[Peace-discuss] Fw: From Cynthia McKinney: I call it murder
unionyes
unionyes at ameritech.net
Mon Feb 1 16:36:49 CST 2010
----- Original Message -----
From: David Sladky
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Sent: Monday, February 01, 2010 8:11 AM
Subject: From Cynthia McKinney: I call it murder
-----Original Message-----
From: Scott McLarty <scottmclarty at yahoo.com>
To: usgp-media at gp-us.org; dcsgp at yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sun, Jan 31, 2010 9:19 pm
Subject: [usgp-media] From Cynthia McKinney: I call it murder
From Cynthia McKinney, January 31, 2010...
They shot this Black man in his genitals and in his back. It sounds like a hate
crime to me. How else could one describe it?
Well, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, it was self-defense.
But how many times have we heard self-defense by cops used as a cop out?
Well, what about Amadou Diallo? Amadou Diallo was murdered on February 4, 1999
by New York Police Department (NYPD) cops who mistook a wallet for a gun. They
claim that they thought he was going to shoot them and so they shot him in
self-defense. One officer fell as if he had been shot. 41 bullets later,
Amadou Diallo had been shot 19 times. Young Amadou was only 24 years old. He
could survive the itinerant life of an African trading family, moving from
Africa to Asia, but he couldn't survive the mean, racist streets of America.
And the killer cops went free. Diallo's mother and step-father settled with the
City of New York for $3 million in a lawsuit alleging wrongful death, racial
profiling, and violation of Amadou's civil rights.
Kathryn Johnston was 92 years old when she was murdered by Atlanta Police
Department (APD) officers who claim that they shot her in self-defense after
narcotics officers broke into her home on November 21, 2006 using a "no-knock"
warrant. Police forced their way into Johnston's home and claimed to have found
a stash of marijuana there. The APD officers claimed that she had injured them
with her rusty revolver. Sadly, it was all lies. Later, it was learned that
the Atlanta Police officers were actually injured by friendly fire after
discharging their firearms 39 times; that they planted marijuana in the Johnston
basement; lied on the drug warrant authorizing the raid; invented an informant
justifying the raid; and pressured an actual drug informant to lie for them.
Atlanta's lying, killer cops did serve time--either for manslaughter, conspiracy
to violate Johnston's civil rights resulting in death, or perjury. The three
officers were also required
to reimburse the Johnston estate the $8,000 cost of her burial.
In the wee hours of November 25, 2006, Sean Bell was murdered in a hail of 50
bullets fired by officers in the New York Police Department. Bell was
celebrating his upcoming wedding and was leaving the club where he had just held
his bachelor party. Police opened fire after they suspected the victim had a
gun. Bell was struck 4 times in the neck and torso and died from his wounds.
When no gun was to be found, they concocted a mystery witness who could possibly
have had a gun. New York's killer cops were acquitted on all charges.
Although Diallo, Johnston, and Bell were Black, Blacks in the United States are
not the only ones who can be victimized by murderous U.S. law enforcement.
While on a visit to Cuba, I had the opportunity to meet and apologize to the
widow of Filiberto Ojeda Rios, a leading Puerto Rican Independentista. Wanted
by U.S. authorities for actions stemming from his belief that Puerto Rico was a
U.S. colony that should be independent, Ojeda Rios was murdered on September 23,
2005, shot by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) at his home. An
FBI press release stated that Ojeda Rios opened fire on the FBI and that the FBI
retaliated, but that claim was not substantiated by an Inspector General's
report that noted that the FBI opened the attack on Ojeda Rios with a "flash
bang" device. Ojeda Rios shot 10 times and the FBI fired one hundred times.
Ojeda Rios was struck in the lung by a single sniper's bullet, fell to the
floor, and bled to death over
12 to 15 hours with no medical help allowed to save his life.
The United States government wanted to investigate the Aryan Nations, a white
supremacist organization in the United States, and solicited Randy Weaver to
become an informant. He turned them down. After a series of incitements and
retaliations, Federal agents trespassed on Ruby Ridge, Weaver's home in Idaho,
incited a response from the Weavers, two of whom left the house to see what was
happening, and by the end of the ordeal, Weaver had lost two family members--his
wife, Vicky and his 14-year-old son, Sammy; his dog; while another family
member, Kevin Harris, had been wounded. Randy Weaver was shot in the back.
Justifying its attack on the Weavers, the U.S. government claimed that Weaver
and Harris had fired at a government helicopter. At trial, the jury believed
that Federal Agents shot and killed the Weaver dog, then shot and killed Sammy,
prompting Harris to shoot and kill one of the agents. The government awarded
Randy Weaver $100,000 and one
million dollars for each of three children. Although Harris had killed a U.S.
agent for which a jury had acquitted him of murder charges because he had fired
only after having been fired upon, the federal government awarded him $380,000
in settlement.
Now, although examples are rife in the Black and Latino communities of ordinary
citizens finding themselves at the wrong end of a police muzzle for minor or no
infractions, it should be clear that as long as government officials are out of
control, no one is safe. That's why we all should be outraged and public about
excessive force no matter where it happens or who the victim might be.
That's why I support the young people who are still facing charges from the
fallout from the Oscar Grant New Year's Day murder. Remove police violence and
one would not even have an Oakland 100. And quite frankly, with Oakland under
the leadership of my former colleague, Ron Dellums, I'm surprised that this
issue had not been more forthrightly dealt with prior to Grant's murder.
This all brings me to the January 30 report on the murder by the FBI of a
Detroit Black man who was also an Imam. The case seems to have all of the
ingredients of the worst of the above cases: the use of informants, law
enforcement claims of self-defense or firing in retaliation for being fired
upon, and failure to call for medical assistance after a fatal shooting. The
FBI also refuses to release what kind of weapon the Imam had. And more
troubling is the autopsy that reportedly shows that Imam Abdullah was shot in
the genitals--a vintage, racist attack on black men used by White men during the
days of U.S. slavery and even after the U.S. Civil War; and in the back--I
suppose that was self-defense, too. Imam Abdullah, with the help of an FBI
informant, was led to a warehouse where he was shot by the FBI 21 times. At a
press conference, FBI Special Agent Andrew Arena commented, "I take full
responsibility for what occurred that day. And I have to
be judged: I’ll be judged by you. I’ll be judged by the community. I’ll be
judged by my bosses in Washington D.C. as far as the Justice Dept., and quite
frankly, God someday."
The sad fact of the matter is that too many killer cops are still walking around
free. Sadly, many continue to serve as law enforcement officials, able to carry
out their crimes against the community again and again. Yes, they all will face
God's judgment when they die, but it would be nice to get some justice here on
earth, too. The Obama Justice Department has the opportunity to exact justice
on behalf of communities besieged by rogue, killer cops. The verdict is not
looking good, unfortunately, on whether the Obama Justice Department will serve
the American people much-needed, long-delayed justice or whether certain
perpetrators and their law enforcement departments will be given yet another
White House pass.
--
http://dignity.ning.com/
http://www.enduswars.org
http://www.livestream.com/dignity
http://www.twitter.com/dignityaction
http://www.myspace.com/dignityaction
http://www.myspace.com/runcynthiarun
http://www.twitter.com/cynthiamckinney
http://www.facebook.com/CynthiaMcKinney
Silence is the deadliest weapon of mass destruction.
_______________________________________________
usgp-media mailing list
usgp-media at gp-us.org
http://lists.gp-us.org/mailman/listinfo/usgp-media
--
This message has been scanned for viruses and
dangerous content by MailScanner, and is
believed to be clean.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.chambana.net/pipermail/peace-discuss/attachments/20100201/dca17281/attachment.html>
More information about the Peace-discuss
mailing list