Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Police Shoot and Kill Three Different People in Under 24 Hours This Weekend

​From Seattle Weekly

Three different suspected criminals in the Puget Sound area met their demise at the business end of a police-issued firearm this weekend.

Here are some details on each.

--First we have a 39-year-old man in Tacoma, shot dead by police early on Saturday after supposedly claiming he had a gun. Pierce County Sheriff's Deputies say they found suspected-car-thief Aaron Westby in the front seat of a truck in an alleyway on South 19th Street and Yakima Avenue. Deputies apparently tried to arrest Westby and fought with him for a while before Tasing him. Deputies say the man kept resisting, and eventually said he had a gun and reached for the glove box. That was the last move he made.

--Hours later an unidentified man was gunned down by Seattle police officers in Belltown near Fourth Avenue and Cedar Street and the Space Needle after police say he "charged at them." The man was thought to have stabbed an 84-year-old man to death in Interbay and was located after he was supposedly monitored using the old man's credit cards.

--Finally, an incident in Lakewood early on Sunday has circumstances nowhere near as seemingly cut-and-dried as the previous shootings. The commotion apparently began around 1 a.m. on Sunday, when someone called 911 to say a person--39-year-old Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier Trent Lloyd-Thorpe--had been shot at a party on the 4800 block of Yew Lane Southwest. When police arrived, they apparently found Lloyd-Thorpe bleeding in the street. Soon, however, more shots rang out--police said Lloyd-Thorpe was firing while lying in the street. The cops returned fire and the young soldier was killed in the street. Stories seem to vary between witnesses and police as to certain details. An investigation is pending.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Downey police shoot and kill robbery suspect

DOWNEY — Los Angeles County Sheriff's investigators said Downey police fatally shot an alleged robbery suspect Saturday because he ran from them, twice, and then approached them in a threatening manner as they were investigating an armed robbery.

But family members said the man was unarmed and had jaywalked across a busy street to buy cigarettes as his wife bought gas near Imperial Highway and Paramount Boulevard.

The officer-involved shooting near Imperial Highway and Paramount Boulevard occurred about 7:20 p.m., said Downey police Sgt. Perry Miller.

The victim was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead, but the body has not yet been transported to the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office, so official identification has not been confirmed, said Lt. Cheryl MacWillie of the Coroner's Office.

The Downey police officers responded to a call of an armed robbery and saw the suspect in the area acting suspiciously, said Sgt. Michael Thomas of the Sheriff's Headquarters Bureau.

Officers detained the suspect but he escaped and ran into the yard of a nearby house. As officers contained the area, the suspect tried to flee again but was captured at Imperial Highway and Paramount Boulevard.

The suspect escaped detention again and fled, leading the officers on a short foot pursuit.

During the foot pursuit, the suspect allegedly turned toward the pursuing Downey officers in an aggressive manner. Fearing the

suspect was armed, an officer shot the suspect, Thomas said.

A sister of the man told KCBS Channel 2 that her brother was not involved in the robbery.

"My brother and his wife were getting gas. He went across the street to get some cigarettes. He jaywalked, I guess. And the police saw him. Confronted him. I don't know what happened, but they shot him ... in the back. Five times. Killed him," Terri Teramura said.

Teramura said her brother had four children.

No weapon was recovered, Thomas said.

No information about the robbery or a description of the suspect sought was released.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Anti-Police Murder March in Atlanta

From Atlanta Indymedia

On October 15th, 2011 at the Vine City MARTA station, in Atlanta's West End, 19 year old Joetavius Stafford was murdered in cold blood by Robert Waldo, a white MARTA police officer.

That night was the Homecoming night for the local high school and was, ostensibly, a night to remember for many young participants - it is now, anyway. At the MARTA station, Joetavius's brother claims that Joe had gotten into an argument with some other men and some fighting began at which point someone began yelling "Where the gun at?".

Cutting through the station a gun shot cracked and Joetavius and his brother began running away, along with everyone else. Moments later, both arms above his head, Joetavius was shot in the back by Officer Waldo who then ran up to Joetavius's limp body and shot him twice more in the back as he lie face down.

This narrative, all-too-familiar for those living west of downtown, illustrates the underlying discourse of the State in general: THEY retain the right to suspend order, THEY retain the privelege of decision-making power, THEY get administrative leave while WE get the death penalty whether we did it or not.

In light of this horror, many participants (roughly 200) in the occupation of Troy Davis park as well as those youth from the Vine City community decided they would hold a march the following Monday night in both memory of Joetavius and in opposition to the police force who's duty it is to enforce the control of the 1% over the will of the rest.

The march, which would grow as it went on and included a large banner and many bucket drums, made its way, firstly, to the nearest MARTA station in Five Points - immediately taking the street for the rest of the night. Congesting the lobby with people dancing and screaming and flipping off police officers helped to really solidify the antagonistic nature this march was going to take on.

The march, raucous now, made its way up Peachtree Street toward/through the business district: Suntrust, Westin Hotel, Marriot, Hard Rock Cafe, Bank of America, Hooters, Starbucks - really a terrible strip of town. Looking on, the lines were drawn: those who support Order unconditionally and without principle were horrified while those who believe in justice and support people over private property and the police that protect it either looked on smiling, raised a first in support, or joined the march.

Needless to say: the march was sick as fuck at this point with heavy dancing and drumming in the middle of a corridor which echoed our chants loudly for several blocks.

Making our way up to the Peachtree-Pine Taskforce for the Homeless (which the city is trying to close down alongside pressure from Emory University, Central Atlanta Progress, and several other corporate entities), the protesters, in a gesture of solidarity, began chanting: "Emory hates the poor/they kick the homeless out the door!" (a chant that had been developed a few days earlier at a march that attempted to force it's way into the administrative building of the Emory Medical hospital across the street from the homeless shelter which resulted in a confrontation with police but no arrests made, thankfully).

Swiftly, the march would make it's way up Pine street, a one-way, to come back up through the business district in full circle, still blocking the street. Returning, once again, to the Five Points MARTA station, the march decided to walk through the police precinct which sits on top of the station. A few folks grabbed a barricade to block of the entrance to the train station while many others flooded past bewildered police officers charging them with homicide, so to speak.
After encircling the entire station, the march finally came back to the occupation at Troy Davis Park where it was met, immediately, with disdain and condemnation by the marginal-yet-influential liberal professional activists.

Decrying the rage of the risen people as "stupid" and insisting that the police were part of the "99%", the liberals attempted to stamp out any expression which did not share strategic trajectory with the established left of Atlanta.

The occupation erupted into many circles, some small,others quite large, of heated debate about policing, class struggle, the murder, strategy, diversity of tactics and more: which marked a huge break with the Bonnarroo feel of the previous few days - it had taken the initiative of 200 people to march around screaming "fuck the police" to drudge up conversation that should have never stopped happening.

Predictably, the voice of pacifism was expressed mostly by the white middle class participants and those in favor of diversity were a diverse group of people - many of which had never had an explicitly political experience until then.

The domination of the pacifist idealogues was pervasive, as usual (perhaps as few as 10 people screaming and interrupting a gathering of some 200 people). It was claimed that it was "hard to tell the marchers apart from the occupation which is supposed to be nonviolent"; which is a phrase that, we feel, actually argues OUR point: people vote with their feet, not with their raised hands (so much for "consensus" in these spaces).

This march was extremely diverse, along racial and gender-lines. One of the most racially diverse moments of the occupation thus far.

The insistence for those who participated in the march is simple: to allow for a diverse, successful, movement, we must allow for a diversity of tactics.

"Fuck the pigs/we don't need 'em!/What we want is total freedom!"

"Hate, hate, hate!/The hate inside of me!/All Cops Are Bastards:/A-C-A-B"

"Emory hates the poor!/The kick the homeless out the door!"

"No Justice/No Peace/Fuck the Police."

"Hey, MARTA/You can't hide!/We charge you with homicide!"

"Cops/Pigs/Murderers"

"Atlanta to Egypt/New York to Greece/Say it loud, Say it proud/Fuck the police!"

Thursday, October 6, 2011

NJ police kill a man then stifle First Amendment, then unleash riot police on crowd

Oct 5, 2011

In response to last week’s killing of Barry Deloatch at the hands of 2 New Brunswick police officers, demonstrators rallied at the site he was shot dead. One of the rally’s organizers and an innocent bystander on her bicycle were arrested by an army of New Brunswick police officers in riot gear… for no good reason.

The investigating authorities still have not said why the officers killed Deloatch shortly after midnight on September 22, nor have they released the officers’ names.

Video shot by Sean Monahan of New Brunswick:


Monday, October 3, 2011

Police Kill Woman Holding Knife in Midtown

A woman brandishing a knife was shot to death by the police in Midtown Manhattan on Sunday evening after refusing to drop her weapon and advancing toward the officers, the police said.

About 8:30 p.m., two officers responded to a call about a fight at the New Providence Residence, a substance abuse shelter for women, on East 45th Street between Second and Third Avenues.

A police spokesman said that the two officers found a woman standing outside with a knife. They repeatedly ordered her to drop it, the spokesman said, but she refused. Instead, she moved toward them with the knife raised, the spokesman said. Both officers fired their weapons. The woman, whose identity was not released, was dead on arrival at Bellevue Hospital, the police said.

Alvaro Gutierrez, 22, who works at a nearby parking garage, said that he had heard the gunshots and that they had sounded “like fireworks.”

Two residents of the New Providence shelter, Joy Ford and Wilene Miller, said that the woman who was shot and the woman she was fighting with both lived in the shelter. Ms. Miller said she had seen the two women get into a shoving match, at which point one pulled out a knife. A call to the shelter was not immediately returned.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

JP Morgan Chase Donates $4.6 Million to the NYPD

JPMorgan Chase recently donated an unprecedented $4.6 million to the New York City Police Foundation. The gift was the largest in the history of the foundation and will enable the New York City Police Department to strengthen security in the Big Apple. The money will pay for 1,000 new patrol car laptops, as well as security monitoring software in the NYPD's main data center.

New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly sent CEO and Chairman Jamie Dimon a note expressing "profound gratitude" for the company's donation.

"These officers put their lives on the line every day to keep us safe," Dimon said. "We're incredibly proud to help them build this program and let them know how much we value their hard work."