The Second Murder Of Botham Shem Jean Is In Full Force: Character Assassination

There is a dia­bol­i­cal unholy alliance in America between the forces which pur­port to be law-enforce­ment and local media houses.
It is dia­bol­i­cal because for as long as America has decid­ed that black peo­ple were less than human and there­fore unwor­thy of respect and dig­ni­ty, there has been a sys­tem­at­ic attempt to dimin­ish the val­ue of black life.

Twenty-six-year-old Botham Shem Jean killed by Dallas police in his own home

There is no rea­son to believe that 26-year-old Botham Shem Jean, a col­lege grad­u­ate who was gain­ful­ly employed, does not have a crim­i­nal record(as if that dimin­ish­es the val­ue of life), leads wor­ship ser­vice at his church would have been insu­lat­ed from vicious slaugh­ter by American Police.

Understandably, once they killed him they had to demo­nize him and that is where the media cam­paign comes in.
Dallas Police which is sup­posed to be inves­ti­gat­ing the mur­der of Jean has been engaged in obtain­ing war­rants to search the home of mis­ter Jean.
Yes, you guessed right, after they were in his home and need­ed to cob­ble togeth­er an ali­bi for their mur­der­ous col­league Amber Guygher.

We are learn­ing that a judge has attached his/​her sig­na­ture to those war­rants and we have the results of what the Dallas Police have report­ed­ly found and on queue is being report­ed by FOX.

- Following the shoot­ing death of Botham Jean by the hands of Dallas Police Officer Amber Guyger, mul­ti­ple search war­rants were exe­cut­ed at Jean’s apart­ment as part of the investigation.

One of the war­rants became a pub­lic record Thursday after­noon when it was returned to the judge who signed it. It was short­ly after Jean’s funer­al had end­ed. It list­ed sev­er­al items found in Jean’s apart­ment, includ­ing a small amount of marijuana.

There have been sev­er­al war­rants signed by judges and exe­cut­ed in this case aside from the arrest war­rant for Guyger and the search war­rant signed September 7 that were returned to the court on Thursday. The oth­ers are still sealed and not accessible.

The search war­rant exe­cut­ed in Jean’s apart­ment at South Side Flats specif­i­cal­ly sought fired car­tridge cas­ings, fired pro­jec­tiles, firearms, bal­lis­tic vests, keys, evi­dence of blood, video sur­veil­lance sys­tems, and con­tra­band such as nar­cotics and oth­er items used in crim­i­nal offenses.

The inven­to­ry return yielded:
2 fired car­tridge casings
1 lap­top computer
1 black back­pack with police equip­ment and paperwork
1 insu­lat­ed lunch box
1 black bal­lis­tic vest with “police” markings
10.4 grams of mar­i­jua­na in ziplock bags
1 met­al mar­i­jua­na grinder
RFID keys
2 used pack­ages of med­ical aid

The doc­u­ment does not say where any of the items were locat­ed in the apart­ment or who the items belong to.

The Jean fam­i­ly’s legal team was unaware of the doc­u­ment when it was first released. Regardless of whose mar­i­jua­na it was, the attor­neys say it does­n’t matter.

I think it’s unfor­tu­nate that law enforce­ment begin to imme­di­ate­ly crim­i­nal­ize the vic­tim — in this case, some­one who was clear­ly was the vic­tim that has absolute­ly no bear­ing on the fact that he was shot in his home,” said Lee Merritt, attor­ney for Jean’s fam­i­ly. “I would love to see more infor­ma­tion com­ing out about the war­rants exe­cut­ed on the home of the shoot­er who lived just below him. I haven’t seen any of those. And par­tic­u­lar­ly for it to be on this day the day that we remem­ber and cel­e­brate him… to see the com­mon assas­si­na­tion attempt on the vic­tim that we often see in law enforce­ment involved shootings.”

It does­n’t change the sto­ry,” said Daryl Washington, attor­ney for the Jean fam­i­ly. “She claimed that she went into a place she thought was her apart­ment. She did­n’t claim she had gone some­where because she thought there was some sort of crim­i­nal activity.”

I know because of how he lived his life it won’t stain his rep­u­ta­tion because he lived his life so vir­tu­ous­ly,” Merritt added. “But it’s unfor­tu­nate law enforce­ment has tak­en this turn.”

Attorney Pete Schulte, who is not con­nect­ed to the case, says the defense will like­ly bring it up in tri­al if the mar­i­jua­na turns out to be his.

I’m not say­ing Mr. Jean is a bad guy because he had some mar­i­jua­na in his apart­ment,” Schulte said. “But it could help add some expla­na­tion to this crazy case. It just adds anoth­er lay­er of complexity.”

Schulte says it’s com­mon prac­tice for detec­tives inves­ti­gat­ing a case to cast a wide net when seek­ing a search warrant.

The request for the war­rant does list a wide range of items — from blood evi­dence and keys, to video sur­veil­lance sys­tems and “any con­tra­band, such as nar­cotics, and oth­er items that may have been used in crim­i­nal offenses.”

Other attor­neys not asso­ci­at­ed with the case say that spe­cif­ic lan­guage may have been used for items that were in plain sight.

They do a broad spec­trum of what they’re look­ing for when they get these search war­rants,” Schulte said. “Now tox­i­col­o­gy is impor­tant, both with Officer Guyger and Mr. Jean, because it could explain how this case hap­pened. How things went south so quickly.”

By law, a war­rant must be exe­cut­ed with­in 72 hours of when it was issued. As far as the tim­ing of the return to the court, near­ly a week later?

There’s noth­ing nefar­i­ous about it. I think it just got done,” Schulte said. “They’ve got to get it to the court, and it got to the court today.”

Jean’s legal team disagrees.

This is noth­ing but a dis­gust­ing attempt to assas­si­nate the char­ac­ter of a won­der­ful young man,” said Ben Crump, attor­ney for the Jean family.

There have been sev­er­al war­rants signed by judges and exe­cut­ed in the case so we could learn of addi­tion­al items retrieved. It’s unclear if those requests includ­ed any war­rants to search Officer Guyger’s apart­ment as well.

Guyger did con­sent to a blood draw the night of the shoot­ing. Toxicology reports for both her and Jean are still pending.

The griev­ing fam­i­ly of Botham Jean, flanked on the right by its lawyer, Benjamin Crump, in Dallas on September 10, 2018ASSOCIATED PRESS

As the fam­i­ly of Botham Shem Jean grieves and hon­or his life with a funer­al ser­vice, a dia­bol­i­cal plan is set in motion by Dallas author­i­ties to deliv­er a coup de grâce to the mur­dered man.
The plan, as was to be expect­ed from past instances where police mur­der peo­ple of col­or, is designed to com­mit the sec­ond mur­der of Botham Shem Jean through char­ac­ter assassination.

The accused friend­ly police report above was writ­ten by the inves­ti­gat­ing offi­cer US Marshall David L Armstrong which seems more like a defen­dant sup­port­ing state­ment, than an affi­davit intend­ed to bring to jus­tice a guilty defendant.