InfoWars: U.S. created ISIS, Russia dominates effort to defeat it
Associated Press (unless identified as AP, photos and videos in this story have been added from various sources by VOD).
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
December 9, 2015
Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad greets Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2006.
MOSCOW (AP) — Russia has unleashed another barrage of airstrikes against [ISIS] targets in Syria, including the first combat launch of a new cruise missile from a Russian submarine in the Mediterranean Sea, the country’s defense minister said Tuesday.
The Kalibr cruise missiles launched by the Rostov-on-Don submarine successfully hit the designated targets in Raqqa, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu reported to President Vladimir Putin. The submarine was in a submerged position during the launch, he added.
Putin noted that the new cruise missile can be equipped with both conventional and nuclear warheads, adding he hopes that the latter “will never be needed.”
Shoigu said Tu-22 bombers flying from their base in Russia also took part in the latest raids, performing 60 combat sorties in the last three days.
He said the targets destroyed in the latest wave of Russian airstrikes included a munitions depot, a factory manufacturing mortar rounds and oil facilities belonging to “terrorists.”
Shoigu said the Russian military had informed Israel and the United States about the airstrikes before launching them. A U.S. defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly, confirmed that Russia notified the U.S. in advance.
The U.S. official said at least 10 cruise missiles were launched from Russian surface ships in the Caspian Sea and at least one missile was fired by a Russian submarine in the eastern Mediterranean.
Above: Earlier footage from InfoWars on Russian airstrikes on ISIS; U.S. role in creating ISIS and Russia’s dominant role in defeating it.
Russia has carried out its air campaign in Syria since Sept. 30, using warplanes at an air base in Syria’s coastal province of Latakia, as well as navy ships and long-range bombers flying from their bases in Russia. While Moscow said its action has been focused on the Islamic State group, the U.S. and its allies have criticized Moscow for also striking moderate rebel groups opposed to Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Downing of Russian SU 24 over Syria by Turkey.
Shoigu told Putin that Syrian army forces had overtaken the area near the border with Turkey where a Turkish jet shot down a Russian warplane on Nov 24. He showed Putin the plane’s flight recorder, which he said Syrian and Russian troops had recovered from the crash site.
Putin ordered the flight recorder to be studied in the presence of foreign experts, adding that the data will show the plane’s flight path.
Moscow’s relations with Ankara have been badly strained over the downing. Turkey said it shot down the aircraft after it violated Turkey’s airspace for 17 seconds despite
AP Photo/Russian Defense Ministry Press Service In this photo made from the footage taken from Russian Defense Ministry official web site on Friday, Dec. 4, 2015 an aerial image of what they purport shows an airstrike.
Turkey denounced the incident as a provocation and summoned the Russian ambassador to protest.
Russia has insisted the warplane had stayed in Syria’s airspace, and responded by deploying long-range air defense missiles at its air base in Syria and introducing a slew of economic sanctions against Turkey.
Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan
“We had treated Turkey not only as a friendly country, but as an ally in the fight against terrorism, and we couldn’t expect such a mean, treacherous stab in the back,” Putin said.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova dismissed Turkey’s complaint about a sailor on a Russian navy vessel pictured on its deck with a portable air-defense missile while the ship was cruising across the Bosporus.
Zakharova responded Tuesday by saying the Russian crew had the right to protect its vessel and insisted that the action didn’t contradict the Montreux Convention, which sets international rules for using the Turkish straits.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry also voiced concern Tuesday about the reported bombing of a Syrian army camp without addressing the U.S. claim that Russia was responsible for the bombing.
Above: commentary on Deir el-Zour bombing; Russia says U.S. responsible
The Syrian government blamed aircraft from the U.S.-led coalition for targeting the army camp in the eastern city of Deir el-Zour on Sunday night, killing three Syrian soldiers and wounding 13. The U.S. denied the claim, and a senior U.S. official military said Washington was “certain” it was a Russian airstrike that had hit the camp. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the issue publicly.
U.S. Pres. Barack Obama leads western coalition attacking Syria, which supports anti-Assad rebels.
Without commenting on the U.S. claim, Russia’s Foreign Ministry on Tuesday said it has “serious concerns” about reports of the coalition strike in Deir el-Zour. It said the incident was rooted in the U.S.-led coalition’s reluctance to coordinate with Damascus on its campaign against the Islamic State group.
The ministry also mentioned a coalition strike in Syria’s province of Hassake that reportedly involved civilian casualties.
“These incidents show that the situation on the front against IS in Syria and Iraq is getting more tense,” the ministry said, adding that the Turkish military’s deployment to a base near Mosul in Iraq without Iraqi government sanction has added to the tensions.
Map shows Syria’s key location.
“We consider such presence unacceptable,” the ministry said.
U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, said Washington expects Turkey to operate in coordination with the Iraqi government.
“We have urged political dialogue between the Iraqi government and that in Turkey,” Power said. “Our belief is that just as we operate in close coordination with and with the consent of the Iraqi government that all countries should do that.”
She voiced hope that the Turkish deployment could “be done in that manner where a sovereign government is making judgments about which capabilities are deployed and making sure that it has visibility into everything going on in its country.”
Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, said that while Russia so far has said ‘no’ to Iraq’s request for help in fighting IS, that attitude may change. He added that the arsenal Russia has put on the ground in Syria signals Moscow’s intention to have a lasting military presence.
“It’s not going to be a short operation, it’s not going to be a short war,” Trenin said. “Russia is there for a long haul.”
AP National Security Writer Robert Burns in Washington, Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations and Kate de Pury in Moscow contributed to this report.
‘Philip was a board member of Rainbow/PUSH and was very passionate about helping people. He fell ill and needed help, and instead of getting help he got death.’–Rev. Jesse Jackson
The Chicago Police Department is under fire once again after releasing yet another video showing the death of a black man in custody — one that took three years to finally emerge.
The long-buried footage of Philip Coleman’s fatal confrontation behind bars emerged Monday night amidst continuing protests and probes over two videos showing the deadly police shootings last year of two black men.
The Coleman video, from December 2012, shows a group of guards waking up Coleman, 38, and surrounding him while he sits in a cell for assaulting his mother during an apparent psychotic episode, the Chicago Tribune reported.
After an apparent confrontation — which cannot be heard on the audio-free video — the six guards swarm Coleman on his cot and repeatedly shoot him with a Taser. The end of the clip shows guards dragging Coleman’s lifeless body by his arms down a hall.
Philip Coleman speaking as activist with Rainbow:PUSH.
Coleman later died in a hospital after a bad reaction to an antipsychotic drug doctors gave him, and his death was ruled an accident. But an autopsy revealed he also suffered severe trauma from the guard barrage, with more than 50 bruises and abrasions all over his body.
The guards shot Coleman with a Taser 13 times and beat him with batons, according to Coleman’s family lawyer. The alleged beating is not seen in the video.
Coleman’s death drew little attention when it happened, and the footage was not released. The guards later said they feared for their safety after Coleman attacked erratically. Police last year cleared them of any wrongdoing and ended an internal investigation.
But after the video’s sudden release Monday, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel swiftly condemned the department.
“I do not see how the manner in which Mr. Coleman was physically treated could possibly be acceptable,” he said in a statement.
Guards cart Philip Coleman to hospital, where he died.
“While the Medical Examiner ruled that Mr. Coleman died accidentally as a result of treatment he received in the hospital, it does not excuse the way he was treated when he was in custody. Something is wrong here — either the actions of the officers who dragged Mr. Coleman, or the policies of the department.”
Emanuel did not announce specific actions for the case but implied a new investigation would begin.
The video appeared near the end of one of the police department’s most embattled days during an increasingly tense year. The Justice Department on Monday launched a civil rights investigation into the force, centered on newly released video showing Officer Jason Van Dyke shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times last October.
Dorothy Holmes, mother of Ronald Johnson, weeps after cop who killed her son is not charged.
Also on Monday, the department cleared Officer George Hernandez for the fatal shooting of 25-year-old Ronald Johnson, just eight days before McDonald’s death. That shooting, which was also caught on camera, sparked similar outcry to McDonald’s death.
The McDonald video led to a first-degree murder charge for Van Dyke, the firing of the city’s top cop and fierce protests in the streets of Chicago. Activists and relatives of the victims have accused Chicago cops of covering up for a pattern of racist, deadly tactics.
AP Photo/Don Schanche/ Bounkham Phonesavanh, center, known as Baby Bou Bou, with mother Alecia Phonesavanh, and father, also named Bounkham Phonesavanh, on Sunday, Dec. 6, 2015.
Raid similar to that in which Detroit’s Aiyana Jones, 7, was killed
DECEMBER 7, 2015
From multiple sources
Flash-bang grenade landed in “Baby Bou Bou’s” crib.
ATLANTA — Nikki Autry, former Habersham County deputy sheriff and special agent of the Mountain Judicial Circuit Criminal Investigation and Suppression Team (“NCIS”), faces trial today on charges that she used false information to get a warrant for a “no-knock” drug raid that severely injured a toddler when a flash grenade detonated in his playpen, in May, 2014.
The grenade blew 19-month-old Bounkham Phonesavanh’s chest and face open, burning him and causing possible brain damage. He has had multiple surgeries since the raid.
The boy’s mother, Alecia Phonesavanh, said Autrey “ruined our family’s life by not doing her job properly.”
Autry, who has since resigned from the sheriff’s office, pled not guilty. Her attorney said she never “intentionally” misled the judge.
In an indictment July 22, 2015, federal prosecutors said Autry relied on untested informants who purchased crystal meth from an unknown person outside the house where Bou Bou and his family were living temporarily. One informant claimed there was unusual foot traffic around the house, a claim which prosecutors said was never verified.
Bou Bou Phonesavah in hospital after firebang explosion in his crib.
The indictment said in part, ” . . . .a brand new NCIS informant and two of his associates—his wife and a roommate—went to a residence located in Cornelia, Georgia. The informant’s roommate, who was not officially working with NCIS, approached the residence and allegedly purchased a small quantity of methamphetamine from an individual unknown to him who was standing outside the residence. There was no police surveillance to verify the purchase. Shortly afterwards, Autry presented an affidavit to a Habersham County magistrate judge falsely swearing that the NCIS informant made the purchase and that the NCIS informant was ‘a true and reliable informant who has provided information in the past that has led to criminal charges on individuals selling narcotics in Habersham County.'” (Full document at Former Habersham County Deputy Sheriff Charged for Her Role in Flash Bang Grenade Incident.)
Acting U.S. Attorney John Horn said, “Without [Autry’s] false statements, there was no probable cause to search the premises for drugs or to make the arrest. And in this case, the consequences of the unlawful search were tragic.”
The toddler’s family has so far been awarded $964,000 in a settlement with Habersham County’s Board of Commissioners. Lawsuits are still pending against other counties that took part in the multi-agency task force raid.
Marchers in Detroit in June, 2010, including Jewel Allison and her daughter Honesti, of New York City, protested the police no-knock raid killing of 7-year-old Aiyana Jones on May 16, 2010, at the home where she, her grandmother and great-aunt, mother, father, two baby brothers, and cousins were staying. She was shot in the head immediately after a flash-bang grenade was thrown on top of the couch where she and her grandmother Mertilla Jones were sleeping. Detroit cop Joseph Weekley was charged with involuntary manslaughter and reckless use of a firearm. He eventually walked free after several mistrials orchestrated by the prosecution, defense and Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway, former wife of Judge Michael Hathaway. Photo: Herb Boyd
Bill Wylie-Kellerman (l), Baxter Jones (in wheelchair) and Marian Kramer (red t-shirt) are among defendants for blockading Homrich entrance July 18, 2014.
City prosecutor: “They talked about living like animals because their water was shut off, and our ability to get a fair trial was thrown out.”
Hathaway: “If I hadn’t stopped the trial, you would have had a verdict today.”
“Can the people of Detroit even get justice?” Alesa Peatross-Smith
Over 45,000 household water shut-offs in Detroit so far this year, more coming under Great Lakes Water Authority
DETROIT – Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Michael Hathaway today snatched a verdict on charges against water shut-offs protesters out of the hands of an all-Black jury in 36th District Court, halting the trial before District Court Judge Ruth Ann Garrett indefinitely. His ruling came in the wake of the Nov. 19 conviction of cop William Melendez by a majority-Black jury in Wayne County’s Third Circuit Court for nearly killing Black motorist Floyd Dent.
Closing arguments were to begin yesterday in front of Judge Garrett in the cases of Rev. Bill Wylie-Kellerman and Marian Kramer of the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization. They and five others are charged with disorderly conduct for putting their bodies on the line to block city contractor Homrich Wrecking’s trucks from going out to shut thousands of Detroiters’ water off July 18, 2014.
The defendants had requested a jury trial, trusting that Detroiters, who make up jury panels at that court, would hear their cry for justice in this, the nation’s largest and poorest Black-majority city. Former City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson was among their witnesses in the case.
Detroiter Rochelle McCaskill, whose water was shut-off, told UN rapporteurs in 2014 she suffers from MRSA, a contagious antibiotic-resilient infection that can be life-threatening. McCaskill must bathe three times a day and frequently wash her clothing to prevent infecting her family. She said she almost died from sepsis last year.
“If I hadn’t stopped the trial, you might have had a verdict in the case today,” Hathaway told a packed courtroom. “I’m not sure civil disobedience is a defense to a criminal action. The focus has to be on the city’s motion for a mistrial and whether Judge Garrett properly denied that motion.”
City prosecutors in Hathaway’s court said they made the motion for a mistrial after two additional witnesses testified.
“They talked all about living like animals because their water had been shut off,” city prosecutor Elizabeth Mullen said. “Our ability to get a fair trial was thrown out the window.”
Hathaway said Melvin ‘Butch’ Hollowell, the city’s corporation counsel under “Mayor” Mike Duggan, and his second-in-command Doug Baker came to his court yesterday, Nov. 30, to argue for his intervention, and he issued an order halting the 36th District Court trial. Kramer’s attorney Julie Hurwitz said neither of Duggan’s two top lawyers had attended even one minute of the 36th District Court trial, which has gone on for 10 days.
Butch Hollowell, new house “N,” helps “mayor” Mike Duggan move into his office.
“Yes, it was an ex parte hearing,” Hathaway admitted. “I’m not absolutely certain my order could not have been entered ex parte.” (“Ex parte” refers to a judge conferring only with one side in a court contest.)
Neither the defendants nor their attorneys were informed of the motion the city filed and arguments held before Hathaway Nov. 30. Judge Garrett received a copy of Hathaway’s order only after her jury was dismissed for the day, attorney Hurwitz said. Garrett ruled against the motion for a mistrial, but had not even had a chance to issue her written order before Hathaway suspended the trial.
“This is crazy,” Cassandra Ford, present in the crowd, said during a break. “What is wrong with that judge [Hathaway]? We don’t have any representation in the courts anymore. Why did he interfere at all? The defendants’ rights were denied.”
Cassandra Ford (center) and Alesa Peatross-Smith (at her left) with Atty. John Royal after court hearing. “Where is the justice?” asked Ms. Peatross-Smith. Photo: Cornell Squires
“Where is the justice?” Alesa Peatross-Smith added. “Can the people of Detroit even get justice—that’s the question. The Mayor has his pockets full of the money from the demolition contractors. They crucified Kwame, now Duggan needs to be crucified.”
Hathaway became notorious in the 2009 case of homeowner Tigh Croff, who chased and shot 52-year-old Herbert Silas, a grandfather of 13, down the street from his house after suspecting him of intending to break in.
Judge Hathaway gave Tigh Croff probation in killing of grandfather he chased down street.
“I told him he was going to die and I shot him,” Croff testified. In chambers, Hathaway told both the prosecution and defense attorneys he would have done the same thing. Hathaway reduced Croff’s charges from second-degree murder to manslaughter, which carries up to 15 years in prison. He later sentenced him to probation on that charge.
In the present case, Hathaway ordered that Judge Garrett issue her written order regarding the city’s motion for a mistrial immediately, and that city prosecutors file an application for leave to appeal her order within 24 hours afterwards.
Attorney John Royal, President of the Detroit chapter of the National Lawyers’ Guild, filed an extensive brief with Hathaway opposing his ruling halting the 36th District Court trial. He and Hurwitz contended that Michigan Court Rules barred Hathaway from taking over the case without a proper interlocutory appeal. Hathaway has been ruling on earlier appeals in the case for unknown reasons.
As defendants blockaded Homrich entrance July 18, 2014, tens of thousands of protesters rallied downtown.
“Michael Hathaway ruled that he has jurisdiction in this case because he thinks he has jurisdiction,” Royal told the crowd of supporters afterwards. “If Judge Hathaway declares a mistrial, it means the trial is over and a new trial has to be scheduled. The city doesn’t want this to go to a verdict because it’s afraid of an acquittal. The City Law Department is clearly acting in close collaboration with Duggan.”
Protesters after release July 18, 2014.
Royal said an appeal would be costly and take months, if not years.
The City is also clearly afraid that an acquittal in the 36th District Court case will open the floodgates for thousands of Detroiters to take direct action to stop water shut-offs which are increasing in the city every day, creating a horrific threat to public health. The United Nations has already condemned Detroit’s shut-off actions.
The Detroit Water & Sewerage Department and the Great Lakes Water Authority, created under the Detroit bankruptcy, are planning to begin a “joint partnership” Jan. 1, 2016. The GLWA would eventually have control over all DWSD matters including rates, contracts, and water shut-offs, among other issues.
Sue McCormick, newly appointed GLWA CEO, said in her monthly report Nov. 19 that 18,622 residential accounts have been permanently shut-off for “illegal” usage, from January 1 through Oct 31, 2015.
Homrich employee shuts water off to Detroit home.
“Since May 11, 2015, the Department has posted 56,317 door hangers notifying customers of pending shut-off of services,” McCormick said. “A total of 29,433 of those customers have either paid their bills, or entered into a payment plan agreement.”
That of course leaves 26,884 households in imminent danger of shut-off in addition to the thousands who have already lost water service. According to Demeeko Williams of the Detroit Water Brigade, the majority of customers he sees are not able to keep up with their payment plans.
The Authority has already declared that, come hell or high water, its “Water Resident Assistance Program” (WRAP) is not and never will be the income-based water affordability, no-shut-offs plan that thousands have demanded over the last two years.
Blocked in the courts, Detroiters will have to decide whether they will be shut-off from a life necessity for themselves and their families, or shut off Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, “mayor’ Duggan, racist white bankruptcy and circuit court judges, and other politicians, BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY.
Angry courtroom crowd listens to attorney John Royal explain their options after hearing 12/1/15. Photo: Cornell Squires.
Related: The Coalition to Save the Detroit Water & Sewerage Department is continuing its petition campaign to get the GLWA takeover on the city’s ballot, and take shut-offs out of the hands of a regional authority hostile to Detroit.
Protesters blockade entrance to DIA as Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes and Chief Judge Gerald Rosen are given the Dennis W. Archer award.
All petition circulators are asked to turn in what they have collected so far at DAREA meetings, held at Nandi’s Knowledge Café at 12511 Woodward Ave. on the 1st Monday of the month at 11:30 am, and at St. Matthews and St. Joseph Church at Woodward and Holbrook on the third Wednesday of every month at 5:30 p.m.
For more information on the this campaign, including links to petitions themselves, fliers, and instructions for circulating, see:
The Coalition needs to collect a total of 15,000 valid petition signatures meaning it must collect at least twice that to allow for invalid signatures. Signers must be Detroit residents who are registered voters. CIRCULATORS DO NOT HAVE TO BE DETROIT RESIDENTS.
Baltimore mural after fiery rebellions in wake of police killing of Freddie Gray. Baltimore’s city government is also carrying out mass water shut-offs.
Tamir Rice, 12 when killed by Cleveland cops Nov. 22, 2014. No grand jury verdict has yet been rendered.
Two independent experts have concluded that the fatal police shooting of Tamir Rice was unjustified, the Daily News has learned.
The 12-year-old boy was carrying a toy gun on Nov. 22, 2014 when he was gunned down in a Cleveland park by a cop who opened fire seconds after hopping out of his patrol car.
“The shooting of Tamir Rice was inconsistent with generally accepted standards and norms in police practices and … it was an unreasonable and unjustified use of deadly force,” reads a report written by law enforcement expert Roger Clark. “The killing of this child was completely avoidable and preventable, and should never have occurred.”
Roger Clark
[VOD: Roger A. Clark is a decorated 27-year-veteran cop who led a major-crimes task force in Los Angeles as a sheriff’s lieutenant before retiring in 1993. He has testified regarding the use of excessive force in many cases.]
The boy’s mother Samaria Rice, who is slated to testify before the grand jury on Monday, said the reports validated what she’s believed all along. She specifically pointed to the experts’ emphasis on the officers opening fire within two seconds of coming upon her son.
Tamir Rice, 12, was carrying a toy gun on when he was gunned down in a Cleveland park by a cop.
“Nobody, not a child, not an adult, can do anything in less than two seconds,” the 38-year-old mom said. “They didn’t give it any time to at least see what was going on.”
Samaria Rice at site of son’s killing in Cudell Rec Center park.
Rice family lawyer Earl Ward sent the reports to Cuyahoga County prosecutor Timothy McGinty Friday as the lengthy grand jury investigation into Rice’s death limps along.
The reports contradict two others released by McGinty’s office last month that concluded the two cops, Timothy Loehmann and Frank Garmback, acted reasonably. McGinty claimed he pushed out the reports in the interest of transparency, but Ward has argued it was part of a calculated effort to muddy the grand jury process.
Timothy Loehmann
Frank Garmback
In a letter to McGinty that accompanied the reports, Ward said he understands they “will likely not undo the damage already done to the grand jury process.”
“But we think it important to consider the testimony and findings of true experts to explain why this killing was unjustified,” it adds.
Ward also reiterated his call for McGinty to recuse himself from the case in favor of an independent prosecutor — a request that the Cuyahoga County prosecutor has dismissed.
The shooting of Rice was set in motion when a 911 caller reported seeing a youth in a park with a gun that was “probably fake.” The dispatcher failed to tell the two responding officers those two key pieces of information.
Jeff Noble
A grainy surveillance video captured the officers arriving at the scene and Loehmann opening fire, striking Rice once in the chest. “The record is uncontested that Tamir was not acting aggressively nor was he threatening or endangering anyone at that time,” Clark wrote in his report.
Jeff Noble, a former deputy police chief in the California cities of Irvine and Westminster, sharply criticized the two responding cops in his 18-page report.
“Officers Garmback and Loehmann engaged in reckless tactical decision making that created the danger, thus the use of deadly force was excessive, objectively unreasonable and inconsistent with generally accepted police practices,” Noble wrote.
Part of Tamir Rice anniversary protest in Cleveland, Nov. 22, 2015. Photo by Yvette Johnson.
Also Saturday, McGinty’s office released enhanced video stills of the fatal police encounter that killed Rice. (See still frame from video above.)
The most revealing of the 326 frames offer a crisp narrative of the seconds leading up to Rice’s death, with the officers in their patrol car quickly closing ground on him.
Text accompanying the images suggest that Rice’s movements could have appeared threatening to the responding officers.
“Rice moves toward police vehicle 5 seconds before police vehicle stops,” reads the narrative accompanying one photo.
Yvette Johnson (l), Kevin Kellom (r), parents of Detroit police victim Terrance Kellom; Mertilla Jones (center), grandmother of Aiyana Jones, 7, killed by Detroit police, attended Cleveland rally.
The next few clips capture the moments before Rice is gunned down. “Rice moves forward and lowers arm to waist,” it reads. “Vehicle still in motion. Passenger door opens.”
“Rice’s shoulder and arms move upward,” the text accompanying another clip reads. “Vehicle still in motion…Loehmann exits vehicle.” The following still shows Loehmann standing a mere few feet from Rice, the officer’s gun pointed directly at the boy. “Rice reacts to gunshot,” the text reads.
Nicholas Heyward, in gray and red jacket, at rally for Tamir Rice held in Nicholas Naquan Heyward Park in Brooklyn, NYC Nov. 22, 2015. AARON SHOWALTER/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
On the subject of what it takes to be a police officer, Nicholas Heyward has a simple rule.
“If I was a police commissioner and you shoot an innocent, you cannot be on my force,” Heyward said.
Nicholas Naquan Heyward, 13 when he was killed by NYPD in Brooklyn, NYC 20 years ago.
More than 20 years have passed since Heyward’s son 13-year-old, Nicholas, was shot to death by a cop while playing cops and robbers in a Brooklyn housing complex.
Yet the pain is as real and fresh as it is for mothers and fathers of today’s Black Lives Matter movement.
Heyward was one of about 100 demonstrators outside Brooklyn’s Barclays Center Sunday afternoon protesting police brutality, and commemorating the one-year anniversary of the death of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old boy shot to death by police in Cleveland.
Like many who waved signs, held banners or led chant, Heyward said he was frustrated with the pace of the Cleveland grand jury’s investigation.
“It’s painful,” Cleveland said, blinking back tears. “My son’s case was closed in three months. It don’t take that long. And this was on film.”
Like Tamir, Heyward’s son was playing with a toy gun when he fatally crossed paths with a cop responding to a call.
Mural at Nicholas Naquan Heyward Park in Gowanus Housing Project, where the 13-year-old was killed in 1994.
“They don’t like to use the word ‘murder’ but here were innocent human beings,” Heyward said.
About 20 police officers shadowed the demonstrators as they marched from the arena to the Gowanus Housing Project, where Heyward’s son was killed in 1994.
At the Barclay’s Center, several cops stood in body armor, while others held rifles to guard the subway entrance to the arena.
Organizers said there were no arrests.
Protesters remember Tamir Rice, Aiyana Jones, children killed by cops in Cleveland and Detroit, during rally in Brooklyn, NYC Nov. 22, 2015.
BELOW: ORIGINAL VIDEO OF TAMIR RICE KILLING, INCLUDING BRUTAL ARREST OF HIS SISTER AFTERWARDS AS SHE TRIES TO HELP HIM. VIDEO SHOWS HOW LONG HE LAY DYING AS COPS FAILED TO HELP, AND BEFORE EMS ARRIVED. THE CHILD DIED FROM LOSS OF BLOOD FROM ONE GUNSHOT WOUND. HE COULD HAVE BEEN SAVED!
Video above: Protesters marching down the streets of Michigan Avenue demanding justice on Black Friday, Nov. 27, for Laquan McDonald, 17, shot 16 times by former Chicago cop Jason Van Dyke in October, 2014.
Above: released video, published on Youtube by Chicago News.
Teen shot 16 times, 9 in the back, by cop with 18 previous complaints, including use of racial epithets, excessive force
CPD took no action for over one year, finally charged Van Dyke with first-degree murder
CPD hid 5 police dashcam videos from public eye, erased 86 minutes of BK video–should entire command be charged with conspiracy and obstruction of justice?
19 Black men and children killed by Chicago police in 2014
Nov. 27, 2015 — (Reuters) On one of the busiest U.S. retail days, thousands of people took to Chicago’s most prestigious downtown shopping district on Friday to protest last year’s shooting death of a black teenager by a white policeman and the city’s handling of the case.
About 2,000 people with signs reading “Stop Police Terror” gathered in a cold drizzle for the march on Chicago’s “Magnificent Mile” on the Black Friday shopping day . . . .
Organizers said the rally would be a show of outrage over the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald, 17, and what they see as racial bias in U.S. policing.
The police officer who shot McDonald 16 times, Jason Van Dyke, 37, was charged with first-degree murder hours before a graphic video of the shooting was made public on Tuesday.
The protesters chanted “Stop the cover up, 16 shots,” as they marched along Michigan Avenue. (Reuters)
Above: protesters demanded release of youth leader, poet Malcolm X. London from police custody; invaded stores, restaurants/Ruptly TV
Van Dyke had 18 civilian complaints, including use of racial epithets, excessive force
Chicago cop Jason Van Dyke, charged with first-degree murder.
For months, Chicago leaders had feared that the release of the video could provoke the kind of turmoil that rocked cities such as Baltimore and Ferguson, Missouri, after young black men were slain by police or died in police custody.
Van Dyke was the subject of 18 civilian complaints over 14 years, including allegations that he used racial epithets and excessive force, police and court records show.
Complaints against police are not uncommon. But the number filed against Van Dyke was high compared with other officers. At least one person he arrested was later awarded $350,000 indamages in a lawsuit.
Van Dyke’s lawyer, Daniel Herbert, did not return a message left Wednesday by The Associated Press.
Eyewitnesses to shooting not interviewed by police
Malcolm X. London, among youth leaders of days of protest in Chicago.
Michael Robbins, an attorney for McDonald’s family, said several citizens who witnessed McDonald’s shooting reported that officers ordered them to leave the scene under threat of arrest without ever interviewing them. Other witnesses reported that detectives later badgered them for insisting that McDonald hadn’t threatened officers before he was shot, Robbins said.
Robbins said one man who was stuck in traffic with his son saw the shooting unfold right in front of him. He followed police orders to leave, but when a police union spokesman later described in television news reports that McDonald had purportedly lunged at Van Dyke with a knife, the man came forward to challenge the account, Robbins said.
“To tell an occurrence witness who observed a fatal shooting to leave and not even ask them to identify themselves is incomprehensible,” Robbins said.
Four other police videos of the killing exist
Chicago protesters battled police two days earlier, Nov. 25, 2015
Chicago Tribune
“The other DVDs released by the city show:
•A video of Van Dyke’s squad car following McDonald through the lawn of a Burger King restaurant and pulling up alongside him as he walked down the center of Pulaski.
•Another video of a squad car arriving at the shooting scene moments after McDonald crumpled to the ground. The video shows the teen appear to move slightly in the street with streams of blood trailing from his body.
•Two other videos from a pair of other police vehicles that drove up near the incident but appeared to be quickly dispatched to help set up a perimeter and control traffic.”
Burger King manager believes Chicago cops deleted surveillance footage after Laquan McDonald shooting
New York Daily News
Burger King is seen at beginning of police dashcam video.
A district manager at a Chicago Burger King claims police wiped more than an hour of surveillance footage from the chain’s servers after last year’s shooting that killed Laquan McDonald, according to a report.
Several detectives barged into the Burger King demanding the password to access surveillance footage that would have captured the crucial minutes before and after Officer Jason Van Dyke opened fire on the 17-year-old, killing the black teen, the Chicago Tribune reported.
The fatal shooting on Oct. 20 would not have been captured on the restaurant’s cameras pointed toward the parking lot, but the video may have shown what court documents described as McDonald brandishing a knife in the parking lot.
Activists gather outside Burger King where police allege McDonald brandished 3-inch knife.
By the time those officers and a member of the department’s technical support left the restaurant after lingering for about three hours, Jay Darshane contends 86 minutes of footage recorded from 9:13 to 10:39 p.m. vanished from their computer.
Van Dyke shot McDonald 16 times at about 9:50 p.m. a short distance from the Burger King.
Darshane brought up his concern over the missing footage while testifying before a grand jury earlier this year, but did not go public with his belief until this week.
“I was just trying to help the police with their investigation … I didn’t know they were going to delete it,” Darshane told the Chicago Tribune..
Autopsy drawing shows 16 bullets that entered Laquan McDonald.
The Other Laquan McDonalds: More Questionable Killings by Chicago Police
Daily Beast
Chicago cops killed 19 males last year. Autopsies, police statements, and media reports for several of those killings do not add up.
Laquan McDonald was one of 19 men killed by the Chicago Police Department last year. As national media turns its attention to the city following the release of video showing McDonald being killed in what prosecutors say was an act of first-degree murder by Officer Jason Van Dyke, the 18 other homicides will go uncovered.
For the past year The Daily Beast has been investigating killings by Chicago police to determine whether the police and press versions of events line up with autopsy reports; whether the Independent Police Review Authority has completed its investigations into the deaths; whether witnesses have spoken to police and IPRA investigators. Simply put: We want to know if there are more Laquan McDonalds.
Warren Robinson, 16, shot 17 times by Chicago police July 4, 2015. A 14-year-old was killed by police the same week.
CHICAGO— On July 5, 2014, not far from the intersection of 87th and Morgan on Chicago’s South Side, Warren Robinson hid under a car. Maybe he was uncooperative, as police have said. Maybe he was defiant, or aggressive, or pissed off or any number of emotions that can course through the mind of a 16-year-old boy. Or maybe he was just scared, because the police were about to pump 17 bullets into his 5-foot-9, 135-pound frame.
Whatever the case, police say they recovered a .38-caliber semi-automatic pistol from Robinson. The cops there had guns too, and they used them to shoot Robinson as he climbed out from underneath the car, [allegedly] refusing to drop his piece.
Robinson is the only person shot by Chicago police more times than McDonald was last year. In all, it took 109 Chicago police bullets to kill McDonald, Robinson, and the other 17 men, a Daily Beast review of autopsy reports found.
‘WE CHARGE GENOCIDE’ — CHICAGO REPORT TO UN ON POLICE KILLINGS
Photo from “We Charge Genocide” report on Chicago police submitted to the United Nations. (See link below).
By BAR editor and columnist Ajamu Baraka November 18, 2015
Ajamu Baraka
“The white supremacist ideology and world-view, normalized and thus unrecognized by most, has become a form of psychopathology.”
The white world views French victims of ISIS as more valuable – more human – than the thousands of Arabs, Kurds and Africans murdered in terror attacks, or the billions of people exploited, enslaved and exterminated by Europeans over the past five centuries. “The ‘lie of white supremacy’ has distorted the personalities, lives and the very ability of many white people to grasp reality. France is anything but innocent. Neither is the U.S.
I received a message from one of my friends in Lebanon who asked with feigned curiosity why the U.S. media only gave a passing reference to the bombing in Beirut before turning to non-stop coverage of the attacks in Paris. Of course, like many of us she already knew the answer – that in the consciousness of the White West there is a premium on the value of White life.
2,000 Nigerians slaughtered by Boko Haram.
Acknowledging this fact is neither new nor should it be particularly controversial. Its obviousness is apparent to anyone who is honest. We saw it in the response to the Charlie Hebdo attacks where the world (meaning the White West) engaged in a gratuitous expression of moral outrage against terrorism. But that outrage against terrorism didn’t extend to the two thousand Nigerians who were murdered by Boko Haram the same weekend that a massive rally in Paris[3] took place to condemn the Charlie Hebdo attack. At that rally not one word of solidarity or condemnation of terrorism in Nigeria was expressed by the speakers or the thousands gathered that day.
“Non-European life simply does not have equal value.”
What my friend and all of us who have been the victims of the selected morality and oppressive violence of Western civilization over the last five hundred years have come to understand is that non-European life simply does not have equal value.
Yemeni children after U.S.-Saudi terror attack; 7,000 Yemenis murdered.
How else can one explain the complete lack of attention to the humanity of the victims of ISIS attacks in Beirut and in Bagdad the day before or the lack of concern for the lives of the over 7,000 people in Yemen murdered by the Saudi Arabia dictatorship, with U.S. and NATO support?
And is it unfair to suggest that it is the diminished value of life of the lives of people in the global South that allows supporters of Bernie Sanders to dismiss his support for U.S. war-mongering policies in the global South?
The Liberal Roots of White Supremacist Psychopathology
In the classrooms of Western universities and occasionally in civic courses in high schools, students are introduced to the ideas of liberal humanitarianism that are supposed to characterize the core values of the European enlightenment. The enlightenment is supposed to represent the progressive advancement of all of humanity by the thinkers of Europe who, of course, represented the leading edge of collective humanity.
But what is not sufficiently interrogated in these classes is the fact that while these grand theories of “mankind’s” inherent equality, rationality and even “perfectibility,” were being discussed, those theorists had already arrived at a consensus. This consensus was on the criteria for determining which individuals and groups would be recognized as having equal membership in the human family, what Hannah Arendt referred to as those people who had the “right to have rights.”
“Women and the non-European world were excluded or assigned to a lower order of humanity.”
Photo of slave auction attended by southern “gentlemen” in the U.S. The 13th Amendment still declares slavery legal in the U.S. prison system.
According to the criteria, women and the non-European world were excluded or assigned to a lower order of humanity. Eurocentric academicians, still a hegemonic force in the West, don’t historicize the “great” humanitarian theories of Europe and critically juxtapose the rise of those theories with the concrete practices of European powers. Those practices involved the systematic slaughter of millions of Indigenous people throughout the America’s and the African slave trade that made Europe fat and rich and allowed for the creation of a class of intellectuals freed-up from the struggle to earn a living and able to engage in the higher contemplations of life.
However, Eurocentric liberalism was never just confined to the academy. It became the hegemonic ideological force that embedded itself in the culture and collective consciousness of the Western project and with it the devaluation of non-European life and culture. In other words, the white supremacist ideology and world-view, normalized and thus unrecognized by most, has become a form of psychopathology. It is the cognitive dissonance that Fanon talks about regarding white supremacy as part of the colonial mindset and what James Baldwin refers to as the “lie of white supremacy” that has distorted the personalities, lives and the very ability of many white people to grasp reality.
James Baldwin: “The lie of white supremacy.”
However, the contradictions in the spheres of ideas and culture are not the real threat. The construction of a Western collective consciousness that is unable to cognitively process information and consider knowledge beyond the assumptions of its own world-views and values is dangerous enough, but the ease with which humanity is stratified with Europeans and their societies representing the apex of human development is the real threat because that belief has resulted in the rationalization for the crimes of colonialism, slavery and genocide, and the politics of permanent war.
The White Lives Matter Movement writ large, played out on the international stage
Despite the spirited defense of the positive aspects of liberalism from John Rawls to radicals like Slavoj Zizek[4], the racist and sexist contradictions of liberalism were once again confirmed by the obscenely disproportionate response to the attacks in Paris that once again demonstrated that liberalism is no more than a racist ideological construct posing as trans-historical philosophy.
130 dead in Paris, hundreds of millions of Africans, indigenous peoples across the world dead at the hands of European and U.S. imperialists.
However, let me be clear, my critique of the moral hypocrisy of the West should not be read as a rationalization for the horrific crimes committed in Paris a few days ago.
The intentional murder of non-combatants is a recognizable war crime that can rise to the level of a crime against humanity and should always be condemned with the perpetrators brought to justice. That legal principle is based on the moral principle of the equal value of all life and everyone’s human right to life. The defense and enforcement of those principles requires, however, that all states and groups be subjected to the same legal and ethical standards and that all are held accountable.
“Some states – like the United States – proudly claim their ‘exceptionality,’ meaning impunity from international norms, as a self-evident natural right.”
Imperialist France’s General Gourand marches through the streets of Aleppo in Syria in 1920.
But in the context of the existing global power relations, crimes committed by Western states and those states aligned with the West as well as their paramilitary institutions escape accountability for crimes committed in the non-European world. In fact some states – like the United States – proudly claim their “exceptionality,” meaning impunity from international norms, as a self-evident natural right.
And in that sense, while the victims of the violence in Paris may have been innocent, France was not. French crimes against Arabs, Muslims and Africans are ever-present in the historical memory and discourse of many members of those populations living in France. Those memories, the systemic discrimination experienced by many Muslims and the collaboration of French authorities with the U.S. and others that gave aid and logistical support to extremist elements in Syria and turned their backs while their citizens traveled to Syria to topple President Assad, became the toxic mix that resulted in the blowback on November 13.
Palestinian children murdered in Zionist Israeli air attacks.
Although a number of the dead in Paris are young Arabs, Muslims and Africans, in the global popular imagination, France, like the U.S. (even under a Black president), is still white.
So in Iraq the Shia will continue to die in the thousands[5] from ISIS bombs; the Saudi’s will continue to slaughter Houthi’s with U.S. and NATO assistance; and Palestinian mothers will continue to bury their children, murdered by Zionist thugs in and out of uniform, without any outcry from the West. CNN and others will give non-stop coverage to the attacks in Paris because in the end we all really know that the lives that really matter are white.
Ajamu Baraka is a human rights activist, organizer and geo-political analyst. Baraka is an Associate Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) in Washington, D.C. and editor and contributing columnist for the Black Agenda Report. He is a contributor to “Killing Trayvons: An Anthology of American Violence” (Counterpunch Books, 2014). He can be reached at www.AjamuBaraka.com[6]
(Video above, from Lady Justice, shows full verdict and surrounding events)
Majority Black jury finds Robocop guilty of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder, misconduct in office; he faces up to 15 years
Judge Vonda R. Evans remands Melendez to Wayne County Jail pending sentencing reset to Dec. 4, as a threat to the community; chastises his wife
William Melendez’ mug shot Nov. 19. Photo: Wayne Co. Sheriff’s Office.
DETROIT— William “Robocop” Melendez is finally off the street, after at least 20 years of wreaking murder and havoc throughout Detroit, the City of Inkster, and elsewhere in Michigan.
Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Vonda R. Evans remanded him to the Wayne County Jail Nov. 19, pending sentencing Dec. 4 (updated) on two felony counts in the brutal beating of Black Detroit autoworker Floyd Dent on Jan. 28, 2015, in the city of Inkster.
A jury comprised of seven Blacks and five whites found Melendez guilty of “Assault with Intent to Do Great Bodily Harm Less Than Murder,” which carries a maximum prison term of 10 years, and “Misconduct in Office,” which carries a five year maximum. They found him not guilty of a felony count of “Strangulation.” The jury foreperson was a Black woman.
That morning, the jury had again watched the police dashcam video of the beating, during which Melendez is seen hitting Dent 16 times in the head with his fist, and other white cops are seen jumping on him, tasering and kicking him. It was a video which went viral after Channel Four reporter Kevin Dietz first aired it and followed up relentlessly with a series of other revelations about the case.
Floyd Dent at courthouse with attorney Gregory Rohl prior to his testimony.
“I would like to have seen Melendez found guilty on all three counts, since I saw my client being choked on the video,” Dent’s attorney Gregory Rohl told VOD. “But Melendez is still looking at 10 years. I admire the courage of Judge Evans; she did the right thing. During Melendez’ sentencing, Floyd Dent will give a very powerful victim impact statement. I don’t know where they’ll send Melendez, but people have called my office saying they’re waiting for him.”
A statement from Rohl’s office added, “Floyd Dent would like to thank all of his supporters and public leaders who stood by him and believed in him during his ordeal with the Inkster Police Department, specifically Reverend [Charles] Williams and Ron Scott. He would also like to extend his gratitude to the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office and Lieutenant Twana Powell for their dedicated service in establishing the truth in this case before the jury.
Father Ellis Clifton of Inkster marches with Floyd Dent and grandson Apr. 2, 2015.
“While Mr. Dent is satisfied with the jury verdict, he is hopeful that his plight will serve to educate the public and reinforce the belief that all lives matter without regard to the color of their skin. He further hopes that the healing that the community so desperately needs can now begin.
“Finally, Floyd would like to thank Judge Vonda Evans for both her professionalism and courage demonstrated in handling this volatile case, especially in remanding ‘Robocop’ Melendez to a place where he can no longer hurt innocent members of the community.”
Melendez has a long, repellent history from his time on both the Detroit and Inkster police forces. He has been sued 12 times in federal court, for the killings of Detroiters Lou Adkins in 1996 and Ernest Crutchfield II in 2003, and numerous other acts of brutality. Prior to the Adkins’ killing, he had been sued four times, according to the Detroit Free Press article shown below. During his trial on the Dent beating, he refused to take the stand to testify, likely in light of this history.
Atty. David Robinson (r) with client Arnetta Grable (l) in 2006, after $4 M jury verdict in 3-time killer cop Eugene Brown’s execution of her son Lamar Grable, 20.
In 2004, the U.S. Department of Justice charged and tried him and other Detroit cops from the Third and Fourth Precincts for a years-long LA Ramparts-style campaign of terrorism. Despite the unprecedented testimony of 17 Black Detroit officers against Robocop’s crew, they were acquitted. The jury evidently responded to aspersions by Melendez’ defense attorney David Lee against those who were victimized.
“Melendez finally got exactly what he deserved,” Attorney David Robinson said. He represented Crutchfield’s family after Melendez, Jeffrey Weiss, and other Detroit cops invaded the man’s home without a warrant and shot him to death in his kitchen in 2003.
“There’s no excuse for what he did to Floyd Dent,” Robinson added. “Fortunately, he was not smart enough to turn his police car camera in a different direction. Had it not been caught on camera, it would have been his word against Dent’s, and he would have gotten away with it again.”
A young Black Inkster resident said Melendez had been on the force there for many years.
“They finally got that monster off the streets,” he told VOD. “Justice has been served today. Now he’s caged up like an animal like he has done to so many other people. He falsely arrested me, and planted drugs on my friends and family members. Two of them are still in prison. The Inkster police force as a whole is corrupt and needs to be dismantled. This verdict has brought me to tears, and I am rejoicing that my God has seen fit for this day to come.”
Cornell Squires
Cornell Squires is a southwest Detroit resident and leader of We the People for the People. His son was falsely charged by Melendez in 1999 and subsequently spent time in prison.
“Praise the Lord,” Squires said. “We’ve finally got a victory. It’s karma, baby. Melendez sent my son to jail and now he’s in jail. Asst. Prosecutor Tom Trczinski suborned perjury in the case, and he died at the age of 56 about two years ago. Melendez thought he was going to get away with it, but he finally got caught. The streets of Michigan will be safer now. Robocop is down for the count; his terrorist attacks have come to an end. He needs to get the maximum sentence. He’s ruined so many people’s lives. He’s a demon. He’s going to jail, and then he’s going to hell.”
Squires said, however, as did Dent, that all the cops involved in the beating and its aftermath should have been criminally charged. He said their charges should have included planting drugs (Melendez), and filing false police reports as well. Melendez was convicted of filing a false report prior to his son’s trial, but then Judge Kym Worthy would not take that into evidence.
Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick is placed in handcuffs at his sentencing hearing May 25, 2010.
Inkster police Officer Chuck Randazzo was internally suspended for 15 days for use of excessive force, and Sgt. Shawn Kritzer was suspended for 30 days for improperly administering medical attention to Floyd Dent. Both testified at the trial on Melendez’ behalf. Randazzo wore his Inkster police uniform on the day of the verdict, and according to Channel 7 news, assaulted one of their cameraman in the hallway. (See video below.)
Squires also noted that despite his violent history, Melendez was politely escorted off to jail with no handcuffs.
“They handcuffed Kwame Kilpatrick after he was convicted for non-violent crimes, far less than what Melendez did to so many people,” Squires said.
Kerry Melendez during honeymoon, from her Google+ account.
Throughout Melendez’ trial, the courtroom was filled with white cops, along with his wife of two months, Kerry Melendez, and other family members. His wife faced a stinging rebuke from Judge Evans after storming out of the courtroom when the verdict was read. Evans forced her to return, telling her she had disrespected her courtroom and the jury.
While outside in the hallway, Randazzo assaulted a Channel 7 cameraman who approached Kerry Melendez, and she herself made threatening moves toward their crew, according to Channel 7. She also refused to stand for the jury as they left after the verdict.(See video below.)
Melendez’ defense attorney James C. Thomas, who also represented former Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick in the case which ended with his sentence to 28 years in prison, told the media that he planned to appeal Melendez’ conviction based on alleged “judicial error” by Judge Evans during jury selection proceedings.
Defense attorney James C. Thomas (l) talks to media including Kevin Dietz (r) of Channel 4, who broke the Dent beating story.
He said the voir dire of the jury was conducted all at the same time, in one room, but did not cite any court rule indicating that could not be done.
“The attorneys both for the prosecution and defense would be able to weed out whatever biases had occurred by getting to know the jurors without being around other people and without other jurors [present],” Thomas said.
Michigan Court Rule 6.412 says regarding voir dire of the jury, that “The scope of voir dire examination of prospective jurors is within the discretion of the court.” It adds, “The court may conduct the examination of prospective jurors or permit the lawyers to do so. If the court conducts the examination, it may permit the lawyers to supplement the examination by direct questioning or by submitting questions for the court to ask. On its own initiative or on the motion of a party, the court may provide for a prospective juror or jurors to be questioned out of the presence of the other jurors.” (See Michigan Court Rules.)
Thomas did not say that he ever introduced a motion for sequestered voir dire of any juror or jurors.
Walter Budzyn and Larry Nevers in 1992, known as “Starsky and Hutch.”
A majority-Black jury is a rare occurrence in the Third Judicial Circuit Court these days. The state legislature abolished the Detroit-only Recorders Court in 1999 after a Black jury convicted white Detroit cops Walter Budzyn and Larry Nevers of second-degree murder for the magnum flashlight beating death of steel plant worker Malice Green in 1992. Then Assistant Prosecutor Kym Worthy gained acclaim from Detroiters for the verdict, which she parlayed into her run for Wayne County Prosecutor.
Budzyn and Nevers, known as “Starsky and Hutch” on the streets of near-west Detroit, later won new trials and reduced verdicts and sentences. Nevers later died of cancer.
Malice Green, beat to death by white cops Walter Budzyn and Larry Nevers in 1992.
Wayne County administrator Mike Duggan, now “Mayor” of Detroit, fired former Assistant Wayne County Medical Examiner Khalil Jiraki for determining Green died from the beating rather than from drugs in his system. Jiraki’s original finding was later confirmed. He won $2.1 million in a lawsuit against his discharge.
Worthy said after the Melendez verdict, “Public confidence in law enforcement is eroded when police officers abuse citizens. The jury’s verdict in this case is important because it shows that police brutality cannot and will not be tolerated.”
However, Worthy recently refused to charge officers in the killing of 19-year-old father Terrance Kellom in his father’s home, despite mass protests in Detroit as Baltimore went up in flames to protest the police killing of Freddie Gray.
Worthy has so far failed to charge ANY DETROIT COPS with murder.
Terrance Kellom with baby son before he was killed. He did not live to see his daughter born afterwards.
Aiyana Jones, killed by Detroit police at age of 7.
A Grand Jury consisting of Third Judicial Criminal Court Chief Judge Timothy Kenny charged Detroit cop Joseph Weekley with involuntary manslaughter in the May 16, 2010 killing of 7-year Aiyana Jones, but Weekley walked after three mistrials.
During those trials, all covered by VOD, it was clear that Asst. Prosecutor Robert Moran colluded with defense attorney Steve Fishman and Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway to orchestrate the results. A source familiar with the prosecutor’s staff told VOD in two letters that many staff members of the office were enraged.
The racial element in Dent case has been glaring. The dashcam video of the beating by numerous white cops of Dent, a Black man, went viral after a year during which Blacks and their supporters in Ferguson and Baltimore rose up in fiery rebellion against the killings of Michael Brown and Freddie Gray by white police officers. Across the country, protests against hundreds of other such killings dominated national news.
Thousands marched in Inkster in support of Floyd Dent on March 3, 2015.
In Detroit and Inkster, thousands marched, demanding charges against Melendez and all involved.
Closing arguments on Nov. 18 in Melendez’ trial were rife with either specific or subtle racial references.
John Zieleniewski testifying about racist texts he received and sent from his phone. He was present at the trial afterwards, and was heard objecting to being characterized by Donaldson as a “wannabe” cop, since he is an unpaid auxiliary cop.
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Robert Donaldson argued that the defense’s whole strategy was to draw attention away from the video, which even former Inkster police chief Vicki Yost admitted was “difficult to watch.” She testified, however, that the video showed Dent had resisted arrest, but that excessive force was used.
“Mr. Dent, who is a 35-year Ford Motor Company employee, with no record except for difficulties keeping his driver’s license, made the mistake of driving his Cadillac in the city of Inkster,” Donaldson said.
He referred to his direct exam of Melendez’ partner, auxiliary Inkster cop John Zieleniewski, who he called a “wannabe” cop. Zieleniewski had testified that he and Melendez saw Dent in the parking lot of the Inkster Budget Inn going into a room and coming out, implying that he went there to buy drugs. He said Dent turned right on Michigan, right on Fairbairn, and left on Oakland, before eventually stopping at the old Inkster police station on South River Park Drive, where the beating occurred.
Dent testified that he was never at the Budget Inn. He said he drove his car from a liquor store near I-275 and Michigan, where he picked up drinks for friends living on Oakland, then drove down Michigan to Fairbairn, which he took to the Pineridge Apartments on Oakland to deliver the drinks.
Pineridge Park Apartments on Oakland in Inkster, MI.
“Why did I expose Zieleniewski?” Donaldson asked, referring to his introduction of racist texts the prosecution subpoenaed from Zielenewski’s phone. “He has a bias. He doesn’t like Black people, he jokes about beating them up, he thinks it’s funny. Zielenewski is not worthy of belief. In essence, he wants to convince you that Mr. Dent got what he deserved. . . .Look at the video. You don’t see Dent’s car in the Budget Inn parking lot, or turning down Michigan Avenue from there.”
Jurors took a field trip to view the scenes involved Nov. 17, but unfortunately covered only the police version of Dent’s route, beginning at the liquor store near the Budget Inn. Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor John Donaldson told VOD that route was used because Dent’s version was “in question,” despite the fact that the prosecution’s whole case rested on questioning the police version of events.
Melendez jurors (in white vans) proceed from Budget Inn on Michigan. Dent testified he had never been at the Budget Inn. MSP Lt. Twana Powell testified that cell phone tower pings placed him at Michigan and I-275, 20 minutes east of the Budget Inn, at beginning of trip.
The senior Donaldson said Zieleniewski tried to portray Dent as a “deranged crackhead,” an image some suburbanites have of Black Detroiters.
“But this is not about cocaine,” Donaldson said. “There is no evidence, none, that Floyd Dent was high on cocaine; both a Medical Examiner and a state toxicologist said so. Melendez says he got cocaine from Dent’s car, the third time he goes in. We don’t see it coming out of the car on the video, only when Melendez pulls it out of his pocket.”
In his closing arguments, Melendez’ defense attorney Thomas appeared to use a “Rodney King” defense. He alleged that Dent was so strong that he was able to struggle against two large, well-built cops lying on top of him, even moving them several feet. He also had officers testify that Dent had such superhuman strength that he did not react to three taser direct stuns. See video of Rodney King beating below.
History has been rife with such portrayals of Blacks as subhuman animals. Hollow-point bullets, originally known as “dum-dums,” were first developed by the imperialist British and Belgians for use in India and Africa in the 1890’s. The invaders claimed people of color needed superhuman force to put them down. (See Detroit Police on SAFARI.)
Thomas disavowed racist texts by Melendez’ partner, auxiliary cop John Zielenewski, admitted into evidence by the prosecution, but the undertone of his later statements reflected repeated if subtle racial animus.
Michigan State Police First Lt. Twana Powell supervises MSP’s internal affairs division for all of Michigan.
“This is a high crime area,” Thomas said of the area around the Budget Inn on Michigan Avenue in Inkster, which Thomas contended Dent had visited to buy and ingest cocaine. “[Former Inkster] police chief Vicki Yost and Randazzo did not have reason to exaggerate. You heard from police officers on the street.”
Inkster’s police force is 80 percent white, while its population is 75 percent Black.
Michigan State Police First Lieutenant Twana Powell, the officer in charge of the case for the prosecution, testified earlier that Inkster police records showed only one drug-related police call to the Motel during the year prior to the Dent beating. Her demeanor throughout her presentation of the case was authoritative and dignified.
But Thomas repeatedly denigrated Powell, who is Black, by name during his closing, making aspersions against her investigative capacity, accuracy and thoroughness.
“Ms. Powell was promoted to First Lieutenant just before this case, for unknown reasons,” Thomas said among other remarks.
Powell is the highest-ranking Internal Affairs MSP officer in the state, after 23 years with both the Detroit Police and MSP. She was also the chief investigative officer in the case against Joseph Weekley for killing Aiyana Jones. The Jones family gave her kudos for her sensitivity to them.
Aaron Westrick, PhD, testified as expert in the use of force on behalf of Melendez.
Thomas contended that Dent possessed and tested positive for cocaine, although those charges had already been dropped. Testimony he elicited from Professor Aaron Westrick, who has a PhD in criminal justice and teaches at Lake Superior State University, was countered by a top MSP forensics lab supervisor and Wayne County Medical Examiner Carl Schmidt, a medical doctor.
Thomas also insisted on calling Westrick a “doctor” as if he was a medical doctor, a far cry from a PhD. He used him and other witnesses as well to describe what they saw in the video, although none of them were forensic video analysts.
But the majority-Black jury, evidently aware of the racist sub-texts in the defense presentation, convicted Melendez based on what they saw in the video. Prosecutor Donaldson quoted Richard Pryor regarding a case of being found in bed with another woman: “Who do you believe, me or your lying eyes?”
His final presentation to the jury was a video clip showing a bloodied Dent held up against Melendez’ police car, crying out, “What did I do? Why are you doing this to me?”
Floyd Dent cried out after beating: “What did I do? Why are you doing this to me?” Melendez is seen at right.
Hundreds marched down route from old Inkster police station, where Floyd Dent was beaten by “Robocop” William Melendez, to new police headquarters on Michigan Avenue April 2, 2015.
Even former Inkster police chief testifies beating not justified
MSP lab supervisor says Dent had NO COCAINE in blood samples
No prints on drug baggie Melendez claimed he found in Dent’s car
MSP 1st Lt. Powell: Cops’ story does not hold up to her investigation
‘Robocop’ Melendez leaves federal court in 2004. Photo by Diane Bukowski
Floyd Dent at rally in Inkster April 2, 2015, with grandchildren.
DETROIT – The jury in the felony trial of former Detroit, Highland Park and Inkster cop William ‘Robocop’ Melendez will tour the scenes related to Melendez’ near-fatal beating of Detroit autoworker Floyd Dent on Tues. Nov. 17, by order of Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Vonda R. Evans. A final prosecution rebuttal witness will testify Wed. Nov. 18, after which closing arguments are expected.
“It will be an aid for the jury to visit that scene, and we’re going to drive that area,” Judge Evans said. She later ordered a van for the trip.
National and international news outlets are covering the trial, including Reuters, the Associated Press, the Guardian, and Al Jazeera America. The video of Dent’s beating went viral across the globe, sparking four major protests in Inkster, Highland Park and Detroit.
Judge Vonda R. Evans
Judge Evans said she hoped the tour will clarify differing prosecution and defense accounts of the case. Melendez was fired after the beating, and faces 10-25 years in prison if convicted on counts of assault with intent to do great bodily harm, strangulation, and misconduct.
Evans’ order, issued after defense attorney James Thomas rested his case without calling Melendez to the stand, capped a week of testimony from prosecution and defense witnesses. During the week, David Lee, Melendez’ attorney in a 2004 federal court case in which he was accused of running an LA Ramparts-style ring of brutal cops, attended the proceedings.
Key testimony included:
Jennifer Wilson (l), supervisor at MSP lab, testifies definitively on cross exam that there was NO COCAINE in blood samples taken from Floyd Dent. Defense attorney James Thomas is at upper right; MSP First. Lt. TwanaPowell at lower right.
“The video is hard to watch.” Former Inkster police chief Vicki Yost’s assertion that she saw nothing in the dashcam video of the incident to justify the 16 blows Melendez delivered with his fist to Dent’s head. Her assertion contradicted later testimony from a Lake Superior State University criminology professor that the use of force was justified.
“I don’t testify for either side, I just testify to the results.” Michigan State Police lab supervisor Jennifer Wilson’s detailed testimony that blood samples taken from Dent at Garden City Hospital tested negative for cocaine and its metabolites (break-down products) on both initial and confirmatory tests. An initial hospital report showed that an initial urine sample from tested positive for cocaine, but no confirmatory test was done.
“Dent would had to have taken cocaine 30 hours before the incident for it not to show up in his blood.” Medical Examiner Carl Schmidt, as an expert in toxicology, backed up Wilson’s testimony and countered Thomas’ assertion that the cocaine could have metabolized out of Dent’s system before the blood test.
“No latent prints left on baggie.” Michigan State Police First Lt. Twana Powell testified that fingerprint testing had not been ordered on the baggie containing cocaine which Melendez claimed came from Dent’s car, but which Melendez is seen on video pulling from his pocket. She said it was ordered later upon her intervention into the case March 23, and by that time was inconclusive.
Budget Inn
“I did follow-up investigations to find out which story most likely occurred, Dent’s or Zielenewski’s. . . First time Dent’s car is seen on the video is on Oakland.” Powell contradicted Melendez’ police report and sworn testimony from his partner John Zielenewski regarding Dent’s route. Zielenewski testified they were surveilling the “high-crime” area of Michigan Avenue in Inkster from the parking lot of a motel on the south side of Michigan. He said they first saw Dent in the parking lot of the Budget Inn across Michigan, which they portrayed as a hotbed of narcotics trafficking. Powell said Zielenewski’s view of the Budget Inn parking lot was blocked by a wall. She testified that the first time Dent’s car is seen on the dashcam video is on Oakland Avenue, travelling west. She said Inkster police records showed only one narcotics-related call to the Budget Inn in the year previous to Dent’s beating, on Jan. 28, 2015.
Map shows Dent’s route from Michigan Ave. up Fairbairn to Pineridge Park Apts. Old Inkster Police Dept., where beating took place, is at far left.
Dent testified earlier that he had never been to the Budget Inn. He said that on the evening of Jan. 28, he traveled from a liquor store near I-275 and Michigan Avenue to the Parkridge Park Apartments to deliver liquor to a friend, Amy Williams, at her request. The Budget Inn is approximately a half-mile east of the Parkridge Park Apartments and Fairbairne Street, which Dent took to Oakland, where the apartments are located. Powell testified that Dent’s cell phone records confirmed his account, showing cell tower pings from the locations he described.
Map shows Budget Inn on Michigan, west of Fairbairn, where Dent turned.
Dent, who lives in Detroit, has worked for Ford Motor Company for 36 years. There are two Ford plants near I-275 and Telegraph.
Map shows route from I-275 and Michigan to Fairbairn Street. First Lt. Twana Powell said cell phone tower “pings” from Dent’s phone confirmed these routes.
Williams, a state-paid home health care worker, testified in support of Dent’s account of his brief visit to the apartment complex’s parking lot. She said that that Dent wiped down the interior door well of his late model light tan Cadillac after delivering the liquor to her in the parking lot, telling her he had just had the car washed.
Pineridge Park Apts. on Oakland, Dent’s destination.
Dent testified earlier that he opened his door during the traffic stop instead of rolling down his window because he didn’t want to streak the windows. Defense witnesses asserted that was an aggressive move indicative of imminent danger to the cops.
Dent was traveling on a suspended license, with one warrant out for his arrest, Powell testified. She said he had been stopped seven times during the previous ten years for driving without a license.
At the conclusion of the prosecution’s case, Judge Evans denied a defense motion for a directed verdict. Thomas claimed testimony showed that Melendez had Dent in a “head lock” to immobilize him, not a “choke hold” to cause strangulation. He claimed Dent’s medical records showed no “significant injuries.” He said there was no “subarachnoid hemorrhage” in Dent’s brain, that his nose was not broken, and that the injury to his eye orbit was repaired.
Judge Evans denied his motion, saying, “I am satisfied there is sufficient evidence for a trier of fact to proceed.”
The prosecution’s rebuttal witness Nov. 18 is expected to be the Parkridge Park Apartments manager, who will testify to records of the card swipes needed to enter and exit the complex on the night of Jan. 28.
Belinda Myers-Florence (r) with husband Jesse Florence (center), both City of Detroit retirees. From Jesse Florence’s Facebook page.
BY YVONNE JONES
November 11, 2015
Belinda Myers-Florence from DAREA Facebook Page, speaking at press conference
It is with great sadness that I post of the passing of Belinda Meyers-Florence. Belinda was one of the founding members of DAREA. Belinda was our Communication Coordinator, Belinda made sure we were all connected and informed. Over this past year Belinda collected over 500 emails from retirees and concerned individuals who wanted to know what was happening with the bankruptcy and pension cuts. Belinda participated in the court hearing, protests, donated funds and whatever was necessary to keep the fight alive.
Belinda was at our meeting on November 4, she encouraged us to continue to fight for justice. Belinda was passionate about the cuts to our pension especially health care! She would speak about how unjust these cuts were. Many times Belinda would come to a meeting, court or demonstration not feeling her best, she would say I got do what I got to do! Belinda was a committed activist for Justice in the fight for Pension, an Elk Daughter, Retiree of 36.9 years as a Principal Social Planner & Development Specialist. Devoted wife, mother, daughter and friend. Belindafoll2 signing out! Peace & Love!
BY VOD STAFF
Belinda Myers-Florence (2nd from r) receives Mover and Shaker award with other DAREA officers (l to r) Wanda Jan Criss Hill, Bill Davis, and Yvonne Jones.
“Belinda Myers-Floreance was a committed soldier in fighting for City of Detroit employees pension rights and restoration, through the courts,” DAREA VP Cecily McClellan said. “Belinda was Corresponding Secretary for DAREA and Financial Secretary and Daughter of Beulahland Temple #569, she will be missed. Please send your blessing and support to the family.” Her family includes her husband Jesse, her daughter Erica, her son Jesse Jr. and many others. Funeral arrangements are below.
Belinda (l) with other women warriors from DAREA fighting against bankruptcy at Detroit General Retirees Employment System Meeting.
DAREA depended on Belinda for collecting its contact lists and keeping them in order, constant email updates, and her unfailing presence at DAREA meetings and at numerous protests against the illegal Detroit bankruptcy, Belinda was everywhere in the battle for justice not only for Detroit retirees, but for the residents of Detroit as a whole, as photos taken by VOD show. She was dedicated and tireless and always kept a cheerful demeanor.
Under the bankruptcy plan, health care costs for Belinda’s husband Jesse Florence, a retiree from D-DOT, and Belinda skyrocketed from $152 a month to $1062 a month, in addition to a $3,000 annual deductible. After putting their children through school, they faced the possible loss of their home.
Belinda with DAREA members who came to denounce “Mayor” Mike Duggan’s plan to dismantle DWSD.
Thousands of other City of Detroit retirees faced the same plight because of the vicious assault by the corporations and banks not only on their pensions and health care, but on the very assets the people of Detroit owned, including the Detroit Water & Sewerage Department, the Institute of Arts, and Belle Isle.
DAREA and Belinda’s family and friends weep for her loss, but vow to continue the fight for justice in her spirit forever.
Belinda (in purple at right) worked on fish fry fundraiser for DAREA, always devoting her time and skills to the struggle.
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PEOPLE’S WARRIOR TANGELA HARRIS JOINS THE ANCESTORS
On Nov. 2, water warrior, social justice activist and community journalist Tangela Harris joined the Ancestors one day before her 40th birthday, after suffering an asthma attack and cardiac arrest. (Her homegoing service was held Nov. 7, 2015.)
Tangela Harris candlelight vigil at her home on Lawrence Nov. 3, 2015.
Tangela was committed to the struggle for humanity in Detroit and across the globe. There was rarely an event for social justice that you didn’t see Tangela at, or you didn’t hear her voice contributing to. She was a frontline foot soldier, as well as a behind the scenes doer. Her interviews were just as passionate as her work, and her love and compassion for her city and her people showed through in everything she touched.
Activists vow to continue Tangela’s fight.
We will never forget Tangela Harris. She was indeed a woman full of “peace and love.”
There are hardly enough words to describe what Tangela Harris means to the city of Detroit, so I will leave you with Tangela in her own voice and her own words for 7 Mile Radio.
This clip is from one of the many events Tangela covered, participated in, or organized in Detroit. If you didn’t know Tangela or about what she poured into her people, this video should shed some light.
Elder holds photos of Tangela in triumph.
Geo. Errol Jennings and wife (left) had just lost their own son before they came; activist Baxter Jones is at right.
Many remembered not only Tangela the warrior, but the warm, wise and loving woman she was.