal ambitions.

Garish And Classless

Mayor deBlasio do not be intimidated as you do the work you were elected to do, Police officers are necessary for the job they do , they are not above the laws. They should and must respect the laws like everyone else. We are with you Mayor.
Mayor deBlasio
do not be intim­i­dat­ed as you do the work you were elect­ed to do, Police offi­cers are nec­es­sary for the job they do , they are not above the laws. They should and must respect the laws like every­one else.
We are with you Mayor.

Members of the NYPD who turned their backs on may­or deBlasio did not do them­selves their fam­i­lies nor the city any jus­tice today . The Mayor has a job to do, and he is doing it. The NYPD’s tone deaf­ness to the con­cerns and the cries of cer­tain com­mu­ni­ties is indica­tive of their lack of respect for some cit­i­zens of the city of New York.”

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Again they have show a total lack of class and respect by turn­ing their backs on the Chief Executive Officer of 8.5 mil­lion peo­ple. Members of the NYPD seem to believe that oth­ers should bow to them. By their own actions they con­tin­ue to do irrepara­ble harm to the depart­ment and to them­selves by their class-less thug­gish and gar­ish dis­play in both words and deeds.

Events like these which ought to elic­it empa­thy and sup­port from cit­i­zens are wast­ed as this Agency dis­plays ten­den­cies which have some cit­i­zens up in arms in the first place.Their actions fur­ther cements the views that the Agency is a Gang of crim­i­nals who believe they are above the laws or a law onto themselves .
Clearly there are sys­tem­at­ic prob­lems with­ing this police depart­ment that needs seri­ous solutions.
The Giuliani and Bloomberg years has cre­at­ed a Force which is alien to the needs of most New Yorkers.
Clearly being the biggest does not mean the best. 
This is a dis­gust­ing tasteless,disrespectful ‚dispi­ca­ble and taste­less act.

#THUGS

Body-blow Cop Suspended :report

Officer John McDevitt — an anti-crime cop from the 7th Precinct rained body-blows on the subject who was already under the control of three other cops
Officer John McDevitt — an anti-crime cop from the 7th Precinct rained body-blows on the sub­ject who was already under the con­trol of three oth­er cops

A NYPD tough-guy street cop wear­ing cam­ou­flage jack­et and base­ball cap with peak turned back­wards, is now cool­ing his heels on sus­pen­sion for rain­ing blows on an under­age boy who was ini­tial­ly accused of assault­ing someone.
The charges against the youth were report­ed­ly lat­er dropped.
John McDevitt , an anti-crime cop from the 7th Precinct was iden­ti­fied as the accused cop who ran in and deliv­ered sev­er­al body-shots to the young man’s mid­sec­tion, while three oth­er cops had him pressed against a car and were in the process of plac­ing cuffs on him.

Interestingly there was a black female cop who stood around as the kid was pound­ed by the cop and did noth­ing. That takes care of the sug­ges­tions racial diver­si­ty with­ing police depart­ments are some sort of panacea for police abuse. From what we have seen in the Eric Garner case and oth­ers, cops of all races appear to be equal oppor­tu­ni­ty abusers.

In this case the black female cop seemed more con­cerned with a lady who iden­ti­fied her­self as a lawyer as she lament­ed that they would actu­al­ly be com­mit­ting the assault in light of recent occurrences.

This is yet anoth­er exam­ple of what black and brown New Yorkers have been com­plain­ing of for years. This is not about aggres­sive polic­ing which is clear­ly need­ed to make sure that crime stats trend down and remain down.

This nlack female cop was more concerned with observers who voiced their disapproval at what was occurring than stopping the assault by her colleague
This black female cop was more con­cerned with observers who voiced their dis­ap­proval at what was occur­ring than stop­ping the assault by her colleague

From Social media com­ments of some igno­rant observers, there is no pos­si­bil­i­ty of aggres­sive­ly going after crim­i­nals and respect­ing the rights of citizens.

Of course those opin­ions are not based on real­i­ty , but on utter igno­rance and racial hatred.
Police offi­cers can aggres­sive­ly go after crim­i­nals and at the same time refrain from tram­pling on the rights of cit­i­zens. There is a dif­fer­ence between aggres­sive­ly going after crim­i­nals and being undu­ly aggres­sive with citizens.
One thing this recent upsurge of police abuse, excess and unlaw­ful killings revealed, is the deep ugly under-bel­ly of racism in America. Be it Police or any oth­er mat­ter, the con­ver­sa­tion defaults to race. That is where the igno­rance and utter idio­cy of those who blind­ly sup­port cops or what­ev­er cause they cham­pi­on from the right comes out. No amount of con­vinc­ing will change the views of those who hold racist views, those who hate, into real­iz­ing racism is igno­rance per­son­i­fied. After all igno­rance is all they have to hold onto.
New York cops are not with­out sup­port­ers who believe it is per­fect­ly good prac­tice to abuse, injury and kill peo­ple of col­or. We can­not change the mind of the igno­rant who feel that way. New Yorkers can make cops under­stand we love them , we respect them but we will under no cir­cum­stances allow them to abuse and kill with­out consequence.

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Once again NYPD’s finest abuse cit­i­zens then gripe and com­plain about not get­ting respect.
You do not get respect when your demeanor is one of a hooli­gan and a com­mon thug.
Differentiate your­self from hooli­gans thugs and gang­sters and peo­ple will respect your authority.
Nowhere in his­to­ry has those who seek to use brute force over per­sua­sion ever work in the inter­est of the practitioner.
Force begets force , vio­lence begets vio­lence, use the author­i­ty of your badge and peo­ple will respect you.

Cop Killed For Being A Cop

Constable Preddie
Constable Preddie

She walked in this morn­ing and greet­ed me as she always did when she comes in to trans­act busi­ness. I real­ized some­thing was wrong as soon as I looked up to return her greet­ing. She told me her cousin was shot and killed in Jamaica last night. Killing is nor­mal now more-so in some places than oth­ers. In Jamaica it’s more-so.

My heart went out to her, she was very much there for me and my fam­i­ly in April when we lost our beloved son Kodi.
I felt a sense of empa­thy for her loss. I do so now even more than I did before. Death of a loved one does that to you.
Then she tells me her cousin was a police offi­cer and my heart dropped. Not because police offi­cers lives are worth more than that of any­one else, but because they stand between those who would do us harm and ourselves.

Jamaican Police say Constable Preddie who was off duty and unarmed was relax­ing with friends at a bar in the remote com­mu­ni­ty of Farm in the Asia police divi­sion of south­ern Manchester when sev­er­al men armed with guns entered the premis­es. The crim­i­nals pro­ceed­ed to rob patrons and in the process of going through their pock­ets dis­cov­ered Preddie’s police iden­ti­fi­ca­tion. One of the gun­men prompt­ly shot him in the head. He report­ed­ly died on the spot. Preddie was mar­ried with two chil­dren aged eight years and 18 months.

The death of this offi­cer sends a chill­ing mes­sage to law abid­ing cit­i­zens, “we will kill any­thing and any­one who stand in our way”. The fact that con­sta­ble Preddie was unarmed is some­what trou­bling. Why would a police offi­cer not have a ser­vice weapon in this day and age is beyond me?
Did Preddie have access to a weapon but naïve­ly allowed him­self to be lulled into a false sense of security?
Did the depart­ment take their weapon after they fin­ished using him dur­ing his tour of duty?
Those are per­ti­nent ques­tions which begs swift answers.
Jamaican author­i­ties and civ­il soci­ety, places extra­or­di­nary stock on the lives of crim­i­nals and con­vict­ed felons, not on the lives and inter­est of police offi­cers. My heart goes out to his fam­i­ly ‚to my friend Trish and more than any­one else, his wife and two lit­tle kids.
May God give you com­fort and peace.
To the scum who took his life, may you rest easy in the knowl­edge you do not have some­one like me on your trail for this killing .
Demonizing police offi­cers gives pow­er to garbage like these scum, that is the Jamaican way.
I ask that all offi­cers take this death per­son­al­ly, go get these pieces of garbage.Whether you bring them to jus­tice or you bring jus­tice to them is all the same to me.

Obama Race Relations Has Gotten Better: But Has It Really

RACE RELATIONS HAVE GOTTEN BETTER, MORE PROGRESS NEEDED”. 

Obama
Obama

Those are the words of Barack Obama President of the United States. 
President Obama made those com­ments in an in depth inter­view with People Magazine.
In the inter­view the President detailed being mis­tak­en for a wait­er and Valet.’ The President’s wife, first lady Michelle Obama recalls that once they were at a black tie affair and some­one asked her hus­band to get coffee.
According to the cou­ple these events occurred just pri­or to mis­ter Obama’s ascen­dan­cy to the Presidency.
In actu­al­i­ty with­in this decade. 
Barack Obama has come under severe scruti­ny and endured much crit­i­cisms on his response to recent police killing of unarmed peo­ple, large­ly African American males.
By the way that cri­tique is com­ing from some of his staunchest sup­port­ers , includ­ing Professors Michael Eric Dyson, Cornell West and oth­ers. Supporters believe he vac­il­lates between speak­ing out stri­dent­ly against oppres­sion and pla­cat­ing white America. Mister Obama’s demeanor seem to be one that shies away from con­fronta­tion. In some quar­ters that may give the appear­ance of weak­ness. However Obama’s stance on the issue of race is not nec­es­sar­i­ly one of weak­ness per sey.

when is enough, enough, what more are blacks waiting for to gain the respect they deserve
when is enough, enough, what more are blacks wait­ing for to gain the respect they deserve

Obama spoke out when his friend Tenured Harvard Professor Henry Lewis Gates was wrong­ly pro­filed and arrest­ed on his own prop­er­ty by a Boston cop. The new President said then:
“I don’t know, not hav­ing been there and not see­ing all the facts, what role race played in that [Gates case]. But I think it’s fair to say, num­ber one, any of us would be pret­ty angry; num­ber two, that the Cambridge police act­ed stu­pid­ly in arrest­ing some­body when there was already proof that they were in their own home; and, num­ber three, what I think we know sep­a­rate and apart from this inci­dent is that there’s a long his­to­ry in this coun­try of African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by law enforce­ment dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly. That’s just a fact.”

Obama also spoke out on the Travyon Martin Killing, stating :

The death of Trayvon Martin was a tragedy. Not just for his fam­i­ly, or for any one com­mu­ni­ty, but for America. I know this case has elicit­ed strong pas­sions. And in the wake of the ver­dict, I know those pas­sions may be run­ning even high­er. “But we are a nation of laws, and a jury has spo­ken. I now ask every American to respect the call for calm reflec­tion from two par­ents who lost their young son. “And as we do, we should ask our­selves if we’re doing all we can to widen the cir­cle of com­pas­sion and under­stand­ing in our own com­mu­ni­ties. We should ask our­selves if we’re doing all we can to stem the tide of gun vio­lence that claims too many lives across this coun­try on a dai­ly basis. “We should ask our­selves, as indi­vid­u­als and as a soci­ety, how we can pre­vent future tragedies like this. As cit­i­zens, that’s a job for all of us. That’s the way to hon­or Trayvon Martin.”

Sorry to burst your bubble mister president , not a darn thing has changed
Sorry to burst your bub­ble mis­ter pres­i­dent , not a darn thing has changed

These were pret­ty defin­i­tive state­ments com­ing from the President, the prob­lems is not that he does­n’t speak out , it’s what he does after white peo­ple push back, he seem to pull back. In the Gates saga he capit­u­lat­ed by invit­ing the cop to the white house for a beer. A def­i­nite no no if you ask me. That was a sign of weak­ness in my estimation.
Since then Obama seem to be at pains not to get involved in the thorny issue of race in America. Now many say “well he is the pres­i­dent of all America he can­not take one side over another!
Perfectly true and he shouldn’t.
But no one is ask­ing him to. 
The President is the high­est elect­ed Official in the coun­try, he can­not run for anoth­er office after his sec­ond term is over. If Obama can­not stand firm­ly and deci­sive­ly against racial hatred in America now, when will he?
Strongly con­demn­ing entrenched racist atti­tudes in some sec­tors of white America is not tak­ing sides. It is the right thing to do.
Who cares about the howls of con­dem­na­tion which are sure to fol­low? To hell with those who scream, if you chose neu­tral­i­ty you actu­al­ly chose the side of the oppressor. 

Eric Garner dead at the hands of cops who choked him to death
Eric Garner dead at the hands of cops who choked him to death

Those who scream about the pres­i­dent should not take sides, are those who ben­e­fit the most from over 400 years of White suprema­cy and racial enti­tle­ments in this country.
Racism can go away today if white America chose to end it.
They start­ed it,they per­pet­u­ate it, they can end it.
This is the rea­son I strong­ly dis­agree with the pres­i­dent that race rela­tions are get­ting bet­ter. The fact that Barack Obama was elect­ed pres­i­dent is a net pos­i­tive for him. It’s a net pos­i­tive for the coun­try and to some extent in the long run black America. At the moment how­ev­er, there is a seri­ous white-lash against his pres­i­den­cy which is hav­ing dev­as­tat­ing con­se­quences for oth­ers less pow­er­ful than he.
No race has author­i­ty over another. 
No race is supe­ri­or to the other.
No race is more enti­tled to this plan­et than others.
On that basis alone black Americans should wait not one minute more to be treat­ed equal­ly and fair­ly in this land their fore-par­ents vis­it­ed first. They should wait not one minute more in this land their fore-par­ents slaved and died for, got raped and muti­lat­ed for.
Many whites speak about America with a sense of own­er­ship, as if every­one else are mere intruders,or vis­i­tors at best. Intruders and vis­i­tors there to be treat­ed based on their per­son­al feel­ings and bias­es. Blacks must seize the moment, but most impor­tant­ly they must assume own­er­ship of their coun­try, and be pre­pared to die for it. They must be pre­pared to die so that their chil­dren may live out the promise this land has for their chil­dren, all chil­dren. Once and for this refugee in their own land sta­tus must come to an end.
th (3)We have …come to this hal­lowed spot to remind America of the fierce urgency of Now. This is no time to engage in the lux­u­ry of cool­ing off or to take the tran­quil­iz­ing drug of grad­u­al­ism. Now is the time to make real the promis­es of democ­ra­cy. Now is the time to rise from the dark and des­o­late val­ley of seg­re­ga­tion to the sun­lit path of … jus­tice. Now is the time to lift our nation from the quick­sands of … injus­tice to the sol­id rock of broth­er­hood. Now is the time to make jus­tice a real­i­ty for all of God’s children.” 
— Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King

President Obama can­not be con­sumed by polls which indi­cate falling num­bers on his han­dling of race. There will be howls of dis­con­tent and anger. Those howls will come from those who are sat­is­fied ben­e­fi­cia­ries of the sta­tus quo. That is unten­able, that is unacceptable.
There comes a time when doing what is right trumps what is pop­u­lar, now is the time.

Enhanced Video Good To Arrest College Professor : Great Quality Un-enhanced Video Not Enough To Indict Cop Who Killed Garner

Commisioner William Bratton . lets see Bratton bring the same level of determination and fortitude to demanding that a Federal grand jury indict Pantaleo for killing Eric Garner
Commisioner William Bratton . lets see Bratton bring the same lev­el of deter­mi­na­tion and for­ti­tude to demand­ing that a Federal grand jury indict Pantaleo for killing Eric Garner

Two NYPD cops attached to the depart­ments legal affairs bureau were alleged­ly assault­ed on the Brooklyn Bridge , sup­pos­ed­ly dur­ing a peace­ful march over the week­end. The two, Patrick Sullivan and Phillip Chan are both Lieutenants. The pair were sup­pos­ed­ly wear­ing NYPD jack­ets with iden­ti­fi­ca­tion and were there to ensure pro­test­ers rights were pro­tect­ed , as report­ed by CBS​.com and the Associated Press. 
Which brings us to ask why are spe­cial cops there to ensure cit­i­zens fun­da­men­tal right to protest against their gov­ern­ment? Aren’t all cops sup­posed to be par­tic­u­lar­ly alert­ed and informed on that fact? What hap­pens when legal affairs is not there?

I believe we all know what hap­pens when they are not.
The NYPD has since arrest­ed Eric Linkser a 29-year-old Baruch College Professor who teach­es Composition. Notice how quick­ly they arrest­ed some­one who alleged­ly attacked one of their own? The Commissioner William Bratton said quote: “We do not take attacks on our police offi­cers light­ly, we nev­er have and nev­er will,”. I bet New Yorkers of col­or would like that sense of res­olute­ness when it comes to police vio­lence on them. 
The Department says there are oth­ers involved in the alleged attack , which they say occurred when the two cops inter­vened when Linkser alleged­ly tried to toss a 50-pound garbage can from the ele­vat­ed walk­way at offi­cers on the road­way below. They are sup­pos­ed­ly putting togeth­er a twelve thou­sand dol­lar ($12,000.00 reward to fer­ret out oth­ers involved in the assault. 
The young man who video­taped NYPD cops killing Eric Garner was arrest­ed on weapons charges, rather con­ve­nient­ly after the video became pub­lic. Pantaleo the cop who killed Garner and the oth­er mur­der­ers who aid­ed and abet­ted him have so far faced no crim­i­nal sanctions.

A disrespectful   Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop , how do they treat people with no power is the real questions those who support everything cops do
A dis­re­spect­ful Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop , how do they treat peo­ple with no pow­er is the real ques­tion those who sup­port every­thing cops do should ponder

In respond­ing to the inci­dent New York City’s Mayor Bill deBlasio called the inci­dent an “alleged assault” That char­ac­ter­i­za­tion drew the ire of the sergeants benev­o­lent asso­ci­a­tion. Union pres­i­dent Ed Mullins labeled the Mayor a “nin­com­poop”. The PBA pres­i­dent Patrick Lynch who encour­aged mem­bers to sign a peti­tion demand­ing that the Mayor and city Council pres­i­dent not attend their funer­al in the event they are killed in the line of duty, said “It is very clear to me that the may­or has no idea of just how angry New York City police offi­cers are at him for his lack of sup­port and for lay­ing decades of soci­ety’s prob­lems unde­served­ly at their feet.”

Does any­one recall when Rudolph Giuliani led a rag-tag throng of drunk­en cops in 1992 onto the steps of City Hall in protest against Mayor David Dinkins? Yup, they called Dinkins a N****r, they called him a wash-room atten­dant. Do you detect the same kind of dis­re­spect to this Mayor who is mar­ried to a black woman ?
In 2007 the New York dai­ly news Mike Mcalary wrote ” This city has two police forces: one small and hor­ri­ble, and one great and noble. People see the uni­form and fig­ure all cops are part of the hor­ror. That’s not true. In the 1820s, the city had two police forces, and they fought on the steps of City Hall. That police riot occurred when one force tried to arrest the may­or. The clos­est we’ve come to that was when Giuliani encour­aged a police mob to rat­tle then-Mayor David Dinkins in 1992”.

PBA president Patrick Lynch has lost all credibility , he blames Eric Garner for his own death. A regular loud-mouth no one takes him seriously on police issues, he is more harm than good to officers
PBA pres­i­dent Patrick Lynch has lost all cred­i­bil­i­ty , he blames Eric Garner for his own death. A reg­u­lar loud-mouth no one takes him seri­ous­ly on police issues, he is more harm than good to officers

The depart­ment is active­ly seek­ing oth­ers involved in the mele. Bratton said the video of the assaults has been enhanced to help find the sus­pects. Isn’t it incred­i­ble how quick­ly they will enhance a shaky video to prove some­one attacked one of their own but will not acknowl­edge they mur­dered an inno­cent man on a video which need­ed no enhancement ?
I don’t know whether or not there are two police forces in new york city., Many peo­ple of col­or have nev­er seen the noble depart­ment Mike Mcalarry spoke of sev­en years ago, even though they are decent law abid­ing citizens.
What they see dai­ly is the “hor­ri­ble” the one above the law, the thug­gish one which demands respect even as it heaps scorn, deri­sion ‚con­tempt and dis­re­spect on oth­ers, even those set above them.
Every grouse, every gripe of the PBA and oth­er unions seem to be about respect. The unions would do them­selves and their mem­bers a tremen­dous ser­vice by being respect­ful to the Mayor, City Council President and peo­ple of col­or in the city, maybe then they will see a turn around in the way peo­ple respond to them.
As a very famous Pastor say from time to time,“If you want some­thing from God, give that thing to some­one else”. Give respect, you get respect. You do not demand respect , you com­mand respect. Stop whin­ing and com­plain­ing about just how dan­ger­ous your job is . No one forced you to join the police depart­ment, you did so of your own free will, and you are paid well to do it.
People have a right to demand that they be treat­ed fair­ly and just­ly, the laws does not only apply when the police say they apply.
If utter­ances and behav­ior are any­thing to go by, this police depart­ment is expo­nen­tial­ly worse than most peo­ple know. People in under served com­mu­ni­ties will tell you they do not call cops. Cops to them are no dif­fer­ent from reg­u­lar gang­sters. Many rob, beat, rape, steal, plant drugs, fal­si­fy reports and kill peo­ple with­out consequence.
These res­i­dents of the city have nev­er seen the “great and noble”.
Too many in the NYPD see them­selves above the laws and the peo­ple who hire and pay them. The media Houses are active cheer-lead­ers in this process, mak­ing them feel above being held account­able. It is time the back of this men­tal­i­ty is bro­ken once and for all.

Police Brutality Is Tyranny

Yes it is
Yes it is

Thousands , maybe mil­lions col­lec­tive­ly, march hand in hand dai­ly across America. They march in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the unarmed, killed by Agents of the states. The bod­ies are many, the ages diverse. Their col­or the only thing which binds them together.
I want to talk a lit­tle about the role states play in these deaths, but before I do I want to take a sec­ond to address a com­mon dis­claimer I hear from many who speak on this issue. Some black, some white , some cop, some not.

THEY ARGUE BLACKS DO NOT MAKEBIG DEAL ABOUT BLACK-ON-BLACK VIOLENCE

Civil Rights groups, church­es, NGO’s and a pletho­ra of oth­er inter­est­ed par­ties have done much work in com­bat­ing vio­lence in the black com­mu­ni­ty. Communities and indi­vid­u­als have done heavy lift­ing toward remov­ing the scourge of drug-deal­ing, drug-addic­tion, and oth­er vices which lead to vio­lence. Activists and Organizations like the Urban league , National Action Network, NAACP, and oth­ers are heav­i­ly invest­ed in com­bat­ing crime in urban centers.
Much more is required in deal­ing with the prob­lem of teenage preg­nan­cy , mass-incar­cer­a­tion of black male, gang affil­i­a­tion and violence.
With that said, black peo­ple com­mit­ted to chang­ing police aggres­sion toward them do not need a lec­ture from any­one, black, white or

Police abuse will not stop because states do not want it to stop
Police abuse will not stop because states do not want it to stop

pur­ple, cop, or not on black on black vio­lence. Blacks have a duty to fig­ure out their prob­lems, what­ev­er they are. What our com­mu­ni­ty does not need is to pay police Officers to kill our children.
Police offi­cers are employed and paid to inves­ti­gate crimes. When black crim­i­nals com­mit crimes they are arrest­ed and incar­cer­at­ed. In more instances than I care to dis­cuss, blacks are incar­cer­at­ed and exe­cut­ed even when they are inno­cent of the crimes they are accused of com­mit­ting. America’s pris­ons are brim­ming with black and brown men , over 65% of those locked up in America’s pris­ons are black and brown. Despite on a per-capi­ta whites com­mit more crimes than they do.

It is this dis­par­i­ty that has peo­ple of con­science up in arms about the con­tin­ued injus­tice in America. A spe­cial word of advise to the igno­rant blacks who par­rot the talk­ing points of igno­rant racist whites on this issue, go read a book, do some research before you open your stu­pid mouths or make moron­ic Youtube videos. You are stu­pid and you look stupid.
Go research what 400 years of Slavery, Chain-Gang, Jim-Crow,separate but equal, and exist­ing insti­tu­tion­al­ized racism has done to peo­ple of African ancestry. 

The Drone
The Drone

In a Bee colony the Queen lays eggs , mil­lions of them, this ensures that the specie con­tin­ue to exist.
Worker Bees gath­er pollen into the pollen bas­kets on their back legs, to car­ry back to the hive where it is used as food for the devel­op­ing brood. Pollen car­ried on their bod­ies may be car­ried to anoth­er flower where a small por­tion can rub off onto thepis­til, result­ing in cross pol­li­na­tion. Almost all of civ­i­liza­tion’s food sup­ply (maize is a note­wor­thy excep­tion) depends great­ly on crop pol­li­na­tion by hon­ey bees, whether direct­ly eat­en or used as for­age crops for ani­mals that pro­duce milk and meat. Nectar is sucked up through the pro­boscis, mixed with enzymes in the stom­ach, and car­ried back to the hive, where it is stored in wax cells and evap­o­rat­ed into hon­ey.
Drones, fig­u­ra­tive sense of ‘idler’ or ‘lazy work­er’, as male bees make no hon­ey, which is some­times giv­en as a folk ety­mol­o­gy of the word ‘drone’ itself.[Wikipedia]
In the great scheme of things there are those who do and there are those who don’t, at least the drones have the good sense to mate with the Queen. For you blacks who have no con­tri­bu­tion to make, even as you ben­e­fit from the strug­gles and sac­ri­fice of oth­ers, do every­one a favor and shut your stu­pid mouths.

This was supposed to be fixed 50 years ago
This was sup­posed to be fixed 50 years ago

Cops abuse and kill because States and munic­i­pal­i­ties want them to. Police are peo­ple, good peo­ple in many cas­es. Give the best guy/​girl a gun, badge , and unfet­tered pow­er and no need to account and you got a real prob­lem on your hands, their atti­tudes change, all of a sud­den the very peo­ple they are sworn to serve and pro­tect becomes their ene­my. Unworthy of respect, they become the big man, Gods even.
It’s not about the need for sup­port and some lee­way to do what we ask them to do . As we have seen over and over again states make extra effort to ensure when they kill they are not held accountable.
They kill as Agents of the state. They kill on behalf of the states. Eric Garner was mur­dered for what must have been the most infin­i­tes­i­mal white col­lar crime. Even if he was sell­ing un-taxed cig­a­rettes ‚(not proven) who was the vic­tim? Who was hurt?
I’ll tell you who, the State of New York was hurt. They are so des­per­ate for the few un-recov­ered pen­nies, it took sev­er­al well paid Thugs to kill Garner over those pennies.

States Legislators, Governors and oth­er offi­cials are heav­i­ly behold­en to Police Departments . Never mind what they say in pub­lic, cops know whose side they are on. Governors, Legislators and Mayors are large­ly white Caucasian male., The women they are more testos­terone laden than their male coun­ter­parts. Police abuse is going nowhere fast.
Anthony Baez was choked to death by Francis Livoti a tough-guy cop with mul­ti­ple com­plaints against him. Baez’s crime was a non-crime. His foot­ball struck a NYPD patrol car.
In sen­tenc­ing Livoti Judge Scheindlin issued a broad attack on the depart­men­t’s han­dling of Mr. Livoti’s case, and said that she had refrained from impos­ing an even greater sen­tence because the depart­ment shared some respon­si­bil­i­ty in Mr. Baez’s death. ”The Police

Same problems 50 years later, things must change once and for all
Same prob­lems 50 years lat­er, things must change once and for all

Department did Mr. Livoti and the peo­ple of this city a grave injus­tice when it per­mit­ted Mr. Livoti to remain on active patrol know­ing of his propen­si­ty toward vio­lence,” Judge Scheindlin said. ”There is no doubt in my mind that the depart­ment knew, or should have known, that Mr. Livoti was dan­ger­ous.” She said that nine ear­li­er police bru­tal­i­ty com­plaints against Mr. Livoti should have been enough ”to alert those in charge to the fact that Mr. Livoti should be off the streets, if not off the force.”
Francis Livoti was a pro­tégée and one of the poster child of Rudolph Giuliani’s dis­dain and dis­re­spect for black and brown res­i­dents of New York City. Anthony Baez and many oth­ers paid with their lives.

”The Police Department let him remain on the streets, know­ing that one day a real tragedy would occur,” she said.

State pro­ce­dures make it dif­fi­cult for cops to face a court of law. If police offi­cers do not have to face courts of law to account for their actions they become the law. They act that way, they say they are the law. Not enforcers of the law.
As black America and oth­ers take to the streets to protest , it is impor­tant to note that even as racism and dis­re­spect dri­ves many deci­sions police make to pull the trig­ger or oth­er­wise abuse blacks, they also do the same to whites.
It is impor­tant that whites rec­og­nize that even though police may be some­what less quick on the trig­ger on poor whites than they do peo­ple of col­or now. It is becom­ing more and more obvi­ous that pret­ty soon drunk with unmit­i­gat­ed pow­er they too will be killed with equal alacrity.
The peo­ple who draft leg­is­la­tion and those who sign them into laws are mere cor­po­rate tools. They are picked and placed by cor­po­rate oli­garchs to car­ry out their dictates.
Those dic­tates do not line up with that of the 99%..
Prisons have to be filled, cor­po­rate pup­peteers who run them are suing states because they are sup­pos­ed­ly los­ing mon­ey from too many emp­ty jail cells. Look around you , yes you , in your state they will be build­ing more pris­ons, while they close schools.
We are all in this togeth­er, black, white, yel­low brown, the soon­er we rec­og­nize this the better.

Tens Of Thousands March On NYPD Headquarters To Protest Police Killings

Tens of thousands of protesters streamed out of New York City’s Washington Square Park on Saturday to protest the killings of unarmed black people by police officers, as part of the “Millions March NYC.

Images are the prop­er­ty of the named entity/​individual as per each por­trait. Chatt-a-box uses these images accord­ing to the rules and dic­tates of the own­er. Images will be removed at own­er’s request/​demand. Thanks for the courtesy.

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Beverly Johnson Alleges Bill Cosby Drugged Her In The 80“s

Cosby and Johnson
Cosby and Johnson

The list of Bill Cosby accusers has anoth­er — and very promi­nent — name.

Beverly Johnson, the pio­neer­ing 1970s-era super­mod­el who was the first African-American woman to be on the cov­er of American Vogue, alleges in an essay post­ed onVanity Fair’s web­site that Cosby drugged her in the mid-1980s and noth­ing fur­ther hap­pened seem­ing­ly only because she real­ized what was hap­pen­ing and unquiv­o­ca­bly told him off. Cosby’s attor­ney did not respond to VF and has not yet respond­ed to a request for com­ment from E! News. Johnson wrote that she went to lunch at Cosby’s New York apart­ment one day, after her agent informed her that the come­di­an want­ed her to audi­tion for the role of one of his patients on The Cosby Show and she sub­se­quent­ly met the man at a tap­ing of the then mega-hit sit­com. Cosby had also pre­vi­ous­ly host­ed her and her young daugh­ter at his home for brunch on a pre­vi­ous occasion.

He was the Jell‑O Pudding man; like most kids, my daugh­ter loved him,” Johnson recalled their first out­ing. She wrote: “Looking back, that first invite from Cosby to his home seems like part of a per­fect­ly laid out plan, a way to make me feel secure with him at all times. It worked like a charm.” According to Johnson, on her solo vis­it to his place, they ate lunch and then Cosby asked her to try out play­ing a scene, instruct­ing her to act as if she were drunk. “When did a preg­nant woman ever appear drunk on The Cosby Show? Probably nev­er, but I went with it,” she wrote, a ref­er­ence to the fact that Cosby’s char­ac­ter, Dr. Cliff Huxtable, was an OBGYN and she was sup­pos­ed­ly being asked to play one of his patients.

Johnson alleges that Cosby insist­ed that she have a capuc­ci­no, made on his ritzy-look­ing espres­so machine, and that after she had a few sips, “My head became woozy, my speech became slurred, and the room began to spin non­stop. Cosby motioned for me to come over to him as though we were real­ly about to act out the scene. He put his hands around my waist, and I man­aged to put my hand on his shoul­der in order to steady myself. “As I felt my body go com­plete­ly limp, my brain switched into auto­mat­ic-sur­vival mode. That meant mak­ing sure Cosby under­stood that I knew exact­ly what was hap­pen­ing at that very moment.”

Johnson claims that she called Cosby a “moth­erf – ker” to his face, mul­ti­ple times, and ulti­mate­ly he grabbed her by the arm, guid­ed her out of the apart­ment, took her down­stairs and put her in a cab. “I sat in there still stunned by what hap­pened the night before, con­fused and dev­as­tat­ed by the idea that some­one I admired so much had tried to take advan­tage of me, and used drugs to do so. Had I done some­thing to encour­age his actions?” the mod­el alleges. “In real­i­ty, I knew I’d done noth­ing to encour­age Cosby but my mind kept turn­ing with ques­tion after question.”

She claims that it took a few days for the effects of the drug to wear off and, when she called Cosby’s pri­vate num­ber to con­front him, his wife answered. Camille Cosby was very polite, Johnson wrote, adding that she apol­o­gized for call­ing so late and then nev­er tried call­ing again.

How could I fight some­one that bold­ly arro­gant and out of touch?” Johnson wrote. “In the end, just like the oth­er women, I had too much to lose to go after Bill Cosby. I had a career that would no doubt take a huge hit if I went pub­lic with my sto­ry and I cer­tain­ly could­n’t afford that after my cost­ly divorce and on going court fees.”

The now 62-year-old mod­el, actress and real­i­ty-TV star fur­ther explained that Cosby accuser Barbara Bowman’s op-ed in the Washington Post and Janice Dickinson’s explo­sive inter­view with Entertainment Tonight, both of which con­tributed to the onslaught of revived accu­sa­tions against Cosby, helped inspire her to come for­ward now after all these years. http://​www​.eon​line​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​6​0​5​8​2​5​/​m​o​d​e​l​-​b​e​v​e​r​l​y​-​j​o​h​n​s​o​n​-​a​l​l​e​g​e​s​-​b​i​l​l​-​c​o​s​b​y​-​d​r​u​g​g​e​d​-​h​e​r​-​i​n​-​t​h​e​-​1​9​8​0​s​-​w​r​i​t​e​s​-​i​n​-​v​a​n​i​t​y​-​f​a​i​r​-​s​h​e​-​t​o​l​d​-​h​i​m​-​o​f​f​-​s​o​-​h​e​-​p​u​t​-​h​e​r​-​i​n​-​a​-​cab

Cosby Fallout Timeline

Bill Cosby
Bill Cosby

Hannibal Buress did­n’t real­ly say any­thing about Bill Cosby that was­n’t already out there with the help of a Google search.

But for what­ev­er rea­son, the crack that the come­di­an made now (or, more accu­rate­ly, in mid-October) in which he referred to the revered fun­ny­man as a rapist was the key tremor that result­ed in the avalanche of alle­ga­tions, con­tro­ver­sy and hind­sight-is-20/20 analy­sis cur­rent­ly envelop­ing Cosby.

The for­mer sit­com star’s attor­ney has flat­ly denied mount­ing claims from, at last count, 16 women who have come for­ward as alleged Cosby vic­tims, but it seems as though every day a new per­son has sur­faced with a sto­ry alleg­ing an assault or attempt­ed assault. Since there has been so much to keep track of in such a rel­a­tive­ly short amount of time (not count­ing the nine years since an accuser sued Cosby for dam­ages), here’s a run­down of every­thing that has hap­pened since Buress’ fate­ful show:

Oct. 16: It seems like longer, but it was just in mid-October when Buress told an audi­encedur­ing a show in Philadelphia : “He gets on TV, ‘Pull your pants up, black peo­ple. I was on TV in the ’80s. I can talk down to you because I had a suc­cess­ful sit­com.’ Yeah, but you raped women, Bill Cosby, so turn the crazy down a cou­ple notch­es.” Someone was record­ing and released the clip to PhillyMag​.com, which post­ed it on Oct. 17. It took a cou­ple of days for the “news” to go viral, but when it did…

Oct 21: In what have been his only pub­lic com­ments about the firestorm he ignit­ed, Buress said on The Howard Stern Show: “This was unex­pect­ed. I did­n’t want to do that [make head­lines]. If I were going to do that, I would have done it on my own. It was­n’t my inten­tion to make this part of a big dis­cus­sion. It was just some­thing I was doing at that venue right then.”

Oct. 30: Cosby’s planned appear­ance on The Queen Latifah Show was can­celed at his request, accord­ing to show pro­duc­er Sony Pictures Television.

Nov. 6: Cosby gives an inter­view to the Associated Press in which he’s asked about past alle­ga­tions and repeat­ed­ly says he has noth­ing to say and there’s no com­ment. Cosby tells the reporter he would “appre­ci­ate it” if this exchange could be “scut­tled” from the tran­script or broad­cast. The inter­view­er said.

Cosby and Raven Symone
Cosby and Raven Simone

Nov. 10: Someone on Team Cosby got the idea to make a meme gen­er­a­tor so that fans could put fun­ny tag lines on seem­ing­ly inno­cent pics of father-fig­ure-era Cosby. Instead, cap­tions refer­ring to the alle­ga­tions against him won the day. That’s prob­a­bly when arti­cles (both old and new) recall­ing how Cosby’s oth­er­wise illus­tri­ous career has been shad­owed by alle­ga­tions that he mis­treat­ed women, plus the eas­i­ly search­able sto­ry about a 2005 law­suit filed against him by Andrea Constand that stat­ed a num­ber of oth­er women who were ready to tes­ti­fy about their own alleged expe­ri­ences, real­ly start­ed pop­ping up. Constand, a stu­dent at Cosby’s alma mater Temple University, accused the enter­tain­er of drug­ging and assault­ing her in January 2004. A set­tle­ment notice was filed in 2008.

Nov. 13: A day after she appeared on CNN Tonight, the Washington Post pub­lished an op-ed by artist Barbara Bowman in which she alleged that Cosby drugged and raped her at his home in 1985 when she was an aspir­ing 17-year-old actress.

Nov. 15: Scott Simon’s inter­view with Cosby for Weekend Edition Saturday airs on NPR. When asked about the con­tro­ver­sy and resur­faced alle­ga­tions, Cosby has noth­ing to say and Simon, who told the come­di­an it gave him “no plea­sure” to have to ask such ques­tions, tells the audi­ence that his guest is shak­ing his head. Meanwhile, an appear­ance sched­uled for Nov. 19 on Late Show With David Letterman is canceled.

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Nov. 16: Cosby attor­ney John P. Schmitt issues this state­ment: “Over the last sev­er­al weeks, decade-old, dis­cred­it­ed alle­ga­tions against Mr. Cosby have resur­faced. The fact that they are being repeat­ed does not make them true. Mr. Cosby does not intend to dig­ni­fy these alle­ga­tions with any com­ment. He would like to thank all his fans for the out­pour­ing of sup­port and assure them that, at age 77, he is doing his best work. There will be no fur­ther state­ment from Mr. Cosby or any of his representatives.”

Nov. 17: Schmitt and an attor­ney for Constand release this adden­dum: “The state­ment released by Mr. Cosby’s attor­ney over the week­end was not intend­ed to refer in any way to Andrea Constand. As pre­vi­ous­ly report­ed, dif­fer­ences between Mr. Cosby and Ms. Constand were resolved to the mutu­al sat­is­fac­tion of Mr. Cosby and Ms. Constand years ago. Neither Mr. Cosby nor Ms. Constand intends to com­ment fur­ther on the matter.”

 Entertainment Tonight airs an inter­view with Janice Dickinson in which the for­mer mod­el alleges that Cosby drugged and sex­u­al­ly assault­ed her in 1982 and that she want­ed to include the sto­ry in her 2002 auto­bi­og­ra­phy but was pres­sured by Cosby’s attor­neys to leave it out. Cosby attor­ney Martin Singer issues a state­ment call­ing her sto­ry a “com­plete lie.”

• Netflix announces the post­pone­ment of the launch of the planned com­e­dy spe­cial Bill Cosby 77.

Nov. 19: NBC pulls the plug on a devel­op­ment deal with Cosby, who was in talks to play the patri­arch in a pro­posed multi­gen­er­a­tional fam­i­ly sitcom.

TV Land pulls reruns of The Cosby Show from its schedule.

Raven-Symoné, who played lit­tle Olivia on The Cosby Show, slams a hoax sto­ry that claimed Cosby molest­ed her as “a dis­gust­ing rumor I want no part of.”

Nov. 20: The afore­men­tioned AP inter­view starts mak­ing the rounds, the news agency stat­ing that the entire exchange was on the record and no agree­ment was made to with­hold any of Cosby’s com­ments at any time.

• Martin Singer calls a Facebook post, in which one Linda Joy Traitz accused Cosby of try­ing to rape her more than 40 years ago, “the lat­est exam­ple of peo­ple com­ing out of the wood­work with unsub­stan­ti­at­ed or fab­ri­cat­ed sto­ries about my client.”

Rumor Fix pub­lish­es alle­ga­tions made by Carla Ferrigno, wife of The Incredible Hulk starLou Ferrigno, that Cosby attacked her when she was a teenag­er in 1967.

• Singer slams a sto­ry giv­en to TMZ by One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest actress Louisa Moritz, call­ing her claim — that Cosby forced his penis into her mouth while they were in the green room back­stage at The Tonight Show in 1971 — a new “point of absurdity.”

Cosby Show pro­duc­ers Tom Werner and Marcy Carsey say in a state­ment: “The Bill we know was a bril­liant and won­der­ful col­lab­o­ra­tor on a show that changed the land­scape of tele­vi­sion. These recent news reports are beyond our knowl­edge or comprehension.”

Cosby does his standup show in the Bahamas in front of a cheer­ing audi­ence, jokes that he’s an “evil man.”

Nov. 21: Model-actress Angela Leslie becomes the eighth woman to come for­ward post-Hannibal Buress, telling the New York Daily News that Cosby got her drunk and made her fon­dle him in a Las Vegas hotel in 1992.

• Las Vegas’ Treasure Island hotel announceds that a Nov. 28 Cosby per­for­mance has been can­celed “by mutu­al agree­ment.” The Virginia Theatre in Champaign, Ill., and the Tacoma Center in Washington state cross Cosby’s sched­uled appear­ances in April 2015 from the sched­ule. The Diamond Desert Casino in Tucson, Az., can­cels Cosby’s Feb. 15, 2015, appearance.

• The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art states that there is no plan to can­cel or alter its “Conversations” exhib­it, sched­uled to run until 2016, fea­tur­ing a num­ber of pieces from Cosby and his wife Camille’s per­son­al collection.

Nov. 18: Joan Tarshis tells CNN Tonight’s Don Lemon that Cosby sex­u­al­ly assault­ed her when she was 19

• Bruce Castor, a for­mer dis­trict attor­ney of Alabama’s Montgomery County tells the Daily Mail that he want­ed to pros­e­cute Cosby when Constand came for­ward, but he did­n’t have the proof to have the come­di­an arrested.

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 Entertainment Tonight airs an inter­view with Janice Dickinson in which the for­mer mod­el alleges that Cosby drugged and sex­u­al­ly assault­ed her in 1982 and that she want­ed to include the sto­ry in her 2002 auto­bi­og­ra­phy but was pres­sured by Cosby’s attor­neys to leave it out. Cosby attor­ney Martin Singer issues a state­ment call­ing her sto­ry a “com­plete lie.”

• Netflix announces the post­pone­ment of the launch of the planned com­e­dy spe­cial Bill Cosby 77.

Nov. 19: NBC pulls the plug on a devel­op­ment deal with Cosby, who was in talks to play the patri­arch in a pro­posed multi­gen­er­a­tional fam­i­ly sitcom.

TV Land pulls reruns of The Cosby Show from its schedule.

Raven-Symoné, who played lit­tle Olivia on The Cosby Show, slams a hoax sto­ry that claimed Cosby molest­ed her as “a dis­gust­ing rumor I want no part of.”

Nov. 20: The afore­men­tioned AP inter­view starts mak­ing the rounds, the news agency stat­ing that the entire exchange was on the record and no agree­ment was made to with­hold any of Cosby’s com­ments at any time.

• Martin Singer calls a Facebook post, in which one Linda Joy Traitz accused Cosby of try­ing to rape her more than 40 years ago, “the lat­est exam­ple of peo­ple com­ing out of the wood­work with unsub­stan­ti­at­ed or fab­ri­cat­ed sto­ries about my client.”

Rumor Fix pub­lish­es alle­ga­tions made by Carla Ferrigno, wife of The Incredible Hulk starLou Ferrigno, that Cosby attacked her when she was a teenag­er in 1967.

• Singer slams a sto­ry giv­en to TMZ by One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest actress Louisa Moritz, call­ing her claim — that Cosby forced his penis into her mouth while they were in the green room back­stage at The Tonight Show in 1971 — a new “point of absurdity.”

Cosby Show pro­duc­ers Tom Werner and Marcy Carsey say in a state­ment: “The Bill we know was a bril­liant and won­der­ful col­lab­o­ra­tor on a show that changed the land­scape of tele­vi­sion. These recent news reports are beyond our knowl­edge or comprehension.”

Cosby does his standup show in the Bahamas in front of a cheer­ing audi­ence, jokes that he’s an “evil man.”

Nov. 21: Model-actress Angela Leslie becomes the eighth woman to come for­ward post-Hannibal Buress, telling the New York Daily News that Cosby got her drunk and made her fon­dle him in a Las Vegas hotel in 1992.

• Las Vegas’ Treasure Island hotel announceds that a Nov. 28 Cosby per­for­mance has been can­celed “by mutu­al agree­ment.” The Virginia Theatre in Champaign, Ill., and the Tacoma Center in Washington state cross Cosby’s sched­uled appear­ances in April 2015 from the sched­ule. The Diamond Desert Casino in Tucson, Az., can­cels Cosby’s Feb. 15, 2015, appearance.

• The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art states that there is no plan to can­cel or alter its “Conversations” exhib­it, sched­uled to run until 2016, fea­tur­ing a num­ber of pieces from Cosby and his wife Camille’s per­son­al collection.

Shonda Rhimes I Haven’t Broken Through Glass Ceiling

 Shonda Rhimes

You can’t deny that Shonda Rhimes is an incred­i­bly influ­en­tial fig­ure in the mod­ern TV land­scape. Hey, she’s tak­en over the entire line­up for one of the biggest net­work’s biggest nights of the week! TGIT, y’all! But when the Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal and How to Get Away With Murder exec­u­tive pro­duc­er was hon­ored with the Sherry Lansing Award for lead­er­ship dur­ing The Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainment Breakfast this morn­ing, she gave an extreme­ly pow­er­ful speech that has us bow­ing down.

MORE: Shonda Rhimes says, “If you don’t like gay scenes, don’t watch my shows”

Why? Because even though she was being rec­og­nized for being a woman who is a pio­neer and a leader in her indus­try and break­ing the glass ceil­ing, she denied that she broke through any glass ceil­ings. Check out her full speech below, and be pre­pared to fall in love with Rhimes even more:

When my pub­li­cist called to tell me that I was receiv­ing this hon­or, I screwed up my face and I said, ‘Are you sure? Me?’ And he said, ‘Yes.’ And I said, ‘Why?’ And then I said, ‘No real­ly, why?’ “And I made him call and ask for some writ­ten rea­son why I was get­ting this award. Because I real­ly and tru­ly was wor­ried that there might have been some kind of mis­take. “I want to pause for a beat here to say that I don’t say these things to be self-dep­re­cat­ing and hum­ble. I am not a self-dep­re­cat­ing, hum­ble per­son. I think I’m pret­ty fan­tas­tic. But I also think that The Hollywood Reporter Sherry Lansing Award is extra­or­di­nary — as is Sherry Lansing her­self. So…no, real­ly, why?

They sent a writ­ten rea­son why I was get­ting this award. It said many nice things but the main thing that it was said was that I was get­ting the award in recog­ni­tion of my break­ing through the indus­try’s glass ceil­ing as a woman and an African-American.

Well. I call my pub­li­cist back. Because I just don’t know about this. I mean, I’m con­cerned now.

I come from a very large, very com­pet­i­tive fam­i­ly. Extremely com­pet­i­tive. And by com­pet­i­tive, I mean, my moth­er says we’re not allowed to play Scrabble any­more when we get togeth­er because of the injuries and the tears. One of the rules in my fam­i­ly is you don’t ever get a tro­phy for par­tic­i­pa­tion, you don’t get a tro­phy for just being you. So get­ting an award today because I’m a woman and an African-American feels…I was born with an awe­some vagi­na and real­ly gor­geous brown skin. I did­n’t do any­thing to make either of those things happen.

To get all Beyoncé about it, peo­ple: ‘I woke up like this.’ Seriously. I know this isn’t an award because I’m a woman or because I’m African American. I know that it’s real­ly about break­ing the glass ceil­ing that exists in the face of being a woman and being black in this very male, very white town.

But I haven’t bro­ken through any glass ceilings.

CLICK: See Scandal’s steami­est scenes

Do they know I haven’t bro­ken through any glass ceil­ings? I ask my pub­li­cist. He assures me that I have. I assure him that I have not. I have not bro­ken through any glass ceil­ings. If I had bro­ken through any glass ceil­ings, I would know. If I had bro­ken through a glass ceil­ing, I would have felt some cuts, I would have some bruis­es. There’d be shards of glass in my hair. I’d be bleed­ing, I’d have wounds.

If I’d bro­ken the glass ceil­ing, that would mean I would have made it through to the oth­er side. Where the air is rare. I would feel the wind on my face. The view from here — way up here where the glass ceil­ing is bro­ken — would be incred­i­ble. Right? So how come I don’t remem­ber the moment? When me with my woman-ness and my brown skin went run­ning full speed, grav­i­ty be damned, into that thick lay­er of glass and smashed right through it? How come I don’t remem­ber that happening?

Here’s why: It’s 2014.

This moment right here, me stand­ing up here all brown with my boobs and my Thursday night of net­work tele­vi­sion full of women of col­or, com­pet­i­tive women, strong women, women who own their bod­ies and whose lives revolve around their work instead of their men, women who are big dogs, that could only be hap­pen­ing right now.

http://​www​.eon​line​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​6​0​5​4​4​2​/​s​h​o​n​d​a​-​r​h​i​m​e​s​-​i​-​h​a​v​e​n​-​t​-​b​r​o​k​e​n​-​t​h​r​o​u​g​h​-​a​n​y​-​g​l​a​s​s​-​c​e​i​l​i​ngs

How Many Americans Do Cops Kill Annually

What will Police killings inspire in the way of change in America?
Over the lase sev­er­al months police have sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly mur­dered unarmed black men even in the face of nation­al out­cry from con­sci­en­tious people. 
The killings con­tin­ue with­out any care, recog­ni­tion or thought of “what if we are held account­able for this one” ?
Which leaves rea­son­able observers to con­clude they do not believe they will be held accountable .
After a Florida Jury exon­er­at­ed wannabe-cop George Zimmerman, Police have sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly killed dozens of unarmed black men under ques­tion­able cir­cum­stances. Each time the lies they tell become more bizarre and out­landish. To hear them try to artic­u­late what caused them to use lethal force is dif­fi­cult to watch. 
Lying absolute­ly does that.
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Police and oth­ers con­tin­ue the killing after this list was released.
Twelve year old Tamir Rice killed in a park with a toy gun when Police drove up and opened fire in less than two sec­onds the child laid on the ground dying from two bul­lets in his young body.
An unarmed Akai Gurley killed by a New York City Rookie hous­ing cop in a dark stair­well . Police was quick to say he did noth­ing wrong but label his death an accident.
Since Gurley’s killing the rash of police killing of black and Latino men have gone on unabat­ed, with no end in sight. In fact no one knows just how many peo­ple police kill each year, much less those killed under dubi­ous cir­cum­stances. The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI does not have report­ing from the tens of thou­sands of police agen­cies in the coun­try on who or how many they kill. They aren’t even man­dat­ed by Law to report the num­ber of cit­i­zens they kill.

The United States Congress is large­ly silent, so too are state leg­is­la­tures across the coun­try, even as police con­tin­ue to kill, giv­ing worn-out tired excus­es for the sum­ma­ry mur­ders they com­mit daily.
One of the expla­na­tions we hear is that police do not go out intend­ing to kill any­one. This is a load of crock , In instance after instance cops are caught telling cit­i­zens they want to kill them. They are caught on audio/​video record­ing devices threat­en­ing to murder. 
Rather than fix the prob­lem states are begin­ning to take more of the rights cit­i­zens have to record police abuse. Even though it is per­fect­ly legal as per the US Supreme Court for cit­i­zens to record Police activ­i­ty as long as they do not hin­der cops, Police con­tin­ue to assault, intim­i­date, arrest, and abuse cit­i­zens who do and destroy their prop­er­ty in the process with­out consequence.
Recently a NYPD cop was caught on cam­era harass­ing a black man dig­ging into his pock­ets and con­fis­cat­ing his mon­ey. When the man demand­ed that his mon­ey be returned to him he was roughed up while oth­er good cops (sic , stood by and did nothing.
His mon­ey was nev­er returned to him. When the gen­tle­man, his sis­ter and onlook­ers com­plained the cop pep­per-sprayed them in their faces, repeatedly. 

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In this inci­dent no one was arrest­ed, the Police alleged­ly stat­ed only $67 was tak­en , as if that legit­imized the bla­tant armed rob­bery recorded.
Lamard Joye, and his sis­ter Lateefah Joye the vic­tims through their lawyer, say they have evi­dence of bank with­drawals done, in an effort to head of alle­ga­tions that the mon­ey may have been ille­gal­ly obtained.

The Police Union chimed in say­ing that ama­teur videos record­ed when police are involved in oper­a­tions are the prob­lem and should be outlawed.

The founders warned you this would happen
The founders warned you this would happen

Even when the crime is com­mit­ted in full view,the NYPDPBA head Patrick Lynch and his sup­port­ers con­tin­ue to dis­tort, obfus­cate and lie about what is actu­al­ly seen by cit­i­zens. The NYPD has for years stolen monies from cit­i­zens whom they claim are drug deal­ers. In many cas­es they do not report ever tak­ing these wads of cash and cit­i­zens are left to lick their wounds with­out recourse.
We con­tin­ue to hear that the NYPD is the world’s best Police depart­ment despite the crimes many in the depart­ment com­mit. If of course we take sup­port­ers of the depart­ment at their word that indeed it is the best, what does that say about the state of polic­ing in America?

Ask yourselves who is the enemy
Ask your­selves who is the enemy

It says that crit­ics are indeed cor­rect that most police depart­ments are now jack-boot­ed death squads, ded­i­cat­ed to abus­ing, rob­bing and killing peo­ple of color.
One of the talk­ing points com­ing out of this epi­dem­ic of mur­der is the ques­tion, “Why are white Americans not out­raged by these killings” The truth is that the demon­stra­tions have gar­nered the sup­port of white Americans of all ages and socio-eco­nom­ic stand­ing. It would be disin­gen­u­ous to sug­gest only blacks are out­raged. In fact white peo­ple are on the streets voic­ing their dis­plea­sure at events and are being abused and arrest­ed by police equal­ly with their black coun­ter­parts. They under­stand they are not safe if this is allowed to continue.

The Constitution prevents them from using the military, they created another standing army
The Constitution pre­vents them from using the mil­i­tary, they cre­at­ed anoth­er stand­ing army

Notwithstanding, there is rough­ly one half of America which absolute­ly loves what is hap­pen­ing. To that part of the pop­u­la­tion the black and brown peo­ple must be cur­tailed, cor­ralled and con­tained , if not worse. Blacks for their part are far less like­ly to take assault from the Klux-Klux-Klan in this day and age with­out a fight.
They know it.

However, what if they placed police uni­forms on the Klan?
The peo­ple they don’t like can­not legal­ly fight back against the duly con­sti­tut­ed author­i­ty of the states, enshrined in their police officers.
Check-mate !!!.

It's already too late.....
It’s already too late.….

The polit­i­cal right which is large­ly white Anglo-Saxon and male is like a wound­ed ani­mal. That demo­graph­ic iden­ti­fies itself as Republican , Conservative, and Tea ‑Party. They saw a man of col­or and his fam­i­ly occu­py the white house. They see a black man head the Justice Department.
Have you ever won­dered why they hate Barack Obama and Eric Holder with such venom?
I sug­gest you hold your noses switch to FOX tele­vi­sion and guar­an­teed you will come away with a bet­ter under­stand­ing of why police are mur­der­ing black peo­ple unchecked. You will also come to the real­iza­tion that absolute­ly noth­ing will be done to rein in killer cops.
Well over Four hun­dred years of white suprema­cy is com­ing to an end. Those who had lives of priv­i­leged and pow­er are not about to relin­quish them with­out a fight.

There is no going back to the way it was....
There is no going back to the way it was.…

As such, those who shucked and jived after the mar­gin­al gains of the 50’s and 60’s will have to pre­pare to fight the very same bat­tles their par­ents and grand par­ents fought, only dif­fer­ence this time is that the ene­mies of jus­tice are doing so under the guise and cov­er of the law.
Not that they did not , in the fights of yester-year, they are much more deter­mined this time, too much is at stake. There is a col­ored man in the white house.

New York’s DA’s And Police Tone Deafness

State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman
State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman

New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman wrote to Governor Andrew Cuomo request­ing that the Governor give his office the Authority and respon­si­bil­i­ty to pros­e­cute Police who kill unarmed civilians.

Schneiderman said quote: “In New York, and across the coun­try, the promise of equal jus­tice under law has been erod­ed by a series of tragedies involv­ing the death of unarmed per­sons as a result of the use of force by law enforce­ment officers,”.

The Attorney General’s request a swift response from some of New York City’s District Attorneys.

Ken Thompson.
Ken Thompson.

Kenneth Thompson in Brooklyn and Richard Brown in Queens expressed oppo­si­tion while the Bronx’s Robert Johnson and Manhattan’s Cy Vance had seri­ous reservations. 
“As the duly elect­ed dis­trict attor­ney of Brooklyn, I am adamant­ly opposed to the request by the New York State Attorney General for author­i­ty to inves­ti­gate and poten­tial­ly pros­e­cute alleged acts of police bru­tal­i­ty,” Thompson said. “No one is more com­mit­ted to ensur­ing equal jus­tice under the law than I am.”

It’s an insult to the intel­li­gence and the integri­ty of every pros­e­cu­tor in the state of New York, as well as every grand juror who exam­ined the facts and the evi­dence,” said Michael Palladino, pres­i­dent of the Detectives Endowment Association.

Patrick J. Lynch
Patrick J. Lynch

The Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association endorsed Schneiderman for state attor­ney gen­er­al in October.

On Monday, the union pres­i­dent Pat Lynch said Schneiderman’s request was all wrong.“There is absolute­ly no rea­son to alter the exist­ing sys­tem because if the rule of law and rule of evi­dence as they stand in the State of New York are fol­lowed dis­pas­sion­ate­ly and hon­est­ly, then the out­come will be right and just regard­less of what office han­dles a case,he said.

I am not sure whether Schneiderman’s inten­tions are right­eous, how­ev­er just because the Police Unions are opposed, I believe the Governor should con­sid­er­ing sign­ing that Executive Order. It appears that New York City’s DA’s are more inter­est­ed in allow­ing their egos to rule their judge­ment rather than heed the cry from the pub­lic. If for no oth­er rea­son Thompson of Brooklyn and Johnson of the Bronx should under­stand both being African Americans.

The tone deaf­ness of the city’s DA’s and their col­leagues in the Police Department is exact­ly what

Bronx DA Robert Johnson
Bronx DA Robert Johnson

the pub­lic is com­plain­ing about. Yet both the DA’s and Police are inca­pable of under­stand­ing that their rela­tion­ship are too close to engen­der trust.
As I stat­ed in a pre­vi­ous Article the prob­lem of police abuse is cer­tain­ly not a prob­lem of police only, but is much deep­er to include District Attorney’s offices and much more.

Attorney General Schneiderman not­ed that sim­i­lar pro­pos­als to require spe­cial pros­e­cu­tors to han­dle cas­es in which cops kill unarmed civil­ians have been around for years in the state Legislature but nev­er enact­ed. He indi­cat­ed an exec­u­tive order by Cuomo might put pres­sure on the law­mak­ers to act.

In the past 15 years, police have been indict­ed in only four cas­es, and one of those indict­ments was lat­er dismissed.

A Cuomo spokeswoman said the governor, who has called for a “soup to nuts” review of the justice system, is reviewing Schneiderman’s request.
A Cuomo spokes­woman said the gov­er­nor, who has called for a “soup to nuts” review of the jus­tice sys­tem, is review­ing Schneiderman’s request.

As we deal with the avalanche of police mur­der of unarmed black men, cit­i­zens and oth­er stake­hold­ers con­tem­plate a way for­ward. We must rec­og­nize that this prob­lem is much deep­er than meets the eyes. Local DA’s are quick to step for­ward to defend their inde­pen­dence, no one but them­selves believe that baloney.
There is a lot more to wor­ry about when pro­pos­als to require spe­cial pros­e­cu­tors to han­dle cas­es in which cops kill unarmed civil­ians lan­guish in the state Legislature with­out a vote.
The ques­tion is why? Police Unions are big donors , they deliv­er huge chunks of votes to politi­cians who tow the line. Most impor­tant­ly Police Unions in some regards are ordi­nary thugs, they use hard nosed tac­tics to keep leg­is­la­tors in line, par­tic­u­lar­ly those in swing dis­tricts. Being brand­ed soft on crime is more than enough to get one vot­ed out of office. This is a chance for Cuomo to step up and make a dif­fer­ence. Lets see if he will sign this order or bow to police and ego­tis­ti­cal District Attorneys.

Lets Decompress As We Consider The Akai Gurley

Kings County, Brooklyn dis­trict attor­ney Kenneth Thompson began to impan­el a grand jury to decide the fate of Officer Peter Liang, the man who shot and killed 28-year-old Akai Gurley. 

Brooklyn DA Kenneth Thompson
Brooklyn DA Kenneth Thompson
Akai Gurley
Akai Gurley

Gurley was killed when Officer Peter Liang and his part­ner, also new to the force, were patrolling a pitch-dark stair­well with flash­lights late Thursday, police said. Gurley, 28, was leav­ing his girlfriend’s apart­ment after she had braid­ed his hair, accord­ing to the girl­friend, who is not his daughter’s mother.

Police said the offi­cers walked down the stairs onto an eighth-floor land­ing when Gurley and his girl­friend opened a stair­well door one floor down, after giv­ing up on wait­ing for an ele­va­tor. Police said Liang, patrolling with his gun drawn, fired with­out a word and appar­ent­ly by acci­dent, hit­ting Gurley from a dis­tance of about 10 feet.

Community Organizations includ­ing the grass­roots orga­ni­za­tion BK Nation, has demand­ed that Mayor Bill de Blasio and Police Commissioner William Bratton bring things to an end:
BK Nation through a Representative Kevin Powell said ‚“We do not believe this was an acci­dent, but a pat­tern of reck­less dis­re­gard for the lives of young men of col­or in our community”.
Regardless of what hap­pens this will anger some groups. Residents and local African-American groups argue this case is just one more exam­ple of the low val­ue Police place on the lives of young men of col­or, par­tic­u­lar­ly black men.
Police Agencies and their sup­port­ers will point to the tremen­dous risks offi­cers face dai­ly as they patrol high crime Housing projects across the nation.
Both sides of the argu­ment has mer­it. Police have demon­strat­ed scant regard for the lives of Young men of col­or, and African Americans in particular.
On the oth­er hand it is incred­i­bly nerve-rack­ing for offi­cers who patrol these crime rid­den hous­ing projects. After all no one deserves to be killed sim­ply because they went to work.
Regardless of the NYPD’s pro­to­col to it’s offi­cers regard­ing how patrols should be done mis­takes were made which may be direct­ly or indi­rect­ly attrib­ut­able to the death of Akai Gurley.
Questions remain.
♦ Why two junior offi­cers were on patrol by themselves?
♦ Why were they doing ver­ti­cal patrols,( going from ground to roof, if they were told not to, as alleged?
♦Why did offi­cer Liang have his gun drawn?
♦Did the open­ing of the door below the offi­cers con­sti­tute enough of a fear fac­tor to cause Officer Liang to believe he and his part­ner were in danger?
♦ If Officer Liang’s part­ner did not un-hol­ster his weapon , it could rea­son­ably be con­strued that any per­ceived fear Liang had may not have been anchored in reality.
Despite all of this, and the tragedy of the loss of this young man and the trau­ma to his fam­i­ly , I believe it would be anoth­er tragedy were he to be indicted .
With what we know so far about this shoot­ing, it would appear that Officer Liang and his part­ner may have ignored Department guide­lines. Liang may not have the nerves or judge­ment required of a good offi­cer, but I see no intent to harm.
When every aspect of what we know is con­sid­ered, tak­ing police side into con­sid­er­a­tion, Officer Liang may need retrain­ing, or even more severe depart­men­tal penal­ty to include but not con­fined to dismissal.

Despite the harm some offi­cers do, we must be mind­ful that Cops face incred­i­ble risks while we sleep at nights. We need to remind our­selves that Officers are peo­ple too, they make mistakes.
It would be trag­ic were the law to pun­ish this offi­cer in light of what we know, because of some of the actions of oth­er police officers.
Lets not throw out the baby with the bath-water.

You Cannot Claim To Be A Good Cop If You Do Not Stop Your Abusive Killer Comrades

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Those of you who like to pre­tend , what the world just wit­nessed is state execution.Carried out with­out a crime being com­mit­ted , a tri­al, or a ver­dict of guilt.
But it goes deep­er than that it is also state Thuggery at it’s finest. Cops who believe they are the Law. Not Law Enforcement Agents. But the law.
Stupid so-called black lead­ers talk about diver­si­ty in police depart­ments, as if that’s a panacea to the sys­temic prob­lem of police killings.
There was a female sergeant there, did she stop the mur­der? No she did noth­ing. Not only that, there were oth­er black cops there, obvi­ous­ly they were scared shit-less to inter­vene as their white killer com­rades abused and killed mis­ter Garner.

Black America is in seri­ous trou­ble.
When we talk about good cops every-time the ques­tion of mur­der­er cops comes up, we remove the shine from the ball.
We divert the nec­es­sary anger from this exis­ten­tial prob­lem.
You can­not claim to be a good cop if you stand by and watch abuse, to include mur­der hap­pen and take no action to stop it .
As a for­mer cop, for­mer col­leagues were some­times mad at me for step­ping in and pre­vent­ing abuse of cit­i­zens.
That in no way com­pro­mised theirs or my effec­tive­ness as tac­ti­cal offi­cers or as detec­tives.
If any­thing it allowed me/​us to be more effective.
Insofar as the New York inci­dents go there are enough bod­ies to show that this is a sys­temic prob­lem of cops who were indoc­tri­nat­ed under the Racial,divisive doc­trine of Rudolph Giuliani, exe­cut­ed by William Bratton and ex-con­vict Bernard Kerik.

Up Up Yea Mighty Race

Hey Black-America, how about we con­sid­er some of these things simul­ta­ne­ous­ly as we demand change in our police departments.
Hey about we.…..»
♦Vote?
♦Start read­ing and keep­ing abreast of what’s happening?
♦Stop spend­ing all our mon­ey on goods and ser­vices with busi­ness­es which does not care about us, and in some cas­es are open­ly hos­tile and dis­re­spect­ful to us?
♦Send our kids to school and mak­ing sure we fol­low up on their progress so that the sys­tem does not get the impres­sion they don’t matter?
♦Stop com­mit­ting crimes?
♦Stop allow­ing our­selves to be immersed sole­ly in things which are entertainment?
♦Save and pur­chase property?
♦Start, oper­at­ing and sup­port­ing oth­er black businesses?
♦Stop allow­ing oth­er peo­ple to tell us who our lead­ers should be?
♦Stop fight­ing among ourselves?
♦Stop hat­ing each other?
♦Stop killing each other?
♦Start cre­at­ing and sup­port­ing com­mu­ni­ty orga­ni­za­tions which empow­er and pro­tect our peo­ple from the kinds of abuse we are speak­ing about , a- la police abuse?
♦Stop deal­ing drugs?
♦Stop deal­ing drugs to your own people?
I know some of you will take issue, argu­ing that oth­er races do the same things black peo­ple do.
News flash , I don’t give a Rat’s behind about oth­er races, I am talk­ing about fix­ing ourselves.
No one will respect us if we do not respect and empow­er ourselves.
The rea­son our peo­ple are being killed may be summed up in one word.
RESPECT !!!!
People do not respect us.
Because in far too many instances we do not RESPECT ourselves.
So what are we going to do people?
We’ve tried marching.
We’ve tried the courts , they do not work for us!
So what now?
Are we going to sit by and watch the states kill our chil­dren and do noth­ing about it ?
scenes which greeted marchers from Ferguson to Jefferson city
scenes which greet­ed marchers from Ferguson to Jefferson city
.…..
We should nev­er lose sight of the fact that Police Departments are armed Arms of the States in which they operate.
We talk about Police as if Police Departments are oper­at­ing in a vacuum.
Governors and State Legislators hide and wait for protest and pub­lic out­cry to dis­si­pate, die down and go away.
They are the ones who give Police offi­cers these wide unbri­dled pow­ers to break the back of minor­i­ty com­mu­ni­ties and fill jail cells.
Town and local munic­i­pal­i­ties cre­ate quo­tas which pres­sure police to be aggressive.
scenes which greeted marchers from Ferguson to Jefferson city
scenes which greet­ed marchers from Ferguson to Jefferson city

Police offi­cers have con­fid­ed in me that their brass open­ly tell them not to cul­ti­vate mean­ing­ful rela­tion­ships with the minor­i­ty com­mu­ni­ty, they should just write tick­ets and keep it moving.
When you refuse to get up off your rear end vote and make sure you are heard , oth­er peo­ple who do not like you make the rules for you.
You allows local, state and fed­er­al can­di­dates who run on tough on crime plat­forms to win, who then give police unmit­i­gat­ed pow­er to abuse and kill you.
When they talk about being tough on crime they are talk­ing about you and me. They are not talk­ing about lock­ing up their own children.
As we look at police sys­tem­at­ic abuse and mur­der of our chil­dren, broth­ers, sis­ters, moth­ers, fathers, aunts, cousins, uncles and our neigh­bors, we must hold these lead­ers responsible.
Police do what they are told to do, they can­not go out and enforce laws which do not exists. 
As this firestorm rages, how many of you have heard a word from the folks in Albany New York?

scenes which greeted marchers from Ferguson to Jefferson city
scenes which greet­ed marchers from Ferguson to Jefferson city

Cuomo have made some com­ments from the side of his mouth,have you heard any­thing from Sheldon Silver and the oth­ers who wield pow­er Albany, Jefferson city, Jersey city, Tallahassee, and state cap­i­tals around the country ?
Those of you in New York State, do you even know who Sheldon Silver is?

For gen­er­a­tions the American Black allowed him­self to be conned into believ­ing if he stayed in his place, main­tain the order he would get his just due.
The ene­mies of jus­tice even dress up some black mon­keys and feed them well. Then they ask them whether things are right with them?
What do you believe those lit­tle black mon­keys answer?
Yes mas­sa we is good gud suh, you is mighty good to us suh”
How can there be order if there is no justice.
Many do not want justice.
They want Order
Order guar­an­tees the sta­tus quo.
Order guar­an­tees their lives of privilege.
Maybe it’s time to upend the order.
They want you to remain silent, they want you to just go away. They don’t want you to grieve when their goons mur­der your sons and daughters.
Many years ago I com­ment­ed to my wife that we were going to see some neg­a­tive con­se­quences to the way we as black peo­ple are liv­ing. I believe the Obama Presidency has been the fuse which lit the Molotov-cock­tail of sim­mer­ing resent­ment and hate. A white-lash if you will.
Just under half of the vot­ing pop­u­la­tion did not vote for President Barack Obama. These are those who call them­selves Republicans, Conservatives, Libertarians and Tea-Party supporters.The vast major­i­ty of them are white Anglo-Saxon, une­d­u­cat­ed and absolute­ly igno­rant. The images marchers encoun­tered on their way to Jefferson City this week , are the very same igno­rant back­woods types of the 40’s,50’s and 60’s. Decades have passed, Racists atti­tudes fueled by igno­rance still persists.
In order for us to move beyond these ebbs and flows of the blood of our young men we have to adopt some bet­ter prac­tices like the ones I out­lined. No one will do for us what we ought to be doing for ourselves.
The first order of busi­ness how­ev­er is that you stand up and claim your coun­try. This is your coun­try. You are not a stranger in your own land. When they talk about the coun­try their fore-fathers built .
Stand up and tell the world they built it on the blood, sweat and tears and on the backs of your fore-fathers and mothers.
When they talk about their chris­t­ian pil­grims and Columbus’s hero­ics, rub­bish their lies with facts about the moors who Columbus came and saw here liv­ing side by side with the native Indians.
When they talk about their fore-fathers being reli­gious refugees remind them they were the scum of Europe emp­tied from the jails and sent here.
Remind them that the inher­ent evil vis­it­ed on your ances­tors are a direct result of the mur­der­ers Europe dumped here up to the end of the civ­il war.
Mass-mur­der­ers, Rapists, Drunks, the refuse of Europe’s pris­ons dumped onto the backs of our fore-parents.
Do not won­der at the sav­agery. They are savages.

Retired Philadelphia Police Captain Ray Lewis

Retired Philadelphia Police Captain  Ray Lewis
Retired Philadelphia Police Captain Ray Lewis

Captain Lewis con­tin­ue to show moral courage as he demon­strat­ed in Ferguson and New York city where he was arrest­ed by NYPD thugs in uniform.