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Racist Suspect Watch


free your mind!

Cress Welsing: The Definition of Racism White Supremacy

Dr. Blynd: The Definition of Racism

Anon: What is Racism/White Supremacy?

Dr. Bobby Wright: The Psychopathic Racial Personality

The Cress Theory of Color-Confrontation and Racism (White Supremacy)

What is the First Step in Counter Racism?

Genocide: a system of white survival

The Creation of the Negro

The Mysteries of Melanin

'Racism is a behavioral system for survival'

Fear of annihilation drives white racism

Dr. Blynd: The Definition of Caucasian

Where are all the Black Jurors? 

The War Against Black Males: Black on Black Violence Caused by White Supremacy/Racism

Brazen Police Officers and the Forfeiture of Freedom

White Domination, Black Criminality

Fear of a Colored Planet Fuels Racism: Global White Population Shrinking, Less than 10%

Race is Not Real but Racism is

The True Size of Africa

What is a Nigger? 

MLK and Imaginary Freedom: Chains, Plantations, Segregation, No Longer Necessary ['Our Condition is Getting Worse']

Chomsky on "Reserving the Right to Bomb Niggers." 

A Goal of the Media is to Make White Dominance and Control Over Everything Seem Natural

"TV is reversing the evolution of the human brain." Propaganda: How You Are Being Mind Controlled And Don't Know It.

Spike Lee's Mike Tyson and Don King

"Zapsters" - Keeping what real? "Non-white People are Actors. The Most Unrealistic People on the Planet"

Black Power in a White Supremacy System

Neely Fuller Jr.: "If you don't understand racism/white supremacy, everything else that you think you understand will only confuse you"

The Image and the Christian Concept of God as a White Man

'In order for this system to work, We have to feel most free and independent when we are most enslaved, in fact we have to take our enslavement as the ultimate sign of freedom'

Why do White Americans need to criminalize significant segments of the African American population?

Who Told You that you were Black or Latino or Hispanic or Asian? White People Did

Malcolm X: "We Have a Common Enemy"

Links

Deeper than Atlantis

Entries by TheSpook (2729)

Tuesday
Aug032004

Black Man Ready to Sue Over Treatment By Raleigh Police


Mortgage Banker humiliated by cops
A Raleigh man claims that he recently was stopped at gunpoint by police, handcuffed and questioned and that police soon realized they had the wrong guy. Mortgage broker Patrick Riley said he and his cousin were driving to a fast-food restaurant Saturday to get lunch for his son when they were stopped by officers looking for two men from an earlier shooting. Police later arrested three Hispanic men in a burgundy Pontiac. Riley said the description of those men did not match his or his cousin's, or their car. "You have two black guys in a dark, burgundy RX-7 that looks kind of brown," Riley said. "How could you make a mistake like that, even with your eyes closed?" Riley said he feared for his life at the time of his arrest. "I ended up at the top of my subdivision, right at home, on my knees with handcuffs on, being humiliated while my clients and my neighbors walked by," he said, "and the only thing that ran through my mind was: 'I'm about to lose my life right here.'" Riley said he has hired an attorney. [more]
Tuesday
Aug032004

Black Youth Brawl with Police Outside Club

Two early morning fights near a club send a trooper and a teenager to the hospital. Beer bottles and bricks were thrown, damaging several police cars. Citizens are saying the early morning brawl was sparked by racial tension, but law enforcement say that's not the case. Ashburn Police and   state troopers were called out to several fights on West Madison Avenue, near the   New Traffic Light Bar. But when blue lights appeared, the fight took a turn, sending one trooper to the hospital. Burgess said, "I heard he got hit in the eye, or whatever, he deserved whatever he got tonight, true enough."
Club owner Burgess says the injured trooper encouraged the brawl. "The other cop tripped my nephew, busted his face all up   and the state patrolman hit him in the head with a flashlight and that's when everybody got out of control." People started collecting bricks and throwing   them at law enforcement, busting police car windshields. "Black people didn't like the way they've done us and they unleashed," Burgess said.
[more]
Tuesday
Aug032004

Black Soldier on Leave from Iraq Beat Down by Milwaukee Cops

Last week, Charles Michael Griffin  missed a flight back to Iraq while on leave visiting family and friends in Milwaukee. The reason is that he spent the night in Milwaukee County Jail, battered and bruised after being arrested by Milwaukee police after a disturbance near his old neighborhood on the north side. Griffin said he was out with friends Monday evening about 9 p.m. when four plain-clothed detectives showed up. He said he tried to leave but was attacked by the officers, thrown to the ground and handcuffed before he knew what was happening. Griffin admitted he had been drinking with his friends; it was a final farewell before leaving the next day to return to his unit. But he denied doing anything to interfere with the officers. "All I said was, 'Looks like it's time for me to leave,' " Griffin said. "Then they just threw me to the ground." After being arrested, he was taken by police to a hospital for treatment, then transferred downtown to jail. [more]
Monday
Aug022004

Suit against 5 St. Joseph cops to start

 Trial is scheduled to start Monday in a federal lawsuit against the city of St. Joseph and five city police officers claiming the officers used racial profiling in arresting three black teen-agers in 2000. The suit was filed in 2002 on behalf of the three teens - Devin Mitchell, Cody Mitchell and Preston Culpepper. The trial is scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. before U.S. District Judge Richard Enslen in Kalamazoo. The suit alleges that the city has developed and maintained policies encouraging racial profiling and has not taken proper steps to stop the practice, or adequate steps to investigate complaints of police misconduct. The complaint claims the three teen-agers were targeted as "the group" because they were among the few black teens living in the city. [more]
Sunday
Aug012004

Shootings by Denver Police Prompt Outcry: ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

  
Fatal shootings by Denver police have raised questions over the department's use of force and prompted the U.S. Justice Department to consider an investigation into local law enforcement. The latest killing was July 11, when a Denver police officer looking for a domestic violence suspect crawled through an upstairs window and shot 63-year-old invalid, Frank Lobato (Pictured above left) as he lay in bed, watching television. Police said the officer thought Lobato, who was not the wanted man, was holding a gun. It turned out to be a soda can. Denver police fatally shot eight people last year and three this year. The circumstances surrounding many of the cases have raised eyebrows. Last year, an officer killed Paul Childs (Pictured above top right), a 15-year-old developmentally disabled black teenager armed with a knife. The shooting sparked demonstrations and anger throughout the city.  In many cases, those killed were black or Latino. "The police are very much distrusted in the minority community," the Rev. Patrick Demmer, a community activist, said. "They go into these communities like they are going into a war zone." [more] and [more]
  •  Latino Man had a Soda Can in his hand, NOT A GUN. Police shoot and kill. [more]
  •  Denver Family Receives Money From City [more]
Sunday
Aug012004

LA Probe to Date Finds No Fault in Fatal Arrest of Latino Man

Despite an autopsy that cited police restraint maneuvers as a factor in an Atwater Village man's death early this year, Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton said Friday that a preliminary investigation found the conduct of officers didn't "appear inappropriate." A report by the Los Angeles County coroner said three factors contributed to the death of 35-year-old Jose Antonio Rodriguez: cocaine intoxication, coronary disease and police restraint procedures employed during his arrest Jan. 18.  The death has sparked outrage among members of the Latino Community Forum, an advisory group for the Los Angeles Police Department.  [more]
  • L.A. - Suspect's death raises question [more]
Sunday
Aug012004

CA. Black Caucus Plans Statewide Hearings Over Police Abuse

The California Legislative Black Caucus plans to hold statewide hearings on police abuse, a state senator and an assemblyman said at a town hall meeting in Leimert Park on Saturday. The event was organized by the Community Commission on Police Abuse, a coalition of activists assembled by publisher and community leader Danny Bakewell after the June 23 televised beating of Stanley Miller, who was tackled by officers after being pursued in a stolen car. "Let's make no mistake, we're not here because a brother got beat," said Sen. Kevin Murray (D-Culver City) to a crowd of several hundred people. "We're here because [the police] got caught beating a brother. These things happen all the time." [more]
Sunday
Aug012004

Dallas police chief bans controversial neck hold

After months of protest from civil rights groups, Police Chief David Kunkle has banned the department's use of a neck hold that contributed to a man's death last year. Kunkle said Friday he plans to brief Dallas City Council members on his decision Monday and ask them to buy 400 Tasers, a type of electrical stun gun. The chief's briefing paper to the council said the neck hold is "difficult to apply in field conditions" and officers may not know about suspects' pre-existing medical conditions. The Rev. L. Charles Stovall of the Unified Organizations for Justice, an activist coalition, welcomed the ban. "This is something that needed to be done, and it's something that we rejoice is happening," Stovall said.  [more]
Friday
Jul302004

Code of Silence Feared to Surround Miller Beating Investigation -

Sheriff Lee Baca says he will investigate allegations his deputies provided incomplete or misleading information to LAPD detectives probing the videotaped beating of suspected car thief Stanley Miller. The inquiry represents an expansion of the investigation into potential brutality during Miller's June 23 arrest, the Los Angeles Times reported. As many as eight deputies responded to the Compton neighborhood where Miller was chased by LAPD officers after abandoning the stolen car he was driving, according to The Times. TV news footage shows Miller, after he appeared to have surrendered, being repeatedly kneed and struck with a flashlight by an LAPD officer. Baca told The Times in an interview that he is particularly incensed by an LAPD report that a deputy assigned to the Compton station yelled, "No rats here!" at an LAPD detective working on the investigation. Baca said the remark, if true, reflects an unacceptable code of silence. "I will find out who made the remark," Baca told The Times. "If a deputy made such a remark, it reflects that individual should no longer be a deputy sheriff... It reflects a gang mentality. ...

Click to read more ...

Friday
Jul302004

AMBUSHED. Albemarle Police Executed Frederick Gray and then Lied about it.

  • New Trial for case of Unarmed, Naked Black Man Beaten and Shot Dead by White Police Officers
Six years ago, in the early morning of May 15, 1997, at least six white police officers responded to 911 calls "concerning a domestic disturbance" at a ground-floor apartment where a black male, Frederick Gray, and his white girlfriend, Katherine Martin, had just moved in together.  Within less than 3 minutes after they entered the premises the unarmed Mr. Gray lay in the entrance doorway shot twice, in the back and left armpit - killed by the Albemarle police.  Gray was naked from the waist down except for socks. Immediately after the shooting, Gray was hand cuffed and left with no attempt at resuscitation.  He died on the threshold of the door.  Before notifying Gray's family, Albemarle officers had begun running a criminal background check on Gray. Gray had no criminal record. Gray's girl friend (and all police involved) was unharmed. In fact, she was not even examined by paramedics. The blood that was on her shirt was Gray's.

What exactly happened in the 2 or 3 minute interval after police entered Gary's apartment is in dispute. The controversy does not concern the conflicting accounts of other witnesses- as there was only one other non- police witness, Gray's girlfriend. Rather, the dispute concerns the police officer's own statements and accounting of what occurred. What the police said at trial is completely different from what the police initially explained immediately after the incident. At some point they lied.
 
When police arrived at Gary's apartment around 6 AM there were no signs that a domestic disturbance had been going on. Police knocked on the door only one time and explain that they waited 10 minutes for the door to be answered. Officer Wallace testified that  during the ten minutes of waiting, he saw Gray and his girlfriend appear briefly at the door. Nevertheless, the police made no follow up efforts to communicate with them. Police say they heard nothing. Police entered the apartment with their guns drawn.

Once inside, the officers went around a divider to the bathroom where Gray emerged undressed.  The police admitted they gave Gray no explanation for their presence. The officers' testimony differed as to where the girlfriend was located when they entered.  However, all the officers agreed that not a single one of them had any conversation or interaction whatsoever with the girlfriend at any point up until after the shooting and she was escorted out.

Officer Giles testified that, when they entered, the girlfriend said, "Everything's okay, everything's okay."  Officer Chiarappa admitted that at one point after they entered he heard her say either "[s]top or no," he was not sure which. One of the officers ordered Gray "to get down"  on the floor. All the officers agreed that Gray "immediately" complied with the order and had surrendered; he got down on the floor. All the officers except for Officer Perry reholstered their guns.

Yet after initially complying, police explain that Gray suddenly rose up and began to struggle with them when an officer attempted to handcuff him. Police then attempted to subdue Gray by hitting him with their police batons. Police reports show that the blows were so powerful they even caused a slight bend in Officer Chiarappa's baton. The girlfriend described that she "just remember that they were, like, hitting him with those sticks." Among other injuries, the autopsy of Frederick Gray revealed a gash into the top of his forehead as well as  a blow to the top of his head that caused bruising extending all the way through the scalp. 

The police say that they were unable to restrain Gray and that he managed to beat back all the officers. Officer Chiaparra said at trial that after witnessing Gray beat down the officers and seeing that Gray had now turned to attack him he withdrew his gun and fired three shots. Gray fell facedown in the doorway of the apartment.

A few hours after the incident each of the officers gave fellow officers detailed statements that were tape-recorded and transcribed concerning the events surrounding the shooting .  They each gave another recorded statement a few weeks later during a second set of interviews conducted by Lieutenant Newton.  Attorney's representing Gray's estate contend that in those original statements all the police officers involved gave significantly different versions of events and descriptions from what they gave at trial including descriptions concerning central issues in the case: a) motivation for Defendants' initial actions, b) whether Gray was trying to escape and whether the officers would have let him, as they contended they would have at trial; c) what actions and motivations allegedly justified the shooting, including whether in fact officers had been injured as they described ; d) and even how the shooting occurred.

Nevertheless, the trial court judge refused to allow the statements to be used at trial. Citing a hearsay law designed to prohibit the use of written statements made to claims adjusters by eyewitnesses immediately after an accident, the Judge said the previous statements were inadmissible [see Opinion]. The statements could not be used to atack the wtiness credibility of the officers nor could the statements be offered as evidence of what had actually occurred.  In fact, the jury never knew the statements even existed.

However, on June 10, 2004 the Virginia Supreme Court overturned the decision, stating that Gray's legal team was wrongfully prevented from using the written statements from the police officers during the previous trial. The appeal victory for Gray means Albemarle police will be back in court for another trial on the 1997 shooting. A date for a new trial has not been announced yet.

Once in court, the police officers will finally be confronted with their own words. The police lied. Both versions of what the police said happened to Frederick Gray cannot be true:

For instance, at trial, Chiarappa described seeing the girlfriend in a "white t-shirt, some lettering on it and looked like blood spots up on shoulder area.".  However, in his statement on May 15, 1997, he was asked about seeing any blood on the girlfriend and responded that he had not noticed any, that he "was not paying attention to her."

At trial, Chiarappa also testified that, other than "get down, get down," no one said anything to Gray. However, on the morning of the shooting, Chiarappa stated that, as Wallace went to cuff Gray, Wallace bent down and "did say something to him, don't know exactly what" after which, "he just began swinging". Attorney's for Gray's estate contend that if Gray did in fact attack the police he may have been provoked by something that was said to him by Wallace.  

Chiarappa testified that he inflicted deadly force baton blows to Gray's head only after Gray had disabled officers in the apartment. Yet, in both of his two original statements, Chiarappa stated several times that he used the baton "to the scalp area" immediately when all the officers were first attempting to subdue Gray. In fact, in his original description, it is after blows to the head that, he says, Gray "raises up, looks at me and he's got this crazed look. . .  his eyes are solid white and ...he starts throwing punches and hitting people."

At trial, all officers described a situation where, from the beginning of the struggle, no officer could ever get control over Gray.  Yet in his original statement to Lt. Newton, Chiarappa described how at one point "all of us including Perry were able to get hold of Frederick Gray and take him from back toward the bathroom area, back toward the corner area which was right as you first come into the apt."

Furthermore, at trial Officer Wallace first testified that he did not recall Chiarappa giving a warning to anyone that he was about to shoot Gray.  But then Wallace stated he remembered something like "roll free" but insisted he heard nothing about going to shoot.   However, in both of Wallace's original statements in 1997, Wallace had repeatedly described such warnings by Chiarappa.  The morning of the incident, he said, "I remember Amos saying Jamie [Hanover] get in here, ah I may shoot this guy, stop, Dave [Wallace] stay clear, or [sic] get out of the way. . . cause this guy was kind of like over . . . ." . He told Lt. Newton separately, he heard Chiarappa yell, "get out the way, Dave, I'm go [sic] have to shoot him. . . . roll free, Dave, roll clear Dave, I've got to shoot him, and I heard him and [sic] I (inaudible) rolled, . . . ", and again, "Amos [Chiarappa] said fall free, I'm go [sic] have to shoot him . . . "

At trial, officers testified to little if any signs of life in Gray after the shooting.  It was uncontested that there was no CPR attempted at any point. However, Wallace stated that morning that they could hear "movement inside [Gray's body]," that he guessed Gray was "still breathing or something." He told Lt. Newton that "[h]e wasn't moving, but he was still living and somebody handcuffed him. . . "

Additionally, At trial, Wallace described observing punches Gray allegedly inflicted upon Giles inside the apartment, saying he "has him around the neck and is delivering punches to his head, the back of his head and back. . . six, eight or more."  However, in his original statement, Wallace said he did not see Giles get hit at all.  He stated, "I didn't see the guy hitting [Giles]."

Importantly, at trial, all Defendants contended that Gray had ample and unfettered opportunity to escape but inexplicably chose not to do so. Yet in his original statement to detectives the morning of the incident, Wallace described the final moments outside as follows:" I was trying to keep my footing to you know get back at him, ?cause
I didn't want him to get away after you know all this crap."

At trial, the police rested their justification for the use of deadly force first and foremost on supposedly seeing Officer Perry knocked unconscious.  Perry himself could not say on the stand whether or not he was knocked unconscious. While he admitted to some "vague" memory of holding onto Gray, and he recalled being pulled in the direction of the door at some point, he had no idea where Gray went from there. He also said he did not remember  heading to the door and then hearing "I'm gonna have to shoot him."
Nevertheless, Perry described precisely this and repeatedly in his original statements. He also recalled a great deal of detail regarding the entire situation in his previous statements.

In their petition, attorney's for Gray's estate also cite various other inconsistencies in police testimony