Black Lives Matter-Ugliness of Racism.

spaminator

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Gatineau police officers who allegedly beat Senegalese diplomat will not face charges
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Apr 21, 2023 • 1 minute read

MONTREAL — Quebec’s prosecution service says it will not lay charges against the Gatineau, Que., police officers who allegedly beat a Senegalese diplomat in August.


Spokeswoman Patricia Johnson says prosecutors ruled out charges after they received a report on the incident by Quebec’s police watchdog — Bureau des enquetes independantes.


The Senegalese Embassy has alleged that diplomat Niang Oumou Kalsoum Sall was beaten so severely by police that she had to be transported to hospital.

Gatineau police have said they were called to the diplomat’s residence to assist a bailiff attempting to seize property in connection with a court order for her to pay a former landlord $45,000.

Police claimed Kalsoum Sall, who has diplomatic immunity, bit and struck officers who arrived at the scene.

The Senegalese Embassy in Ottawa did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
 
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Taxslave2

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Diplomatic immunity is rather convenient for certain extremist governments. Also their members that have their own criminal empires to run.
 
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spaminator

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Florida homeowner fires shots at Instacart driver who mistakenly turned onto property
No one was injured by the gunfire in an upscale Fort Lauderdale suburb

Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Terry Spencer
Published Apr 24, 2023 • 3 minute read
19-year-old Waldes Thomas Jr. and his 18-year-old girlfriend, Diamond Darville, were shot at by a Florida homeowner after mistakenly turning onto a property while making a delivery.
19-year-old Waldes Thomas Jr. and his 18-year-old girlfriend, Diamond Darville, were shot at by a Florida homeowner after mistakenly turning onto a property while making a delivery.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A Florida prosecutor has ordered an investigation after a homeowner fired shots into a couple’s car when they mistakenly turned onto his property while making a late-night Instacart delivery. Police closed the case without consulting the state attorney’s office.


No one was injured by the gunfire in an upscale Fort Lauderdale suburb, but it is the latest in a spate of similar shootings across the U.S. where people have mistakenly turned onto the wrong property or gotten in the wrong car. One person has been killed and others seriously wounded. In this case, the shooter told police the car was being driven erratically, struck his leg, and made him fear for himself and his son.


Broward County State Attorney Harold Pryor issued a statement saying police investigators never contacted his office about the April 15 shooting in Southwest Ranches that put at least two bullets into the car driven by 19-year-old Waldes Thomas Jr., who was with his 18-year-old girlfriend, Diamond Darville.


Pryor said his staff members were unaware of the shooting until they were contacted Friday by a reporter from WTVJ-TV, who interviewed the couple. The Davie Police Department has a contract with Southwest Ranches to provide service.

“I contacted the Davie Police Department to request a full investigation,” Pryor said Friday, adding that his prosecutors will decide whether charges should be filed.

Davie police declined to comment Sunday but released the lead detective’s report. He wrote that without any video, he couldn’t determine whether either the shooter or couple committed a crime.

“Each party appeared justified in their actions based on the circumstances they perceived,” the report concluded.


The shooting happened on an unlit street in a semi-rural neighborhood at a home sitting on two acres.

According to the police report, Thomas and Darville got lost while delivering groceries for Instacart shortly before 10 p.m. They were on the phone with their customer when Thomas turned their 2014 Honda Civic into an area where the shooter stores equipment for his excavation business. The address they were looking for is across the street.

The shooter and the couple gave investigators conflicting reports about what happened next.

The homeowner told officers he asked his 12-year-old son to tell the driver to leave but soon heard the boy yelling for help. The father said he saw the car driving erratically, banging into logs and boulders, and so he told his son to run.


He said the car then drove toward him and ran over his foot. Saying he feared for his life and his son’s, the man drew his handgun and fired at the car’s tires, but it sped away. He called police.

An officer found Thomas and Darville parked nearby. When he asked what happened, they replied, “We just got shot at.” He said that Darville was crying and that Thomas appeared “extremely nervous and scared.” The officer said that there were two bullet holes in the car’s bumper and that one tire was flat.

The couple told police they thought that they were at the right house and tried to leave after the boy told them they weren’t. Thomas said he put the car into reverse and hit a boulder, which was when the shooter approached “aggressively.” That’s when Thomas said he heard shots and drove away. Darville said she saw the shooter pull his gun and fire.

“I said, ‘We got to go, we got to go,”‘ Darville told WTVJ. “I was scared, I’m not going to lie.” She didn’t respond to a phone call or emails from The Associated Press.

The AP isn’t naming the property resident because he hasn’t been charged with a crime. His phone rang unanswered, and he did not return a text message Sunday seeking comment.

Police say they returned the shooter’s gun after closing the case.
 

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Jasmine Hartin pleads guilty in death of Belize police chief

Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Apr 25, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

Canadian Jasmine Hartin’s nightmare odyssey in paradise is slowly marching toward its finale.


The 33-year-old mother of two pleaded guilty on Tuesday afternoon in Belizian to manslaughter by negligence in the shooting death of Belize police chief Henry Jemmott in May 2021.


She will be sentenced on May 31.

Outside the court, Hartin told a local reporter: “I just want Henry’s family to have peace now and for this whole thing to be behind us all so that we can heal.”

Since the shooting, the pretty blond has found herself facing off against the country’s establishment, police service and her former in-laws, the most powerful family in the country.

In the interim, her ex-husband has whisked the children out of Belize to the Turks and Caicos and she hasn’t seen them in months.


Hartin is originally from the Kingston area.


On the night Jemmott died on a San Pedro pier, he and Hartin were sitting on the dock when they were examining his service Glock. It accidentally went off, hitting the cop in the head, killing him instantly.

According to Belize 7, Hartin’s lawyer claims she had been prepared to plead guilty in exchange for a non-custodial sentence.

“This is a case in which the DPP has accepted that there was no intent and that it was, there was no recklessness, no intent, no recklessness. It was just a pure accident,” her lawyer Hubert Elrington told the news network.


“So, we are hoping, we can’t do anything besides hope, we are hoping that the learned judge will be as lenient as he or she can be in this case.”

The lawyer added: “She is very heartbroken and she is very, very, very remorseful and if she wants the Belizean people to understand anything or know anything about this is that she is very, very, very sorry. And, that she has been giving the survivors some benefits.”

Hovering in the background of the story that has garnered worldwide headlines is the country’s richest man, billionaire Lord Michael Ashcroft, a heavy hitter in Britain’s Conservative Party.


Hartin had been in a long relationship with his son, Andrew Ashcroft, who has fled with their children to Turks and Caicos. She has not seen the twins in months.

Sources told The Toronto Sun that the relationship had been on the rocks for months by the time of Jemmott’s death.

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun
 

55Mercury

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Jasmine Hartin pleads guilty in death of Belize police chief

Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Apr 25, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

Canadian Jasmine Hartin’s nightmare odyssey in paradise is slowly marching toward its finale.


The 33-year-old mother of two pleaded guilty on Tuesday afternoon in Belizian to manslaughter by negligence in the shooting death of Belize police chief Henry Jemmott in May 2021.


She will be sentenced on May 31.

Outside the court, Hartin told a local reporter: “I just want Henry’s family to have peace now and for this whole thing to be behind us all so that we can heal.”

Since the shooting, the pretty blond has found herself facing off against the country’s establishment, police service and her former in-laws, the most powerful family in the country.

In the interim, her ex-husband has whisked the children out of Belize to the Turks and Caicos and she hasn’t seen them in months.


Hartin is originally from the Kingston area.


On the night Jemmott died on a San Pedro pier, he and Hartin were sitting on the dock when they were examining his service Glock. It accidentally went off, hitting the cop in the head, killing him instantly.

According to Belize 7, Hartin’s lawyer claims she had been prepared to plead guilty in exchange for a non-custodial sentence.

“This is a case in which the DPP has accepted that there was no intent and that it was, there was no recklessness, no intent, no recklessness. It was just a pure accident,” her lawyer Hubert Elrington told the news network.


“So, we are hoping, we can’t do anything besides hope, we are hoping that the learned judge will be as lenient as he or she can be in this case.”

The lawyer added: “She is very heartbroken and she is very, very, very remorseful and if she wants the Belizean people to understand anything or know anything about this is that she is very, very, very sorry. And, that she has been giving the survivors some benefits.”

Hovering in the background of the story that has garnered worldwide headlines is the country’s richest man, billionaire Lord Michael Ashcroft, a heavy hitter in Britain’s Conservative Party.


Hartin had been in a long relationship with his son, Andrew Ashcroft, who has fled with their children to Turks and Caicos. She has not seen the twins in months.

Sources told The Toronto Sun that the relationship had been on the rocks for months by the time of Jemmott’s death.

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun
no intent or recklessness?

the idiot handed her a loaded gun!

looks like just deserts all around

no doubt the philandering cop chief's and the gold-digging adulteress' next scene, had there been no 'accident', would have played out something like...

Dumb Cop [placing her hand there] "this one is loaded too"

jesus

well we're sure the gold-digging white bitch's life doesn't matter
but I gotta ask, do stupid cops' lives suddenly matter now?

fuck, no!
 

spaminator

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What was behind Jasmine Hartin's shock guilty plea?

Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Apr 26, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

In a courtroom in Belize City, weary Canadian mom of two Jasmine Hartin seemed to have finally had enough.


Enough of the politics, police and poison of a developing nation known for its corruption.


So, on Tuesday, the 33-year-old Kingston-area native pleaded guilty to manslaughter by negligence in the shooting death of San Pedro police chief Henry Jemmott in May 2021.

From the beginning, Hartin had pleaded with anyone who would listen that the shooting was an accident. And in the end, the cops, prosecution and judiciary seemed to agree. It is highly unlikely she will be jailed.


Her Toronto lawyer Seth Weinstein told The Toronto Sun exclusively that the former socialite’s trials and tribulations have been nothing short of an “odyssey.”

“It has been quite an odyssey for Jasmine, I agree. From her perspective, this has always been a tragic accident and now that has been accepted by all involved parties,” Weinstein said. “Jasmine was very mindful of not putting (Henry Jemmott’s) family through a public trial.”


So far, it is unclear whether Hartin will be deported back to Canada.

But Weinstein said Hartin’s primary objective now is to be reunited with her six-year-old twins Charlie and Elle.

Her estranged husband, Andrew Ashcroft — son of Belize’s richest and arguably most powerful man — whisked the children off to the Turks and Caicos in the Caribbean.

Hartin has seen little of her children since the ordeal began.


“Her only objective at this point is to see her children, (in addition to Jemmott’s death) this has been the primary tragedy for Jasmine,” Weinstein said. “She has been deprived of seeing them every step of the way.”

“She is going to do everything in her power to get back into her children’s lives and be the absolute best mother, the mother she wants to be,” he added.


Weinstein said he would not comment on Hartin’s trials and tribulations in Belize.


“Right now my primary objective is to help Jasmine navigate her way through the Belizean justice system,” he said.

By the time Jemmott’s body was en route to the morgue, the pretty blond had found herself facing off against the country’s establishment, police service and her former in-laws, the most powerful family in the country.

Her representative sent The Toronto Sun a press release on Wednesday afternoon.


“Yesterday was a day fraught with emotion and uncertainty that ultimately resulted in Ms. Hartin’s decision to plead guilty to the charge of Manslaughter by Negligence,” the release said.

“It was a decision that was ruled by emotion and made in haste, and without the expected time to consult with her Canadian Senior Council, however, it is a decision that Ms. Hartin feels is the best possible outcome for all parties.”



The release added: “After a long and painful battle, at times dealing with politics, power and corruption at its core, it is of course a great relief to finally put an end to this heartbreaking and tragic accident involving one of her dearest friends.

“Ms. Hartin for the past almost two years has had to live under the pall of criminal allegations and under the public’s ever-present scrutiny and presumption of guilt on several matters, including two of which are still pending.

“Ms. Hartins hope is that by making this plea, healing and closure can begin for all affected by this tragic loss. Out of respect for Mr. Jemmott’s family, this decision will ensure that the family is not forced to relive this horrific tragedy.”

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun
 

spaminator

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White woman whose claim led to Emmett Till killing has died
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Emily Wagster Pettus
Published Apr 27, 2023 • 3 minute read

JACKSON, Miss. — The white woman who accused Black teenager Emmett Till of whistling at her — causing his 1955 lynching in Mississippi, which galvanized a generation of activists to rise up in the Civil Rights Movement — has died at 88.


Carolyn Bryant Donham died in hospice care Tuesday night in Louisiana, a coroner’s report shows.


The kidnapping and brutal murder of the 14-year-old captured international attention when his mother, Mamie Till Mobley, insisted on an open-casket funeral in their hometown of Chicago so the world could see his brutalized body, which was pulled from a river in Mississippi. Jet magazine published photos.

In August 1955, Till had traveled from Chicago to visit relatives in Mississippi. Donham — then 21 and named Carolyn Bryant — accused him of making improper advances on her at a grocery store where she was working in the small community of Money. The Rev. Wheeler Parker, a cousin of Till who was there, has said 14-year-old Till whistled at the woman, an act that flew in the face of Mississippi’s racist social codes of the era.


Evidence indicates a woman identified Till to Donham’s then-husband Roy Bryant and his half-brother J.W. Milam, who killed the teenager. An all-white jury acquitted the two white men in the killing, but the men later confessed in an interview with Look magazine.

When Till disappeared in Mississippi, Ollie Gordon — one of Till’s cousins — was 7 years old and living in the Chicago home with Till’s mother and family. Gordon told The Associated Press on Thursday that in the days leading up to when his body was found, the home was full of fear, because people knew there was a strong likelihood he had been killed.

Gordon said she had mixed emotions about Donham’s death.

“She was never tried in the court of man,” Gordon said. “But I think she was judged by God, and his wrath is more punitive than any judgement or penalty she could have gotten in a courtroom. I don’t think she had a pleasant or happy life.”


In an unpublished memoir obtained by The Associated Press in 2022, Donham said she was unaware of what would happen to Till.

The contents of the 99-page manuscript, titled “I am More Than A Wolf Whistle,” were first reported by the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting. Historian and author Timothy Tyson of Durham, North Carolina, who said he obtained a copy from Donham while interviewing her in 2008, provided a copy to the AP.

Tyson had placed the manuscript in an archive at the University of North Carolina with the agreement that it not be made public for decades, though he said he gave it to the FBI during an investigation the agency concluded in 2021. He said he decided to make it public after some of Till’s relatives and other people doing research at the Leflore County, Mississippi, courthouse in June 2022 found an arrest warrant on kidnapping charges that was issued for “Mrs. Roy Bryant” in 1955 but never served.


Tyson said in a statement Thursday that Donham’s precise role in the killing of Till remains murky, but it’s clear she was involved.

“It has comforted America to see this as merely a story of monsters, her among them,” Tyson said. “What this narrative keeps us from seeing is the monstrous social order that cared nothing for the life of Emmett Till nor thousands more like him. Neither the federal government nor the government of Mississippi did anything to prevent or punish this murder. Condemning what Donham did is easier than confronting what America was — and is.”

Last year, members of the New Black Panther Party and other activists, began showing up at addresses associated with the aging Donham, including in North Carolina and Kentucky. They were there to serve unofficial “warrants” for her arrest and trial.


Weeks after the unserved arrest warrant was found, the office of Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch said there was no new evidence to pursue a criminal case against Donham. In August, a district attorney said a Leflore County grand jury declined to indict Donham.

Till’s cousin, Priscilla Sterling, filed a federal lawsuit against the current Leflore County Sheriff, Ricky Banks, on Feb. 7, seeking to compel him to serve the 1955 warrant on Donham. In a response April 13, Banks’ attorney said there was no point serving the warrant on Donham because the grand jury did not indict her last year.

The Emmett Till Legacy Foundation, run by some of Till’s relatives, posted a blank black square to social media sites Thursday after news of Donham’s death was reported.
1682778888848.png
 

spaminator

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Man killed by chokehold on New York subway, examiner says
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Jake Offenhartz And Bobby Caina Calvan
Published May 03, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 4 minute read

NEW YORK — A man who had been shouting at people aboard a New York City subway train died after fellow riders tackled him and one put him in a chokehold that lasted until his body went limp, according to police officials and video of the encounter.


Jordan Neely, 30, died from compression of the neck, the city’s medical examiner determined Wednesday.


Neely is recognizable to some New Yorkers as a Michael Jackson impersonator who regularly danced in the Times Square transit hub. On Monday afternoon, he was yelling and pacing back and forth on an F train in Manhattan, witnesses and police said, when he was restrained by at least three people, including a U.S. Marine veteran who pulled one arm tightly around his neck.

Video of the altercation posted online by a freelance journalist showed the man lying beneath Neely, holding him in a headlock position for several minutes as Neely tried and failed to break free. A second passenger pinned Neely’s arms while a third person held down his shoulder.


It was unclear why the group had moved to restrain him.

Neely, who is Black, lost consciousness during the struggle. EMTs and police arrived after the train stopped at a station. He was pronounced dead at a Manhattan hospital shortly after.

The 24-year-old Marine veteran, who appeared to be white, was taken into custody and released without charges. His name has not been released publicly.

The medical examiner’s office classified Neely’s death as a homicide and the manner as a chokehold, but noted that any determination about criminal culpability would be left to the legal system.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office said it is investigating.

“As part of our rigorous ongoing investigation, we will review the Medical Examiner’s report, assess all available video and photo footage, identify and interview as many witnesses as possible, and obtain additional medical records,” read a statement from a spokesperson for the DA.


As news of Neely’s death spread online, video of the encounter evoked strong reactions from New Yorkers and officials. Some described the act as a lethal overreaction to a person in the throes of mental illness and others defended the Marine veteran’s actions.

A group of protesters gathered Wednesday afternoon in the station where Neely died to call for an arrest. Kyle Ishmael, a 38-year-old Harlem resident, said the video of the incident left him feeling “disgusted.”

“I couldn’t believe this was happening on my subway in my city that I grew up in,” he said.

Neely’s death comes amid a period of heightened public attention to both homelessness and mental illness on New York City’s streets and subways. Following several high-profile incidents, including a shooting on a subway train that left 10 people wounded last year, Mayor Eric Adams promised to deploy additional police officers and mental health workers throughout the transit system.

The freelance journalist who recorded the incident, Juan Alberto Vazquez, told the New York Post that Neely was screaming “in an aggressive manner,” and complaining of hunger and thirst. Neely did not physically attack anyone, Vazquez said, adding that the Marine veteran approached the man after he threw his jacket to the ground.

The video starts with Neely already on the subway car’s floor, with the man’s left arm around Neely’s neck, locked into his other arm positioned against the man’s head. A second man holds Neely’s outstretched arm while pinning the other hand against his body. Neely is mostly still, but half a minute later tries to struggle out of the headlock. Eventually, he goes limp.

Dave Giffen, the executive director at Coalition for the Homeless, blamed city and state officials for an inadequate response to the mental health crisis — and questioned why the Marine veteran was not facing criminal charges.


“The fact that someone who took the life of a distressed, mentally ill human being on a subway could be set free without facing any consequences is shocking,” he said. “This is an absolute travesty that must be investigated immediately.”

Those calls were echoed by several Democratic elected officials, who described the incident as a low point for the city. A spokesperson for the mayor touted his administration’s investment in mental health initiatives, but declined to comment directly on Neely’s death, noting, “There’s a lot we don’t know about what happened here.”

Tribute videos posted online show a loyal fanbase who enjoyed crossing paths with Neely on their daily commutes. Some grew concerned when he went missing early last year, according to YouTube comments.


Jason Williams, an actor, recalled encountering Neely when he first moved to the city in 2007. Then a teenager, Neely was an agile Michael Jackson impersonator, Williams said, soliciting donations as he moonwalked through the subway and lip-synced to “Billie Jean.”

“He embodied the hustle spirit of New York,” Williams said. “He was a great performer and it’s a real tragedy that he was killed so senselessly.”

The Rev. Al Sharpton demanded in a statement that Neely’s death be investigated as a potential case of manslaughter. Sharpton referenced the Bernhard Goetz case in 1984, in which a white gunman was convicted of a weapons offense after he shot four Black men on a subway train.

“We cannot end up back to a place where vigilantism is tolerable. It wasn’t acceptable then and it cannot be acceptable now,” Sharpton said.

Andre Zachery, Neely’s father, told the New York Daily News that he had not seen his son in four years.

Zachery told the paper that Neely’s mother also died violently. Christie Neely was strangled in New Jersey in 2007, according to news accounts at the time. Her body was found days later in a suitcase along a roadway. Neely, who was 14 when she died, testified against his mother’s boyfriend at his murder trial.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Video of the altercation posted online by a freelance journalist showed the man lying beneath Neely, holding him in a headlock position for several minutes as Neely tried and failed to break free. A second passenger pinned Neely’s arms while a third person held down his shoulder.

It was unclear why the group had moved to restrain him.
Why, because it was lynchtime, of course!
 

spaminator

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Byron Allen sues McDonald's for allegedly lying about commitment to Black media
The lawsuit seeks $100 million plus punitive damages

Author of the article:Reuters
Reuters
Jonathan Stempel
Published May 08, 2023 • 1 minute read

The media entrepreneur Byron Allen has filed a second lawsuit against McDonald’s Corp over the fast-food chain’s alleged refusal to advertise with Black-owned media.


In a complaint filed last week in Los Angeles, Allen’s Entertainment Studios Networks Inc and Weather Group LLC said McDonald’s “lied” when it pledged in May 2021 to boost national ad spending with Black-owned media to 5% from 2% by 2024.


Allen said he would know if McDonald’s were honoring that pledge because his Allen Media Group represents more than 90% of Black-owned media. He said he relied on McDonald’s pledge when seeking new business from the company, only to be rebuffed.

The lawsuit seeks $100 million plus punitive damages for McDonald’s alleged violation of a California anti-fraud law against making false promises.

Allen’s case is in addition to his $10 billion federal lawsuit saying McDonald’s ad practices amount to “racial stereotyping” that violated federal and California civil rights laws.


In a statement, McDonald’s said it was proud of its record of investing in diverse communities and partners.

“Byron Allen files baseless lawsuits as part of a public smear campaign against our company to try to line his pockets,” it said. “We will not be coerced by these ‘in terrorem’ tactics and will defend ourselves vigorously.”

Allen said in his own statement: “During the Black Lives Matter movement, hundreds of corporations made pledges to Black America…. McDonald’s is one of those corporations that has lied and made false promises.”

In an April 21 court filing, McDonald’s lawyers said mediation to settle Allen’s $10 billion lawsuit has been unsuccessful, and accused Allen of trying to “harass and harangue McDonald’s into an unmerited resolution.”

McDonald’s cited an open letter Allen placed in the Chicago Tribune on April 19, one day before scheduled talks, attacking its alleged “horrible systemic racism against Black people.”

The letter also called for the replacement of Chief Executive Chris Kempczinski and McDonald’s board of directors. A spokesman for Allen did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday.
 

petros

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Byron Allen sues McDonald's for allegedly lying about commitment to Black media
The lawsuit seeks $100 million plus punitive damages

Author of the article:Reuters
Reuters
Jonathan Stempel
Published May 08, 2023 • 1 minute read

The media entrepreneur Byron Allen has filed a second lawsuit against McDonald’s Corp over the fast-food chain’s alleged refusal to advertise with Black-owned media.


In a complaint filed last week in Los Angeles, Allen’s Entertainment Studios Networks Inc and Weather Group LLC said McDonald’s “lied” when it pledged in May 2021 to boost national ad spending with Black-owned media to 5% from 2% by 2024.


Allen said he would know if McDonald’s were honoring that pledge because his Allen Media Group represents more than 90% of Black-owned media. He said he relied on McDonald’s pledge when seeking new business from the company, only to be rebuffed.

The lawsuit seeks $100 million plus punitive damages for McDonald’s alleged violation of a California anti-fraud law against making false promises.

Allen’s case is in addition to his $10 billion federal lawsuit saying McDonald’s ad practices amount to “racial stereotyping” that violated federal and California civil rights laws.


In a statement, McDonald’s said it was proud of its record of investing in diverse communities and partners.

“Byron Allen files baseless lawsuits as part of a public smear campaign against our company to try to line his pockets,” it said. “We will not be coerced by these ‘in terrorem’ tactics and will defend ourselves vigorously.”

Allen said in his own statement: “During the Black Lives Matter movement, hundreds of corporations made pledges to Black America…. McDonald’s is one of those corporations that has lied and made false promises.”

In an April 21 court filing, McDonald’s lawyers said mediation to settle Allen’s $10 billion lawsuit has been unsuccessful, and accused Allen of trying to “harass and harangue McDonald’s into an unmerited resolution.”

McDonald’s cited an open letter Allen placed in the Chicago Tribune on April 19, one day before scheduled talks, attacking its alleged “horrible systemic racism against Black people.”

The letter also called for the replacement of Chief Executive Chris Kempczinski and McDonald’s board of directors. A spokesman for Allen did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday.
That just fucking petty.

North America is heading off a cliff.

This will be interesting.
 
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55Mercury

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Hmm. . . sounds like Corporation X suing Corporation Y. Black, White, whatever. . . it's about green.

(NB for Canadians: Our money is green.)
but for us it's easier to put $150 in other terms, like, 2 pinks, 2 greens, and 2 blues

for ewe murkins it's 2 Grants, 2 Jacksons, and 2 Lincolns.

it's even harder to type!

:?D
 

Tecumsehsbones

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but for us it's easier to put $150 in other terms, like, 2 pinks, 2 greens, and 2 blues

for ewe murkins it's 2 Grants, 2 Jacksons, and 2 Lincolns.

it's even harder to type!

:?D
I consider the one-colour, one-size money the dumbest thing the U.S. does.

Well, one of the dumbest.

One can hardly imagine a way one could set up the system more conveniently for error and fraud.
 

spaminator

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U.S. Army sergeant who fatally shot BLM protester sentenced to 25 years
Daniel Perry's conviction prompted outrage from prominent conservatives

Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Jim Vertuno
Published May 10, 2023 • 3 minute read
Perry, a U.S. Army sergeant, was convicted of murder in the fatal shooting of Air Force veteran Garrett Foster, 28, an armed protester during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Texas.
Perry, a U.S. Army sergeant, was convicted of murder in the fatal shooting of Air Force veteran Garrett Foster, 28, an armed protester during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Texas.
AUSTIN, Texas — A U.S. Army sergeant plans to appeal his 25-year prison sentence for fatally shooting an armed man during a Black Lives Matter protest in Texas, and will cooperate with efforts by the state’s Republican governor to issue a pardon, his attorney said Wednesday.


Daniel Perry, 36, was convicted of murder in April for killing 28-year-old Garrett Foster during the downtown Austin protest in July 2020.


“After three long years we’re finally getting justice for Garrett,” the victim’s mother, Sheila Foster, told the court after sentencing Wednesday.

“Mr. Perry, I pray to God that one day, he will get rid of all this hate that is in your heart,” she said.

Perry attorney Clinton Broden said in a statement that his client would appeal. He called Perry’s conviction the product of “political prosecution” and said the defence team would “fully cooperate in the pardon process.”

Perry’s conviction prompted outrage from prominent conservatives, and Gov. Greg Abbott, citing Texas’ Stand Your Ground laws, has said he would sign a pardon once a recommendation from the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles hits his desk


The board — which is stacked with Abbott appointees — is reviewing Perry’s case on the governor’s orders, but it is unclear when it will reach a decision.

District Judge Clifford Brown delivered a statement during sentencing that didn’t address the potential pardon directly. But he insisted that Perry had a “fair and impartial trial” and that the jury’s decision “deserves our honour and it deserves to be respected.”

Travis County District Attorney Jose Garza said it was Abbott “who decided to insert politics in this case.”

Garza said he’s been in touch with the board and has been assured that prosecutors will be allowed to present a case against a pardon, and that it will include a presentation from Foster’s family.


The pardon process is a valuable check on the court system, Broden said.

“Those who claim that Governor Abbott’s expressed intent is based on politics simply choose to ignore the fact that it was only the political machinations of a rogue district attorney which led to Sgt. Perry’s prosecution in the first instance,” he said.

Perry was stationed at Fort Hood, about 70 miles (110 kilometres) north of Austin, when the shooting happened. He had just dropped off a ride-share customer and turned onto a street filled with protesters.

Perry said he was trying to get past the crowd and fired his pistol when Foster pointed a rifle at him. Witnesses testified that they did not see Foster raise his weapon, and prosecutors argued that Perry could have driven away without shooting.


Perry said he acted in self-defence. His lawyers asked the judge to consider his more than a decadelong military career and hand down a sentence of no more than 10 years. Army spokesman Bryce Dubee has said Perry is classified as in “civilian confinement” pending separation from the military.

On Tuesday, prosecutors submitted into evidence dozens of texts and social media posts Perry wrote, shared or liked, including some shockingly racist images. They had been excluded from Perry’s trial, but were publicly released after his conviction and allowed into the sentencing phase by Brown.

“This man is a loaded gun, ready to go off at any perceived threat,” prosecutor Guillermo Gonzalez said, urging Brown to issue a sentence of at least 25 years. “He’s going to do it again.”


Perry, who is white, was working as a ride-share driver in downtown Austin on July 25, 2020, when he shot and killed Foster, an Air Force veteran. Foster, who was also white, was legally carrying an AK-47 rifle as he participated in the demonstration against police killings and racial injustice, following the death of George Floyd, a Black man, by a white Minneapolis police officer.

Among Perry’s statements introduced Tuesday, he wrote on Facebook a month before the shooting: “It is official I am a racist because I do not agree with people acting like animals at the zoo.”

Floyd was killed on May 25, 2020. A few days later as protests erupted, Perry sent a text message to an acquaintance: “I might go to Dallas to shoot looters.”

Perry attorney Douglas O’Connell argued that the texts and posts were presented by prosecutors out of context, and that Perry has a right to free speech.

“Some of those social media posts are frankly repugnant,” O’Connell said, while classifying others as “dark humour.”

Foster was with his girlfriend, Whitney Mitchell, who is Black and uses a wheelchair, when Perry gunned him down.

“Black lives mattered to Garrett,” his mother told the courtroom Wednesday. “The love of his life was a Black woman.”