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

I haven't listened to any of these, but these are recordings of the beyond ferguson event. I'm sure there will be/is video also. I just haven't come across it yet.

http://www.thetakeaway.org/story/the-takeaway-2014-08-20/


http://www.npr.org/blogs/codeswitch/2014/08/28/343731780/michel-martin-goes-beyondferguson
Live stream is over but check the comments and questions below.

It will be reaired also for those of us who missed it. I will have to catch it another time:

This conversation will air tomorrow, Friday, Aug. 29 at noon on 90.7 FM locally, and streaming online anywhere. We will also welcome your thoughts at that time on Twitter using the #BeyondFerguson hashtag.
 
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Missouri police sued for $40 million over actions in Ferguson protests

(Reuters) - A group of people caught up in unrest in Ferguson, Missouri, after a white officer killed a black teenager, sued local officials on Thursday, alleging civil rights violations through arrests and police assaults with rubber bullets and tear gas.

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, says law enforcement met a broad public outcry over the Aug. 9 killing of 18-year-old Michael Brown with "militaristic displays of force and weaponry," (and) engaged U.S. citizens "as if they were war combatants."

The lawsuit seeks a total of $40 million on behalf of six plaintiffs, including a 17-year-old boy who was with his mother in a fast-food restaurant when they were arrested. Each of the plaintiffs was caught up in interactions with police over a period from Aug. 11 to 13, the suit allege.

Named as defendants are the city of Ferguson, St. Louis County, Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Delmar, Ferguson police officer Justin Cosmo, and other unnamed police officers from Ferguson and St. Louis County.

Neither the city, county nor police departments had any immediate comment on the lawsuit.

The lawsuit followed nearly two weeks of racial strife in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, where Brown's killing prompted protesters to take to the streets. Some stores were looted in nightly protests, and police responded with riot gear and moved in military equipment to try to quell the turmoil.

One of the plaintiffs alleges she and her son were in a McDonald's restaurant when several police officers with rifles ordered them out. According to the suit, an officer threw her to the ground and handcuffed her, with she and her son both arrested.

Another plaintiff alleges he was trying to visit his mother in Ferguson when several police officers in military uniforms in her neighborhood shot him with rubber bullets. When he fell over, he was beaten and sprayed with pepper spray, the lawsuit says.

Two other plaintiffs say they were peacefully protesting when officers in riot gear fired on them with tear gas, rubber bullets and stun grenades. A separate plaintiff says he was trying to record footage of the protests when police took his camera and arrested him.

"This is a blatant example of how police handle African-Americans ... how it can go terribly, terribly wrong. You have a right to peaceful assembly," said attorney Reginald Greene who brought the case.

Police have said police officer Darren Wilson shot Brown in an altercation on a residential street when the officer asked him to move out of the road. Some witnesses have reported that Brown was holding his hands up in surrender when he was shot multiple times, including twice in the head.

A St. Louis County grand jury has begun hearing evidence in the case. The U.S. Justice Department has opened its own investigation.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/28/us-usa-missouri-shooting-idUSKBN0GS2KD20140828

Hit e'm in their pockets :dance:
 
North Korea Says Ferguson Response Made U.S. ‘The Laughing Stock Of The World’
BY HAYES BROWN POSTED ON AUGUST 27, 2014 AT 8:59 AM UPDATED: AUGUST 27, 2014 AT 9:03 AM

AP960218099326-638x438.jpg

Human rights defender, and leader of North Korea, Kim Jong Un
CREDIT: AP PHOTO/KRT VIA AP VIDEO, FILE
Better late than never. Nearly a week after other repressive countries used protests in Ferguson, MO to critique the United States’ human rights record, North Korea joined the fray on Tuesday, calling the U.S. “the laughing stock of the world” over its actions over the last few

Can i get a link
 
:angry::angry::angry:



I don't know where to put this, so I will put it here:

http://www.thismess.net/2014/08/cultofcompliance-living-while-black.html

I have no words.

Check the source link as there are some links embedded throughout.

Here are four stories literally just from last night (they happened at different times, but made news yesterday). They illustrate the way racism enables and is enabled by the cult of compliance. The cult provides an intersectional lens in which race and class dominate the middle, with disability not far behind. When these categories overlap in a single individual, trouble beckons.

Incident 1: Sitting while black in a public space.

The African-American man was sitting outside a store, waiting for his kids to get out of school. The store clerk got nervous - a black man sitting! For ten minutes! - so he called the police. When the police arrived, they demanded his ID. He didn't comply:

The man in the video tells the officer he was sitting in front of the store for 10 minutes as he waited for his kids to get out of school, and that the area is public and he had a right to sit there.
“The problem was —” the female officer begins.
“The problem is I’m black,” the man fires back. “It really is, because I’m not sitting there with a group of people. I’m sitting there by myself. By myself, not causing a problem.”
Eventually a second male officer approaches the man in the video and attempts to restrain him.
“I’ve got to go get my kids,” the man tells the second officer, pulling his arm away. “Please don’t touch me.”
“You’re going to go to jail then,” the second officer says.
“I’m not doing anything wrong,” the man replies.
At this point, both officers grab the man.
“Come on brother,” the man says, “This is assault.”
“I’m not your brother,” the second officer replies. “Put your hands behind your back otherwise it’s going to get ugly.”
Eventually the officers start to cuff the man and he drops his cellphone and the video goes black.
“I haven’t done anything wrong!” we hear the man yell. “Can somebody help me? That’s my kids, right there! My kids are right there!”
“Put your hands behind your back!” the male officer screams.

Then they tased him.

Incident 2: Hands in pockets while black and autistic

This was from three years ago, but I just heard about the story yesterday when the judge dismissed the lawsuit. A boy was in his yard when the cops pulled up.

According to Yearby, her son was standing in front of their apartment on Southampton Road minding his own business when two officers on patrol approached him and questioned him. The officers later said they thought he looked suspicious.
"I ran outside and the police pushed me back and I asked him, 'what was going on?' and [the officer] was like 'I asked your son to take his hands out of his pockets,'" recalled Vicky Yearby.
Yearby said she and a neighbor told the officers her son was mentally disabled but they ignored them and continued to yell at Isaac Yearby and frighten him.
Video captured from the Taser camera shows Yearby removed his hands from his pockets then flailed his arms. Seconds later the Taser fired and he fell to the ground. The lawsuit claimed the fall caused Isaac Yearby to suffer seizures which continued periodically.

And of course, there's no accountability.

College Park Police Chief Ron Fears declined an interview but city spokesman Gerald Walker issued a statement which reads, "The City of College Park's Police Department respects the rights of all citizens and visitors, and pledges to maintain a safe community."
It goes on, "[t]he situation in 2011 with Mr. Yearby was unfortunate; however, Judge Marvin Shoob's summary exonerated our officers and their actions. The College Park Police Department continues to protect and serve, and hopes for the best for everyone involved in this case."

This is not what protecting and serving looks like.

Incident 3 (from Digby and Rawstory): Not Walking While Black

There was a foot chase and the man, an African American named Gregory Towns, was exhausted, but caught. He wouldn't walk, so they started tasing him, driving him with electric shocks as if he were an animal. He died.

But Police Benevolent Association lawyers representing Weems continued to insist that the officer’s actions did not cause Towns to die.
Attorney Dale Preiser issued a statement saying that the “use of drive stun to gain compliance is permitted under federal and Georgia law

Read that again. Under federal and Georgia law, it's fine to use a taser to "gain compliance."

Incident 4 - Not Resisting While Black

Stop Trying to Take My Gun!" The cop shouted this as he was attacking a black man with his hands up.

Cameras have lately been touted as a major solution to police brutality. And they are definitely a HUGE help. What's interesting to me, and upsetting, is the way that police are beginning to game their speech so that they'll have an excuse for the camera.

As we've seen in the Michael Brown case, "he was reaching for my gun" is the excuse that police use when they shoot someone unarmed. Here's a case where the video catches the whole thing.

All the criminal charges against Marcus Jeter have been dismissed, and two Bloomfield police officers have been indicted for falsifying reports, and one of them, for assault.
A third pleaded guilty early on to tampering. It's all thanks to those dashcam tapes. It's the video that prosecutors say they never saw when the pursued criminal charges against 30 year-old Marcus Jeter . In the video, his hands were in the air. He was charged with eluding police, resisting arrest and assault. One officer in the video can be seen throwing repeated punches.

His hands are in the air, because he's a black man, and he knows that if he looks threatening, he can be shot with impunity.

The video, starting around 2:30, is terrible. Listen to the cop screaming, "Stop Resisting! Stop Resisting! Why are you trying to touch my fucking gun! Get off my gun!"

They are faking resistance for the camera.

Good news: The cops have been charged. There may be justice in this case.
Bad news: How many other people have gone to jail while the cops screamed, "Stop resisting!" to an unarmed man with his hands up. They are learning to play for their cameras.

Here's one final link. This is a white man in Florida. His son, who is autistic, was pulled over and the father drove to help, but the cops didn't want his help. This is their command training - a civilian interfering is a threat to their command presence, so they don't allow it. The man calmly asserts his rights, he tells the officers that the boy is autistic. If you watch the video, you can see them look at the camera being held by the son, move to block a little. They grab him, throw him to the ground, tase him, and shout, "GET ON THE GROUND! STOP RESISTING." That, they hope, will provide them with the excuse they need.

Of course they charged him with resisting arrest.

The Cult of Compliance provides our intersectional lens. We know these cases are wrong. We know about them because of video, because of disability, because of luck. Most of the victims are people of color. Most of the victims never get any publicity.

Here's one vital lesson for white folks like me. When Michael Brown was killed, a lot of white people, mostly but not exclusively conservatives, said, "He should have just complied when the police told him to get out of the road." Maybe. Maybe it would have saved him. But as we can see here, there is no correct behavior that will protect a black man from police brutality. All behaviors - standing, sitting, walking, not walking, showing your hands, hands in your pockets - are suspect.
 
St. Ann officer resigns over protester threat

ST. ANN, Mo. (AP) -- A suburban St. Louis police officer shown on cellphone video pointing his rifle at demonstrators in Ferguson and threatening them is now out of a job.
St. Ann Police Chief Aaron Jimenez confirmed in an interview with The Associated Press that police Lt. Ray Albers resigned Thursday. A phone call seeking comment from Albers was not returned.”


:dance::dance::dance::dance:


So he resigns and gets full pension instead of being fired



We lost this one, he didn't feel anything in his pocket



:smh::smh::smh:
 
But thats the thing. Its not hitting them in their pockets. Its taxpayer money and in the event the lose civilly they dont feel a thing personally.

You're right but lawsuits like this can bring a stain to the department and it'll expose them for future bs. It's a start. This needs to be a trend with a number of police departments in the U.S.
 
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GET THE FUCK OUT YOU SICK CRACKER ASS CRACKKKA

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St. Ann officer resigns over protester threat

ST. ANN, Mo. (AP) -- A suburban St. Louis police officer shown on cellphone video pointing his rifle at demonstrators in Ferguson and threatening them is now out of a job.
St. Ann Police Chief Aaron Jimenez confirmed in an interview with The Associated Press that police Lt. Ray Albers resigned Thursday. A phone call seeking comment from Albers was not returned.”


:dance::dance::dance::dance:

No need to :dance: All they gon' do is move him to another county & that pig will be right back in business.
 
I fully support ugly whether the cop gets charged or not.


I feel, if we don't do shit I will be next. no amount of being "good" or keeping my "head down" and being a "good boy" can save any of us.

My 101 Grandmother lives in Jennings, next to Ferguson.

We can not move her.

Is she just collateral damage, to your, " Ugly ", a full on shooting war situation. 'Brother '. Or are you going to stand with me on those 3 acres in Jennings, with an Ar-15 downrange and protect her?

I say this out of full love, but don't walk down this road.
 
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My 101 Grandmother lives in Jennings, next to Ferguson.

We can not move her.

Is she just collateral damage, to your, " Ugly ", a full on shooting war situation. 'Brother '. Or are you going to stand with me on those 3 acres in Jennings, with an Ar-15 downrange and protect her?

I say this out of full love, but don't walk down this road.

if i was able, i would help defend her with you.

but the problem is ugly automatically meant violent.

it's not automatic violence. if we stop supporting their economy.. it's gonna get ugly out here. they don't hit their bottom line you know they're going to kill themselves in record numbers, it's gonna get ugly.

if we stop the work force that drives this country it's gonna get ugly

if we stand united it's gonna get ugly.

AS WELL as not allowing them to pick us off 1 by 1.

we need to stand united. when we're united it's UGLY.
 
if i was able, i would help defend her with you.

but the problem is ugly automatically meant violent.

it's not automatic violence. if we stop supporting their economy.. it's gonna get ugly out here. they don't hit their bottom line you know they're going to kill themselves in record numbers, it's gonna get ugly.

if we stop the work force that drives this country it's gonna get ugly

if we stand united it's gonna get ugly.

AS WELL as not allowing them to pick us off 1 by 1.

we need to stand united. when we're united it's UGLY.


Respect.
 



read that body language. mofo was nervous as hell. that little jump he did while he held the gun.
listen to his words. you can tell that he's some lame mofo that feels powerful cause he has a gun. without the gun he'd get his ass stomped in a heartbeat.


theres a lot of folks like that. not jut cops.
mofo hold a gun and be nervous than a mofo.
those are the ones that are quick to shoot people...no questions asked....or shoot someone else by mistake cause theyre so nervous and out of their character that they cant shoot straight.

Thats why a lot of folks become cops.
they feel powerless and depressed.
Including the former gangbangas and skin heads...a lot of em were lame most of their lives...so once they become cops they release all that bitterness on those that they wrongfully accuse.
 
Civil unrest in Ferguson was fuelled by the Black community’s already poor relationship with a highly militarized police force.

http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/20...nship-with-a-highly-militarized-police-force/
On August 9th, an unarmed 18-year old Black teenager, Michael Brown, was shot by a police officer in Ferguson, a suburb of St Louis. The following two weeks saw protests and riots in the town, culminating in the Governor of Missouri calling in the National Guard on August 18th. Tim Newburn takes a close look at the unrest in Ferguson, writing that it has parallels with similar riots in London in August, 2011. Both were sparked by the oppressive policing of black neighborhoods, but the most distinctive feature of the unrest in Ferguson was the militarized nature and reaction of local police forces..

St Louis, Missouri, doesn’t have much of a history of rioting. In the major urban disorders of the 1960s, the city was relatively peaceful. The decades since, which have seen riots in cities as widespread as Washington DC, Albuquerque, Baltimore, Miami, Detroit, Los Angeles and New York among many others – St Louis barely figured. And, then, in August 2014 all this changed. The St Louis suburb of Ferguson – one of over 90 municipalities in St Louis County – saw sustained disorder lasting longer than the Los Angeles riots that broke out in the aftermath of the Rodney King affair.

In some ways the story is an all too familiar one. In Ferguson, a young, unarmed African American man, Michael Brown, was shot and killed by the police. In truth, this is not such an unusual occurrence in America. At least four such incidents occurred in the US in the month leading up to the shooting of Michael Brown. Although the number of citizens shot and killed by the police has declined significantly in the last half century, there were over 4,300 such deaths between 1999 and 2011.

In Ferguson, however, what followed the shooting was at least as great an impetus to the disorder. First, Michael Brown’s body lay in the street for four hours before the authorities finally moved it. It lay uncovered and in full view for a considerable period and whilst there have been some mitigating circumstances it is of little surprise that locals took this to be supremely disrespectful. Later that evening, once the body had been removed, a temporary memorial of flowers, candles and photographs was established. The police blocked vehicle access to the street in which the incident had occurred, but allowed their own cars to enter, several of which drove over the memorial, crushing the flowers and breaking the candles. The final indignity occurred when a police officer allowed the dog he was controlling urinate on the memorial.

Much of this terrible tale is all too familiar to anyone familiar with the English riots of 2011. Then, a young Black man, Mark Duggan, was shot and killed by the police in North London. It was 48 hours before rioting broke out, but in the intervening period feelings had been inflamed by what was perceived to be a failure to treat Duggan’s family with appropriate respect, and mishandling of the protests that gathered outside the local police station. In addition, a series of claims about Duggan’s actions (that, for example, he had fired a gun at the police) or character (that he was a ‘gangster’), many of them subsequently discredited, were made by the authorities, all of which convinced many that there would be little chance of ‘justice’ being done.

Very much in parallel with the Duggan case, in the aftermath of the Michael Brown shooting in Ferguson an information war also quickly began. First of all the police released details, including stills from a surveillance camera, of a convenience store ‘robbery’ that had occurred just before the shooting. They suggested that Brown had both been involved and implied that this might help explain the subsequent shooting. It later emerged that the officer who shot Brown had no idea he might be implicated in the theft from the store. The police then released details from the initial autopsy conducted on Brown, suggesting that he had traces of cannabis in his bloodstream. As in the Duggan case it appeared that strenuous efforts were being taken to divert attention from the shooting itself.


Protesters in Ferguson, Missouri. Credit: Youth Radio (Flickr, CC-BY-NC-SA-2.0)

The rioting on both sides of the Atlantic in many ways took standard forms. In Ferguson, Missouri, as in London, Birmingham, Manchester and elsewhere, the disorder involved attacks on police, quite widespread destruction of property, and the looting of local stores – though the latter was significantly more extensive in some of the English riots. When asked about their frustrations, young St Louis residents complained about police ‘harassment’, and stop and frisk in particular, very much as rioters regularly complained about stop and search to researchers in the Guardian and LSE’s Reading the Riots study in England. In Ferguson, there were even stories – many circulating via social media – of ‘vigilante’ business owners in Ferguson taking to the streets to protect their shops, rather as happened in parts of north London and in Birmingham in 2011.

But to some extent there the parallels end. First, Ferguson was centrally about race in a way that was only partly true of the England riots of 2011. It was indisputably the case that a great many black Britons were involved in the 2011 disturbances, and many of the ‘rioters’ interviewed in Reading the Riots talked about racism and the discrimination they faced, particularly from the police. And yet the English riots were defined at least as much by poverty and disadvantage as they were about race. To that extent, arguably Ferguson has stronger resonances with St Pauls, Brixton, Toxteth and the other British urban disorders of the 1980s, where predominantly black neighborhoods rose up against what had long been experienced as oppressive policing.

The starkest contrast from a British perspective, however, was to be found in the pictures of highly militarized policing in Ferguson. CS gas, stun grenades, rubber bullets, camouflage uniforms, snipers on roofs, armored cars, assault rifles pointed directly at residents and journalists, shotguns and automatic weapons appeared to be almost daily presences on the streets of St Louis. This drift toward ever-greater militarization of American policing has been in evidence for several decades now, but has sped up since 1997 as a result of the flow of surplus equipment made available by the US Department of Defense. Further, it is argued that since the September 11th attacks, the US government has increasingly viewed the police ‘as frontline forces in a new war’.

Civil unrest often places police forces under the very greatest strain. In 2011, even London’s Metropolitan Police, far and away the largest force in the UK, had to utilize the mutual aid system to call on assistance from other forces, and still struggled in the early days of the riots. The situation in somewhere like St Louis contrasts greatly, given the thousands of Police Departments in the US compared to only 39 in England.

Ferguson’s Police Department has fewer than 100 officers. They were initially supplemented by officers from neighboring forces and by the St Louis County PD. The initial mishandling of the riots by these Departments led to responsibility being passed, temporarily, to the Missouri Highway Patrol. They had some initial successes, and were widely praised by citizens and professional police observers. Nevertheless, concerns about intensifying violence led the State Governor eventually to call in the Missouri National Guard – essentially a reserve military service – to police Ferguson. It was almost two weeks of unrest before the Governor finally felt able to withdraw the National Guard.

What next? There is a Federal Civil Rights investigation being undertaken at the instigation of Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., and a local Grand Jury will decide whether the officer that shot Michael Brown will face charges. There has been vocal and sometimes bipartisan criticism of the style of militarized policing that was visible in Ferguson, and has been seen in many cities in the US, and President Obama has ordered a review of the programs that supplied the police with much of this equipment. Nevertheless, as one commentator put it, it is the promiscuous – for which read routine and all too frequent – use of SWAT teams that remains a significant problem in much American urban policing.

What about the UK? Here there are also reasons to be cautious. Much of the history of modern civil unrest suggests that a combination of firm but proportionate policing with serious engagement with the community generally holds out the greatest promise of success. Such lessons have been learned the hard way – from Los Angeles and Cincinnati to Brixton and Toxteth. Although some efforts were taken to learn some of the lessons from the 2011 riots, the febrile political atmosphere that currently surrounds policing is far from healthy, and the spectacle earlier this year of London’s Mayor, Boris Johnson, rushing ahead to buy water cannon before the Home Secretary had authorized the use of such equipment, is hardly an illustration of careful political strategy and management. We must continue to hope that our political leaders will show restraint where policing is concerned.

But it is far from all doom and gloom. Yes, there were significant mistakes in the policing of the 2011 riots, and there was very great criticism of the police from politicians and the public. Nevertheless, the types of over-reaction and escalation that were the hallmark of much of the policing of the disorder in Ferguson were not generally among the criticisms made of British policing in 2011. At the very least that is something positive to hang on to.

This piece is a revised and expanded version of an article that first appeared at the Guardian.
 
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Man fuck u fuzzy...

I'm messaging mods and HNIC for that BULLSHIT you posted. You need to catch a ban for that shit straight up you BITCH you :angry:

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

Like I said in my previous post, it's a start to get the wheels rolling. Once the people see where their tax money is going, that'll make them start voting these folks out of office and so on. In the long run, it can make a difference if people get more involved in their community and have a bigger say so on who police them.
 
Hillary Clinton finally speaks....real talk she is 100% pure politician (like most of them) but....

We can make her jump when we threaten her.....which is something we need to think about especialy considering the Repug alternatives.....
 
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that actually wasnt bad!
 
if i was able, i would help defend her with you.

but the problem is ugly automatically meant violent.

it's not automatic violence. if we stop supporting their economy.. it's gonna get ugly out here. they don't hit their bottom line you know they're going to kill themselves in record numbers, it's gonna get ugly.

if we stop the work force that drives this country it's gonna get ugly

if we stand united it's gonna get ugly.

AS WELL as not allowing them to pick us off 1 by 1.

we need to stand united. when we're united it's UGLY.
But that's just it. We need a process, procedures in place to make it get ugly and if it goes to gully, we stand UNITED and ready. The many positive threads started here to learn a skill, start a business, can be tied into a database that we support 100%- add bluntbit.
 
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