Police just executed an unarmed 17 yr old brotha (shot 10 times)

Camille this is what I've ALWAYS thought.

If he violently and aggressively and forcefully tried to open a door, the force generated when or if it hits a stationary object, ricocheting back to it's closed position would be enough to knock a person out.

Based on the eye witness statements that we've heard so far we know that Wilson was the aggressor. He was probably half out the door when it flew back closed and hit him in the head.

I’m just out here working hard every single day, just trying to be the best poster I can be....

Even if Michael Brown DID push the door back, that shouldn't automatically be taken as a show of aggression. Think about it like this. The cop drove past and then reversed back to confront Brown. From there the story takes on two paths depending on who is speaking.

I would argue that it is entirely possible for Brown to push the door back as a reflex when he got hit by it. Is it outside the realm of possibility for Darren Wilson to be so incensed by a comment Brown made as he RESPONDED to the officer's aggressive comment that Wilson would attempt to open the door with such force and with the intent to hit Brown that it would cause Brown to reflexively push it back?

If that is what occurred then the topic can then include a different argument. That argument would be this: does self defense exist when the aggressor is a police officer?

Of course, I would argue yes - but now we have a very dangerous situation. If we start THAT argument in regards to this case, this will be the litmus test for just how far police can go. I can envision departments training their officers in ways of "protecting" themselves to maintain the ability to assault people.

The definition of police is: the civil force of a national or local government, responsible for the prevention and detection of crime and the maintenance of public order.

However, if they are the ones committing the crimes (assault) but are also the force that is supposed to be preventing crime you have enter a new phase (which we do already, this situation will make it a bigger issue) where officers will begin a major decent from being "the civil force" to "the oppressive force"

Of course that will only become a problem when that extends to the majority (read:white) population.

By jumping behind Darren Wilson so blindly people are contributing to something with the potential to be very dangerous for ALL.

The public officer SHOULD always be under scrutiny, anytime anyone unarmed is murdered by the police that should be held under even MORE scrutiny and the public should NEVER support any police officer who is in that situation. But that's where the "he reached for my gun" defense comes into play. Im sure departments don't officially train officers to say that, but I guarantee that it's something they're told to say if they find themselves in a dicey situation, i mean who are people more likely to believe, the cop or a "criminal," or to be succinct - dead men don't tell no tales.

Michael Brown could've been a gang banging pedophile kitten torturer. If at THAT moment he was unarmed, and approached aggressively by a cop his past should not play a part in judging the situation unless that officer was approaching the subject under suspicion of a crime.

There was no suspicion of anything, it was an officer who didn't like someone giving him lip, and since it's a black teen he knew he had leverage to fuck with him.

I ranted a bit much. Fuck it.
 
Ferguson isn’t about black rage against cops. It’s white rage against progress.


Police_Shooting_Missouri_Recovery-0d3a2.jpg




By Carol Anderson August 29
Carol Anderson is an associate professor of African American studies and history at Emory University and a public voices fellow with the Op-Ed Project. She is the author of “Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP and the Struggle for Colonial Liberation, 1941-1960.”
When we look back on what happened in Ferguson, Mo., during the summer of 2014, it will be easy to think of it as yet one more episode of black rage ignited by yet another police killing of an unarmed African American male. But that has it precisely backward. What we’ve actually seen is the latest outbreak of white rage. Sure, it is cloaked in the niceties of law and order, but it is rage nonetheless.

Protests and looting naturally capture attention. But the real rage smolders in meetings where officials redraw precincts to dilute African American voting strength or seek to slash the government payrolls that have long served as sources of black employment. It goes virtually unnoticed, however, because white rage doesn’t have to take to the streets and face rubber bullets to be heard. Instead, white rage carries an aura of respectability and has access to the courts, police, legislatures and governors, who cast its efforts as noble, though they are actually driven by the most ignoble motivations.

White rage recurs in American history. It exploded after the Civil War, erupted again to undermine the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education decision and took on its latest incarnation with Barack Obama’s ascent to the White House. For every action of African American advancement, there’s a reaction, a backlash.

The North’s victory in the Civil War did not bring peace. Instead, emancipation brought white resentment that the good ol’ days of black subjugation were over. Legislatures throughout the South scrambled to reinscribe white supremacy and restore the aura of legitimacy that the anti-slavery campaign had tarnished. Lawmakers in several states created the Black Codes, which effectively criminalized blackness, sanctioned forced labor and undermined every tenet of democracy. Even the federal authorities’ promise of 40 acres — land seized from traitors who had tried to destroy the United States of America — crumbled like dust.

Influential white legislators such as Rep. Thaddeus Stevens (R-Pa.) and Sen. Charles Sumner (R-Mass.) tried to make this nation live its creed, but they were no match for the swelling resentment that neutralized the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments, and welcomed the Supreme Court’s 1876 United States vs. Cruikshank decision, which undercut a law aimed at stopping the terror of the Ku Klux Klan.

Nearly 80 years later, Brown v. Board of Education seemed like another moment of triumph — with the ruling on the unconstitutionality of separate public schools for black and white students affirming African Americans’ rights as citizens. But black children, hungry for quality education, ran headlong into more white rage. Bricks and mobs at school doors were only the most obvious signs. In March 1956, 101 members of Congress issued the Southern Manifesto, declaring war on the Brown decision. Governors in Virginia, Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia and elsewhere then launched “massive resistance.” They created a legal doctrine, interposition, that supposedly nullified any federal law or court decision with which a state disagreed. They passed legislation to withhold public funding from any school that abided by Brown. They shut down public school systems and used tax dollars to ensure that whites could continue their education at racially exclusive private academies. Black children were left to rot with no viable option.

A little more than half a century after Brown, the election of Obama gave hope to the country and the world that a new racial climate had emerged in America, or that it would. But such audacious hopes would be short-lived. A rash of voter-suppression legislation, a series of unfathomable Supreme Court decisions, the rise of stand-your-ground laws and continuing police brutality make clear that Obama’s election and reelection have unleashed yet another wave of fear and anger.

It’s more subtle — less overtly racist — than in 1865 or even 1954. It’s a remake of the Southern Strategy, crafted in the wake of the civil rights movement to exploit white resentment against African Americans, and deployed with precision by Presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. As Reagan’s key political strategist, Lee Atwater, explained in a 1981 interview: “You start out in 1954 by saying, ‘N-----, n-----, n-----.’ By 1968 you can’t say ‘n-----’ — that hurts you. Backfires. So you say stuff like ‘forced busing,’ ‘states’ rights’ and all that stuff. You’re getting so abstract now you’re talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you’re talking about are totally economic things, and a byproduct of them is blacks get hurt worse than whites. And subconsciously maybe that is part of it. I’m not saying that.” (The interview was originally published anonymously, and only years later did it emerge that Atwater was the subject.)

Now, under the guise of protecting the sanctity of the ballot box, conservatives have devised measures — such as photo ID requirements — to block African Americans’ access to the polls. A joint report by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the NAACP emphasized that the ID requirements would adversely affect more than 6 million African American voters. (Twenty-five percent of black Americans lack a government-issued photo ID, the report noted, compared with only 8 percent of white Americans.) The Supreme Court sanctioned this discrimination in Shelby County v. Holder , which gutted the Voting Rights Act and opened the door to 21st-century versions of 19th-century literacy tests and poll taxes.

The economic devastation of the Great Recession also shows African Americans under siege. The foreclosure crisis hit black Americans harder than any other group in the United States. A 2013 report by researchers at Brandeis University calculated that “half the collective wealth of African-American families was stripped away during the Great Recession,” in large part because of the impact on home equity. In the process, the wealth gap between blacks and whites grew: Right before the recession, white Americans had four times more wealth than black Americans, on average; by 2010, the gap had increased to six times. This was a targeted hit. Communities of color were far more likely to have riskier, higher-interest-rate loans than white communities, with good credit scores often making no difference.

Add to this the tea party movement’s assault on so-called Big Government, which despite the sanitized language of fiscal responsibility constitutes an attack on African American jobs. Public-sector employment, where there is less discrimination in hiring and pay, has traditionally been an important venue for creating a black middle class.

So when you think of Ferguson, don’t just think of black resentment at a criminal justice system that allows a white police officer to put six bullets into an unarmed black teen. Consider the economic dislocation of black America. Remember a Florida judge instructing a jury to focus only on the moment when George Zimmerman and Trayvon Martin interacted, thus transforming a 17-year-old, unarmed kid into a big, scary black guy, while the grown man who stalked him through the neighborhood with a loaded gun becomes a victim. Remember the assault on the Voting Rights Act. Look at Connick v. Thompson, a partisan 5-4 Supreme Court decision in 2011 that ruled it was legal for a city prosecutor’s staff to hide evidence that exonerated a black man who was rotting on death row for 14 years. And think of a recent study by Stanford University psychology researchers concluding that, when white people were told that black Americans are incarcerated in numbers far beyond their proportion of the population, “they reported being more afraid of crime and more likely to support the kinds of punitive policies that exacerbate the racial disparities,” such as three-strikes or stop-and-frisk laws.

Only then does Ferguson make sense. It’s about white rage.



http://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...55e3f4-2d75-11e4-bb9b-997ae96fad33_story.html




Carol Anderson was in Hidden Colors 3
 
Even if Michael Brown DID push the door back, that shouldn't automatically be taken as a show of aggression. Think about it like this. The cop drove past and then reversed back to confront Brown. From there the story takes on two paths depending on who is speaking.

I would argue that it is entirely possible for Brown to push the door back as a reflex when he got hit by it. Is it outside the realm of possibility for Darren Wilson to be so incensed by a comment Brown made as he RESPONDED to the officer's aggressive comment that Wilson would attempt to open the door with such force and with the intent to hit Brown that it would cause Brown to reflexively push it back?

If that is what occurred then the topic can then include a different argument. That argument would be this: does self defense exist when the aggressor is a police officer?

Of course, I would argue yes - but now we have a very dangerous situation. If we start THAT argument in regards to this case, this will be the litmus test for just how far police can go. I can envision departments training their officers in ways of "protecting" themselves to maintain the ability to assault people.

The definition of police is: the civil force of a national or local government, responsible for the prevention and detection of crime and the maintenance of public order.

However, if they are the ones committing the crimes (assault) but are also the force that is supposed to be preventing crime you have enter a new phase (which we do already, this situation will make it a bigger issue) where officers will begin a major decent from being "the civil force" to "the oppressive force"

Of course that will only become a problem when that extends to the majority (read:white) population.

By jumping behind Darren Wilson so blindly people are contributing to something with the potential to be very dangerous for ALL.

The public officer SHOULD always be under scrutiny, anytime anyone unarmed is murdered by the police that should be held under even MORE scrutiny and the public should NEVER support any police officer who is in that situation. But that's where the "he reached for my gun" defense comes into play. Im sure departments don't officially train officers to say that, but I guarantee that it's something they're told to say if they find themselves in a dicey situation, i mean who are people more likely to believe, the cop or a "criminal," or to be succinct - dead men don't tell no tales.

Michael Brown could've been a gang banging pedophile kitten torturer. If at THAT moment he was unarmed, and approached aggressively by a cop his past should not play a part in judging the situation unless that officer was approaching the subject under suspicion of a crime.

There was no suspicion of anything, it was an officer who didn't like someone giving him lip, and since it's a black teen he knew he had leverage to fuck with him.

I ranted a bit much. Fuck it.

No one is arguing that it was done as an act of aggression, simply as an explanation of how the officer got hurt and an event that helped fuel his rage. Short of a video, no one is ever going to convince me that Mike punched Wilson. The way I heard the account, Wilson tried to open his door but he Mike was too close and it slammed back. He then proceeded to try to pull Mike through the window. In that order.

~~~

In a lot of areas the police are already the oppressive force where black people are concerned, which is part of what all the protests and outrage is about, and it is already starting to include white folx. They are going to get caught up in the quest to keep private prisons occupied also. Crime rates are dropping and there are not enough brown and black bodies to keep them at capacity.

~~~

Honestly, I've never had a bad personal experience with the police. I used to date a police officer, and I had friends that were officers, though we've fallen out of touch now. I also have former classmates who are officers. If I've ever been stopped it was because I was actually speeding. Driving through Virgina on the way back to Ohio, going well over 15 miles over the speed limit, when I got stopped the officer was nice enough to only give me a warning and let me go. The worse experience was when I got into an accident and the police officer was being really dismissive toward me, until his trained power of observation kicked in, and he realized it was the cute little blonde that hit ME. I'd have to be blind, deaf, and stupid not to realize that my experiences are not the norm for everyone. I look at my little nephews and worry about what they will run into when they are out and about. They are all well mannered, but as we have seen, compliance does not protect our kids, and not even their age. The one kid that got snatched and choked up by the police was only 12.

At the same time tho, I'm not going to call for blatant disrespect of police officers or have a "fuck the police attitude". My sister works for a correctional facility and has for years, but is now going through the training to go out on patrol. I want the authority that comes along with her uniform to be respected and the officer friends I have safe. There are others like this also, who want law and order, but who also want citizens protected and not persecuted.

Unfortunately, there are dirty cops out there and white people are sort of trained to take the officers at their word, as though they are only bearers of truth. Social media is changing this. Ferguson in and of itself, the images that have come out of there, the on the ground reports. Watching the police lie on tv giving a press conference while at the same time watching a live stream of police attacking peaceful protesters in a different part of the city. Many eyes have been open, tho not enough. Some of the best reporting I have seen around this has been surprisingly done by white folx. I think the trend will continue. Those with foresight, even if they also do not have any bad personal experiences, know this needs to be addressed and are helping to do the work.
 
Saw this last week forgot to post it...


MOUNTJOY: Sharpton and Holder add fuel to the Ferguson fire
By Paul Mountjoy, Communities Digital News


VIRGINIA, August 22, 2014 — Here we go again: The good Rev. Sharpton et al, off to another town to decry the treatment of a young black person. While his current crusade to raise the noise level about a death he deems unjust, let’s not forget how Sharpton got in the limelight to begin with-lying through his teeth.

When Sharpton was an unknown small venue Reverend, he claimed one of his parish, a very young black girl, was gang raped in a pool hall by up to 15 white men.

The entire story was a lie and Sharpton fomented the lie and peppered it with more lies, then refused the police the opportunity to interview her.

Hallelujah! The Good Lord loves a liar!

At least Sharpton must think so.

Now Sharpton is a radical leader of the Church of Idiocracy located in the hearts and minds of bigots everywhere.

Of course “treatment” means the recipient of deadly force by a white police officer and “et al” means President Obama again, making unfair nationally televised comments about a local issue by using his oft ridiculed method of making his position sound neutral but adding a caveat.

For example: ‘both the police and the public in Ferguson, MO. must remain calm’ but adding noise about police brutality and military style policing.

Worse, inward jets Attorney’s General Eric Holder who has never in his professional history come to the so-called aid of a cCaucasian under these circumstances, and who belly aches about his personal memories of mistreatment by cCaucasian police.

Poor, poor, pitiful Eric who feels he must beam down to Ferguson and set things straight without violating the prime directive of Obama Fleet.

Whatever this could be.

After all, Obama actually cut his vacation shortto address the matters at Ferguson. This must be a national crisis; he doesn’t even cut his multi-million dollar, taxpayer paid vacations short when Russia is invading the Ukraine.

This is not the place or responsibility of the Attorney’s General or our President and never has been in our nation’s history.

Are the behaviors of Obama, Sharpton and Holder racist or of bigots? Looking at the facts; more than likely if we look at the Merriam-Webster definition; Bigot-“a person who obstinately or intolerantly is devoted to his or her opinions and prejudices”

Here is what’s known as told by those in the know: A young Ferguson, Mo. Police officer with an exemplary record, Darren Wilson, was in his patrol car doing his job by asking two men to stop obstructing traffic. The men did not stop after repeated demands.

One of the two men, 6’4, 300 lb. Michael Brown, had just finished robbing a store by taking paraphernalia for getting high on illegal substances.

Brown’s disregard and disrespect for his fellow man was obvious when asked by the small store owner to pay, he pushed the store owner aside and calmly walked out with the robbed merchandise.

Officer Wilson was unaware of the robbery so he was not on edge or on high alert. He simply wanted the road cleared.

How did the gigantic Brown react to Officer Wilson’s demand? He rushed Wilson as Wilson was attempting to exit his patrol car and beat Wilson so badly, his orbital socket was broken and sources say his face was “beaten severely”.

Based on what little is known of Brown for this 10 minute period, Brown was not going to stop beating Officer Wilson based on Wilson’s request to stop.

Under these conditions, an officer has the right to his or her own safety and the duty to his or her family to stop the assault by deadly force if needed and since Wilson was beaten silly, semi-unconscious and could not see well at all, he used what any police officer would: deadly force.

What bothers Obama, Holder, Sharpton and the black’s in town is the deadly force was too deadly.

Deadly means deadly and if one does not wish to experience deadly force, it may be a good idea to not severely beat police officers that are armed.

What happens next? The usual-civil unrest, racial accusations, the ‘poor dead guy’ routine and gee, golly, gosh: Looting!. Not just by blacks robbing small store owners in the very town they live in but blacks from out of town seizing the opportunity to get a free T.V.

Oh, and the ever-present opportunist Al “I never met a camera I didn’t like” Sharpton.

What’s that, Obama, Holder and Sharpton? Can’t hear you! Surely you are chomping at the bit to stop this behavior!?

Quick-the Reverend needs his hair done and a microphone! “Oh, Dr. Ben Carson spoke of me? Great man! What? Poorly, you say? Uncle Tom if I ever met one!”

Brown had undergone an autopsy in Mo. and a requested autopsy by the Brown family and now a third ordered by Holder. Imagine an autopsy ordered by the Attorney’s General of a local robber after two were already performed.
The police claim they have “solid proof” that there was a struggle for Officer Wilson’s weapon and the family refuses to release their autopsy results.

Sharpton is correct on one issue-‘enough is enough”. “Enough” meaning Holder go home, Sharpton, go home, folks stop looting and trying to convince the nation Brown is an altar boy and Wilson the devil. We know the truth.

Thank God Wilson is not being autopsied from Brown’s errant and violent behavior.

Wilson serves the people of MO. And has devoted his life to enforce protection of the public and his record of service suggests he has always done just that.

What has Brown done? We all grieve for his family but Brown brought this grief on. He showed in just 10 minutes of recorded behavior he is a druggie, a robber and a mugger.

Brown is not the victim, folks, he is the perpetrator and now he has bleeding heart liberals fearing police using military style defense measures.

The streets are rife with semi and automatic weapons in the wrong hands. Police need such protection and so do good, hard -working folks who have not robbed and beaten others or looted from their own neighbors.

This type of story has grown old, old, old and by all means-“enough is enough”. Stop robbing, drugging, assaulting, looting then crying “foul” when the result of this kind of behavior turns a sour result.

Be responsible, act responsibly, do what is right and let the justice system work as it should. Obama, Holder, Sharpton and looters are doing more damage to the black race than any police department could ever inflict.
 
Good read. Your link starts on page 2 tho. I think they redid the incident report. That incident report they did the screenshot of was referenced in the August 9th robbery report along with one from Ferguson, which has never appeared. There is no way it took them 10 days to enter it.
Yeah I just copied the link after I finished reading.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Young brothers in Ferguson found this in their yard when they woke up this morning. <a href="http://t.co/osO9pkLHcW">pic.twitter.com/osO9pkLHcW</a></p>&mdash; Shaun King (@ShaunKing) <a href="https://twitter.com/ShaunKing/statuses/506176235412525056">August 31, 2014</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>In tomorrow's WaPo: 2 young (black) men - <a href="https://twitter.com/bydarrylfears">@bydarrylfears</a> &amp; I profile the friendship of Michael Brown &amp; Dorian Johnson <a href="http://t.co/Z80hs2Dafd">http://t.co/Z80hs2Dafd</a></p>&mdash; Wesley Lowery (@WesleyLowery) <a href="https://twitter.com/WesleyLowery/statuses/506258134781145088">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
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At Ferguson March, Call to Halt Traffic in Labor Day Highway Protest

By MANNY FERNANDEZ and CAMPBELL ROBERTSON
AUGUST 30, 2014


Organizers at the rally called on demonstrators to drive on Interstate 70 and other area highways at 4:30 p.m. Monday, turn their hazard lights on and stop their vehicles for four and a half minutes to symbolize the four and a half hours that Mr. Brown’s body lay in the street.

:cool: Remember what I said. 70 and 270, Lambert Airport where I used to work will have to nearly shut down. No way around it.

I will say this, if we can do it, buy your milk in the North, Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolis, etc. Tonight.

Everything will be late.

If you see a Camry, a Chevy, and a Ford on the highway tomorrow on the news.

HI! Peace!

I got 2 people driving plus myself, my attorney says he can get us out, after being arrested.

EXCITING. FUCK EM.

They got black people on the news talking about how dangerous it could be to block the highway . . . . not talking about how dangerous it is to be black.

Peace ya'll. But I think I will come back.
 
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5 Am. They have started, " Check points ". In the sense there are police.

Basically I can not get to Jennings, next to Ferguson without harassment.

Police on North Kings, Pine Lawn, ( STL knows them ). Jennings station road, and Lucas and Hunt.

I don't how this going to go.
 
Fight for the right cause
And understand this is god's work
You're a witness
Serve your purpose
You will be covered in the spirit.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>In tomorrow's WaPo: 2 young (black) men - <a href="https://twitter.com/bydarrylfears">@bydarrylfears</a> &amp; I profile the friendship of Michael Brown &amp; Dorian Johnson <a href="http://t.co/Z80hs2Dafd">http://t.co/Z80hs2Dafd</a></p>&mdash; Wesley Lowery (@WesleyLowery) <a href="https://twitter.com/WesleyLowery/statuses/506258134781145088">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
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Remember I said a while back, a site found a song Brown did talking about street stuff like drugs, fucking hoes, selling drugs etc...

I didn't post it because I didn't want to bring that attention to the situation. Wasn't trying to add fuel to the press agenda.
Not sure who's watching us.
 
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Ferguson police officers begin wearing body cameras in the wake of Michael Brown shooting <a href="http://t.co/eh6cP57WN5">http://t.co/eh6cP57WN5</a> <a href="http://t.co/i7gXR7COJw">pic.twitter.com/i7gXR7COJw</a></p>&mdash; NBC Nightly News (@NBCNightlyNews) <a href="https://twitter.com/NBCNightlyNews/statuses/506479632606969857">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
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*church faint* The TIMES used the word "Negrophobia"...

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Negrophobia: Michael Brown, Eric Garner and America’s fear of black people <a href="http://t.co/bu4mmemo0d">http://t.co/bu4mmemo0d</a></p>&mdash; TIME.com (@TIME) <a href="https://twitter.com/TIME/statuses/506441480609595392">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Public art. Canfield. Joy. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ferguson?src=hash">#ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/EEA1vvWcRA">http://t.co/EEA1vvWcRA</a> <a href="http://t.co/EQeSmJ2Z0L">pic.twitter.com/EQeSmJ2Z0L</a></p>&mdash; deray mckesson (@deray) <a href="https://twitter.com/deray/statuses/506516839959384065">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Public art. Real talk. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ferguson?src=hash">#ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/YLBn3l7fxf">http://t.co/YLBn3l7fxf</a> <a href="http://t.co/CDingOA2cF">pic.twitter.com/CDingOA2cF</a></p>&mdash; deray mckesson (@deray) <a href="https://twitter.com/deray/statuses/506516852504543232">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Public art on Canfield. Reorganized today. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Ferguson?src=hash">#Ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/rjLyyCuN0u">pic.twitter.com/rjLyyCuN0u</a></p>&mdash; deray mckesson (@deray) <a href="https://twitter.com/deray/statuses/506467644577685506">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-conversation="none" lang="en"><p><a href="https://twitter.com/cmtwx">@cmtwx</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/OpFerguson">@OpFerguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/ZuG9J0qa7T">pic.twitter.com/ZuG9J0qa7T</a></p>&mdash; Anonymous_Zero (@Anonymous_Cero) <a href="https://twitter.com/Anonymous_Cero/statuses/506576124219252736">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
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Audio recording of Michael Brown being gunned down WAS made at the time he was killed: App company appears to confirm tape of ELEVEN bullets being fired - including final volley of 'kill shots'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-fired-including-final-volley-kill-shots.html


A video texting service confirmed today that an audio recording - which appears to contain the sound of shots fired by Officer Darren Wilson when he killed unarmed Michael Brown - is authentic.

Chaim Haas, head of communications at Glide, verified the tape recorded by an unnamed individual in Ferguson, Missouri on August 9.

An estimated 11 shots are heard to ring out in the background of the recording with a brief but significant pause between the first seven shots and the last volley of four.

Glide released a lengthy statement on their website today which said the user had been live video-messaging with a friend when the gunshots that killed Michael Brown were caught in the background audio.

A video texting service confirmed today that an audio recording - which appears to contain the sound of shots fired by Officer Darren Wilson when he killed unarmed Michael Brown - is authentic.

Chaim Haas, head of communications at Glide, verified the tape recorded by an unnamed individual in Ferguson, Missouri on August 9.

An estimated 11 shots are heard to ring out in the background of the recording with a brief but significant pause between the first seven shots and the last volley of four.

Glide released a lengthy statement on their website today which said the user had been live video-messaging with a friend when the gunshots that killed Michael Brown were caught in the background audio.
Glide confirmed to MailOnline today that the FBI had been in touch with them regarding the audio recording.

The start-up business also said in the statement that it was proud of their app user for turning over the video message to the FBI investigation.

Experts who have listened to the audio have said it could prove damning for Officer Wilson.

In the audio, the unidentified man is heard telling someone, 'You’re so pretty' then 11 gunshots crack in the background - seven in one volley, followed a pause and then a final burst of four.

Lopa Blumenthal, the attorney for the unidentified man who recorded the alleged gunfire nearby said that she believed the audio shows that Officer Wilson had a clear 'point of contemplation' while pulling the trigger and aiming at Brown.

'He was in his apartment, talking to a friend on a video chat,' said Ms Blumenthal.

'He heard loud noises, and at the time he didn't even realize the import of what he was hearing until afterwards, and it just happened to have captured 12 seconds of what transpired outside of his building.'

A police expert also said that the recording could cause problems for Officer Wilson who is on leave from the force while a federal investigation is carried out.

'There sounds like a pause in it (the audio). And when you hear that pause it brings some concern,' said retired Chief Deputy U.S. Marshall Matthew Fog after listening on CNN.

'It is very significant, because if you have a pause there it means somebody had time to think and then fire again.'

If the audio is genuine it calls into question the version of events that Officer Wilson and the Ferguson police force have claimed occurred on August 9.

~~~~~~~​

There is more @ the sourcelink including videos, but most of it is recapping what we know thus far....
 
Pictures I took today. Everything was horribly unorganized. But I shall not judge.


I'll speak more on it after I get my house in order.



Highway shutdown postponed, but not everyone got the message

http://kplr11.com/2014/09/01/michael-brown-protesters-call-off-plan-to-block-highways/

Lucus and Hunt.

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Besides the ghetto bird/helicopter this was the only news coverage.

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Lucus and Hunt was the wrong place to be. We had to run down here into Pine Lawn just to get a pic of stopped traffic going WEST.

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Ferguson today.

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The McDonalds.

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Highway shutdown postponed, but not everyone got the message
http://kplr11.com/2014/09/01/michael-brown-protesters-call-off-plan-to-block-highways/


FERGUSON, MO (KPLR) – Protestors cancelled a highway shutdown protest, but it appears some protestors took action anyway. I- 270 at West Florissant was shut down by protestors for a short time around 4:40 pm.

Several drivers also appeared to slow down and stop, in protest, on I-70 near Bermuda. Police responded to an accident in that area at about 4:35 pm. St. Louis County Police also stopped people who were walking on I-70 carrying signs.

Mike Brown`s family asked for a delay in the highway shutdown during an announcement this afternoon at about 1:30pm. Leaders still plan to shut down the highway, but it will reportedly be more organized and planned.

The original idea began over the weekend. It was suggested that protestors turn on their hazard lights and stop on the highway for four and a half minutes to symbolize the four and a half hours Mike Brown remained on the ground after a Ferguson police officer shot and killed him.

One possible date for the new highway shutdown is September 10th. Activist Eric Vickers wrote President Barack Obama about that possibility. Activist Zaki Baruti, with the Universal African Peoples Organization, confirmed that as a possible date for action. Baruti said, ‘We`ll be looking at that proposal by Eric. Eric is a very strong member of our community, the civil rights and human rights struggle in the area. I`ll personally probably support that cause and ask others to support it.’

Plenty of people appear to be ready to answer the call, like Sherhonda Golden. Golden said, ‘I would definitely stop and I would do it as my form of protest coming from myself to symbolize that this is the mark we`re trying to make and we want to keep trying to do any kind of protest we can to bring attention and awareness to basically getting anyone`s body from out from laying on the ground for that period of time.’

Baruti says they have five demands, including the immediate termination of the Ferguson officer who shot Mike Brown and for him to be charged with murder. He said, ‘As of now, not one demand has been met and that`s why we`ve got this ongoing tension. We`re saying that leadership just do the right thing.’

Police were concerned about serious and potentially deadly accidents from a protest where people are stopping on a highway.

In 1999, activists shut down I-70 to demand hiring of more minorities by contractors and it was organized in such a way that police had enough advance notice and specific details that they could safely divert traffic.

Eric Vickers, who was part of that 1999 protest, walked the area around Lucas and Hunt and I-70 this afternoon, doing research about where they might organize the shutdown. Vickers told me it looked like a good spot for the planned shutdown he`s proposing for September 10th.
 
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@Shane...yeah I saw the tweets that the family had requested not to do it today, but there were other tweets that said it happened. It was only supposed to be for 4 1/2 minutes, so I don't think it inconvenienced anyone too much, but disorganization is that nature of grassroots efforts.


In the beginning I was wondering if teachers or others would speak out, but it slipped my mind. Just saw this tho:

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>This reflection of Michael Brown by one of his teachers will make the tears flow <a href="http://t.co/6ACCVgqDEa">pic.twitter.com/6ACCVgqDEa</a></p>&mdash; Tierra Leone (@PaintingDaBlues) <a href="https://twitter.com/PaintingDaBlues/statuses/506261696579923968">September 1, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
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