Black Lives Matter-Ugliness of Racism.

spaminator

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Trial for Texas officer who killed Black woman hinges on gun
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Jake Bleiberg
Publishing date:Dec 05, 2022 • 1 day ago • 4 minute read
This undated photo provided by the Tarrant County, Texas, Jail shows Aaron Dean, the former Forth Worth police officer who is set to go on trial Monday, Dec. 5, 2022, for shooting Atatiana Jefferson, a Black woman.
This undated photo provided by the Tarrant County, Texas, Jail shows Aaron Dean. The former Forth Worth police officer is set to go on trial Monday, Dec. 5, 2022, for shooting Atatiana Jefferson, a Black woman, through a rear window of her home while responding to a call about an open front door in 2019. PHOTO BY TARRANT COUNTY JAIL / FILES /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FORT WORTH, Texas — Atatiana Jefferson was holding a gun but never raised it to point at the white police officer who fatally shot her through a rear window of her Texas home, the Black woman’s 11-year-old nephew testified at the officer’s murder trial Monday. The officer’s defence attorney said the boy said otherwise immediately after the shooting.


The boy’s testimony touched on an issue at the heart of the long-delayed case charging Aaron Dean with Jefferson’s killing: whether the Fort Worth officer saw Jefferson’s gun before he shot her.


Dean quit and was charged with murder two days after killing the 28-year-old while responding to a call about an open front door in October 2019.

Body-camera footage showed that neither Dean nor the other responding officer identified themselves as police at the house. Dean’s attorney contended the officer saw through the window that Jefferson was pointing the gun at him. Prosecutors said evidence would show otherwise.

That night, Jefferson was playing video games with her nephew, Zion Carr, who told a court Monday that his aunt pulled out a gun after hearing suspicious noises behind the house. Under questioning Carr, then 8, said the gun was only ever pointed “down” but he acknowledged not remembering parts of what happened.


On cross-examination, Dean’s defence said Carr told a child case worker during a recorded interview after the shooting that Jefferson had raised the gun. The boy denied this.

In 2019, the case was unusual for the relative speed with which, amid public outrage, the Fort Worth Police Department released the video and arrested Dean. Since then, his case has been repeatedly postponed amid lawyerly wrangling, the terminal illness of his lead attorney and the COVID-19 pandemic.

By contrast, former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin went on trial and was convicted of murdering George Floyd more than 1 1/2 years ago. Floyd was killed seven months after Jefferson, in a case that sparked global protests over racial injustice.


Dean, who has pleaded not guilty, has been free on $200,000 bond. Now 38, he is charged with killing Jefferson on Oct. 12, 2019, after a neighbour called a nonemergency police line to report that the front door to Jefferson’s home was open.

Bodycam video showed Dean approaching the door of the home where Jefferson was caring for her nephew. He then walked around the side of the house, pushed through a gate into the fenced-off backyard and fired through the glass a split-second after shouting at Jefferson, who was inside, to show her hands.

Assistant District Attorney Ashlea Deener said during opening statements Monday that Jefferson believed Dean and his fellow officer were intruders. Dean opened fire without giving her time to comply with commands and without ever saying he saw a gun, Deener said, adding “the evidence will support, he did not see the gun in her hands.”


The home’s front and side doors were open to vent smoke from hamburgers Jefferson was cooking with her nephew, Deener said. Carr testified that he burned the burgers.

Defence attorney Miles Brissette countered that the officers were following protocol in treating the call as a potential burglary. He said the “living room looked like it’s been ransacked” and they were looking for signs of forced entry.

Before opening fire, Brissette said, Dean saw a silhouette in the window of a person with a gun and a green laser sight pointed at him. He said the evidence would show the officer’s actions were reasonable.

“That gun was relevant,” Brissette said. “This is a tragic accident.”

Jefferson was considering a career in medicine and moved into her mother’s home months before the shooting there to help as the older woman’s health declined.


Her killing shattered the trust police had been trying to build with communities of colour in Fort Worth, a city of 935,000 about 30 miles (50 kilometres) west of Dallas that has long had complaints of racially unequal policing and excessive force.

The shooting drew swift rebuke from the city’s then-police chief and Republican mayor, who at the time called the circumstances “truly unthinkable” and said Jefferson having a gun was “irrelevant.”

Dean’s legal team used those comments in unsuccessful attempts to move the case from Fort Worth, claiming news media attention and statements from public officials would bias the jury pool. District Judge George Gallagher rejected their request again Monday before the jury entered the overflowing courtroom.

As jury selection was set to start last week, Dean’s defence attorney, Jim Lane, died. After years of delays, Gallagher moved forward anyway and, following days of questioning potential jurors, a panel of 12 jurors and two alternates was selected Friday. Eight were men, six women and none of them appeared to be Black.

The opening day of Dean’s trial ended before noon so participants could attend Lane’s funeral.

— Associated Press reporter Jamie Stengle in Dallas contributed to this report.
 

spaminator

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Janusz Walus, apartheid-era killer of South African icon Chris Hani, released on parole
Court decision has caused furor and sparked street protests

Author of the article:Reuters
Reuters
Publishing date:Dec 07, 2022 • 1 day ago • 1 minute read

JOHANNESBURG — Janusz Walus, a far-right extremist who assassinated South African anti-apartheid leader Chris Hani nearly thirty years ago, has been released on parole, authorities said on Wednesday.


A Polish citizen who emigrated to South Africa in 1981, Walus, 69, was granted parole by the Constitutional Court in late November after serving nearly 30 years of his life sentence for Hani’s murder.


The decision has caused furor and sparked street protests in South Africa, where some say the prospect of Walus’ release re-opened deep wounds of racial inequality.

His parole takes effect from Dec. 7, the Ministry of Justice and Correctional Services said in a statement.

“He will serve two years under community corrections in line with the parole regime upon which he is released,” it said.

Walus was initially expected to be released last week, but was admitted to a hospital after being stabbed by a fellow prison inmate. Authorities said he was discharged on Wednesday.

Hani, who was a senior member of the now-ruling African National Congress and head of the South African Communist Party, was shot dead outside his home in Johannesburg in 1993.

His killing triggered nationwide riots that threatened to derail South Africa’s transition to multi-racial democracy after decades of white minority rule under apartheid.

“Offender Walus has been furnished with his parole conditions… If he violates the conditions, he will be returned to a correctional center,” the ministry said.
 

spaminator

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Los Angeles council member involved in fight with activist
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Publishing date:Dec 11, 2022 • 21 hours ago • 2 minute read

LOS ANGELES — A Los Angeles City Council member embroiled in a scandal over racist remarks and an activist fought at a Friday night holiday event.

The activist and Kevin de Leon got into an altercation at a toy giveaway and holiday tree lighting at Lincoln Park, the Los Angeles Times reported.


Earlier on Friday, de Leon attended his first City Council meeting in nearly two months following a scandal that erupted after a recording surfaced in October of former council President Nury Martinez, outgoing Councilman Gil Cedillo, de Leon and a labour union leader participating in a closed-door meeting in which racist language was used to mock colleagues while the participants schemed to protect Latino political strength in council districts.

Martinez resigned. Cedillo lost a June election and his last day in office is Monday. De Leon has apologized and said he has no plans to resign.

De Leon said in a statement to the newspaper that he was assaulted Friday night, while activists said the council member was the aggressor.

The Times reported two local activist organizations, RootsAction and J-TOWN Action and Solidarity, posted a video on Twitter showing a portion of the incident between De Leon and a man identified as Jason Reedy, a People’s City Council organizer.


De Leon’s office said Reedy and other activists were at fault. De Leon spokesperson Pete Brown said the council member was head-butted by Reedy, a member of his staff was elbowed in the face and a volunteer was punched in the arm, the Times reported.

De Leon’s statement to the Times said they were “violently and physically assaulted by self-proclaimed activists at a community holiday event to the dismay of a multitude of families and children who were there to celebrate a Christmas tree lighting and to receive toys and food.”

“The escalating rhetoric is hitting a fever pitch, transcending from verbal threats into actual acts of violence and must end before more serious harm or loss of life occurs,” the statement said. “Violence is not free speech and has no place in politics or democracy.”

Shakeer Rahman, an attorney representing Reedy, called de Leon “a disgrace” in a statement to the Times Friday night.

“Video footage clearly shows him and his supporters initiating this assault while Mr. Reedy stands prone,” Rahman said. “Not only has Kevin de Leon lost all political legitimacy, his claims that he was the one attacked here simply underscores how he’s lost touch with reality.”
 

spaminator

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Texas officer testifies he saw gun before fatally shooting Black woman
"I was looking right down the barrel of the gun"

Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Jake Bleiberg
Publishing date:Dec 12, 2022 • 1 day ago • 3 minute read

A former Texas police officer testified in his murder trial Monday that he fatally shot a Black woman through a rear window of her home in 2019 while staring down the barrel of a handgun she was pointing at him.


Aaron Dean testified that Atatiana Jefferson had the gun “pointed directly at me” on the fourth day of his trial in the killing the 28-year-old woman. It was Dean’s first public statement in the more than three years since the white Fort Worth officer shot Jefferson while responding to a call about an open front door.


“I was looking right down the barrel of the gun and when I saw the barrel of that gun pointed at me I fired a single shot from my duty weapon,” Dean said on the witness stand.

Prosecutors have contended the evidence will show Dean never saw Jefferson’s gun.

The Fort Worth Police Department released body-camera video and arrested Dean on a murder charge within days of the Oct. 12, 2019 shooting. He quit the force without speaking to investigators.


Since then, Dean’s case was repeatedly postponed amid lawyerly wrangling, the terminal illness of Dean’s lead attorney and the COVID-19 pandemic. Tarrant County prosecutors rested their case Wednesday after about two and a half days of testimony.

Dean shot Jefferson after a neighbor called a nonemergency police line to report that the front door to Jefferson’s home was open. She had been playing video games that night with her nephew and it emerged at trial that they left the doors open to vent smoke from hamburgers the boy burnt.

Bodycam footage showed that Dean and a second officer who responded to the call didn’t identify themselves as police at the house. Officer Carol Darch testified last week that she and Dean thought the house might have been burglarized and quietly moved into the fenced-off backyard, guns drawn, looking for signs of forced entry.


There, Dean fired a single shot through the window a split-second after shouting at Jefferson, who was inside, to show her hands.

Dean testified Monday that his view of the darkened backyard was clearer than what’s shown in his body-camera footage but said that he could not make out the race or sex of the person in the window. He said he opened fire after seeing a gun “very close” and that he was briefly blinded by his muzzle flash.

“When my vision cleared, then I observed the person that we now know is Miss Jefferson,” he said, crying. “I heard her scream and then saw her fall.”

Darch’s back was to the window when Dean shot, but she said he never mentioned seeing a gun before he pulled the trigger and didn’t say anything about the weapon as they rushed in to search the house.


Jefferson’s 8-year-old nephew witnessed his aunt be shot from inside the room. Zion Carr testified that Jefferson took out her gun believing there was an intruder in the backyard, but he offered contradictory accounts of whether she pointed the pistol out the window.

Carr, now 11, testified on the trial’s opening day that Jefferson always had the gun down, but he said in a interview that was recorded soon after the shooting and played in court that she pointed the weapon at the window.

Dean testified that after the shooting he was shocked to find the little boy inside, still thinking someone had been stealing things from the house.

“I’m thinking, ‘Who brings a kid to a burglary? What is going on?” he said.
 

spaminator

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Racism lawsuit against Tesla gaining momentum in California
In his complaint five years ago, Vaughn claimed racial discrimination and harassment were widespread at Tesla’s factory in Fremont, California.

Author of the article:Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Malathi Nayak
Published Dec 15, 2022 • 1 minute read

(Bloomberg) — Tesla Inc. is waging a losing battle to stop a Black assembly line staffer from trying to add more than 100 other workers to his 2017 lawsuit calling the electric-car maker’s production floor a “hotbed for racist behavior.”


The company is set to ask a California appeals court Thursday to block ex-employee Marcus Vaughn from seeking class-action status to represent other workers. But the three-judge panel issued a tentative ruling rejecting Tesla’s arguments.


In his complaint five years ago, Vaughn claimed racial discrimination and harassment were widespread at Tesla’s factory in Fremont, California. Tesla responded to the suit with a blog post titled “Hotbed of Misinformation,” saying the company had fired three people after probing alleged incidents.

Vaughn said in a sworn declaration that he had heard the “N-word” used at least 100 times by co-workers and that Black and White employees alike referred to the factory as “the plantation” or “slaveship.”


Tesla has been hit with a number of high-profile suits — including one filed by the state of California in February — over its treatment of Black employees and subcontracted workers at the Fremont plant.

A former elevator operator who won a $137 million jury verdict over discrimination last year is scheduled in March to face off again with the company over monetary damages after he refused to accept a judge’s decision that he was entitled to just $15 million. The lawyers from that case also represent Vaughn.

The company didn’t respond to an email seeking comment on the tentative ruling.

The case is Vaughn v. Tesla, A164053, California Court of Appeals, First Appellate District (San Francisco).
 

Jinentonix

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Texas officer testifies he saw gun before fatally shooting Black woman
"I was looking right down the barrel of the gun"

Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Jake Bleiberg
Publishing date:Dec 12, 2022 • 1 day ago • 3 minute read

A former Texas police officer testified in his murder trial Monday that he fatally shot a Black woman through a rear window of her home in 2019 while staring down the barrel of a handgun she was pointing at him.


Aaron Dean testified that Atatiana Jefferson had the gun “pointed directly at me” on the fourth day of his trial in the killing the 28-year-old woman. It was Dean’s first public statement in the more than three years since the white Fort Worth officer shot Jefferson while responding to a call about an open front door.


“I was looking right down the barrel of the gun and when I saw the barrel of that gun pointed at me I fired a single shot from my duty weapon,” Dean said on the witness stand.

Prosecutors have contended the evidence will show Dean never saw Jefferson’s gun.

The Fort Worth Police Department released body-camera video and arrested Dean on a murder charge within days of the Oct. 12, 2019 shooting. He quit the force without speaking to investigators.


Since then, Dean’s case was repeatedly postponed amid lawyerly wrangling, the terminal illness of Dean’s lead attorney and the COVID-19 pandemic. Tarrant County prosecutors rested their case Wednesday after about two and a half days of testimony.

Dean shot Jefferson after a neighbor called a nonemergency police line to report that the front door to Jefferson’s home was open. She had been playing video games that night with her nephew and it emerged at trial that they left the doors open to vent smoke from hamburgers the boy burnt.

Bodycam footage showed that Dean and a second officer who responded to the call didn’t identify themselves as police at the house. Officer Carol Darch testified last week that she and Dean thought the house might have been burglarized and quietly moved into the fenced-off backyard, guns drawn, looking for signs of forced entry.


There, Dean fired a single shot through the window a split-second after shouting at Jefferson, who was inside, to show her hands.

Dean testified Monday that his view of the darkened backyard was clearer than what’s shown in his body-camera footage but said that he could not make out the race or sex of the person in the window. He said he opened fire after seeing a gun “very close” and that he was briefly blinded by his muzzle flash.

“When my vision cleared, then I observed the person that we now know is Miss Jefferson,” he said, crying. “I heard her scream and then saw her fall.”

Darch’s back was to the window when Dean shot, but she said he never mentioned seeing a gun before he pulled the trigger and didn’t say anything about the weapon as they rushed in to search the house.


Jefferson’s 8-year-old nephew witnessed his aunt be shot from inside the room. Zion Carr testified that Jefferson took out her gun believing there was an intruder in the backyard, but he offered contradictory accounts of whether she pointed the pistol out the window.

Carr, now 11, testified on the trial’s opening day that Jefferson always had the gun down, but he said in a interview that was recorded soon after the shooting and played in court that she pointed the weapon at the window.

Dean testified that after the shooting he was shocked to find the little boy inside, still thinking someone had been stealing things from the house.

“I’m thinking, ‘Who brings a kid to a burglary? What is going on?” he said.
The simple fact remains, the police were on her property without declaring they were there. They made a pretty fucked up assumption despite the fact that the person who called the police called a non-emergency number simply to request a welfare check on their neighbour. Not to mention that since they didn't announce themselves, Ms. Jefferson was well within her constitutional rights to brandish her weapon when she heard noises in her backyard.

Dean deserves to have the entire book thrown at him. As for his comment, “I’m thinking, ‘Who brings a kid to a burglary? What is going on?” I have a better question. What kind of idiot cop goes to do a welfare check and decides with no evidence whatsoever that there's a burglary in progress? An open front door with a closed screen door is hardly the kind of "evidence" that suggests a burglary is in progress
 

The_Foxer

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Yep. Except for the fuckwits who CLEARLY don't understand the job, or procedure.
Well this is it. 90 percent or more of cops are great people doing a good job in really tough conditions. Then you get the odd douceball like this one who is terrible and deserves to be severely punished.

But - when that happens the radical left starts making comments about how NO police should be supported and that they're all terrible. Yet - who is the first group they go to when someone steps on their rights?

And of course sometimes the loonie left disguises their condemnation of all police as an sarcastic suggestion they should be supported. :)
 
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petros

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Well this is it. 90 percent or more of cops are great people doing a good job in really tough conditions. Then you get the odd douceball like this one who is terrible and deserves to be severely punished.

But - when that happens the radical left starts making comments about how NO police should be supported and that they're all terrible. Yet - who is the first group they go to when someone steps on their rights?

And of course sometimes the loonie left disguises their condemnation of all police as an sarcastic suggestion they should be supported. :)
SEATTLE - Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant, an outspoken critic of police who has led efforts to defund the Seattle Police Department, is again criticizing police - over what she calls a "deeply concerning" manner in which the department is handling an investigation into bags of human feces being tossed into her yard.

In a Wednesday letter from Sawant to Mayor Bruce Harrell, Seattle Police Chief Adrian Diaz, and the City Council, she claims police are not doing enough to investigate the incidents.

"Six times now, bags of human excrement have been thrown into my yard, most recently on Thursday, October 13th. The events seem likely to be politically motivated, given their targeted nature and repetition," says the letter. “Most concerning is the very high likelihood that this extreme and hostile behavior is politically motivated, and could turn into more serious and dangerous harassment. Unfortunately, it does not appear that the Seattle Police Department agrees that this is in any way a serious matter. I was informed yesterday, just five days after an investigation was opened on October 13th, that the case is being inactivated and no longer pursued at this time."
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

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SEATTLE - Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant, an outspoken critic of police who has led efforts to defund the Seattle Police Department, is again criticizing police - over what she calls a "deeply concerning" manner in which the department is handling an investigation into bags of human feces being tossed into her yard.

In a Wednesday letter from Sawant to Mayor Bruce Harrell, Seattle Police Chief Adrian Diaz, and the City Council, she claims police are not doing enough to investigate the incidents.

"Six times now, bags of human excrement have been thrown into my yard, most recently on Thursday, October 13th. The events seem likely to be politically motivated, given their targeted nature and repetition," says the letter. “Most concerning is the very high likelihood that this extreme and hostile behavior is politically motivated, and could turn into more serious and dangerous harassment. Unfortunately, it does not appear that the Seattle Police Department agrees that this is in any way a serious matter. I was informed yesterday, just five days after an investigation was opened on October 13th, that the case is being inactivated and no longer pursued at this time."
If you take away the funding, dog shit throwing becomes one of the crimes that do not get investigated. She should hire her own private investigators.
 

Jinentonix

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SEATTLE - Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant, an outspoken critic of police who has led efforts to defund the Seattle Police Department, is again criticizing police - over what she calls a "deeply concerning" manner in which the department is handling an investigation into bags of human feces being tossed into her yard.

In a Wednesday letter from Sawant to Mayor Bruce Harrell, Seattle Police Chief Adrian Diaz, and the City Council, she claims police are not doing enough to investigate the incidents.

"Six times now, bags of human excrement have been thrown into my yard, most recently on Thursday, October 13th. The events seem likely to be politically motivated, given their targeted nature and repetition," says the letter. “Most concerning is the very high likelihood that this extreme and hostile behavior is politically motivated, and could turn into more serious and dangerous harassment. Unfortunately, it does not appear that the Seattle Police Department agrees that this is in any way a serious matter. I was informed yesterday, just five days after an investigation was opened on October 13th, that the case is being inactivated and no longer pursued at this time."
She's far from the only clueless douche who supported and voted for defunding the police who then had the fucking temerity to complain that the police wouldn't baby-sit her after getting threats and shit.
 

spaminator

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First Black appellate justice in Canada appointed next Chief Justice of Ontario
Michael Tulloch replaces George R. Strathy, who retired at the end of August

Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Dec 20, 2022 • 1 minute read

Michael Tulloch, the first Black justice to sit on any appellate court in Canada, has been appointed as the new Chief Justice of Ontario.


Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Tulloch’s appointment, calling him a highly respected member of the legal community.


The former Crown attorney in Peel and Toronto was first admitted to the bar in 1991 before he was appointed a judge of the Superior Court of Justice for Ontario in 2003.

He became the first Black justice to sit on a Canadian appellate court when he was elevated to the Ontario Court of Appeal in 2012.

The Jamaican-born, Osgoode Hall Law School-educated justice has led independent reviews of Ontario’s police oversight system and street check regulations.

Tulloch, who also assumes the role of President of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, replaces George R. Strathy, who retired at the end of August.
 
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