The Jena Six - Targets of Small Town Racism

Damn, I usually watch CNN's American Morning while getting ready for work and I ain't hear shit about this...

I co-sign with DarkCity, donating doesn't feel like enough, even emailing and contacting state officials doesn't help. It's sad that we still have these blatant racist acts in 2007, but I knew that racism never died, i can't believe people actually think that it did...
 
i've been hearing abou this for a few months now,,,each time i get more details,,,i plan on sending some money to help out,,,anybody who can please to the same
 
UPDATE

'Jena Six' defendant's criminal history comes to light;

bond denied


bilde

Roy Higgins (right) and Frederick Jones carry signs outside
Trout Creek Baptist Church in Jena on Aug. 5 in support of
six black teenagers charged with attempted murder. (AP
File Photo/Richard Alan Hannon)


Shreveport Times
By Abbey Brown
abrown@thetowntalk.com
August 25, 2007

JENA — In addition to Mychal Bell's recent felony conviction, his criminal history was revealed Friday to contain four other violent crimes.

Because of that, a LaSalle Parish judge denied a request to reduce the 17-year-old's bail in his current scrape with the law. Bell remains in jail in lieu of a $90,000 bond.


Bell was convicted in June of aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy to commit that crime for his part in a Dec. 4 incident at Jena High School that left fellow student Justin Barker unconscious.

Bell is one of six black students, known as the "Jena Six," who have been charged in connection with the attack on Barker, who is white.

According to court documents, someone hit Barker from behind, knocking him out, then others began to kick and stomp his "lifeless" body. He spent about three hours in a local emergency room for treatment of injuries to his head and face.

Three months prior to that attack, Bell committed two violent crimes while on probation for a battery Christmas Day 2005, according to testimony. Later that same week, he led the Jena Giants to a shutout victory in a football game against the Buckeye Panthers. Bell was adjudicated — the juvenile equivalent to a conviction — of battery Sept. 2 and criminal damage to property Sept. 3, said Cynthia Bradford, LaSalle Parish deputy clerk.

A few days later, on Sept. 8, Bell rushed 12 times for 108 yards and scored three touchdowns — one of the best performances of the year for the standout athlete.

Mack Fowler, Jena High's football coach at the time, said Friday he hadn't heard about Bell's specific criminal history.

Fowler said that at one point he had a policy in place more severe than the school's when it came to students with discipline problems. But he said he discovered that while he was punishing his players, the school "wasn't doing anything" to them.

Fowler said he decided then that he was going to do the same thing the school did — nothing.

According to Louisiana code, "bail may be allowed" after conviction but before sentencing if the maximum sentence is more than five years' imprisonment. Bell faces as many as 22½ years. The code gives an exception of "when the court has reason to believe, based on competent evidence, that the release of the person convicted will pose a danger to any other person or the community."

LaSalle District Attorney Reed Walters pointed out that Bell was placed on probation until his 18th birthday — Jan. 18, 2008 — after an incident of battery Dec. 25, 2005. After being placed on probation, he was adjudicated of three other crimes, the two in September and another charge of criminal damage to property that occurred on July 25, 2006.

Bell's defense attorney, Louis Scott, pointed out that Bell's father, Marcus Jones, and a number of area ministers have pledged their support to Bell to keep him on the right path.

Jones testified that he already had scheduled an interview for his son at Holy Savior Menard Central High School in Alexandria to see if Bell could attend there if released on bond. Jones testified that he didn't move back to Jena until February — after all of the incidents involving his son — but that he was committed to staying here to exercise greater supervision over Bell.

Jones said he had been living in Dallas for the past seven years.

Judge J.P. Mauffray Jr., with the 28th Judicial District Court, went over the factors in Louisiana code used to determine bail, pointing out specifics in Bell's case:

n The seriousness of the offense: "It is a serious offense because it is a crime of violence," he said.

n The weight of the evidence against the defendant: Mauffray said it was "pretty weighty" considering the jury convicted Bell.

n The previous criminal record of the defendant: He said a criminal record was obviously present considering that Bell had been adjudicated on three offenses that were committed while he was on probation and then convicted this year in adult court.

n The nature and seriousness of the danger to any other person or the community that would be posed by the defendant's release: Again, Mauffray pointed out that Bell now has either been adjudicated or convicted of five crimes of violence.

n Whether the defendant is currently out on bond on a previous felony arrest: He cited Bell's presence on probation and the fact that there were three other cases — not including the case Bell is currently in jail for — awaiting disposition.

"Past behavior is the best prediction of future behavior," Mauffray said.

A motion hearing is scheduled for Sept. 4. Bell's attorneys are hoping their client's adult conviction will be voided and the case remanded to juvenile court. If that motion is denied, attorneys have filed a motion for a new trial based on insufficient defense counsel. Sentencing is scheduled for Sept. 20.

Town Talk reporter Bob Tompkins contributed to this report.

http://www.shreveporttimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070825/NEWS03/708250353/1062/NEWS03
 
Why don't you show up to the rally in Jena on Sept 20th, if those people who you mention arent there, then you can chastise them because you were there and they weren't... until then.. youre just like them.

NiggaHate said:
fuck Al, Fuck Jessie Remeber?

What I Wanna Know Is Where Is David Banner? Where All Them Hard Ass Thugs Niggas That Be Bangin On Wax Gun Slangin And The Hardest Mufuckas On The Planet? Whey Dont They Roll Down There On They 24z And Rollz And Take Care Of That Business? Chances Are, These Students Bought Much Of Their Shit.
 
You see this is the damn type of news that needs the tremendous media attention, but the media rather continue focus on Michael Vick. I guarantee you that if it had that much attention that young brother would have been free!!
 
Where are the Black Panthers, someone from their organization came down 2 my home town after the cops tear gassed people having a block party after a parade last year. He told the cops that if something like this happened again, they would be back down here with guns and take over the police dept. The sherriff said they would be ready but i see they straightened up since. I saw the fear in his eyes. This type of stuff doesn't happen often as much in south Louisiana but more so in North Louisiana. We don't tolerate that kind of shit, and many whites don't either, but they're still a few hiding. It takes support from all sides to make a change.
 
p.ledet said:
He told the cops that if something like this happened again, they would be back down here with guns and take over the police dept.
Damn - What town did that happen in?


QueEx said:
'Jena Six' defendant's criminal history comes to light
I was wondering when they would bring up past suspensions or runins with the law. I wonder how that'll affect the case.
 
themainman said:
I wonder how that'll affect the case.
Past acts, generally, is evidence reflecting upon one's character or
propensity to do a thing.

Generally, character evidence can not be used to prove that the person
acting in accordance therewith in the present incident. Therefore, one
reason why we're just hearing about the 'past acts' -- could be, the
prosecutor didn't try to get them introduced during Mychal Bell's trial or
he attempted to introduce those prior acts and was overruled, and
the media accounts we have just failed to mention it. (we would have to
have the transcript to know).

On the other hand, if there was a pattern or practice connecting the prior
acts with the present case, (i.e., Bell had used a hammer to knock mofos in
the head in the past) and its alleged that he used a hammer to hit the
guy in the present case, the character evidence might be admissible, not to
prove that Bell hit that sombitch with a hammer, but to show thats Bell's has
a pattern or practice of knocking mofo's in the head with hammers.
Supposedly, the jury can only consider the character evidence to show
the pattern or practice, but in reality .....).

More than anything, the reason we're hearing about it now is two-fold:
(1) he used the prior acts to keep Bell locked down; obviously them mofo's
don't want to see him on the outside speaking, urging the protests and
otherwise affecting public opinion in his and the other 5 guy's favor. (2) the
prosecutor intends to introduce the prior acts at Mychal Bell's sentencing
hearing which, I believe, is set for September 20, 2007.

QueEx
 
If those crimimal crackas down in Jena, La can get away with this down there, they would be able to get away with it anywhere in the USA, which would put our innocet Black youth (and adults) even more at risk to be imprisoned for nothing than we already are.

I'm all for putting criminals in prison...no matter what color you are.... but come on now....this isn't JUSTICE, this is JUST-US for those nasty white racist honkys down in Jena La. In fact the whole justice system in the U.S. is for Just-Them (Rich white Folks...)....it works for the likes of drunken white slut ass whores like Paris Hilton and Lindsey Lohan....it's not meant to work for the Black man. Never has and never will be.
 
XXXplosive said:
This case involves black MALES
So obviously Oprah won't give a damn :smh:

AMEN... If it was some white boys being victimized by the system, they may have a chance to be heard.

Did you see when she had black men who were pardoned and exonorated from death row? She looked like she couldn't care less. Ohhh back in the day, black women used to love black men. We made strides in the most important issue on planet earth, human rights during that time. We made world history using the rules of this country to change it. Now black women get to work, get higher education, have a vote and a voice, equal rights and protection from discrimination thanx to the ultimate sacrifices by black men fighting in this country and for this country. Well, I guess they've gotten all they can out of us and now they're fuckin' nigga's and spawnin' more nigga's and hating black men for all the trouble these nigga's they love so much are getting them into. Gangsta rap and white propaganda has turned them against us.

Nah, the Jena 6 isn't going to be on Oprah anytime soon. In fact, what media outlet are they really going to be heard on fairly. This is something that should spark riots. The case with the Duke boys, white folks cheated the process by stopping the Judicial process in its tracks and declaring these men innocent, not only that, they want to punish the people involved in pressing charges. Yet they want the process to play out in the case to Genarlow Wilson and the Jena 6 even though they know it to be unfair.

Hatred is spewed out for the black man at every turn. Even with M. Vick we all know there is Bull fighting, Cockfighting, Hunting or bow hunting, duck shoot, Zoo's, animal experimentation, Circuses and you could go on forever about the unnecessary animal cruelty. All of which are just as barbaric as dogfighting. Yet M. Vick is a blackface they can put on animal cruelty and they made him the first man to recieve a federal conviction over this hatred. They so insistant on hatred that anyone that speaks in favor or defense of Vick is derided.

They loved prosecuting MJ, Kobe, Tyson and they loved talking about all the woes it brought them from MJ being broke, Kobe and McDonalds and so on. You cant even say OJ Simpson around white people! We just need to wake up and become a government to ourselves with our own form of trade and justice system so we can put our communities back together. The system is going to try to tear that apart at every turn.
 
Where are US? Its enough of us on this board to handle our business. Its quite clear no one is going to stand up for us but ourselves. I'm down for going to the rally on the 20th. Who else is with it, its time to mobilize and quit waiting for a Black Leader to fall from the sky.
 
GYH,

You bringing them big-ass tits with you on the 20th?
I suspect a few more BGOL faithful might want to cum,
to the rally, that is.

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
GYH,

You bringing them big-ass tits with you on the 20th?
I suspect a few more BGOL faithful might want to cum,
to the rally, that is.

QueEx

Actually Que, I'm thinking of doing a telethon type event with several partners, to benefit the cause, any takers........?

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
 
Not there Makk; but I am coordinating a group of attys focusing on any protest-related arrests occuring on or about Sept. 20.

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
GYH,

You bringing them big-ass tits with you on the 20th?
I suspect a few more BGOL faithful might want to cum,
to the rally, that is.

QueEx

Unfortunately, I can't make it down there, at this time...

All I know is, WE need to unite and come up with tactful ways to combat racism and straighten up problems in our circle. Some type of guidelines, protocol to deal with this type of situation. How to recognize the signs, how to react, who to contact, what information to provide, then react, when the opportunity is there...
 
GET YOU HOT said:
Unfortunately, I can't make it down there, at this time...

All I know is, WE need to unite and come up with tactful ways to combat racism and straighten up problems in our circle. Some type of guidelines, protocol to deal with this type of situation. How to recognize the signs, how to react, who to contact, what information to provide, then react, when the opportunity is there...
Agreed 100%.

QueEx said:
I am coordinating a group of attys focusing on any protest-related arrests occuring on or about Sept. 20.
That's wasup Que. I'm sure that'll be needed. Thanks for answering my question about how Bells record may play into things.
 
the NAACP would have helped sooner, but they were still helping Michael Vick. (rolls eyes) Heres my thing. Why do black people actually think they're going to get a fair shake in this place. we never will. so why live in the South being a minority, nooses hanging from trees. let them screw their siblings and pigs. be around ppl who are more intelligent. thats like going to a KKK rally and complaining someone called u the n word. i havent been to jena, but i know better than to move there. I understand if it was a place where there was a great job market and beautiful scenery, but its the country. move to a better life
 
This level of bigotry still going on in America i thought all this was in the past. But suffice it to say this is madness white America still at this level the two races will be riven by this, where is the media in all this inane level of thinking. The system have the audacity to charge this individual, how could he be liable if people did not see him now that is an illegal indictment on a black man, all this mendacious utterances by the lawyer compounds this whole case, nevertheless where are the black leaders are the taciturn or afraid. WHERE IS OBAMA! :confused:
 
I am from around that area about a hour from that town and man them people look at you crazy if you ain't from that area or they don't know you.
 
<font size=" 5"><center>Residents: Nooses spark school violence, divide town</font size></center>

art.bell.tues.cnn.jpg

Mychal Bell, 17, faces up to 22 years in prison
after his aggravated battery conviction

CNN
September 4, 2007
By Susan Roesgen and Eliott C. McLaughlin

JENA, Louisiana (CNN) -- Mychal Bell was like a lot of boys his age, his mother says.

The always-smiling 16-year-old often spent weekends on the couch, munching Little Debbie snack cakes, watching football and dreaming of the day he would join his heroes in the NFL.

That was before police arrested the star running back and five other teens -- dubbed the "Jena 6" -- on attempted murder and conspiracy charges after a December 4, 2006, fight at the local high school. Three of the six, including Bell, later had their charges reduced to aggravated battery.

Bell, now 17, sits in a cell in Jena, waiting to learn later this month whether he will spend the next two decades in prison.

"He's not the same. He's grown up a lot since he's been in there. He's not the same ol' smiling Mychal he used to be," his mother, Melissa Bell, says. "I pray that the judge will go easy on him."

Mychal Bell wasn't convicted of attempted murder. The charges were diluted to aggravated battery and conspiracy, but undiluted is the outrage over the fates of Bell and the rest of the Jena 6. Watch deputies subdue Bell's father after the conviction »

Many in this sleepy town of 3,000, where 12 percent of the population is black, are calling Bell's June conviction a case of Jim Crow justice.

They question why Bell's public defender never called a witness in the trial. They question the all-white jury that took three hours to convict him. They question charges they say are wildly overblown. They question why the teen was tried as an adult.

And they say the fight never would have happened if not for the nooses.

A threat or a prank?

In September 2006, as the school year kicked off, a black Jena High School student asked the vice principal if he and some friends could sit under an oak tree where the white students typically congregated.

Told by the vice principal they could sit wherever they pleased, the student and his pals plopped down under the sprawling branches of a shade tree in the campus courtyard.

The next day, students arrived at school to find three nooses hanging from those branches.

"I seen them hanging. I'm thinking the KKK, you know, were hanging nooses. They want to hang somebody. Real nooses, the ones you see on TV, are the kind of nooses they were," Robert Bailey, 17, one of the Jena 6, told the syndicated radio show "Democracy Now!"

The school's principal recommended expulsion for those behind the nooses, according to local newspaper in nearby Alexandria. Instead, The Town Talk reported, a school district committee overruled the recommendation and suspended three white students for three days for hanging the nooses, a gesture written off as a prank.

"Toilet paper, that's a prank, you know what I'm saying?" Bailey told the radio show. "Nooses hanging there -- nooses ain't no prank."

A series of scuffles ensued over the next three months as racial tension at the school became palpable.

The district attorney was summoned to address the student body. Off-campus fights were reported. Bailey said he had a beer bottle broken over his head in one incident, a shotgun pulled on him in another.

On November 30, someone torched the school's main academic building. The arson remains unsolved, but many suspect it's linked to the discord strangling Jena High.

The attack

Four days after the arson, several students jumped a white classmate, Justin Barker, knocking him unconscious before stomping and kicking him.

Parents of the Jena 6 say they heard Barker was hurling racial epithets. Barker's parents say he did nothing to provoke the beating.

Barker was taken to the hospital with injuries to both eyes and ears as well as cuts. His right eye had blood clots, said his mother, Kelli Barker. Justin Barker was treated and released that day.

Bell, Bailey, Theo Shaw, Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis and an unidentified juvenile -- all black teens -- were arrested and charged with attempted murder. The weapons used, according to the charges -- shoes. Their bails were set at between $70,000 and $138,000. Watch Purvis' mother say her son heard the 'lick' that leveled Barker


Charges Reduced


On Tuesday, LaSalle Parish District Attorney J. Reed Walters reduced the charges against Jones and Shaw to second-degree aggravated battery, the same charge on which Bell was convicted.

Only Bell remains in jail, on a $90,000 bond, and the judge has refused to lower it, citing Bell's criminal record, which includes four juvenile offenses -- two simple battery charges among them.

The Jena 6 say they are innocent. Bailey told CNN that by the time he arrived at the fight, students and coaches had broken it up.

"When a fight breaks out, all the kids just run to see a fight. That's just how it was," he said. "You really couldn't see nothing. So when I'm running to see what's going on, I got down there to the fight, it was over."

[n]Attorneys ask judge to reconsider[/b]

Bell's new attorneys will try Tuesday to have their client's conviction thrown out or have the case remanded to juvenile court, where they say it should have been handled in the first place.

If that fails, Bell is scheduled for a September 20 sentencing hearing where he faces up to 22 years in prison. The other five await their days in court.

The case is getting international media attention -- a buzz that has drawn the NAACP and civil rights stalwarts such as the Rev. Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III -- but many in Jena are skeptical the boys can get a fair trial.

"Jena has been a community that has had self-imposed segregation probably since the '50s. They never got the memo," said radio host Tony Brown, who coined the name Jena 6.

Brown, who hosts a statewide radio newsmagazine from Alexandria, where he has lived since 1991, says there are still "righteous people" in Jena. However, he said, there is little commingling among black and white residents and the town often abides by "a Jim Crow mentality."

The mothers of Bell and Bailey concur, but Caseptla Bailey insists, "Jena's a good place to live. It's home. It's something that's in our hearts."

Kristi Boyett, a white resident, is not so nostalgic. She and her family are leaving Jena "because of the racist stuff that's going on here," she said.

She fears for her children's safety in the public schools, she said, and she's not surprised that racial tension in Jena has reached a breaking point.

"That's the way this town's always been. I've lived here for 16 years, and it's been segregated since we lived here," she said.

'We lost Jena'

Other longtime residents, however, paint a more harmonious portrait of Jena and blame the media for casting their town in a negative light. Mayor Murphy McMillan declined to be interviewed, saying only, "The media is making our town look bad."

Paula Brewer, who grew up in Jena, told The Town Talk in Alexandria that "everybody talks to everybody" and there are no racial boundaries in the central Louisiana hamlet.

"Where did Jena go in all this?" she asked the newspaper. "We lost Jena. We aren't what they are calling us -- racist and ignorant. Jena is a good town with good people."

Though some say race drove the decision to charge the teens with attempted murder, the victim's mother doesn't think so. Had the attackers not been pulled off her son, she said, he could have been killed.

"I wish to goodness it wouldn't have happened," Kelli Barker said. "And I hate it for them parents. I mean, I can only imagine, but I also have to think about my child and my family."

Juvenile Punishment is Whats Warranted

Advocates for the Jena 6 aren't saying the boys should be let off if they indeed pummeled Justin Barker. Rather, they're saying the charges should match the crime -- and that the juvenile court should handle the teens' cases.

Brown said he will use his radio show as a platform to push for justice until an appellate court throws out Bell's conviction and the remaining Jena 6 see a fair trial.

Brown said of his rationale, "My grandma used to tell me, 'You can't hang a thief for murder,' and that's what they're doing in Jena."

[]img]http://i.l.cnn.net/cnn/2007/US/law/09/04/bell.jena.six/t1home.jenna.6.cnn.jpg[/img]


http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/law/09/04/bell.jena.six/index.html
 
<font size="4">
NOTE: CNN is running segments all day (Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2007) on the Jena 6.

<font size>
 
The DA put lesser charges on a couple of the young black men, but is going full bore on the others. Hopefully, the momentum will grow and a possibly result in a lesser charge like battery or assault, for the juvenile and the other(s) too, certainly not attempted murder... :smh:
 
GET YOU HOT said:
The DA put lesser charges on a couple of the young black men, but is going full bore on the others. Hopefully, the momentum will grow and a possibly result in a lesser charge like battery or assault, for the juvenile and the other(s) too, certainly not attempted murder... :smh:

Whether he lowers the charges or not, what is the evidence against these boys that they should be convicted? NONE!!!
 
Free The Jena Six Guys, Those Whites Shouldn't Not Messed With The Blacks First.
 
streetdreamer said:
Whether he lowers the charges or not, what is the evidence against these boys that they should be convicted? NONE!!!

Tides may turn, in the way that the DA, will be investigated for prejudical or inconsistant charges, against blacks, in cases other than this one. Continued interest, momentum will bring more to light...
 
Dunno if this was posted but this story was posted at Digg and of course the most popular agreed upon comment is one defending the white kids
:smh: :smh: :smh:


Two black men wrestle gun away from white man and get charged with theft!
(Click to read responses)


It was not a simple school fight. Six black guys ganged up on and beat the living sh*t out of a White guy. Guess what? No hate crime charges. Reverse the race and you would have hell to pay from Al Sharpton. And don't buy the spin that the White guy somehow brought it upon himself. There had been tense racial relations at the school for sometime and the group of 6 blacks, one of whom has been charged with battery before, took the opportunity to beat a White guy.
 
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