"In the first-ever study of people serving life without parole for nonviolent offenses in the United States, the American Civil Liberties Union found that at least 3,278 prisoners fit this category in federal and state prisons combined.*" Cenk Uygur (http://www.twitter.com/cenkuygur) host of The Young Turks discusses the report.
This blog stays updated with cases of Police Brutality against Black Men and the Black Community. These are just the cases that we are fortunate enough to hear about. But, there are several "unsung victims" whose story has never been told or videotaped. Infamous cases such as Rodney King and Oscar Grant are not isolated incidents. They exist amongst a corrupt system of impunity. Who am I? I am a “Concerned Member of the Black Community.”
Friday, November 15, 2013
Shocking ACLU Report On Life Without Parole Sentences For Nonviolent Crimes
The Joys Of Being Black Caught On Tape: Lantz Day Tased For 42 Seconds By Virginia Police! [Video]
A police department in Virginia is under scrutiny after an officer was filmed shocking a man with a Taser for more than 40 seconds.
The suspect, Lantz Day, 36, was a passenger in a car that struck five parked cars in downtown Fredericksburg on Saturday night, Fredericksburg.com reported.
The driver of the four-door Buick fled the scene, but Day remained in the area until police caught up to him.
Cops said he was belligerent and threatened to attack anyone who called 911.
Video posted to YouTube showed Day lying on the ground next to some officers before jumping up and attempting to flee.
A cop drops him with a Taser and continues shocking him for 42 seconds.
At one point, Day screams out, “Stop it! Stop it!” but the officer doesn’t let up. The stun gun’s persistent clicking is audible in the video.
Day, of Locust Grove, was charged with misdemeanor obstruction of justice and released later on $3,500 bond, Fredericksburg.com reported.
A police spokesman told the news website investigators were looking into whether officer’s use of the Taser was excessive.
Georgia deputy sheriff dressed in blackface as a jail inmate 'picking cotton' for Halloween
A white Georgia police officer who dressed in blackface for Halloween has been suspended after residents in the community became understandably outraged.
via Daily Mail
A Camden County Georgia deputy sheriff has been suspended without pay after photos surfaced of him dressed not only in blackface but as a black prisoner in a striped jail uniform ‘picking cotton’ at a Halloween party.
Sheriff Jim Proctor has suspended Deputy Sheriff Chad Palmer without pay and said while Palmer’s costume was ‘extremely insensitive,’ he doesn’t believe that Palmer is racist.
Proctor says Palmer has been placed on probation for a year and the department’s deputy sheriffs are now required to participate in sensitivity training — which begins next week. But some angry residents in the south Georgia county say that’s not enough.
The Camden County sheriff Jim made the announcement in front of a room packed with community members, local church leaders and representatives from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on Wednesday.
‘Today, we are here because of someone’s inappropriate, insensitive actions. Extremely insensitive, is what it is. I do not believe Chad Palmer is a racist. I have had to take action,’ said Proctor.
‘There's been a lot of thought, a lot of prayer in to this decision,’ Proctor said. ‘I thought about firing him but decided against it.’
Meanwhile, some members of the coastal county’s community say he should have.
‘To me, it was like a slap in the face,’ Pastor Mack Knight said of the pictures. ‘Out of all of the characters that this police officer could have chosen, he chose to go as a slave, an inmate, picking cotton.’
Community member Shelia Blake agreed.
‘That is bad. For this to be a deputy doing something like this,’ she told First Coast News. ‘This isn't causing anything but a war in Camden County. It's not good for Camden County.’
In light of the revelations and their racist implications, some residents have asked for an investigation into the possibility that Palmer’s previous arrests have been racially motivated.
Proctor said he analyzed the deputy’s record while weighing the decision and found no evidence of prejudice.
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