Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Teazer on Thu Aug 28, 2014 9:07 pm

windwalker wrote:
The question whether it is constitutionally permissible for the police to demand that a detainee provide his or her name was considered by the U.S. Supreme Court in Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada, 542 U.S. 177 (2004), which held that the name disclosure did not violate the Fourth Amendment prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures


Minnesota isn't on that list, so no legal requirement.

windwalker wrote:what it dosen say is whether the place the man was sitting was owned by the store or weather it was a public space.

As far as I can tell it was a bank property with a bunch of shops in it. The store clerk who called the cops wouldn't have been the one who owned where he was sitting. It doesn't sound like the clerk actually spoke to him at all & just made the call reporting him. Note that all the charges were dropped.

windwalker wrote:its the same as whether one has to roll their car window down when stopped by an officer.

If you're driving a car you have a legal requirement to produce ID, so no it isn't the same.

windwalker wrote:notice you dont post how many cops are shot while just stopping someone one.

Did the guy look particularly threatening sitting on a bench or walking, or standing asking questions? No noticeable weaponry, being quite polite considering the circumstances? Why did the two cops think he was sufficiently dangerous to require putting him in handcuffs?

You might want to compare the somewhat different outcomes when white libertarians challenge cops on legal process while taking videos.
Why does man Kill? He kills for food.
And not only food: frequently there must be a beverage.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby windwalker on Fri Aug 29, 2014 6:56 am

Some legal organizations, such as the National Lawyers Guild and the ACLU of Northern California, recommend to either remain silent or to identify oneself whether or not a jurisdiction has a "stop and identify" law:

And in any state, police do not always follow the law, and refusing to give your name may make them suspicious and lead to your arrest, so use your judgment. If you fear that your name may be incriminating, you can claim the right to remain silent, and if you are arrested, this may help you later. Giving a false name could be a crime.[45]
In a more recent pamphlet, the ACLU of Northern California elaborated on this further, recommending that a person detained by police should:

. . . give your name and the information on your drivers’ license. If you don’t, you may be arrested, even though the arrest may be illegal.[46]


what ever, the cops came because they where asked to, didnt watch the clip, just reading the transcript looks like they started to tell him what the problem was and then
he came back and told them. That always works 8-)

You might want to compare the somewhat different outcomes when white libertarians challenge cops on legal process while taking videos.

no need, I could find accounts of the same things happening or that have happened. The point would be?

what would they be trying to prove with "another" autopsy?


the starting point of the thread.
it will be interesting to see how this plays out. We will see if the witnesses
tell the same story while under oath, and what the evidence shows.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Teazer on Fri Aug 29, 2014 10:00 pm

Why does man Kill? He kills for food.
And not only food: frequently there must be a beverage.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby windwalker on Sat Aug 30, 2014 12:22 pm

A Chicago police commander who had been praised for his crime fighting in some of the city's roughest neighborhoods appeared in court on Thursday to face charges he put a gun in a suspect's mouth, officials said...'' You are leaving out the most important part of the story. This
top cop, than proceeded to tell the suspect that two hours prior he arrested a pimp and had his pistol sticking in his butt :o while he cuffed him. I 8-)

a poster posted this from this article, not a good thing but kind makes one smile thinking of it.
http://news.yahoo.com/high-ranking-chic ... 56898.html

A suburban St. Louis cop who was suspended for pointing his semi-automatic rifle and threatening protesters in Ferguson, Missouri, has resigned, the police chief told the Associated Press. Lt. Ray Albers, who was put on indefinite leave from the St. Ann Police Department after being caught on a cellphone video that went viral, quit the job he had held since 1994 on Thursday. Albers could not be reached for comment.

http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/michae ... rs-n191751

one points a gun, the other puts it in the suspects mouth 8-)

the main difference, imo, is that one was in control of the events,
the other reacting to events seemed to be overwhelmed
pretty tough being a cop, not a job I would want.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Dajenarit on Sun Aug 31, 2014 3:06 pm

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/11/21/v ... tches.html

Earl Sampson has been stopped and questioned by Miami Gardens police 258 times in four years.

He’s been searched more than 100 times. And arrested and jailed 56 times.

Despite his long rap sheet, Sampson, 28, has never been convicted of anything more serious than possession of marijuana.

Miami Gardens police have arrested Sampson 62 times for one offense: trespassing.

Almost every citation was issued at the same place: the 207 Quickstop, a convenience store on 207th Street in Miami Gardens.

But Sampson isn’t loitering. He works as a clerk at the Quickstop.

So how can he be trespassing when he works there?

It’s a question the store’s owner, Alex Saleh, 36, has been asking for more than a year as he watched Sampson, his other employees and his customers, day after day, being stopped and frisked by Miami Gardens police. Most of them, like Sampson, are poor and black.

And, like Sampson, many of them have been cited for minor infractions, sometimes as often as three times in the same day.

Saleh was so troubled by what he saw that he decided to install video cameras in his store. Not to protect himself from criminals, because he says he has never been robbed. He installed the cameras — 15 of them — he said, to protect him and his customers from police.

Since he installed the cameras in June 2012 he has collected more than two dozen videos, some of which have been obtained by the Miami Herald. Those tapes, and Sampson’s 38-page criminal history — including charges never even pursued by prosecutors — raise some troubling questions about the conduct of the city’s police officers.

The videos show, among other things, cops stopping citizens, questioning them, aggressively searching them and arresting them for trespassing when they have permission to be on the premises; officers conducting searches of Saleh’s business without search warrants or permission; using what appears to be excessive force on subjects who are clearly not resisting arrest and filing inaccurate police reports in connection with the arrests.

“There is just no justifying this kind of behavior,’’ said Chuck Drago, a former police officer and consultant on police policy and the use of force. “Nobody can justify overstepping the constitution to fight crime.”

Repeated phone messages and emails to Miami Gardens Police Chief Matthew Boyd and City Manager Cameron Benson asking for comment on this story were not returned.

Boyd did release a statement, saying that the department is committed to serving and protecting the citizens and businesses in the city.

But Howard Simon, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union Florida, said that’s exactly what Boyd is NOT doing.

“Where is the police chief in all this? In a police department in a city this size, this kind of behavior could not escape his attention. Doesn’t the City Commission know that they are exposing the city to either massive liability for civil rights violations? Either that, or they are going to wake up one day and find the U.S. Department of Justice has taken over its police department.’’

Saleh and his attorney, Steve Lopez, are preparing to file a federal civil rights lawsuit, contending that the police department has routinely, under the direction of the city’s top leaders, directed its officers to conduct racial profiling, illegal stops and searches and other activities to cover up illegal misconduct.

CITY’S STRUGGLES

Miami Gardens, incorporated 10 years ago, has struggled with gang violence, drug crime and shooting sprees that have claimed the lives of many innocent people. Just this year, a 12-year-old girl was killed in a hail of bullets and a retired minister and her grandson were slain in an execution-style murder.

While overall crime has declined in recent years, murders have more than doubled, according to state crime figures. Residents haven’t sat idly. For years they have demanded change. They’ve led anti-violence crusades, crime-fighting rallies and town-hall meetings to draw attention to the city’s crime problem.

With a population of 109,000 people, Miami Gardens is the third largest city in Miami -Dade. Its population is predominantly black. Its citizens have voiced their distrust of the police department over the years on a number of fronts, noting that officers — many of them white and Hispanic — seldom leave their patrol cars except to make an arrest.

In the past, Boyd and other top commanders have insisted that in order to quell violence they need the community to cooperate and help them root out criminals.

“The real problem here,’’ Drago said, “is the police department does not have a relationship with its community — black or white. When they make these kinds of stops for minor offenses, it only re-enforces the mistrust.’’

Saleh, whose store is tucked between a public park and working-class neighborhoods, contends that Miami Gardens police officers have repeatedly used racial slurs to refer to his customers and treat most of them like they are hardened criminals.

“Police line them up and tell them to put their hands against the wall. I started asking myself ‘Is this normal?’ I just kept thinking police can’t do this,’’ Saleh said.

Last year, Saleh, armed with a cache of videos, filed an internal affairs complaint about the arrests at his store. From that point, he said, police officers became even more aggressive.

One evening, shortly after he had complained a second time, a squadron of six uniformed Miami Gardens police officers marched into the store, he says. They lined up, shoulder to shoulder, their arms crossed in front of them, blocking two grocery aisles.

“Can I help you?” Saleh recalls asking. It was an entire police detail, known as the department’s Rapid Action Deployment (RAD) squad, whom he had come to know from their frequent arrest sweeps. One went to use the restroom, and five of them stood silently for a full 10 minutes. Then they all marched out.

Boyd, who is black, said earlier this year that headlines of killings and shootings in Miami Gardens overshadow the gains his department has made since the city established its police department in 2007.

“Rest assured that our department is fully committed to complying with the laws that govern us,’’ Boyd said in his written statement emailed to the Herald Wednesday. He added that he was also committed to “exceeding the expectations of those that rely on us, and providing the best possible service to the residents of this great City.’’

‘LIKE FAMILY’

For 17 years, Saleh has owned 207 Quickstop. Saleh has come to know his customers by their first names, and even by their nicknames. He has watched some of them grow from toddlers into young men. He feels for them when loved ones die, and has celebrated with them when their babies were born.

“To me, these people are like family,’’ said Saleh, a native of Venezuela who is of Palestinian descent.

About three years ago, Saleh said police asked him to participate in what they called a “zero-tolerance” program to reduce crime. He gladly signed up, not realizing at the time how much it would impact his business and customers. Under the program, Miami Gardens police are given broad powers to stop and arrest people who appear to be loitering or trespassing at the participating business.

The idea behind the program is based on the “broken window theory,’’ a concept that has been employed by police around the country. The theory holds that a community that rids itself of petty crime, such as shoplifting, vandalism and trespassing, can eradicate more serious crime because criminals won’t have anywhere to hide.

Drago said the idea does work — but only if a police department has built a good relationship with its residents.

“There’s a lot of groundwork that has to be laid with the community before you start sweeping,’’ he said.

Almost immediately after Saleh put the “zero-tolerance” sign in his window, he regretted it.

Miami Gardens police officers, he said, began stopping his patrons regularly, citing them for minor infractions such as trespassing, or having an open container of alcohol. The officers, he said, would then pat them down or stick their hands in citizens’ pockets. But what bothered Saleh the most was the emboldened behavior of the officers who came into his store unannounced, searched his store without his permission and then hauled his employees away in the middle of their shifts. He finally told them he no longer wanted to participate in the program and removed the sign.

The officers, however, continued their surveillance of his store over his objections. The officers even put the sign back on his store against his wishes, he said.

One video, recorded on June 26, 2012, shows Sampson, clearly stocking coolers, being interrupted by MGPD Sgt. William Dunaske, who orders him to put his hands behind his back, and then handcuffs him, leads him out of the store and takes him to jail for trespassing.

More than once, Saleh has told police that Sampson is an employee and is not trespassing.

On that June arrest report, obtained by The Herald, police explained the trespass arrest, saying that Sampson was arrested for loitering outside the store when in fact the video, which has a date and time stamp, clearly shows him being handcuffed and arrested inside the store.

FDLE records show that Sampson was stopped at least once a week for the past four years, and sometimes several times a week and even as many as three times in one day. The stops are often conducted by the same police officers, who have arrested him time and time again.

“I never felt they had any probable cause,’’ Sampson said. “They hop out of the car and search me before they even ask me for my name.’’

Saleh theorizes that it’s an easy way for the department to make it seem like they are making a large number of arrests.

“They have specialized units to combat crime and they need to bring in the numbers to justify those units,’’ Saleh said.

Said Sampson: “We have people shooting, killing, robberies. This is really ridiculous that they spend so much time arresting people for trespassing.’’

Another employee, Ron Picart, was arrested for illegal possession of a firearm. The case was never filed by the state attorney because the officer, Dunaske, found the firearm under the store’s counter during an illegal search, which was video recorded.

BEER AND FOOTBALL

On a typical weekday afternoon, the Quickstop’s front door squeaks incessantly, as customers wander in and out. They buy snacks, like pickled pigs feet and potato chips, grab a beer or two, and stop to chat with Saleh. Few of them own cars, and usually walk or ride a bicycle.

Some stand in front of the store’s television and talk about football as they sip coffee. Others do their business and are in and out. In the parking lot, a few of them are drinking beer out of paper bags.

Since Saleh has served notice that he is going to sue the city, Sampson hasn’t been arrested, and police are not as active in the store’s parking lot.

But Saleh is mindful of his David vs. Goliath battle with the city’s police department. He worries about his safety, and carries a licensed firearm.

In December, Saleh was followed out of his parking lot by a Miami Gardens police officer, who stopped him after a few blocks. The officer, Carlos Velez, said he stopped Saleh because his tag light was out.

Two other squad cars arrived at the scene, bringing the total number of officers on the scene to six. A police dashboard camera captured it all.

“I thought, you know, there is a lot of serious crime in Miami Gardens,’’ Saleh said. “Why do they need six police officers on a car stop with a burned-out tag light?’’

Another officer, Eddo Trimino, approached Saleh’s passenger side, opened the door and removed a gun that was in a bag containing the store’s money, Saleh said. They ran a check on the gun, which Saleh was licensed to carry.

They cited him for having a bad tag light, tinted windows and bald tires.

Before leaving, the unit’s then-sergeant, Martin Santiago, allegedly told Saleh:

“I’m going to get you mother-f-----,’’

The next day, Saleh viewed video of his truck as it pulled out of the parking lot the night before.

His tag light was working.

Simon called Miami Gardens’ approach of “selective enforcement’’ a clear violation of civil rights.

“Unfortunately, this is being done all across Florida and the country,’’ Simon said.

“I have to say congratulations to the owner of the convenience store for recognizing this is not acceptable and having the courage to stand up and challenge it.’’

Miami Herald staff writer Lance Dixon contributed to this story.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Dajenarit on Sun Aug 31, 2014 3:33 pm

How often do the police get to lie about the details of this case before someone gets hit with perjury charges? They involved this poor store owner and his employees in their desperate attempted coverup to the point these people are afraid for their lives which I doubt they should be. With the way the media has been playing up 2 days of rioting out of the majority of the 3 weeks of peaceful protesting, I'm not at all surprised they're afraid of reprisals. The media did the same hatchet job to Occupy or any other relatively peaceful mass movement actually.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/08/1 ... gar-Theft#

Attorney For Ferguson Market: NO ONE From His Store Called 911 To Report Cigar Theft

St. Louis local news is reporting that the Attorney for the Ferguson store, Jake Kanzler said the the Ferguson store owner, nor any store employee called the police to report any shoplifting of cigars, but, rather, a customer called the police.
Please notice, the I was not able to embed the video of St. Louis local news but the video can be seen here)

REPORTER: The owner of the store dispute the claim that they or an employee called 911, saying a customer inside the store made the call. They also say St. Louis County issues the warrants for the hard drive of surveillance video Friday.
[emphasis added by me]

the Ferguson Market attorney said police did not see the video until after the unarmed teenager, Michael Brown, was shot dead in the street.
REPORTER: "I asked the attorney for the owner of the store how the Ferguson police ended up with the video the Police Chief released this morning, the attorney said, 'during the course of Ferguson's investigation, the police department from Ferguson, came to the store and asked for to review the tape."
WOW!
St. Louis news goes on to report:

... the attorney wanted to emphasize the 911 call did not come from the owners or an employee.

WOW!

In a separate news video (embedded below) the Ferguson Market attorney also says any alleged theft of cigars had nothing to do with Michael Brown being shot to death by Ferguson police:




KANZLER: "Whatever the police are looking for on the surveillance tape, has nothing to do with what went on in the street."
Well, well, well ... now the fact that no employee from the store, nor the store owner called 911 to report a 'theft' of cheap cigars, might explain why the DoJ did not want Ferguson Police Chief Johnson to release the tape. Add to that, the fact that even Ferguson Market attorney acknowledges the obvious, "Whatever the police are looking for on the surveillance tape, has nothing to do with what went on in the street."
Take away: the alleged theft of the cheap cigars was so insignificant to the Ferguson Market that they did not even bother to call 911 about it -- yet -- the Ferguson Police Chief appears to want us to pretend that the alleged shoplifting of the cheap cigars somehow justifies Officer Darren Wilson killing the unarmed teenager who they claim was the alleged suspect.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Dajenarit on Sun Aug 31, 2014 3:36 pm

Oh yea, where is this alleged customer?
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby windwalker on Sun Aug 31, 2014 7:12 pm

“The real problem here,’’ Drago said, “is the police department does not have a relationship with its community — black or white. When they make these kinds of stops for minor offenses, it only re-enforces the mistrust.’’

are you saying that they should not stop anyone for "minor offenses"

Evans has been the subject of several police misconduct lawsuits, according to reports in the Chicago Tribune and WBEZ, a local National Public Radio affiliate.

http://news.yahoo.com/high-ranking-chic ... 56898.html
McCarthy, who has been under pressure to bring down the murder rate in the nation's third-largest city, has praised Evans' work in the past and said on Monday he continued to support him.


this is the officer who stuck the gun in the suspects mouth. noticed you didnt have much to say about it.
is it just police in gen, that your referring to or specific officers? in certain neighborhoods?

if a white cop stuck a gun in a black suspects mouth would it be different ? especially since he has several misconduct lawsuits pending.
to me he seems like an effective officer

Evans was charged on Wednesday with aggravated battery and official misconduct in the capture of a suspect on Jan. 30, 2013, according to Sally Daly, a spokeswoman for the Cook County State's Attorney's office.

Image

At Thursday's hearing Evans was released on his own recognizance, said Laura Morask, one of his defense attorneys.

View galleryChicago Police Department Commander Glenn Evans at …
Chicago Police Department Commander Glenn Evans at a Harrison District resident at a National Night …
The amount of force that can be used by police officers has become a focus of national debate after the fatal shooting of an unarmed black man in a St. Louis suburb on Aug. 9. The shooting of Michael Brown, 18, was followed by weeks of sometimes violent protests.

already said officers have a tough job,
lets see if the MB case goes to trial or not.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby windwalker on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:07 pm

Well, well, well ... now the fact that no employee from the store, nor the store owner called 911 to report a 'theft' of cheap cigars, might explain why the DoJ did not want Ferguson Police Chief Johnson to release the tape. Add to that, the fact that even Ferguson Market attorney acknowledges the obvious, "Whatever the police are looking for on the surveillance tape, has nothing to do with what went on in the street."
Take away: the alleged theft of the cheap cigars was so insignificant to the Ferguson Market that they did not even bother to call 911 about it -- yet -- the Ferguson Police Chief appears to want us to pretend that the alleged shoplifting of the cheap cigars somehow justifies Officer Darren Wilson killing the unarmed teenager who they claim was the alleged suspect.



the police will contend that the officer was attacked.
the question will be asked "why would the gentle giant" do this.
according to "you" a video showing a recent strong arm robbery before event, with the gentle giant should not be used,


The grand jury reviewing the facts in the case is impaneled until mid-September, but could continue to deliberate beyond its term, in which case their sole focus would be on the shooting of Brown. At the conclusion of its investigation, the grand jury will decide whether to indict Wilson in connection with the shooting.

http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/michae ... rt-n186431

Under normal courtroom rules of evidence, exhibits and other testimony must adhere to strict rules before admission. However, a grand jury has broad power to see and hear almost anything they would like.

However, unlike the vast majority of trials, grand jury proceedings are kept in strict confidence. This serves two purposes:

It encourages witnesses to speak freely and without fear of retaliation.
It protects the potential defendant's reputation in case the jury does not decide to indict.
- See more at: http://criminal.findlaw.com/criminal-pr ... HGv8V.dpuf


the officers contention will be that he was attacked, and has to show why this is probable.
MJ, recent activities as well as his past will be brought into question just as the officers will be.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby windwalker on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:39 pm

Oh yea, where is this alleged customer?

lets review

a man is killed
a riot started
shit burned down

a video is shown of the man you just reported in the store who later was shot by a police officer, the store owners and employees
don't want nothing to do with this, and your asking where is this person ::)
where would you be, what talk show would you
want to be on 8-)
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Dajenarit on Sun Aug 31, 2014 11:03 pm

More like the person might not exist like the dozen alleged witnesses for the cop. They pulled the tape from the store owner after the shooting against the store owners, state authorities and the DOJ's wishes. Can they at least confirm that the person and the story they're telling is actually real? No shit they shouldn't release the persons name obviously but the sole reason for taking and releasing an inflammatory alleged robbery video might not even exist like the dozens of so called witnesses and pieces of evidence that Ferguson PD gets caught perjuring themselves about. Why would a customer call the police and not notify the store clerk atleast? I've never heard someone do something like that before. Not when the property owner and alleged crime victim is standing right there and they themselves decide not to pursue a criminal case but the customer calls it in? Even after the guy for whatever reason was allegedly shoved in a strong arm robbery? It's a justified question if the person actually exists after all the lies being told in this case by the police.
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Dajenarit on Sun Aug 31, 2014 11:24 pm

You're really reaching with this he wasn't a gentle giant horse you keep beating. You know that isn't the point nor a justification. Stop pretending you're not smart enough to see the bigger picture. If you want to keep pretending this is an isolated incident then we have nothing to discuss. I mean I'm seriously having a hard time seeing what you're complaint is WW'? For the record I already said thats its just as bad if its a black cop or a white victim rare as that is. Lets not act like unarmed or handcuffed white suspects are being blown away by police on a weekly or monthly rate. These people would be lucky to just have a gun put in their mouths. The author rightly states that this list is hundreds of names short for perspective. Thats why people are angry enough to riot and this is not a fair and balanced situation by any means. Just be glad its not your people and your children being shot down in the streets and at home like clockwork. I can show you videos of white people having their pets shot for days though... If only thats all minorities had to worry about in 90% of cases.. being just harassed, probably arrested, maybe alittle assault for good measure and at worst losing the family pet... ::)



http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/08/2 ... ildren-now

Let's do a brief recap of the news since Jordan Davis was gunned down, prompting my November 2012 diary, shall we?

On August 18 2014, Kajieme Powell was killed by a white police officer in St. Louis because, according to the police, he came at them with a knife "in an overhand grip" (although according to a videotape that St. Louis law enforcement themselves have released in what can only be described as a failed attempt to keep St. Louis from looking like Ferguson, he did not).

On August 11, 2014, Ezell Ford, a mentally disabled man whose disability was well known to neighborhood LAPD, was shot dead by white officers in South Los Angeles. Depending upon whose story you believe, he either "spun around, tucked his head toward the officer’s gun and basically tackled him to the ground, trying to grab at the weapon.” or he was lying down on the ground when he was shot three times by the cops.

On August 9, 2014, (as we all have heard) Michael Brown was killed by a white officer while fleeing following that officer's initial attempt to detain his 18-year-old self for jaywalking in Ferguson, Missouri.

On August 5, 2014, John Crawford III was killed by a white officer while handling a BB gun in a Walmart near Dayton, Ohio, after some random white folks raised the "scary black man with a gun! alarm" by calling 911 without a nanosecond's thought about why someone would actually be holding a BB gun in a place where these items were for sale. Crawford was 21 years old.

On July 17, 2014, Eric Garner was killed by a white officer using a chokehold after an arrest for allegedly illegally selling cigarettes (what we used to call "loosies" back in 'hood back in the day, although we didn't know then that selling them was a death sentence) in Staten Island, New York.

On September 14, 2013, Jonathan Ferrell was shot and killed by a white officer after crashing his car in Charlotte, North Carolina, and seeking help from what we can all hopefully agree was the wrong white woman.

On November 2, 2013, Renisha McBride, was shot and killed by a white homeowner in Detrooit, Michigan, after she crashed her car and knocked on his door seeking help.

On March 9, 2013, Kimani Gray was shot seven times by two police officers in Brooklyn, New York, as he left a friend's birthday party. He was 16 years old, but the cops claimed he had a gun even when the witnesses say he was hauling ass trying to save his life (sound familiar?) and the bullets pumped into the front and the back of him appear to bear that out.

On December 2, 2012, Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams were shot 137 times by 63 of Cleveland's finest (and ultimately killed) after a police officer said that he "thought he heard a gunshot" from the car. A high-speed chase began, which violated Cleveland's own rules about high speed chases. No matter that in the end there was, in fact, no gun. Russell and Williams were high on coke, so they deserved it. Not to mention that Malissa Williams was just "bad news" all the way around.

On May 6, 2012, 18 year old Alan Blueford was killed in Oakland, California 2 weeks before his high school graduation after running from the cops for reasons unknown, tripping and falling and not exchanging gunfire with the officer who killed him (despite Oakland's original lies to the contrary.

March 21, 2012 saw the bystander murder of Rekia Boyd who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time when a white police officer, responding to an nuisance call about noise coming from the park, claimed he saw another young black man reach for his "gun" (which turned out to be his cellphone) after he'd turned away from the boy and blindly fired 5 shots over his shoulder, injuring the boy but killing Ms. Boyd by a shot to the head.

On March 20, 2010, Steven Washington—27 years old and autistic—was shot by two gang-enforcement officers after he was approached by the cops, who said they'd "heard a loud sound in the area" and Washington was "looking around suspiciously" and, ultimately "took something out of his waistband" (later changed to "appeared to," go figure). Naturally, no weapon was ever recovered.

Aaron Campbell left this life in Portland, Oregon, on February 28, 2005. He was 25 years old. Campbell was shot in the back by a cop who said he thought the unarmed man was "reaching toward his waistband for a weapon." Everyone else said that Aaron was walking backward toward police with his hands locked behind his head moments before the fatal shot was fired. No surprise to anyone.

We musn't forget Ronald Madison, 40, and James Brisette, 17, who lost their human right to live (a lot more than the "civil rights" violation black folks are always asked to settle for in these cases) on September 4, 2005. That day white officers fired on them as they were simply being, unarmed, on the eastern side of the Danziger Bridge, fleeing the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. (As a bonus, Madison got stomped on before he died.) In a rare occurrence, the cops were actually convicted of something—violation of their "civil rights". Not murder, though, and that is NOT a distinction without a difference.

Orlando Barlow was killed in Las Vegas, Nevada, on February 8, 2003. He was 28 years old and shot from 50 feet away because "I thought he was reaching for a gun" while he was on his hands and knees, surrendering in front of witnesses. That ultimately was deemed "justifiable homicide" by a cop who was a card-carrying member of the "BDRT," which stood for "Baby Daddy Removal Team" and "Big Dogs Run Together," (they even had T-shirts!).
Of course, there are the lucky ones. They weren't shot to death. Just tasered to death. Here are just a couple of those from recent years:

On August 12, 2014, 36 year old Dante Parker was tasered to death after he was stopped by a white officer while riding his bike in Victorville, California—a hobby he had taken up to try and lose a little weight.
Alonzo Ashley made the mistake of being a 29-year-old splashing water from a drinking fountain on his face at the Denver Zoo in 2011. Police claimed that he "made irrational comments" (whatever the fuck that means) and ultimately "threw a trash can," perhaps because of what cops claimed was his "extraordinary strength." No criminal charges there; totally understandable that he's dead, right?
Let's just make sure we're clear: you don't have to be young and "thuggish" to lose your life as a Black child of God.

For confirmation you can ask Kenneth Chamberlain, Sr. who took those Life Alert commercials too seriously when they said the device could save your life. Thanks to his Life Alert, he lost his life at the age of 68 in a hail of taser fire, bean bags and, finally, a real gunshot in his home on November 19, 2011 thanks to the cops who just couldn't take "Seriously, I'm fine!" for an answer when they were dispatched to his home and broke down the door.
You could also ask Army veteran Shem Walker (well, you could have asked him, except that he was gunned down on July 11, 2009 at the age of 49) what it feels like trying to shoo away from your family's property you think is a thug loitering around only to be shot to death for your trouble by an undercover who, of course, claimed afterward that it looked like [Walker] was reaching for his gun.

Portrait of Aiyana Mo'nay Stanley Jones before her death at the age of 7. Finally, last time I left out a group that can only be described as "collateral damage" because they were not the target of the police insanity that led to their death. The most well-known of these was a little girl, Aiyana Mo'nay Stanley-Jones, just 7 years old. She was killed on May 16, 2010, on the couch where she slept, in a hail of bullets lobbed by a SWAT team through the door after midnight. The cops were there because A & E television had a contract with the Detroit police for a television show: one that required the cops to solve a murder within 48 hours. What is notable about baby Aiyana's death is not just the utter senselessness of it—it's that it took an entire year to charge anyone in her death, even though the A&E photographer lied about what she saw, lied about what her videotape showed and obstructed the investigation. So did the cops:
Police first floated the story that Aiyana's grandmother had grabbed Weekley's gun. Then, realizing that sounded implausible, they said she'd brushed the gun as she ran past the door. But the grandmother says she was lying on the far side of the couch, away from the door."
Dajenarit
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Dajenarit on Sun Aug 31, 2014 11:27 pm

::) John Stewart is the last hope...maybe he can 'splain it to America in a nice nonthreatening comedic way...

Dajenarit
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Re: Holder Orders DOJ to Do Further Autopsy on Michael Brown

Postby Dajenarit on Mon Sep 01, 2014 1:46 am

Just for you WW













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Feel better now?
Dajenarit
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