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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Press Conference regarding Hanging victim Frederick Jermaine Carter


Frederick Jermaine Carter was found hanging in a tree in Greenwood, Mississippi. Although the Sheriff claims his death was a suicide, there is insufficient evidence to support this finding. More importantly, the state of Mississippi refuses to release the complete autopsy including Mr. Carter's personal effects and the rope which was used in the hanging. For more information please see www.andjusticeforus.org

  





100 Blacks In Law Enforcement Press Conference pt1







'Trayvon Martin case reeks of racial bias'


Press TV has conducted an interview with Ralph Schoenman, author and political commentator, Berkeley about the issue of the case of George Zimmerman, neighborhood watchman who stalked and then shot and killed unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin and has walked free from court claiming self defense.

Italian lawmaker under fire for racist remark


Italy's unprecedented left-right government continues to make the headlines for all the wrong reasons. The most recent institutional mishap occurred when the vice-president of the Senate, Northern League Party's Roberto Calderoli said Integration minister looks like an orangutan.

Congo-born Cecile Kyenge is Italy's first black minister and has already been the target of many Northern League Party. Minister Kyenge has been the subject of racist abuse, mostly from the anti-immigrant Northern League party and far-right groups, since her appointment last March. 

Corrupt racist US courts don’t recognize African Americans as equals: Mark Mason


Press TV has conducted an interview with Mark Mason, activist and political commentator, San Francisco about the verdict of not guilty for George Zimmerman over the shooting death of black teenager Trayvon Martin, which has ignited nationwide protests in the US. The following is an approximate transcript of the interview.


Press TV: I’d like to get your opinion on the ‘not guilty’ verdict of George Zimmerman. Was justice served, or was it neglected? 

Mason: No. There is no way justice was served. We have a judicial outrage. Of course, the setting is that here in America, African Americans have never been full citizens with all the rights and privileges of being an American citizen. 

We know about the near genocide of African Americans; the enslavement of them until we had to have a civil war or in the 1860s. On paper in 1865 African Americans became free, but they have never become free of vast deep racism. 

They are the most deeply poor impoverished in the United States. The judicial system does not recognize them as members - honorable and dignified members of our American community.


Press TV: Many observers say that the issue of race played a very prominent role in this case and the trial of George Zimmerman. What has to happen to bring about change in such scenarios and who has the power and the fortitude to bring about that change? 

Mason: We’ll see, but I believe it will not make any significant change. There has been a call for the Department of Justice, Eric Holder, to file a federal civil rights case. Yes go ahead with that, that should be done, it’s on the books, that process should go forward within the context of the clearly corrupt judicial system that we have. 

But we need another mass social justice movement that we had in the 1960s. And we need to come together across the nation to go out into the streets and to begin demanding justice for African Americans in the United States. They are across the board still to this day deeply impoverished and the racism is very real. 

This one statistic: African Americans make up 12 percent of the population. They are 36 percent of the US prison population. And that one statistic alone should tell us that there’s something deeply, deeply wrong; that we still have a deeply racist system. 

The judicial system is racist; the policing system targets African Americans; and they’re not getting justice in the court room. 

A History Of Black Males Murdered With No Justice Before Trayvon Martin

The New York Daily News put out a cover highlighting Trayvon Martin and the Black men who were killed with no justice before him. These are important names to know.

In case you aren't aware, here are the facts behind these cases. The Root also did a great job putting some slides together. http://www.theroot.com/multimedia/beyond-trayvon-black-and-unarmed

Kimani Gray

Sixteen-year-old Kimani was shot four times in the front and side of his body and three times in the back by two New York City police officers as he left a friend's birthday party in Brooklyn on March 9, 2013. The only publicly identified eyewitness is standing by her claim that he was empty-handed when he was gunned down.


Kendrec McDade

Nineteen-year-old college student McDade was shot and killed in March 2012 when officers responded to a report of an armed robbery of a man in Pasadena, Calif. He was later found to be unarmed, with only a cellphone in his pocket. His death has prompted his family to file a lawsuit, in which McDade's parents argue that he was left on the street for a prolonged period of time without receiving first aid. According to court documents, McDade's last words were, "Why did they shoot me?" The officers involved were initially placed on paid administrative leave but have since returned to duty.


Timothy Russell

Russell and his passenger, Malissa Williams, were killed in Cleveland after police officers fired 137 rounds into their car after a chase in December 2012. Officers said they saw a possible weapon, but no weapon or shell casings were found in the fleeing car or along the chase route. 


Ervin Jefferson

The 18-year-old was shot and killed by two security guards -- also African American -- outside his Atlanta home on Saturday, March 24, 2012. His mother says that he was unarmed and trying to protect his sister from a crowd that was threatening her.


Amadou Diallo

In 1999 four officers in street clothes approached Diallo, a West African immigrant with no criminal record, on the stoop of his New York City building, firing 41 shots and striking him 19 times as he tried to escape. They said they thought the 23-year-old had a gun. It was a wallet. The officers were all acquitted of second-degree-murder charges.

Patrick Dorismond

The 26-year-old father of two young girls was shot to death in 2000 during a confrontation with undercover police officers who asked him where they could purchase drugs. An officer claimed that Dorismond -- who was unarmed -- grabbed his gun and caused his own death. But the incident made many wonder whether the recent acquittal of the officers in the Amadou Diallo case sent a signal that the police had a license to kill without consequence.


Ousmane Zongo

In 2003 Officer Bryan A. Conroy confronted and killed Zongo in New York City during a raid on a counterfeit-CD ring with which Zongo had no involvement. Relatives of the 43-year-old man from Burkina Faso settled a lawsuit against the city for $3 million. The judge in the trial of the officer who shot him (and was convicted of criminally negligent homicide but did not serve jail time) said he was "insufficiently trained, insufficiently supervised and insufficiently led."


Timothy Stansbury Jr.

Unarmed and with no criminal record, 19-year-old Stansbury was killed in 2004 in a Brooklyn, N.Y., stairwell. The officer who shot him said he was startled and fired by mistake. Police Commissioner Ray Kelly called his death "a tragic incident that compels us to take an in-depth look at our tactics and training, both for new and veteran officers." A grand jury deemed it an accident.


Orlando Barlow

Barlow was surrendering on his knees in front of four Las Vegas police officers when Officer Brian Hartman shot him in 2003. Hartman was 50 feet away and said he thought the unarmed 28-year-old was reaching for a gun. The deadly shooting was ruled "excusable." But a federal investigation later revealed that Hartman and other officers printed T-shirts labeled "BDRT," which stood for "Baby Daddy Removal Team" and "Big Dogs Run Together," and that they'd used excessive force during two separate investigations.


Aaron Campbell

In 2005 Campbell was shot in the back by Portland, Ore., police Officer Ronald Frashour, who said he thought the unarmed man was reaching toward his waistband for a weapon. Witnesses said the 25-year-old was walking backward toward police with his hands locked behind his head moments before the fatal shot was fired. A grand jury cleared Frashour of criminal wrongdoing but sent a letter to the county district attorney's office condemning police handling of the incident. Campbell's mother received a $1.2 settlement in the family's federal wrongful-death lawsuit against the city of Portland.


Victor Steen

In 2009, 17-year-old Victor, who was riding his bicycle, refused to stop when chased by a police officer in a cruiser in Pensacola, Fla. In response, the officer aimed his Taser out of the driver's window and fired and then ran over the unarmed teen, killing him. The deadly incident was captured on video. A judge ruled that no crime was committed.


Steven Eugene Washington

Washington was shot by gang-enforcement officers Allan Corrales and George Diego in Los Angeles one night in 2010 after he approached them and appeared to remove something from his waistband. The officers said they'd heard a loud sound in the area and the 27-year-old, who was autistic, was looking around suspiciously. No weapon was ever recovered.


Alonzo Ashley

Police say that 29-year-old Ashley refused to stop splashing water from a drinking fountain on his face at the Denver Zoo one hot day in 2011, then made irrational comments and threw a trash can. The responding officers, who didn't dispute that he was unarmed, killed him with a Taser, saying he had "extraordinary strength." No criminal charges were filed against them.


Wendell Allen

Allen was fatally shot in the chest by officers executing a warrant on his house on March 7, 2012, in New Orleans. The 20-year-old was unarmed, and five children were home at the time of his death. Police found 4.5 ounces of marijuana on Allen after they killed him. An attorney for the family says that New Orleans police are investigating whether Officer Joshua Colclough was wrong to pull the trigger.


Ronald Madison and James Brissette

In 2005, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, five officers opened fire on an unarmed family on the east side of the Danziger Bridge, killing 17-year-old James Brissette and wounding four others. Next, officers shot at brothers Lance and Ronald Madison. Ronald, a 40-year-old man with severe mental disabilities, was running away when he was hit, and an officer stomped on and kicked him before he died. In a federal criminal trial, five officers involved in what have become known as the "Danziger Bridge Shootings" were convicted of various civil rights violations, but not murder.


Travares McGill

In 2005 in Sanford, Fla. (the same county in which Travyon Martin was killed), the 16-year-old was killed by two security guards, one of whom testified that Travares was trying to hit him with his car. But evidence showed that the bullet that killed the teen hit him in the middle of the back and that the guard kept firing even after the car was no longer headed toward him.


Ramarley Graham

In 2012 Officer Richard Haste shot and killed 18-year-old Graham in the bathroom of his grandmother’s Bronx, N.Y., home after a chase while he was attempting to flush a bag of marijuana down the toilet. Police did not have a warrant to enter the house, and Graham had no weapon. A grand jury charged the officer with manslaughter, but a judge tossed the indictment in May, ruling that the prosecution inadvertently misled jurors by telling them not to consider whether he was warned that Graham had a gun.


Emmett Till 

We all know the story of the most famous lynching in America. He was walking down the street and got murdered. The pain reverberates today.


Willie Edwards, Jr.

He was a 24-year-old who was lynched in Alabama in 1957. Officials said his body was too decomposed to determine a cause of death. 

James Chaney

He, along with James Goodman and Mickey Schwerner were murdered in Neshoba County, MS. Their bodies weren't found for days and the killers were given light sentences. 


Michael Donald 

He was lynched in Alabama in 1981 in what people call the “last recorded lynching.” But we know better. 


Yusef Hawkins

He was murdered for being in the wrong neighborhood in New York. Rappers spoke on him in the 80s but justice was never served.


James Byrd 

He was murdered by three men in Texas…one of whom was an admitted white supremacist.


Oscar Grant 

Oakland, Calif., transit-police Officer Johannes Mehserle said that he accidentally used his gun instead of his Taser when he shot Grant on a train platform on New Year's Day 2009. The 22-year-old was lying face down with his hands behind his back, being subdued by another police officer, when he was killed. Mehserle was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to only two years for taking Grant's life. He was released after 11 months.


Sean Bell

He was shot and killed right before his wedding by plain clothes officers who thought he was someone else.  In the early-morning hours of what was supposed to be 23-year-old Bell's wedding day, police fired more than 50 bullets at a car carrying him and his friends outside a Queens, N.Y., strip club in 2006. Bell was killed, and two of his friends were wounded. The city of New York agreed to pay more than $7 million to settle a federal lawsuit filed by the family and two friends of Bell. The three detectives who were charged -- one of whom yelled "gun," although Bell was unarmed -- were found not guilty of all charges. Just this March, the NYPD fired four of the officers involved in the shooting for disobeying departmental guidelines on the scene.