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The 'Crime' Of Walking While Black.....the DEADLY consequences for a 16 year old.
#41
Keith Millea;52758[B Wrote:I think that's what you call a posse........[/B]

Quote:Definition of POSSE

1
: a large group often with a common interest

2
: a body of persons summoned by a sheriff to assist in preserving the public peace usually in an emergency

Some deep political satire:

"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
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#42

When "stand your ground" fails

John McNeil killed a white man who assaulted him on his property. But, unlike George Zimmerman, he's serving life

By Rania Khalek

[Image: zimm_mcneil_color-460x307.jpg] George Zimmerman and John McNeil (Credit: AP)


Topics:Crime, George Zimmerman
Trayvon Martin's tragic murder has brought much-needed scrutiny to "Stand Your Ground" laws. If you read or hear about a local "Stand Your Ground" case that isn't getting much national press, blog about it on Open Salon.
As the shooting death of Trayvon Martin and the failure of authorities to arrest his killer, George Zimmerman, continues to grab headlines, many conservatives and gun rights advocates insist that race has nothing to do with it. Some have also rallied to the defense of Florida's "stand your ground" law, the self-defense legislation under which Zimmerman was able to avoid arrest. Yet not all stand your ground claims are so successful. Not too far from Sanford, Fla., a black man named John McNeil is serving a life sentence for shooting Brian Epp, a white man who trespassed and attacked him at his home in Georgia, another stand your ground state.
It all began in early 2005, when McNeil and his wife, Anita, hired Brian Epp's construction company to build a new house in Cobb County, Ga. The McNeils testified that Epp was difficult to work with, which led to heated confrontations. They eventually decided to close on the house early to rid their lives of Epp, whom they found increasingly threatening. At the closing, both parties agreed that Epp would have 10 days to complete the work, after which he would stay away from the property, but he failed to keep up his end of the bargain.

On Dec. 6, 2005, John McNeil's 15-year-old son, La'Ron, notified his dad over the phone that a man he didn't recognize was lurking in the backyard. When La'Ron told the man to leave, an argument broke out. McNeil was still on the phone and immediately recognized Epp's voice. According to La'Ron's testimony, Epp pointed a folding utility knife at La'Ron's face and said, "[w]hy don't you make me leave?" at which point McNeil told his son to go inside and wait while he called 911 and headed home.
According to McNeil's testimony, when he pulled up to his house, Epp was next door grabbing something from his truck and stuffing it in his pocket. McNeil quickly grabbed his gun from the glove compartment in plain view of Epp who was coming at him "fast." McNeil jumped out of the car and fired a warning shot at the ground insisting that Epp back off. Instead of retreating, Epp charged at McNeil while reaching for his pocket, so McNeil fired again, this time fatally striking Epp in the head. (Epp was found to have a folding knife in his pocket, although it was shut.)

The McNeils weren't the only ones who felt threatened by Epp. David Samson and Libby Jones, a white couple who hired Epp to build their home in 2004, testified that they carried a gun as a "precaution" around Epp because of his threatening behavior. According to Jones, Epp nearly hit her when she expressed dissatisfaction with his work at a weekly meeting. The couple even had a lawyer write a letter warning Epp to stay away from their property. Samson testified that after they fired him, Epp would park his car across the street and watch their house, saying "it got to the point where my wife and I were in total fear of this man."
After a neighbor across the street who witnessed the encounter corroborated McNeil's account, police determined that it was a case of self-defense and did not charge him in the death. Nevertheless, almost a year later Cobb County District Attorney Patrick Head decided to prosecute McNeil for murder. In 2006, he was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

McNeil's attorney Mark Yurachek told Salon that "DAs throughout the country enjoy that kind of flexibility of deciding who to prosecute, but it's curious that he took a year to do it." While he said there's no way to know what swayed the DA to prosecute, Yurachek revealed that letters, which he obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, were written to the DA's office demanding that McNeil be charged. "They were mostly emails from people cajoling prosecutors to investigate," says Yurachek. "One was from Epp's widow. Others were written anonymously."
In 2008, McNeil appealed his case to the Georgia Supreme Court with all but one of the seven justices upholding his conviction. The sole dissent came from Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears who argued, "the State failed to disprove John McNeil's claim of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt."She went on to write:
Even viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence was overwhelming in showing that a reasonable person in McNeil's shoes would have believed that he was subject to an imminent physical attack by an aggressor possessing a knife and that it was necessary to use deadly force to protect himself from serious bodily injury or a forcible felony. Under the facts of this case, it would be unreasonable to require McNeil to wait until Epp succeeded in attacking him, thereby potentially disarming him, getting control of the gun, or stabbing him before he could legally employ deadly force to defend himself. This is not what Georgia law requires.
As a leading gun rights state, Georgia has both a stand your ground law that permits citizens to use deadly force "only if he or she reasonably believes that such force is necessary to prevent death or great bodily injury," as well as a Castle Doctrine law, which justifies the use of deadly force in defense of one's home.
Thus far, gun rights advocates such as the NRA and former Cobb County congressional Rep. Newt Gingrich have been silent on McNeil's conviction, though it's unclear whether they are aware of the case. The NRA did not immediately return a call seeking comment. Still, Rev. William Barber, president of the North Carolina NAACP State Conference, argues, "The NRA would be screaming about the injustice of his conviction if John had been white and shot a black assailant that came at him on his property armed with a knife." (McNeil grew up in North Carolina, where the local NAACP chapter, led by Barber, was the first to pick up on his case in Georgia.)

Barber was clear that the NAACP remains firmly against stand your ground laws because "they give cover to those who may engage in racial profiling and racialized violence," adding that "There is a history and legacy of discriminatory application of the law" that continues to this day. "African-Americans are caught in curious position. On one hand, we fight against stand your ground laws, but once the laws are on the books they aren't applied to us."
Civil rights activist Markel Hutchins agrees and has filed a federal lawsuit challenging Georgia's stand your ground law because the law is not applied equally to African-Americans. He accuses the courts of accepting "the race of a victim as evidence to establish the reasonableness of an individual's fear in cases of justifiable homicide."

Meanwhile, Barber argues that McNeil's treatment stands in stark contrast to that of George Zimmerman, who has been afforded the benefit of the doubt despite his victim being unarmed. "America's always had a difficult issue dealing with race, so rather than face it when it's exposed, the tendency by some is to try and dismiss it. But the reality is you do not see this kind of miscarriage of justice when it comes to whites." He adds, "John's whole life has been taken away from him. His wife is very ill with cancer and she has lost a husband, his sons have lost a father and society has lost a man that was contributing to his community."
http://www.salon.com/2012/04/11/when_sta...und_fails/
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#43
American society is rascist and classist - and getting WORSE on both accounts at the current time! The Police have long been known for their unequal treatment of dark skinned and poor people; as have prosecutors, judges and the whole system - legal and otherwise. Its as American as baseball and apple pie.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
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#44
All things considered, I think the elephant in the room here is the gun...
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#45
Albert Doyle Wrote:All things considered, I think the elephant in the room here is the gun...

Well there certainly are a hell of a lot of guns in the USA [registered and known about I believe three for every person; unknown weapons likely several time that]...but it is not just the weapons - it is the laws; the attitudes toward weapons use and the mentality of many with those weapons....and finally the example the country itself sets on how to 'settle' a 'situation' [i.e. most often with violence and deadly force]. Its a mess.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#46
Quote:Well there certainly are a hell of a lot of guns in the USA [registered and known about I believe three for every person; unknown weapons likely several time that]...

And you can bet your bottom dollar,that if the people didn't own these weapons,the PTB would already have put their serf tattoo on our asses!
"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Buckminster Fuller
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#47
Keith Millea Wrote:[
And you can bet your bottom dollar,that if the people didn't own these weapons,the PTB would already have put their serf tattoo on our asses!


Don't look down Keith, lol...
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#48
Zimmerman was allowed to be out on a tiny bail [for killing a person, almost unheard of!] of $150,000. For killing a person they usually do NOT grant bail or if they do it is millions of dollars. A black man accused of killing a white man likely has NEVER EVER been granted bail - I've never heard of it.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#49
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We begin today's show with the latest on the shooting death of Kenneth Chamberlain Sr., the 68-year-old African-American veteran who was shot dead inside his own home by a White Plains New York police officer in November. On Thursday, the Westchester County District Attorney Janet DiFiore announced a grand jury declined to indict any of the officers involved.
JANET DIFIORE: The death of Mr. Chamberlain inside his apartment and during the encounter with White Plains police on November 19th was a tragedy on many, many levels. A grand jury heard all the evidence on the use of physical force and deadly physical force by the police in this encounter. The grand jury also heard the evidence of the threatened use of deadly physical force by Mr. Chamberlain during the encounter. After due deliberation on the evidence presented in this matter, the grand jury found that there was no reasonable cause to vote an indictment.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: The police were called to Kenneth Chamberlain's apartment after he accidentally set off his LifeAid medical alert device. After Chamberlain refused to let officers into the apartment, police broke down the door and then shot him with a taser, then with bean bags fired from a shotgun, and finally a white police officer named Anthony Carelli shot him dead. Police claim Chamberlain tried to attack them with a knife.
Randolph McLaughlin, an attorney for the Chamberlain family, said they would now seek a federal probe into the shooting.
RANDOLPH McLAUGHLIN: We're moving beyond Westchester County now. We're going to put this case in the hands of the United States attorney general. We're good to be drafting a letter for release tomorrow morning to Eric Holder and to the U.S. attorney for the Southern District, Preet Bharara, and calling for a full investigation not only in this case, which we think was a civil rights violation, given what happened here, but given what we've learned about the other cases pending and threatened in this county involving White Plains police officers, we're going to ask the U.S. attorney and the attorney general to use their powers under federal law to conduct a full investigation of this department. And we believe, when they do that, they will find civil rights violations.
AMY GOODMAN: In a moment, we'll be joined by Mayo Bartlett, the attorney for the Chamberlain family. But first we turn to a remarkable series of audio and video recordings from the morning of Kenneth Chamberlain's death. Much of the audio was recorded by Chamberlain's LifeAid medical alert device. The video was recorded from the police taser gun used to shoot the 68-year-old man before he was shot dead. We begin with the initial call that prompted the police response.
OFFICER CIANCI: White Plains Police Officer Cianci.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Good morning. This is LifeAid reporting a medical alert.
OFFICER CIANCI: Where at?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: One thirty-five
OFFICER CIANCI: Yep.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: South Lexington Avenue.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK. Apartment number?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: One-B, like "boy."
OFFICER CIANCI: One-B, OK. Medical alert?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Yes.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK. What's the name of the resident?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Last name is Chamberlain, first name Kenneth.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK. Did you get a response from him at all or no?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: No, nothing at all from him.
AMY GOODMAN: After the White Plains police arrived at Ken Chamberlain's apartment, Chamberlain told an operator from LifeAid that he was not sick and did not need assistance.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: This is your help center for LifeAid, Mr. Chamberlain. Do you need help?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Yes, this is an emergency! I have the White Plains Police Department banging on my door, and I did not call them, and I am not sick!
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Everything's all right, sir?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: No, it's not all right! I need help! The White Plains Police Department are banging on my door!
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Mr. Chamberlain, go to your door and answer it.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: [inaudible] Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Open your door for the police, Mr. Chamberlain.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I didn't call the police. I did not call the police!
LIFEAID OPERATOR: That's OK. Go to your door and let them know you're all right.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I stay right there. They hear me. They say they want to talk to me.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: OK, go and talk to them, sir. I'll stay on the line with you.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I have no reason to talk to them.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Mr. Chamberlain? Mr. Chamberlain?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Yes.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: You pressed your medical button right now. You don't need anything, let the police know you're OK.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I'm OK! The police department is knocking on my door, and I
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Yes, I understand. Go to the door and tell them you're all right.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I will not open my door.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Sir, go to the door and tell them you're OK.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I will not open my door.
AMY GOODMAN: After Kenneth Chamberlain told LifeAid he was OK, but afraid of the police at the door, the LifeAid operator attempted to cancel the call for police assistance.
OFFICER CIANCI: White Plains police emergency.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Good morning, sir. I'm attempting to cancel that dispatch for Kenneth Chamberlain at 135 South Lexington.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK. You know, we havewe have units on scene right now.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Yeah, he'swe're on the line with him on a two-way communication, and he's saying he's not going to open the door and is scared he's going to bust his door down.
OFFICER CIANCI: Right. They're going to make entry anyway.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: OK, so, hold on. Give him a chance to come to the door to open it, because he's OK to open it.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK. I mean, they have a key they can open it with anyway, so...
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Oh, they have a key?
OFFICER CIANCI: Yeah, they're not going to break it down.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Oh, because they're banging on it. We can hear on the line.
OFFICER CIANCI: What's that?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: They're banging on it. We can hear on the line. They're
OFFICER CIANCI: Yeah, yeah. We have units going over there right now. They get in.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Oh, OK. And your name and number?
OFFICER CIANCI: Sixty-four.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Thank you.
OFFICER CIANCI: You got it.
AMY GOODMAN: Kenneth Chamberlain went on to tell the LifeAid operator that the police had drawn their guns and were attempting to break down his door. Listen closely.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Officers, this is LifeAid. Are you inside Mr. Chamberlain's home?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: They're breaking in my door! They're breaking in my door!
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Mr. Chamberlain, I heard you say they're breaking in your door. Are you OK?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: My door.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Mr. Chamberlain, are you OK?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I'm fine!
LIFEAID OPERATOR: OK. You pressed your medical button. That's why the officers are there. Can you go to the door and speak to them?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I [inaudible] the door. They've got their guns out! They have their guns out!
LIFEAID OPERATOR: OK. Do you have weapon, Mr. Chamberlain?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I [inaudible] weapons. I am just protecting myself.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: OK. They're not there to hurt you. I'm here on the line.
POLICE OFFICER: Mr. Chamberlain, we're not here to helphurt you. We're here to give you a hand, help you out.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I'm OK! I told you I was OK! [inaudible] I'm OK! I'm fine! Leave me alone! I'm fine!
AMY GOODMAN: A video camera on the police taser gun recorded the next sequence. You can hear Kenneth Chamberlain say the police have stun guns and shotguns. He then predicted the police would probably kill him. Again, listen closely.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: They have stun guns and shotguns! [inaudible]
POLICE OFFICER: Mr. Chamberlain! Mr. Chamberlain!
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: They've come to kill me with that, because I have a bad heart.
POLICE OFFICER: It doesn't have to happen that way. [inaudible] just have to open the door.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Get out! I didn't call you! I did not call you. Why are you here? Why are you here?
POLICE OFFICER: Life alert called us.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Why are you here?
POLICE OFFICER: Life alert called us.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: They have their nine-millimeter Glocks at the ready. They're getting ready to kill me or beat me up.
POLICE OFFICER: Open the door.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I'm OK.
POLICE OFFICER: Let them check you out. And then we will leave.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I'm OK. I'm OK. I'm fine.
POLICE OFFICER: Yeah, but I'm not a doctor.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I am fine!
POLICE OFFICER: No, nothing here.
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Leave. I'm fine. Now leave. I'm fine.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: While the police were threatening to break down Kenneth Chamberlain's door, Chamberlain's sister called the police in an attempt to defuse the situation.
OFFICER CIANCI: White Plains police emergency.
CAROL MATTHEWS: Yes, good morning. My name is Carol Matthews. I'mI understand that the police are down with my brother, Kenny Chamberlain.
OFFICER CIANCI: Yes, ma'am.
CAROL MATTHEWS: And I'myou know, I'm trying to get through to him. You know, he is on medication.
OFFICER CIANCI: He is on medication, right, yeah.
CAROL MATTHEWS: Yeah, he has the paper that he's supposed to carry around with him.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK, no problem.
CAROL MATTHEWS: And, you know, he's like reallyhe seems like he's done snapped, you know what I mean?
OFFICER CIANCI: Sure.
CAROL MATTHEWS: I just don't know what to do at this time.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK, well, it's no problem.
CAROL MATTHEWS: The number that I have
OFFICER CIANCI: Just, you know what? We're going to handle it on our end.
CAROL MATTHEWS: Yeah, but I mean, I don'tyou know, they say he has asomeone said he has a knife or something?
OFFICER CIANCI: Who said that?
CAROL MATTHEWS: The people from the station, you know, from the alert station, life alert.
OFFICER CIANCI: Yeah, I don't know. I'm not sure. Whatever it is, though, we're going to handle it. And then he can
CAROL MATTHEWS: Yeah, but that's
OFFICER CIANCI: certainly get in touch with you as soon as he can.
CAROL MATTHEWS: Because I don't want them to shoot him, you know.
OFFICER CIANCI: No, it's not going to come to that.
CAROL MATTHEWS: Well, they said thatmy daughter is there also. She said that theythat they have their guns out. They're trying to talk to him, you know, but that's
OFFICER CIANCI: Right, right. Well, you know what, ma'am? Listen, just stay in contact with your daughter. She knows more than I do. I'm inside right now. I don't really have any of the information, so you just talk with her, and she'll relay you any information that she gets. She'll probably get it to you faster than I could.
CAROL MATTHEWS: OK.
OFFICER CIANCI: OK? Have a good evening. All right, bye-bye.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Soon after Kenneth Chamberlain's sister was assured the police would not shoot her brother, that is just what happened. Police video shows the moment police broke down his door and shot him with a taser. TV viewers will see a few quick glimpses of Kenneth Chamberlain. The 68-year-old man was wearing boxer shorts and no shirt. This video was recorded by a camera on the police taser. Listen closely and you can hear the sound of the taser.
POLICE OFFICER: You got it?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Shoot! Shoot me! No! Shoot me! Shoot me!
POLICE OFFICER: Need another cartridge?
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Shoot me!
AMY GOODMAN: You can actually see the electricity shooting Kenneth Chamberlain. The video cuts out at this point. Within minutes, Kenneth Chamberlain was shot dead by the police.

AMY GOODMAN: We're joined on the phone right now by Kenneth Chamberlain Jr., the son of Kenneth Chamberlain Sr., the African-American former Marine who was shot dead by police in his home on November 19th, 2011, when his LifeAid medical alert pendant went off and the LifeAid company called police for medical assistance at his home.
Kenneth Chamberlain, the grand jury has just come back. There will be no charges against police officers involved in the killing of your father. Your response?
Kenneth Chamberlain, can you hear us? Kenah, it looks like he's in a TV studio, and he's not able to hear us right now, problems with the sound. So we're going to go to Mayo Bartlett, the attorney for the Chamberlain family, for Kenneth Chamberlain Jr. Your response to the grand jury decision not to indict the police officers?
MAYO BARTLETT: Well, from the very beginning, we were interested in getting an independent arbiter with respect to this, because we know that grand juries are secret in New York, so you can basically present the same information any number of different ways. We don't know what charges were actually presented. We don't know who the target was. And it appears to me that the grand jury was more of an investigative grand jury that would give you a report than it was one that targeted actual suspects. And one of the things about that presentation is that if the district attorney's office had a good-faith belief that one or more of these officers were guilty of a crime, they could have simply charged them by misdemeanor information or by felony complaint, and then, afterwards, presented the matter to the grand jury, which would be the norm for anyone else who's arrested. Instead, the grand jury is often used to cover politically for a figure, for a district attorney. So if the grand jury indicts, it's not the district attorney's fault. They simply presented the evidence, and the grand jury indicted. If the grand jury chooses not to indict, well, then the grand jury essentially is blamed, but that's an anonymous group of 23 individuals.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, Mayo Bartlett, I especially would like to ask you about this whole issue how thisthe law enforcement handled this investigation, because there have been many cases in the past where, in high-profile cases, the grand jury not only does areviews the evidence, but actually issues a report. It happened, for instance, in the Tawana Brawley case many years ago. It happened in the killing of Kevin Cedeno when Manhattan District Attorney Morgenthau issued a complete report. But in this case, what happened was the district attorney only announced the finding of the grand jury not to indict. And then, within moments, the Westchester Police Department released, to me, an unprecedented amount of its internal documents to the press, so the DA did not have to comment on anything, and the department then sought to do the damage control, basically, to justify what the grand jury had decided. Have you ever seen this enormous release of internal records of the police department and of these tapes so quickly after a grand jury concludes its deliberations?
MAYO BARTLETT: I have absolutely never seen that. And I believe very strongly that if this information had been released earlier, we may have had an indictment, because the grand jury would have been in a position to ask different questions. We don't know whether they heard all of these tapes, whether they heard them in context. If you hear things out of context, for instance, you may be given the impression that Mr. Chamberlain is making threats early on and that Mr. Chamberlain is unstable early on. But when you have the complete tapes, you know that he's telling them repeatedly, for at least 15 minutes, that he's fine, he's OK, and he doesn't need help. So one of the problems is the fact that all of this information is released, but I think it's released in a very self-serving manner.
And generally, you would expect a grand jury to take direction from the prosecution. So, quite often in criminal cases, we get grand jury minutes when a witness is about to testify. And when you read those grand jury minutes, you see that the grand jurors themselves are actually asking questions, and quite often the district attorney determines that those questions are not relevant, especially when those questions go toward credibility or go toward the strength of the case. So they never really get to fully explore the case.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to go to another part of the LifeAid recording that we haven't played. Now, just let me explain why there are these recordings. This is the LifeAid medical system where the patient, Kenneth Chamberlain, had a weak heart, wears this LifeAid pendant. We actually saw it on the video when you could see through the crack in the door. He had something around his neck. So, it's not clear how it was triggered, the LifeAid pendant. Maybe when he was sleeping he rolled over. It was 5:00 in the morning. That alerted the LifeAid company. They have a system to record in the apartment of the patient. And that's why we have this audio recording that was released by the police. So this recording is recording not only what's happening in the room, and you hear those discussions between Kenneth Chamberlain's sister and the LifeAid operator. So this is a part of the recording that we have not played. You can hear a police officer banging on Kenneth Chamberlain'sbanging on Kenneth Chamberlain's window after Chamberlain said he's OK. The officer responds by using a curse and the N-word. Listen closely.
OFFICER STEPHEN HART: Mr. Chamberlain!
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: Don't do that, sir. Don't do that. Don't do that, officer. Don't do that. Don't do that. Don't do that. Do not do that! I'm telling you I'm OK!
OFFICER STEPHEN HART: I don't give a [bleep], nigger!
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I'm telling you I'm OK!
OFFICER STEPHEN HART: [inaudible]
KENNETH CHAMBERLAIN SR.: I'm telling you I'm OK.
AMY GOODMAN: And I want to replay just a bit of that, if you missed what the police officer was saying outside the window the first time.
OFFICER STEPHEN HART: I don't give a [bleep], nigger!
AMY GOODMAN: Mayo Bartlett, explain.
MAYO BARTLETT: Well, it's inexplicable, because just that alone, you would think that if a district attorney's office is presenting this case fully, that means more than just presenting a charge of murder in the second degree for a grand jury to consider. We don't know what they presented or with respect to whom. But if you only present murder in the second degree, you're asking a jury to find that the officers arrived at Mr. Chamberlain's house with the sole intent of killing [him] and that they formed an intent to actually deprive him of his life. And that'sthat's a difficult thing to ask that jury to find when they were responding to a medical call. But if you give them the full gamut of charges, you allow them to consider reckless conduct, reckless endangerment, criminally negligent homicide, manslaughter, official misconduct. And I would think that simply that language right there, cursing at Mr. Chamberlain, taunting him
AMY GOODMAN: And saying what exactly?
MAYO BARTLETT: And saying, quote-unquote
AMY GOODMAN: But don't say the words.
MAYO BARTLETT: "I don't give an F," and then using the N-word, is unbecoming and unprofessional. And the entire course of conduct leaves so much to desired, that it's a breach of their actual protocol.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Yeah, Mayo, thatthe officer who uttered those words, the district attorney's office has confirmed that those words were said and that that's beingthe police department is looking into the actions of that officer. But that officer was identified in the minutes of thein the transcript of that recording as a Police Officer Stephen Hart.
What I noted in my column in the Daily News today was that there were at least three officers at the scene that night who were, at that very moment, facing a civilfederal civil rights claims against them in federal court by citizens who had claimed they had abused them.
There was Carelli himself, who actually shot Mr. Chamberlain, who's facing astill about to go to trial in a civil federal lawsuit of civil rights violations against two Jordanian immigrant brothers who alleged that he beat them while arresting them in a precinct and called them "ragheads."
There is Stephen Hart himself, who was at the window and used the N-word, who is also facing claims by an African-American woman that he used a
AMY GOODMAN: Hart, as you write
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: I'm sorry.
AMY GOODMAN: was caught on tape, "facing his own civil suit in federal court from a young Hispanic man."
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Hispanic man, right. The vice president of a
AMY GOODMAN: Edgar Maurado.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: The vice president of a bank, who claimed that he threw him to the pavement, beat his head on the pavement, broke his nose, while arresting him for disorderly conduct.
And then, finally, Sergeant Fottrell, one of the supervisors on the scene, who is facing awho just finished a trial from an African-American woman who claimed that he used a stun gun on her while arresting her, although he was acquitted in that trial.
Three of them were facing, at that very moment that they were in Chamberlain's house, charges by citizens who claimed that they had abused them. So, this is part of what you're looking at in terms of calling for a federal investigation of the White Plains Police Department?
MAYO BARTLETT: Absolutely. We know that people are not going to be perfect. We know that the officers won't be. But when the officers exhibit this type of behavior, the department has the responsibility of overseeing them and determining whether they're still fit to serve as police officers, and if so, in what capacity. And it's clear that the White Plains Police Department and the city of White Plains as a whole turns a blind eye to these things. And if these officers engaged in this same conduct without being able to hide behind a badge and a shield, they would be charged with felonies, serious felonies. They would very well be in jail.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: I'd also like to ask you about the issue ofbecause the police have claimed that Mr. Chamberlain advanced on them twice with knivesonce inside the apartment and once as they were trying to break down the door. Now, the video of the police attempts to break down the door are really chilling, because you don't really get a sense of the fear that that can put in you, because they werethey were using crowbars. There were using axes. There was an ax visible, a police ax, as they were attempting to break down his door. But there was a claim that Chamberlain had tried to useinitially it was reported as an ax, put through the door, that the police grabbed away from him. Then it was later downgraded, becauseand I know by discussions with the district attorney's officethey said it was a meat cleaver, not an ax. And now it turns out that in the reports of the police officers on the scene, it was an eight-inch butter knife that went throughthat he tried to put through the door and was taken away from him. In fact, you hear the police officers say, "We got the knife away from him," before they even entered the apartment. Now, there is an issue of what happened inside the apartment, whether there was a second knife that he attempted to use against them. Your response to this claim of the weapons?
MAYO BARTLETT: The police can make anything a weapon. If they came in here right now, they could take this mug I have in front of me and say it's a weapon, because I could use it as a dangerous instrument. But the police took, I guess, what they claim is a butter knife without incident. And what's important to remember here is that that occurred fairly well into this entire episode. Mr. Chamberlain was in his home 5:00 in the morning, and he had advised police and LifeAid numerous times, over a 15- to 20-minute period, that he was OK and didn't need assistance.
The police department's own protocol requires them to call people when they go on a medical emergency to make sure that they can establish contact with the person that way. And if they can in fact do that, it can end even there, if they're satisfied that that's the person. Now, they claim that they knew Mr. Chamberlain, so they knew who they were going to speak to, and they knew who they were speaking with. And he said he was fine. LifeAid actually asks to withdraw and recall their call for assistance. And once the door is taken down and the police are advancing into Mr. Chamberlain's home, the video shows that Mr. Chamberlain standing, not advancing toward the police. And it's important to note that at no point in time is it even alleged that Mr. Chamberlain ever left his house to confront anybody.
AMY GOODMAN: On the audiotapes from the LifeAid company released yesterday, you can hear attempts by the LifeAid dispatcher and Kenneth Chamberlain's sister, Carol, trying to defuse the situation. At one point, Kenneth's sister Carol wants to call her brother to see if she can help him calm down. So the LifeAid dispatcher calls the police to relay this idea to them.
OFFICER CIANCI: Yeah, White Plains Police. This is 64.
LIFEAID OPERATOR: Yes, Operator 64. This is Operator JR01. I not too long ago spoke to you.
OFFICER CIANCI: Yeah, what's going on?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: OK, I gave Carolwell, she actually gave us a call back. She would like to call Kenneth's home, and she would like for you to tell the officers to tell him to answer his phone.
OFFICER CIANCI: Ma'am, we've got awe've got a pretty serious situation going on over here, OK?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: That's what I told her.
OFFICER CIANCI: So, tell her to relax. We're trying to work it out on our end. But right now we're not going to play mediator or anything between the two of them. OK? We can't play those games right now. We've got a serious situation going on, and we're trying to figure it out. We're trying to get a resolution going. So just
LIFEAID OPERATOR: No, I understand completely.
OFFICER CIANCI: We want to do our best. I know it's not your fault. You're just relaying her message. But right now, you know, we don't need to relay her messages to us at this point. Just tell her that we're trying to resolve the situation the best we can. OK?
LIFEAID OPERATOR: OK, I'll let her know that.
OFFICER CIANCI: So, thank you very much.
AMY GOODMAN: That is Kenneth Chamberlain's sisterthe LifeAid operator, rather, talking to the police. Mayo Bartlett?
MAYO BARTLETT: Well, when you have family members that can assist in situations like this, it's negligent, at a minimum, to ignore those individuals and not to let them try to help out. I mean, that would have possibly defused the entire situation.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
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#50
http://www.commondreams.org/further/2012/05/18-0

05.18.12 - 11:01 AM
Stand Your Ground (Unless You're A Black Woman)

by Abby Zimet

The surreal case of Marissa Alexander, a 31-year-old Florida woman who fired warning shots into the ceiling - with a registered gun - to escape a beating by her abusive husband, against whom she had already taken out a protective order. Charged with attempted murder, she claimed self-defense under Stand Your Ground law, lost, and under the state's strict minimum sentencing requirements was sentenced to 20 years.

See also post #42 for added confirmation that Florida's African Americans are indeed still slaves,and unworthy of being treated like normal Human Beings.Way to go Florida!!!!


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"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Buckminster Fuller
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