$400 million wrongful death Suit Against Burlington Coat Factory Dismissed for Now: Black Woman Savagely Beaten to Death by Store Guards in $39 Shoplifting episode

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A Port Richmond woman has no legal standing to file a $400 million lawsuit on behalf of her daughter and granddaughter, who were believed to have drowned in a swollen North Carolina creek three years ago while being chased by a store security officer, ruled a federal judge.

In dismissing Annette Johnson's lawsuit against Burlington Coat Factory, Senior District Judge Edward R. Korman said she has not received the requisite letters of administration nor been named executor of the estates of her daughter, Gracie Nell Johnson, and granddaughter, Rianna Tarell Johnson, who are former borough residents.

"Because (Annette Johnson) is not the administrator of the two estates on whose behalf the complaint is filed, although she has had more than three years to obtain letters of administration, she has no standing to bring this action," wrote Korman, who sits in Brooklyn.

A legal source said Ms. Johnson could re-file the suit if and when she's appointed administrator of her kin's estates, provided she does so within any applicable statute of limitations to commence the action.

Ms. Johnson filed the wrongful-death and civil-rights lawsuit in August of last year in Brooklyn federal court.

She alleged her daughter, Gracie Nell Johnson, 43, and her grandaughter, Rianna Tarell Johnson, 16, were "savagely beat(en)" to death while being pursued from Burlington Coat Factory in Charlotte on Aug. 5, 2011, on suspicion of shoplifting $39 in merchandise.

The articles consisted of underwear and a plastic necklace, Ms. Johnson's lawyer, Raphael Weitzman of Manhattan, told the Advance then.

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department told the Advance at the time that the two women and the security officer went into a creek – which had become swollen due to flooding – behind a nearby business park. Although the employee made it out of the creek, the women did not.

However, Ms. Johnson's civil complaint contended the guard followed the women for a quarter of a mile "through a forest" and "savagely beat and killed them."

"When the bodies were found there were bruises all over them, " Ms. Johnson's civil complaint alleged.

Weitzman said his expert's review of the autopsy report indicated Gracie Nell Johnson had suffered defensive wounds and was protecting her daughter.

Weitzman alleged the security officer "vanished" after the incident and never gave police an official statement. He has not been identified.

Weitzman could not immediately be reached Friday for comment.

Annette Johnson told the Advance her daughter and granddaughter had relocated to North Carolina a few years before the episode. They were planning to move back to New York when the incident occurred, she said.

Public records show Gracie Nell Johnson had an address in Clifton as recently as 2009, and had also lived in Mariners Harbor and West Brighton.

According to a press statement at the time, police said the incident unfolded after they received a larceny call from the store.

When officers arrived, the store had one of three suspects in custody, while the other two ran off, chased by a store loss prevention officer.

The two women and the guard went into a swollen creek, but only the guard emerged, according to police.

Rescue workers found Gracie Johnson dead in the creek "after a brief search," police said.

They found Rianna Johnson dead a day later.

The lawsuit alleged the guard refused to get the women medical aid and "instead, he left the bodies sunk in a creek."

The suit, filed against Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corporation and Burlington Coat Factory of North Carolina, sought $100 million in compensatory damages and $300 million in punitive damages.

Besides wrongful death and civil rights violations, it alleged negligence and denial of medical care.

Burlington has stores in New York City, which formed the basis of the lawsuit's jurisdiction, Weitzman, the lawyer, previously told the Advance.

$4.6 Million Awarded to Family of Homeless Black Man Killed by White Denver Cops. Do Lawsuits Stop the Relentless Violence against Blacks by Whites?

From [HERE] As Denver faces a string of police brutality cases, a federal jury has awarded a historic $4.6 million in damages to the family of a Black homeless preacher killed while he was in the booking area of the Denver jail.

Marvin Booker died after he was grabbed and then piled on by a team of white officers who handcuffed him, put him in a chokehold and tasered him. The coroner ruled his death a homicide, but white prosecutors declined to charge the white deputies involved, and Denver Sheriff Department officials (white people) never disciplined them, saying Booker could have harmed someone and that force was needed to restrain him.

The case highlights a history of misconduct by the police department. [To end racism we must end white power MORE]

In the past three months alone, Denver has either agreed or been ordered to pay nearly $10 million in just three cases involving its jail deputies and police officers.

• In August, the Denver City Council approved a $3.25 millionsettlement payment to former jail inmate Jamal Hunter.

• On Sept. 26, a Denver U.S. District Court jury awarded $1.8 million to a Denver family after four Denver police officers executed a warrantless raid on their home that previously was occupied by drug dealers. The officers arrested Daniel Martinez Jr. and three of his sons, allegedly shoving a 16-year-old boy's head through a window. [MORE]

Identifying with the Victimizer. Doing what he's told by his white masters or does he really have his finger on the nuclear button? Alleged brother Mayor Michael Hancock dissapointed with the $4.6 million verdict. More on Black droids in service of white domination below. 

Tallahassee Settles Mistaken Home Raid Case: TPD Race Soldier Cops Beat & Drag Black Minister on Concrete, Invade Home & Terrorize Kids like Enemy Combatants

From [HERE] The city of Tallahassee quietly settled a federal lawsuit filed by a Black Tallahassee minister who alleged he was choked and abused by police officers after they raided his house by mistake in 2010.

The city settled the case brought by Kevin Hawkins, minister at The Multitude of Christ Church on Apalachee Parkway, last month for $45,000. The settlement amount is under a $50,000 threshold that would have required approval from city commissioners.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Tallahassee, said Tallahassee Police Department officers armed with assault weapons and paramilitary attire pulled Hawkins out of his home on Idlewild Drive on Aug. 11, 2010, dragged him across a concrete walkway and subjected him to other physical abuse. He suffered cuts to his face, injuries to his arm, legs and back and a broken dental plate, according to court records.

TPD officers also forced Hawkins' daughter, who was 15 at the time, to get onto the bathroom floor, partially covered with only a small towel, and ordered his son, who was 9 at the time, to put his hands up and lie face-down on the floor, the complaint alleged. The cops held them at gun point. A dozen TPD officers, all members of the Tactical Apprehension and Control Team, were named as defendants.

James Cook, a Tallahassee attorney who represented Hawkins and his two children, said his client decided to settle in part because officers were expected to seek a type of appeal open to law enforcement before lawsuits are resolved. He said taking a higher settlement amount to city commissioners also could have delayed a resolution.

"Basically our client was looking at settling it now for less than he thought it was worth or waiting another year and a half to two years to go to trial," Cook said. "This is a huge problem in the field of civil rights."

A video shot by TPD shows the first portion of the arrest, including officers knocking on Hawkins' door and taking him to the ground outside his house. The video shows officers wearing miltary helmets, gloves and carrying automatic rifles.

"They just don't look like they're from this world," Cook said. "(Hawkins) was humiliated in front of his kids. It hurt him every time he thought about it. He wanted to get it behind him."

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Family of Osman Hernandez files wrongful death suit: White Salinas Cops Execute Latino Man Holding Lettuce Knife - shot lying on his back with Assault Rifle 10 times

From [HERE] and [HERE] The parents of a man fatally shot by Salinas police in May have filed a federal lawsuit [HERE] claiming wrongful death.

Osman Hernandez, 26, was shot and killed by police in the parking lot of Mi Pueblo on East Alisal on May 9. Officers responded after a citizen called to report that a man was there brandishing a lettuce knife.

Officers say Hernandez didn't comply with their orders and that they used a stun gun on him but it wasn't effective. They said he still attempted to come toward them with the knife,  and that's when two officers fired their guns at him.

The shooting occurred in front of numerous witnesses and was caught on surveillance camera. The incident spurred an emotional debate and accounts of what happened were wildly conflicting at the time.

The suit filed by Hernandez' parents names the city of Salinas, Police Chief Kelly McMillin and the officers involved.

According to the complaint, Hernandez was shot 10 times. The case is under review by the Monterey County District Attorney's Office. Chief McMillin has said the officers used appropriate force in the incident.

About two weeks after Hernandez was killed, Salinas police fatally shot Carlos Mejia (foul video below), after responding to reports of a man trying to break into a woman's house and exposing himself to her. Officers say that when they arrived, Mejia had a large pair of garden shears that he was brandishing at them. Officers tried using a stun gun first, but it was unsuccessful. Mejia's family has also filed a wrongful death suit.

Arizona Jail Accused of Ignoring & Refusing Basic Medical Care to Latino Man who Died in Cell - Detained for Driving on Suspended License

From [HERE] Another wrongful death lawsuit has been filed against Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio (in photo). This time, detention officers are accused of deliberately looking the other way, instead of helping a  Latino inmate with a serious medical condition.

Felix Torres, 47, died in October 2013, after being found unconscious in his jail cell. Torres had been arrested on outstanding warrants for driving on a suspended license and failing to appear in court.

He was being held at Maricopa County's Towers Jail in Phoenix.

Torres' mother hired an attorney, who just filed a wrongful death lawsuit, accusing detention officers and other jail personnel of ignoring Torres' cries for help.

According to the lawsuit, "Felix continued in vain to try to obtain medical assistance," while detention officers and the medical staff, "were deliberately indifferent to Felix's need for care."

Brandon Aubrecht told CBS 5 News that he was in the jail cell, just a few feet away from Torres, in the days leading up to Torres' death.

"I heard the DO cursing at him," said Aubrecht. "Quit f*** faking. Quit faking it - quit complaining. Inmates actually had to drag him to medical. They were saying that medical was actually laughing at him, and basically telling him he's faking it ."

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'Fearful for their Safety' White Dallas Cops Fatally Shoot Mentally ill Black Man 6 times (twice in the back) b/c he had a small computer screwdriver in his hand - Suit filed

From [HERE] The father of a Black man who was fatally shot by two Dallas police officers during a confrontation at his home this summer has sued the city and the officers in federal court, alleging excessive force, court records show.

Jason Harrison, 38, was shot on June 14 after officers were called to his home on Glencairn Drive, near Interstate 35E and Camp Wisdom Road, about 11:30 a.m.

Harrison came out of the home with a screwdriver and became aggressive when the officers told him to drop it, police officials have said. Both officers drew their guns and shot at Harrison, who died at the scene. He was struck six times, the lawsuit said. The officers were not injured.

The lawsuit, filed by David Harrison, said his son’s mother called 911 to say he was bipolar and schizophrenic and that he may need to go to Parkland Memorial Hospital for medical help. The suit said the officers, John Rogers and Andrew Hutchins, shot Harrison within 2 minutes of arriving at the scene.

Harrison had only a small screwdriver used for computer equipment in his hand, the suit said. It said the officers shot him even though he didn’t pose a threat to anyone.

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“We were not told why we were stopped but there’s a gun in our face” [You Were Stopped by White Salisbury Cops for failing to give a turn signal continuously during the last 100 feet of travel before turning = b/c you are Black]

From [HERE] Darryle Smith was pulled over for a traffic stop in Salisbury. He gave one officer his license and registration. Another officer pointed a gun at him and his two friends who were in the car, he said.

“We have not been told why we’re being stopped, but there’s a gun in our face,” Smith said.

Smith and friends Julian Washington and Brian Louck were searched in the early morning of Aug. 24, along with the car, and nothing illegal was found, Smith said.

They still didn’t know why the car had been stopped. Smith ended up with a traffic-violation warning for failing to give his turn signal continuously during the last 100 feet of travel before turning.

Smith, 21, of Bryans Road, Maryland, Louck, 20, of Edgewater, Maryland, and Washington, 21, of Gambrills, Maryland, have filed a lawsuit against Salisbury Police Officer Justin Aita, the Salisbury Police Department and the city of Salisbury.

The lawsuit was filed Tuesday, the third lawsuit in a month to be filed against the Salisbury Police Department and Officer Justin Aita. The lawyers representing Smith, Washington and Louck are James Otway and Luke Rommel, and Rommel is also representing the other two sets of plaintiffs who filed lawsuits against the police department and Aita in September.

Is that You in the PE logo? Another Suit Filed Against White Milwaukee Cop for Unlawful Strip and Body Cavity Search of Black Man

From [HERE] A Black man who said he was illegally searched by Milwaukee police officers has sued the city, officers and others, following dozens of such lawsuits.

Edward Wright says that then-officer Michael Vagnini performed an illegal strip and body cavity search in October 2011 after he was stopped in the 2800 block of N. Palmer St., according to a lawsuit filed Thursday.

 Wright says he was near his parked truck outside his mother's house in Milwaukee after midnight when Officers Michael Vagnini, Jacob Knight, Jeffrey Cline, Gregory Kuspa and Jason Mucha stopped him and asked if he had drugs or guns.     

When Wright said he did not, Vagnini allegedly accused the man of lying and began searching his truck without his consent. "After searching Mr. Wright's vehicle and finding nothing, Officer Vagnini put plastic gloves on his hands and reached inside Mr. Wright's pants, grabbing and searching Mr. Wright's genitalia; once again without Mr. Wright's consent; without probable cause; and without a reasonable basis to do so," the complaint states.     

Vagnini has since pleaded no contest to eight criminal charges related to illegal body-cavity and strip searches, for which he is now only serving a 26-month sentence.

The lawsuit, one of more than 50 filed by people who said they were illegally searched by police, says that officers did not find any contraband when doing the search of Wright.

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Judge drops manslaughter count in case of White Detroit Race Soldier (Cop) who Shot 7 Year Old Black Girl with Submachine Gun

From [HERE] The Wayne County Prosecutor's Office is filing an emergency appeal after Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway unexpectedly granted a defense motion to drop the charge of involuntary manslaughter against Detroit Police SWAT Officer Joseph Weekley.

Weekley was accused of gross negligence in the killing of 7-year-old Aiyana-Stanley, and charged with involuntary manslaughter and negligent discharge of a submachine gun causing death.

However; as of 10 a.m. Friday, Wayne County Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway, stating she wished to "err on the side of the defense," granted a standard defense motion to drop the first charge, which required willful negligence according to the jury instructions.

The jury was released until Monday.

Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor Robert Moran, calling it a "bad jury instruction," quickly objected and requested a stay. Hathaway said court would reconvene shortly after 11 a.m., but she returned early to announce the appeal and dismissal for the day.

Weekley's defense attorney, Steven Fishman, argued that one of the elements to convict on involuntary manslaughter is that the suspect "willfully" committed a negligent act resulting in death.

"I'm not really clear if the three elements ... coincide with willfully," Hathaway said. "I don't see that."

Fishman said he asked for the same dismissal during the initial trial of Weekley in the summer of 2013. At that time it was denied. "It was a different case," Fishman said Friday.

"Oh my God," a woman watching the trial, presumably in support of justice for the Black girl, exclaimed when it became apparent Hathaway would grant the motion.

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No Justice in Racist System of Vast Unequal Power: Jon Burge Released Early from Prison - Served 3 years for Lying about Cop Torture of over 100 Victims of White Supremacy [Black Men]

From [HERE] Today, former Chicago police commander Jon Burge, who was convicted of lying about torturing over 100 African-American men at stationhouses on Chicago’s South and West Sides, will walk out of the Butner Correctional Institution, having been granted an early release to a halfway house in Tampa, Florida.

Burge’s 2010 conviction for perjury came nearly 20 years after his reign of racist terror finally ended. From 1972 to 1991, he led a torture ring of white Chicago detectives who routinely used electric shock, suffocation with plastic bags and typewriter covers, mock executions and brutal attacks on the genitals to obtain confessions from their victims. A team of lawyers at the People’s Law Office, including myself, documented 118 such cases. But a series of police superintendents, numerous Cook County prosecutors and a cover-up that implicated former Mayor Richard M. Daley (during his time as both mayor and state’s attorney) protected Burge and his men from prosecution until well after the statute of limitations had run out on their crimes of torture. [What is white collective power?] 

The former commander, Jon Burge, was not convicted of abusing prisoners — crimes for which the statute of limitations had passed — but of perjury and obstruction of justice for lying about the abuse in a civil case.

Like Al Capone, Burge could only be prosecuted for lying about what he and his men did, not for the deeds themselves. He was sentenced to the maximum term of four and a half years, and ended up serving three and a half before being released to a halfway house—a stark contrast to the fates of his victims, many of whom received death sentences or life in prison on the basis of confessions that were tortured from them.

Despite his felony conviction, Burge continued to collect his pension (now at $54,000 per year) while serving his time, and the Illinois Supreme Court recently decided four to three that he may continue to do so in the future. But the nearly $700,000 that Burge has already collected is little compared to what Chicago, Cook County, the State of Illinois and federal taxpayers have already expended as a result of the Burge torture scandal.

Chicago has spent more than $20,000,000 to provide legal defense to Burge and his men in the numerous civil damages suits brought against them over the years. Chicago, Cook County and the State of Illinois have paid out more than $66,000,000 in settlements to compensate the Burge torture survivors who were wrongfully convicted on the basis of false confessions. The city, county, state and federal governments have spent more than $15,000,000 investigating and prosecuting Burge. And his cabal of officers has received $22,000,000 in pensions to date.

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New Report says NYPD Targets Black Women as Prostitutes

From [HERE] Typically the term "profiling" is used in discussions of the way police target young men of color, especially for drug crimes or weapon possession. And much police profiling is, in fact, of this type. New York City's stop-and-frisk policy, for example, disproportionately affects black and Latino men—so much so that in 2011 the New York Police Department (NYPD) actually conducted more stops of young black men than there are young black men in the entire city.

As a new report makes clear, however, police profiling isn't only focused on men. The Red Umbrella Project (RedUP), a peer-led Brooklyn organization that advocates for sex workers, has just released the results of a year-long study of New York's Human Trafficking Intervention Courts (HTICs). These courts are intended to provide alternatives to incarceration for people charged with prostitution-related offenses. But while HTICs goal may be humanitarian, their proceedings seem tainted by racial bias. In Brooklyn—where blacks make up about one-third of the total population—black defendants faced 69 percent of all charges brought before the trafficking court. And they faced a whopping 94 percent of charges on the offense of "loitering for the purposes of prostitution."

Loitering for the purposes of prostitution is a particularly subjective charge, heavily based on individual officers' perception of criminal behavior. As Audacia Ray, the director of RedUP and a former sex worker, explained, "the bar for proof of loitering for engaging in prostitution is much lower than for proving a person has been doing prostitution." Loitering charges don't require an exchange of sex for money and are "really based on … what the cops observe and what they say they observe."

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One Nation Under Guard: White Overseer Tallahassee Cops Occupy & Terrorize Black People on Video - Attack Old Black Woman, others for Walking in Street [no sidewalk]

The Tallahassee Police Department moved swiftly Wednesday to get out in front of its latest controversy — the tasing of a 61-year-old woman in the back as she walked away from an officer in the middle of a city street in broad daylight.

The incident, which was recorded by an onlooker with his cell phone, prompted TPD Chief Michael DeLeo to hold a middle-of-the-night news conference to announce that the officer involved, Terry Mahan, was being placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal-affairs investigation.

TPD also released the cell-phone video, posting it to the department's YouTube channel. The nearly seven-minute video shows Mahan tasing Viola Young, who went motionless before falling face-first onto the pavement.  [MORE]

Texas Jail Locked Mentally ill Black Man in a cell for weeks amid piles of excrement, rotting trash and swarms of insects - Guards Ordered to Keep Door Shut

From [HERE] and [HERE] The Department of Justice (DOJ) has been asked to intervene in a Texas sheriff's investigation over allegations that a county jail inmate was locked in a cell for weeks amid piles of excrement, rotting trash and swarms of insects.

"The Harris County Sheriff is calling for the DOJ to come in and I hope it’s for a comprehensive review and not just an isolated investigation," Texas State Sen. Rodney Ellis told Al Jazeera on Thursday in regards to the ongoing probe. 

Twenty-four year old Terry Goodwin, incarcerated on a marijuana charge and reportedly in need of mental health care, was alleged to have been locked in a filth-ridden solitary confinement cell for as long as two month. He was only discovered when inspectors made a surprise visit on Oct. 10, 2013, local news channel ABC-13 reported.

“His sink, toilet, and shower drain were clogged, not just with feces, but with toilet paper in an apparent attempt by Goodwin to cover his own waste and with orange rinds, perhaps in a futile effort to mask the smell,” whistleblowers told ABC-13. “Food in Styrofoam containers was pushed in by guards through a slit in the door and the refuse was never collected,” the news channel added.

A sign attached to the exterior door of Goodwin’s cell instructed jail guard to keep it closed, the unnamed whistleblowers disclosed.

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What's a Speedy Trial "Right" in a System of White Domination? Black Teenager Snatched off street by Cops & Detained Pre-trial for 4 years at Rikers Island for taking a backpack [case dismissed]

Would this happen to white folks? Kalief Browder spent time waiting for his speedy trial in solitary confinement @Rikers.  From [HERE] In the early hours of Saturday, May 15, 2010, ten days before his seventeenth birthday, Kalief Browder and a friend were returning home from a party in the Belmont section of the Bronx. They walked along Arthur Avenue, the main street of Little Italy, past bakeries and cafés with their metal shutters pulled down for the night. As they passed East 186th Street, Browder saw a police car driving toward them. More squad cars arrived, and soon Browder and his friend found themselves squinting in the glare of a police spotlight. An officer said that a man had just reported that they had robbed him. “I didn’t rob anybody,” Browder replied. “You can check my pockets.”

The officers searched him and his friend but found nothing. As Browder recalls, one of the officers walked back to his car, where the alleged victim was, and returned with a new story: the man said that they had robbed him not that night but two weeks earlier. The police handcuffed the teens and pressed them into the back of a squad car. “What am I being charged for?” Browder asked. “I didn’t do anything!” He remembers an officer telling them, “We’re just going to take you to the precinct. Most likely you can go home.” Browder whispered to his friend, “Are you sure you didn’t do anything?” His friend insisted that he hadn’t.

At the Forty-eighth Precinct, the pair were fingerprinted and locked in a holding cell. A few hours later, when an officer opened the door, Browder jumped up: “I can leave now?” Instead, the teens were taken to Central Booking at the Bronx County Criminal Court.

Browder had already had a few run-ins with the police, including an incident eight months earlier, when an officer reported seeing him take a delivery truck for a joyride and crash into a parked car. Browder was charged with grand larceny. He told me that his friends drove the truck and that he had only watched, but he figured that he had no defense, and so he pleaded guilty. The judge gave him probation and “youthful offender” status, which insured that he wouldn’t have a criminal record.

Late on Saturday, seventeen hours after the police picked Browder up, an officer and a prosecutor interrogated him, and he again maintained his innocence. The next day, he was led into a courtroom, where he learned that he had been charged with robbery, grand larceny, and assault. The judge released his friend, permitting him to remain free while the case moved through the courts. But, because Browder was still on probation, the judge ordered him to be held and set bail at three thousand dollars. The amount was out of reach for his family, and soon Browder found himself aboard a Department of Correction bus. He fought back panic, he told me later. Staring through the grating on the bus window, he watched the Bronx disappear. Soon, there was water on either side as the bus made its way across a long, narrow bridge to Rikers Island.

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Baltimore has paid $Millions for Police Misconduct [Lawsuits Against Racist Cops Do Not Stop Police Brutality because they Do Not Stop White Supremacy]

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White People are Not Comfortable with their Numbers or their Appearance. Dr. Frances Cress Welsing explains that 'whenever there is a sense of increased vulnerability within the local and/or global white collective - as, for example, caused by inflation (currency devaluation), unemployment, war or counter-struggle by non-white peoples (e.g., Arabs controlling and limiting oil supplies, Iranians taking white hostages, Black guerillas struggling in southern Africa), the shrinking white population  - there will be an increase of the ever-present "normal" daily slaughter and murder of Black and other non-white males by those both legally and illegally authorized to do so. This murder and slaughter will be logically viewed as justified within the specific logic framework of the fear of white genetic annihilation [white survival].

Within the historic framework of Western civilization and culture (the civilization and culture organized to prevent white genetic annihilation), all white peoples have the spoken or unspoken mandate to participate actively in their collective struggle for global white genetic survival. This specifically means, of necessity, the murder and slaughter of Black and other non-white males whenever it is felt within the white collective to benecessary and, therefore, justified.

Because Black males, of all non-white males, have the greatest potential to genetically annihilate the white collective, Black males will experience the greatest ferocity of white supremacy's attack through justifiable homicide. Because Black and other non-white males have the potential to produce white genetic annihilation through the use of their genitalia and because genetic annihilation is the most fundamental fear of the global white collective, this collective (consciously or unconsciously) evolved a "counter"weapon or system of weapons, that theoretically could achieve non-white genetic annihilation.[MORE]

Video Shows White NYPD Cops Slamming Pregnant Latino Woman to the Ground - Belly First

From [HERE] Video posted to social media Tuesday shows NYPD officers slamming a pregnant woman to the ground belly-first.

The woman, Sandra Amezquita, 44, reportedly tried to intervene in the arrest of her 17-year-old son. In the video, officers from the 72nd precinct appear to be throwing her to the pavement before slapping handcuffs on her.

In a press conference Wednesday, Amezquita's lawyers said police beat the pregnant woman on the belly with a baton, and released photos of bruises on her abdomen. [MORE]

Department Of Justice Orders Ferguson Cops to Stop Wearing ‘I Am Darren Wilson’ Bracelets & to Stop Hiding their Name Tags

From [HERE] A Department of Justice letter sent to the Police Chief Tom Jackson of Ferguson, Missouri on Friday instructed all officers to stop wearing “I Am Darren Wilson” bracelets. Another letter issued on Tuesday ordered members of the police department to wear readable name plates, after officers were seen wearing unidentifiable tags or none at all.

Protests have not stopped in Ferguson since officer Darren Wilson shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was unarmed, in August. And in response to civil unrest, which gained steam again after Brown’s memorial was burned to the ground on Tuesday, and the use of the slogan “I Am Mike Brown,” officers were photographed wearing the bracelets supporting the officer who killed him.

The DOJ letter sent to Jackson explained that the bracelets contributed to an “us versus them” mentality and “upset and agitated” others.

In a separate letter, the DOJ also said that officers must stop violating name tag protocol by obscuring or altogether not wearing their name tags. The practice, DOJ said, “conveys a message to community members that, through anonymity, officers may seek to act with impunity.” [MORE]

Autopsy says Mentally Ill Black Man Died of Thirst while Restrained in Solitary Confinement - Homicide Not Ruled Out

From [HERE] A Black inmate from North Carolina with severe mental illness died of thirst after being held in solitary confinement, an autopsy report said. The report, released Thursday by the North Carolina Medical Examiner’s Office, said that the inmate, Anthony Michael Kerr, died of severe dehydration. Mr. Kerr, 53, was found unresponsive in the back of a van on March 12 after being driven from Alexander Correctional Institution to the mental hospital at Central Prison in Raleigh. The State Department of Public Safety subsequently fired a captain and four nurses at Alexander. A nurse and a psychologist resigned. In her autopsy report, Dr. Lauren Scott, a pathologist, said state prison officials declined to give her information about the circumstances leading to Mr. Kerr’s death, including when he last had access to food and water.

The autposy said that he had abrasions on his arms “consistent with restraint devices.” And that key details regarding his death such as when he last had food or water were left unanswered by an internal investigation, the Associated Press reports.

Even now, it’s not clear just how Kerr died. He was being transferred to a medical facility March 12 that was 164 miles away, and was found unresponsive at the end of the 3-hour journey. A Department of Public Safety spokeswoman told the Raleigh News & Observer she couldn’t explain what sort of treatment he would receive and why he wasn’t taken to a closer facility. His sister, Brenda Liles, told the Associated Press earlier this year that she had called prison officials repeatedly in the days leading up to his death to try to get him help, after she heard from other inmates that he was in danger. Even before the autopsy was released Thursday, seven prison staff members had lost their jobs over Kerr’s death.

But the Department of Corrections has declined to publicly release findings from an internal investigation. In her autopsy, pathologist Dr. Susan E. Venuti wrote that the Department allowed a “witnessed review” of the investigation, but would not allow her to take a copy. She said the investigation lacked key information, such as when Kerr last received food and water. Because of this, she could not determine whether the death was a homicide. The agency told AP its investigation is still ongoing.

The prison where Kerr was in confinement, Alexander Correctional, was under investigation for another controversial death several years ago, in which inmate Timothy E. Helms was paralyzed and had his skull smashed in after he set fire to his cell, and said prison staff responded by beating him with billy clubs.

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