Ferguson police execute an unarmed 17 yr old boy (Update: Ferguson police chief to resign 3/19)

loyola llothta

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Actor Jesse Williams Reflects on Killing of John Crawford

http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/30/opinio...lmart-killing/


Editor's note: Jesse Williams, an actor best known for his role as Dr. Jackson Avery on ABC-TV's "Grey's Anatomy," serves on the Board of Directors of the Advancement Project, a multiracial civil rights organization. He is also executive producer of the project Question Bridge: Black Males. Follow him on Twitter @iJesseWilliams. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

(CNN) -- Police gunned down John Crawford, 22, in a Walmart in Beavercreek, Ohio, on August 4. Recently released surveillance video, synced with a recording of the 911 call, reveals the blatant dishonesty and falsehoods that led to his death as he talked on his cellphone in the pet aisle, casually holding a pellet gun that he had picked up from a shelf in the store.

That a young black man was shot to death by police is nothing new. It was simply caught on tape this time.



In the 911 call, we hear Ronald Ritchie repeatedly telling the operator that Crawford is pointing "a gun" at people. At one point, he tells the operator that Crawford is "loading it right now" and that "he just pointed it at, like, two children."

Ritchie told the media that Crawford "was just waving it [a gun] at children and people. .... I couldn't hear anything that he was saying. I'm thinking that he is either going to rob the place or he's there to shoot somebody else." The man looked kind of serious, Ritchie said. "He didn't really want to be looked at and when people did look at him, he was pointing the gun at them. He was pointing at people. Children walking by."

At no point in the surveillance video did Crawford point the air rifle at anyone. He did not "load it." And when police encountered Crawford, they shot him almost immediately.

What happened to John Crawford has happened to many black men in the past, killed for their hands' terrifying proximity to a wallet, or a cellphone or a pocket. This, combined with prevailing racist narratives and practices, can quickly transform "black man" into "armed and dangerous killer."

Ritchie dialed 911 and his statements did not reflect the truth. He's old enough to know white imagination often trumps black truth. Ritchie had plenty of time on his 911 call to tell the story accurately. John Crawford, on the other hand, had no time to think, let alone form a complete sentence in his defense.

Deliberately "making false alarms" is a crime under Ohio law, punishable by a fine or jail sentence. But Ritchie has not been charged with anything.

Even with videotaped evidence of police destroying black people, many freedom-loving Americans remain unconvinced of a systemic problem. Maybe some day the perfect tape will be released, one in which the dead or maimed African American has just the right wardrobe, complexion, size and diction to warrant empathy.

For centuries, certain white civilians and members of law enforcement have used the privileged presumption of decency afforded them to cast aspersions on black people. Such aspersions are deadly for African Americans.Crawford's fate is one few white people will ever fear or experience, particularly in a brightly lit Walmart.

In Ohio, it's legal to openly carry a gun, yet John Crawford was killed for openly carrying a toy.

John Crawford was not in the streets. He was in one of the nation's largest toy and gun retailers. If we're in a toy and gun store, and I'm holding what could be either, isn't it at least plausible I'm a customer? If you swing by the barbecue grill section and pick up a grilling fork and lighter fluid, you don't magically become a knife-wielding arsonist. Kids grab toy guns from the shelves and act out gun fights in the aisles all the time. They are never gunned down by the guys from "Call of Duty."

Let's be practical. We've all seen something that, at first glance, looked a little sketchy. Maybe a lady leaves her bag on the train. You could immediately yell "Bomb!" -- but that would be hasty and irresponsible. You could get the woman's attention, or tell other people, or notify the conductor, or call in a suspicious package. What you cannot do is call 911 and say she's strapping on bombs to kill little kids.

Officers are paid to assess situations and act in the interest of the law and public safety.Being a police officer can be very dangerous. Incidentally, so can being black in America. Time and time again, when law enforcement engages African Americans, they skip the protocol and get right to the violence.

If police know Crawford has a "gun" based on Ritchie's call, they also know he's alone and cornered. They know John Crawford can hear, as evidenced by his ongoing phone conversation.

Police are really good at announcing themselves -- unseen and at a safe distance. Maybe from a few aisles away, they could have said: "Drop the weapon, kick it toward my voice and get on the floor!" Instead, they ran up on him unannounced, shouting and shooting like maniacs.

Of course you would be as startled and terrified as John was in that incomprehensibly brief moment; suddenly under siege from big, armed, yelling, faceless figures charging and shooting him.

The tape reveals a young father racked with horror, confusion and pain, as the very people sworn to protect him, snatch his life.

You can't startle the hell out of an unsuspecting American who's committed no crime, then shoot him to death for being startled. Or can you? Once again, our "justice system" reviewed the evidence before it and determined that the shooting was justified.

Historically, the justifications for similarly motivated homicides have essentially been the same: He looked at a white woman. He was running. He was wearing a hoodie. He was a teenager playing his personal music preference at a high volume. He was big. He was wounded, delirious and terrified after a car accident. He was lying face down with his hands cuffed behind his back. He fit the "so called" description. He was holding his wallet. She was seeking help after an accident. He was walking slowly. He was walking fast. He was walking. He was standing.

There is no moral or legal justification for Crawford's death at 22.

Now, many of your experiences with police may have been associated with respect, fairness and decency. Mine have not. But that shouldn't influence our ability to interpret the evidence.

We must acknowledge that for a significant portion of the American population, fairness and decency at the hands of the law, police or the courts is not the reality. This is not hyperbole. African Americans in particular have witnessed or been victim to disproportionate police violence and abuse -- sometimes to the point of death. Watching cops harass or unlawfully detain, demean, choke or taunt people is not only real for some people of color, it is routine. We're tired of being told we're seeing ghosts. If you care to look, the data is perfectly visible. And we need your help.

The existence of your neighbor's pain is not dependent upon your belief in it. And we cannot improve a situation that we don't acknowledge. Learning from patterns is both basic and critical to the progress of human "civilization."

We must stop reflexively dismissing our nation's shortcomings by telling oppressed people what America does and does not stand for. I assure you, they are well aware.
 

you're NOT "n!ggas"

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So outside of ebola, this happened down here today brehs:

Dallas officer fired for ignoring woman's plea for help

DALLAS -- The Dallas Police Department fired a 28-year veteran officer for ignoring a woman whose children had been kidnapped as he was on his way to another call.

On the evening of Saturday, Aug. 23, Miesha Kilson reported her on-and-off ex-boyfriend of 14 years Steven Douglas was at her home and wouldn't leave. Douglas then told her he'd be gone by Monday morning, but as Kilson arrived to get supplies for her children's first day of school, she again found him at her apartment and again called police.

That sparked an altercation that ended with Douglas ramming Kilson's car, threatening her with a gun, and finally kidnapping the two children he had with Kilson on Illinois Avenue.

According to Dallas police, Senior Corporal Leslie Richardson was on his away to a burglary call when he heard about Kilson's report over the radio and the dispatcher announced a disturbance emergency call approaching Illinois Avenue which required a lights-and-siren response. At 7:31 a.m., Richardson was travelling eastbound on Illinois Avenue as the dispatcher announced shots being fired and Douglas ramming Kilson's car, as well as descriptions of the suspect and complaintant's vehicles.

A minute later, Richardson passed Douglas' car, which he abandoned in a grassy area before beginning to flee on foot. Seconds later, Richardson saw and approached Kilson's vehicle. Richardson pulled alongside Kilson, who began telling the officer, "That's him, that's him, right there," motioning towards Douglas.

According to Dallas police, Richardson responded "Right here what, baby? I'm on a call," and drove off. He continued to leave even as the dispatcher said Douglas was on Illinois Avenue and that "he just grabbed the kids."

Kilson told News 8 about the incident later that week, saying "He sped off and never came back... He left me there."

Richardson continued on to the burglary call he was originally travelling to, arrived at 7:37 a.m., and left shortly after, but did not immediately clear from the call to make himself available, as is required by Dallas police policy.

"An internal affairs investigation concluded that Senior Corporal Richardson placed persons in greater danger than necessary when he failed to take any action as a police officer and made an inappropriate comment to a citizen," the department said in a news release, also noting he used a tobacco product while driving a police vehicle and failed to clear himself after going to the burglary call.

Douglas was eventually shot and killed by another Dallas police officer when he pointed a gun at the officer, police say.

Douglas' mother, Rene Douglas, told News 8 that her son shouldn't have died and it shouldn't have escalated to that point. Kilson, despite the threats from her ex, said she feels the same way.

"I never thought my kids would lose their daddy. Not like that, not so early," Kilson said.

Richardson, who joined the force in August 1986 and was assigned to the South Central Patrol Division, was terminated for his actions. He has the right to appeal his discipline.


Ignore somebody on your way to another call... you're bytchass is fired :ufdup: Kill an unarmed black man... paid vacation :gladbron:



 

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Watch Shaun King talk about Ferguson on CNN
Man this fukking c00n Kevin Jackson needs his ass whooped.:snoop:
 
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aaaaaaa

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I don't know if this is the thread for this but something I've been thinking about is how come it's been so easy for black people in this country to be beat on and treated disparately.

The history of the black man in this country is one of the most vicious, hateful, and malicious histories I know of and yet how many revolutionaries or fighters have come up out of all this subjugation and hatred. Other than Marcus Gavey and Malcolm X there has been very few. None that I can think of.

A woman who's been raped has a much higher chance of being raped again. The initial trauma does something to her mindset, making her much more likely to be victim and also making her stand out to other predators. I wonder if the same thing could have happened to us as a people. We are downtrodden. The amount of bullshyt we put up with as black people would not be tolerated by anyone else. Maybe slavery changed us or maybe I'm just blind but I just cannot understand how generation after generation of this shyt could happen without something like ISIS or the IRA rising up. Yes we have the black panther but that's nothing. Not even childs play. You really think Hamas would let Israeli police come into their town and shoot an unarmed Palestine boy without something blowing up.

We've been fooled into thinking there's a certain "correct" way to get justice and it keeps us from taking matters into our own hands. Everyone knows the justice system is fukked up and racism rules the day but there's still this lingering feeling that this is America...this is the 21st century...things are different now...justice will prevail. Look at how many people are sitting there expectantly as if Darren Wilson being charged will somehow save the day and wake everyone up from this nightmare. Meanwhile how many other black people have been shot since Mike Brown.

We have no power. All these riots and protests are like an abused child who's snapped throwing a tantrum in public. We got other people looking in and saying "hey it's not right how he treats that child" but nobody's gonna step in. All the parent's gotta do is fake an apology and maybe buy us an ice cream to shut us up and they can take us home and the abuse can continue the next day, and the next day, and the next day.

I know it's a clumsy metaphor but that's exactly what's happening.
 

Huey Shootin

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I don't know if this is the thread for this but something I've been thinking about is how come it's been so easy for black people in this country to be beat on and treated disparately.

The history of the black man in this country is one of the most vicious, hateful, and malicious histories I know of and yet how many revolutionaries or fighters have come up out of all this subjugation and hatred. Other than Marcus Gavey and Malcolm X there has been very few. None that I can think of.

A woman who's been raped has a much higher chance of being raped again. The initial trauma does something to her mindset, making her much more likely to be victim and also making her stand out to other predators. I wonder if the same thing could have happened to us as a people. We are downtrodden. The amount of bullshyt we put up with as black people would not be tolerated by anyone else. Maybe slavery changed us or maybe I'm just blind but I just cannot understand how generation after generation of this shyt could happen without something like ISIS or the IRA rising up. Yes we have the black panther but that's nothing. Not even childs play. You really think Hamas would let Israeli police come into their town and shoot an unarmed Palestine boy without something blowing up.

We've been fooled into thinking there's a certain "correct" way to get justice and it keeps us from taking matters into our own hands. Everyone knows the justice system is fukked up and racism rules the day but there's still this lingering feeling that this is America...this is the 21st century...things are different now...justice will prevail. Look at how many people are sitting there expectantly as if Darren Wilson being charged will somehow save the day and wake everyone up from this nightmare. Meanwhile how many other black people have been shot since Mike Brown.

We have no power. All these riots and protests are like an abused child who's snapped throwing a tantrum in public. We got other people looking in and saying "hey it's not right how he treats that child" but nobody's gonna step in. All the parent's gotta do is fake an apology and maybe buy us an ice cream to shut us up and they can take us home and the abuse can continue the next day, and the next day, and the next day.

I know it's a clumsy metaphor but that's exactly what's happening.
Huey Newton

Medgar Evers

Stokely Carmichael

Angela Davis

Louis Farrakhan

Mumia Abu Jamal

James Baldwin

There have been many, from various walks of life, who took up our struggle. Cacs have been very successful at dividing and conquering, but we are still here. A lot of people fail to grasp that it was only 500 years that we were brought here. That is a mere grain in the sands of time. The struggle continues, but the strategy must change. We must stop protesting ( they won't listen ) and start fighting.
 

Huey Shootin

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What are you insinuating by tagging me?

I support the black power movement and have said myself that blacks need/should arm & organize.

I'm not one of those "anti-violence" types when it comes to fighting oppression. That's stupid, especially historically that oppressors have always used violence. You can't be non violent to them.

If they busted dudes head open, openly on camera, with tons of police present..they'd be getting a plethora of charges, fines, ex etc..

Just cause I don't think people should bust open a racist dudes head on camera, in front of a ton of police don't mean I'm all for subversive ish...

The anti-fa in Greece, when they killed two members of the Golden Dawn (white power group) for killing an anti-fa, anti-white supremacy rapper.. they did it anonymously & spontaneously, no cameras, no nothing. And there killers still haven't been caught a year later.

Work around the system. You can get back at dude without guaranteeing a spot In prison.

Don't get it confused. I'm not anti-resistance or anti-violence.
If Darren Wilson is allowed to walk free from an indictment, he must not be allowed to patrol the streets of ferguson safely ever again. He needs to die. And if the people of Ferguson are not about that life (I think they are, as we have seen), I know many who are.
 
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