FIGHT TO SAVE OUR LIBRARIES!! PICKET JAN. 3 8 AM LINCOLN AND MONTEITH

ON TUES. JAN. 3, DPL ADMINISTRATION WILL BE MOVING EVERYTHING OUT OF THE FOUR BRANCHES SCHEDULED TO BE CLOSED.

PROTESTS TUES. JAN. 3, 2012  8 A.M.

LINCOLN BRANCH, 1221 E. 7 MILE     4 blocks east of I-75 f reeway)       MONTEITH BRANCH 14100 KERCHEVAL   (3 blocks west of Chalmers)

  • NO MORE SCHOOL CLOSINGS!
  • STOP THE DESTRUCTION OF OUR NEIGHBORHOODS
  • BUILD THE NEW CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT!  

On Thursday, December 22, 2011, the people of Detroit stood up and said that we will not take the destruction of our libraries, our neighborhoods, our city and our future any more.  Eleven people occupied the Lincoln Branch Library and refused to leave until their demand was met to keep all of the libraries open.  The inside occupation was supported by about one hundred people who rallied outside the library to defend the occupation. Friends of the Monteith Library also rallied outside Monteith. 

Protesters outside Monteith Library December 22, 2011

At Lincoln, occupiers began to gather at 10:30 am, right after the library opened. Occupiers read out loud a classic book of the last civil rights movement, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s “Why We Can’t Wait.” As they read Dr. King’s moving description of the struggle for black equality and freedom in Birmingham in 1963, we heard loud honking from E. Seven Mile, as motorists expressed their support for the libraries. As the day progressed, more people called and came by to show support. 

 

At 4:00 pm, the police arrived and closed the library to the public, even though it was scheduled to remain open until 6:00 pm.  In fact, the police and library officials closed every library branch two hours early, and hurried the patrons and staff out of the buildings. At Lincoln, the police even closed the window blinds to prevent supporters and press from seeing the occupiers. 

In spite of police threats to charge every occupier who didn’t leave the library with felony charges for “obstructing,” the occupiers held their ground, chanting, “When the libraries are under attack, what do we do, stand up, fight back!,” and “Public libraries are a must! Detroit won’t go to the back of the bus!” 

The police arrested the occupiers, and took the occupiers out in handcuffs. Defenders outside the library did their best to slow the progress of the police, and once the occupiers were driven away in police cars and a paddy wagon, the defenders regrouped at the jail (near Nevada and Ryan), and picketed the jail, calling for the occupiers’ release. 

Movement attorneys found a sympathetic judge who signed writs of habeas corpus for all, which forced the police to let the occupiers go. 

No charges have been filed yet, but the outcome depends on how hard we fight this week to continue to defend our libraries. 

The December 22 library occupation showed the way to fight and win. If more people adopt this method, especially the young people of Detroit, we will be able to stop library and school closings, home evictions and the destruction of our neighborhoods. 

The Detroit Public Library Commission’s November 16 vote to close four Detroit libraries on December 22–Mark Twain, Monteith and Lincoln on the East Side, and Richard on the West Side, must not stand. 

Our libraries are essential cultural institutions. They are free public spaces outside school and home, where young people can explore the world beyond their daily experience, through books, movies, music and the internet. Libraries provide gathering space and social contact for young and old. Libraries offer everything from latchkey care for working parents, to job search support for unemployed people, to free classes and summer reading programs.

Gail Beasley said the closing hurts area seniors during Dec. 22 protest.

 For the students and neighborhoods that these libraries serve, and for Detroit as a whole, these library closings would be yet another devastating blow that we cannot afford, do not deserve, and should not accept. 

For far too long our youth and our city have been given second-class treatment and conditions. The Democrats and Republicans are united in systematically stripping our city of every essential service, from public schools to public libraries. This is the new Jim Crow, and we are organizing to defeat it. 

 

The current political powers-that-be claim that there is no money for the libraries, but we know that money is always found where there is the political will. If we fight to win, they will find the money.   

 Last year, when the young women of Catherine Ferguson Academy heard that their school was going to be closed, they began to organize to keep it open. The students believed in two things: 1) like Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., they refused to believe that “the bank of justice is bankrupt;” they refused to believe that there wasn’t enough money to keep their school open; and 2) they know that the rich and powerful are not the only force that can change history. 

The Catherine Ferguson students joined BAMN, the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary. As young BAMN leaders, they organized an occupation of their school, they sat down inside and refused to leave, and they organized hundreds of supporters to stand outside and defend them, and they won—they kept their school open. 

 We can follow this example of how to win and save our libraries. The young people who depend on these libraries and who believe in the right to have public libraries can answer the challenge of becoming our generation’s voice of freedom. Together with our families, friends, loved ones, neighbors and supporters there is no reason why we can’t keep our libraries from closing. 

Become part of the fight to end the second-class treatment of Detroit. Our libraries must stay open. We deserve nothing less! 

Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) www.bamn.com

313-434-7075     contact@bamn.com                 Twitter: @followbamn

 

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‘JAIL-HOUSE SNITCH’ JAY SCHLENKERMAN USED AGAINST AIYANA JONES’ DAD

Charles Jones and Aiyana Stanley-Jones before she was killed by police

“Snitch” has lengthy criminal history

Prosecution has produced no other evidence 

Exam adjourned to Jan. 28 after Owens again refuses to testify

By Diane Bukowski 

December 23, 2011

DETROIT – Mertilla Jones, grandmother of Aiyana Stanley-Jones, 7, killed by Detroit police last year in a SWAT-style assault on her home, held Aiyana’s mother Dominika Stanley tightly in her arms as both wept uncontrollably in an elevator at 36th District Court in downtown Detroit Dec. 22. 

They had just left the third session of the preliminary exam for Aiyana’s father Charles Jones, 27, who faces first-degree murder and other charges in the killing of Je’Rean Blake two days before the police raid that killed Aiyana.. They had hoped her father would be able to be home with his six little boys for Christmas. 

Charles Jones and Aiyana's mother Dominika Stanley at her funeral; some of Jones' little sons are at left

“It will be another Christmas without Aiyana, and now it will be a Christmas without my son,” Jones said. “My sister is sick, I am sick, my family is suffering, but Officer Weekley, who killed Aiyana, is home for the holidays with his family on personal bond. It’s a total conflict of interest that Moran, the same prosecutor against my son, is also the prosecutor against Weekley.” 

The prosecution appears to be pulling out all stops to convict Jones, whose family believes it is a veiled attempt to get Weekley exonerated of charges of manslaughter and reckless use of a firearm. 

Weekley shot Aiyana to death on May 16, 2010, in the course of the Special Response Team raid that included tossing a “flash-bang” grenade through the window under which she was sleeping with her grandmother. An insider who saw the initial film taken by A & E’s “First 48” camera crew of the raid told VOD it shows without a doubt that Weekley aimed and shot deliberately into the house from its doorway within seconds after the grenade was thrown. 

Police officer Joseph Weekley, who killed 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones

However, he said, the cameraman took the first film out after he saw police rushing out with Aiyana’s body, and replaced it with a second tape. 

Detroit police said they were looking for Chauncey Owens, the fiancé of Aiyana’s aunt, who lived in the flat upstairs from Mertilla Jones and her family, in a poor neighborhood on Detroit’s east side. They said they had a warrant charging him in the Blake killing. 

There was a heavier than usual police presence in the court due to expectations that 36th District Court Judge E. Lynise Bryant-Weekes might dismiss charges against Aiyana’s father this time.  Owens, who had confessed to shooting Blake, refused for the third time to testify that Jones gave him the gun. His attorney David Cripps, speaking for him, said the immunity agreement offered by the prosecution did not provide immunity against a charge of perjury. 

Chauncey Owens listens to his attorney at earlier exam

Owens pled guilty to second-degree murder with a provision that he would “tell the truth” about the matter in April of this year. This time, Moran told Owens he would face first-degree murder charges if he did not testify. Owens, however, remained calm, collected and silent. 

Cripps and Jones’ attorney Leon Weiss of the law firm of Fieger, Fieger, Kenney, Giroux and Danzig, objected that only the presiding judge in the case, Wayne County Circuit Court Richard Skutt, could vacate the plea agreement. Judge Bryant-Weekes agreed. 

Assistant Prosecutor Robert Moran

Moran has appeared to have no other case against Jones. He has not introduced the gun involved into evidence. He has produced no forensic testimony regarding fingerprints on the gun or other proof it belonged to Jones, or witnesses who said they saw Jones give Owens the gun to shoot Blake. 

But at the eleventh hour, Moran offered testimony from what Jones’ defense attorney Leon Weiss called a “jailhouse snitch,” Jay Schlenkerman, 49. Moran said Schlenkerman gave a statement November 26, 2011 that Owens bragged about the Blake killing to him and said Jones provided the gun, while both were incarcerated in Wayne County Jail. 

Cripps earlier said that Owens was being held “in high-security protection at Wayne County Jail, separate from other inmates,” after Owens’ sentencing in front of Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Richard Skutt was adjourned for the fourth time Dec. 2. 

36th District Court Judge E. Lynise Bryant-Weekes

At Weiss’ request, Bryant-Weekes adjourned the preliminary exam until Thurs. Jan. 26 at 1:30 p.m. so that he could prepare a brief arguing that Schlenkerman’s testimony should be excluded, in response to a brief filed that morning by Moran to allow it. 

Despite Weiss’ passionate plea to allow his client a “reasonable bond” on a tether over the holidays, Bryant-Weekes remanded Jones back to Wayne County Jail.  Weiss said  Jones, who appears to have lost a significant amount of weight, is still grieving for his daughter. 

According to jail, court and Michigan State Police records, Schlenkerman has a lengthy criminal record.  He is Caucasian, has resided in various downriver suburbs, and runs a business called “Comet Floor Coverings,” based both in Rockwood and Brownstown Township according to Wayne County Clerk assumed names records. It has a Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Comet-Floor-Covering/202555589776866?v=info

Jay Schlenkerman; photo from Facebook

Schlenkerman was briefly brought into the courtroom by sheriffs, but through the courtroom door instead of the holding cells in back. A call to Wayne County Jail Dec. 24, however, revealed that he is still incarcerated. As he waited, expecting to testify that day, he appeared friendly and jocular with one police officer accompanying him.

 Schlenkerman was most recently detained May 28, 2011 by Brownstown Township Police, who alleged felony kidnapping in their request for a warrant. 

The charges were reduced in 33rd District Court to aggravated domestic violence, a misdemeanor. Schlenkerman was also charged with violating a personal protection order, and contempt of court.  He pled “no contest,” and was sentenced to six months in jail with 34 days credit for time served, on July 1. That means his release date should have been approximately November 26, the date of his alleged statement. 

Schlenkerman business Comet Floor Covering's address is listed as 32029 Dixie Manor Rd. in Rockwood, MI; however the Zillow website says this is a single family-home.

Schlenkerman also received 18 months probation, during which he is to have his driving privileges revoked for 36 weeks, cannot use alcohol or drugs, or have any contact with the victim. 

In chronological order, Schlenkerman’s  prior criminal record is as follows: 

    • 7/24/99: one count misdemeanor domestic violence, after arrest by the Southgate police; sentenced to 93 days in jail.
    • 5/26/2000: one count misdemeanor operating while intoxicated and one count felony operating while impaired, 3rd offense notice, after arrest by Melvindale police. Ninety days Wayne County Jail, two years probation.
    • 8/29/2000:  misdemeanor driving with license suspended, revoked, denied, arrested by Dearborn Heights police. Ninety days in jail.
    • 3/14/2001:  misdemeanor driving with suspended license, misdemeanor alcohol open container in vehicle, arrested by Taylor Police. Sixty days in jail, 12 months probation.
    • 11/27/2001: misdemeanor driving with suspended license, arrested by Michigan State Police in Lenawee County.  Thirty-five days in jail.
    • 4/4/2002: misdemeanor driving with suspended license, 2nd or subsequent charge, arrested by Monroe County Sheriffs, fines and costs.
    • 10/17/2002: misdemeanor driving with suspended license, 2nd or subsequent charge, arrested by Blissfield police; 93 days in jail, six months probation.
    • 12/13/2003: misdemeanor operating while intoxicated, 3rd offense notice, arrested by Rockwood police; 60 days in jail, 2 years probation.
    • 8/9/2005:  Assaulting, resisting, obstructing police officer under MCL 750,81D1, a two year felony, arrested by Northville Twp. police; 60 days in jail.
    • 9/29/2005: misdemeanor driving with suspended license, 2nd or subsequent offense, arrested by Lenawee County Sheriff. One year in jail.

Mertilla Jones (l) at candlelight vigil for Aiyana, with her father Charles Jones and mother Dominika Stanley at right

    In many of the cases, Schlenkerman had numerous instances of “capias,” or failure to appear for a hearing, including sentencing hearings. There is no record that bench warrants were issued for his arrest in these instances. 

According to Michigan law, a third or subsequent offense of drunk driving carries a term of up to five years in prison, no matter how long ago the previous offense occurred. A second or subsequent offense of operating with a suspended or revoked license carries up to one year in prison. 

Wayne County records show that Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Maggie Drake sentenced Schlenkerman to 2 days to 5 years in state prison for probation violations,in February of 2006, the most severe sentence he received. But State Police records do not show that sentence was carried out and he is not listed on the Michigan Department of Corrections Offender Tracking Information website.

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PROTESTERS OCCUPY PORTS IN OAKLAND AND BEYOND

 

Occupy protesters shut down ports in Oakland

By Judith Scherr

December 13, 2011

OAKLAND, California, Dec 13, 2011 (IPS) – Occupy movements in Oakland, California; Portland, Oregon; and Longview, Washington claimed victory Monday when they prevented workers from loading or unloading ships at the three ports.

“We shut it down, people, we shut it down,” Anthony Leviege, International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) member, told the cheering crowd at Oakland’s Berth 55, just before 10 a.m. local time.

“I’m impressed that so many people got up at 5 o’clock in the morning… We can’t stop here.”

About 800 people showed up for the pre-dawn action in near-freezing weather, chanting, “Whose port? Our port!” and holding placards that called for “Solidarity With Longshoremen Against the One Percent” and “Cerremos Wall Street del Puerto”.

Protesters shut down ports/Photo by Judith Scherr

The protests, stretching from San Diego to Anchorage, Alaska, aimed at the control of the terminals by those whom the Occupy Movement has dubbed the “one percenters”, especially Goldman Sachs, primary investor in terminal operator SSA Marine.

The port action was just the latest in the tactics of the nimble Occupy Movement that, in Oakland, began with tent camps, twice destroyed by police. Last week it changed course and occupied foreclosed homes and on Monday, it rallied supporters to shut down work at the port.

“What is amazing about this movement is that it refuses to be dismantled,” said activist and retired university professor Angela Davis, speaking at an afternoon rally in downtown Oakland before the second wave of picketers left for the port.

“The occupy movement has had its tents destroyed, has had its encampments dismantled,” Davis said, adding that the police and corporations believed the movement would die when the camps were crushed, but “from those ashes, the occupy movement has risen once again, like a phoenix rises.”

To prevent port workers from on and off loading ships, an arbitrator had to certify the picket line was a health and safety issue for the workers.

Scott Olson, wounded during Oakland police attack, returns to the battle

Although the determination was made in the morning for both morning and evening shifts, a crowd estimated in the thousands and led by Scott Olson, the young Iraq War veteran hit in the head with a police projectile in Oakland on Nov. 2, marched back to the port in the late afternoon to renew the picket and celebrate victory.

They stayed the night and ended up blocking the 3 a.m. shift at the port, according to KPFA radio.

Controversial closure

The decision to shut down the port, however, was controversial both inside and outside the Occupy Movement, even though targeting Goldman Sachs and its role at the port was not in dispute among occupiers.

“Goldman executives can take credit for many of the financial crises of the last decade, including insider trading, fraud, credit default swaps, and subprime mortgages,” wrote Michael Siegel, attorney and Occupy Oakland activist.

Still, most unions sat out the port blockade, neither condemning nor supporting it.

The Oakland Education Association did, however, strongly endorse the action, with Betty Olson-Jones, OEA president, directly linking port operations to Oakland school needs.

Truck driver shows solidarity with shutdown

Private maritime businesses in the Port of Oakland “use rent-free public land [that] generates 27 billion dollars annually in trade”, Olson-Jones said. She suggested that taxing them one percent would be enough to pay off Oakland school debt, restore full library services and rehire ever laid off library worker.

While some longshore workers were prominent individually in organising the port shutdown, union leadership opposed it. Much of the controversy centred on a labour dispute between the ILWU and Export Grain Terminal (EGT) in Longview, Washington.

Both the West Coast Occupy movements and the ILWU say that EGT broke a promise to hire ILWU workers, and both want the pledge fulfilled.

Meanwhile, an EGT company spokesman said the company tried to negotiate an agreement with ILWU, but that the union wanted a pension plan that was too expensive, reported the New York Times.

When the Occupy Movement began organising against EGT without the ILWU’s blessing, ILWU President Robert McEllrath reacted, telling the Occupy Movement to stay out of the conflict.

The ILWU’s fight for democracy “is the hard-won right to chart our own course to victory”, he wrote, warning that the union doesn’t want outsiders to adopt the struggle as their own, given the danger that they might do so “in order to advance a broader agenda… destructive to our democratic process and [one that] jeopardises our over two year struggle in Longview”.

Oakland Mayor Jean Quan pleaded with Occupy Oakland not to persist with the shutdown.

“The Port of Oakland is not the home of the one percent,” he wrote. “Rather, it generates over 73,000 jobs in the region and is connected to more than 800,000 jobs across the country. It is one of the best sources of good paying blue-collar jobs left in our city.”

The port commission wrote that the shutdown would “hurt working people and harm our community”. Even some within Occupy Oakland expressed concern that independent truckers would lose a day’s pay. During the morning picket at Berth 55, Alameda County sheriffs tried crossing the picket line twice to take a bus into the port area. Blocked the first time by pickets, sheriffs turned the bus around and returned on foot, using batons to force their way through the picket line and line up between protesters and port property. No one was hurt or arrested.

The second time the sheriffs attempted to drive into the port area, four or five picketers with bicycles stood ground directly before the bus, which soon left the area.

Protests in other cities

From Portland, organiser Tomas Bernal said in a phone interview that the 300-400 protesters there also succeeded in shutting down the port in the morning. “It’s quite historic – with only two and a half weeks to prepare,” he said.

The Portland terminals were also shut down in the evening, Jamie Partridge, another Portland activist, told IPS in an email.

In Longview, where the EGT terminal is located, about 100 protesters arrived at the port’s main entrance. Workers were reportedly sent home due to safety concerns.

But in Vancouver, Long Beach and San Diego, protesters were unable to stop work at the port, while in Seattle police reportedly used flash-bang grenades and pepper-sprayed demonstrators, blocking one of the terminal entrances and arresting 11.

The Seattle Times reported that organisers claimed victory because the workers at two terminals didn’t come to work. The port, however, sent out a press release saying the protest had minimal impact.

(Click on http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/14/us/occupy-oakland-angers-labor-leaders.html to read New York Times story, which despite its headline, is rather congratulatory towards the Occupy protesters.)

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STOP SNYDER’S TAKEOVER OF DETROIT! ALL OUT ON JAN. 2!

 

Leaders, community mobilize for fightback rally Jan. 2, will focus on petition drive to repeal PA 4

More actions at auto show Jan.9; Gov. Snyder’s house MLK Day Jan.16  

By Diane Bukowski 

Councilwoman JoAnn Watson speaks at rally September 10, 2011

DETROIT – The New Year will open with a city-wide rally Monday,  Jan. 2, to save Detroit from the clutches of an emergency manager. Organizers say there is no time to waste if Michigan Governor Rick Snyder’s planned takeover is to be stopped.  

They believe it would further devastate the city with a massive loss of jobs, city services, and any hope for Detroit’s youth.  Under Public Act 4 (PA4), a takeover would mean the complete disenfranchisement of the people of the largest Black-majority city in the world outside of Africa.  

The rally, called by City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson, U.S. Congressmen John Conyers and Hansen Clarke, and community groups including Moratorium Now!, will be held at Tabernacle Baptist Church on Grand River and West Grand Blvd. at 5 p.m.  

“We will not be re-enslaved,” Councilwoman Watson told an organizing meeting in Council chambers Dec. 16. “The state still owes us $220 million, which would immediately resolve our deficit. The state additionally has never sent the $2 billion in federal American Recovery Act funds it received to our cities.” 

Youth rally against Detroit takeover in Lansing Feb. 23, 2011

Councilwoman Watson was the first leader to initiate a fightback against the legislation that would become PA 4, bringing thousands to rally on the Lansing capitol steps in February, and co-coordinating legal actions afterwards.  

Organizers present at the meeting included Isaac Robinson and Marion Brown of Congressman Conyers’ office,  WHPR talk show hosts Richard Hairston and Lee Gaddies, who is also president of the 5,500 member Bagley Community Council, the city’s largest block club,  Sherry Gay-Dagnogo of the National Congress of Black Women, attorneys with the National Lawyers Guild, representatives of Moratorium NOW! and Occupy Detroit, and many rank-and-file community members. 

They resolved that the Jan. 2 rally will focus on the mobilization of thousands of Detroiters to circulate petitions for the referendum to repeal PA 4. Once at least 161,000 valid signatures are collected, the Act will be frozen until Michigan voters have their say at the polls in November, 2012.  

The act incorporates cities already under an emergency manager, and knocked the original legislation, PA 72, off the books. That should mean that managers currently in place in Benton Harbor, Ecorse, Flint, Hamtramck, Highland Park, and the Village of Three Oaks, and the school districts of Detroit and Inkster, would have to step down pending the November, 2012 vote, in addition to the suspension of efforts to take over Detroit.

State Attorney General Bill Schuette, however, has said that he has not decided whether PA 72 would be reinstated if PA 4 if frozen. 

This Jan. 4 photo shows Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder's home near Ann Arbor. Snyder said Wednesday that he's staying in his home so his daughter doesn't have to change schools. Snyder plans to use the official governor’s residence in Lansing for meetings and receptions. (AP Photo/Kathy Barks Hoffman)

Organizers said the Jan. 2 rally will be only a first step. They also proposed actions at the opening of the International Auto Show Jan. 9, and outside Gov. Snyder’s home in Superior Township on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Jan. 16, 2012. Revs. David Bullock of the Rainbow:PUSH coalition and Charles Williams II of the National Action Network have put out the call for that action.  

Several organizers favored targeting international commerce at the Ambassador Bridge, and the Detroit casinos, which oppose an increase in state and city taxes on them from 18 percent to 23 percent, proposed by State Rep. Rashida Tlaib in a House bill this session. There was also a call for an economic boycott of Michigan businesses if Snyder does not back down. 

U.S. Congressman Hansen Clarke and John Conyers, Jr.

Councilwoman  JoAnn Watson announced that U.S. Congressmen Conyers, Clarke, and Gary Peters sent a letter with the signatures of  sixty-six elected local, state and national leaders to Gov. Snyder Dec. 15, asking that he meet with them prior to taking any further action under PA 4. The state is currently conducting an initial 30-day review of Detroit’s finances, the first step in imposition of an EM.

(Click on  Conyers and elected officials letter to Snyder re EM  to read entire letter.)  

The signatories include all of Detroit’s state delegation along with other Democratic legislators, and eight of nine Detroit City Council members. Council member Gary Brown, who has been pressing for a “consent agreement” with the State, did not sign the letter. 

Slavemaster Snyder uses PA 4 lash on Michigan's majority-Black cities

The letter notes that PA 4 destroys both voting and collective bargaining rights in Michigan.  

The leaders add, “We also have a particular concern that the Emergency Manager law may be being disproportionately applied to disenfranchise persons of color. As a matter of fact, it is our understanding if you choose to appoint an Emergency Manager to oversee Detroit, that would mean that approximately 50% of all the African American citizens in the State would be living under the authority of unelected managers.” 

State Sen. Phil Pavlov plots to pass PA 4 legislation at hearing Feb. 8, 2011

The letter continues, “We would also note our serious concern that your Administration may be pursuing additional stop-gap legislation in an effort to thwart any voter led initiative seeking to revoke the underlying Emergency Manager Law. If true, that would mean that not only would voters in covered jurisdictions be unable to elect their own representatives, but voters state-wide would be prevented from using the initiative process to best reflect their own views and judgments.”  

State Sen. Phil Pavlov has introduced Senate Bills 0153 through o158, which would effectively perform the same functions as PA 4. The bills are currently in the Senate Education committee and allegedly not expected to be acted on before the current session expires.  

On Dec. 1, Conyers additionally wrote U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, with a copy to Rep. Lamar Smith, chair of the House Judiciary Committee, asking that the Justice Department review and take action against PA 4. Conyers contended that the act violates the U.S. Constitution’s contracts clause and the Voting Rights Act.

Click on U-S-Representative-John-Conyers-Jr-s-Letter-to-Attorney-General-Regarding-Michigan-Emergency-Manager-December-1-2011[1] to read letter. 

Inquiries by VOD to Gov. Snyder’s press representative Sara Wurfel and to a representative of U.S. Attorney General Holder regarding their responses to the letters had not been answered before press time.  

The organizing committee for the Jan. 2 rally will meet again Friday, Dec. 23 at 4 p.m. in council chambers. For further information, call City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson’s office at 313-224-4535.

Rally in Benton Harbor, first city to be hit by PA 4

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BANKSTERS PLAN TO ROB DETROIT OF $400 M UNDER EM; ALREADY GOT $211.6 M ON WATER BOND SALE

“Swap termination” would amount to one-third of city’s 2012 budget 

Massive lay-offs, severe wage cuts, gutting of city services, drastic increases in water rates, taxes, and sale of assets likely under EM

By Diane Bukowski 

December 19, 2011 

DETROIT – According to reports from Moody’s and Fitch bond ratings services, banks plan to rob Detroit of $400 million, one-third of its 2012 budget, if an emergency manager is installed by Michigan Governor Rick Snyder.

(Center) Stephen Murphy of Standard and Poor's and Joe O'Keefe of Fitch Ratings are flanked by then Detroit CFO Sean Werdlow (l) and Deputy Mayor Anthony Adams in 2005 as they bludgeon City Council into borrowing $1.5 billion in pension obligation certificates, a debt that is repeatedly coming back to haunt Detroit.

“The state appointment of an emergency manager would in turn trigger a termination event [default] under the city’s swap agreements,” Moody’s said Dec. 13. The “swap agreements” relate to $1.5 billion in pension obligation certificates the city borrowed in 2005 during the Kwame Kilpatrick administration, from Zurich-based UBS AG and New York’s  Siebert Brandford Shank & Co. (SBS). 

The city defaulted once before on that debt, in 2009. Then Mayor Ken Cockrel’s administration forestalled a likely bankruptcy by agreeing to have Detroit’s casino taxes go directly to a bank trustee to ensure payment of the debt. A trustee was already overseeing its revenue-sharing taxes.

MGM Grand, one of Detroit's three casinos; a bank trustee rakes in all of Detroit's casino tax revenues to ensure debt pay-off.

Detroit’s Channel 7 interviewed Pat O’Keefe, of O’Keefe and Associates (see video above.) 

“Since they [Detroit] have been struggling for so long,” O’Keefe said, “they have a number of bond agreements that cause acceleration in some of the debts if an emergency financial manager is appointed. As a consequence it is almost a self-fulfilling prophecy that will cause the city of Detroit to continue to hemorrhage even more cash because of the accelerated payments on some of these bonds.” 

Wall Street is not waiting for an emergency manager, however, to shake Detroit down.

On Dec. 15, it raked in $211.6 million on a water bond sale of $484 million, according to the Wall Street Journal (click on Detroit Sells Muni Bonds at a Price WSJ, 12/15/11 and on http://dwsdupdate.blogspot.com/2011/12/emergency-financial-manager-appointment.html   for more complete information). 

U.S. District Court Judge Sean Cox

The ratings agencies said Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) bonds, which previously had up to AAA ratings, are under scrutiny because DWSD belongs to the city. They said buyers were more willing to invest in the bonds after U.S. District Court Judge Sean Cox’s November 11 decision severing much of Detroit’s control over the DWSD, but only at a hefty price. 

What does this mean for the people of Detroit, the largest majority-Black city in the world outside of Africa, and the country’s poorest city? What are the implications for its its surrounding suburbs? 

First of all, the water bond sale portends a hefty increase in water rates for one-third of Michigan’s population, which is served by DWSD, and more shut-offs for those who cannot afford them, this spring. Further lay-offs and service cutbacks will also result.  

James Fausone, Board of Water Commissioners chair

Since the Board of Water Commissioners, newly reconstituted under a consent agreement with Cox in February, must have a supermajority of its seven votes to approve rates and contracts, its three suburban representatives have veto power over both.   

The chair of the BOWC is James Fausone, who is already connected with a waste-to-energy conversion contractor like Synagro. It is likely that other Commissioners will hand out more costly private contracts to their friends, further depleting DWSD funds and putting the burden on its customers. (Click on  http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/11/10/cox-axes-detroiters-control-over-water-department/ for further information.)

Cutting one-third of Detroit’s budget of more than $1.2 billion is virtually unimaginable.

According to the Crain’s article cited earlier, the city administration had great difficulty getting its creditors to agree to take control of its casino tax revenues instead of calling in $4oo million then.

French demonstrators march against pension cutbacks earlier this year; Fitch just downgraded France's bond ratings as well.

Where will they turn now to avoid economic disaster? The city’s pension funds, worth $6 billion, are likely the first target, low-hanging fruit for UBS and SBS. Mayor Bing earlier targeted them for a takeover by the Municipal Employees Retirement System, based in Lansing. 

Faced with similar economic distress, other municipalities and companies have eliminated health benefits for retirees, and in the case of bankruptcy, even halved their pensions, a solution the city of Vallejo, California resorted to. (Click on http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/31/vallejo-bankruptcy_n_816060.html for complete information.) 

If an emergency manager takes over, he would also have the power to sell DWSD, the third largest water and sewerage system in the county,  lock, stock and barrel. (Click on dwsd_fact_sheet[1] for complete description of DWSD assets.)

Water pump station in Pontiac, Michigan

Pontiac’s emergency manager Louis Schimmel just put on the auction block 11 water-pump stations, five fire stations, the public library, the police station, two community centers, two landfills, and two cemeteries. 

Schimmel told Kathleen Gray of the Detroit Free Press that because he is required to hold a public hearing anytime the city has assets to sell, he might as well put everything on the list. No one showed up for the public hearing he held Dec. 20. 

“We just want the option,” the Free Press quoted Schimmel. “We don’t want to come back piece by piece.” 

Fitch Ratings put the city between a rock and a hard place, squarely on the back of its workers and residents, many of whom already live below the poverty level. 

Fitch red flagged the movement to repeal Public Act 4, which has gained steam since Snyder began a state financial review Dec. 6, the first step in the appointment of an EM. As noted in the article above, a Jan. 2 town hall meeting in Detroit has been called by City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson and U.S. Representatives John Conyers and Hansen Clarke, which will focus on ramping up the signature-gathering.

 “If Act 4 is suspended, avenues for addressing the city’s financial difficulties in the near term will narrow,” Fitch said, indicating that it will not let up on its ratings war against Detroit no matter which route is taken.

The need for a massive fightback by working and poor people against the reign of the nation’s banks over basic needs like water, food, housing, utilities and jobs is now more than ever glaringly apparent.

March during Oakland, CA general strike November 17

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MUMIA FACES DEATH THREATS FROM POLICE; RAMONA AFRICA AT RALLY

Dear Friends,

Last night Mumia Abu-Jamal was moved out of Administrative Custody and transferred to Disciplinary Custody at SCI Mahanoy. Here is his new address: 

Mumia Abu-Jamal
AM 8335
SCI Mahanoy
301 Morea Road
Frackville, PA 17932

TAKE A MOMENT TO CALL AND WRITE

Write Mumia and call the prison Warden John Kerestes at 570-773-2158. Tell the him that Mumia must not be kept shackled during visits. He must have contact visits (after 30 yrs of non contact vistis). He must have access to his family, his lawyers, and communication with the outside world. 

On Thursday the 9th, I attended the Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) rally. More accurately, I went to the FOP Klan rally in Glenside PA. It was a shocking display of naked calls for harm to Mumia. Maureen Faulkner asked the 900 strong, 99% white police officer audience members to call the Governor and demand that Mumia be transfered where he could be threatened or killed. The head of FOP said, “The next time I want to hear about him is in his obituary.” 

Bemoaning the fact that Mumia has slipped out of their FOP noose was the usual parade – Hugh Burns, Tigre Hill, Seth Williams, Maureen Faulkner, Joseph McGill, and Michael Smerconish. They sowed hate and delivered vigilante propaganda to a blood thirsty crowd. 

What a dramatic contrast to the defense rally the next night at the Constitution Center with Johanna Fernandez, Cornel West, Amiri Baraka, Ramona Africa, Marc Lamont Hill, and others. One was all about love, the other all about hate. 

While we strive for justice and stand with life-affirming committment to healing, we must also take action in defending all of our brothers and sisters inside prison.

Tell the prison that the world is watching, and that you care about Mumia and the conditions of all prisoners. After Desmond Tutu visited him at SCI Greene they took off the hand and waist shackles. For the last week he has been back in shackles during non contact visits. 

Please visit our new improved website at http://www.prisonradio.org where you can find coverage of Mumia Abu-Jamal on Democracy Now! as well as links to the historic Dec. 9 Constitution Center event. We also are making available copies of Mumia’s brand new books: The Classroom and the Cell and Message to the Movement. You can link to our Facebook, Twitter , Blog and Podcast. And as always, you can find Mumia’s latest commentaries as well as access to the entire Prison Radio Archive.

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NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT: INTERNET WAR ON HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS AT HOME

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

By Deborah Dupre, Human Rights Examiner

December 15, 2011

NDAA 2012 codifies Commander in Chief President Obama, DHS, military police waging war against American internet users, independent reporters, whistleblowers of high-level corruption

The National Defense Authorization Bill 2012 (NDAA FY2012passed in the House yesterday, contains language allowing the Pentagon to wage cyberwar on domestic enemies of the state, a human and civil rights violation of freedom of speech and freedom of the press, as reported by MSNBC Wednesday, potentially impacting both Occupy movement and Tea Party participants plus independent news reporters and whistleblowers exposing government corruption. President Obama will have the bill to sign this week according to Government Executive, as ACLU and David Swanson urgently call Americans to action to thwart the signing of the bill into law.

It is “astonishing and disappointing” that the bill’s language has been approved by Congress and President Obama said Jameel Jaffer of National Security division of ACLU in his interview by Rachel Maddow in her MSNBC show Wedneday, “Suspicion Accomplished.”

The NDAA FY2012 includes the following language in its final “reconciled” bill now in the Senate and then traveling to President Barack Obama to be signed into law, despite earlier assertions he would veto the human rights violating legislation:

“Congress affirms that the Department of Defense has the capability, and upon direction by the President may conduct offensive operations in cyberspace to defend our Nation, Allies and interests, subject to–

(1) the policy principles and legal regimes that the Department follows for kinetic capabilities, including the law of armed conflict; and

(2) the War Powers Resolution (50 U.S.C. 1541 et seq.)”

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CELEBRATING THE LIFE OF ODESSA KINCAID

(To print out a copy of Ms. Kincaid’s obituary, click on Odessa Kincaid_0001.)

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DOUBLE VICTORIES FOR MARYANNE GODBOLDO AND FAMILY

 Judge Bill upholds dismissal of criminal charges; DHS supervision ended

By Diane Bukowski

December 13, 2011

DETROIT – Maryanne Godboldo expressed both joy and pain after Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Gregory Bill upheld the dismissal of multiple felony charges against her Dec. 12.

Maryanne Godboldo speaks at rally last July

“I’d like to thank my attorneys for their excellent representation, and thank Judge Bill,” Godboldo said tearfully. “He gave an excellent lesson to the attorneys from the opposition on the law. I hope they will remember that because they are dealing with people’s lives and their children. I thank him for doing his job and upholding the law.”

 

But Godboldo added, “Every day we come home from court, the many hours we spend in here, I could be home taking care of my daughter and moving forward on her treatment plan.”

Tanks roll down Linwood Mar. 24 to confront mother and child

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy brought multiple counts of assaulting, resisting and obstructing police officers and other charges against Godboldo. Godboldo had defended her child, Ariana Godboldo-Hakim, 13, from seizure by police and Child Protective Services (CPS) worker Mia Wenk, during a twelve-hour stand-off March 24.

CPS wanted to force dangerous drug on child

Wenk was intent on medicating the child with a dangerous psychotropic drug, Risperdal. The North Oakland Child-Adolescent Family Center, which is paid by drug companies to conduct trials, originally put Ariana on the drug, which is not approved by the FDA for use in children.

Penny Godboldo (center) at rally outside 36th District Court after her sister's arraignment in March

Her mother consented in writing only on the condition that she would be allowed to take her off the drug for any reason, which she did after observing harmful side effects.

Godboldo’s sister Penny Godboldo called Judge Bill “a teacher and preacher and a man of justice,” after Wayne County Family Court Judge Lynne Pierce finally ended the Department of Human Services’ supervision of the family during a court hearing that afternoon.

“Justice has been served.,” Ariana’s father Mubarak Hakim said, “Judge Bill was very thorough, very honest and covered all the facts.”

Ariana's father Mubarak Hakim

Godboldo’s attorney Allison Folmar said, “We thank Judge Bill for upholding a parent’s constitutional right to choose how to treat their child.” Her co-counsel Byron Pitts added, “Two judges have now ruled in favor of my client. We ask that Kym Worthy leave this case alone and allow parents to take care of their children without government interference.”

Despite Pitt’s emphatic request, Worthy’s office announced shortly after Judge Bill’s ruling that she would appeal.

Judge Bill upholds Judge Ronald Giles, incorporates his statements

Judge Bill incorporated 36th District Court Judge Ronald Giles’ entire statement dismissing charges against Godboldo after her preliminary exam into his ruling. He said he was also incorporating the entire transcript of the exam, which spanned two full days in July and August earlier this year. 

36th District Court Judge Ronald Giles

Judge Giles said Aug. 29 that his decision was based both on the invalidity of the court order Wenk used to take Ariana, and the prosecution’s failure to show probable cause that Godboldo fired a gun during the twelve-hour stand-off with police, who were armed with assault weapons, tanks and helicopters.

Godboldo’s stand exposed for the first time that the Wayne County Family Court had been seizing children based on court orders rubber-stamped with Chief Judge Leslie Kim Smith’s signature by unauthorized probation officers. No hearings had been held before the Judge, and no review of documents and evidence in the cases had been done before removal of an untold number of children over an undetermined period of time.

The Justice4Maryanne Committee has contended that the court, the state, and non-profit agencies are motivated by the federal payments they receive for each child taken.

“He (Giles) talked about a person’s constitutional rights, about familial integrity,” Bill said. “He said, ‘it is ridiculous to go in and remove somebody’s child based on THIS order, without even exigent circumstances.’ It wasn’t like the child had cancer, there was no immediate threat of death or physical harm.”

Bill further noted that Judge Giles found no evidence on the record “that this defendant discharged that firearm.”

Judge Bill finds Judge Giles thorough and impartial

“My findings parallel those of Judge Giles,” Judge Bill said. “He had the advantage of seeing and hearing the witnesses testify. His decision was amply supported by the nature of the testimony during the exam.”

Bill said Giles allowed the prosecution numerous opportunities to present witnesses and evidence, even over defense objections, and that his handling of the case was extremely thorough and impartial.

Bill said he himself spent the entire weekend, after hearing arguments from both sides Dec. 9, “reading and re-reading” briefs, exam transcripts, and exhibits before making his own decision to uphold Judge Giles’ ruling.

Wayne County Assistant Appeals Prosecutor David McReady had argued that Judge Giles abused his judicial discretion, and that he “suppressed evidence,” referring to Giles statement that everything following the invalid court order was “the fruit of the poisonous tree.”

McReady also argued, among other matters, that Godboldo had “tacitly admitted” firing the gun, but Judge Bill found that no such admissions had taken place.

Mother says child severely harmed by events

Godboldo said her daughter Ariana Godboldo-Hakim, now 14, was severely harmed by the year’s events.

Friends console Maryanne Godboldo during vigil outside Hawthorn Psychiatric Hospital

“My daughter has had a very difficult time,” Godboldo said. “Last night she could not sleep. The damage done to my child because of them taking her has nearly destroyed me.”

After her seizure, Ariana was incarcerated in Hawthorn Children’s Psychiatric Hospital in Northville for six weeks. There, doctors forcibly medicated her with Risperdal, according to Wenk’s wishes and against the will of both her parents. Wenk has only a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and had been on the job for only three years..

 Wenk said in court testimony that the fact that Godboldo took the child off the drug was the cause for her removal. She also testified during the preliminary exam that Ariana needed to be “caged” in the back of a police car, despite the fact she had never seen or interviewed the child.

During Ariana’s stay at the hospital, doctors gave her three other dangerous psychotropic drugs and 14 immunizations, according to Godboldo and attorney Folmar. Hospital personnel took her prosthetic leg, which she had worn since infancy, and forced her into a wheelchair. Prior to her removal, the child had been active in dance and horse-back riding.

Godboldo also filed a police report alleging her child was sexually abused at Hawthorn, after she was taken from there to Children’s Hospital (CHM) for treatment of a sexually-transmitted disease. During a physical exam immediately after her removal from her home, CHM found no such disease. No action has been taken on that report. 

Dr. Margaret Betts prescribed holistic regime for Ariana Godboldo-Hakim

During the Family Court hearing before Judge Pierce, Ariana’s court-appointed guardian ad litem Daniel McGuire said, “I visited the child Saturday morning. She was the most animated and attentive I had ever seen her. She made eye contact and was not shy at all. There has been great improvement. The holistic regimen [prescribed by Dr. Margaret Betts] seems to be improving her temperament and her motor skills. I don’t think she needs me or the court in her life anymore.”

 Maryanne Godboldo said Ariana is once again dancing, studying music, and playing her drums, which her father, who is a musician, taught her to play. “She is coming along,” Godboldo said. “She is doing better because she is at home where she belongs.”

Worthy refuses comment on charging Wenk, CPS, DHS, Family Court

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy

Prosecutor Worthy’s Chief of Communications Maria Miller said, “We are appealing on the same grounds as in the Circuit Court.We believe that the lower court judge abused his discretion in dismissing the charges at the preliminary examination.”

VOD inquired, “Does Prosecutor Worthy plan to do any or all of the following:

• File criminal charges against CPS worker Mia Wenk for making a false report to the police (she admitted during the preliminary exam that she told police she had a “warrant,” not a court order, which escalated the police response); for obstruction of justice (having the police raid the home the day after the order was obtained when in fact she had thirty days to have hearings held and give due process to the parents, etc.) or any other charges? Mia Wenk used the same procedures in the case of Nathaniel Brent, who is currently suing her and other officials in federal court, and likely an unknown number of other families.

• Will the Prosecutor at least initiate an investigation of Ms. Wenk’s actions and those of other DHS officials, as well as Wayne County Family Court officials, regarding violations of the constitutional rights of families in Wayne County through assembly line seizures of their children?

• File charges against officials in the Wayne County Court family division and the Department of Human Services for taking children based on orders that had never been seen or personally signed by the Family Division Chief Judge, and on which no hearings had been held by ANY Family Court Judge or Magistrate prior to the seizure of thren? The State Court Administrator’s Office has said that hearings must be held first to provide due process, and that orders such as that used in the Godboldo case, rubber stamped by probation officers, are in fact invalid.”

Miller responded to those questions as follows: “We have no comment on these questions because the Attorney General handles the abuse and neglect issues. These questions relate to that part of the case.”

(VOD: Perhaps the fundraiser below, still needed since Worthy is pursuing appeal, can turn into a celebration for the Godboldo-Hakim family. All they wanted for Christmas was justice!)

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ITALY’S UNIONS ON STRIKE AGAINST AUSTERITY MEASURES

 

Italy’s workers on rotating strikes across the country the week of Dec. 12, 2011

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Italy’s week started with demonstrations and strikes that are set to be repeated over the next five days.

On Monday port, highway and haulage workers angry at Prime Minister Mario Monti’s 33-billion-euro austerity package walked out. On Tuesday most newspapers will not be published while public transport strikes will be staged on Thursday and Friday.

For the first time all four unions are united and say they want a fairer distribution of the cuts.

“This demonstration in front of the parliament building here in Rome is a protest against the budget cuts, which were decided without even the possibility of negotiation between unions and government. These cuts hit only pensioners and employees. And it will hit them like never before,” said Raffaele Bonanni, leader of the CISL Union.

Protests and strikes were staged in other cities. The prime minister met with union leaders on Sunday night but failed to convince them that his plan could work against what he calls,“Italy’s extreme financial situation”.

According to a statement the government is open to amendments as long as they can be fully funded.

Copyright © 2011 euronews

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