Showing posts with label world news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world news. Show all posts

Saturday, 20 December 2014

Two POLICE MEN ‘Assassinated’ in Brooklyn

Matthew Narvin/The Daily Beast

A FRAYING LINE

12.20.14

Two Cops ‘Assassinated’ in Brooklyn

The execution of two police officers in cold blood has shocked the city and driven a deeper wedge between the cops and the mayor.
In a crime sure to shock all decent souls and to shame those protesters who were chanting for dead cops a week ago, a gunman walked up to a marked NYPD car on Saturday afternoon and shot two uniformed police officers, killing both.
“Five days before Christmas,” a senior law enforcement official noted.
From a shooting stance by the passenger side window, 28-year-old Ishmael Brinsley repeatedly fired a silver Taurus semi-automatic pistol. The bullets struck Officer Rafael Ramos and Officer Wenjian Liu in the head as they sat in their patrol car parked near the corner of Tompkins and Myrtle Avenues. Ramos had been at the wheel. They had no opportunity to draw their guns and may not have even realized the gunman was there.
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Police Officer Wenjian Liu, left, and Police Officer Rafael Ramos. (NYPD)
Brinsley then fled into a subway station a block away. Other cops chased him down onto the westbound platform.
“Get down! Get down!” a cop shouted to the waiting passengers.
A shot rang out as Brinsley took his own life, sprawling with the gun at his side. He had shot and wounded his ex-girlfriend early that morning in Baltimore and headed for his native Brooklyn. He was SAID to have paused to post photo of what was almost certainly the same silver Taurus semi-automatic pistol on Instagram, along with these words:
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Instagram
“I’m Putting Wings on Pigs Today. They take 1 of Ours…Let’s Take 2 of Theirs #ShootThe Police #RIPErivGardner (sic) #RIPMikeBrown This May Be My Final Post…I’m Putting Pigs In A Blanket.”
At least some people had seen the posting and failed to notify the authorities, hopefully because they had not taken it seriously. Ramos and Liu were now rushed to nearby Woodhull Hospital, where one was pronounced dead. The other officer also proved to be beyond saving.
Both Mayor De Blasio and Police Commissioner William Bratton rushed to the hospital. They there met the families of the murdered officers. Liu had been married just two months before and his wife now stood in this Brooklyn hospital, a sudden widow because of a madman. Ramos’ 13-year-old son stood nearby, suddenly without a father.
A senior law enforcement official suggested one early lesson from the tragedy.
“You start shouting ‘shoot cops!’ and some nut might listen to you,” he said.
On December 15, some of the protesters demonstrating in Manhattan against the failure of grand juries in Staten Island and Missouri to indict police officers in the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown were videotaped chanting, “What do we want!? Dead Cops!” Thousands of others chanted, “How do you spell murder? NYPD!” 
The message was that all cops should be condemned by the actions of the very few, and that is just the sort of fevered ignorance that incites violence in those who find meaning in nothing else. Brinsley had apparently not even been in New York that weekend, but he certainly shared that way of thinking and took it to an extreme. 
Around 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Brinsley posted on his Facebook page that, “I Always Wanted To Be Known For Doing Something Right... But My Past Is Stalking Me And My Present Is Haunting Me.”
He had by that point shot his ex-girlfriend and he had to know the police were looking for him.
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Facebook
By mid-afternoon he had apparently decided to escape his past and present by striding up to a radio car as a self-imagined avenger. He shot the two officers just about the time the NYPD receiving an alert from the Baltimore police saying that Brinsley was wanted for a shooting and may be in Brooklyn.   
After the demonstrations, the Patrolman’s Benevolent Association, the police union, had blasted the mayor for supporting the protestors at the expense of the cops. The PBA president. Patrick Lynch, had said that De Blasio should stay away from the funerals of any police officers killed in the line of duty.
“They were quite simple assassinated. Targeted for their uniform.”
Now there would be two funerals and police officers turned their backs on De Blasio as he strode with Bratton towards an evening press conference in the hospital auditorium. They were not likely to be appeased by the remarks De Blasio would make to the assembled media about the sacrifices cops make in protecting all of us.
Bratton noted that the murdered officers were posted outside their usual precinct in downtown Brooklyn to help reduce violence in the Tompkins Houses in Bedford Stuyvesant, as part of the ongoing effort that has made New York the safest big city in America. He added that the officers were murdered not because of who they were but what they were.
“They were quite simply assassinated,” Bratton said. “Targeted for their uniform.”
Police had heard that the killer may have had ties to a prison gang called the Black Guerilla Family, which was said by an anonymous caller to 911 in Baltimore to be planning to kill cops, though the caller had not mentioned the death of Garner or Brown. Bratton was not ready to say that Brinsley was acting as part of a group or as anything but a lone monster.
Bratton did note that this was the seventh time since 1972 that a pair of NYPD partners had been murdered. He went on to say that even such double horrors had never kept cops from continuing on.
“They grieve and they mourn but then they go out into the streets of the city to protect us every day and every night,” Bratton said. “It’s not easy. It’s not easy at all.”
He said that the NYPD will be in deepest mourning this Christmas season.
“But they’ll go out and they’ll do what we expect of them because that's what cops do,” he went on.
He then said again, “But it’s not easy.

Thursday, 18 December 2014

Judge throws out teen’s murder conviction

Judge throws out teen’s murder conviction 70 years after his execution

 December 17 at 6:39 PM  
When George Stinney Jr. was executed for the killings of two white girls in 1944, he was so small that the straps of South Carolina’s electric chair didn’t fit him properly, and he had to sit on a book for his electrocution.
Stinney was just 14 years old at the time and became the youngest person put to death in the United States in the 20th century. But Wednesday, 70 years after the fact, Circuit Judge Carmen Mullen tossed out his conviction, which was reached after a trial that didn’t even last a full day and was never appealed. As the Associated Press noted, it took Mullen “nearly four times as long to issue her ruling as it took in 1944 to go from arrest to execution.”
“I can think of no greater injustice,” Mullen wrote in her 29-page order, the AP reported.
Stinney, who was black, was arrested for the beating deaths of two young girls in the segregated town of Alcolu. There wasn’t any physical evidence linking him the crimes, and he wasn’t allowed to see his parents after he was apprehended.
“Given the particularized circumstances of Stinney’s case, I find by a preponderance of the evidence standard, that a violation of the Defendant’s procedural due process rights tainted his prosecution,” Mullen wrote in her decision, according to CNN.
From the AP:
Stinney’s case has long been whispered in civil rights circles in South Carolina as an example of how a black person could be railroaded by a justice system during the Jim Crow era where the investigators, prosecutors and juries were all white.
The case received renewed attention because of a crusade by textile inspector and school board member George Frierson. Armed with a binder full of newspaper articles and other evidence, he and a law firm believed the teen represented everything that was wrong with South Carolina during the era of segregation.
“It was obviously a long shot but one we thought was worth taking,” said attorney Matt Burgess, whose firm argued that Stinney should get a new trial.
Earlier this year, Stinney’s sister, Amie Ruffner told the Guardian: “I never went back [to Alcolu]. I curse that place. It was the destruction of my family and the killing of my brother.”
She will never forget the last time she saw George alive. She was eight at the time, hunkering in the chicken coop, scared half to death, when two black cars drove up to their house. Neither her mother, also Aime, a cook, nor her father, George senior, were home when white law enforcement officers came and took away George and her stepbrother, Johnny, in handcuffs. Johnny was later let go. She idolised George and followed him everywhere. He called her his shadow.
Though she left the south long ago, Aime’s rich, deep voice resonates with the vowels of her birthplace. But recalling her last words to George, it alters as if she’s gone back in time, to the high-pitched voice of a girl. “I said: ‘Oh George, are you leaving me? Where you going?’ He told me to find Charles and Katherine and tell them he was taken away.
“I never saw him again until he was in his casket,” said Aime. “That is something I will always see in my memories. His face was burned.”

Monday, 15 December 2014

‪#‎IllRideWithYou‬ has gone viral to support Muslims in the wake of the‪#‎SydneySiege‬.

‪#‎IllRideWithYou‬ has gone viral to support Muslims in the wake of the‪#‎SydneySiege‬.
143,756 views

The 34-year-old manager of the Lindt cafe, Tori Johnson, and mother of three Katrina Dawson, 38, have been named as the two hostages killed during the Sydney siege on Tuesday morning

Faces of the victims: Heroic Sydney cafe manager, 34, shot dead as he grabbed terrorist's gun to protect hostages - and the brilliant young barrister and mother of three who died after the siege ended

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The 34-year-old manager of the Lindt cafe, Tori Johnson, and mother of three Katrina Dawson, 38, have been named as the two hostages killed during the Sydney siege on Tuesday morning. Four others have been injured, including a woman with serious gunshot wounds to the leg. The Muslim gunman identified as self-styled Iranian Sheik Man Haron Monis, 50 (inset), was also shot dead after police burst into the Martin Place cafe at 2.11am Tuesday and opened fire. One of the hostages was reportedly shot by the terrorist, while another tragically died from a heart attack later in hospital. Gunfire and bursts of light could be seen as they stormed the Lindt Chocolate Cafe in Martin Place. Minutes before police stormed the cafe, seven hostages managed to escape 17 hours after the siege began. Man Haron Monis was described as a self-styled sheik from Iran who arrived in Australia in 1996. He is on bail for being an accessory to the murder of his ex-wife, allegedly carried out by his current partner. Monis also faces 50 charges of indecent and sexual assault during his time as a 'spiritual healer'. He also appeared in court for sending hate-filled letters to the families of soldiers killed in Afghanistan.

Friday, 12 December 2014

Police arrest 76 as Eric Garner 'die-in' demo brings chaos to Westfield

Police arrest 76 as Eric Garner 'die-in' demo brings chaos to Westfield

"This is the worst protest ever. There’s no message" - police officer heard speaking to protester at Westfield

Protest: Police arrive as protesters gather in one of the centre's main areas (Picture: @owais00/ @VigothePainting)
Updated: 08:04, 12 December 2014
More than 70 protesters were arrested when a demonstration over the police killing of an unarmed black man in New York brought mayhem to a west London shopping centre.
High-end shops at Westfield White City in Shepherd’s Bush were forced to close their doors with terrified shoppers and staff barricaded inside as hundreds of campaigners staged a mass “die in” over the death of Eric Garner.
Dozens of police and security guards surrounded around 600 protesters who sprawled on the floor in the centre’s atrium from 6pm last night, chanting arrested Garner’s last words as he was restrained by chokehold: “I can’t breathe!”
 
 
 
By 8pm, all entrances and exits were closed, costing shops thousands of pounds in lost trade from Christmas shoppers.
Whole most left peacefully, a “hard core” remained chanting and “charging around” in front of terrified shoppers.
Arrests: 76 people were detained by police during the protest (Picture: Nigel Howard)
Many of the arrests were made as a breakaway group who had been forced outside tried to storm their way back in, past guards and locked doors at 8.20pm.
It is understood several of the designer shops, which include Prada, Gucci, De Beers and Jimy Choo, feared they could be targeted by anti-capitalist protesters hijacking the event.
One shop worker said: “It was pretty scary. They were charging around and we just didn’t know what would happen next. We thought to protect everyone we would lock the doors.
“I understand the right to protest but why here? We are a shopping centre not Parliament Square.”
 
Theatre director Charlie Wiseman, who was Christmas shopping with his nine-month pregnant wife, said: “It was over the top. It was definitely not what my wife needed. We had to get out of the way because security guards were moving in and we had to walk the long way around the shopping centre because security guards had blocked off a section to keep the protesters back.”
Arrests: those detained were taken to police stations as far away as Sutton (Picture: Nigel Howard)
Another witness said: “It was getting pretty rough the police were kettling the protesters to force them out of the shopping centre and that’s when they started to fight back.”
Some questioned the point of the “die-in”, with a police officer telling a protester: “This is the worst protest ever. There’s no message.”
Transport: Those arrested were taken in a fleet of hired London buses to police cells (Picture: Nigel Howard)
Those arrested were taken in a fleet of hired London buses to police cells as far away as Sutton where they were today being questioned over criminal damage and public order offences.
A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: “Shortly after 8.20pm, a group of protesters broke away from a larger group and attempted to force entry to the shopping centre assaulting security staff and causing damage to property.
“In response to this police used a number of tactics - including a containment for the purpose of preventing violence and effecting arrests.
“A total of 76 people were subsequently arrested on suspicion of public order offences; one man was further arrested on suspicion of assault.
“They have been taken to various London police stations for questioning.”
The protest at Westfield followed thousands protesting in New York and elsewhere since the announcement last week that a grand jury would not indict a white police officer over Mr Garner’s death during the July arrest which was captured on video.
Hard core protest: some protesters stormed their way into the shopping centre (Picture: Nigel Howard)
Chief Superintendent Mark Bird, in charge of the operation, said: “We will always work with those that wish to demonstrate lawfully - as the majority of protesters did yesterday. However, we will not tolerate the small minority that offer violence or commit other criminal acts.”