Monday, October 29, 2007

WELCOME TO "JENA" NEW YORK


NEW YORK (FinalCall.com) - Officials at Columbia University and the NYPD’s hate crimes unit say they are investigating the hanging of a noose on the office door of a Black female professor on Oct. 9.
The noose was found on the door of Teachers College professor Madonna Constantine who teaches a class on racial justice and has written several books on the topic, according to her online faculty biography.
The suspected hate crime comes less than two weeks after the appearance at Columbia University by Iranian President Dr. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and the discovery afterwards of racist and Islamophobic graffiti at the same Teachers College, ranked the best graduate school education program in the nation.
Columbia University students staged a demonstration on the night of Oct. 9, chanting, “Not in my school!”
On the morning of Sept. 28, a janitor found a noose inside a locker room used by police officers at the Village of Hempstead police station in Long Island. Half of the officers serving on the Hempstead Police Department are people of color, 40 percent of which are Black, according to officials.
The New York daily Newsday recently reported that the U.S. Department of Justice and the Nassau County District Attorney’s office have created a joint task force to investigate the incident.
News reports indicate there is suspicion that the target of the noose was newly appointed deputy chief, Willie Dixon. At a press conference held on Sept. 29, Mr. Dixon, a 27-year police veteran, stated that he would not be intimidated: “The hangman’s noose is the ultimate symbol of disgust if you know American history, especially if you are Black.”
On Sept. 20, Brooklyn Councilman Charles Barron, speaking to the hundreds that had gathered at Brooklyn’s Borough Hall, opened his speech with: “Welcome to Jena, New York.”
Councilman Barron shared what happened to a young Black man in Oceanside, Long Island, who was arrested on assault charges after he was assaulted by a gang of Whites. Aloysius Staton, 24, could face up to 25 years in jail if convicted, according to Marc Claxton of 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care.
The councilman then explained that on Sept. 11, a group of White men allegedly attacked several Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC) Black basketball players and their coach.
“So, we don’t have to go to Jena to be brutalized,” Councilman Barron observed.
At a press conference on Sept. 19, BMCC coach Chester Mapp, 49, told reporters he had never witnessed the racism displayed as he did that day. “I’ve been all over this country playing sports, but never in my born days have I seen the kind of racism I witnessed right here in New York City,” Mr. Mapp stressed.
Several players had left practice and as they walked passed a bar, a group of White men shouted “n----rs” and “this is what slavery feels like.” According to the young Black men, someone in the crowd threw a bottle at them.
The young men say as they proceeded to their subway station they were jumped by “six” of the Whites. Marquis Scott, 18, the son of a New York City policewoman, said he was knocked to the ground and stomped. “When the police arrived they immediately handcuffed me,” Mr. Scott said. He was charged with misdemeanor assault, his attorney Benita Zelman told The Final Call.
“I am the victim and I get arrested,” Mr. Scott stated at the press conference.
Ms. Zelman explained that the initial police reports did not mention that the “n” word was used, which would make it a “bias crime.”
“It is outrageous that these young men and their coach were victims of a hate crime and the police wanted to sweep it under the rug,” commented Ms. Zelman.
Councilman Leroy Comrie (D-Queens), the deputy speaker of the council sent out a press release on Sept. 26, calling for the Manhattan District Attorney to drop the charges against Mr. Scott. In addition, he said, “As a New Yorker, I am appalled that such an attack would occur on the streets of New York City, much less on Sept. 11.”
Ms. Zelman has since informed The Final Call that the NYPD has charged the Whites with a hate crime, which is a felony. “What is outrageous is that the district attorney’s office has yet to indict them on the hate crime charge, and issue orders of protection against the White males, who also attend BMCC,” Ms. Zelman said. She added that her client, Mr. Scott, is suing the police for assault. Calls to the Manhattan district attorney’s office were not returned.
“Clearly, once again, the mindset of the NYPD is that all African American males are predisposed to be criminals,” Councilman Comrie told The Final Call.
“I think what has happened is that in New York we have had a protracted period without any really meaningful organizational push to address the issues of racism, but Jena has forced us to confront it head-on,” Mr. Claxton said.

By Saeed Shabazz

3 comments:

  1. Westchester "Black Watch:

    You are spreading gross untruths to promote your black agenda. Shame on you. Give it up if you ever want racial harmony in this country.

    Here is what really happened in Jena:
    Chronological Order of Events
    Concerning the “Jena Six”
    Editor’s Note: Because of the overwhelming number of requests
    from outside media and other individuals/groups, the Jena Times
    has compiled a chronological order of events from last August
    until now concerning events surrounding the “Jena Six.” This
    feature was compiled from news stories appearing in this
    newspaper, whose information came directly from investigators
    with the LaSalle Parish Sheriff’s Department, the Jena Police
    Department, the LaSalle Parish District Attorney’s Office, LaSalle
    Parish School System officials, and from information obtained
    from US Attorney Donald Washington and FBI Agent Lewis
    Chapman. We believe this to be a nearly accurate depiction of
    events during this past year.

    August 30, 2006: During a Wednesday assembly of all males at
    Jena High School, many items were discussed concerning rules
    and policies of the school for the new school year. Such items
    included dress codes, etc. Near the end of the assembly, one black
    student jokingly asked Assistant Principal Gawen Burgess if black
    students were permitted to sit underneath the tree in the center of
    the square located in the center of the campus. The question
    evoked laughter from everyone at the meeting, including the black
    students, with Burgess responding, “Don’t even go there. You
    know you can sit anywhere you want.” Burgess and the rest of the
    students knew the remark was made to gain laughter as a joke, not
    as a serious question. A couple more jokes were also made (not
    about the tree) before the lighthearted assembly was dismissed.

    August 31, 2006: On this Thursday morning two “hangman”
    nooses were found hanging from the lone tree in the center of the
    area known as the Square, located on the center of Jena High
    School’s campus. Some students had arrived and saw the nooses,
    but as soon as they were brought to the attention of school
    officials, they were removed. Students that arrived after 7:55 a.m.
    did not even see the nooses, as they had already been removed.
    The three white students who placed the nooses in the tree were
    identified by school officials, a school/state/FBI investigation was
    held, and they were removed from school with a recommendation
    by Principal Scott Windham for expulsion. A hearing by an
    expulsion committee ruled against expulsion and instead
    suspended the three students for nine days at an alternative facility,
    two weeks of in-school suspension, and a number of Saturday
    detentions. They also had to undergo evaluations from licensed
    professionals. The committee’s investigation revealed there was no
    racial motivation behind the nooses and that the incident was a
    prank. “To say that these students were simply ‘slapped on the
    wrist’ is a grave misconception of what punishment actually took
    place,” said LaSalle Superintendent Roy Breithaupt. The
    overwhelming majority of students at Jena High School did not
    even know about the nooses until the following week, when it was
    published in daily newspaper reports and TV programs.
    An external, criminal investigation did take place in the days that
    followed the nooses being found, with police, including an agent
    with the FBI, interviewing the three students. All agencies
    concluded the same: The noose incident did not meet the criteria
    for a federal “hate” crime and although it was a terrible act that
    should have been punished within the school system, it did not
    warrant criminal charges from either the state (local district
    attorney’s office) or the federal government. (It was learned later
    that the US Attorney’s Office did review the noose incident
    through its civil rights division and also came to the same
    conclusions.)
    With so much emphasis on the nooses in this case, LPSB Child
    Welfare Supervisor Melinda Edwards said it might surprise
    everyone to learn that the three students did not have a knowledge
    of black history in relation to that hanging of black citizens in the
    south during the civil rights movement.
    “We discussed this in great detail with those students,” Edwards
    said. “They honestly had no knowledge of the history concerning
    nooses and black citizens. This may seem hard to believe for some
    people, but this is exactly what everyone on the committee
    determined.”
    She also said that once the historical significance of the nooses was
    revealed to the students and how it was considered a tremendous
    insult to those of the black race, they showed great remorse.
    “When they were told about the historical relevance of the nooses
    and how others would interpret their actions, they really were very
    remorseful,” she said. “I can honestly say that these boys regretted
    tremendously ever hanging those nooses.”
    September 1, 2006: Some black students have said they
    participated in a “protest” at the school this day in response to the
    noose incident the prior day. They said they met underneath the
    tree in an act of solidarity; however, this was the only report of
    such a protest. The school officials note that if such a protest was
    conducted, it apparently did not disrupt school enough to draw
    their attention to the incident as no report of such as protest was
    noted by administrators or teachers at the school. For the most part,
    the majority of students at JHS still did not even know about the
    nooses being hung.
    The following four days, September 2-5: There were no reports
    of violence or confrontations in the town or at JHS. Students were
    out of school on Monday, September 4, and on Tuesday, the school
    did report one fight at school, but it was not linked to the noose
    incident. However, on Tuesday night, September 5, several black
    parents and students attended a rally at the L&A Missionary
    Baptist Church to discuss the noose incident and how to respond.
    The event was covered by this area’s daily newspaper, which
    published an article on Wednesday, describing the noose incident
    as “racial.” Television stations then caught on to the story, and
    segments were broadcasts that same day, again describing the
    incident as racially motivated. It should be noted that no law
    enforcement agency, including the FBI, has determined the noose
    incident to be racially motivated.
    September 6, 2006: The result of the media coverage was a tense
    atmosphere at the school Wednesday, September 6, where at least
    two fights occurred between students. One of those altercations
    was between a white girl and black girl, and another sent a white
    student to the emergency room for stitches to the back of his head
    after he was hit from behind while walking to class in a hallway.
    Because of the media attention, police officers from the Jena
    Police Department and the LaSalle Parish Sheriff’s Department
    stayed at the school most of the day, especially during time when
    students were out of classes. The tension also prompted Principal
    Scott Windham to call an assembly of all students, where he,
    LaSalle School Superintendent Roy Breithaupt, and LaSalle Parish
    District Attorney Reed Walters addressed students. A faculty
    meeting was also held that afternoon, setting new duty posts for
    teachers and requiring all male teachers to be on duty at all times.
    September 7, 2006: On Thursday, September 7, as the media
    continued to flame the racial winds, police officers were again at
    the school as students arrived and stayed throughout the day until
    they left to go home. There were no reports of any misconduct
    related to the noose incident. But because of the area-wide media
    attention, a football game between the Jena Junior High School
    Giants and the Vidalia Junior High School Vikings, that was to
    have taken place at JHS, was cancelled.
    September 8, 2006: Shortly after students arrived to school on
    Friday, the school went into “lock-down” mode after a report was
    received that a student had brought a gun to school.
    For approximately three hours, students stayed inside classrooms
    as police officers searched the school grounds and students for
    weapons. No such weapons were found, but a large number of cell
    phones were confiscated. It is against state-law to bring cell phones
    on campus.
    Because of the large array of rumors that circulated during the
    week, culminated with all types of reasons why the school went
    into lock-down mode Friday morning, parents began arriving at the
    school by 11:15 a.m. to check their children out of school.
    Some 150 students did not even show up to start school Friday,
    and by the time over 160 more students checked out (in about 30
    minutes) following the lock-down, well over half of the student
    body at JHS was not even in school by Friday afternoon.
    Classes had been reduced in size drastically, with some classes
    with 26 students enrolled having only four or five in attendance.
    The massive exodus from JHS prompted Superintendent
    Breithaupt to make a radio statement on KJNA shortly after lunch
    Friday. In his radio broadcast with Owner-Disc Jockey Larry
    Evans, Breithaupt said:
    “The LaSalle Parish School System has a history of providing
    inclusive and safe schools and we’re committed to this tradition.
    “It’s very unfortunate that we cannot control everyone’s behavior
    and we cannot control what people say sometimes, but we’re very
    confident in the fact that we have very safe schools. “Jena High
    School is a safe school and we have confidence in the
    administration and the teachers because we know these are
    individuals whose primary concern is to protect students and
    provide for their needs and provide them a quality education. And I
    can tell you that at Jena High School you will find a safe school
    today. We have local law enforcement on duty just to make sure
    things are going right. The school was inspected by our local law
    enforcement and found to be safe. There have been no major
    incidents over the last few days, so there is really no justification
    for any alarm on the part of any parent or anyone caring for a
    child. We’re closely monitoring the situation at Jena High School.
    I just returned from JHS myself – had lunch there – and I found
    everyone to be very calm and looking forward to the ballgame
    tonight. And I can tell you that JHS, at this present time, is a very
    safe learning environment. As a matter of fact, the most protected
    place children can be today is at school. I’ve seen teenagers driving
    vehicles up and down roads, driving at high rates of speed, and I
    know that if those children would not have been checked out of
    school, they would be in the classroom where they would be
    learning and taking advantage of the opportunities we have for
    them.” The superintendent further stated that parents need not fear
    for their students and their reaction by pulling them out of school
    simply had no justification. “It’s unfortunate that things like this
    happen. I understand that parents want to protect their children but
    sometimes, due to the fact that we cannot control rumors and we
    cannot control information that is false, people are given
    information that is not necessarily correct. In this particular case, I
    think there is much concern on the part of many people that really
    has no justification. They (parents) can be confident in the fact that
    we’re going to provide a quality education to the students of
    LaSalle Parish and our primary concern is that we have good, safe
    schools that provide students everything they would have need of,”
    Breithaupt concluded.
    That night, the week ended with a strong police presence at the
    Jena-Buckeye football game, but nothing out of the ordinary
    occurred at the game.
    On the sidelines during the game, one Jena player stated that all of
    the things being said about the school in the media and around the
    parish is simply not true.
    “Sure, there may be some whites that don’t like blacks, and there
    may be some blacks that don’t like whites, but that is a very small
    minority here,” the player said. “At JHS, we’re neither black or
    white…we’re black and gold!”
    September 18, 2006: Black parent Tracey Bowen addressed the
    LaSalle Parish School Board at their regular monthly meeting
    concerning the noose incident. Bowen said that she was there on
    behalf of all parents, defending her and several other black parents’
    recent cries of racism following an incident at JHS where two
    hangman’s nooses were discovered at the school.
    “Everyone says that we went overboard but I don’t believe we
    went overboard with this,” she said. “Right is right – no matter
    what color you are.”
    Three white JHS students were suspended following the incident
    after it was discovered their motivation was not racism but rather a
    prank taken from a movie.
    Bowen contended that even if it was a prank, the punishment
    warranted much more, given the history of American racism
    against blacks.
    “We’re all equal and we only want what is right,” she continued.
    “What goes for one goes for all.”
    Bowen read from a prepared statement and that took less than five
    minutes to read. Approximately ten other black supporters were
    there with her.
    Following her statements, the board thanked Bowen for her
    comments and moved to the next item on the agenda. Because the
    issue involved students of a school, board members are prohibited
    from discussing them or information about the incident in public
    due to confidentiality reasons.
    September 9-November 30, 2006: Despite the media promoting
    racial tension, there were no such reports of any violence or
    destruction during this time period. Disruptions at school were
    only those of typical disruptions, nothing related to any racial
    divide, thus, putting to rest any speculation that there was true
    racial tensions in town.
    Late September-Early October, 2006: Although the specific date
    cannot be verified, an assembly of all students was called by
    school officials at JHS where various officials addressed the
    student body. Those speaking included sheriff’s detectives Paul
    Smith and Jimmy Arbogast, Principal Scott Windham,
    Superintendent Breithaupt, and LaSalle Parish District Attorney
    Reed Walters.
    The assembly was prompted when police were called to the school
    to calm down a student who was fighting and when police got
    there the student allegedly tried to hit Detective Smith. Although
    Smith did not arrest the juvenile (who would later be implicated as
    one of the “Jena Six”) he felt the need to call the assembly and
    requested the DA to come and speak to students.
    Walters said that he’d been preparing an aggravated rape case that
    morning when he received the call. Such a case in Louisiana could
    subject the accused to the death penalty.
    “I had been handed an aggravated rape case where an 18 year-old
    had allegedly had sex with a 12 year-old and I was concentrating
    on that,” the District Attorney Reed Walters said. “This is the type
    of case that can subject one to the death penalty in Louisiana so I
    was very much involved in deciding how to proceed with the very
    serious case when I got the call from Paul.”
    “So, here I am thinking about this case and what to do,” he
    continued. “Should I or should I not seek the death penalty and in
    the middle of all this Paul (Smith – then LPSO detective) calls and
    says we need you to come to the school. I thought to myself, I
    don’t want to go to the school right now, but he said he really
    needed my presence there.”
    LaSalle Parish Sheriff’s Detective Jimmy Arbogast said that
    tensions were high on the campus on that particular day and the
    purpose of the district attorney coming to school was to calm
    everyone down.
    “Everybody was upset and Paul just wanted Reed to explain to
    them that they have to think about their actions,” he said. “Reed
    talked about the case he was looking over that day and was
    explaining to them that they would be held accountable for their
    actions.”
    Walters said that he did mention the death penalty case before the
    students, although he did not divulge any details about the case.
    While he was talking to the students, he contends some of the
    students were not paying him any attention.
    “What happened was, two or three girls, white girls, were chitchatting
    on their cell phones or playing on their cell phones right in
    the middle of my dissertation,” he remembered. “I got a little
    irritated at them and said, ‘pay attention to me. I am right now
    having to deal with an aggravated rape case where I’ve got to
    decide whether the death penalty applies or not.’”
    The DA said that his purpose in his speech was to allow the
    students to see the very serious consequences that certain actions
    would have. Furthermore, even though the DA didn’t mention any
    names associated with the rape case, several in the auditorium who
    were related to that white man and white girl involved in the rape
    case, apparently figured out what case the DA was referencing
    even though he never mentioned any names or other vital
    information about the case.
    “The reason I know this is because after I left I had to go back to
    the school to talk with those certain students and their mothers to
    calm them down,” Walters said. “I would assume that when I made
    the statement concerning my pen they thought I was talking about
    their relative.”
    “I’m trying to help Paul and Jimmy and the school by saying I
    want you (students) to call me before you do something stupid,” he
    said. “If you don’t, then I have to go based on what the facts are. I
    was trying to impress upon the kids to please think before you act.
    That was the context of what took place that day.”
    To emphasize his point and to grab the attention of the uninterested
    white girls, the DA said he pulled out his ink pen and made a
    statement that many in the black community felt was aimed at
    them.
    “As I got aggravated with the white girls, I made reference to the
    aggravated rape case and say, look, I can be your best friend or
    your worst enemy,” he said. “With the stroke of a pen I can make
    your life miserable so I want you to call me before you do
    something stupid. But that last part never gets reported.”
    Also contrary to reports concerning the DA’s speech to students,
    Arbogast notes that the black and white students were not sitting in
    segregated fashion as many say.
    “If I remember correctly, they came into the auditorium and sat by
    classes, such as homeroom classes,” the detective said. “The
    whites and blacks were scattered throughout the auditorium and he
    never focused on any one particular group when giving his
    speech.”
    Walters said he just remembers walking up and down the left aisle
    of the auditorium while talking when he noticed the three white
    girls not paying attention to his speech.
    “If anything, I was focused on the girls when I said the pen
    statement and not any of the black students in the assembly,” he
    said. “In all actuality, if I hadn’t been dealing with the aggravated
    rape case I would have never even thought about saying that
    statement.”
    Arbogast said that he is very confident that the DA was not
    addressing black students.
    “Look, these are kids,” Arbogast said. “That’s what the DA was
    trying to explain is that if they come up here and do something
    stupid then its going to affect you from now on. Every time you go
    to get a job, every time you go some where, you don’t want
    something (criminal history) following you around.”
    Smith said that the reason for having Walters speak before the
    students was to simply have them stop and think about the
    consequences of inappropriate actions.
    “In my theory of calling him up there was to get him up there and
    explain that there are consequences of their actions and hopefully,
    it would ease the tensions,” Smith said. “Maybe they would stop
    and think, hey, we can’t be acting like this.”
    Walters also noted that this was not the only time he’d addressed
    students.
    “I have spoken to students on several other occasions,” he said.
    “My purpose is simply to have them to think before they act. This
    pen is a pretty important instrument in my hand. I can help you or I
    can hurt you. It’s up to you. It’s not up to me.”
    November 30, 2006: Around 4 a.m., Thursday, November 30, the
    Jena Fire Department received an alarm that the main, two-story
    academic building of Jena High School was on fire. They arrived
    to find the building nearly engulfed in flames and soon called for
    every fire department in the parish to respond for assistance.
    Within 20 minutes, departments from across the parish converged
    on the scene to assist with the fire.
    At total of 98 firefighters from 15 different departments and 32
    other assistant personnel fought the blaze until it was finally
    extinguished around 11 a.m. Officials from the Louisiana State
    Fire Marshal’s Office were also at the scene, and quickly
    determined the cause of the fire – arson.
    According to sources, one fire was started in the main office
    complex of the building, specifically in Principal Scott Windham’s
    office. There were also multiple fires set on the second floor in
    various classrooms. The result was a fire that firefighters in the
    parish have only read about or watched training films on.
    There still have been no arrests made in connection with the arson
    fire and officials do not believe it is related to the noose incident.
    November 30th also marked the changing of command at Jena High
    School, as Principal Scott Windham was promoted to a position at
    the school system’s central office and was replaced by new JHS
    Principal Slick Joiner.
    December 1, 2006: The first time law enforcement officials used
    the term “racial tensions” was in describing the events of the
    weekend and subsequent Monday, in which several black-white
    altercations occurred. LaSalle Parish Sheriff’ Department
    Investigator Paul Smith said the unusual racial unrest throughout
    the community started Friday night, December 1, at a private party
    held at the Jena Fair Barn.
    “The facility was rented by a woman who was throwing a party for
    her daughter,” Arbogast said. “During the course of that party that
    night, where both blacks and whites attended, Robert Bailey, Jr.
    and some other friends came to the party seeking a mutual friend
    inside the party.”
    Walters said that according to the statement given by Robert
    Bailey, Jr., he was asked to leave by the person who was giving the
    party.
    “My understanding of the case is that the mother was going back
    inside to get the friend and the defendant (Justin Sloan) comes out
    and hits him (Bailey),” Walters said. “A scuffle ensues and then
    Mr. Bailey leaves. All of this took place outside of the fair barn.”
    The DA noted that this was not a fight because Robert Bailey did
    not swing at Sloan or fight back.
    “He did not do anything,” Walters said. “Robert Bailey, Jr. was the
    victim of this incident. He was hit by the defendant’s fist, knocked
    down, some type of scuffle occurred, then Mr. Bailey left.”
    The police and DA noted that contrary to reports since the incident
    that a beer bottle was used in the attack of Bailey, Bailey’s own
    statement written after the incident said that he was hit only with
    the fist of Sloan.
    “There was no statement given by the victim at that time that any
    weapon was used in the attack,” Walters said. “There is nothing in
    his statement that says ‘he hit me with a beer bottle.’ He did not go
    to the hospital for stitches and there is no medical evidence other
    than this was a simple battery.”
    Walters said that Sloan was arrested for simple battery, prosecuted
    for simple battery, pled guilty to simple battery, and was sentenced
    for simple battery.
    “As part of his sentence, he was made to apologize to Robert
    Bailey in open court,” Walters said. “In sumassion, it started as a
    simple battery, the evidence supported a simple battery, and it was
    prosecuted as a simple battery. It was only after the fact, after the
    ‘Jena Six’ began to receive national attention that I heard that a
    beer bottle was involved and stitches were involved. So, I checked
    with the local hospital and there was no medical evidence to
    support the accusation.”
    Justin Sloan, 22, of Jena, a white participant of the party, was
    arrested by the sheriff’s office in connection with the fair barn
    fight, and this event led to other attacks throughout the area.
    “Sometime later that night, there was another incident near the fair
    grounds but there were no arrests made in connection with that,”
    Smith said.
    December 2, 2006: On Saturday night, December 2, another
    altercation occurred at the Gotta-Go Grocery, a convenience store
    near the Jena Airport, that resulted in three Jena High School
    students arrested on several charges and the victim having to be
    treated at the hospital for injuries.
    The victim, Matt Windham, alleges that three black males attacked
    and robbed him while the three accused are claiming self-defense.
    Both the victim and those arrested offered different statements to
    police, however, two eye witnesses to the event unrelated to the
    victim or those arrested, gave a report of the incident that
    corresponded with the victim.
    Those arrested include: Robert Bailey, Jr., 17, of Jena; Ryan
    Simmons, 17, of Jena, and Theodore Shaw, 17, of Jena. All three
    are students at Jena High School and each were charged with
    second-degree robbery, theft of a firearm, and conspiracy to
    commit second-degree robbery.
    No reports of any fights or attacks were noted for the following
    day, Sunday, December 3.
    December 4, 2006: On Monday, December 4, one of the most
    violent attacks in Jena High School’s history was orchestrated by
    seven black students on a lone white student, according to
    authorities.
    The attack came less than four hours after students were allowed
    back on campus following the arson fire of JHS. According to
    witness statements, at the end of the lunch period, the seven
    students jumped a white male student, beating him unconscious
    with him having to be carried from the school by ambulance to the
    emergency room. Trial testimony later identified Mychal Bell as
    the first of the group to strike Justin Barker, hitting him so hard
    from behind that it knocked him immediately unconscious. Other
    participants in the attack then joined Bell in kicking and stomping
    Barker as he lay defenseless and unconscious on the ground.
    Although Barker was released later that day from the hospital, it
    was reported that he continues to suffer pain from the attack. He
    did attend a senior class ring ceremony that same night, but had to
    leave early because of pain.
    Shortly after the incident, sheriff’s detectives arrested Robert
    Bailey and Theodore Shaw again in connection with the attack,
    along with JHS standout football player Carwin Jones, 18, of Jena,
    Bryant R. Purvis, Mychal Bell, and two juveniles.
    The seven were originally arrested for second-degree battery
    related charges, however, LaSalle Parish District Attorney J. Reed
    Walters made the decision to up the charges to more serious
    offenses.
    All seven were arraigned on charges of conspiracy to commit
    second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder.
    Walters charged juvenile Mychal Bell as an adult while the other
    two remain in juvenile court.
    Mychal Bell, 16, of Jena, another standout JHS football player, had
    his bond set at $90,000.
    Total bonds on each of the students from the Gotta-Go fight and
    the JHS attack were set at: Jones - $90,000; Bailey - $138,000;
    Shaw - $130,000; Purvis - $70,000; and Simmons - $60,000. (It
    should be noted that portions of some of the students’ bond were
    from the event at Gotta-Go Grocery, making them higher than
    others.) No information was available concerning bond on the
    other juvenile.
    Investigator Smith noted that since the JHS attack on December 4,
    there have been no other reports of violence in the Jena area
    connected with the incidents.
    From all evidence gathered by law enforcement detectives, the
    violent attack of Barker by seven black students at Jena High
    School December 4 is not linked to the arson fire that destroyed the
    main academic building four days prior or the hanging of a noose
    at JHS in August.
    U.S. Attorney Donald Washington has stated on numerous
    occasions that no where in any witness statements concerning the
    attack is there ever any reference to the noose incident in August,
    thereby, discounting the attack was related to the noose hangings.
    Investigator Paul Smith of the LaSalle Parish Sheriff’s Department
    said the investigation so far has revealed no link between the fire
    or noose incidents and several fights throughout Jena over the
    previous weekend involving white and black students of JHS.
    December 7, 2006: Approximately 35 ministers and lay-leaders
    from many Jena-area black and white churches met for over an
    hour last Thursday night, uniting in their efforts to promote peace
    among all citizens.
    The ministers met at Trout Creek Baptist Church to start a new
    ministerial alliance group for Jena churches of all denominations
    and racial-ethnic groups. The meeting occurred just days following
    racial unrest throughout Jena, specifically involving students at
    Jena High School.
    “We’re not here to talk about what has happened, but rather what
    we can do to address those issues from a spiritual basis,” Jena First
    Baptist Church Pastor Dominick DiCarlo told the group. “This is a
    spiritual problem and there is no other institution appointed by God
    to deal with the heart problem of man other than His church.”
    DiCarlo said he believes all area ministers must unite to combat
    the spiritual forces that are attacking area young people and there
    must be a unified front for the sake of the entire community.
    “We want to implement Biblical solutions and stress the value of
    powerful prayer among all believers, white and black,” he said.
    By the end of the meeting, the group agreed in wording for a
    resolution to be printed in the newspaper (see resolution inside this
    issue) with all ministers’ signatures attached.
    The clergy also agreed to address the situation from their
    individual pulpits during Sunday services, encouraging their
    members to pray and to seek peace among students and adults.
    They also organized a prayer time last Sunday, December 10, at
    the four different schools in Jena – Jena High, Jena Junior High,
    Jena Elementary, and Good Pine Middle School.
    At JHS alone, over 200 people from all denominations and racial
    groups met to pray for the school, its students, teachers, and
    administrators. Joiner even opened the doors of classrooms so
    people could walk inside each room and pray. The end of the event
    had all participants joining hands in the school square for a time of
    corporate prayer.
    On Monday of this week, administrators invited all area ministers
    to have lunch at Jena High with the students and teachers.
    December 13, 2006: Approximately 600 Jena residents filled the
    Guy Campbell Memorial Football Stadium Wednesday night,
    December 13, for a community-wide prayer and unity service
    sponsored by local ministers.
    The new ministerial alliance, consisting of Jena area pastors of
    various denominations and ethnic memberships, organized the
    event during a special meeting of some 35 pastors and lay-leaders
    December 7.
    The purpose of the new alliance and the prayer meeting last week
    was to unite all Christians in light of recent racial tensions
    surrounding Jena High School.
    Jena has been plagued in recent weeks with a series of events
    containing racial overtones, culminating December 4 with a violent
    attack on the campus of Jena High School involving black and
    white students. Other events included fights throughout the Jena
    area involving blacks and whites, including JHS students, and the
    recent arson fire at the school November 30, although so far
    investigators have not linked the fire to racial motivations.
    “Our purpose here tonight is not to talk about what has happened,
    but rather to pray for healing and unity for our community,”
    Midway Baptist Church Pastor Rick Feazell said in opening the
    service. “This is not a social problem, but a spiritual problem that
    can only be solved by God.”
    SCHOOL OFFICIALS, POLICE OFFICIALS, AND OTHER
    GOVERNING OFFICIALS have all noted that there have been no
    racial incidents since the December 4, 2006, attack and subsequent
    arrests. However, some time at the beginning of 2007, black
    ministers pulled out of the LaSalle Ministerial Alliance and are no
    longer participating in the joint ministry.
    March 7, 2007: A special meeting was held at Antioch Baptist
    Church near Jena for the formation of a LaSalle Branch of the
    NAACP. According to president Caseptla Bailey, who is also the
    mother of accused student Robert Bailey, Jr., over 100 people,
    including adults and youth, paid membership fees to join the
    organization. The committee known as the “Jena Six Defense
    Committee,” was also formed this night.
    March 8, 2007: The first “Free the Jena Six” rally was held at the
    LaSalle Parish Courthouse in Jena with about 30 people in
    attendance. Along with some of the family members of the black
    students accused, members from the national ACLU and state
    NAACP were in attendance.
    May 2, 2007: Approximately 40 people attended a rally on the
    steps of the LaSalle Parish Courthouse Wednesday afternoon,
    calling for the release and charges dropped on six former Jena
    High School students.
    Some of the parents and family of the six accused students were at
    the rally, however, a large portion of those attending were from
    outside of LaSalle Parish.
    Groups represented included the NAACP, ACLU, and the National
    Action Network.
    June 25-28, 2007: The trial of Mychal Bell, the first of the Jena
    Six to go to trial from the December 4, 2006, attack, was held
    during this week. An all-white jury was selected, however, it
    should be noted that no potential black jurors showed up for jury
    duty, although several were summoned. Bell’s charges were
    reduced from attempted murder to aggravated second-degree
    battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated second-degree
    battery. He was convicted of both counts.
    July 26, 2007: A community education forum was held at Good
    Pine Middle School led by US Attorney Donald Washington and
    FBI Assistant Special Agent in Charge Lewis Chapman. At this
    forum, Washington said his office’s civil rights division has
    investigated all of the events in Jena during 2006, including the
    noose incident, the fights throughout town, and the December 4,
    2006 attack. He said there were no civil right violations in any of
    the incidents…making specific reference to the noose incident. He
    also said the FBI has investigated the school system, police
    departments, sheriff’s department, district attorney’s office, and the
    28th Judicial District Court system and found no violations of civil
    rights in any area.
    July 31, 2007: An estimated crowd of 300 people descended upon
    the lawn of the LaSalle Parish Courthouse Tuesday, July 31,
    demonstrating their support for the black Jena High School
    students charged in connection with an attack at the school last
    December.
    The protesters came to Jena from all over the country, including
    California and Washington, D.C., although only around 10
    residents of LaSalle Parish were present. Most of those were
    family members of the students accused in the attack.
    The protest was called for a day when Mychal Bell was originally
    set to be sentenced following his conviction of aggravated seconddegree
    battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated second-degree
    battery during a jury trial in late June.
    August 5, 2007: Rev. Al Sharpton made his first official visit to
    Jena, preaching in a service at Trout Creek Baptist Church during
    their Sunday morning service.
    August 14, 2007: Rev. Al Sharpton made his second visit to Jena
    bringing with him Martin Lurther King, III, during a town hall
    meeting at Antioch Baptist Church on this Tuesday night.
    August 24, 2007: Mychal Bell was back in court on a series of
    motions from his new pro-bono attorneys. They were successful in
    getting on the conviction counts thrown out, the conspiracy to
    commit aggravated second-degree battery, but Bell still faces
    sentenced on the aggravated second-degree battery count on
    September 20. He faces a maximum jail time of 15 years. It was
    also revealed during the hearing that Bell has a violent past as a
    juvenile, with at least four different violent arrests. He was also on
    juvenile probation during some of those arrests, and was on
    probation when the December 4, 2006 attack occurred.
    September 12, 2007: Rev. Jesse Jackson made his first appearance
    in Jena during a meeting with some 300 people at Good Pine
    Middle School Sunday afternoon. The next day, he held a press
    conference/rally at the LaSalle Parish Courthouse with family
    members of the Jena Six.
    September 14, 2007: LaSalle Parish District Attorney J. Reed
    Walters issued his first public statement on the events of this past
    year, noting the noose incident did not constitute a federal or state
    offense, and the attack at JHS on December 4, 2006, was exactly
    that…and not a “school-yard fight” that has been repeatedly
    reported in the news media.
    The Third Circuit Court of Appeal announced on this date they
    have overturned Mychal Bell’s conviction and have thrown it out.
    They ruled the matter should have been handled in juvenile court
    and sent it to that jurisdiction for prosecution. Walters said he
    would appeal the decision to the Louisiana Supreme Court.
    September 20, 2007: Around 15,000 people from across the
    nation and world were in Jena for a large demonstration/rally in
    support of the “Jena Six.” This is the day Mychal Bell was to be
    sentenced prior to the appeal court decision September 14. Even
    though the conviction was overturned, organizers for the massive
    demonstration continued with the rally as planned. The rally was
    peaceful, as predicted by organizers.
    September 27, 2007: Mychal Bell was released on $45,000 bond
    before a crowd of family and friends and a large contingency of
    national and local media. He appeared in front of the LaSalle
    Parish Courthouse alongside Rev. Al Sharpton and Martin Lurther
    King, III, before going home after 10 months in jail.
    ====================
    As far as the noose incident at Columbia is concerned, the University refused to release the video tapes to the local authorities. They were clearly hiding something. Could it be that Ms. Constantine hung the noose herself ? The whole matter has been covered up.

    The Westchester "Black Watch" is as racisct as the NAACP, Black Miss America, the countless "Historically Black Colleges", 100 Blacks in law enforcement, and on and on.

    Greetings
    From: USA White Watch

    ReplyDelete
  2. Специально для Вас друзья мы возвращаем наш отличный проект на котором можно скачать все с файлобменников бесплатно [url=http://kachaitut.ru/]Софт[/url] . Все для Вас друзья.
    Уважаемые Админы приглашаем Вас обменяться ссылками.

    С Уважением, Администрация КачайТУТ.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Салон Секреты Красоты предлагает большой выбор классических салонных услуг: парикмахерские услуги, маникюр, педикюр, косметология, перманентный макияж. Мы работаем более 10 лет и придерживаемся принципа соотношения цены и качества обслуживания. Для постоянных клиентов действуют акции и бонусная система. Заходите на наш сайт [url=http://s-krasoti.ru/] щелочной педикюр
    [/url]

    ReplyDelete