Both Maduro, Roussef champions of poor, workers, opponents of U.S. policies
U.S., global banks, oil corporations, others behind attacks
Editor: While the people of the U.S. are blindly involved in national elections, NO candidate offers a platform that would withdraw U.S. troops and U.S. economic blockades and pressure from virtually every country across the globe.Now Venezuela, Brazil, and the rest of Latin America are under the gun.
May 14, 2016
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro declared a 60-day state of emergency on Friday due to what he called plots from within the OPEC country and the United States to topple his leftist government.
Maduro did not provide details of the measure. A previous state of emergency, implemented in states near the Colombian border last year, suspended constitutional guarantees in those areas, except for guarantees relating to human rights.
Protest against U.S. intervention in Venezuela Sat. May 14, 2016. Sign calls U.S. Pres. Obama an assassin, fascist, and imperialist.
Earlier on Friday, U.S. intelligence officials told reporters they were increasingly worried about the potential for an economic and political meltdown in Venezuela and predicted Maduro was not likely to complete his term. [VOD: Telesur reported, “U.S. President Barack Obama issued an Executive Order March 9, 2015 declaring a ‘national emergency with respect to the unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States posed by the situation in Venezuela.” See story at http://www.telesurtv.net/english/telesuragenda/US-Threats-on-Venezuela-20150311-0012.html.]
Venezuela’s opposition is seeking to recall the unpopular leader, 53, amid a worsening crisis that includes food and medicine shortages, frequent power cuts, sporadic looting and galloping inflation.
Protester’s sign says: I want Maduro.
But the former union leader and bus driver has vowed to stick out his term, and accuses the United States of fomenting an undercover coup against him. He pointed to this week’s impeachment of fellow leftist Dilma Rousseff in Brazil as a sign that he is next.
“Washington is activating measures at the request of Venezuela’s fascist right, who are emboldened by the coup in Brazil,” Maduro said during a Friday night broadcast on state television.
Washington has had an acrimonious relationship with Caracas for years, especially following U.S. support for a short-lived 2002 coup against late leader Hugo Chavez.
Pres. Maduro during celebration of Pres. Hugo Chavez’s revolutionary history.
Venezuela’s ruling Socialist Party has long been a strong ally of Rousseff’s Workers Party, however, and her departure adds to Maduro’s isolation in Latin America.
Flanked by his ministers and a statue of Chavez, Maduro signed a state of emergency and extend a state of economic emergency to protect the country from foreign and domestic “threats,” without providing details.
Venezuela’s opposition, which scoffs at Maduro’s accusations of coups-mongering, quickly condemned the measure.
“Today Maduro has again violated the constitution,” said opposition lawmaker Tomas Guanipa. “Why? Because he is scared of being recalled.”
(Reporting by Deisy Buitrago and Alexandra Ulmer; Writing by Alexandra Ulmer)
BRAZIL IMPEACHMENT: PRES. DILMA ROUSSEF CONDEMNS ‘COUP,’ AND ‘FARCE’
Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff has condemned the move to impeach her as a “coup” and a “farce”, denying she has committed any crimes.
She was addressing the nation on TV for the first time since senators voted overnight to suspend her for budgetary violations and put her on trial.
Ms Rousseff vowed to fight the “injustice” by all legal means.
Vice-President Michel Temer will assume the presidency while Ms Rousseff’s trial takes place.
Pres. Dilma Roussef celebrates opening of new workers housing.
The trial may last up to 180 days, which would mean Ms Rousseff would be suspended during the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, which start on 5 August.
Senators had voted to suspend her by 55 votes to 22 after an all-night session that lasted more than 20 hours.
Ms. Rousseff is accused of illegally manipulating finances to hide a growing public deficit ahead of her re-election in 2014.
‘Fraudulent’
In her TV speech, flanked by ministers at the presidential palace, Mr Rousseff said that she may have made mistakes but had committed no crimes, adding: “I did not violate budgetary laws.”
Protest supports Pres. Roussef as she leaves on suspension.
She said: “What is at stake is respect for the ballot box, the sovereign will of the Brazilian people and the constitution.”
Branding the process “fraudulent” and saying her government was “undergoing sabotage”, she vowed to fight the charges against her and said she was confident she would be found innocent.
Michel Temer became interim president as soon as Ms Rousseff was suspended.
The 75-year-old law professor of Lebanese origin was Ms. Rousseff’s vice-president and was a key figure in the recent upheaval.
Michel Temer’s new cabinet is composed of all-white males for the first time in decades.
Up until now, he’s been the kingmaker, but never the king, having helped form coalitions with every president in the past two decades
He is president of Brazil’s largest party, the PMDB, which abandoned the coalition in March.
In recent months, his role has become even more influential; in a WhatsApp recording leaked in April, he outlined how Brazil needed a “government to save the country”.
Ms Rousseff, 68, accused the opposition of leading the impeachment because they had vehemently opposed all the advances she and her predecessor, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, had made for the Brazilian poor and lower middle classes.
After her speech she left the presidential palace and shook hands with supporters lining the pathway.
In another speech outside she told supporters she could feel their “love and energy” on what she called a “tragic” day for the country.
Dilma Roussef, age 22, during military hearing. She was tortured by the government then, but said her ouster this time is worse than that torture.
Michel Temer is set to be sworn in later on Thursday and he is expected to give a speech and present some of his cabinet.
During the overnight debate, Senator Jose Serra, tipped to become the new foreign minister, said the process was “a bitter though necessary medicine”.
“Having the Rousseff government continue would be a bigger tragedy,” he said.
Brazil is suffering from its worst recession in 10 years, unemployment reached 9% in 2015 and inflation is at a 12-year high.
The 180 days allocated for the trial to take place expire on 8 November.
Stories related to U.S., neo-imperialist attacks on Venezuela, Brazil, Latin and Central American countries:
Teachers shut DPS May 2, 3 not only over pay threats, but dismantling of nation’s largest majority-Black school district
Race a central issue—DFT President Ivy Bailey
“Rise up to defend jobs, schools, children, strike to win”—Former DFT pres. Steve Conn
Senate, House bills all destroy Detroit Public Schools, pay off banks
By Diane Bukowski
May 6, 2016
DPS students stress Snyder plan to dismantle DPS is focus of sick-out May 2. /Mlive
DETROIT – Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder’s racist plan to obliterate the Detroit Public Schools (DPS) district by July 1, forcing city residents to pay off $3.9 billion in operating and bonded debt incurred under state control, is the common denominator of legislation just passed in both chambers of the Michigan Legislature.
It is also a chief factor underlying the massive teacher “sick-outs” of May 2 and 3, which shut down 94 of 97 schools left in a district which once had 261 schools, and educated 92 percent of the city’s children, not the 42 percent left today. DPS has the second highest number of charter schools in the U.S., after New Orleans, which have drained billions from its per-pupil funding, mostly for profit.
In an “Open Letter to the Detroit Community” May 4, Judge Rhodes said regarding the sick-outs, “[this] unfortunate and unnecessary strike … threatens the community’s ability to achieve our shared goal of a new, locally governed DPS that can give our students the best possible education.”
DPS EM Steven Rhodes roller skates with grandkids in seaside resort hometown of Cape May, N.J., 90 percent white with median family income of over $50,000
He added that the actions kept 45,000 children out of school, depriving them of free breakfasts and lunches, and inconveniencing their parents.
He did not address the issue of the genocide committed on the total of 167,000 students who attended DPS in 1994.
That number has dwindled as over 164 DPS schools closed under orders from a succession of state-appointed CEO’s and Emergency Managers under Governors Engler, Granholm and Snyder, and hundreds of thousands of Detroit homes housing these children were foreclosed through illegal mortgage and taxation scams.
“This is not just about our teachers, it is about the destruction of DPS,” Detroit Federation of Teachers (DFT) President Ivy Bailey told VOD May 4. “It shouldn’t just be on back of the educators who work here to take on this fight. The entire city needs to get involved.
Detroit Federation of Teachers President Ivy Bailey addresses teachers outside the school district’s headquarters, Tuesday, May 3, 2016, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
“The plan is to split our school system. This is an atrocity. Detroiters’ tax money will be going to pay off the debt for schools we don’t even have any more. We want a fully elected and empowered school board, and to keep our system the way it is. The bigger question is why is this happening to Detroit? They don’t want to call it an issue when it comes to race—why not? What’s the problem? We were in better shape under our elected school board than we are now are under an EM.”
DPS’ students are approximately 88 percent Black, while the city has a child poverty rate of 59 percent, the highest in the U.S. Detroit also has the second highest number of charter schools in the country after New Orleans, which have drained billions from the DPS budget. New Orleans itself is 58.8 percent African-American, down from 66.7 percent in 2000.
The white power structure used Hurricane Katrina to shut down the city’s public schools, housing and health systems, and relocate thousands of Blacks out of the city after Katrina.
Bailey referred to packages of bills in both the State Senate and State House that would terminate the Detroit school district effective July 1. A skeleton structure would remain solely to pay off the district’s debt with millages and property taxes. The amount will increase under provisions providing for “re-financing” of that debt, meaning stretching it out over a longer term, with higher interest rates. It will mean property tax increases and more millage votes.
Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan
A “community school district” including the population of charter schools in Detroit, answering to the State Financial Review Board created under the Detroit bankruptcy plan, would replace DPS. Both its Superintendent and Chief Financial Officer would be appointed by the state. Elections for a new school board would be held this August, but under the House version of the plan, it would not take power until Jan. 2018, after a board appointed by Snyder and Mayor Mike Duggan assumes duties for the community district meanwhile.
Despite the uproar about the massive debt DPS has incurred under state control, its ability to take on more debt would be expanded under both sets of bills.
During previous years, DPS debt, payment of which is controlled by the New York Mellon Bank through a state-appointed trustee, has taken the largest portion of per-pupil aid provided by the State of Michigan through mandated debt set-asides. (Chart below provides an example.) Add to that the fact that per-pupil aid is set by the amount of property taxes each district pays, with the wealthier districts getting a proportionately larger share of the pie.
“The state should have the responsibility for all the debt incurred under emergency managers and state-appointed CEO’s since the 1999 takeover,” Bailey said. “We also want a forensic audit, but Rhodes said the district doesn’t have money to do that. The state should want to find out where all the money went. All teachers want to do is work for a school system they can trust, that respects teachers, and puts its students first.”
Demands raised in “STAY OUT TO WIN” flier by EON/BAMN Caucus.
What the Detroit Federation of Teachers (DFT) calls a “lock-out,” precipitated by Emergency Manager Steven Rhodes’ order to stop teachers’ pay June 30, ended May 4.
Rhodes verbally withdrew the attack on teachers who prorate their paychecks through the summer months, and followed up with a vague written statement saying teachers are “legally entitled to be paid in full” for their work, and that DPS “will honor that legal obligation.”
Steven Conn, a long-time DPS math teacher at Cass Technical High School, was recently ousted as DFT President but is appealing that action to the International Union. He and a “Strike to Win” faction among the teachers are calling for the strike to continue until Snyder’s plan is defeated.
After Katrina, state officials in Louisiana created a highly unsuccessful all charter-school district for New Orleans, known as the “Recovery School District.” Conn and others fear that is the veiled intention of the Snyder plan for DPS.
“Certainly the teachers are very angry,” he said. “Their expectations during the sick-out went well beyond just getting paid for what they had to get paid for anyway. We have to translate it into defeating the Snyder plan.”
Former DPS Pres. Steve Conn, 2nd from left, and other board members sworn in Jan. 20, 2015.
He said he believes that the DFT leadership and Randy Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, are supporting the Senate version of Snyder’s plan, which does not include the wholesale anti-union provisions of the House version, passed yesterday, although it still includes the dissolution of DPS and pay-outs to the banks.
“They want to get their union dues, and are criminals for selling members down the drain,” Conn said. “Why would they trust Rhodes’ statement—he is a professional liar, and an agent of a governor who is a professional liar. The more we pull punches, the harder it gets to fight. Teachers are not bluffing. I think they feel they can organize themselves. The sick-outs [earlier sick-outs took place in January to protest school conditions] are an expression of power that’s still there.”
A flier distributed by the Equal Opportunity Now/By Any Means Necessary Coalition concludes, “Today, in the wake of the Flint and Detroit water crises, Gov. Snyder is the most unpopular and weakest government in modern Michigan history. His own party has deserted him. It would be ridiculous for the DFT to prop up his political corpse and help him get his essentially dead plan through the State Legislature. The power of, by and for the Black, Latino and working people of Detroit holds the only possibility of solving our fundamental problems. (See full flier at http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/BAMN-flier-Stay-Out-May3-v2.pdf.
City of Detroit Wastewater Treatment Plant workers on strike Sept. 30, 2012. Hundreds of DWSD workers have been laid off since the bankruptcy. Staff at the WWTP is down to a skeleton crew, endangering the health of all DWSD water users.
The EON/BAMN flier is reminiscent of the last ditch efforts of Local 207 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) to save the City of Detroit through a 2012 wildcat strike at the Wastewater Treatment Plant which they hoped would generate a city-wide walk-out.
Their efforts were sabotaged by AFSCME Council 25’s top leadership including Pres. Al Garrett, his assistant Ed McNeil, and Staff Representative Catherine Phillips.
These “leaders” did not even bother to attend the funerals of militant long-time local leaders who died too early under the stress of battle. They included Local 207 President John Riehl, who died at the age of 62 in 2015, and Bus Mechanics Local 312 President Leamon Wilson, who died at the age of 55 the year before.
The lessons of the Detroit bankruptcy have not stopped the Snyder/Rhodes “Hurricane Katrina” roaring towards DPS, after destroying the City of Detroit under Rhodes’ Chapter 9 bankruptcy plan.
City retirees protest outside Judge Rhodes bankruptcy hearing Aug. 19, 2013.
Under that plan, city workers lost not only large parts of their pensions, pay and benefits, but residents lost nearly all the city’s assets, including the $6 billion Detroit Water and Sewerage Department.
The city’s creditors walked off with 95.9 percent of their original claims, including lucrative assets like the Joe Louis Arena, the Windsor-Detroit Tunnel, and other riverfront property, while retirees got an average of 13.5 percent of their claims. (See chart below.) The city’s after bankruptcy debt climbed 300 percent.
The Senate and House are haggling over which set of bills is more pro-charter. The House versions, passed May 4, have numerous anti-union provisions in them, including the use of non-certified teachers, the elimination of seniority considerations, non-recognition of the unions after the takeover, severe penalties for teachers who conduct “sick-outs,” and a prohibition against a federal audit of the DPS budget. The latest version of House Bill 5384 adds a $250,000 appropriations clause to make it referendum-proof.
Kidnapped African woman learns to read after abolition of slavery.
The Senate versions of the bills include a seven-member advisory “Detroit Education Committee” appointed by Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, which will have the power to site both public and charter schools. The so-called “Coalition for the Future of Detroit’s Schoolchildren,” led by the Rev. Wendell Anthony, who supported the Detroit bankruptcy plan as a trustee of the Detroit General Retirees System, and Walbridge Aldinger CEO John Rakolta, a firm supporter of Gov. Snyder, has called for the passage of the Senate bills.
The final legislative battle is boiling down to a battle between Republicans vs. Democrats, with neither offering a genuine solution to revive and restore the Detroit Public Schools district and the future of Detroit’s children. DPS was founded in 1842, around the time that kidnapped Africans across the country fought slavery during the Civil War and built public schools during the Reconstruction Era after the War. Their struggle established a large part of the groundwork for the public school system nationally.
After all, kidnapped Africans were lynched for learning to read and write, for educating themselves. Many Detroiters feel the destruction of the Detroit Public Schools District is nothing but another mass lynching, genocide carried out against Detroit’s Black population.
Editorial/interview by VOD Staff Writer Cornell Squires, co-authored by investigative journalist David Schied
May 1, 2016
As I write what is found below, I am reminded of the interview I had several weeks ago in the living room of Jann DeBacker’s daughter, Shannon DeBacker. It was a shared investigation with me working in the capacity and purpose of my not-for-profit entity of “We the People for the People,” and David Schied, a fully-credentialed Michigan schoolteacher, an investigative journalist and co-founder with me of RICO Busters.
In her living room, Shannon DeBacker presented us with compelling testimony and a plethora of evidence, some so graphically sickening that we thought it better to protect the privacy of her disabled child, about whom this story concerns. It is with that past personal knowledge and first-hand access to the evidence of the reported prolonged sexual abuse of this disabled child that I provide an update of this situation by publishing the results of my latest interview this past Friday with Shannon DeBacker’s mother, Jannice DeBacker.
I thus write this story with feverish urgency and the need to rally the American public in defense of this defenseless and precious human being, by expounding upon the outcries of this child’s mother and grandmother.
Just this past Friday, April 29, 2016, Wayne County’s Third Circuit Court held a “Show Cause” hearing in the case of “Shannon Debacker vs Michael Lewis,” Case No. 09-154554-DS.
Jann DeBacker, the mother of Shannon DeBacker, was the only person attending that hearing to support her daughter. She watched with horror in the courtroom as her daughter Shannon was falsely charged with “contempt of court” by Judge Martha Snow. Her daughter was then handcuffed, escorted out of the court, locked up, and falsely imprisoned for the first time in her life….all because Shannon had declined the judge’s appointment of an attorney; and because Shannon had insisted instead on presenting herself to the court as a natural and sane person!
Jann DeBacker said, “What is insane in this situation is the way the ‘judge’ herself is acting in the context of the serious nature of this case.”
She said her daughter has been forced to endure a long history of past attorneys which she claims have sold her out and cut deals with this and other various judges off the record and inside of the judges’ chambers. Thus, Shannon DeBacker no longer trusts attorneys.
“I honestly believe that most attorneys – at least most operating here in Michigan courts – have ‘sold their souls to the devil,’” she added.
Before being sentenced to jail by this so-called “judge” Snow, Jann’s daughter Shannon had tried reasoning with the court. She had stated numerous times before that she has been double-crossed repeatedly already by attorneys, and that she doesn’t trust any attorney with this particular case because it is so serious.
“This judge” she continued, “completely ignores the fact that my granddaughter’s life – Janna Lewis’s life – has been and remains perpetually in severe imminent danger!”
Jann DeBacker is the grandmother of Janna Lewis. She says she supports her daughter Shannon DeBacker because she knows firsthand that this court case is really about the settlement of an accompanying case.
That is a multi-million dollar medical malpractice lawsuit against the medical community for her granddaughter being born clinically dead and only being revived to the point of having to live with worst type of Cerebral Palsy for the rest of her life.
“These never-ending court cases have been ruining all of our lives – that of my daughter and granddaughter and me – for the past five years,” she stated.
Essentially, the actual reason why so many Charter County of Wayne “government usurpers,” as RICO-Busters calls them, are against Shannon DeBacker today is because her daughter, Janna Lewis, has this huge civil action pending.
It all started weeks prior to Janna’s birthdate of July 15, 2009 when Shannon had gone to Oakwood Hospital Emergency room in full term pregnancy. While she was there, the doctors and medical staff induced labor but Shannon was ultimately sent home before delivery. At home, a rupture occurred and as a result, Baby Janna was deprived of oxygen. She was next subject to a botched surgical procedure and born with cerebral palsy.
For the past few years since Janna’s birth, the court and other “government actors” have been incrementally and systematically taking custody away from Shannon DeBacker under false pretenses. They have been constructing a fraudulent paper trail of lies and covering up the alleged criminal activity of the baby’s father, Michael Lewis, so as to bring the case to a final conclusion that neither parent is fit to manage the life and the lucrative malpractice settlement money.
In essence, these attorneys, as “officers of the courts,” the judges, referees, social workers, guardian ad litems, conservators, and investigators hired by or appointed by the probate court, have long been stealing the proceeds of this massive lawsuit, something that happens much more frequently than anyone wants to admit in large settlement civil cases such as this one.
The facts behind all this prove that this “court” is nothing more or less than the alter-ego of this “judge” Martha Snow. It isn’t about the physical health, welfare or safety of Jann DeBacker’s disabled granddaughter, Janna Lewis. It is all about who controls the money that is being legally designated to the judge’s cronies for covering Mrs. DeBacker’s granddaughter’s future health, welfare and safety.
We can prove that state “actors” operating the Wayne County Circuit Court have a multi-decade history of covering up court cases and hiding facts in courts cases such as Shannon’s and Janna’s medical malpractice cases involving large sums of money. (See the 30-year history of the Wayne County Probate Court case of Lynnette and Mailauni Williams.)
Mailauni and Lennette Williams relax at home after she was returned to her mother subsequent to a 6-month kidnapping. Mailauni also suffers from cerebral palsy, and was expected to live no more than a few months. With her mother’s nurturing, she has graduated from high school and is now 32 years old.
Thus, Martha Snow presents much more than a simple “appearance of impropriety” defining “judicial misconduct;” she is clearly operating this court with unclean hands, using it and using Shannon’s daughter and Jann’s granddaughter as a “payback” tool for lining the pockets of her cronies.
“She needs to be held liable for covering up the criminal activity of my disabled daughter’s sexual perpetrator; and for ordering my grandbaby’s perverted father to instead have temporary custody over my granddaughter while criminally ordering my daughter Shannon to a weekend of false imprisonment,” cried Jann DeBacker during the interview.
Judge Martha Snow showed favoritism to the father Michael Lewis in court on Friday simply because he has an attorney, Audrey C. Stroia (P-21098) and Shannon DeBacker has no attorney!
From Toledo Children’s Hospital
The underlying fact is that this “judge” Martha Snow did like other Wayne County judges Arthur Lombard and Christopher Dingell did on this case for previously years, not investigating the father’s past history and continuing to conspire in covering up Shannon DeBacker’s old and new evidence and allegations of specific sexual abuse, the Debackers say.
In previous years, Arthur Lombard and Christopher Dingell continued to order shared custody between mother and father despite all the facts and evidence being brought to their attention by Shannon DeBacker and her mother.
“Last Friday, Martha Snow deliberately put my granddaughter in harm’s way,” Mrs. DeBacker continued. “She put Janna’s most dedicated advocate, her mother, in the county jail and handed over temporary custody for the entire weekend to the [alleged] perpetrator. This judge knows very well that my and husband and I are licensed foster home caretakers.”
The pattern and practice (#2) of Wayne County “agents” is to thwart their duties in law enforcement and in the judiciary. Examples: Even their own (Southgate PD) police officer (Grondin) reported that Janna Lewis had revealed directly to him that her father “kisses” her vagina. Officer Grondin also said he watched the “disturbing” videos Shannon DeBacker had turned over as evidence she had downloaded from Michael Lewis’ own cell phone camera. Yet “for some reason” that even Ofcr. Grodin could not figure out, the reports are not being taken seriously by the detective’s bureau” and Officer’s Grodin’s report was merely “placed (by whom) into the case file.”
The pattern and practice (#3) – If Janna can’t convey it herself, the government usurpers employed as corporate agents of the Charter County of Wayne simply “see no evil, hear no evil, and speak no evil.” Example: “Michael Lewis’ criminal history?……..What criminal history?”
Grandma Jann DeBacker said Lewis’ activity – and its cover-up – has been ongoing since 2011, and is supported by credible evidence and an abundance of pictures and incriminating videos. “My granddaughter been crying out for help; and my daughter is now jailed for trying to bring attention to these sexual abuses by Michael Lewis,” Mrs. DeBacker exclaimed.
Jann stated that both she and Shannon have been praying for help, been pleading for help, both have been ignored by law enforcement and child protective agencies, been ignored by many of the state insurance mandated doctors and medical facilities, been ignored by judges and even ignored by the mainstream media.
“I and my daughter contacted the State Agencies Child Protective Services and Monroe Police Department in 2015 and our complaints were ignored. We also contacted the Southgate and Taylor police departments,” she added.
“I contacted Detective Cole today at court when my daughter was being arrested because he had an appointment for Janna scheduled with ‘Kids Talk’ on May 5, 2016; but we needed help today! I now feel that my granddaughter and daughter are both in imminent danger. I called Detective Grodin last year and he corroborated our allegations to a C.P.S worker who knew about these crimes yet denied an investigation of these allegations. But we needed help today! I now feel that my granddaughter and daughter are both in imminent danger. I called Detective Grodin last year and he corroborated our allegations to a C.P.S worker who knew about these crimes yet denied an investigation of these allegations. But the court still has granted custody this weekend to Janna’s father today….even despite the proof of his sexual exploits.
Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder appointed Martha Snow to the bench.
The rallying public needs to ask what more evidence there is to draw the links in the “chain” of association between the criminal conduct of Michael Lewis, accused of cowardly acting in the darkness and privacy of his home, and the criminal conduct of Martha Snow, accused of usurping judicial power and authority in open court.
What reasoning can we attribute to this treasonous activity by the judge appointed to the bench by the very same Michigan governor (Snyder) that is now being petitioned for recall from office and possibly facing prison time for his part in turning a blind eye on the poisoning of the entire population of Flint? Perhaps there is something to the saying about “birds of a feather flock together?”
We already know the links between Snyder’s appointment of Martha Snow to the judicial bench, and between Martha Snow and her “mentor” Audrey Stroia, the attorney defending Michael Lewis as the child’s alleged sexual predator in a custody battle over the welfare of this child. So let’s turn our attention to other questionable “links” in this chain conspiracy to deny due process to Shannon DeBacker and to cover-up to years of alleged sexual exploitation being carried out against his own daughter by the man known to have a mental health diagnosis of “schizophrenia.”
Michael Lewis’ “schizophrenia” is being treated by Dr. Thomas Pinson. “Dr.” Pinson is currently on “probation” by the Medical Board for “incompetence,” “negligence,” and other forms of substandard care.
Dr. Thomas Pinson
Moreover, Lewis’ doctor, Thomas Pinson, is believed to be the very same person who in 1988 was criminally charged with sixteen (16) counts of receiving stolen property and providing a pole barn for an auto “chop-shop” operation/ As shown above on the document bearing Pinson’s signature below Lewis’ diagnosis, he either does or did operate his medical “practice” at 13636 Dix Toledo Rd. in Southgate, Michigan 48195.
Note that according to Dun & Bradstreet, that place of business, “City Medical, PC,” is showing a lucrative $1,200,000.00 annual income. Interestingly however, it appears that office is shared with someone carrying the very same last name as Michael Lewis’ attorney and Judge Martha Snow’s “mentor.” She is a chiropractor by the name of Susan Stroia. Even more interesting is the fact that Stroia and Pinson appear to be more than business partners in City Medical, PC; they appear to be husband and wife.
So besides the obvious fanfare of friendship, cronyism and nepotism between “judicial usurper” Martha Snow, her mentor Audrey Stroia, and Stroia’s mega-successful daughter and son-in-law, and Stroia’s client, Michael Lewis, why else might Snow be catering favorably and providing “preferential treatment” to attorney Audrey Stroia?
Wouldn’t it be because she is an ESTATE PLANNING expert? In sum, the corporate and state “players” operating the Wayne County Circuit Court are keenly aware of Janna Lewis’ disability and the fact that a multi-million dollar civil case was filed and is soon scheduled to reach a final court settlement after more than five years of state takeover and criminal cover-up!
For the past few years since Janna’s birth, the court and other “government actors” have been incrementally and systematically taking custody away from Shannon DeBacker under false pretenses. They have been constructing a fraudulent paper trail of lies and covering up criminal activity of the baby’s father, Michael Lewis, so to bring the case to a final conclusion that neither parent is fit to manage the life and the lucrative malpractice settlement money.
In essence, these attorneys, as “officers of the courts,” the judges, referees, social workers, guardian ad litems, conservators, and investigators hired by or appointed by the probate court, have long been already stealing the proceeds of this massive lawsuit, something that happens much more frequently than anyone wants to admit in large settlement civil cases such as this one.
The facts behind all this prove that this “court” is nothing more or less than the alter-ego of this “judge” Martha Snow. It isn’t about the physical health, welfare or safety of Jann DeBacker’s disabled granddaughter, Janna Lewis. It is all about who controls the money that is being legally designated to the judge’s cronies for covering Mrs. DeBacker’s granddaughter’s future health, welfare and safety.
Thus, Martha Snow presents much more than a simple “appearance of impropriety” defining “judicial misconduct;” she is clearly operating this court with unclean hands, using it and using Shannon’s daughter and Jann’s granddaughter as a “payback” tool for lining the pockets of her cronies.
Atty. Audrey Stroia of Stroia & Associates specializing in estate planning/Facebook photo.
“She needs to be held liable for covering up the criminal activity of my disabled daughter’s sexual perpetrator; and for ordering my grandbaby’s perverted father to instead have temporary custody over my granddaughter while criminally ordering my daughter Shannon to a weekend of false imprisonment,” cried Jann DeBacker during the interview.
So besides the obvious fanfare of friendship, cronyism and nepotism between “judicial usurper” Martha Snow, her mentor Audrey Stroia, and Stroia’s mega-successful daughter and “incompetent” son-in-law, and Stroia’s client, Michael Lewis, why else might Snow be catering favorably and providing “preferential treatment” to attorney Audrey Stroia? Wouldn’t it be because she is an ESTATE PLANNING expert?
In sum, the corporate and state “players” operating the Wayne County Circuit Court are keenly aware of Janna Lewis’ disability and the fact that a multi-million dollar civil case was filed and is soon scheduled to reach a final court settlement after more than five years of state takeover and criminal cover-up!
Jann DeBacker told VOD,
“I know my daughter Shannon loves her disabled daughter more than anyone in this world would ever imagine. She was and will remain willing to do whatever is needed to stop the sexual exploitation of her daughter Janna by the child’s medically-diagnosed-as-schizophrenic father with a well-documented criminal history. Though Shannon has no criminal history whatsoever before now, she has shown that she is even willing to go to jail in advocacy on behalf of her defenseless baby.”
In court last Friday, April 29, Shannon took a bold stand against the corruption and greed that has inundated her daughter’s medical malpractice case. She chose to stand on her own rather than to allow an evidently crooked judge and attorneys to keep this barreling train on the same railroad track that it has been on for the past few years. She took a stand as a mother who truly loves her daughter.
She also took a stand as a natural person deciding to handle her own affairs without an attorney, rather than to continue trusting more despicable members of the Michigan State BAR. She had that right according to federal law (i.e., see28 U.S.C §1654), and the “judge” Martha Snow was in violation of Shannon DeBacker’s constitutionally guaranteed rights when that judge sent Shannon to jail with the trumped up “contempt of court” charge.
Shannon additionally has every right to refuse to comply with an unlawful “order” of the court when that order disregards the safety and welfare of her child; particularly when she had a recent order by a registered nurse asserting that she nor anyone else should be allowing Michael Lewis to have access to Janna because she would be in imminent physical danger! Judge Martha Snow refused to address the new sexual assault allegations and evidence to support the reasoning of that nurse. Mrs. DeBacker insists that the pictures in evidence against Michael Lewis are much too graphic to place them in this online news story.
THE DEBACKERS ARE ASKING THAT SUPPORTERS COME TO THEIRHEARING MONDAY, MAY 2 AT 9AM, IN THE COURTROOM OF JUDGE MARTHA SNOW, RM. 1812, AT 2 WOODWARD AVE.
See documents related to Michael Lewis criminal history at:
Charles Lewis, in prison since 1977 at age of 17, case dismissed by Judge Gershwin Drain on April 3, 2000 after state failed to comply with requirements to hold “Pearson” evidentiary hearing allowing “res gestae” witnesses who saw real shooter at scene to testify. Lewis’ attorney said he was guilty in opening argument.
April 3, 2000 dismissal of Lewis’ case.
Judge Qiana Lillard acknowledges court order dismissing case at hearing April 21, 2016, takes no action
Lewis’ state court files, filling three cartons, have mysteriously “disappeared,” next hearing to feature last known official in possession
Lewis is one of state’s juvenile lifers whose case is being addressed under Montgomery v. Louisiana
By Diane Bukowski
April 29, 2016
U.S. District Court Judge Gershwin A. Drain
DETROIT – Why is Charles Lewis, 58, locked up in Michigan prisons since the age of 17, still there? On April 3, 2000, previous Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Gershwin Drain ordered that a charge of first-degree murder and a sentence of life without parole against Lewis be summarily dismissed. That order has never been carried out.
Questions remain regarding his guilt in the case.
Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Qiana Lillard acknowledged having a copy of the order during a “show cause” hearing April 21, which Lewis “attended” through a videoconference from somewhere in the bowels of the Michigan Department of Corrections. She took no action on it.
“I’m excited that I got to make a record of the fact that I’m presently locked up without a conviction, or Court files or records,” Lewis said in a Jpay email to this author afterwards. “I got the chance to tell the judge that I was being held in prison without a conviction. She did not respond to that. She did say that she talked to Judge Drain, but did not elaborate on what they said to each other. I wanted to establish for the record the fact that I filed pleadings and she sent them back to me with no answer.
“Having me on a video is a violation of the Michigan Court Rules,” Lewis continued.
“That was designed for unruly people, and hearings that do not require testimony. When you take testimony you have a right to be present. So much for my rights.”
Charles Lewis’ mother Rosie Lewis in earlier years. From her daughter Wendy Lewis’ Facebook page. Mrs. Lewis and her daughter have vigorously fought for Charles’ freedom since 1977.
A prison counselor discovered Drain’s order in Lewis’ court records 10 years after it was issued and gave him a copy.
Lewis’ mother Rosie Lewis said she reviewed three cartons of files from her son’s case two years ago. Charles Lewis testified during the hearing that he last requested a copy of his complete file in June, 2013, to no avail. He said he also sent copies of the dismissal order to Wayne County Circuit Court Chief Judge Virgil Smith, to the clerk at the Michigan Supreme Court, and to the Corporation Counsel for the Third Judicial Circuit Court, Kimberley Reed-Thompson.
The three cartons of files mysteriously disappeared after that.
“My primary concern is that I am in prison without a conviction, and nobody has reviewed the matter,” Lewis testified. “Why did my file come up missing? Files just don’t come up missing.”
Lewis has said that Wayne County Judge James Chylinski, who inherited Drain’s caseload after he was appointed to the federal bench in the Eastern District of Michigan, earlier expressed his willingness to hold a hearing on Drain’s order. But Lewis’ case somehow wound up in front of Judge Lillard instead.
Two contradictory Registers of Actions kept by the Wayne County Clerk show filings only from 2000 onward. The current one says Lewis was convicted on April 3, 2000 by a jury, a blatant lie and possible criminal obstruction of justice, since his conviction occurred in 1977. A previous Register of Actions says Drain dismissed the case against Lewis on April 3, 2000.
Current register showing Lewis’ conviction in 2000.
Disposition shown in earlier version of Register of Actions.
Wayne County prosecutors claimed Lewis murdered off-duty Detroit police officer Gerald A. Sypitkowski in 1976 outside a bar on Detroit’s east side. Newspaper articles at the time contradictorily said he and three friends either confronted Sypitkowski in the street, or tried to rob the bar itself. They also reported that Sypitkowski’s partner Dennis Van Fleteren, who was with him, witnessed the killing, which he said was carried out by the driver of a white Ford Mark IV named Leslie Nathaniel, not the young teens.
Dennis Van Fleteren/Facebook
Nathaniel was arrested and charged, but was later freed after allegedly passing a lie detector test. According to an inside source, Nathaniel was an autoworker known for loan sharking. According to the book, “Motor City Mafia–A Century of Organized Crime in Detroit,” by Scott M. Burnstein, the Mafia was heavily involved in loan sharking operations during that period.
Lewis was convicted in 1977, after two jury trials in front of Judge Joseph Maher. The first jury was excused after their deliberations without a reason. The second jury brought back a verdict of “guilty.”
In a federal motion for relief from judgment filed Feb. 11, 2016 , Lewis said M. Arthur Arduin, the court-appointed lawyer who represented him even after Lewis asked for his removal, acted against his interests. Lewis called him a “mob lawyer.”
Attorney M. Arthur Arduin, Sr. at the age of 91, in Detroit Free Press series on seniors.
Lewis says not only Van Fleteren, but a bar employee and four college students driving in the area testified that they saw the shotgun blast which killed Sypitkowski come from a white Ford Mark IV. Two men even chased the car and identified its license plate, leading initially to the arrest of Leslie Nathaniel. Nathaniel testified at trial that two men tried to open the doors of his car and he fled from them.
During the second trial, Lewis says that the judge excluded police officers who questioned the eyewitnesses from testifying. He quotes from Arduin’s opening argument, evidently from transcripts Lewis retained:
“There’s been a killing . . .Now we have here only one defendant. But originally there were four young Blacks. If they were part of a gang, I don’t know. But let’s assume they were part of a gang. We’re going to prove by all the witnesses who are going to testify in this case–by all the witnesses I mean the People’s witnesses, their own witnesses, and I may have a witness or two for the defense. We’re going to prove four lads who are part of a gang, who are–expertise. Expertise–they knew how to steal cars and God only knows if they knew how to rob. Now that’s what we’re going to prove. And they started out on this day, July 1, 1976 — four of them, four of them–to steal a car and go out and commit a robbery.”
Lewis later filed for a “Pearson” evidentiary hearing, to produce factual (“res gestae”) witnesses who did not testify at his second trial.
Photo from Lewis’ Facebook page, maintained by his sister Wendy.
The State failed to hold the hearing within the required time limit of 30 days, resulting in Judge Drain’s order of dismissal. When the state finally held a hearing a year later, Van Fleteren was not listed among the witnesses. However, he remains very much alive according to his Facebook page.
Leslie WIlliams, a woman police officer who arrived on the scene later did testify; she claimed Van Fleteren was too drunk to see what happened.
Before his imprisonment, Lewis was a musician, a guitarist, with his own band. He is a writer, who previously wrote for the Afro-American Gazette out of Grand Rapids as well as a prison newspaper, The Huron Valley Monitor. He said he took journalism and political science courses in college, when the MDOC still offered college courses.
Autobiography of Malcolm X
Edward Sanders, another juvenile lifer who attained his bachelor’s degree in prison, wrote VOD that he knew Lewis when they were both incarcerated at Ionia prison in the late 1970’s.
“I used to read his books on the music business and the late El-Hajj Malik el-Shabaaz, [Malcolm X],” Sanders wrote. “We used to call him KK.” Newspaper articles at the time of Officer Sypitowski’s killing used Lewis’ nickname to claim he belonged to a youth gang known as the “KK Capones”. Lewis’ mother Rosie said the initials came from Kilbourne Street, where her son grew up.
Judge Lillard said the purpose of the April 21 court hearing was her previous order for Wayne County to produce Lewis’ full court file, issued March 17.
Lillard was appointed to the Wayne County Circuit Court bench by Governor Rick Snyder on Aug. 7, 2013, after spending eight years in the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office. Her legal experience prior to that was with Detroit Edison, the Michigan Basic Property Insurance Association, and AAA Michigan, according to a campaign biography.
Judge Qiana Lillard
Prosecutors across Michigan are currently reviewing files of the state’s 364 “juvenile lifers” in an attempt to comply with Montgomery v. Louisiana. The U.S. Supreme Court decided Jan. 25, 2015, that its earlier ruling in Miller V. Alabama, calling juvenile life without parole “unconstitutional,” and “cruel and unusual punishment,” under the Sixth Amendment, is completely retroactive.
Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette represented one of only four states in the U.S. which ultimately refused to acknowledge the retroactivity. The Michigan legislature earlier passed statutes allowing prosecutors to file LWOP re-sentencings for court hearings before judges or juries. Those prisoners they do not choose to request LWOP on will be automatically sentenced to a minimum of 25-40 and a maximum of 60 years.
It is questionable whether those statutes violate Miller, which requires an in-depth individual assessment of each prisoner at the time of the crime in question.
During the April 21 court hearing, one in a series, Lewis’ attorney Felicia O’Connor of Foley & Lardner, Wayne County Prosecutor Jason Williams, and Judge Lillard questioned David Baxter, clerk of the Wayne County Clerk’s criminal division, regarding the Lewis file. Baxter also sits on the Criminal Work Group Forms Committee of the state Supreme Court Administrator’s Office.
Lewis’ attorney Felicia O’Connor
“I have not been able to locate copies of that file,” Baxter said, “only a file from another 1976 case, and filings from the murder case since 2000.”
The other case, pertaining to an armed robbery, is closed according to the Michigan Department of Corrections OTIS website.
“We’ve been looking for the [murder] file for some time, at least two years,” Baker said. “The last judge who requested it was Edward Ewell, who took a civil assignment later. His clerk Joann Gaskin was the last person I know of who had the file in its entirety.”
In one prominent criminal case in 2011, Judge Ewell refused to grant a stay of Maryanne Godboldo’s criminal prosecution for standing off police officers who came to her home to take and medicate her 13-year-old daughter against her will, pending the outcome of a Michigan Supreme Court decision in Moreno. The Supreme Court later upheld the “common-law” right of individuals to resist illegal police conduct and arrests in Moreno.
Thirty-Sixth District Court Judge Ronald Giles and Circuit Court Judge Gregory Bill have since twice dismissed the charges against Godboldo, saying the “order” used to take Godboldo’s child was invalid, and she had a right to resist.
Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Edward Ewell.
Baxter said Gaskin would have sent Lewis’ file to the Clerk’s office on the ninth floor, and it would now be in storage at the Vigliotti Building on E. Jefferson. Baxter said he also contacted the Michigan Supreme Court, which has received the file numerous times pertaining to various appeals of Lewis’ case. He said he has not personally conducted a hands-on search for the file.
Judge Lillard said she would hold another hearing with Joann Gaskin as a witness on the next date the videoconference room is available. There is only one such room in the Frank Murphy Hall.
Lewis asked for her to direct both parties to submit briefs on the case, but Judge Lillard said they were only at an “investigatory” stage and refused to do so.
After the hearing, this reporter and Mrs. Lewis met with Attorney O’Connor, who said she has been directed by her firm, Foley & Lardner, not to waive attorney-client privilege in the case by discussing it with the media. Foley & Lardner is representing Lewis pro bono under an arrangement assigning lawyers to all state juvenile lifers, by noted defense attorney Deborah LaBelle.
This reporter and Mrs. Lewis then went to the 9th floor Clerk’s office to file our own request for the file, but have not heard back from them.
Nelson Mandela in prison in apartheid South Africa.
VOD has left a message for Judge Drain in his federal office in Detroit, and is awaiting his reply. This reporter has also contacted Dennis Van Fleteren through his Facebook page messages, and has received no reply from him yet. VOD intends to continue its investigation of this case, due to other anomalies discovered so far.
“I know that God has a plan for my life and that my struggle is not in vain,” Lewis wrote to this reporter. “It took Nelson Mandela 27 years to get out of prison. I’ve served nearly twice as much time as Nelson Mandela served under apartheid. It makes you wonder which system is the real apartheid system.”
Syrian civilians in Aleppo following air strike; U.S. has escalated war to overthrow Syrian government by sending U.S. troops there. Both Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders support the U.S. intervention.Photo: The Guardian
by BAR executive editor Glen Ford
April 27, 2016
Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders agree on U.S. war agenda in Syria, Middle East.
Bernie Sanders has endorsed President Obama’s troop escalation in Syria, once again showing that “he is no more ‘progressive’ than Obama on foreign policy, and just as dishonest – a true Democrat.”
Sanders will ultimately bow to Hillary Clinton, while still claiming that the Democratic Party can be transformed from the inside. However, millions will have witnessed that the campaign proves exactly the opposite – and will seek alternatives.
“His underlings are telling the troops that this whole electoral exercise will be worthwhile if they succeed in pushing through a progressive party platform, in Philadelphia.”
The 2016 presidential season will only be of historical significance if it leads to a fracturing of the duopoly electoral system in the United States, a “trap within a trap” in which the rich control both parties – one of which is always the overt party of white supremacy. Donald Trump has already succeeded in creating a “market” for a second right-wing party by stripping the GOP’s’ appeal to its raw, racist, white nationalist essentials – a political nightmare for every corporate public relations department in the nation. Corporate logos will be hidden in brown paper bags at the Republican convention, in Cleveland.
US business magnate Donald Trump, who is running for president in the 2016 presidential elections. AFP PHOTO / FREDERIC J. BROWN
It is difficult to imagine how the Trump rank and file and the party’s corporate “establishment” will paper over their irreconcilable differences, rooted in the party’s failure to preserve skin privilege and good jobs in a White Man’s Country. Just as brazenly, Trump, the rabble rousing billionaire, has violated the most sacred ruling class taboos by rejecting the national security rationale for the hyper-aggressive, ever-expanding, global U.S. military presence. If Trump fails to convincingly recant such heresies, the rulers will deal with him with extreme prejudice.
“Trump has violated the most sacred ruling class taboos by rejecting the national security rationale for the hyper-aggressive, ever-expanding, global U.S. military presence.”
Bernie Sanders presents no such threat to Empire. He supports President Obama’s illegal drone wars and the 15-year occupation of Afghanistan. Should he somehow be elected president, Sanders would follow Obama’s practice of reserving Tuesday’s for choosing targets from his “Kill List.” To circumvent U.S. and international prohibitions against assassination, Sanders offers the same “self-defense” justification as the Israelis do, when they slaughter Palestinians by the thousands. “There are people out there who want to kill Americans, who want to attack this country, and I think we have a right to defend ourselves,” Sanders told Chris Hayes, of MSNBC.
U.S. President Barack Obama has boots on the ground in Syria, across the globe.
The nominally socialist senator from Vermont claims that he differs from Hillary Clinton on foreign policy because she “is too much into regime change and a little bit too aggressive without knowing what the unintended consequences might be.”
During the New Hampshire debate, Sanders said the ouster of Iraq’s Saddam Hussein “destabilized the entire region” and the overthrow and death of Muammar Gaddafi “created a vacuum for ISIS” in Libya. “Yes, we could get rid of Assad tomorrow,” Sanders told the crowd, back in February, “but that would create another political vacuum that would benefit ISIS.”
“It doesn’t bother Sanders a bit that the U.S. presence on sovereign Syrian soil is illegal, an act of war.”
His leftish boosters clung to these utterances as proof that Sanders was, deep down, a peaceable kind of guy, in sharp contrast to “Queen of Chaos” Clinton. Tuesday, however, as he was losing four of five primaries, Sanders showed that he is no less a warlord than Barack Obama – who, like Sanders, based his “peace candidate” appeal on his 2002 opposition to the Iraq invasion. Obama announced he was sending 250 more U.S. Special Forces troops into Syria, supposedly to fight ISIS and to arm and train more of those elusive, damn-near-extinct “moderate” rebels. It doesn’t bother Sanders a bit that the U.S. presence on sovereign Syrian soil is illegal, an act of war, as is U.S. funding and training of fighters attempting “regime change.”
Syrian hospital in Aleppo bombed April 28, 2016.
“Here’s the bottom line,” said Sanders. “ISIS has got to be destroyed, and the way that ISIS must be destroyed is not through American troops fighting on the ground.” U.S. Special Forces have already been engaged in combat operations in Syria, as Sanders should know. Nevertheless, he plowed on:
“I think what the president is talking about is having American troops training Muslim troops, helping to supply the military equipment they need, and I do support that effort. We need a broad coalition of Muslim troops on the ground. We have had some success in the last year or so putting ISIS on the defensive, we’ve got to continue that effort.”
What Sanders is saying is that he would continue Obama’s policy of regime change, despite the “unintended consequences” and its clear illegality. He is no more “progressive” than Obama on foreign policy, and just as dishonest – a true Democrat.
“Sanders opposes ‘regime change’ except when it is perpetrated by a Democratic administration.”
Obama sends 500 U.S. troops to Syria.
The same day, Sanders sidestepped Joe Scarborough’s attempts to get him to agree that Hillary Clinton is a “hawk” on foreign policy. “I don’t want to characterize her, but I think our views on foreign policy are different,” Sanders told the MSNBC host.
“I think my views are a lot closer to President Obama’s than they are to Hillary Clinton’s…. I believe it must be Muslim troops on the ground who do the fighting with the support of the United States. I will do everything that I can to prevent our troops from getting involved in perpetual warfare in the Middle East.”
A distinction without a difference, as they say. Sanders opposes “regime change” except when it is perpetrated by a Democratic administration. He really doesn’t mind U.S. “boots on the ground” in other people’s countries, as long as they are arming and training people of native religions and races to kill others of their kind, and U.S. casualties are kept to a minimum.
ISIS executes government police and soldiers in open field in Iraq. ISIS is a creation of the U.S. CIA, originating with the anti-Gaddafi “rebels” who helped the U.S. and NATO obliterate Libya.
Sanders is an imperialist pig. Although his self-image is that of a Scandinavian social democrat, Sanders is more like a French “socialist” who supports the maintenance of a safety net for his own people, but reserves the right to routinely commit mass murder in the former colonies in order to preserve the French “way of life” and “values.”
With the mathematics of the presidential primary race now undeniable, Sanders is preparing his supporters to scale back their dreams of social transformation – which, for some of them, includes a genuine retreat from Empire as well as a new domestic deal. His underlings are telling the troops that this whole electoral exercise will be worthwhile if they succeed in pushing through a progressive party platform, in Philadelphia. Then it will be time to unite with Hillary, the plutocrats’ candidate, in the battle against the dreaded Trumpster.
“Sanders is preparing his supporters to scale back their dreams of social transformation.”
Bernie Sanders is peddling the sucker’s line, that the Democratic Party can be transformed from the inside. However, the actual experience of the campaign, as witnessed by millions of young, newly energized citizens, is proving exactly the opposite; that this corporate-crafted Democratic mechanism and its interlocking Republican counterpart are tools of the oligarchy, designed to manufacture consent to corporate rule and corral and crush dissent.
Military occupation at home: Teen confronts police in Ferguson, MO after the police execution of Michael Brown Aug. 9, 2014. His killer, Darren Wilson, was exonerated.
When Sanders consummates his “sheep dog” assignment, he will deflate to his original state: a small-town Democratic Party operative. Most of his supporters will acquiesce to Hillary’s nomination – just as most people everywhere acquiesce to everything most of the time.
But, a significant proportion, numbering in the millions, and including the half of young African Americans that have rejected the Black Misleadership Class’s slavish allegiance to the Democratic Party hierarchy, will not. And, although Hillary Clinton will surely win victory in November with her “big tent” Democratic Party – flush with white suburbanites who, only yesterday, were Republicans – it will be a Party that is even more hostile to Blacks and progressives than before Donald Trump plunged the duopoly into crisis.
Millions of people, especially young folks, will be looking for an alternative to the Democrats and the Republicans – or to electoral politics, entirely. It’s up to the Left to give it to them.
With statements by the Honorable Louis Farrakhan, Mother Tynetta Muhammad, wife of the late Elijah Muhammad
Prince not only an artist: he battled corporations for artists’ rights and justice, fought police violence, environmental racism
“When you stop a man from dreaming, he becomes a slave”–Prince
Note: VOD editor Diane Bukowski previously wrote for The Final Call over a period of six years. The Final Call has produced a stunning, one of a kind article on Prince that analyzes his legacy from a people’s political standpoint, unlike coverage in the mainstream media.
In this June 2, 2014, file photo, U.S. pop singer Prince watches the fourth round match of the French Open tennis tournament between Spain’s Rafael Nadal and Serbia’s Dusan Lajovic at the Roland Garros stadium, in Paris. Prince announced on, Aug. 25, 2014, that he would release a new album entitled, “Art Official Age” on Warner Bros. Records, the label Prince was signed to from 1978 to the mid-1990s, but later battled for the rights of his music. Photos: AP/ Wide World photos
Vigils, block parties, and celebrations of his life continued across the world for music artist and global icon Prince, who passed away at age 57 on April 21.
Prince was an incredible musician, culture watchers and analysts told The Final Call. Just look at the outpouring of love by fans touched by his music, they said.
But, they added, Prince is also loved because he was principled. He fought for artists’ rights and for justice. He fought for people who could not fight for themselves, not just through his music, but with his clout and his finances.
“I like you will miss Prince. I like you saw the Greatness in his Struggle just to gain ownership of his own name. I saw the Greatness of his Being, the courage that he had to fight for, not only his own image, his own likeness, and his own music masters but to fight for others who were not as blessed with the depth of love and the breadth of courage that he demonstrated,” wrote the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam in a tribute published in The Final Call. He also highlighted the “beauty” of the “essence” of Prince in his music, his gifts and his service to others. The musician tried to visit the Minister during a serious illness in the 1990s and donated $50,000 to the Million Family March in 2000.
A memorial fence in memory of pop star Prince is lined with flowers and signs at Paisley Park Studios, April 22, in Chanhassen, Minn. Prince died April 21 at Paisley Park at the age of 57.
“Though I am saddened over the fact that I will never physically meet him, we will always have him with us through the music that he gave us, the struggle that he made that taught us how we must stand up, fearless against that which is ugly in its injustice, its unrighteousness and its wickedness,” said Minister Farrakhan. For Minister Farrakhan’s full statement, see link at end of story.
“He had a mystique, this whole thing about not being accessible, but from what I understood and from what I’ve seen, he was a lot more accessible than people realized,” said Davey D, a national hip hop journalist and historian.
“Here’s a guy that, when you talked to folks, they’d be like, ‘Oh yeah! He was showing up at the back of my poetry show in the middle of nowhere, and he’d be sitting there in the back, checking you out,” Davey D stated.
A fan cries at a makeshift memorial created in remembrance of singer Prince outside Apollo Theatre in New York , April 22.
He recalled Prince was so impressed with Bay Area DJ Pam the Funktress’ work at after parties that he put her on tour with him.
Whether discussing environmental pollution with journalist and author Tavis Smiley, funding songs and videos about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., or holding a concert and focusing on the problem of police violence, Prince’s fight for justice was as pure as his music, said Davey D, artists and analysts.
“He was one of those folks that gave and was committed, and pushed back fully, all at the same time of being a consummate artist and playing that game very well, meaning that he kept a certain type of mystique about him, a certain type of sex appeal, if you will, and he knew how to play to people’s emotions,” Davey D said.
Prince’s art and intelligence earned many accolades, including seven Grammy Awards and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004.
The artist formally known as Prince, with the word “Slave” written across his face, belts out a tune from not only a revolutionary artist, but as a business his new CD, “Chaos and Disorder,” outside the studio of NBC-TV’s “Today” show in New York’s Rockefeller Plaza, July 9, 1996. Photos: AP/Wide World photos
Prince had just returned to Warner Bros. Records after an 18-year feud. He regained ownership of his catalog in an agreement that also meant a new album. During the fight, in which he was unable to use his birth name, the musician created a symbol that was used to represent him and re-named himself, “The Artist Formerly Known as Prince” in 1993. Three years later he would sever ties with Warner Bros.
In a music video and in public performances, the word “slave” was written on his cheek. “People think I’m a crazy fool for writing ‘slave’ on my face,” he said in a 1996 interview with Rolling Stone magazine. “But if I can’t do what I want to do, what am I? When you stop a man from dreaming, he becomes a slave. That’s where I was. I don’t own Prince’s music. If you don’t own your masters, your master owns you.”
Prince stood up to the corporations and won, said Davey D. “Not only did he stand up, but he stood on principles, like, ‘I will not put my name next to a product.’ That’s a pretty bold move.”
Many have used the “if I don’t do it, somebody else will do it. I gotta get it now” excuse, said the internationally known chronicler of hip hop and music. “Prince was like to hell with that! ‘You ain’t getting paid, and I’m not gonna get paid, but that’s alright.’ He found other ways to get paid, because he understood that his talent was transferrable. His talent wasn’t dependent upon Warner Bros. or anything like that,” Davey D said.
The skilled, protective Prince licensed his music to stream only on Tidal, the popular music service owned by rap mogul Jay Z.
Musicians staHHr. Davey D and Jasiri X
“Even though as somebody who would like easy access to his music, I can respect the fact that it’s scrubbed from the internet and all those places where money was made off his product. He did that. … That’s pretty big,” Davey D added.
For rap activist Jasiri X, Prince’s activism around artist independence and justice are a big part of the Prince legacy, and are very influential on his own life and art.
“He didn’t just exist as a musical genius,” the rapper said. In Prince’s tradition, he too feels strongly that as a young, Black man in America, he has no luxury to do art for art’s sake. He feels a duty to speak on what is happening with his people and his community.
“It’s interesting how we saw that play out with Prince. We saw it play out first with his stance on artists’ ownership and standing up to the record company. … He and both Michael Jackson did the same thing,” Jasiri X noted.
Muhammad Ali and The Artist Formerly Known As Prince are photographed at a press conference in Washington, D.C. on June 24, 1997 detailing plans for the World Healing Honors, a benefit concert headlined by the Artist to promote international harmony and tolerance. All proceeds from the October concert in Los Angeles went towards Ali’s World Healing Project.
They stood up to record companies and against the exploitation of artists, and Prince took it a step further, he continued. “They took ownership of his given name, and he decided to take on a symbol and market that, which was really powerful.”
But Prince wasn’t through, said Jasiri X. In 1985, he started his own label Paisley Park Records with Warner Bros.
Prince became one of the leading artists to begin to utilize the internet and distribute his music online early on, but he did not allow YouTube to get paid off his music without paying him.
“I think about his Musicology tour, where he included his album in the price of the ticket. … It became the highest selling album in the country because of that tactic, and Billboard or the artist registry basically said they would not count that as record sales anymore after Prince did it,” Jasiri X recalled.
“You’re talking about somebody that was not only a revolutionary artist, but as a business person, and thinking about how—which is a struggle that many artists have—do you monetize your music, being at the forefront of doing different things and looking at different ways to monetize music.”
“Music is nothing without the product behind it,” said Che “Rhymefest” Smith, Grammy Award-winning rapper and songwriter. “The music is just the commercial for who you are as a person, and for what you provide, the services you provide as a human being, like how do you serve. And then your music is your journal to that journey.”
Prince exhibited significant attributes in different ways, from giving money to the family of slain teen Trayvon Martin in Florida, to giving money and showing up and performing at a school for the deaf, he said. “I mean, he performed seven concerts and still had time in the 80s, at the height of Purple Rain, to perform and raise money for deaf children through concerts for them … saying that you may not hear the tonality of my music, but you’re going to feel the spiritual vibration of it,” Rhymefest told The Final Call.
Rhymefest
Prince could have left it at just being a great guitarist, an artist, but Prince learned to play 27 instruments and with them, gave the world the gift of 28, including his voice, Rhymefest continued.
The world is coming to know just how he manifested the word of God through his actions, Rhymefest said.
“I think it’s very important when we as Muslims think about what it is our prayers say, what it is that the Qur’an says and the Hadith says, to be a servant of Allah. Prince, no matter what religion he called himself, as a human being, he was a servant of Allah. He was the manifestation of what a Muslim is, and you see that not only in his music, but in his service of mankind,” he added.
Mother Tynnetta Muhammad, the late wife of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, reflected on Prince’s creating Love 4 One Another, a non-profit dedicated to relieving poverty by communal action and self-help programs.
A crowd pays tribute to Prince inside First Ave where “Purple Rain” was filmed late, April 21,in Minneapolis. Photo: AP/Wide World photos
It was to, “eliminate ‘lack’ from the global vocabulary,” Mother Tynnetta wrote in a column, “The awakening of Sleeping Beauty—The Golden Age of the New Cultural Revolution Begins A Seven Day Celebration with Prince—A Tribute to Paul Robeson and Mei Lanfang” which appeared in 2000 in The Final Call newspaper. In the column, she shared her experience touring Paisley Park.
“The Honorable Elijah Muhammad desired that our entertainers and performers would become spiritually awakened to the knowledge of themselves by placing God in the forefront of their creative gifts and influences,” she wrote.
“The man named Prince appears to be sincerely motivated and guided by a genuine spirit of godliness seeking to escape the entrapments of a dying world,” Mother Tynnetta Muhammad continued.
Prince has empowered many young adults through Yes We Code, a national initiative to connect 100,000 men and women from low opportunity backgrounds to high-paying careers in technology.
“Prince’s struggle as a gifted artist to reclaim his own name on the basis of Freedom, Justice and Equality, pitted in a legal battle with Warner Brothers Records, has placed him in a vanguard position as an example for others,” she observed.
Prince was one of the last few great artists who had a chance to make a lot of money but did not really care a whole lot about money, said Dr. Boyce Watkins, entrepreneur, writer and analyst.
“He seemed to have value systems that went beyond money, which to me, it kind of propels him ahead of most other entertainers, because since Prince died, people have talked about what kind of philanthropist he was and how much he cared about his community, and also how much he cared about making good, independent music,” Dr. Watkins said.
He was a good artist, and he defended his right to be an artist, even in the face of corporate control and manipulation, Dr. Watkins said.
Dr. Boyce Watkins, the “People’s Scholar.”
“A lot of people think that freedom of speech or creative freedom comes in the form of music where they’re calling women all kinds of derogatory names and rapping about Black men killing each other, but that’s not creative freedom. That’s corporate speech, what corporations tell you to say,” he argued.
“Prince stood up to corporations and said, ‘You’re not going to control me,’ and a lot of people admired him for that,” Dr. Watkins said.
Many also admired Prince because he understood he was more than an artist, Dr. Watkins said. “He understood that you can’t be a ‘successful’ Black man if you’re not doing anything for other Black people,” he said.
Dr. Watkins believes Prince set the tone for the next 30 years with what he did with the film “Purple Rain” in 1984.
“That’s what most people know him for, even though he’s made a lot of music since then. He’s put out 39 studio albums, and they say that 70 percent of his music has not been released, which is really amazing,” Dr. Watkins said.
“What we’re looking at is somebody who is really committed to the craft. He studies. He rehearses. He practices. He does due diligence in terms of making sure that his performance and skill level is up there, and he takes his time, and he is very particular about what he was going to let out, what he wasn’t,” said Davey D.
“That sort of work ethic I think we take for granted but it’s not seen in a lot of people,” he said. Some artists turn out projects quickly so they can be consumed versus taking time and getting it right. “They’re just like, Hey. We just want you to get this out, and don’t worry about yo’ur audience. They’re not smart enough. They’re not worthy enough. They’re not insightful enough to know the difference between you taking your time and getting all the right equipment, and right notes, and players or musicians to do your thing versus just doing any old thing,” he said.
Prince was in a class of musicians and singers that set a high bar in the entertainment industry. He was in the company of Stevie Wonder, Smokey Robinson, Michael Jackson, Rick James, Barry White and others that were always on point, Davey D added.
Prince of the 1980s is largely remembered and celebrated, but there was so much more than that that he wanted to do, a tearful Van Jones, Prince’s friend and one of his attorneys, said in various TV interviews.
Logo for Prince’s charity known as “Love 4 One Another”.
According to Mr. Jones, it was Phaedra Ellis Lamkins, a young, Black woman in the labor movement, Prince’s manager, who went to war to get his catalogue back.
Prince wanted to make children’s cartoons, control his own music, and help children, he said. Prince cared so much just about ordinary people, Mr. Jones stated during the Dr. Drew show on the cable Headline News channel.
Prince has empowered many young adults through Yes We Code, a national initiative to connect 100,000 men and women from low-opportunity backgrounds to high-paying careers in technology. Prince helped launch the initiative at the 20th Anniversary Essence Music Festival, July 4th, 2014.
“It’s so hard to talk about your friend in the past tense,” Mr. Jones said.
Family and friends had an intimate ceremony April 23 after Prince’s remains were cremated.
Publicist Yvette Noel-Schure said the celebration of his life included his “most beloved” family, friends and musicians. She said a musical celebration will be held at a future date.
The list of people who attended was not announced, but Prince’s sister Tyka Nelson and brother-in-law Maurice Phillips were seen on the grounds of Prince’s estate Paisley Park, as well as friends such as percussionist Sheila E. and bassist Larry Graham.
Prince’s Paisley Park Studios
Prince was found unresponsive April 21 in an elevator at Paisley Park, and an autopsy was done. Authorities have not declared a cause of death and said results could take days or weeks.
His sudden death brought different stories and concerns about whether it was from natural causes or some other nefarious means. Prince was known for clean living.
For 25 years Jaye Delai has entertained audiences around the world on the radio. The announcer’s distinctive voice has been heard on radio stations in large cities such as Charlotte and small towns playing the music of Black America for decades.
“Prince Rogers Nelson was one of the most incredible talents this world has ever seen,” he said. “However it is his creative genius, his business mind, and humanitarian efforts that set him apart.”
“Prince was one of the most vocal artists as well when it came to the fair and equitable treatment of artists. He fought Warner Brothers over the rights for his catalog of music, his name and more. When he wrote slave on his face he also said that these industry contracts make slaves out of performers,” he said.
(Nisa Islam Muhammad and the Associated Press contributed to this report.)
Minister Farrakhan’s statement on Prince’s passing:
Michigan Legislature still debating provisions of bills that would end DPS
Current Detroit Board of Education, parents file class action lawsuit citing irreparable harm to Detroit’s children under state control
Retaliation continues against teachers who closed 80 percent of Detroit schools during walk-outs protesting building conditions
By Diane Bukowski
April 24, 2016
Detroit Board of Education President Herman Davis stands at right as schools activist Helen Moore speaks at press conference announcing lawsuit for DPS kids April 7, 2016.
DETROIT – The far right-wing war to dismantle the Detroit Public Schools (DPS) district continues; a July 16 DPS “execution date” is set under pending state legislation.
Meanwhile, DPS board members and parents await the results of a federal civil rights lawsuit filed April 6 against Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and his Emergency Managers (EM)’s, and Detroit teachers face continuing attacks for a series of walk-outs that shut down 80 percent of Detroit’s schools earlier this year.
“The war is on,” Detroit Board of Education President Herman Davis said during a press conference April 7 on the lawsuit. “We must move forward as a community, and stop the school to prison pipeline. This is just like in slavery days. They are taking our Black children and selling them to the highest bidder. It’s genocide.”
Davis compared attack on DPS to slave auctions of previous era.
On the legislative front, the State Senate has approved bills 710, 711, 819, 820, 821, and 822, which would replace DPS with a “community district” including charter schools, all under state control, and abolish the current Board.
The new board would answer to the same State Financial Review Commission that controls the city of Detroit under the bankruptcy plan.
It would also create a “Detroit Education Commission” appointed by Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, to determine school siting. (See earlier VOD article, linked below, which laid out provisions of the bills.)
Senate members and their supporters in the Coalition for the Future of Detroit School Children, co-chaired by Rev. Wendell Anthony, with Walbridge Aldinger CEO and Snyder ally John Rakolta, Jr., among others, are now wrangling with members of the House of Representatives over whether the legislation is sufficiently pro-charter school.
Michigan State Sen. Coleman A. Young II
But State Sen. Coleman A. Young II (D-Detroit), expressed his complete opposition to the Senate bills during debate in the Senate.
“I want to make it clear that this is not a bailout,” Young said. “This is repaying DPS money that the state put into debt in the first place, and it’s not enough money for the debt that the state put DPS in. . . .there is no academic reform or support in this whatsoever. Sixty‑six percent of the children in Detroit Public Schools are not proficient in reading. Forty-seven percent of the city is functionally illiterate. This, to me, seems more about governance, contracts, and who gets the money than about doing what is best to educate our children.”
(See link below story for VOD’s earlier description of Senate bills.)
Student of Detroit’s historic multi-cultural Chadsey High School speaks at school board meeting against Chadsey closure March 10, 2005. Despite repeated walk-outs by Chadsey students, the school closed anyway.
On April 20, 31 state Republicans signed a resolution to dissolve the elected State Board of Education and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction which it appoints.
Under terms of the resolution, the governor would appoint a director of a state Department of Education. Such an action, however, would require a state constitutional amendment.
The resolution’s sponsor, State Rep. Tim Kelly (R-Saginaw Township), said “It has become increasingly obvious that students in Detroit would be better off if DPS simply went away,” in an op-ed in the Detroit News April 9. He proposed instead that the state issue voucher payments to parents to send their children to private schools.
But Detroit school board members, parents, and their attorney Thomas Bleakley said April 7 that state control has been responsible for the Detroit district’s extreme distress, pointing to the chart below.
Accompanying the package was a letter asking the public in part to “Oppose any dissolution or replacement of Detroit Public Schools. . . .oppose any further intervention and/or experimentation on Detroit schoolchildren . . . demand that the State of Michigan conduct a specific audit to determine the causes and origins of the DPS deficit . . . .[and] immediately empower the current and already elected School board. (See full letter at http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/DBEletter.pdf.)
Detroit Board of Education press conference on lawsuit, April 7, 2016. Board member Elena Herrada is speaking.
The lawsuit, Pauling et al v. Snyder et al, filed against Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, his Emergency Managers, and their cronies April 6, says the state is waging an unbridled assault on the right of Detroit’s children, particularly children of color, to a “free, public, adequate and worthy education,” in the words of Bleakley. It asks for a trial by jury and “compensatory and punitive damages.”
The long-closed Frederick Douglass High School on Detroit’s east side has left a community full of vacant storefronts and homes.
“There is a now a greater percentage of school drop-outs, more children are entering the criminal justice system, and more cannot get in college,” since state control, Attorney Bleakley said.
School board member Elena Herrada said the number of children being suspended, with no recourse, is rising. There are only two suspension hearings officers, and no translators for Spanish and Arabic-speaking parents.
A Michigan American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) study, “The School to Prison Pipeline,” earlier found that children of color, particularly Black children, are disproportionately suspended across the state, leaving them to the mercy of the streets.
Students have been left without schools, period. The majority of DPS schools have been closed since the state takeover, leaving 89 bona fide public schools in 2016, out of 261 in 1994, depriving entire communities of the institutions that once anchored them.
Detroit Board of Education member Lamar Lemmons.
“Seventy-seven school buildings have been bundled and given to the City of Detroit to pay an alleged water drainage debt,” Herrada said. “Art, music and math teachers have been cut from the budget. Teachers have had their pay cut and their health care benefits slashed. Take our children out of these oppressive warehouses!”
Speakers also expressed absolute opposition to the Senate bills.
“We vehemently oppose the Senate bills,” Board member Lamar Lemmons said. “They are nothing but a bait and switch tactic, giving the illusion of democracy with an ‘elected’ school board [answering to the State Financial Review Commission] in place of the duly elected board which now exists, which we call the ‘School Board in Exile’ because all our powers have been stolen under the EM.”
He added, “Both the Community School District and the Detroit Election Commission allow the Mayor to pick charter schools for his friends and campaign contributors. More millage dollars and construction dollars are involved in the plan. If these are such great ideas, why don’t they have them in Grosse Pointe? Don’t Jim Crow Detroit!”
Kathy Carthron (featured in Channel 7 video above) has an eight-year-old autistic son attending DPS, which has closed facilities for special needs students including the Oakman Orthopedic School and the Detroit Day School for the Deaf. DPS has merged their students with the general population of students, with teachers untrained in handling their needs.
“My son has been abused in Detroit Public Schools,” Carthron said. “They have left him sitting in a mess in diapers. He doesn’t have enough time to eat. This is against the law. ”
DPS parent Kathy Carthron speaks, with board members Ida Short and Tawanna Simpson to her right.
She said her son was “kidnapped” by Checker Cab after being left without a way home on a day when school ended early.
“This attack on public education is going on all across the country,” said Helen Moore, founder of the Keep the Vote No Takeover Coalition. “Black and Brown children are being harmed irreparably by corporate interests who want to profit from public education.”
She cited in particular New Orleans, which now has the nation’s first all-charter school district, called the Recovery School District. Seventy percent of charter schools are operated for profit. Parents there have also filed a class-action lawsuit. (See video below.)
Meanwhile, a May 16 hearing has been scheduled in an ongoing state lawsuit titled, “The School District of the City of Detroit v. Detroit Federation of Teachers et al,” which targets teachers who earlier participated in a series of well-publicized sick-outs. The actions drew broad attention to the horrific conditions in what is left of Detroit’s public school buildings.
Large demonstrations have been held by teachers, parents and students outside the hearings, held at Cadillac Place on W. Grand Blvd., which houses the State of Michigan’s Detroit offices. (See video at top of story.) The sick-outs have received national coverage, including in the pages of Time Magazine. (See link below story.)
Protesters outside Cadillac Place during earlier hearing on lawsuit v. teachers who called in sick.
Court of Claims Judge Cynthia Diane Stephens earlier denied the plaintiffs’ request for an injunction against the walkouts. In ordering the May 16 hearing, to be held at noon, Judge Stephens said, “The issue here is whether the defendants engaged in conduct which was in violation of the EM [order] 1-15 but protected by the First Amendment.”
Her order, at http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/School-district-v-DFT-order.pdf, cites language from the Michigan Public Employee Relations Act (PERA), which says, “This act does not limit, impair, or affect the right of a public employee to the expression or communication of a view, grievance, complaint, or opinion on any matter related to the conditions or compensation of public employment or their betterment as long as the expression or communication does not interfere with the full, faithful, and proper performance of the duties of employment. [MCL 433.201.2].”
Chicago Teachers Union protest at Bank of America.
The Chicago Teachers Union has repeatedly struck and conducted informational rallies against the dismantling of schools in that city, taking a much stronger and more effective stance than the current DFT since its previously elected president Steve Conn was ousted for his militancy.
Singled out for attack in the lawsuit are Conn and Nicole Conaway, who taught at the now-privatized Catherine Ferguson Academy for pregnant students and their children. They became nationally known when they walked out to stop the dissolution of their school.
Some of Michigan’s juvenile lifers: (l to r, top through bottom row), Cortez Davis, Raymond Carp, Dakotah Eliason, Henry Hill, Keith Maxey, Dontez Tillman, Charles Lewis, Jemal Tipton, Nicole Dupure, Giovanni Casper, Jean Cintron, Matthew Bentley, Bosie Smith, Kevin Boyd, Damion Todd, Jennifer Pruitt, Edward Sanders, David Walton (photos show some lifers at current age, others at age they went to prison).
U.S. Supreme Court ruled Jan. 25 in Montgomery v. Louisiana that Miller v. Alabama decision declaring JLWOP unconstitutional is retroactive
But MICHISSIPPI’s juvenile lifers still have “many rivers to cross” in state with 2nd highest number of JLWOPer’s in U.S., under Snyder administration
Another state juvenile lifer commits suicide after 23 years, says attorney
“All but the rarest of children” are not incorrigible, and should not be left in prison to die, says USSC
Henry Montgomery, 69, in Angola Prison in Louisiana since 1963
DETROIT – The fates of at least 364 Michigan prisoners sentenced to die in prison as juveniles, a/k/a to “life without parole,” hang in the balance after the U.S. Supreme Court’s Montgomery v. Louisiana ruling affirming the appeal of George Montgomery, a Black man who was 17 when charged with killing a white deputy sheriff in the deep South.
Almost four years after the court found such sentences unconstitutionally “cruel and unusual” in Miller v. Alabama, it finally ruled that Miller was fully retroactive across the U.S. Courts in only four states, Louisiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Minnesota had persisted in declaring that Miller did not apply to already incarcerated prisoners, many of whom had already spent decades behind bars.
In Michigan, two-thirds of juvenile lifers have spent at least 25 years in prison. At least 70 percent are people of color, most of them Black. Michigan has the second highest number of juvenile lifers in the U.S. Under the current state administration, they still face “many rivers to cross” in the wake of the Montgomery ruling.
Edward Sanders at 17 (r) with friends in Detroit.
“All praises are due to Allah,” Detroiter Edward Sanders said of the decision. He was 17 when he was convicted of first-degree murder in a 1975 drive-by shooting where he did not pull the trigger.
“I am thankful for our Lord’s Mercy,” Sanders continued. “The recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Montgomery vs Louisiana is a great step back into our humanity; a child is never the same as an adult. I am thankful to the many people and groups that worked to this end. I prayed for this day. First for myself . . . and then for others in my situation. The short time in which we went from juvenile courts to adulthood in our society as it reacted to very young children is sad. [Islamic law] says children are not adults and should not be addressed the same under the law. In Islam this is not a modern law, nor is it in this society.”
Sanders is now 58, and has spent the last 41 years in Michigan prisons. He is currently at the Chippewa Correctional Facility in Kincheloe, in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, classified at the low security level of two.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy
During his time in prison, Sanders obtained his bachelor’s degree, and continued to study the law. He taught classes at Mound Road Prison in Detroit, and has functioned as a jail-house lawyer for many years, helping other inmates with their cases. He has said he wants to work with at-risk youth upon release.
“Henry Montgomery has spent each day of the past 46 years knowing he was condemned to die in prison,” Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority in the U.S. Supreme Court decision.
“Perhaps it can be established that, due to exceptional circumstances, this fate was a just and proportionate punishment for the crime he committed as a 17-year-old boy. In light of what this Court has said in Roper, Graham, and Miller about how children are constitutionally different from adults in their level of culpability, however, prisoners like Montgomery must be given the opportunity to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption; and, if it did not, their hope for some years of life outside prison walls must be restored.” (See USSC decision at http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/USSC-Montgomery-v-LA.pdf.)
Henry Montgomery booked at the age of 17 in East Baton Rouge, LA, allegedy for killing Sheriff’s Deputy Charles Hurt; media called him “Wolfman.”
The court found that its 2012 Miller decision involved substantive, not procedural, issues under the Constitution and therefore was retroactive. It thus disagreed with opinions by Michigan’s attorney general Bill Schuette, who filed an amicus brief opposing Montgomery’s appeal, and other state officials and courts.
“A State may remedy a Miller violation by extending parole eligibility to juvenile offenders,” Kennedy said regarding implementation. “This would neither impose an onerous burden on the States nor disturb the finality of state convictions. And it would afford someone like Montgomery, who submits that he has evolved from a troubled, misguided youth to a model member of the prison community, the opportunity to demonstrate the truth of Miller’s central intuition—that children who commit even heinous crimes are capable of change.”
He noted further, “Although Miller did not foreclose a sentencer’s ability to impose life without parole on a juvenile, the Court explained that a lifetime in prison is a disproportionate sentence for all but the rarest of children, those whose crimes reflect ‘irreparable corruption.’”
Atty. Mark Plaisance argued case in front of USSC for Henry Montgomery.
Attorney Mark Plaisance of Baton Rouge, LA argued the case for Montgomery, as a representative of the Public Defender’s Office. He was backed by amicus briefs filed by dozens of other organizations.
“We were well pleased with the decision,” Plaisance told VOD. “It’s the next step in the court’s evolution on how it believes the justice system should address juvenile offenders, that they are not fully knowledgeable about what they are doing. The Supreme Court said it would leave [implementation] up to the states, but Justice Kennedy said based on the states’ arguments that reviewing all cases would be burdensome, it would be easily resolved by states just sending such prisoners straight to parole hearings. He dropped a big hint.”
Montgomery, a sophomore in high school, was two weeks past his 17th birthday in the rural South of 1963 when he was arrested for killing white deputy sheriff Charles H. Hurt of the East Baton Rouge Parish. Newspaper accounts at the time called Montgomery the “Wolfman.”
STILL SLAVERY IN PRISON: In this Aug. 18, 2011 photo, prison guards ride horses that were broken by inmates as they return from farm work detail at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, La. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
He was at first sentenced to death, but his conviction was overturned on an appeal alleging substantial racial bias at trial. He was retried and sentenced to life without parole. He has spent his time since then at Louisiana’s notorious Angola Prison, named after the country from which many Africans were kidnapped to spend their lives as slaves in the area.
Plaisance said Montgomery remains in Angola more than two months after the Supreme Court decision, because the Louisiana Supreme Court has yet to respond to the high court’s order remanding the case to it for a compliant ruling.
Here in Michigan, most juvenile lifers remain in limbo as well, due to various state statutes and court rulings. Two exceptions are Cortez Davis and Raymond Carp, whose cases under Miller had already been heard and denied by the Michigan Supreme Court, on grounds that Miller was not retroactive.
USSC has remanded Juvenile lifer Cortez Davis’ case to the Michigan Supreme Court.
State records indicate the USSC remanded their cases to the MSC for re-consideration under the Montgomery ruling as of April 8.
But for other Michigan juvenile lifers, the situation is complex. The merciless attitude of the current administration under Governor Rick Snyder and Attorney General Bill Schuette was summed up in an amici curaie brief filed on behalf of Michigan “and 15 other states.”
“As guardians of the community’s security, the amici States note that these offenders are as a category some of the most dangerous,” Schuette’s brief says in part. “They committed the gravest crime—murder. And they have been incarcerated for virtually their entire adult lives. Requiring the States to resentence hundreds of offenders, many of whose crimes were committed decades ago, would undermine the community’s safety and would offend principles of finality.”
While the USSC suggested, but did not require, that all juvenile lifers be made parole eligible, Michigan’s legislature earlier enacted statutes mandating procedures for re-sentencing to long terms of years instead, if Miller was found to be retroactive.
Juvenile lifer Edward Sanders
Under MCL 769.25a, prosecutors in each county have 180 days from the date of the retroactivity decision to file a motion seeking re-imposition of LWOP in selected cases. If they do not file such a motion, the defendant must be re-sentenced to a minimum term of 25 to 40 years, with a maximum term set at 60 years. Prisoners who have served more than 20 years are given priority for re-sentencing. See http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Juvenile-lifers-mcl-769-25a.pdf.
“I look to be resentenced to a term of years,” Sanders reacted. “I am not considering the Michigan parole board who told me back in 1982-83 that it would support me in a commutation request that never happened due to the change in its policy to ‘life means life.’ I am willing to have a court reconsider my past 41 years in prison and the facts of the case plus I do have new evidence addressing intent in this case that show there was never a first-degree murder. However, I accept my actions . . . . [but] I am not the child of 1975, I am an adult of 2016.”
Stephen Marschke, parole board director under Engler.
Former Michigan Gov. John Engler
Michigan’s parole board under Governors since John Engler has had a merciless reputation. Engler converted the board from civil service employees to gubernatorial appointees. One of his first parole board directors, Stephen Marschke, a former Berrien County Sheriff with a brutal reputation, coined the phrase, “life means life.”
Prior to that, law and practice regarding parolable life was that a prisoner could apply for parole after 10 years. Afterwards, Michigan’s prison population skyrocketed, now taking up one-third of the state’s budget.
Anthony Shamont Jones remains in prison after 35 years despite the reduction of his sentence to parolable life in 2011.
In the first case in the U.S. after Miller, Anthony Shamont Jones, 17 when he was convicted of first degree murder in 1979, won a parolable life sentence in Kalamazoo County’s Ninth Circuit Court in Dec. 2011. He had run from the scene of a store owner’s killing and was not the shooter.
But almost five years later, he remains incarcerated at the Chippewa Facility in Kincheloe, MI, also at the low security level of II, like Edward Sanders.
His situation highlights the problems parolable lifers also face in merciless Michigan, now known as MICHISSIPPI to many in the wake of the state’s poisoning of the entire city of Flint under Governor Snyder’s Emergency Manager law, and the proposed abolition of the Detroit Public Schools district.
Michigan’s prosecutors including the likes of Wayne County’s Kym Worthy, Oakland County’s Jessica Cooper, and Berrien County’s Michael Sepic have in the past vehemently opposed giving juvenile lifers a “second chance” through any means, during hearings before Michigan’s legislature.
Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy testifies at state legislature with AP Richard Moran at her side.
The Montgomery decision said, “a lifetime in prison is a disproportionate sentence for all but the rarest of children, those whose crimes reflect ‘irreparable corruption.’”
Assistant Defender Peter Van Hoek of the State Appellate Defender’s Office says it is a toss-up whether prosecutors will seek to re-impose JLWOP on a large or small number of prisoners.
“While no one yet knows in how many of the retroactive cases in Michigan . . . the prosecutor will file for LWOP sentencing, it is likely they will not keep that number down to only rare cases,” Van Hoek said in an email to VOD.
“Even if they file for LWOP sentencing in a particular case, it will still be open for negotiation,” Van Hoek went on. “If an agreement is not met to sentence to the 25-40 to 60 year term, then a full sentencing hearing, under the Miller factors, will have to be held before the decision is made whether to re-impose a LWOP sentence or a term of years.
Peter Van Hoek, of SADO
Such hearings will be very involved and detailed, comparable to that portion of a death penalty case where the decision is made to either impose the death penalty or a prison term. While of course the defense will argue that the particular case does not fall within that rare number where LWOP sentences are appropriate, that decision will be up to either the judge or a new jury, depending on how a different line of cases is resolved in Michigan.”
Charles Lewis of Detroit was a musician and singer with his own band at the age of 17. On the Facebook page set up by his sister Wendy, he says in part, “I’m a writer, a musician, a comedian, an actor and most importantly, a God fearing Black Man. My struggle is the struggle of thousands of Black men in America.” In an earlier letter, he said regarding Miller, “The U.S. Supreme Court . . . decided that no civilized country in the world sentences juveniles to prison for the rest of their lives. This is the only ‘civilized’ country in the world that sends children to prison forever at such an alarming rate.”
Lewis has always contended his innocence, which also presents a problem regarding whether the state statutes can accomplish justice. He said in a Jpay email as follows:
Charles Lewis at 17; Facebook photo
“As you may or may not know from reading the briefs and motions filed in the United States District Court, I’ve been locked up for the past thirty years without a conviction.
I was arrested August 1, 1976 in the law office of attorney Gerald Lorence. I told Lorence that I was not involved in the case and was at the local 212 on the night of the murder. He assured me that I would be out in two weeks. That was nearly 40 years ago.
Gerald Lorence was removed from my case and . . . lawyer M. Arthur Arduin was appointed to represent me. Arduin . . . .came to see me one time in the County Jail prior to trial. . . . I was arrested, charged and eventually convicted of first degree murder for the murder of off duty Detroit Police Officer, Gerald Swpitkowski. Officer Swpitkowski’s partner Dennis Van Fleteren testified at two trials that he was actually talking to Swpitkowski when he was shot and killed. He testified that the shot that killed Swpitkowski came from the driver’s side of a white Mark IV that was driven by Leslie Nathanial. Van Fleteren testified that he was the best friend and partner of the deceased and started the night off with him.
Leslie Nathanial was arrested hours after the murder, and released, without explanation hours later.
TRULY MICHISSIPPI
There are a million things that I would like to say regarding the juvenile life without parole situation. First, most people miss the real point. Most juveniles charged with first degree murder are poor and come from poor families. My parents could not afford to hire a lawyer to represent me. And, none of the juvenile lifers that I know had paid attorneys.
Charles Lewis today, after 41 years in prison since the age of 17.
Here is the difference between a paid lawyer and a lawyer appointed by the State. Jeffrey Mulligan testified as my 15 year old co-defendant; he had a paid lawyer and did not do one day. His lawyer worked out a deal for him to testify against me in exchange for his freedom. Ronald Pettway testified that he was a 16 year old accomplice; his paid lawyer worked out a deal for him to testify against me in exchange for his freedom. Mark Kennedy testified that he was my 16 year old accomplice and his paid lawyer brokered a deal for him to testify against me in exchange for his freedom. In my case a State lawyer was the difference between freedom and thus far, I’ve served a few months short of 40 years. Hell of a difference!”
Lewis and his attorneys have argued his case in both federal and state courts, on grounds his innocence as well as seeking his release under Miller and now Montgomery. At one point in the process, Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Gershwin Drain ordered the charges against him dismissed (see below).
Lewis has a state “show cause” hearing scheduled in front of Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Qiana Lillard April 21 at 9am to address the matter. She has reportedly ordered that the file be produced for his hearing. Lewis contends strongly that he should be immediately released.
U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett OMeara
Also in play is a ruling by U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett O’Meara in January, 2013 that made all Michigan juvenile lifers eligible for parole, in the Hill v. Snyder case involving 13 juvenile lifers, brought by Attorney Deborah LaBelle for the Michigan American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Although the case named particular plaintiffs, O’Meara intended his ruling to affect all of the state’s juvenile lifers.
“Indeed, if ever there was a legal rule that should – as a matter of law and morality – be given retroactive effect, it is the rule announced in Miller,” O’Meara said in an eight page decision after lengthy hearings. “To hold otherwise would allow the state to impose unconstitutional punishment on some persons but not others, an intolerable miscarriage of justice.”
Snyder and Schuette have appealed O’Meara’s ruling, and it is still before the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court. After the Montgomery decision, the state argued that the Hill case should be dismissed, in favor of enforcing the state statutes.
Attorney Deborah LaBelle
In pleadings on the case, LaBelle has argued that the state statutes do not conform with Miller or Montgomery because they do not provide for consideration of the 10 Miller factors. (See box.)
She reiterates that all Michigan juvenile lifers should be eligible for meaningful parole hearings taking Miller into account.
“The parties have litigated this case for six years,” LaBelle wrote in a letter to the Sixth Circuit Court. “Defendants first argued that mandatory life imprisonment without parole for children was constitutional, and upon issuance of Miller they opposed relief based on a retroactivity argument that was subsequently rejected in Montgomery. They now make a bare assertion that untried legislation cures the constitutional violations found by the District Court. Recently, we have lost another youth who committed suicide on October 28, 2015, after serving 23 years on a sentence that offered no hope of release. This Court should affirm the District Court’s decision, which was not an abuse of discretion, and remand for the lower court to implement appropriate remedial orders without further delay.”
DETROIT ATTORNEY FILES CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT FOR DPS STUDENTS ON BEHALF OF SCHOOL BOARD
Press conference Thurs. Apr. 7, 11 am, Fisher Building 3011 W. Grd. Blvd.; Board of Ed members, DPS parents to attend
Attorney Says State and Emergency Managers’ Failings of Detroit Public Schools is “Flint Crisis on Steroids”!
Lawsuit says Governor, other politicians, emergency managers and crooked vendors responsible for destroying life-long opportunities for thousands of impoverished DPS students.
MEDIA CONTACT: Sal Giacona (Phone: 313-421-9108)
Student at Mumford High School, then part of the EAA, tells media about terrible conditions there May 28, 2013 as Board President Herman Davis and member Elena Herrada listen.
Detroit, MI., April 5, 2016 — A major announcement will be made at a press conference and media opportunity on Thursday April 7 at 11 a.m. (ET) outside the main entrance of the Fisher Building located at 3011 W Grand Blvd, Detroit, MI 48202.
The press conference will feature Detroit attorney Tom Bleakley (pronounced Blake-Lee) who will provide information regarding the class-action lawsuit being filed on behalf of the thousands of impoverished Detroit Public Schools (DPS) children.
The treatment of these students by state officials since taking control of the school district in 1999, and aggravated by three recent consecutive emergency managers, has caused profound life-long damage to the students thanks to uncertified and inexperienced teachers, overcrowded classrooms, rat-infested gymnasiums and hallways, closing of neighborhood schools, wasteful and dumb management practices, massive funding of worthless experiments and other acts have all moved the Detroit Public Schools from the best-performing school district of over 100,000 children in the country to the very worst.
Parents, teachers and students rally to save Oakman Orthopedic School, the only one of its kind in Detroit, built to serve special needs students, on Aug. 27, 2013. The school was later closed by Gov. Rick Snyder’s EM Jack Martin.
The callous indifference of State officials to the needs of the children, in all aspects of their educational experiences, rises to the level of constitutional violations. The Detroit Public Schools Board is bringing the lawsuit, along with several named parents who will serve as class representatives. Bleakley, Board members, and several plaintiffs will be available for personal interviews after the press conference.
The unwarranted and unjust state takeover of DPS originally occurred in 1999 as a result of skillful fiscal and academic management the Detroit schools enjoyed a multi-million-dollar surplus, and their student test scores were at the state midpoint and rising despite pervasive resident impoverishment and the city’s myriad of social problems.
DPS student Sasha Alford participates in protest against state-appointed CEO Kenneth Burnley June 16, 2005.
“The filing of this action is being done with the intent of setting the record straight as to who is responsible for the current disastrous condition of the school district, as well as settling a longstanding score with the Michigan politicians for the benefit of the poverty-stricken children of the Detroit Public Schools.,” Bleakley said.
Bleakley is a trial lawyer who has represented thousands of children injured by drug products against the pharmaceutical industry, as well as cases involving constitutional issues. He is handling the case pro bono because he feels it is important for the children of the school district, unlike the governor and his underlings, to have a voice in these issues unsullied by big money interests.
Protesting tax foreclosures at Wayne Co. Commission meeting March 17 were (l to r) Beverly Kindle-Walker, Kamala El, Queen Mother Dr. Nefertiti-El, and Cornell Squires.
March 31st was deadline day for 30,000 County families currently occupying their homes to pay property taxes or face foreclosure and auction
Speakers tell Wayne County Commission March 17 that tax foreclosures illegal due to no value re-assessments; violate Indigenous Peoples rights
Protest held outside Wayne County Treasurer’s office March 23
Federal claims filed against County citing $100 billion in domestic terrorism insurance, by Squires, Schied, acting under law as private atty. generals
Alonzo Long, Jr. acquitted Feb. 1 on murder charges for defending his family against armed foreclosure bidders
By Diane Bukowski, Cornell Squires, and David Schied
April 4, 2016
Photo by Cornell Squires
DETROIT–Wayne County residents hit their government from all sides over the last two weeks to stop the pending tax foreclosures and auctions of 30,000 homes this year. Detroit and Wayne County homes have been virtually bombed out by such foreclosures for over 15 years, leaving neighborhoods looking like war zones, they say.
“Our property is being taken away, our school system is being taken away,” Kamala El told Commission members. “When are respect and human compassion going to manifest themselves in this city and county? Stop the corruption and thievery and give us our due!”
African Moors
She cited common law rights under the Wayne County Charter, and the UN Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples, finally signed by U.S. President Barack Obama in 2010. That declaration says in Article 26, “Indigenous peoples have the right to the lands, territories and resources which they have traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired.” (See UN Declaration at http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/UN-Dec-Rights-of-Indigenous-Peoples-1.)
Many Black Detroiters have Native American ancestry. Many also claim indigenous sovereignty as descendants of the Moors, Black Africans who migrated to Europe and later the Americas independent of the slave trade.
El noted that no one currently occupies the office of Wayne County Treasurer, and called at least for a moratorium on all foreclosures until residents have elected a Treasurer.
Also raising the issue of indigenous people’s rights has been activist and “attorney in fact” James Cole, Jr. who helps people fight foreclosures from his home. Cole and others have found numerous irregularities in the practices of the Wayne County Treasurer’s office regarding foreclosures, including the use of unauthorized personnel to sign and notarize “Sheriff’s Deeds” issued after foreclosure takes place.
The extent to which anger is rising in Detroit and elsewhere about the devastation of the area was shown Feb. 1, when a Wayne County Circuit Court jury found Alonzo Long, Jr. NOT GUILTY of second-degree murder and other counts.
Long had defended his family against a father and daughter who bought his uncle’s home at auction in 2013, then tried to force family members out at gunpoint as they were in the process of moving the uncle anyway. The erstwhile landlords had not gone to 36th District Court to carry out the eviction.
Alonzo Long, Jr. with friend.
Attorney Lillian Diallo, who represented Long in an uphill battle, said that under the law, people have the right to self-defense and defense of others.
Cornell Squires, of We the People 4 the People, whose own home is on the foreclosure list, called the pending foreclosures nothing but domestic terrorism and violations of the RICO Act.
He presented the Commission with a “cease and desist” demand letter sent to then Wayne County Treasurer Richard Hathaway, Deputy Treasurer Eric Sabree and Wayne County Executive Warren Evans Feb. 23.
“We know that the County’s Treasury will soon hold public auctions of [properties], . . . many of which are being auctioned with the wrong tax bills, because the tax bills are not based on upon the true cash value. . .This poses a legal issue and the county treasury could be liable,” the letter reads in part.
Cornell Squires speaks at Wayne County Commission March 17, 2016.
Michigan law requires municipalities to conduct annual assessments of real estate values, or at the very least, reassessments every five years. Detroit had not done so for 20 years, until current Mayor Mike Duggan conducted a partial re-assessment over the past year. But, Squires said, that is not sufficient to make up for the years residents have been overbilled.
“The County and the City owe US money, not the other way around,” he said.
Instead, what the County has done is increase interest rates on delinquent taxes to 18 percent, while the City of Detroit is allowing wealthier neighborhoods like Palmer Woods and Sherwood to vote themselves additional tax assessments to qualify for better city services than other areas.
Protesters outside Treasurer’s office March 23, 2016.
On March 23, protesters from the Moratorium NOW! Coalition called for an immediate end to tax foreclosures outside the Wayne County Treasurer’s Office at 400 Monroe in downtown Detroit. Among the demands listed on their flier:
“We demand proper reassessment, and debt incurred by failure to properly assess be wiped clean! Stop Foreclosures and auctioning of homes based on “fraudulent” assessments!
Water bills are added to the property tax. Remove all water bill debt from property tax bills!
In a city where 43% live in poverty, the tax department does not notify people that they may be eligible for “poverty” or principal residence exemptions. Eligibility for “poverty” exemptions should be retroactive, and everyone needs to be informed of these exemptions!
THE NEXT DETROIT: Dan Gilbert of Quicken Loans, being sued by USDOJ for illegal mortgage practices.
“The State of Michigan has just received a new grant of $74 million in Federal Helping Hardest Hit Homeowner assistance,” the flier continues.
“These funds must be used to pay delinquent property tax bills for occupied homes, not be diverted for ‘blight removal’ as was done last year. Place an immediate moratorium on tax foreclosures . . .to allow families the opportunity to access these new Step Forward Funds. Make the Banks and Gilbert pay for the blight they caused through their predatory lending policies.”
On April 2, David Schied and Cornell Squires, acting under law as “private attorney generals,” filed updates to their federal claims against Wayne County’s $100 BILLION Domestic Terrorism insurance policy, asking to compensate taxpayers who have had their homes foreclosed on. Wayne County carries that policy through the infamous AIG (American International Group), whose collapse in 2008, losing $99.2 billion in assets, helped trigger that year’s global economic crisis. AIG was bailed out with an $85 billion loan from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Domestic terrorism in Detroit: foreclosed and abandoned houses on the city’s east side.
Schied and Squires, along with members of their groups We the People for the People, and RICOBusters, are recruiting those who have lost their homes to foreclosure to join the lawsuit. A special meeting will be held as follows:
JOIN $100 BILLION FEDERAL CLAIM VS. WAYNE COUNTY DOMESTIC TERRORISM
Compensation for Foreclosed Homeowners!
Saturday, April 9, 5:00 PM to 6:30 PM
Barton School
8530 Joy Road at Ohio, Detroit, Michigan.
For further information, call Cornell Squires at 313-460-3175