July 2014 death of an African American man after an arrest by police officers in New York
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FYC FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION Campaign…BREATHE - BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM…starring MAGNUM P.I.'s @stephenhillacts with music featured by GRAMMY Winner @shabazzpalaces …Exec Produced by @shantillylace of HBO's Heaven's Gate…during the 10th year anniversary of the killing of ERIC GARNER…Voting on the ACADEMY SCREENING ROOM begins DEC 9-13th 2024BREATHE is a short film narrative and short dramatic fantasy about the last day of Eric Garner's life. For Eric, it's a normal day in his life in his neighborhood, but for the rest of the world, it's the day Eric faces the reality of taking his last breath. The film stars @stephenhillacts (Magnum P.I.) as Eric Garner.On July 17, 2014, Eric Garner, an African American man, was killed in the New York City borough of Staten Island by Daniel Pantaleo, a New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer, after the latter put him in a prohibited chokehold while arresting him.Video footage of the incident generated widespread national attention and raised questions about the use of force by law enforcement.In an interview with Flintside.com, Burton-Oare stated that "she recognized that this story was not just about Eric Garner, but also about Ramsey Orta who filmed Garner's deadly arrest. By giving him a place in her project, Burton-Oare aimed to highlight the interconnectedness of their lives and experiences."Executive produced by Shannon E. Riggs, the cast also includes Jason Galloza, Vince Fazio, Luke Leonard, Afrim Gjonbalaj, and Shanel Riley.The featured song in the film comes from Grammy Award winner Ishmael Butler, best known for his work with Digable Planets and Shabazz Palaces.Listen/Follow here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pbs-262-vote-for-breathe-for-2025-academy-awards-best/id1486119466?i=1000680273918
Eric Dym from the New York's Finest Podcast teams with with Tansey to breakdown the 2014 death of Eric Garner, a 43-year-old African American man. In Staten Island, NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo placed Garner into a chokehold while arresting him-- a move that was deemed to be prohibited. Ten years national attention spread and raised the questions about use of force that have become to important in the George Floyd era and beyond. Eric Dym is a Retired NYPD Lieutenant, a former Marine, an Iraqi Freedom Vet, Former Lieutenant's Benevolent Association Delegate & the Co Host of New York's Finest: Retired & Unfiltered Podcast. Check Out New York's Finest Podcast https://thefinestunfiltered.com/ https://www.youtube.com/@TheFinestUnfiltered https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/new-yorks-finest-retired-unfiltered-podcast/id1636574356 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Alvin Bragg rejoins the pod to explain the judicial inquiry happening now and why the answer to that question can't stop with Daniel Pantaleo.
Asian man punched by stranger near NYC’s Penn Station. Eric Garner chokehold cop Daniel Pantaleo loses appeal to get NYPD job back. ‘Arrested Development’ star and NYC resident Jessica Walter dead at 80.
’Du lytter til Politiken’ holder efterårsferie i denne uge og er tilbage med nye, aktuelle historier mandag den 21. oktober. Men i mellemtiden kan du høre - eller genhøre - fire afsnit af ’Du lytter til Politiken’, som vi har udvalgt til dig fra den forgangne periode. I dag kan du høre om politivold i USA. En julidag i 2014 døde 43-årige Eric Garner efter at politibetjenten Daniel Pantaleo tog ulovligt kvælertag på ham under en anholdelse. Episoden er én af utallige sager om politivold i USA's sorte og latinamerikanske kvarterer. Tidligere Politiken-journalist Sara Maria Glanowski har fulgt en mand, som har viet sit liv til at dokumentere politiets overgreb mod minoriteter. Men hvad var det, der satte ham i gang med sit vagtværn på gaderne?
George Floyd è morto dopo essere stato schiacciato per otto minuti e 46 secondi dal ginocchio e dal peso del poliziotto Derek Chauvin, mentre altri tre agenti guardavano senza fare nulla. I parlamentari texani promettono che finalmente ci saranno nuove leggi, vincoli più stretti per la polizia, migliori garanzie per i cittadini afroamericani. Al funerale di Floyd l'ultimo podio è stato per il reverendo Al Sharpton, l'unico che ha evocato il grande assente, Donald Trump: «Stiamo combattendo contro un problema istituzionale e contro la debolezza di chi ha permesso a una persona simile (Derek Chauvin ndr) di diventare un poliziotto. Stiamo combattendo l'impunità. Non vogliamo delle scuse, vogliamo giustizia. Da Trump neanche una parola per George Floyd, non possiamo lasciare che la Bibbia e George vengano usati come strumento di propaganda (riferimento alla foto di Trump davanti alla St. John's Episcopal Church con una Bibbia in mano, ndr)». Tra gli invitati anche Gwenn Carr, madre di Eric Garner, ucciso nel 2014 a Staten Island, New York. Il poliziotto incriminato, Daniel Pantaleo, lo soffocò prendendolo per il collo. Garner, immobilizzato a terra, ripetè per 11 volte: «Non posso respirare». Esattamente le ultime parole di Floyd. L'agente Pantaleo fu assolto. Ora, è il messaggio che arriva da Houston, è necessario un finale diverso (dal Corriere della Sera del 10 giugno 2020). In questo numero di Sfogliando il giornale parliamo dell'indignazione contro il razzismo che sta agitando gli Stati Uniti in queste settiomane - e che ha trovato una vasta eco anche in molti altri paesi del mondo - come pure delle speranze per un cambiamento radicale. Lo facciamo con Andrea Panerini, decano della Chiesa Protestante Unita e direttore del quotidiano on line voceevangelica.it. Nella foto un particolare della manifestazione del 31 maggio scorso a Miami (Florida). Nel cartello si legge: "le nostre vite cominciano a terminare il giorno in cui stiamo zitti sulle questioni che contano". L'articolo Tensioni e speranze di cambiamento negli Stati Uniti dopo la morte di George Floyd proviene da Radio Voce della Speranza.
George Floyd è morto dopo essere stato schiacciato per otto minuti e 46 secondi dal ginocchio e dal peso del poliziotto Derek Chauvin, mentre altri tre agenti guardavano senza fare nulla. I parlamentari texani promettono che finalmente ci saranno nuove leggi, vincoli più stretti per la polizia, migliori garanzie per i cittadini afroamericani. Al funerale di Floyd l'ultimo podio è stato per il reverendo Al Sharpton, l'unico che ha evocato il grande assente, Donald Trump: «Stiamo combattendo contro un problema istituzionale e contro la debolezza di chi ha permesso a una persona simile (Derek Chauvin ndr) di diventare un poliziotto. Stiamo combattendo l'impunità. Non vogliamo delle scuse, vogliamo giustizia. Da Trump neanche una parola per George Floyd, non possiamo lasciare che la Bibbia e George vengano usati come strumento di propaganda (riferimento alla foto di Trump davanti alla St. John's Episcopal Church con una Bibbia in mano, ndr)». Tra gli invitati anche Gwenn Carr, madre di Eric Garner, ucciso nel 2014 a Staten Island, New York. Il poliziotto incriminato, Daniel Pantaleo, lo soffocò prendendolo per il collo. Garner, immobilizzato a terra, ripetè per 11 volte: «Non posso respirare». Esattamente le ultime parole di Floyd. L'agente Pantaleo fu assolto. Ora, è il messaggio che arriva da Houston, è necessario un finale diverso (dal Corriere della Sera del 10 giugno 2020). In questo numero di Sfogliando il giornale parliamo dell'indignazione contro il razzismo che sta agitando gli Stati Uniti in queste settiomane - e che ha trovato una vasta eco anche in molti altri paesi del mondo - come pure delle speranze per un cambiamento radicale. Lo facciamo con Andrea Panerini, decano della Chiesa Protestante Unita e direttore del quotidiano on line voceevangelica.it. Nella foto un particolare della manifestazione del 31 maggio scorso a Miami (Florida). Nel cartello si legge: "le nostre vite cominciano a terminare il giorno in cui stiamo zitti sulle questioni che contano". L'articolo Tensioni e speranze di cambiamento negli Stati Uniti dopo la morte di George Floyd proviene da Radio Voce della Speranza.
Reggie "The Reel Critic" Ponder sat down with Esaw Garner, widow of Eric Garner, and filmmaker Roee Messinger to talk about American Trial: The Eric Garner Story. The movie imagines a world wherein NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo was tried and acquitted for the murder of Eric Garner in 2014.
In this episode Deb drank pomegranate flavored kombucha tea, needless to say Maria inspired her. Maria drank iced mint tea with fresh mint and Eric Kent's Rosé which can be found at: https://www.erickentwines.com/shop/item?itemid=1811&catid=17Deb and Maria talked about being anti-racism and discussing the current climate in the U.S.Warning: This episode contains content related to violence, abuse, and traumatic events. TED Talk Maria was referring to: https://www.ted.com/talks/robin_steinberg_and_manoush_zomorodi_the_us_is_addicted_to_incarceration_here_s_how_to_break_the_cycle?rss=172BB350-0207Emotions Chart Maria uses: https://www.patreon.com/posts/38091713 What is institutional or systemic racism? "less overt, far more subtle"Institutional racism was defined by Sir William Macpherson in the UK's Lawrence report (1999) as: "The collective failure of an organization to provide an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture, or ethnic origin. It can be seen or detected in processes, attitudes and behaviour which amount to discrimination through prejudice, ignorance, thoughtlessness and racist stereotyping which disadvantage minority ethnic people."When white terrorists bomb a black church and kill five black children, that is an act of individual racism, widely deplored by most segments of the society. But when in that same city – Birmingham, Alabama – five hundred black babies die each year because of the lack of proper food, shelter and medical facilities, and thousands more are destroyed and maimed physically, emotionally and intellectually because of conditions of poverty and discrimination in the black community, that is a function of institutional racism. When a black family moves into a home in a white neighborhood and is stoned, burned or routed out, they are victims of an overt act of individual racism which most people will condemn. But it is institutional racism that keeps black people locked in dilapidated slum tenements, subject to the daily prey of exploitative slumlords, merchants, loan sharks and discriminatory real estate agents. The society either pretends it does not know of this latter situation, or is in fact incapable of doing anything meaningful about it.Jim Crow Laws: Jim Crow laws were state and local laws that enforced racial segregation in the Southern United States.[1] All were enacted in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by white Democratic-dominated state legislatures to disenfranchise and remove political and economic gains made by blacks during the Reconstruction period.2] The Jim Crow laws were enforced until 1965.Facilities for African Americans and Native Americans were consistently inferior and underfunded compared to the facilities for white Americans; sometimes, there were no facilities for people of color.[4][5] As a body of law, Jim Crow institutionalized economic, educational, and social disadvantages for African Americans and other people of color living in the South.The New Jim Crow Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness By Michelle AlexanderThe New Jim Crow tells a truth our nation has been reluctant to face.The New Jim Crow is a stunning account of the rebirth of a caste-like system in the United States, one that has resulted in millions of African Americans locked behind bars and then relegated to a permanent second-class status—denied the very rights supposedly won in the Civil Rights Movement.Alexander shows that, by targeting black men through the War on Drugs and decimating communities of color, the U.S. criminal justice system functions as a contemporary system of racial control, even as it formally adheres to the principle of colorblindness.Police BrutalityThe shooting of Walter Scott occurred on April 4, 2015, in North Charleston, South Carolina, following a daytime traffic stop for a non-functioning brake light.Bettie Jones was fatally shot Dec. 26, 2015, by police responding to a domestic disturbance call at a West Garfield Park apartment building near Chicago, Illinois. Verdict: settlement On July 6, 2016, Philando Castile, a 32-year-old African American man, was stopped while driving and fatally shot by Jeronimo Yanez, a 29-year-old Hispanic-American police officer from St. Anthony, Minnesota. Verdict: Not guilty"He killed my boyfriend," Reynolds said. She claimed that police had opened fire when Castile reached for his driver’s license, as an officer requested: "He let the officer know that he had a firearm, and he was reaching for his wallet, and the officer just shot him in his arm."On September 6, 2018, off-duty Dallas Police Department patrol officer Amber Guyger entered the Dallas, Texas, apartment of 26-year-old accountant Botham Jean and fatally shot him. Guyger said that she had entered the apartment believing it was her own and that she shot Jean believing he was a burglar.[1][2] The fact that Guyger, a white police officer, shot and killed Jean, an unarmed black man, and was initially only charged with manslaughter, resulted in protests and accusations of racial bias.[3][4][5] On October 1, 2019, Guyger was found guilty of murder.[6] The next day, she received a sentence of ten years in prison.[7]Atatiana Jefferson, a 28-year-old woman, was shot and killed in her home by a police officer in Fort Worth, Texas, United States, in the early morning of October 12, 2019. Police arrived at her home after a neighbor called a non-emergency number, stating that Jefferson's front door was open. Police body camera footage showed that when she came to her window to observe police outside her home, Officer Aaron Dean shot through it and killed her.[2] Police stated that they found a handgun near her body, which according to her 8-year-old nephew, she was pointing toward the window before being shot.[3][2][4] On October 14, 2019, Dean resigned from the Fort Worth Police Department and was arrested on a murder charge.[5][6] On December 20, 2019, Dean was indicted for murder.[7][8] Jefferson was black and the officer who shot her is whiteOn March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old African American woman, was fatally shot by Louisville Metro Police Department officers in her sleep. African-American emergency room technician. After a brief confrontation, they fired several shots, striking her at least eight times. According to The Louisville Courier Journal, the police were investigating two men who they believed were selling drugs out of a house that was far from Ms. Taylor’s home. But a judge had also signed a warrant allowing the police to search Ms. Taylor’s residence because the police said they believed that one of the two men had used her apartment to receive packages. The judge’s order was a so-called “no-knock” warrant, which allowed the police to enter without warning or without identifying themselves as law enforcement. The three officers have been placed on administrative reassignment.On July 17, 2014, Eric Garner died in the New York City borough of Staten Island after Daniel Pantaleo, a New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer, put him in a chokehold while arresting him.[3] Video footage of the incident generated widespread national attention and raised questions about the appropriate use of force by law enforcement. NYPD officers approached Garner on July 17 on suspicion of selling single cigarettes from packs without tax stamps. After Garner told the police that he was tired of being harassed and that he was not selling cigarettes, the officers attempted to arrest Garner. When Pantaleo placed his hands on Garner, Garner refused to cooperate and pulled his arms away. Pantaleo then placed his arm around Garner's neck and wrestled him to the ground. With multiple officers restraining him, Garner repeated the words "I can't breathe" 11 times while lying face down on the sidewalk.Sandra Bland was a 28-year-old African American woman who was found hanged in a jail cell in Waller County, Texas, on July 13, 2015, three days after being arrested during a pretextual traffic stop. Her death was ruled a suicide.On 22 November 2014 Tamir Rice, a 12-year old boy, was fatally murdered in Cleveland, Ohio by Timothy Loehmann, a 26-year-old police officer. Rice was carrying a replica toy Airsoft gun; Loehmann shot him almost immediately after arriving on the scene. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On today's episode of Loud & Clear, Brian Becker and John Kiriakou are joined by Max Blumenthal, a bestselling author and journalist, whose latest film is “Killing Gaza,” and who is also the senior editor of Grayzone and co-host of the podcast “Moderate Rebels.”Former Obama National Security Advisor Susan Rice made a wild and unsubstantiated accusation over the weekend, saying that Russia and Vladimir Putin were behind the uprising in Minneapolis and subsequent nationwide rioting following the police murder of George Floyd. She offered no evidence for the accusation and went on to say that the Trump Administration’s decision to designate Antifa as a terrorist organization was “fine.” The country is in the midst of an uprising not seen since the 1960s, with anti-police marches, demonstrations, and violence taking place in hundreds of cities and towns across America. The protests began when a police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota knelt on the neck of George Floyd and killed him. But frustration and anger have bubbled over, and in many cities, the violence is now out of control. Twenty six states and the District of Columbia have activated the National Guard, many for the first time since World War II. For his part, President Trump has been notably silent, except on Twitter, where he has threatened retaliation against demonstrators. Last night he did that from a bunker underneath the White House, to which he was evacuated during demonstrations in Washington. Eugene Puryear, an author, activist and host of the new program BreakThrough News, joins the show. Today’s “Education for Liberation” is education for liberation at a time of mass uprising. Our guest has been fighting for economic, racial, and social justice in the streets for decades. Brian and John speak with Bill Ayers, an activist, educator and the author or co-author of many books, including “About Becoming A Teacher” and “You Can’t Fire the Bad Ones: And 18 Other Myths About Teachers, Teachers Unions, and Public Education,” and a 1960s central national leader of Students for a Democratic Society, who’s at www.BillAyers.org. President Trump tweeted over the weekend that he intends to designate Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization, a move that constitutional scholars already are declaring unconstitutional. Antifa, which stands for anti-fascism, is a broad-based group of people who support oppressed communities and who protest the amassing of wealth accumulated by corporations and elites. Another tactic that governments use to try to suppress protesters is to slow the wheels of justice against police who kill and carefully craft any indictments against police who kill to be able to wait out the protests and let the police off the hook later on, like Daniel Pantaleo, the policeman who choked Eric Garner to death but who emerged from several investigations years later without criminal charges. Mara Verheyden Hilliard, the executive director of the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund, joins the show. Monday’s regular segment Technology Rules is a weekly guide on how monopoly corporations and the national surveillance state--where this week they focus on the technologies and surveillance tactics that the government has already been using at all levels to suppress the protests for Justice for George Floyd, manipulate the narrative, and criminalize dissent. This is your guide to what’s going on behind the scenes of the nationwide protests demanding justice for George Floyd and the countless people killed by police. Web developer and technologist Chris Garaffa and software engineer and technology and security analyst Patricia Gorky join the show with John.
Roee Messinger’s new film “American Trial: The Eric Garner Story” is an unscripted courtroom drama imagining the trial that never happened involving Daniel Pantaleo, an NYPD officer videotaped administering a fatal chokehold on Staten Island resident Eric Garner in 2014. The video, in which Garner repeatedly called out “I can’t breathe!” has become a rallying cry against police brutality and the murder of unarmed black people at the hands of law enforcement. In this installment of Leonard Lopate at Large on WBAI, Eric Garner’s widow Esaw Snipes-Garner, who appears in the film, joins director Roee Messinger and executive producer Ralph Richardson for a conversation about "American Trial" and the horrific events that inspired it.
This episode we introduce our student of the week segment! Jordan Battle sat in with us today and talked about how she changed her major from biology to theatre, her lab series play "For Colored Girls", etc. Lo also brings up Daniel Pantaleo, as well as her positive experience with her high school resource officer. Tune in to see what else our favorite cohosts talked about on this episode of Black on the Prowl..
The LAVA Flow | Libertarian | Anarcho-capitalist | Voluntaryist | Agorist
Three stories on rights in America. Do you actually have any rights left? What's in the News with stories on flying cars in New Hampshire, civil forfeiture, Scottish secession, man's home blown up by cops, NYPD murdered of Garner suing for his job, and a kid thrown out in the cold, literally, by the Chicago school system. And, an Ask Me Anything segment with your questions on fictional planets, vacation destinations, alcoholic beverages, Star Wars theme parks, Resist the Empire Podcast, mainstream TV, League of Liberty, and am I a felon. This episode is brought to you by Health Excellence Plus, a health share that has saved my family thousands of dollars, and can save you money too. Also, brought to you by ForkFest, the annual decentralized libertarian camping event that happens around PorcFest, with no tickets and no one in charge. Also, brought to you by all of my dozens of supporters WHAT'S RUSTLING MY JIMMIES I have two stories in my queue talking about the erosion of rights in this country so I wanted to bring this topic to your attention. First, the Oregon Court of Appeals made a first-of-its-kind ruling in the state when it affirmed a lower court's decision that the forced disclosure of a defendant's phone passcode was not a violation of her Fifth Amendment rights. You know, that pesky thing that supposedly enshrines our right against self-incrimination. Unfit to Fucking Exist. A Boston Democrat has proposed a state law that would penalize the use of the b-word when used to demean another person. And that word is not "boy." WHAT'S IN THE NEWS In New Hampshire, It's Like This Too news, New Hampshire is preparing for life with electric cars and is starting to think about life with self-driving cars, but there's another automotive option on the horizon that needs to be considered: flying cars. In legal theft news, letting South Carolina police and prosecutors seize and keep cash, cars, and other valuables and use the proceeds to pad their budgets violates the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments, a circuit court judge in Horry County, South Carolina ruled. In secession news, thousands rallied in Glasgow calling for Scotland to become an independent country, with First Minister Nicola Sturgeon telling the crowds that their goal was "within touching distance". In I can't make this up news, police in Colorado blew up an innocent man's house in search of an armed shoplifter, and the courts don't care. In bad boys news, the NYPD officer who was fired for choking Eric Garner to death is suing to get his job back. Former NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo's lawyer says it's “arbitrary and capricious” to fire a cop for choking a guy over black market cigarettes. In indoctrination centers news, the family of a 9-year-old Chicago student sued the city's school system, accusing staff members of manhandling the boy and forcing him out of the building in 40-degree weather without a coat. ASK ME ANYTHING I answer your questions on fictional planets, vacation destinations, alcoholic beverages, Star Wars theme parks, Resist the Empire Podcast, mainstream TV, League of Liberty, and am I a felon.
10.24.19 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: Rep. Elijah Cummings lies in state at the Capitol; Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg grilled on Capitol Hill; Ex-NYPD cop Daniel Pantaleo sues to get his job back; New Mexico officer resigns after a vicious attack on an 11-year-old girl; No charges will be filed against the Providence Rhode Island corrections officer who drove his car into a group of protesters. - #RolandMartinUnfiltered partner: Life Luxe Jazz Life Luxe Jazz is the experience of a lifetime, delivering top-notch music in an upscale destination. The weekend-long event is held at the Omnia Dayclub Los Cabos, which is nestled on the Sea of Cortez in the celebrity playground of Los Cabos, Mexico. For more information visit the website at lifeluxejazz.com. Can't make it to Los Cabos for the Life Luxe Jazz Fest? Get your live stream pass at https://gfntv.com/ #RolandMartinUnfiltered partner: Ebony Foundation | Home by the Holiday Home by the Holiday aims to reunite Black and Latino families separated by bail, while challenging racial injustice and mass incarceration. For more info visit https://www.homebytheholiday.com/
They say justice is Blind that Justice does not “see” the differences in those who seek help. Decisions in U.S. Courts are not to be based on how people look, whether they are friends or foe, rich or poor, old or young. Public opinion depending on which side you are on will vary After Amber Guyger was found guilty and sentenced to 10 years in Jail, There's 2 things I couldn't understand, why did the brother of the victim, Botham Jean, hug former police officer Amber Guyger -- a gesture that brought even the judge to tears………Then the Judge hugs Guyger are you Freaking Kidding me. Oh I would be acting a straight full. I heard a speaker say this is for Trevon Martin, Michael Brown, Sandra Bland, Tamir Rice, Eric Gardener and Antwon Rhodes A Staten Island grand jury has cleared an NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo of criminal wrongdoing in the chokehold case of Eric Garner, the unarmed man who died while being arrested in the borough earlier this year, the district attorney's office said Wednesday. In delivering a vote of "no true bill," jurors determined there was not probable cause that a crime was committed by NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo, who was seen on a widely watched amateur video wrapping his arm around Garner's neck as the 43-year-old yelled, "I can't breathe!" If you call 10 years on what should be a 25 to life for Capitol murder Justice. I got it this is the Martin Luther King, idealization about for forgiving. No I will not agree that this Is justice. The commission's analysis of demographic prison data from 2012 to 2016 found that black men serve sentences that are on average 19.1 percent longer than those for white men for similar crimes. The commission's analysis of demographic prison data from 2012 to 2016 found that black men serve sentences that are on average 19.1 percent longer than those for white men for similar crimes. Black men constitute 6 percent of the US adult population but are approximately 35 percent of the prison population and are incarcerated at a rate six times that of white males (Carson and Sabol 2012). Mass Incarceration, Stress, and Black Infant Mortality A Case Study in Structural Racism By Connor Maxwell and Danyelle Solomon Posted on June 5, 2018 Today, infants born to black mothers die at twice the rate as those born to white mothers.1 This horrific disparity cannot be fully explained by differences in income, education, or even health care; evidence suggests that cumulative stress from generations of structural racism is driving this epidemic.2 To combat this persistent problem, lawmakers must attack structural racism in all its forms—including mass incarceration. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/according-2-b-matthews/support
Terry and guest host Rivka sit down with 3 TPSU Alumni to continue the discussion that began in the workshops. The aftermath of Daniel Pantaleo's termination starts the conversation off.
After 5 years, NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo was finally fired for his role in the death of Eric Garner --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/carl-liggins/support
Seeking justice, transparency and accountability in the tragic case of Eric Garner: Aaron Freiwald, Managing Partner of Freiwald Law and host of the weekly podcast, Good Law | Bad Law, is joined by Alvin Bragg, Gideon Oliver, and Monifa Bandele for a special conversation on police brutality, community safety, and the tragedy of Eric Garner’s death five years ago. Alvin and Gideon are both attorneys for the Garner family and Monifa is a community activist heavily involved in the case, as well as one of the petitioners in the recent judicial inquiry brought by Alvin and Gideon, on behalf of the family. Although the NYPD has fired Daniel Pantaleo, the police offer who placed a fatal chokehold on Eric Garner on July 17, 2014, so many questions, disturbing questions remain. The judicial inquiry request, recently filed, seeks answers to those questions. In today’s episode, Aaron, Alvin, Monifa and Gideon discuss the history of Eric Garner’s terrible and unnecessary death, what has happened since, and the broader implications this case and others like it have had and continue to have on our society. The conversation centers on the systemic issues that persist in our legal system and the flawed structure of our law enforcement institutions. What should be the model for community safety? Where should communities focus their resources? Alvin Bragg is a visiting professor of law at New York Law School, Co-Director for the Racial Justice Project, and Co-Counsel for the Garner Family. Previously serving as Chief Deputy Attorney General in the New York State Office of the Attorney General and an federal prosecutor in New York as well, Alvin’s research focuses on the intersection of criminal law and civil rights, prosecutorial discretion and accountability, and the functions of state Attorneys General. Gideon Oliver manages his own firm, Gideon Law, and is Co-Counsel with Alvin for the Garner family. After receiving his B.A. in philosophy with a correlate in Women’s Studies from Vassar, Gideon graduated from Brooklyn Law School and began working as an associate in his father’s New York-based firm. Gideon has been a solo practitioner since 2009 and serves Of Counsel for several other firms. Monifa is Vice President and Chief Partnership and Equity Officer for MomsRising, an organization whose members aim to tackle the most critical issues facing women, mothers, and families by educating the public and mobilizing massive grassroots action. Monifa has more than a decade of experience in policy analysis, communications, civic engagement organizing, and project management. In addition to MomsRising, Monifa sits on the steering committee for Communities United for Police Reform and is an activist with the Black Lives Matter Movement. Listen in to learn more about our guests and their involvements in the Eric Garner case, and the legal actions they are taking in pursuit of the real truth about what happened to Eric Garner, justice, and accountability. This is a riveting conversation about an incredibly important topic. For more information on Alvin Bragg, visit his bio page here. For more information on Gideon Oliver, visit his firm website here. For more information on Monifa Bandele and MomsRising, please visit the organization’s website here. Host: Aaron Freiwald Guests: Monifa Bandele, Alvin Bragg, and Gideon Oliver Follow Good Law | Bad Law: YouTube: Good Law | Bad Law Instagram: @GoodLawBadLaw Website: https://www.law-podcast.com
On this episode the guys get together and re-cap last weeks affairs to include topics such as the scrutiny in which the SEAL community is coming under fire with their new grooming standards, and the controversy surrounding the firing of NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo.
We jump right into this episode with a flashback and cautionary tale from Alaric that really proves if it is too good to be true then it probably is. He meets a beautiful woman at a bar and then the encounter goes left. This leads us to ask a couple of questions, “How shallow are we?” and ”Would you date a woman differently-abled or possessing non-traditional beauty?” It's another trip for Mack aka Mr. International and this time it's Greece. Mack gives us the good, the bad and the hilarious parts of his trip and how a very old man and ex-wrestler worked together to conspire against unsuspecting travelers. You have to hear this one! This week's libation is Grass Widow courtesy of our first Whiskey Warrior Nelson Hume. A very good whiskey, perfect for after or maybe during work. We then switch gears and discuss the fallout from the RocNation and NFL partnership and whether or not if the NFL achieved its goal of changing the narrative. Despite an avalanche of public opinion, we cut through some of the noise to find out if there's any there...there. We also discuss the recent firing of officer Daniel Pantaleo, who was directly involved with the choking death of Eric Garner. What took so long to fire him and was it enough? You'll hear all this and more in this Friday's edition of Decoding 40. And, follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. And, this week on Patreon, be sure to check out the alternate ending only available to our Patreon subscribers.
We jump right into this episode with a flashback and cautionary tale from Alaric that really proves if it is too good to be true then it probably is. He meets a beautiful woman at a bar and then the encounter goes left. This leads us to ask a couple of questions, “How shallow are we?” and ”Would you date a woman differently-abled or possessing non-traditional beauty?” It’s another trip for Mack aka Mr. International and this time it’s Greece. Mack gives us the good, the bad and the hilarious parts of his trip and how a very old man and ex-wrestler worked together to conspire against unsuspecting travelers. You have to hear this one! This week's libation is Grass Widow courtesy of our first Whiskey Warrior Nelson Hume. A very good whiskey, perfect for after or maybe during work. We then switch gears and discuss the fallout from the RocNation and NFL partnership and whether or not if the NFL achieved its goal of changing the narrative. Despite an avalanche of public opinion, we cut through some of the noise to find out if there’s any there...there. We also discuss the recent firing of officer Daniel Pantaleo, who was directly involved with the choking death of Eric Garner. What took so long to fire him and was it enough? You’ll hear all this and more in this Friday’s edition of Decoding 40. And, follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. And, this week on Patreon, be sure to check out the alternate ending only available to our Patreon subscribers.
Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams joins Russ Salzberg on 'Bernie and Sid in the Morning' to discuss the disrespect the NYPD officers are receiving in recent months, the firing of officer Daniel Pantaleo, the 9 suicides committed by NYPD officers in 2019, and the New York City sanitation department.
Subscribe to more videos:https://www.youtube.com/c/PoliceBrutalityWorldwide Check out my Fiverr link: https://www.fiverr.com/kingemjay?up_rollout=true My blog: https://policebrutalityworldwide.blogspot.com/ My Website: https://www.policebrutalityworldwide.com/ Check this Surf roam link: https://surfroam.com?tap_a=22019-573852&tap_s=492427-1313ee My paypal link: www.paypal.me/kingemjayconsulting Other links: http://wu-world.com/profile/DJEMJAY http://raphead.com/profile/DJEMJAY Mining site: https://cryptouniverse.io/en/r/EQGGJZEO https://blackjunction.com/?ref=KINGEMJAY https://blackjunction.tv/@KINGEMJAY Get CryptoBrowser:https://get.cryptobrowser.site/7009526 Booster Miner: https://boostminer.io/180551 Mining site: https://btcfast.co/36765 Mining site: https://wssavior.com/?ref=KINGEMJAY My podcast: https://anchor.fm/king-emjay PI Network: https://minepi.com/KingEmjay3355 https://www.karatbars.com/?s=kingemjay https://www.karatbars.com/shop/?s=kingemjay https://www.karatbars.com/landing/?s=kingemjay https://lp1.kb-universe.com/?referer=kingemjay . https://www.dualmine.com/?ref=88302 . . . . . . . #policebrutalityworldwide #policebrutality Feel supa dupa free to contact me at my email: kingemjay3355@gmail.com Stay melanin
I 2014 døde Eric Garner efter, politibetjenten Daniel Pantaleo tog ulovligt kvælertag på ham under en anholdelse. Episoden er én af utallige sager om politivold i USA's sorte kvarterer. Tidligere Politiken-journalist Sara Maria Glanowski har fulgt en mand, som har viet sit liv til at dokumentere politiets overgreb. Men hvad satte ham i gang? Kan du kun høre DLTP mandag og fredag, og er du ked af at gå glip af alle de andre interessante afsnit af podcasten, kan du tegne et abonnement på Politiken på politiken.dk/shop.
The suspect wanted in connection with abandoning two empty rice cookers in the Fulton Street subway station and one in Chelsea was apprehended around 1am on August 17th. Larry Griffin of Bruno, West Virginia was seen in video being wheeled in a wheelchair out of a building in Longwood in the Bronx by paramedics with his head slumped to the side. Emergency responders had originally arrived at the location on reports of two people possibly overdosing, then identified Griffin from the subway security camera footage that had been circulated by police. Griffin had spoken to family members in West Virginia after the bomb scare incident and claimed he had found the rice cookers outside an Asian restaurant. Griffin's cousin described him as someone dealing with mental issues who had a tendency to pick up objects off the streets. The 26-year-old also has a criminal record in West Virginia and an active warrant was out for his arrest before the rice cooker incident. He is being held on a $200,000 bond and is facing three counts of placing a false bomb. His lawyers are reportedly in talks to arrange a plea deal and he will be back in court on September 6th. More than five years after Eric Garner's death, the NYPD announced on August 19th that the officer seen on eyewitness video putting Garner in a prohibited chokehold will be fired. Police Commissioner O'Neill announced that former officer Daniel Pantaleo would be fired and the Commissioner attributed the years-long delay to the U.S. Justice Department asking the NYPD to postpone the internal NYPD investigation. The U.S. Department of Justice began an investigation in 2014 into the actions of officer Daniel Pantaleo, and in 2019, the Department of Justice, now overseen by Trump-appointed Attorney General William Barr, announced that they would not pursue civil rights charges against Pantaleo, a decision they voluntarily chose to announce one day before the anniversary of Garner's death. Pantaleo's supervisor, Sergeant Kizzy Adonis, pleaded guilty to charges of failure to supervise and will lose 20 vacation days, with Commissioner O'Neill stating "nothing about her actions on that day either caused the use of the banned chokehold or delayed the arrival of medical attention for Mr. Garner". The city medical examiner's office concluded that the methods used to detain him during arrest, combined with his respiratory health, led to his death. A chokehold is a prohibited procedure for the NYPD to use, but video from the scene clearly showed officer Daniel Pantaleo with his arm around Eric's neck. The incident ignited protests across the city and country and Garner's dying words of "I can't breathe" became a rallying cry of the Black Lives Matter movement. In 2015, the city reached a settlement with the Garner family in which they received $5.9 million in response to their wrongful death claim. 15 years ago on August 26, 2004 — Protests begin surrounding the Republican National Convention scheduled to take place at Madison Square Garden Two women who were arrested in 2015 for planning terrorist bombings in the city pleaded guilty this week to charges of teaching and distributing information about the manufacture and use of an explosive, destructive device, and weapon of mass destruction. 28 years ago on August 28, 1991 — A drunken subway operator derails a '4' Train at Union Square just after midnight, killing five and injuring 121 This will be the final week if you've been meaning to take a selfie with the the marble lions at the main branch of the NYPL. The famous lion sculptures, named Patience and Fortitude, that have guarded the entrance to the library at 42nd and Fifth since 1911, will be taking a much-deserved trip to the spa starting September 2nd when their $250,000 restoration begins. Some significant cracks have formed due to water damage and the Tennessee pink marble has been dirtied by air pollution and weather conditions. The lions will be enclosed in plywood and lasers will be used to zap contaminants from the surface of the stone, while cracks will be evaluated and repaired via a variety of methods. If you'll be missing the lions during the weeks they're under repair, the NYPL's online shop even offers replica of Patience and Fortitude as bookends for $150. A Great Big City has been running a 24-hour newsfeed since 2010, but the AGBC News podcast is just getting started, and we need your support. A Great Big City is built on a dedication to explaining what is happening and how it fits into the larger history of New York, which means thoroughly researching every topic and avoiding clickbait headlines to provide a straightforward, honest, and factual explanation of the news. Individuals can make a monthly or one-time contribution at agreatbigcity.com/support and local businesses can have a lasting impact by supporting local news while promoting products or services directly to interested customers listening to this podcast. Visit agreatbigcity.com/advertising to learn more. AGBC is more than just a news website: It also automatically checks MTA data before morning rush hour and sends out notifications if there are delays on any subway lines, LIRR or MetroNorth trains, and bridges and tunnels. Follow @agreatbigcity on social media to receive the alerts. Park of the day Macombs Dam Park — A large park situated next to Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, Macombs Dam has all the athletic amenities, including a baseball diamond that sits in the footprint of the 1923 Yankee Stadium. The Parks Department swapped land with the Yankees when the new stadium was built, so the new stadium sits atop the old Macombs Dam Park and vice-versa! Parks Events Movies Under the Stars: Bohemian Rhapsody — Monday August 26, 2019 at Highland Park in Queens Coney Island Flicks on the Beach: Avengers: Endgame — Date: Monday August 26, 2019 near the Cyclone Summer Movies Under the Stars: Crazy Rich Asians — Date: Monday August 26, 2019 in Cunningham Park in Queens at the main park house. And now let's check in with our robot friend for the concert calendar: Concert Calendar Squeeze is playing The Rooftop at Pier 17 on Saturday, August 24th. Shawn Mendes is playing Barclays Center on Saturday, August 24th. Ted Leo and the Pharmacists and Control Top are playing White Eagle Hall on Saturday, August 24th. Taking Meds, Husbandry, Rebuilder, and Substitute are playing Our Wicked Lady on Saturday, August 24th. Prevailer, For Those Who Can See, and Secret Ion are playing Buckley's on Saturday, August 24th. semaphore and Dead Empires are playing Saint Vitus Bar on Sunday, August 25th. Legion of Skanks Podcast is playing The Stand on Monday, August 26th. Lenny Kravitz is playing Radio City Music Hall on Tuesday, August 27th. Lenny Kravitz is playing Radio City Music Hall in Midtown on Tuesday, August 27th at 8pm. Billy Joel - In Concert and Billy Joel are playing Madison Square Garden on Wednesday, August 28th. King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard is playing Rumsey Playfield, Central Park in Midtown East on Wednesday, August 28th at 7pm. Billy Joel is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Wednesday, August 28th at 8pm. Mary J. Blige with Nas is playing Barclays Center in Boerum Hill on Wednesday, August 28th at 8pm. Kanine Records Rooftop Show, The Natvral, Bloom, Honey cutt, and Nicole Yun are playing Our Wicked Lady on Thursday, August 29th. Reaches, Dead Tooth, Chorty, and Painted Faces are playing Windjammer on Thursday, August 29th. Jonas Brothers: Happiness Begins Tour and Jonas Brothers are playing Madison Square Garden on Thursday, August 29th. Jonas Brothers with Bebe Rexha is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Thursday, August 29th at 7pm. Gladys Knight with Will Downing is playing New Jersey Performing Arts Center on Thursday, August 29th at 8pm. Electric Zoo: Evolved, 1788-L, 4B, Above and Beyond, Afrojack, Alison Wonderland, Anti Up, Armin van Buuren, ARMNHMR, and Bear Grillz are playing Randall's Island Park on Friday, August 30th. Jonah Matranga, Early Riser, and Stathi are playing Mercury Lounge on Friday, August 30th. Electric Zoo (Friday Pass) is playing Randalls Island in East Harlem / Randall's Island on Friday, August 30th at 3am. Electric Zoo (3 Day Pass) is playing Randalls Island in East Harlem / Randall's Island on Friday, August 30th at 12pm. Jonas Brothers with Bebe Rexha is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Friday, August 30th at 7pm. On Da Reggae Tip with Busy Signal is playing Ford Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk in Seagate on Friday, August 30th at 7pm. Soulfrito Music Festival with Farruko, A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Arcangel are playing Barclays Center in Boerum Hill on Friday, August 30th at 8pm. Dionne Warwick with Peabo Bryson is playing Kings Theatre in Ditmas Park / Flatbush on Friday, August 30th at 8pm. Find more fun things to do at agreatbigcity.com/events. Learn about New York Here's something you may not have known about New York: Mobile food vendors and food trucks in the city are being outfitted with battery-powered location-sharing devices so the Department of Health can find them and conduct random inspections Weather The extreme highs and lows for this week in weather history: Record High: 103°F on August 26, 1948 Record Low: 50°F on August 27, 1885 Weather for the week ahead: Light rain on Wednesday, with high temperatures rising to 86°F on Friday. AGBC Weather Weather.gov forecast Thanks for listening to A Great Big City. Follow along 24 hours a day on social media @agreatbigcity or email contact@agreatbigcity.com with any news, feedback, or topic suggestions. Subscribe to AGBC News wherever you listen to podcasts: iTunes, Google Play, or Player FM, RadioPublic, Pocket Casts, or listen to each episode on the podcast pages at agreatbigcity.com/podcast. If you enjoy the show, subscribe and leave a review wherever you're listening and visit our podcast site to see show notes and extra links for each episode. Intro and outro music: 'Start the Day' by Lee Rosevere — Concert Calendar music from Jukedeck.com
This week, Daniel Pantaleo was fired from the NYPD, Jay Inslee dropped out of the Democratic primary race, and President Trump arrived in France for the G7 Summit.
The first episode of The Indypundit - the podcast of The Indypendent, New York's progressive print newspaper, hosted by Dean Patterson and executive editor John Tarleton. In this EP we discuss the takeover of East River Park, New York car culture and its cycling discontents, and the overdue firing of Daniel Pantaleo. Opening track is Louis Prima's Just a Gigolo, closing is Joan Baez Guantanamara
In mid-August, NYPD Police Commissioner James O'Neill fired Daniel Pantaleo—the New York City police officer accused in the 2014 death of Eric Garner—despite the fact that Pantaleo was cleared of any wrongdoing in the incident. Patrick Lynch—the president of the Police Benevolent Association—sent a message to officers that could very easily be construed as a signal of a work slowdown. "We are urging all New York City police officers to proceed with the utmost caution in this new reality, in which they may be deemed 'reckless' just for doing their job," Lynch said. In this podcast segment, Jim and Doug discuss how actions such as the firing of Dan Pantaleo fan the flames of the continuing trend of de-motivation and de-policing in America.
Five years after Eric Garner's death, Daniel Pantaleo has been fired. NY1's Grace Rauh, Zack Fink, and Juan Manuel Benitez analyze Police Commissioner James O'Neill's decision to fire the officer. They also discuss the homelessness crisis and whether Mayor de Blasio's affordable housing plan can find any solutions. Join the conversation on Twitter: #NY1OffTopic or @gracerauh, @ZackFinkNews, and @JuanMaBenitez For more information: ny1.com/offtopic
Josh and I are back for season 2 of the podcast. We kick off this season of the podcast discussing the firing of the Daniel Pantaleo. The officer responsible for Eric Garner's murder. Then we move on to the NFL/Roc Nation Partnership, breaking down both side of this deal and how critics and supporters are viewing the move.
Episode 120 Gets Honest About This Popeye's Craze,Tee Grizzley,Getting Back The Energy You Put Out,Daniel Pantaleo's Go Fund Me,Snowfall Getting Real,A Quick Way To Get Attention,We Cover Dame Dash On No Jumper Podcast,Jamie Foxx,Season Finale Of Behind The Music,Trump Returning To Office & More! "Rose From Concrete" By Geezy The Hitmaker Is Out Now On All Platforms! Go Stream The Summer Singles By Your Host "PSA" "Jumanji" Or "Proof" On Your Favorite Streaming Service Now! Be Sure To Tune In Every Other Day For New Episodes Of This Podcast & Come Help Us Move This Content Culture Forward!
This week's episode of Day 1 Radio features two men behind a short film that is bound to strike up plenty of conversations once it's shown to the masses. The film's writer and producer Coffey and actor Nashawn Kearse stopped by to talk about About the People, a short film that can best be described as a fly-on-the-wall view of the conversation that Black people in America have after each police shooting or any other injustice African-Americans almost exclusively experience. Coffey and Kearse share what it's been like touring the festival circuit, creating the film and what they hope viewers walk away with after watching. 1:15 - About the People got a standing ovation at a Martha's Vineyards film festival. But Coffee admits that the applause was hard to enjoy given that many of the issues talked about in the film continue to happen. 4:00 - Nashawn talks about why he chose to take this role and Coffey speaks on the reactions he got from the rest of the cast when they first read the script. Nashawn calls it "our version of '12 Angry Men.' 6:00 - The emotions ran very high on the set. Nashawn describes it as "raw." Coffey talks about how this high-powered cast came together. 13:30 - About the People left no stones unturned as they talked about some rarely spoken about realities from the Civil Rights movement and how that impacted future generations. 17:00 - Coffey admits that while most of the feedback on the film has been positive, not every film festival has been willing to show it. 22:00 - The guest and the hosts share their thoughts on recent events including Eric Garner's killer Daniel Pantaleo getting six-figure GoFundMe donations and the NYPD Sergeant who oversaw him only getting punished by losing vacation days. 35:30 - Nashawn and Coffey share their aspirations for the film and hopes it gives people ideas. Day 1 Radio podcast is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, IHeartRadio, Spotify, Stitcher, Radio Public, and CLNS Mobile Media app. Follow us on Twitter, FB, and IG at @day1radio
The Powell men minus 1 discuss a range of topics including Jay-Z and the NFL, 1619, Disgraced NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo, Their favorite kids cereal, and pig to human heart transplant.
In episode 457, Miles and special guest host Laci Mosley are joined by comedian and Sports Without Balls host Erin Foley to discuss Robert De Niro's company suing their ex-employee, Trump's approval ratings, Trump's claims of voter fraud, the cop who choked out Eric Garner finally being fired, California passing a law to protect people from being murdered by the police, an Instagram influencer's motorcycle accident, and Moore! FOOTNOTES: 1. Robert De Niro’s Company Files $6 Million Suit Against Ex-Employee 2. New Polls Show That Trump Should Be Afraid. Very Very Afraid. 3. Trump's outrageous claims of voter fraud have a clear goal: Refusing to accept defeat in 2020 4. Fired chokehold cop Daniel Pantaleo will SUE NYPD Commissioner James O'Neill to get his job back as Eric Garner's daughter brands him a murderer and says he should have been sacked five YEARS ago 5. California Senate Committee Advances Law Enforcement-Backed Use Of Force Bill — But Links It To Its Rival 6. Insight Web Special: Professor Robert Weisberg Explains California’s Police Use Of Force Bills 7. An Influencer Is Defending Her Decision To Post A Photo Shoot Of Her Motorcycle Accident On Instagram 8. WATCH: Kings of Convenience -- Scars on Land Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
This week, NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo was fired for his involvement in the 2014 death of Eric Garner. The incident helped to stimulate the Black Lives Matter movement, and sparked public debate about the limits of and accountability for law enforcement. With these debates once again at the fore, BackStory revisits a segment originally published in 2016. In it, producer Nina Earnest explores how the professionalization of the Los Angeles Police Department ended up putting the department above the law they were supposed to enforce. BackStory is funded in part by our listeners. You can help keep the episodes coming by supporting the show: https://www.backstoryradio.org/support
After five years, Daniel Pantaleo, the cop who killed Eric Garner is finally fired. The Black Delegates discuss whether it's justice or just some more b.s. Did Colin Kaepernick kneel so Jay-Z could stand up or is Hov the god of backstabbing? Portland cops #ProtectNServe by PhotoShopping a black man's lineup photo. Plus, find out which of the Black Delegates loves rocking dirty draws on Episode 74. Contact Us: Email us questions, comments or suggestions theblackdelegatespod@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter @black_delegates @theblackryan @ishcreates @boxedwinepapi Follow us on IG @black_delegates @ishcreates Like us on FB: www.facebook.com/blackdelegatespod Links: Cop who choked out Eric Garner is fired https://abcnews.go.com/US/nypd-officer-involved-eric-garners-death-untruthful-investigation/story?id=65054867 PhotoShopped mugshots legal? https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/police-digitally-remove-african-american-suspect-tyrone-lamont-allen-tattoos-for-photo-lineup/ Taking 'she love my dirty draws' to a whole new level https://dlisted.com/2019/08/17/in-poor-hygiene-news-nearly-half-of-americans-say-they-dont-change-their-underwear-every-day/
The Powell men minus 1 discuss a range of topics including Jay-Z and the NFL, 1619, Disgraced NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo, Their favorite kids cereal, and pig to human heart transplant.
After 5 years of investigations and protests, New York City Police Commissioner James O'Neil fired Daniel Pantaleo who was the officer involved in the 2014 chokehold death of Eric Garner. O'Neil said that using the banned chokehold was a mistake that any officer could have made in the heat of an arrest, but he can no longer effectively serve as a NY City police officer. My producer Victor Wright joins us for more. Next, we speak to Joe Barnett, managing editor of Budget and Tax News, for a look into red-light cameras in the country. While people should not running red-lights, are these cameras increasing safety and causing fewer accidents. The results are mixed, some evidence suggests that increasing the time of the yellow light may be more helpful and enforcement of red-light citations is not always the easiest. Finally, in recent years more young adults are continuing to see their pediatricians well into their mid-20's. People are on their parents insurance longer and feel more comfortable seeing the same doctor they have known since they were kids, but how long can you sit in that Candy Land waiting room geared toward toddlers? Caren Chesler, contributor to the Washington Post joins us for when it's time to look for another doctor. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Tuesday’s edition of the podcast details the firing of NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo in the 2014 death of Eric Garner. Planned Parenthood is crying foul against the Trump Administration. Apple has a new monthly service and Antonio Brown’s helmet saga drags on.
In this episode I address the stunning change in the narrative on anti-First Amendment group ANTIFA brought about by our show. I also address the disturbing firing of NYPD police officer Daniel Pantaleo. Finally, I address The NY Times stunning admission of media bias. News Picks:Elizabeth Warren says “sorry,” again. Insanity is erupting on college campuses. Is Russia hiding another Chernobyl? Rep. Rashida Tlaib is a hypocrite on human rights. The NY Times finally admitted they’re not “journalists.” Pick up Matt Palumbo's book "Debunk This!: Shattering Liberal Lies" here. Copyright Dan Bongino All Rights Reserved.
Order up! On this week’s menu: the firing of Daniel Pantaleo, Jay-Z and the NFL’s partnership, Planned Parenthood continuing the fight, and Missed Connections from Brooklyn! Enjoy! Support Purchase some merchandise! Use the hashtag #CrownAndCollards on social media when live listening and posting about the show! Contact Twitter: @CrownNCollards Instagram: @crownandcollards Facebook: Crown & Collards Email: CrownAndCollards@gmail.com Patreon: Patreon.com/FlawlessNoises Website: FlawlessNoises.com Crown & Collards is a Flawless Noises Media Network presentation. #FNMediaProd --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/crownandcollards/support
Today we discussed Governor Gavin Newsom signs Stephon Clark's law, NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo fired 5 years after choking Eric Garner, two Texas cops arrest black man and handcuff him to two horses and walk through town, Man impersonating cop pulls over van full of cops in New York, NFL running back Cedric Benson dies in motorcycle accident, Long Beach has an Iowa picnic that has been around for 119 years and still going strong thanks to Iowa association of Long Beach. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ramon-figueroa4/support
Daniel Pantaleo is no longer an officer with the New York Police Department. Commissioner James O'Neill fired Pantaleo Monday for his role in the 2014 arrest and death of Eric Garner. The New York City Police Benevolent Association is unhappy with the decision, tweeting that O'Neill "has chosen politics and his own self-interest" over siding with his officers. What's going on in Hong Kong? The Civil Human Rights Front, a broad coalition of pro-democracy groups, claimed more than 1.7 million had attended a Sunday demonstration, while Hong Kong police said 128,000 people attended the rally at its peak. It is reported that the rally was attended, crucially, by thousands of ordinary residents as opposed to more radical student and youth protesters who have headlined recent demonstrations, including an occupation of Hong Kong International Airport last week. Sunday showed as well that the public was still united against the government and Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam, who sparked protests in early June when she attempted to push a bill through the legislature that would have allowed extradition of some arrested in the city to mainland China, among other places.A new poll finds more than 70% of economists expect the US economy to slip into recession in the next two years. The poll released Monday shows 38% of economists surveyed predict the slowing economy will slide into a recession in 2020. Another 34 see the recession coming in 2021. The economists were surveyed by the National Association for Business Economics. They've previously voiced concerns that US President Donald Trump's tariffs and higher budget deficits could eventually let the air out of the economy. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said Monday that his department will grant another temporary reprieve to Huawei Technologies, delaying the implementation of a penalty on the Chinese tech giant for another 90 days. “It is another 90 days for the US telecom companies,” Ross said. “Some of the rural companies are dependent on Huawei. So we're giving them a little more time to wean themselves off. But no specific licenses are being granted for anything.” The next deadline, he added, is roughly November 19. All of this while the Washington Post reports, "The quantum revolution is coming, and Chinese scientists are at the forefront." Chinese physicist Pan Jian-Wei describes revolutionary breakthroughs in technology such as "hacking-resistant communications networks they are building across China, the sensors they are designing to see through smog and around corners, and the prototype computers that may someday smash the computational power of any existing machine. All the gear is based on quantum technology — an emerging field that could transform information processing and confer big economic and national-security advantages to countries that dominate it." What does this mean going forward?GUESTS:John Burris — Lead attorney and founder of the Law Office of John L. Burris. He is primarily known for his work in the area of civil rights, with an emphasis on police misconduct and excessive force cases. Bob Schlehuber — Producer for By Any Means Necessary and Sputnik news analyst. Linwood Tauheed — Associate professor of economics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.Dr. Jack Rasmus — Professor of economics at Saint Mary's College of California and author of "Central Bankers at the End of Their Ropes: Monetary Policy and the Coming Depression."
3 mass shooting plots stopped around the country in separate incidents // Daniel Pantaleo, Officer Who Held Eric Garner in Chokehold, Is Fired // Prince Andrew rejects involvement in Epstein sex scandal // Professional cuddling gets even weirder... // Man stabbed and killed in CSUF parking lot // Inside the 'Bird Mafia' // Gavin Newsom signs new police use-of-force bill // And since 2019 is full of cuddling, forest therapy, and 26-year-olds going to the pediatrician it's time to remind the world about Chuck Connors!
Eric Garner said I cant breathe 11 times and still police officer did not release him so he could catch his breath he than died. Now the officer has been fired 5 years later do you feel that justice was finally won? Lets Talk About It !!! Trending On Twitter Popeye's Chicken Sandwich vs. Chick-Fil-A's Chicken Sandwich You Be The Judge Its A war Yall LoL! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/shawntel3/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/shawntel3/support
8.2.19 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: NYPD judge says Daniel Pantaleo; should be fired; Pastor who met with Trump says #45 lied about helping #Baltimore; An innocent man is finally free after serving 21 years in prison; Cyntoia Brown to be freed next week; ASAP Rocky is free to leave Sweden until his verdict is announced; R. Kelly denied bail in NY. - #RolandMartinUnfiltered partner: 420 Real Estate, LLC To invest in 420 Real Estate’s legal Hemp-CBD Crowdfunding Campaign go to http://marijuanastock.org
US pulls out of nuclear treaty with Russia. New Job numbers out. Mar Hammrick, Bankrate.com discusses the new report. Movies opening this weekend. ASAP Rocky released from Swedish jail. A New York administrative judge recommended that Daniel Pantaleo, the New York City police officer at the center of Eric Garner's July 2014 death case, should be fired
The fact that Daniel Pantaleo, the officer that murdered Eric Garner, should elicit a conversation about reforming the criminal justice rather than pushing us into extremes. Written, Edited & Filmed by Krish Mohan Intro Music by Liss Victory. Get her full album here: lissvictory.bandcamp.com SUPPORT THE SHOW ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/KrishMohanHaha MAKE AN INDIVIDUAL DONATION: paypal.me/KrishMohanhaha TOUR DATES: http://ramannoodlescomedy.com EXCLUSIVE MATERIAL: https://ramannoodlescomedy.bandcamp.com/ Weekly Updates: http://bit.ly/WeeklyKrish Subscribe: http://eepurl.com/oOJ45 Podcast: https://anchor.fm/taboo-table-talk FFON Podcast: https://anchor.fm/krishmohan-ffon Download my NEW album "Empathy On Sale": http://bit.ly/EmpathyOnSale-1 Download my album "Approaching Happiness": http://bit.ly/ApproachHappy STEEMIT: https://steemit.com/@krishmohanhaha MINDS: https://www.minds.com/KrishMohanHaha --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The fact that Daniel Pantaleo, the officer that murdered Eric Garner, should elicit a conversation about reforming the criminal justice rather than pushing us into extremes. Written, Edited & Filmed by Krish Mohan Intro Music by Liss Victory. Get her full album here: lissvictory.bandcamp.com SUPPORT THE SHOW ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/KrishMohanHaha MAKE AN INDIVIDUAL DONATION: paypal.me/KrishMohanhaha TOUR DATES: http://ramannoodlescomedy.com EXCLUSIVE MATERIAL: https://ramannoodlescomedy.bandcamp.com/ Weekly Updates: http://bit.ly/WeeklyKrish Subscribe: http://eepurl.com/oOJ45 Podcast: https://anchor.fm/taboo-table-talk FFON Podcast: https://anchor.fm/krishmohan-ffon Download my NEW album "Empathy On Sale": http://bit.ly/EmpathyOnSale-1 Download my album "Approaching Happiness": http://bit.ly/ApproachHappy STEEMIT: https://steemit.com/@krishmohanhaha MINDS: https://www.minds.com/KrishMohanHaha --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode of Necessary Blackness Podcast, we discuss the Justice Department announcement that it would not be pursuing federal charges against Daniel Pantaleo, the NYPD officer accused of fatally choking Eric Garner, who was approached by police for allegedly selling loose cigarettes. The post Necessary Blackness Ep: 90 Black Resistance & White Laws appeared first on Elementary Genocide.
In this episode of Necessary Blackness Podcast, we discuss the Justice Department announcement that it would not be pursuing federal charges against Daniel Pantaleo, the NYPD officer accused of fatally choking Eric Garner, who was approached by police for allegedly selling loose cigarettes. The post Necessary Blackness Ep: 90 Black Resistance & White Laws appeared first on Elementary Genocide.
The safety net in our sanctuary city barely exists for undocumented immigrants. Mazin Sidahmed of Documented and Claudia Irizarry Aponte of The City come in to discuss their reporting on ICE raids, family members left behind and more. Plus, Harry and Chrissy talk about the feds decision not to charge Daniel Pantaleo for the killing of Eric Garner, and Victoria Bekiempis and Alex Brook Lynn go inside the courts.
Episode 102 Welcomes Ayceslater Of The 'Everything Anime Podcast' As They Continue Their Creative Journey,We Also Cover The Importance Of Reading,The Dirty Water Podcast Recent Episode,New Movies,Kathy Griffin,Daniel Pantaleo,Passing Your Idol's,New Music Release,Kevin Spacey,How Free Is Speech & More! 'PSA' By Your Creator Is Out Now! Kid Ka$h's 'BlueFace' Ep.Is Out Everywhere Music Matters! Go Support 'Heat Advisory' By Geezy The Hitmaker!
Today is the 5th anniversary of the death of Eric Garner and yesterday we found out that the Justice Department will not bring federal charges against Daniel Pantaleo , the New York City police officer who put Garner in a chokehold that later led to his death. Carl Takei, senior staff attorney at the ALCU, joins us to discuss why no charges were filed and if there is any other disciplinary action yet to come for Pantaleo. Next, as Operation Varsity Blues works its way through the courts with parents and coaches who were charged in the college admissions cheating scandal we take a look at how USC is investigating the students who have been connected to the scandal. 33 students are under investigation to see what they knew or if they lied on their applications. Joel Rubin, reporter for the LA Times, joins us for a look inside the admissions investigation. Finally, a cash shortage may soon be squeezing the huge Democratic field of presidential candidates. Nearly half of the candidates spent more campaign cash than they raised in the second quarter of the year. Early money is more important than ever because candidates are forced to spend heavily to meet polling and donor thresholds to qualify for debates. David Siders, reporter for Politico, joins us for who is in danger. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
On this episode of The Critical Hour, Dr. Wilmer Leon is joined by John Burris, lead attorney and founder of the Law Office of John L. Burris. He is primarily known for his work in the area of civil rights, with an emphasis on police misconduct and excessive force cases. The Department of Justice will not charge police in connection with Eric Garner's death. The decision came five years after Garner's dying words — “I can't breathe” — became a rallying cry. New York City police officer Daniel Pantaleo will not face federal charges relating to the choking death of Garner, ending a years-long inquiry into a case that sharply divided officials and prompted national protests over the use of excessive force by the police. The United States attorney in Brooklyn, Richard P. Donoghue, announced the decision not to bring criminal civil rights charges on Tuesday morning, one day before the fifth anniversary of Garner's death. That is the deadline by which the department would have to file charges against Pantaleo. What are we to make of this?CNN reported Monday that it had exclusively obtained new documents which "reveal that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange received in-person deliveries, potentially of hacked materials related to the 2016 US election, during a series of suspicious meetings at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. The documents build on the possibility, raised by special counsel Robert Mueller in his report on Russian meddling, that couriers brought hacked files to Assange at the embassy. The surveillance reports also describe how Assange turned the embassy into a command center and orchestrated a series of damaging disclosures that rocked the 2016 presidential campaign in the United States." Are the actions of Assange as described in this report as nefarious as CNN makes them out to be, or are there other possibilities for his behavior?Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's (D-NY) chief of staff Saikat Chakrabarti has tweeted messages suggesting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is an ineffective legislator, that a Native American lawmaker voted “to enable a racist system” and that moderate Democrats are modern-day segregationists because they backed a Senate border aid bill. How is this adding to the pressure on Ocasio-Cortez, who has taken Congress by storm?US President Donald Trump said early Tuesday his administration would investigate accusations that Alphabet Inc's Google worked with the Chinese government. The president repeated accusations made previously by Peter Thiel, a co-founder of PayPal and venture capitalist, that Google worked with the Chinese government. Also in the world of social media giants, US Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) said Facebook is “delusional” to believe people will trust it with their money, as lawmakers from both sides of the aisle grilled the social media company on its plans for a digital currency at a hearing on Tuesday. What does all this mean?The recent MintPress News article, "The CIA is Invoking Wikileaks to Push for the Expansion of a Cold War Era Secrecy Law," states, "More than three decades later, the CIA is apparently unsatisfied with the protections the bill [the Intelligence Identities Protection Act (IIPA) in 1981] granted 'covert agents.' It has enlisted a select group of senators and representatives to help expand the universe of individuals who are protected, making members of the press who cover intelligence matters more vulnerable to prosecution." What's really going on behind the scenes?GUESTS:John Burris — Lead attorney and founder of the Law Office of John L. Burris. He is primarily known for his work in the area of civil rights, with an emphasis on police misconduct and excessive force cases. Catherine Shakdam — Political commentator and analyst focusing on the Middle East, and the author of "A Tale Of Grand Resistance: Yemen, The Wahhabi And The House Of Saud." Eugene Craig III — Republican strategist, former vice-chair of the Maryland Republican Party and grassroots activist.Linwood Tauheed — Associate professor of economics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Chris Garaffa — Web developer and technologist.John Kiriakou — Co-host of Loud and Clear on Radio Sputnik.
5.22.19 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: VA Gov. Ralph Northam blackface drama continues, Eastern Virginia Medical School investigation into the photos inconclusive; Daniel Pantaleo's partner admitted to falsifying police reports to exaggerate Eric Garner's crime; Donald Trump lashes out at Dems and has a temper tantrum in the Rose Garden; Sen. Elizabeth Warren talks about her plans to help Black America if elected; HUD Sec. Ben Carson gets grilled on Capitol Hill
General Counsel for the National Action Network, Michael Hardy talks with us about the NYPD trial of Officer Daniel Pantaleo who killed Eric Garner in 2014.
We sat down with Gwen Carr, A mother, an author and social activist for criminal justice reform. Millions of Americans and people around the world heard the haunting words from Eric Garner "I can't breathe, I can't breathe" as police officer Daniel Pantaleo used an illegal use of force by putting Eric Garner in a chokehold and ultimately killing Garner. Gwen Carr takes us back to that tragic day on July 17, 2014. We talked about the importance of voting, participating in community/town hall meetings and the importance of taking back our communities. She directed her focus on explaining the racial divide within the criminal justice system and how there is an ongoing attack on the black race in America. It was such an honor to have her on our show, she also presented us with her new book "This Stops Today". Make sure to purchase the book wherever books are sold. MAKE SURE TO SUBSCRIBE AND COMMENT!!!! Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/FGRpodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freegameradiopodcast/
ABC Criminal Justice reporter Christina Carrega joins Harry Siegel, Christina Greer, Victoria Bekiempis and Alex Brook Lynn to talk abut what she's seen at the disturbingly low-stakes department trial, inside One Police Plaza, of the officer whose chokehold killed Eric Garner—and who's still drawing a check from the NYPD nearly five years later.
NYPD Chief Surgeon says Eric Garner WAS NOT choked by NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo. The Chief Surgeon suggested the cause of death was related to Eric Garner's health issues. Tuesday April 9th, Sgt Dorsey speaks to CA legislators in support of AB392 on heels of a KPCC radio debate with the president of the California, Police Chiefs Association (CPCA). Sgt Dorsey has a follow up to her radio show appearance, with the president of CPCA, included in this podcast. An acclaimed author and social justice advocate, Retired Los Angeles Police Department Sergeant Cheryl Dorsey has dedicated her life to serving and protecting all citizens with procedural justice and to assist communities in sorting out the truth about legal and necessary law enforcement conduct. She does so with a level of credibility that is effective, relevant and irrefutable. Her desire is to ensure that every person who has an encounter with the police has the requisite skills and knowledge to safely navigate the experience. Staying alive is the ultimate goal. As such, she is a highly sought police expert on significant criminal justice issues making national headlines. Her unique and candid commentary has been featured on such respected news networks as CNN, Fox News, Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN), HLNTV, MSNBC as well as appearing on CNN International, NowThis News, KPCC, DemocracyNow, Tom Joyner Morning Show and KABC Talk Radio w/ Dr. Drew. Sgt. Dorsey has been seen on Brazilian TVGlobo, Tavis Smiley, Dr. Drew, Dr. Phil and TD Jakes Shows. Sgt. Dorsey has also been featured on TV Crime Series; “It Takes A Killer”, “Corrupt Crimes” “Motive to Murder” and “Dead Files”. Cheryl Dorsey has written an autobiography entitled, "Black and Blue, The Creation of A Social Advocate" which chronicles her 20-year LAPD journey and advocacy suffered the loss of a loved one due to abuse of authority. Her next book "Black and Blue, The Creation of A Whistle Blower" is coming soon!
NYPD Chief Surgeon says Eric Garner WAS NOT choked by NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo. The Chief Surgeon suggested the cause of death was related to Eric Garner's health issues.Tuesday April 9th, Sgt Dorsey speaks to CA legislators in support of AB392 on heels of a KPCC radio debate with the president of the California, Police Chiefs Association (CPCA). Sgt Dorsey has a follow up to her radio show appearance, with the president of CPCA, included in this podcast. An acclaimed author and social justice advocate, Retired Los Angeles Police Department Sergeant Cheryl Dorsey has dedicated her life to serving and protecting all citizens with procedural justice and to assist communities in sorting out the truth about legal and necessary law enforcement conduct. She does so with a level of credibility that is effective, relevant and irrefutable. Her desire is to ensure that every person who has an encounter with the police has the requisite skills and knowledge to safely navigate the experience. Staying alive is the ultimate goal. As such, she is a highly sought police expert on significant criminal justice issues making national headlines.Her unique and candid commentary has been featured on such respected news networks as CNN, Fox News, Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN), HLNTV, MSNBC as well as appearing on CNN International, NowThis News, KPCC, DemocracyNow, Tom Joyner Morning Show and KABC Talk Radio w/ Dr. Drew. Sgt. Dorsey has been seen on Brazilian TVGlobo, Tavis Smiley, Dr. Drew, Dr. Phil and TD Jakes Shows. Sgt. Dorsey has also been featured on TV Crime Series; “It Takes A Killer”, “Corrupt Crimes” “Motive to Murder” and “Dead Files”.Cheryl Dorsey has written an autobiography entitled, "Black and Blue, The Creation of A Social Advocate" which chronicles her 20-year LAPD journey and advocacy suffered the loss of a loved one due to abuse of authority. Her next book "Black and Blue, The Creation of A Whistle Blower" is coming soon!
On this week's episode of Extended Play, Bill Press talks to ThinkProgress' Jack Jenkins & Carimah Townes about their exclusive report on the NYPD cop at the center of the 2014 Eric Garner case. New records indicate that Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who is white, had an extensive disciplinary record that was shielded by New York City. This leads to a larger discussion of the unjust killings of unarmed African Americans in this country.
Bill Press welcomes Leslie Dach, Sam Baker, Carimah Townes, & Jack Jenkins to discuss Democrats' tough questions for SCOTUS nominee Neil Gorsuch, Tom Price's mission to kill Obamacare, why Gorsuch's 'frozen trucker' ruling matters, & new information on the NYC cop who killed Eric Garner in 2014 - all the big highlights from this Wednesday edition of the Bill Press Show!
Rod and Karen are joined by comedian Neruda Williams about The Harlem Comedy Festival, Hillary Clinton, fantasy football terrorism, how to best protest for BLM, Desiigner innocent, you can buy a nuclear plant, men shouldn't put phone in pocket, Katie Couric sued, cop fired for not shooting black man, Daniel Pantaleo given a raise, Kate Upton and Michael Rappaport, white people news, man claims God told him to speed, teacher was holding at school, woman uses boyfriend's eye for ashtray and sword ratchetness. Twitter: @rodimusprime @SayDatAgain @TBGWT @NerudaCareBear Email: theblackguywhotips@gmail.com Blog: www.theblackguywhotips.com Voice Mail: 704-557-0186 Neruda's Festival: www.HarlemComedyFestival.com Sponsors: www.adamandeve.com Code: TBGWT www.GetBevel.Com Code: FreeTBGWT Vote for J-L Cauvin here: http://www.laughtertrumpshate.com/vote
“You rape our women and you're taking over our country,” Dylann Roof is reported to have said as he opened fire on African Americans in Charleston, killing nine. His claim to act in women's – which is to say white women's – defense is as old as white male supremacy itself, and it's been refuted for just as long. Ida B Wells Barnett was the first, debunking lies like Roof's. Over a century ago, she reported the facts and led the campaign to stop lynching. Jessie Daniel Ames a white single mother of three, responded to the call. Ames founded the Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching in 1930, which gathered tens of thousands of signatures on a pledge that read in part: “[P]ublic opinion has accepted too easily the claim of lynchers and mobsters that they are acting solely in defense of womanhood… We dare no longer to permit this claim to pass unchallenged...” White supremacist killers have never stopped using the false pretext of acting in women's defense. Women of color (as well as men ) have perished as a result, and not just in the US. Not only vigilantes but also our politicians have used the pretext of “protecting” women to defend their imperial wars. In my lifetime alone -- from the invasion of Grenada (to “rescue” white female medical students) to the invasion of Iraq, there's not been a war that wasn't waged in “women's” name, to devastating result on women and men alike. “One thing is for certain: shortly after the invasion of Iraq. There won't be any more mass graves and torture rooms and rape rooms,” Hah. his own global torture regime was just then taking root. The interests white supremacist patriarchal killers serve are their own, their own, their own. Self appointed watchman, George Zimmerman, and killer policemen Daniel Pantaleo, Dante Servin and the rest do not “serve' or protect people in peril. They put us there, as do our packed prisons and jails, and all the rapacious businesses that make private profits off public pain. Just to be clear: I am not Dylann Roof's woman. Racist patriarchal violence does not make me safe. It divides me from people I love and tells me lies about who and what actually pose a threat to my life. White female queer, I also know by now that one of white supremacy's goals is to keep me in my place: silent and separate from my sisters and those with whom I might otherwise make common cause. I refuse. And I am not alone. Women of all colors refute this violence and reject the claim that this killing is in our name. We pledge to act. A statement is right now being finalized. If you want to sign up, write to me laura@GRITtv.org. Thanks.
The Context of White Supremacy welcomes Dr. Niyana Rasayon for his 10th visit {http://eyesofmaat.com/}. Dr. Rasayon is a Behavioral Neuroscientist, Neuropsychologist, North Carolina A&T alumnus, author and father. We've explored his publications on previous broadcasts: Reality Check: A Manual for the Hue-Man Octahedron & The Mystery of Melanin as well as The Awakening: OMG The President Is Black. We conversed with Dr. Rasayon in the autumn of 2014. At that time, Tamir Rice, Freddie Gray and Walter Scott were alive, and there was at least a morsel of hope that White killers Darren Wilson and Daniel Pantaleo would be indicted. We'll get his view on what has unfolded over the past 8 months and if he think this looks like substantial movement towards the permanent elimination of White Supremacy. We'll also ask him about the reports of Whitefolks in general, and specifically at the FBI, fabricating expert, scientific analysis. INVEST in The COWS - http://tiny.cc/ledjb CALL IN NUMBER: 760.569.7676 CODE 564943# SKYPE: FREECONFERENCECALLHD.7676 CODE 564943# The C.O.W.S. archives: http://tiny.cc/76f6p
The Gist of Freedom Preserving American History through Black Literature . . .
Join The Gist of Freedom as we discuss The Michael Brown and Eric Garner Grand Jury Verdicts. Police not Indicted, For The deaths of Unarmed Black Men, with Attorney Activist, Michael Coard Esq.! 8pm ET~ www.BlackHistoryBlog.com "I can't breathe" Weeks before the shooting death of Michael Brown this August in Ferguson, Missouri, the death of Eric Garner set off its own wave of protests. The father of six died in July while being suspected of selling illegal cigarettes in Staten Island, after a police chokehold rendered him unable to breathe. The cop, Pantaleo, who held Eric Garner in the chokehold that killed him has been sued three times for allegedly violating the constitutional rights of other blacks he and fellow cops arrested. Unlike Mike Brown's death, Garner's death has harrowing digital footprints. His attempted arrest and struggle for air were captured on a widely-disseminated video. His final words were “I can't breathe.” Besides the banned chokehold used by the cop, throwing a beefy arm around his neck, there was lethal danger in the way Mr. Garner was subdued — on his stomach, with a pile of cops on his back. “positional asphyxia” quoted the Department's guidelines on preventing deaths in custody. The New York medical examiner's office ruled Mr. Garner's death a homicide, it cited “compression of neck (choke hold), compression of chest and prone positioning during physical restraint by police.” The pressure prevents the diaphragm from going up and down, and he can't inhale and exhale.” Which is exactly what Mr. Garner was trying to tell the officers who were on top of him when he said "I can't breathe" On Wednesday, a grand jury decided not to indict Daniel Pantaleo, the plainclothes NYPD officer who was making the arrest.
The Gist of Freedom Preserving American History through Black Literature . . .
Join The Gist of Freedom as we discuss The Michael Brown and Eric Garner Grand Jury Verdicts, Police not Indicted, ForThe deaths of Unarmed Black Men, with Roy Paul! Weeks before the shooting death of Michael Brown this August in Ferguson, Missouri, the death of Eric Garner set off its own wave of protests. The father of six died in July while being arrested for selling illegal cigarettes in Staten Island, after a police chokehold rendered him unable to breathe. On Wednesday, a grand jury decided not to indict Daniel Pantaleo, the plainclothes NYPD officer who was making the arrest. There are plenty of differences between the cases of Garner and Brown, but one particular contrast remains salient: There was no footage of Michael Brown's death, only eyewitness accounts and conjecture, leaving minds to imagine a standoff between an officer and a civilian, a standoff that ended with the image of Brown lying dead in the street for over four hours. Garner's death has harrowing digital footprints. His attempted arrest and struggle for air were captured on a widely-disseminated video. His final words were “I can't breathe.” In the aftermath of the verdict, many will likely point to the fact that the coroner's report ruled Garner's death a homicide, and that chokeholds are expressly forbidden by the NYPD.
A shocking decision has come from a Staten Island grand jury, as they decided that no indictment will be made against officer Daniel Pantaleo. The officer was seen in a video placing an illegal chokehold on Staten Island resident Eric Garner, which led to his death. What does this mean for the future on how police officers interact with those of color and for the lives of black men?
With recent events sparking nationwide protests and riots, thousands of American citizens, primarily African Americans, are saying no more. With the non-indictment of both Darren Wilson, white officer who killed unarmed Michael Brown, and Daniel Pantaleo, white police officer who administered a banned chokehold subsequently causing Eric Garner's death, the social issue of police brutality has taken the spotlight. On this episode the crew talks about those cases, including the more recent one involving the shooting death of 12 year old Tamir Rice, by white police officer Timothy Loehmann.
DECEMBER 4, 2014 FROM FERGUSON TO NEW YORK CITY: NATIONWIDE, PROTESTERS TAKE TO THE STREETS TO SAY THAT BLACK LIVES MATTER Protesters remain on the streets of New York City, in Washington, DC, around the country and world because a second grand jury has failed to indict a White police officer for killing an unarmed Black man. This time, a grand jury on Staten Island, New York has failed to indict Daniel Pantaleo for the choking death of Eric Garner in July. We hear voices from the DMV that are part of an international wave of protest that began after the decision of a grand jury to not indict Darren Wilson for the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. And we hear what a former poet laureate of the United States has to say. Guests and voices: Rita Dove, speaking at the Furious Flower Poetry Festival; Kristina Jacobs, NBUF DC chapter secretary and November 25 protesters in Washington, DC. Headlines on Black Friday protests, memorial services for Marion Barry, environmental news and more. https://onthegroundshow.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/OTG-DEC.4-2014WSHOW.mp3