MILWAUKEE MAN, 72, CONVICTED 3 DAYS AFTER ZIMMERMAN VERDICT FOR KILLING 13-YEAR-OLD BLACK NEIGHBOR IN COLD BLOOD

MILWAUKEE MAN, 72, CONVICTED OF KILLING 13-YEAR-OLD BLACK NEIGHBOR

By KYLE JONES kjones@ashlanddailypress.net

Posted: Wednesday, July 17, 2013 10:00 pm

Defense will seek to prove mental illness

John Henry Spooner, 72; Patricia Larry and a photo of her 13-year-old son Darius SImmons, shot to death by Spooner May 31, 2012.

John Henry Spooner, 72; Patricia Larry and a photo of her 13-year-old son Darius SImmons, shot to death by Spooner May 31, 2012.

John Henry Spooner, a 76-year-old Milwaukee resident, has been convicted of first-degree intentional homicide. Henry had suspected that a 13-year-old neighbor, Darius Simmons, had broken into his home and stolen weapons in May of 2012.

Spooner’s own security camera footage shows him confronting Simmons while he was retrieving his family’s trashcan. Spooner is shown pointing a gun at Simmons from about six feet away, and then briefly pointing the gun at Simmons’s mother who is standing on her porch off camera. Spooner then points the gun back at 13-year-old Simmons and fires, hitting the boy in the chest.

After Simmons managed to stumble away, Spooner then fired another shot that missed. Simmons then collapsed in the street and died in the arms of his mother, Patricia Larry.

Video below, from Spooner’s own security camera, was shown at trial

Spooner lingered after the shooting, pacing up and down the sidewalk until police arrived. Officer Richard Martinez testified that while he was handcuffing Spooner, the shooter proclaimed, “Yeah, I shot him.”

The trial will now enter into the second phase in which the defense will attempt to prove that Spooner was mentally ill at the time of the shooting.

UPDATE: Wis. man to testify in neighbor’s shooting death

Posted: Thu 3:21 PM, Jul 18, 2013

UPDATED Thursday, July 18, 2013 — 3:20 p.m.

Spooner being led into court.

Spooner being led into court.

MILWAUKEE (AP) — A Milwaukee man convicted of homicide this week will testify in the mental illness phase of his trial, against the advice of his attorney.

Seventy-six-year-old John Henry Spooner declined to testify in the first half of his trial. In that phase a jury convicted him of first-degree intentional homicide.

The judge asked him Thursday whether he wanted to testify in the second phase, which is designed to determine his mental competence at the time of the shooting. He said he wanted to make a statement instead.

The defense requested a break so he could be mentally evaluated. A doctor ruled him competent to proceed, and Spooner said he would testify,

Spooner was convicted Wednesday of fatally shooting of his teenage neighbor after accusing the boy of burglary. The trial is now in a second phase to determine his mental competence.

Copyright 2013: Associated Press

______________________________________________

UPDATED Wednesday, July 17, 2013 — 4:11 p.m.

MILWAUKEE (AP) — A psychiatrist testifying in the trial of a Milwaukee man who fatally shot his teenage neighbor says the man once killed his daughter’s kitten.

kitten-gun_inline

Spooner killed his daughter’s kitten. Many psychiatrists say killing animals is a prelude to killing humans.

Dr. Basil Jackson testified Wednesday in the second phase of a trial for 76-year-old John Henry Spooner. The testimony came hours after a jury found Spooner guilty of fatally shooting his 13-year-old neighbor after accusing the boy of stealing from him.

The second phase is to determine Spooner’s mental competence at the time of the 2012 shooting. [A psychiatrist already found Spooner competent to stand trial.]

Jackson says Spooner once killed a kitten that his daughter brought home because he didn’t want a cat. The psychiatrist, who was hired by the defense, says that sort of anger prompted Spooner to momentarily lose control during the several seconds that he fired two shots at the boy.

Copyright 2013: Associated Press

Don't shoot I want to grow up

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

BOYCOTT FLORIDA! — JUSTICE FOR TRAYVON!

VIDEO OF STEVIE WONDER CALL FOR BOYCOTT OF FLORIDA

By Charles S. Daigle

Published on Jul 14, 2013

While performing in Quebec City on July 14th 2013, Stevie Wonder reacts to the not-guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman trial that followed the shooting of Trayvon Martin. He declares he will not perform in Florida as long as the Stand-your-ground law isn’t revoked there, or anywhere else in the world with such a law. I am the author of this video, if you wish to use it on television, on radio or on your website, I can grant you the right to do so, demanding that credits be given at time of publication. I can be reached at charles.savard.daigle@gmail.com

Florida boycott

Rev. Edward Pinkney of Black Autonomy Community Organizations (BANCO) in Benton Harbor at rally against EM's May 26, 2012.

Rev. Edward Pinkney of Black Autonomy Community Organizations (BANCO) in Benton Harbor at rally against EM’s May 26, 2012.

__________________________________________________________ The Root

Poll: Boycott Florida Businesses and Products?By : Diana Ozemebhoya Eromosele | July 15, 2013 

Profile picture of the "Boycott Florida" Facebook group.

Profile picture of the “Boycott Florida” Facebook group.

If it grows in Florida, was made in Florida or makes money in Florida, then it is eligible to be included in a list of products and businesses that some Trayvon Martin supporters will boycott as a way to protest the not-guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman second-degree-murder trial.

More specifically, creators of the “Boycott Florida” Facebook page want state legislators to repeal the “Stand your ground” law that shielded Zimmerman from prosecution. According to the group’s Facebook description, it hopes that “an economic embargo on Florida’s industry will force corporations to use their power, money and influence to stand with us against Stand Your Ground.”

And “the happiest place on Earth” is no exception. That’s right: Walt Disney World Resort is among those businesses in the bull’s-eye: The franchise’s most notable symbol — Mickey Mouse — is the profile picture for the group’s Facebook page, except that there’s a red slash across Mickey’s face, along with the words “Just Say No.”

orange juiceThe Philly Post is reporting that verdict protesters in Philadelphia vow to boycott Florida oranges and Florida orange juice. Tropicana is undoubtedly not happy about that.

Efforts are being made by Trayvon Martin supporters for an all-out boycott of Florida oranges and products derived from them. On Sunday, at a rally in Philadelphia’s Love Park that drew at least several hundred protesters, the call was clear: Don’t eat Florida oranges, and don’t drink Florida orange juice. Similar messages have been going out around the country via social media and online petitions.

Another Florida product? NAACP Convention held in Orlando, Florida the week after the Zimmerman verdict.

Another Florida product? NAACP Convention held in Orlando, Florida the week after the Zimmerman verdict.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

NAN “JUSTICE FOR TRAYVON” RALLY SAT. JULY 20 12 NOON US FEDERAL BLDG. 211 FORT

Trayvon rally 7 20 13

Please read VOD article below with cautionary note about depending on the feds: http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/07/17/detroit-marches-in-wake-of-zimmerman-verdict.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

DETROIT MARCHES IN WAKE OF ZIMMERMAN VERDICT

March against Zimmerman verdict rounds Woodward Ave. towards Washington Blvd.

March against Zimmerman verdict rounds Woodward Ave. towards Washington Blvd.

 Grandmother of Aiyana Jones, 7, speaks in wake of killer cop hung jury

Participants stress the fight against racism, unlike US AG Holder

Hamlin calls for real battle against “a violent enemy” 

By Diane Bukowski 

July 17, 2013 

One marcher carried a sign fashioned with Skittles and a pop bottle, the items Trayvon was carrying when he was murdered by George Zimmerman.

One marcher carried a sign fashioned with Skittles and a pop bottle, the items Trayvon was carrying when he was murdered by George Zimmerman.

DETROIT – Over 500 Metro Detroiters packed the streets on short notice July 14 to protest the acquittal of Trayvon Martin’s killer George Zimmerman the night before. They marched from Grand Circus Park to the Federal Building on Michigan Avenue, chanting “No Justice, No Peace!” 

The march was organized by a broad spectrum of the city’s social justice organizations. 

Mertilla Jones, grandmother of Aiyana Jones, 7, stood out among the speakers at the initial rally. The trial of Detroit police officer Joseph Weekley, who shot the child to death May 16, 2010 during a military-style police raid on her home, ended in a hung jury June 18.  Jones noted the parallels between the trials of Zimmerman and Weekley, including the apparent fact that the prosecution in both cases did not appear intent on winning.

Mertilla Jones, grandmother of Aiyana Jones, 7, killed by Detroit police in 2010, speaks at rally.

Mertilla Jones, grandmother of Aiyana Jones, 7, killed by Detroit police in 2010, weeps as she speaks at rally.

Weekley is scheduled for a new pre-trial hearing in front of Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway Thurs. July 25 at 9 a.m. according to court records. 

“The verdict they put down last night on Trayvon’s murderer was not right,” Jones told the crowd. “I don’t think that they’re going to convict Weekley either. I’m out here for all the Aiyanas and Trayvons, and Aiyana is here too, because she speaks through her grandmother. To Trayvon’s family, you have my sympathy. We are in this battle for the long run. Nobody can take away my memory of watching my 7-year-old granddaughter get her brains blown out. It was horrible, very, very ugly, and I don’t wish that on anyone. I hope that every time Weekley looks in his daughters’ eyes, he sees Aiyana’s face.” 

Marchers pack streets around Grand Circus Park.

Marchers pack streets around Grand Circus Park.

Wayne County Prosecutor Robert Moran prosecuted Weekley and, in an evident conflict of interest, is also prosecuting Aiyana’s father Charles Jones for first-degree murder in the death of Je’Rean Blake. His chief witness is jail-house snitch Jay Schlenkerman. 

During the Weekley trial, Moran failed to object to numerous improprieties, including the constant unfounded characterization of the Jones home as a crack house and repeated references to Chauncey Owens, the long-time boyfriend of Aiyana’s aunt, also charged in Blake’s death, as a “murderer.” Jones and Owens have yet to be tried. 

Marchers condemned the ongoing presence of virulent racism in the U.S.

Marchers condemned the ongoing presence of virulent racism in the U.S.

The one lengthy objection Moran did make was to the presentation of photos taken from the Facebook page of one of Aiyana’s uncles, which defense attorney Steve Fishman said showed various relatives with guns at undisclosed locations and times.  However, Moran made that objection out of the presence of the jury, and only briefly noted it had been made while the jury was there. 

As in Trayvon’s case, where the judge forbade the use of the term “racial profiling,” Moran never attempted to say racism was involved in the killing of a Black child living in a poor Black neighborhood by a white police officer living in the well-to-do, predominantly white suburb of Grosse Pointe Park. 

Marchers of all races, ages and sexes united for Trayvon and against racim.

Marchers of all races, ages and sexes united for Trayvon and against racim.

In Zimmerman’s trial, many including renowned prisoner/activist Mumia Abu Jamal have said the prosecution handed the trial to the defense. 

“I’ve never seen a defense lawyer utilize, so skillfully, the ju-jitsu-style techniques of witness flipping,” Abu Jamal wrote. “In all honesty, the state’s prosecution witnesses became defense witnesses. And where the defense was adroit, the prosecutor bumbled and fumbled.” 

The prosecution apparently failed to do a forensic voice analysis of the 911 call a neighbor made during Trayvon’s killing. Trayvon’s family testified it was his voice heard in the background shouting in horror for help, while Zimmerman’s mother said it was her son’s voice. 

Many youth attended the march.

Many youth attended the march.

In keeping with the judge’s dictum, the Zimmerman prosecutor did not attempt to make a case that Zimmerman was motivated by racism, although testimony was given that Zimmerman had repeatedly made 911 calls regarding the presence of Black youths in his neighborhood. 

In both trials, the juries were all white except for one Black member. 

The demonstrators in Detroit July 14 vehemently disagreed with the “see no racism” approach, carrying signs that declared “Justice for Trayvon! Say NO to Racism!” 

Cassandra David and son

Cassandra David and son Alex Lamar, 15.

Cassandra David attended the march with her son Alex Lamar, 15. 

“I’m down here for my son,” David said. “He’s 15 years old. It’s a shame that Black kids are being killed like this. They shouldn’t be stereotyped. My son has a 4.0 grade point average, and is an accomplished athlete. He is very respectful, he holds the door for people. We are here to oppose people being profiled by the color of their skin.” 

Lamar said, “This is crazy. This is like the case of Emmett Till, which we’re just learning about in class. That was almost half a century ago, and it’s still going on, as if history is repeating itself.” 

Likewise, Angela Thomas, who attended the march with her sons Demetrius Collins, 12, and Canaan Thomas, 11, said she was there for them. 

Mother Angela Thomas and her sons

Mother Angela Thomas and her sons Demetrius Thomas, 12 and Canaan Thomas, 11 (front)

“I brought my boys out here to back democracy and to show them what’s right,” Thomas commented. 

Chantel Simmons commented on VOD’s previous post on the Zimmerman verdict, “My heart hurts for my people; it will never change[how] I feel. We are losing more of our children every day because people feel they have the right to hurt our kids. This was all about color. No one on earth can stay it was not. Why are we the only ones that have to tell our children about color at a young age like something is wrong with them? I love my color and teach my children to love their color. When will this ever change?” 

Mike Hamlin, a co-founder of Detroit’s renowned League of Revolutionary Black Workers in 1969, stressed that the struggle against economic, political and social racism must progress to the level of a real fight, not just rallies and marches, to succeed. 

LRBW co-founder Mike Hamlin calls for serious fight beyond rallies.

LRBW co-founder Mike Hamlin calls for serious fight beyond rallies.

“This year marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Medgar Evers,” Hamlin said, referring to the civil rights leader who was gunned down in his driveway in  Decatur, Mississippi by Byron De La Beckwith, a member of the White Citizens’ Council, on June 12, 1963. 

Hamlin also brought up the cases of Emmett Till, 15, brutally lynched in 1955, and Cynthia Scott, a Black Detroit woman killed by police July 5, 1964. A demonstration of 5,000 took place outside police headquarters to protest her murder on July 13, 1964 according to the book, “On the Ground: Black Panther Parties in Communities Across America,” edited by Judson Jeffries. 

Emmett Till, 15, in his coffin after torture and slaughter by Southern racists in 1955. His mother asked that the photo be published to show the depths of racism in the U.S.

Emmett Till, 15, in his coffin after torture and slaughter by Southern racists in 1955. His mother asked that the photo be published to show the depths of racism in the U.S.

Hamlin focused on the centuries-long oppression of Black people in the U.S., from slavery to 5,000 recorded lynchings in the 20th century, to prison labor in the south, where Black men were kidnapped and forced to work as slaves long after slavery allegedly ended. 

“People are saying, ‘We just want justice,’ but I ask where the hell have you been for the last 350 years?” Hamlin said. “Malcolm said non-violence only works if you have a moral people. Our enemies are arming themselves; there are stand your ground laws in 34 states. Justice is not going to happen without a fight, because we are not dealing with a non-violent enemy.”

The march concluded with a rally at the Federal Building on Michigan Avenue in downtown Detroit. Many in the march called for federal civil rights charges to be brought against Zimmerman.

US Atty. General Eric Holder at NAACP Convention July 16, 2013.

US Atty. General Eric Holder at NAACP Convention July 16, 2013.

However, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and spokespersons for the Obama administration have stressed the difficulty of bringing charges based on civil rights violations against Zimmerman, noting that it will be difficult to prove “intent.” 

Following are excerpts of Holder’s speech to the NAACP National Convention July 16, 2013, with a link to the full text at the end. The word “racism” never appears in his talk.

“Today I’d like to join President Obama in urging all Americans to recognize that, as he said, we are a nation of laws, and the jury has spoken. . . .

Detroit marchers.

Detroit marchers.

“This afternoon I want to assure you of two things: I am concerned about this case and as we confirmed last spring, the Justice Department has an open investigation into it. Now while that inquiry is ongoing, I can promise that the Department of Justice will consider all available information before determining what action to take. . . .

“We must also seek a dialogue on attitudes about violence and disparities that are too commonly swept under the rug, by honoring the finest traditions established by generations of NAACP leaders and other nonviolent advocates throughout history; and by paying tribute to the young man who lost his life here last year, and so many others whose futures have been cut short in other incidents of gun violence, that pass too often unnoticed, in our streets. And we must do so by engaging with one another in a way that is at once peaceful, inclusive, respectful and strong. 

Family at Detroit rally. What will the future hold for this young child?

Family at Detroit rally. What will the future hold for this young child?

As we move forward together, I want to assure you that the Department of Justice will continue to act in a manner that is consistent with the facts and the law. We will not be afraid. We are committed to doing everything possible to ensure that in every case, in every circumstance and in every community, justice must be done.”

Holder also spent a large part of his talk declaring that progress is being made on assuring the voting rights of Black U.S. residents, despite the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down part of the Voting Rights Act in Shelby County v. Holder.

For full text of Holder’s talk, click on AG Holder on Trayvon Martin at NAACP 7 16 13.)

President Barack Obama and Holder, however, have repeatedly failed to act on instances of blatant racism, rampant police brutality, economic devastation, and the abrogation of Black voting rights here in Detroit and Michigan.

Aiyana Jones, 7, murdered by Detroit police May 16, 2010.

Aiyana Jones, 7, murdered by Detroit police May 16, 2010.

The Justice Department NEVER opened an investigation into the Aiyana Jones murder on May 16, 2010, despite promising it would do so once the state investigation had concluded. That investigation ended in 2011. While killer cop Joseph Weekley remains employed and goes home to his family every night, Aiyana’s father Charles Jones has been locked up since Nov. 2011, while he grieves the loss of his only daughter.  Her male relatives continue to be harassed and arrested by Detroit police, according to Mertilla Jones and others in the family, with nary a word from Holder.

The Justice Department exonerated FBI agents and Dearborn and Detroit police who brutally shot Imam Luqman Abdullah to death 21 times, during a set-up raid at a warehouse in Dearborn Oct. 28, 2009. The Imam’s autopsy showed that he was savagely attacked by police dogs as well. Iman Abdullah was a Black cleric who headed a mosque in one of the poorest neighborhoods of Detroit, which ministered to the needs of the community. He was known to be associated with Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin (formerly H. Rap Brown of the Black Panthers), who was framed up on charges of murdering a Georgia law enforcement official and is now incarcerated for life. Imam Al-Amin also led similar efforts to address the needs of the Black community in Georgia, while working to bring Black youth together to fight for a positive future, as did the Black Panthers.

Imam Luqman Abdullah, murdered by FBI, Detroit and Dearborn police Oct. 28, 2009.

Imam Luqman Abdullah, murdered by FBI, Detroit and Dearborn police Oct. 28, 2009.

Why anyone should ever have expected the USDOJ and Holder to do anything other than exonerate their own people begs reason.

Finally, President Barack Obama and Eric Holder have NEVER responded to pleas from the Black citizens of Michigan, more than 51 percent of whom are effectively without voting rights due to emergency manager laws.

U.S. Rep. John Conyers wrote Holder on Dec. 2, 2011 asking him to open a Justice Department investigation into Public Act 4. A staff member told VOD that the last they heard was Holder’s declaration that the voting rights of Michigan’s Black citizens are a matter for the cities and state to solve. 

In the nascent stages of the emergency  manager takeover of Detroit, the largest Black majority city in the U.S., Pres. Obama never even deigned to visit the city during his last campaign, despite the fact that droves of Detroiters turned out to the polls to vote both for him and for Proposal 1, which overturned PA 4. Now Detroit is subject to PA 436, a reincarnation of PA 4 which threatens the city’s very existence. WHERE ARE PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA, ERIC HOLDER, AND THE U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT?

The belief that the Obama administration will bring justice in the Trayvon Martin case, which many people continue to cling to, only delays the struggle that is needed to win real victory for Trayvon, his family, and the Black residents of this Jim Crow police state and prison nation, the struggle to which Mike Hamlin referred when he spoke at the July 14 rally.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

FREEP PHOTOGRAPHER ARRESTED FOR FILMING POLICE

Analysis by Diane Bukowski  

July 16, 2013

Journalist Mandi Wright

Journalist Mandi Wright

DETROIT – According to the Detroit Free Press, Detroit police arrested their photographer Mandi Wright July 11 as she was filming the seizure of a young Black man by eight officers, seven in plainclothes.

Wright was taken to the Northeast District and held for six and one-half hours in the same interrogation room as the young man. She was told she would be charged with obstruction and resisting a police officer, but, said the Freep, no charges had been filed as of July 15.

Mandi Wright has been a journalist since 2000. She is one of the Freep’s best videographers. Recently, she filmed the complete trial of Detroit police officer Joseph Weekley on manslaughter charges in the killing of seven-year-old Aiyana Jones, for live stream coverage, a job that took great stamina. She also took still photographs, such as the one of Aiyana’s grandmother Mertilla Jones below.

Mertilla Jones, grandmother of Aiyana Jones, 7,. testifies duirng trial of Officer Joseph Weekley in June, 2013. Photo by Mandi Wright.

Mertilla Jones, grandmother of Aiyana Jones, 7,. testifies duirng trial of Officer Joseph Weekley in June, 2013. Photo by Mandi Wright.

Wright also filmed proceedings at Wayne County Metro Airport as Detroit EM Kevyn Orr met with the City of Detroit’s creditors June 14.

Detroit EM Kevyn Orr after airport creditors meeting. Still from footage by Mandi Wright.

Detroit EM Kevyn Orr after airport creditors meeting. Still from footage by Mandi Wright.

Police claim Wright struggled with them as they took her IPhone. Wright was accompanied by long-time Freep reporter Kathleen Gray, who said she simply pulled the IPhone to her chest. The Freep says the man taking the phone did not identify himself as a police officer. When her IPhone was returned, the SIM card was missing. The film of the man’s arrest, (above) however, was preserved on its internal memory.

The Freep reported, “As an officer begins searching the suspect’s pockets, a man wearing a black-collared shirt, green pants and a ball cap comes into view on Wright’s left and and says, ‘Back up. … Back up.’ He points into the camera and says, ‘No. Turn it off.’ 

Wright, taking a step back, says, ‘I’m with the Detroit Free Press.’ 

‘OK,’ the man responds. 

‘I’m a journalist, working journalist,’ Wright says. 

‘OK. I don’t care who you are,’ he says. 

As the camera is jostled, Wright says, ‘Wait. Are you touching me? I’m sorry —‘

Then the recording cuts off.”

Complete Freep story is at http://www.freep.com/article/20130716/NEWS01/307160018/photographer-free-press-mandi-wright-video-arrested.

Reporter. J. R. Valrey of Block Report Radio and the San Francisco Bay View newspaper was arrested while filming the rebellions against the police murder of Oscar Grant in Oakland, CA.

Reporter. J. R. Valrey of Block Report Radio and the San Francisco Bay View newspaper was arrested while filming the rebellions against the police murder of Oscar Grant in Oakland, CA.

Wright’s arrest is one of thousands across the country that have taken place over at least the last decade, as both professional journalists and citizens film police actions. Photojournalist Carlos Miller, who was himself previously arrested and charged,  keeps track of many such arrests on his website at http://photographyisnotacrime.com/.

As conditions for working and poor people drastically worsen due to attacks by the global banks and corporations, repression including tens of thousands of arrests and incarceration, much of it aimed at poor, Black and Latin youth, is increasing.

The authorities do not want the extent of this repression recorded for public consumption.

Although Deputy Chief James Tolbert told the Freep that he will tell officers not to interfere with  photographers, Detroit’s new police chief James Craig has not issued such an order yet, to VOD’s knowledge.

Detroit's new police chief James Craig spent 28 years with the LAPD.

Detroit’s new police chief James Craig spent 28 years with the LAPD.

Craig spent 28 years of his career with the infamous Los Angeles Police Department. Those years included the Rodney King arrest and beating, and the resulting rebellion, as well as the Ramparts scandal in which numerous officers were exposed for shooting, beating and framing up hundreds. Craig was on the internal panel which essentially whitewashed the police department in the Ramparts case. The LAPD has only recently been released from monitoring by the U.S. Justice Department.

In this Aug. 4, 2009 file photo, Detroit Chief of Police Warren Evans, right, and team stop a vehicle in Detroit.  On any given day or night, dozens of Detroit's toughest, most street-savvy officers descend on high-crime areas to round up as many illegal guns, drugs and bad guys as possible in one swoop with tactics as simple as minor traffic stops. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

In this Aug. 4, 2009 file photo, Detroit Chief of Police Warren Evans, right, and team stop a vehicle in Detroit. On any given day or night, dozens of Detroit’s toughest, most street-savvy officers descend on high-crime areas to round up as many illegal guns, drugs and bad guys as possible in one swoop with tactics as simple as minor traffic stops. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

The police claim they had pursued the young man in a chase, and that he possessed a gun. “Stop and frisk” police procedures targeted at Black and poor youth, with no search warrant or reasonable suspicion, have become epidemic on the streets of Detroit. The police did not want evidence of this shown to the public.

As readers may know, this reporter experienced a similar arrest on Nov. 4, 2008, the day the nation’s first Black President, Barack Obama, was elected. While working for the Michigan Citizen, with my press badge displayed as was Wright’s, I was taking pictures of the aftermath of a reckless state trooper chase that took the lives of two Black Detroiters, one of them on his way to the polls. They were the motorcyclist the cops were chasing, James Willingham, and a pedestrian, Jeffrey Frazier who stepped into the street unaware because the troopers did not have their lights and siren on.

Diane Bukowski arrested by state troopers Nov. 4, 2008.

Diane Bukowski arrested by state troopers Nov. 4, 2008.

A state trooper sergeant barked, “Who the fuck do you think you are? You’re under arrest!” Despite the protest of one trooper who told the sergeant I was with the media, the arrest went forward. I was charged at first with five felony counts of assaulting, resisting, obstructing, and otherwise hindering the troopers, and faced ten years in prison.

As in Wright’s case, troopers erased photos from my camera, although they failed to erase a key photo showing my lengthy distance from evidence at the scene.

The charges were clearly retaliation for my coverage of police brutality and Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy’s failure to charge Detroit cops who kill.

James Willingham and Jeffrey Frazier.

James Willingham and Jeffrey Frazier.

After three of the charges were dropped at my preliminary exam, I faced trial in front of Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Michael Hathaway, who granted a prosecution motion that my rights under the First Amendment not be discussed during my trial.

I was convicted by a mostly suburban jury, who listened uncritically as the troopers perjured themselves regarding my behavior, which was completely passive as filmed by a Fox 2 news crew. I served a year’s probation, including $4,000 in fines. The charges were not overturned on appeal, so I remain a two-time felon. The troopers involved in the chase were never charged.

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

I note that it took the Freep five days to publish the story of Wright’s arrest. I faced doubt and substantial lack of support from my own newspaper editor and publisher. The Freep, however, appears to have their top First Amendment attorney Herschel Fink on the case.

I am calling on the Freep, and the people of Detroit, to rally behind Mandi Wright as she undergoes this ordeal. It took courage for her to film this arrest, even though it was on a public street and she had every right in the world both as a journalist and a citizen to film the event.  She should NOT face charges, and the Freep should file suit for damages on her behalf.

As a postscript, even if Wright HAD resisted her clearly illegal arrest, she would have been protected under the recent Michigan Supreme Court Moreno decision, which upheld the common-law right of citizens to resist illegal police conduct and arrests.

Related:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/05/18/michigan-supreme-court-upholds-right-to-resist-police-misconduct/

http://freedianebukowski.org

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

ET TU AMERICA? — TRAYVON MARTIN’S BROTHER ON ZIMMERMAN ACQUITTAL; PROTESTS ERUPT; DETROIT RALLY SUN. JULY 14 6 PM

Tracy Martin, Sybrina Fulton, Jahvaris Fulton

Tracy Martin, Sybrina Fulton, Jahvaris Fulton

TWEETS  FROM TRAYVON MARTIN’S FAMILY

Trayvon Martin

Trayvon Martin

Lord during my darkest hour I lean on you. You are all that I have. At the end of the day, GOD is still in control. Thank you all for your prayers and support. I will love you forever Trayvon!!! In the name of Jesus!!!  — Sybrina Fulton, Trayvon’s mother

Et tu, America? –Jahvaris Fulton, Trayvon’s brother

Thanks to everyone who are with us and who will be with us so we together can make sure that this doesn’t happen again. – Tracy Martin, Trayvon’s brother

 

HURT, SORROW, ANGER–REACTIONS TO THE ZIMMERMAN ACQUITTAL

by Julianne Hing, Color Lines

Saturday, July 13, 2013

George Zimmerman and attorneys after acquittal late July 13, 2013

George Zimmerman and attorneys after acquittal late July 13, 2013

A six-person jury in Sanford, Florida found George Zimmerman, a self-appointed neighborhood watchman, not guilty of killing Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old black teen, on Saturday. The jury, composed of six women, all but one of whom were white, acquitted Zimmerman of second-degree murder as well as a lesser charge of manslaughter.

On February 26 of last year, Zimmerman saw Martin walking home in the rain in his father’s gated community and thinking Martin a dangerous threat, approached him and soon after shot and killed the unarmed black teen. The jury deliberated for 16 hours after a nearly three-week trial during which Zimmerman’s defense argued that he’d been shaken by home break-ins and was attacked by Martin, killing him out of fear for his own life. The prosecution argued that Zimmerman, who ignored a dispatcher warning not to approach Martin, was driven by malice toward Martin. With their verdict, the jury decided that Zimmerman could have been justified in killing Martin that rainy night.

Tracy Martin kisses his son Trayvon in happier times.

Tracy Martin kisses his son Trayvon in happier times.

Courtroom proceedings during the trial studiously sidestepped race—Judge Debra Nelson barred attorneys from using the word “racial profiling” during the trial in a murder case that was driven entirely by racial profiling.

Observers of the trial reacted to the verdict with outrage on social media. Below are a few of the responses from folks in the racial justice world.

Twitter Responds to George Zimmerman Verdict

jay smooth@jsmooth995: The fundamental danger of an acquittal is not more riots, it is moe George ZImmermans.

Marc Lamont Hill@marclamonthill: We live in a country where it is not only illegal, but lethal, to be young and Black and outside. Trayvon is our nation’s metaphor.

Jose Antonio Vargas@joseiswriting: Dear media: we do not live in a “post-racial” America. Proof: Trayvon verdict, among countless other reasons.

Michael Eric Dyson@MichaelEDyson: Zimmerman not-guilty decision one of the most profound miscarriages of justice in our nation’s history. Trayvon Martin grieves in his grave. 

‘The system has failed’: Hundreds of demonstrators voice their disappointment and anger over not guilty verdict in George Zimmerman trial

Protesters in Oakland, CA burn U.S. flag.

Protesters in Oakland, CA burn U.S. flag.

 Demonstrators in cities across the country took to the streets to protest the not guilty verdict in the Trayvon Martin murder trial

After George Zimmerman was acquitted of murder protesters outside of the Florida courthouse chanted their disappointment with the court’s verdict and justice system at large

Hundreds of people took to social media to express their outrage over the verdict and many warned of revenge attacks against Zimmerman

Hundreds marched in cities across the country with the vast majority of protests remaining peaceful

Some violence broke out in Oakland where crowds smashed windows and started small fires.

By Laurie Kamens

www.dailymail.co.uk

Trayvon Martin protest after verdict.

Trayvon Martin protest after verdict.

Angry crowds gathered in major cities across the country late last night following the not guilty verdict in the Trayvon Martin case.

The demonstrators carried signs and gathered en masse from New York to Washington D.C. and Los Angeles. Though the marches were largely non-violent, police assembled close by to monitor activity – fearful strong reactions to the verdict could spill over into rioting.

In Oakland, California, long a hotbed of racial tension, some protestors turned violent – vandalizing police cars, breaking windows and setting fire to garbage cans.

One photo from the protests in the city shows men dousing a flag in lighter fluid and setting it alight.

Protest in Los Angeles, CA.

Protest in Los Angeles, CA.

More demonstrations are planned today under the banner of ‘Justice 4 Trayvon.’ At least three separate protests are scheduled for New York City alone – one in lower Manhattan, one in Harlem an a third in Brooklyn.

Trayvon Martin protest/Reuters

Trayvon Martin protest/Reuters

In Washington D.C., CBS reported the group of protesters grew from three people to about 400.

They marched for an hour and a half, picking up people from bars and clubs along the way. People carried signs and chanted for racial equality.

James Evan Muhammad, front left, of the New Black Panther Party, shouts slogans after the verdict of not guilty was handed down in the trial of George Zimmerman at the Seminole County Courthouse, Saturday, July 13, 2013, in Sanford, Fla. Neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman was cleared of all charges Saturday in the shooting of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed black teenager whose killing unleashed furious debate across the U.S. over racial profiling, self-defense and equal justice. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
James Evan Muhammad, front left, of the New Black Panther Party, shouts slogans after the verdict of not guilty was handed down in the trial of George Zimmerman at the Seminole County Courthouse, Saturday, July 13, 2013, in Sanford, Fla. Neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman was cleared of all charges Saturday in the shooting of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed black teenager whose killing unleashed furious debate across the U.S. over racial profiling, self-defense and equal justice. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

 

‘Stop criminalizing black men,’ one sign read.

‘I will not walk on these streets in fear,’ one protester told the broadcaster. ‘I’m not afraid’.

Another rally is expected tonight at Meridian Hill Park and New York’s Union Square while many are expected to re-converge outside the trial courthouse in Florida at 3pm today.

The Miami Herald reported that many churches in the state were planning to remain open throughout the day to help people deal with news of the verdict.

Two protest areas have been erected to allow protests in the city and police officers will be ordered to remain in uniform today to show their presence.

California protest

California protest

Courthouses and other public buildings were the focus of many of the marches.

More than 40 people gathered at Sacramento City Hall.

The Sacramento Bee reported that protesters chanted: ‘What do we want? Justice. When do you we want it? Now. For who? Trayvon.’

Los Angeles protesters.

Los Angeles protesters.

 Amongst the protesters at the courthouse were members of the New Black Panther Party who wore shirts reading, ‘Freedom or Death.’

The Sun Sentinel reported that the militants spoke of ‘injustice’ in the moments after the ruling.

‘No one, no one could have foreseen that he would walk away,’ said James Evans Muhammad, the party chairperson told the newspaper.

Crowd outside Seminole County Courthouse where verdict was handed down.

Crowd outside Seminole County Courthouse where verdict was handed down.

A crowd of college students were amongst the louder voices present, chanting their dissent well after the verdict was announced.

Violent words were thrown around on social media and vitriolic posters threatened that Zimmerman was a ‘dead man walking.’

Several online commentators sent out George Zimmerman’s address while others post threats using the hashtag ‘If I Ever See Zimmerman’.

LA protest.

LA protest.

However, most heeded the Martin family’s immediate calls for calm and sadness was the pervasive feeling among the thousands reacting to the divisive verdict last night.  

Stevie Johnson, wide receiver for the Buffalo Bills compared the Zimmerman verdict to Michael Vicks dog fighting case.

‘Living in a world where you fight dogs; you could lose everything (Mike Vick).. If you kill a black man you’re not guilty!#INjusticesystem,Johnson wrote.

Miami Heat’s Dwyane Wade lamented the verdict Tweeting,’ How do I explain this to my young boys????’

Musicians also tweeted their frustration with the jury’s verdict. Celebrities including Rihanna, Ice Cube, and Nicki Minaj criticized the court’s verdict.

Rihanna tweeted, ‘This is the saddest news ever!!! #whatsjustice.’

Ice Cube wrote: ‘The Trayvon Martin verdict doesn’t surprise me. Stanford, FL never wanted Zimmerman arrested. Now he’s free to kill another child.’

Trayvon Martin's girlfriend Rachel Jenteal testifies at trial. She was talking to him on his cell phone when Zimmerman shot him to death.

Trayvon Martin’s girlfriend Rachel Jenteal testifies at trial. She was talking to him on his cell phone when Zimmerman shot him to death.

American Idol judge and pop star Nicki Minaj wrote: ‘And our taxes paid for that trial. We just paid to see a murderer walk free after killing an innocent unarmed little boy. #GodBlessAmerica.’

Actors spoke out against the verdict as well, sending their prayers to the Martin family and expressing their disapproval of the court’s verdict.

HBO Girl’s star and writer Lena Dunham sent her condolences to the Martin family tweeting, ‘No. My heart is with Sybrina Fulton, Rachel Jeantel, everyone who loved Trayvon and has been sent the message that his life didn’t matter.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2362829/George-Zimmerman-verdict-Hundreds-voice-disappointment-Trayvon-Martin-case.html#ixzz2Z2OT4KgC
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

TRAYVON MARTIN RALLIES PLANNED TO PROTEST ZIMMERMAN VERDICT

By Amy Pavuk, Orlando Sentinel

10:52 a.m. EDT, July 14, 2013 

Rally outside Seminole County Courthouse.

Rally outside Seminole County Courthouse.

Supporters of Trayvon Martin will host a rally Sunday afternoon outside the Seminole County Courthouse to protest the not guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman trial.

The Coalition of Justice for Trayvon is calling for nationwide protests.

“The protests will look toward a New America, where black and brown youth are protected by the justice system and racial oppression is ended,” the organizers’ news statement said.

Every 28 hours

Protester outside Seminole County courthouse.

The Coalition, comprised of student groups and community members from across Florida, will organize a rally at 3 p.m. outside the courthouse on Bush Boulevard in Sanford.

“The organizers feel that the entire system has failed to bring justice, and that the youth have gained a new resolve to move beyond this case and to end racial oppression for good,” the news statement said.

Meanwhile, another group is calling for a statewide day of action in Florida for Trayvon Martin for later in the week.

Dream Defenders said it will be demonstrating outside the Capitol building and other locations Tuesday to organize “pressure” in response to the Zimmerman verdict and “other civil rights issues in the state of Florida.”

In a statement issued Sunday, Dream Defenders said: “Our thoughts are with Trayvon Martin’s family, who unfortunately will never have their son back. This is a true American tragedy for every child, mother, father, brother and sister in the nation. This is a reminder that our communities still find themselves profiled, targeted and oppressed each day. The battle for true Justice in an unequal society is never simple. Florida has taken another one of ours. We must hold on to our anger in the face of the injustice and let the feelings of love for our community push us forward in fixing our broken society. We will never forget his name.”

Acquittal — July 13, 2013

by Mumia Abu-Jamal

MumiaJuly 8, 2013 – By the time these words reach you, perhaps it will all be over. “It” is the Zimmerman trial in Florida.

I have no idea what the ratings are for CNN, nor CNBC, for that matter, but I’d bet they’re pretty elevated from their usual summer viewership.

In this place of prison population, every man with a mouth wants to discuss the case. In the chow hall. On the walk ways. In the gym. On the yard. Not even the buxom (and buttsome) beauties of “Love and Hip Hop” have garnered that much attention.

Who will be next?

Who will be next?

“Are you watching the trial?” “Who do you think is gonna win?” Questions bounce like basketballs, as all eyes are locked on this, the latest “trial of the century.”

The trial of George Zimmerman for the homicide of unarmed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin has snatched a level of public attention that hasn’t been seen since the mid-‘90s – in other words, the O.J. Simpson murder trial.

I believe, frankly, that Zimmerman will be acquitted. I may be wrong – but I don’t think so.

I’ve never seen a defense lawyer utilize, so skillfully, the ju-jitsu-style techniques of witness flipping. In all honesty, the state’s prosecution witnesses became defense witnesses.

And where the defense was adroit, the prosecutor bumbled and fumbled.

I may be wrong – I hope I’m wrong – but I don’t think I am.

We shall see.

© Copyright 2013 Mumia Abu-Jamal. Read Mumia’s latest book, “The Classroom and the Cell: Conversations on Black Life in America,” co-authored by Columbia University professor Marc Lamont Hill, available from Third World Press, TWPBooks.com. Keep updated at www.freemumia.com. For Mumia’s commentaries, visit www.prisonradio.org. For recent interviews with Mumia, visit www.blockreportradio.com. Encourage the media to publish and broadcast Mumia’s commentaries and interviews. Send our brotha some love and light: Mumia Abu-Jamal, AM 8335, SCI-Mahanoy, 301 Morea Road, Frackville, PA 17932.

Protest of Trayvon Martin's murder in Detroit, March 26, 2012.

Protest of Trayvon Martin’s murder in Detroit, March 26, 2012.

STAND WITH TRAYVON MARTIN RALLY– DETROIT

SUNDAY, JULY 14, 2013 6 PM  GRAND CIRCUS PARK 

Please join local community organizations in peaceful protest in memory of Trayvon Martin in this time of injustice. Let this meeting also serve as a springboard for coalition building in Detroit around systemic inequalities and oppression. Hoodies are welcome!

https://www.facebook.com/#!/events/435535769816213/

Detroit Rise Up

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

HIGHLAND PARK SHOW/SLOWDOWN: EM TRASHED COLLECTION OF BOOKS ON BLACK AND HUMAN HISTORY

(Story will be up shortly. It was a busy weekend with the Trayvon travesty.)

Published on Jul 13, 2013

Highland Park School Leaders Destroy Valuable Books & History! – – A No Struggle, No Development Production!

By Kenny Snodgrass, Activist, Photographer, Videographer, Author of

1) From Victimization To Empowerment…
www.trafford.com/07-0913 – eBook available at www.ebookstore.sony.com
2) The World As I have Seen It! My Greatest Experience {Photo Book}
3) You Tube – I have over 430 Video’s on my YouTube Channel.
Over 208,185 hits, averaging 50,000 hit’s a month @ www.YouTube.com/KennySnod

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

‘GOD DAMN AMERICA FOR HER CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY’ – REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT

The video above was sent to VOD by our regular contributor Jay Janson, “an archival research peoples’ historian activist, musician and writer [who]has lived and worked on all continents; articles and media published in China, Italy, UK, India and the US; now resides in NYC.”

It is accompanied by Janson’s article documenting section by section Rev. Wright’s allegations of U.S. crimes against humanity. His article is lengthy but definitely worth reading.

Rev. Jeremiah Wright

Rev. Jeremiah Wright

ABOUT THE VIDEO: Jeremiah Alvesta Wright, Jr. (born September 22, 1941) is Pastor Emeritus of Trinity United Church of Christ (TUCC), a megachurch in Chicago exceeding 6,000 members. In early 2008, Wright retired after 36 years as the Senior Pastor of his congregation and no longer has daily responsibilities at the church. http://www.weboose.com

Following retirement, Wright’s beliefs and preaching were scrutinized when segments from his sermons were publicized in connection with the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, including his contention that the Attacks of September 11, 2001 were proof that “America’s chickens are coming home to roost” and “…not God Bless America. God damn America.”[4] Obama reacted to the Wright controversy in a speech entitled “A More Perfect Union.”[5]

Wright subsequently defended himself in a speech before the NAACP on April 27, 2008, in which he indicated that he was not “divisive” but “descriptive,” and that the black church experience, like black culture, was “different” but not “deficient.”.

 “GOD DAMN AMERICA FOR HER CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY” – REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT

Jay Janson

Jay Janson

BY JAY JANSON

DESCRIPTION:

Non-white majority Mankind, mostly descendants of the planet‘s earliest humans educated in the arts and sciences, long plundered by savage descendants of ferocious Vikings and other primitive Germanic tribes, will soon force America, and the white Colonial Powers it leads, to pay compensation for wrongful death, injury, stolen property and natural resources as condemned by Jeremiah Wright in his sermon.

TEXT:

-Whereas: Former Chad dictator Hissène Habré is about to be tried for crimes against humanity and atrocities, (Habré’s army was funded, armed and trained by Americans during Ronald Reagan’s presidency. Habré, who seized power in a CIA-backed coup in 1982 and ruled with an iron fist until his own overthrow in 1990, was used to prevent African Union Chairman Gadaffi’s planned union of Libya and Chad). [1]

Ronald Reagan and Guatamalan dictator Rios Montt.

Ronald Reagan and Guatamalan dictator Rios Montt.

-Whereas: Former Guatemalan Dictator Gen. Ríos Montt was convicted a month ago for genocide, (At the height of the Gen. Montt’s massacres, eighteen months of massacres, President Reagan visited him in Guatemala City and hailed him as “a man of great personal integrity and commitment.”) [2]

-Whereas: Jean-Claude Duvalier, the former hated and feared Haitian dictator known as Baby Doc has been arrested pursuant to trial for the deaths, torture and the disappearance of hundreds of people, (President Reagan’s U.S. ambassador to Haiti stated, during Duvalier time in office, “It can honestly be said that the Jean-Claude Duvalier presidency is the longest period of violence-free stability in the nation’s history.”) [3]

The Pinochet File-Whereas: On Dec. 2 1987, under President Reagan, the U.S. delegation to the UN General Assembly voted against a resolution condemning Chile’s violations of human rights under US supported dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet, (Pinochet was eventually indicted by judge Juan Guzmán Tapia, and charged with overseeing the death of thousands in Chile and abroad. By May 2012, sixty-seven of Pinochet’s agents had been convicted.)

-Whereas: During the first years of the Reagan’s administration, CIA was organizing, funding and overseeing the sickening terrorist attacks on rural areas of Nicaragua, planning sabotage of industries and mining Nicaragua’s ports, which brought a US conviction by the International Court of Justice when Nicaragua sued in 1984,

-Whereas: In El Salvador, despite overwhelming evidence that by 1984, 65,000 civilians had been murdered by the National Guard and right-wing paramilitary forces, President Reagan’s national Bipartisan Commission on Central America justified massive military support, (So far, El Salvador’s amnesty laws have protected the military supported by the US.)

Atrocity in El Salvador

Atrocity in El Salvador

-Be it noted that though our mostly non-white six billion strong Majority Mankind, has not yet coalesced into a force to match the US and other Colonial Powers, its Latin America component is on its way to the day when it will prosecute America for the crimes against humanity planned and arranged by America’s genocidal speculative investment banking elite and criminal media for two and half centuries. Latinos had been damning ‘gringos’ for two hundred years before millions of them saw and heard Rev. Jeremiah Wright God-damning America on TV. Every nation in Latin America, if not invaded by troops and bombed, has had its government overthrown covertly by America, leading to massacres and years of violence and keeping the continent in poverty, its labor and resources used to make money for American banks.

In 2008, Rev. Wright detailed these US genocidal crimes around the world in a sermon on Chicago’s South Side. [5] For weeks on network news, only the “God damn America” phrase was excepted as a soundbite and followed by derisive commentary, newsworthy because Wright had long been the pastor of presidential candidate Barack Obama. Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

D-DOT WOODWARD BUS (DIS)SERVICE

 

Woodward bus picks up passengers on Michigan near D-DOT terminal Oct. 25, 2012. Riders have previously complained that the Woodward route has been altered to detour the downtown strip.
Woodward bus picks up passengers on Michigan near D-DOT terminal Oct. 25, 2012. Riders have previously complained that the Woodward route has been altered to detour the downtown strip.

 

 By Bruce Saunders 

July 12, 2013 

For the past few months, DDOT Woodward Ave. service has been deprived of about half the usual number (eleven) of coaches each day, resulting in delays of, sometimes, several hours for passengers. Why has just the Woodward line been cut so severely?

D-DOT driver and mechanic outside funeral for AFSCME Local 312 Pres. Leamon Wilson, who represented mechanics and fought militantly to keep the system out of a regional authority. That regionalization has now been authorized by the Michigan Legislature, with the support of some Detroit Dems. Immediately afterward, federal funds to D-DOT were cut.

D-DOT driver and mechanic outside funeral for AFSCME Local 312 Pres. Leamon Wilson, 55, who represented mechanics and fought militantly to keep the system out of a regional authority. That regionalization has now been authorized by the Michigan Legislature, with the support of some Detroit Dems. Immediately afterward, federal funds to D-DOT were cut.

Can it be that the huge number of complaints to DDOT about this will be cited by advocates of the proposed Woodward shuttle as substantiation of the claim that Woodward needs more commuter service? The non-bus-riding public has not been informed of the down-sizing of the Woodward fleet and would probably accept such claims for the proposed shuttle (which Detroiters have NOT been enthusiastic about) as valid. This ruse may be the only way to popularize the idea of Detroiters bearing the expense of a project which would, otherwise, seem to primarily benefit suburbanites – given its very limited number of Detroit stops. 

This appears to be a calculated ploy – implemented with no regard whatsoever of thehardships which it is inflicting on DDOT Woodward commuters – for the purpose of generating the false appearance of substantial grounds for funding a project which Detroiters have been pretty much in opposition to. The public should be aware of the lengths to which certain parties will go to serve their own ends – at cost to the public.

(VOD will be following up on this matter. D-DOT riders are asked to comment on-line, or email diane_bukowski @hotmail.com to tell their own stories. VOD will also be contacting D-DOT and other sources.)

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

OUTRAGE: HIGHLAND PARK H.S. DUMPS HISTORIC LIBRARY COLLECTION; NEW SHOWDOWN FRI. JULY 12 7:30 A.M.

       NEW SHOWDOWN IN MOTOWN– HIGHLAND PARK STYLE                Friday, July 12, 2013 7:30 AM Highland Park High School 15900 Woodward

https://www.facebook.com/events/214201488729585

Michigan Radio interview with historian Paul Lee: Hundreds of irreplaceable books retrieved from dumpster; thousands more lost

Emergency manager Donald Weatherspoon to blame

July 9, 2013 

Protest at Highland Park High School July 8, 2013.
Protest at Highland Park High School July 8, 2013.

There has been a firestorm of protest in Highland Park after the discovery that a large collection of history books, film and tapes from the city’s high school was tossed in the trash.

Some 50 protestors gathered outside the high school in Highland Park, a member of the school board quit, and several people climbed into dumpsters to retrieve what they could.

The protests focused not only on the discarded books but on the way Highland Park’s emergency manager Donald Weatherspoon is running the district.

One of those people who searched through the dumpsters to retrieve as many books as possible is Paul Lee. He is a Highland Park resident and an historian who helped build the collection of black history books, videos and movies.

Here is a video he shot while looking through the dumpster:

“It favorably compares with a good community college library, and in some respects even a university graduate library in terms of its diversity, range, and depth, and the core of it was Black history and culture,” Lee said of the collection. “It wasn’t just African American, it also covered the entire continent of Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. And there was a substantial collection on indigenous and Native American history and culture.”

Walter Knall and Paul Lee display photo of Kwame Ture, Jaramogi Abebe Abeygan, and Kenneth Cockrel, Sr. at Detroit City Council hearing April 3, 2012. The next day, the Council voted 5-4 for the PA 4 consent agreement.

Walter Knall and Paul Lee display photo of Kwame Ture, Jaramogi Abebe Abeygan, and Kenneth Cockrel, Sr. at Detroit City Council hearing April 3, 2012. The next day, the Council voted 5-4 for the PA 4 consent agreement.

According to Lee, the library originally started in the 1960s as material to teach “black studies,” lessons that would help young African Americans build a sense of self-esteem and value.

“I happened to be the first class that was taught black studies,” he said. “I was also the first class to be able to use that library, and my work as a historian since then is based upon the library that I was first exposed to in 1974.”

The collection was estimated at ten thousand volumes before it was thrown away. Lee and his team were able to recover less than one thousand.

Some of books Lee found in dumpster. Photo: Paul Lee

Some of books Lee found in dumpster. Photo: Paul Lee

“The state imposed emergency manager offered an apology but no explanation,” Lee said. “He only said that contractors were hired to consolidate records. Well, how does consolidation of records equal throwing out a library?”

It is Lee’s feeling that emergency management in Highland Park has turned into a disaster, and that the school district should be returned to the citizens.

-Michelle Nelson, Michigan Radio Newsroom

Listen to the full interview at http://www.michiganradio.org/post/outrage-after-highland-park-high-schools-library-material-gets-dumped-trash

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment