Daily Archives: June 22, 2012

racist hate returns to Wilton High School

Wilton High School does not offer an AP Hate class, or even Creative Hate Speech Writing. But someone in the school has found a way to disseminate racist and anti-Semitic language, all the same.

Late last week I heard about a Twitter account under the name @YouLiveInWilton, whose screen name is “Wilton Life.” All the tweets are written as if they describe what life in Wilton is like.

Sadly, here’s one of the recent tweets from that account:

“F*ck Darien. Since they don’t allow Jews to live in their town, they dump them on our land!”

Lest you think Jews were the only targets, read the tweet that immediately preceded that one:

#IWillNeverUnderstandWhy people think we’re racist? We love black people… Everyone should own one.

There were several other tweets, many of them just as racist and anti-Semitic. Others were simply ‘snarky’ and obnoxious, still others just spoiled and bratty. All of them came off as pretty ignorant.

Based on tweet content and reaction from Wilton Public Schools administrators, it’s widely believed that the tweets are from a high school student.  Superintendent Dr. Gary Richards confirmed that the district is investigating the Twitter account and is working with the Wilton Police Department as well as the CT State’s Attorney’s office.

This all makes me nauseous.

As a Jew, as a parent with children in Wilton schools, and as a human being, I know that it happens, but still—it caught me off guard and it fills me with such sadness.

As a Wilton resident—I hope I won’t be disappointed.

What I mean by that is:  I hope I won’t be disappointed at the reaction I would like to see in response.

Over the weekend I spoke with Gary Jones, the CT Regional Director of the Anti-Defamation League. The ADL has been in existence for 99 years, and according to Jones, its mission has always been the same:  “To stop the defamation of the Jewish people, and to secure justice and fair treatment for all.” In other words, you have to stand with anyone victimized by hate.

I wanted to get some context for this kind of hate, and how a community should handle this when it happens.  Jones is staying in touch with Dr. Richards about the hate tweets. Given the ADL’s experience in helping communities deal with instances like this one, he explained what steps Wilton can start to take.

“An important component of this is for the school community to have its school leadership inform them of what happened, what responses they’re taking, and to make it clear that the haters don’t speak for our community,” said Jones. “It sends a message, especially to the kids, it assures them for their perspective of what is right and what is wrong is shared by the administration and by the leaders of the school community.”

Our times are definitely more complicated. Things that happen off school grounds are—by common sense and now, by state anti-bullying law—intricately intertwined with school life and the security of its students. Even if the twitter hate wasn’t composed on a school computer, it’s still something the school has to get involved with.

But is it only the school’s responsibility to take on this ugliness? Is it just the school that needs to distinguish between hate speech and the freedom to speak it?

Jones explained, “First and foremost, it is the role of the administration and the superintendent and the town leadership.  Just because you can’t criminally prosecute it for speech, doesn’t mean it’s right. And the distinction between right and wrong is something parents teach kids, and something that our leaders teach kids. And our leaders stand forward to say, this is not going to be tolerated, and this is not appropriate in the school community or in any community.”

Ah!  In other words, it’s something we as a wider community—not just those involved with the schools, but all of Wilton needs to realize is going on, and needs to stand up against this kind of hate here.

“One of the things that haters like to do is to make the people who are their targets feel small and alone. That’s a very powerful weapon they have if they are successful. But there’s an equally powerful weapon that the good people in the community have, and that is to stand with the people who are the victims, and make it clear that the victims are not isolated and alone, they have the support of the entire community. Rather, it’s the haters and the bigots who are isolated and alone and who have no support,” agreed Jones.

Dr. Richards addressed the incident in his report to the Board of Education at their meeting last Thursday, June 14. In his remarks (attached to this article), he stressed how, as educators and parents, those in the schools work hard to teach young people how to make appropriate choices.

“It is my hope that we can send a clear, unequivocal and united message that this kind of behavior does not represent our community and that it will not be tolerated.”

It’s a good start. But more needs to be done. There needs to be a more active education plan to directly address the dangers and effects this kind of hate speech has; to teach about how being a bystander is just as damaging to the collective nature of our community as it is to individual victims; and to demonstrate how the community can come together to stand up and reject this kind of speech as representative of life in Wilton.

This needs to happen actively in the schools. It needs to happen with our town leadership. It needs to happen in our homes, in conversations Wilton parents have with their children.

Jones explained, “One of the things we try to make people understand is that a school or a community is not judged by virtue of the bad acts of one or a small number of people; it’s judged by the response. That is always the key in these situations—it’s the community rising up, the leadership rising up and saying, this is not appropriate, we’re not going to stand for it and we’re going to make sure that people in our community understand that wilton is not a place that will condone this kind of hate speech.”

You know, this is not the first time this kind of hate has hit Wilton and its high school. But even more interesting? Our community did join together, just as Jones described, in defiance of the hate.

Back in 2004, some lockers at Wilton high school were defaced with racist and homophobic slurs. The Wilton Library brought together representatives from the high school, local religious congregations, town government and youth organizations to craft a proactive response, which they dubbed “Operation Respect.” Hundreds of residents participated and the community linked together to say, “Hate has no place here!”

As I learned from my talk with the ADL’s Jones, ignoring the hate won’t make it go away, and it’s not enough just to try and fight it when hate comes knocking. Education is what’s going to make hate unwelcome here, and it’s education that has to come from parents, teachers and school administrators, town leaders, community organizations, business people, residents of all stripes and walks of life.

“If we believe, as we do, that people have to be taught to hate, we also believe that people can be taught to be respectful and friendly, to appreciate differences, and most importantly—to stand up for people who are being victimized by any kind of hate or bullying,” Jones said.

We all need to keep spreading that message, supporting one another and teaching one another why it’s important to stand up and say we won’t stand for this bigotry to represent what Wilton is.

So it’s up to you. And you. And you. And you. And me. It’s up to all of us to say to @YouLiveInWilton:

“While you may call yourself ‘Wilton Life’ on Twitter, I’m sorry but you are not what Wilton Life is all about, and you are not welcome here.”

http://wilton.patch.com/articles/hate-returns-to-wilton-high-school#photo-10349449

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Lebron James and the Hunger Games

Reblogged from Cree7's Blog:

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Adulation for and Celebration of the Miami Heat winning the 2012 NBA championship has been muted. Predictably.

White folks are pretending that this NBA finals win is not the biggest in the history of the league. No one is supposed to talk about it for what is is: Three black males, with genius talent, accepted the challenge of walking through the gate called "free agency" without permission from massuh and making a run for what they thought the free colored man's promised land.

Read more… 569 more words

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Kids Sunburned at School: Who’s to Blame?

Violet and Zoe Michener came home from school sporting these severe sunburns.

It was raining when her children left for school on Tuesday, so Jesse Michener did not slather them in sunscreen, even though she knew they’d be outdoors for field day later that afternoon. But the sun came out around noon and, when the kids came home, two of them were so severely sunburned that they had to go to the hospital.

“We’ve never done a field day at the school before,” Michener told Yahoo! Shine in an interview on Thursday. “They were outside for over five hours.”

A freelance photographer, she posted pictures and described her daughter’s sunburns on her blog. “Two of my three children experienced significant sunburns. Like, hurts-to-look-at burns,” Michener wrote. “Violet is starting to blister on her face.” Both Violet, 11, and her sister, Zoe, 9, “have headaches, chills and pain” and had to stay home from school the next day. (Her youngest daughter, 7-year-old Eleanor, was also sunburned, but not badly.) The girls did not stay overnight at the hospital, and Michener said they are being treated at home with cool baths and over-the-counter pain medications.

To make matters worse, Zoe, has a form of Albinism — and teachers and staff at Point Defiance Elementary School were aware of her extreme sensitivity to the sun. She even has a written agreement — a 504 plan — with the school because of it. And yet, teachers refused to send the girls indoors or allow them to apply sunscreen themselves, according to her mom.

“My children indicated that several adults commented on their burns at school, including staff and other parents,” Michener wrote on her blog. “One of my children remarked that their teacher used sunscreen in her presence and that it was ‘just for her.’ So, is this an issue of passive, inactive supervision? Where is the collective awareness for student safety?”

Tacoma Public School district spokesman Dan Voelpel told Yahoo! Shine that the school district’s sunscreen policy — which forbids teachers from applying sunscreen to students, and only allows students to apply it to their own bodies if they have a doctor’s note authorizing it — is based on a statewide law.

“Our policy follows the state law which allows district to establish the rules for how medications, both over-the-counter and prescription medication, is handled in the school,” he said. “Our policy is that any of that medication requires a doctor’s order for kids to take it at school. This is really to protect other students who could be exposed to various medications that they could be allergic to.” The federal Food and Drug Administration considers sunscreen to be an over-the-counter medication.

While Michener says that she takes full responsibility for not making them put on sunscreen before bringing them to school that day — none of her kids have ever come home from school with sunburns before, she notes. She also points out that teachers had other options besides breaking the law: They could have sent the girls indoors when they noticed the burns getting bad, or called Michener and asked her to come to school and put sunscreen on them herself. (The FDA suggests that sunscreen be reapplied every two hours.)

“Something as simple as a sun hat might seem to bypass the prescription issue to some extent,” she wrote. “Alas, hats are not allowed at school, even on field day.”

“It was an exceptional day, with exceptional inability to serve these kids,” she told Yahoo! Shine.

Michener is asking the school district to consider crafting a more “parent-friendly” policy on sunscreens, one that would allow parents to sign a waiver giving teachers permission to apply sunscreen while at school, or one that would allow teachers to act in their students’ best interests. Voelpel told Yahoo! Shine that there currently is not a procedure in place for parents who have trouble getting a doctor’s note, but “We periodically review our policies as situations change,” he said. “I can’t say whether this one will be revised based on this case.”

Michener says that her daughters’ sunburns are really part of a larger problem.

“My biggest beef is that teachers are not able to make good decisions about kids safety,” she said. “Fear of litigation is preventing us from living our lives and taking care of our kids.”

http://shine.yahoo.com/parenting/kids-come-home-school-bad-sunburns-responsible-172200498.html

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Hebrew translation of “The Color Purple” will not be published in Israel because it is “guilty of apartheid and pe rsecution of the Palestinian people”

Alice Walker wants to boycott Israel until it changes its policies toward the Palestinian residents of Gaza and the West Bank.

Alice Walker has refused to allow a new Hebrew translation of her Pulitzer-winning novel, “The Color Purple” to be published in Israel, which she says is “guilty of apartheid and persecution of the Palestinian people.”

Walker, 68, has long been a member of the boycott, divest and sanction movement, which wants Israel ostracized economically and culturally on the international stage until it changes its policies toward the Palestinian residents of Gaza and the West Bank.

She compared Israel to the South Africa of yesteryear — as well as American segregation.

“I grew up under American apartheid and this was far worse,” Walker says in an open letter to Israeli publisher Yediot books, which is affiliated with the daily newspaper Yediot Ahronoth and was planning a new translation.

That letter appeared on the website for the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel on Sunday.

Describing how she years ago refused to have the film version of “The Color Purple” shown in apartheid South Africa, she writes: “I would so like knowing my books are read by the people of your country, especially by the young, and by the brave Israeli activists (Jewish and Palestinian) for justice and peace I have had the joy of working beside. I am hopeful that one day, maybe soon, this may happen. But now is not the time.”

Israel’s supporters lashed out at the author.

The right-leaning Commentary magazine called Walker’s letter “among the most egregious acts of discrimination against Israel by leftist intellectuals.”

And Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, a City University trustee and a vocal supporter of Israel, called Walker a “lunatic” and suggested she and her ilk “need serious counseling.”

Incidentally, Walker’s ex-husband is Jewish civil rights lawyer Mel Leventhal. They had one daughter together, 42-year-old Rebecca Walker, whose books include “Black White and Jewish.”

Her mom’s criticism of Israel has been even more strident in the past.

Asked last year by Foreign Policy magazine if Hamas was a terrorist group, she replied: “I think Israel is the greatest terrorist in that part of the world. And I think, in general, the United States and Israel are great terrorist organizations themselves.”

That interview was given as Walker attempted to board “Freedom Flotilla II,” which was to pass through the Israeli maritime blockade of Gaza. A previous flotilla had left nine activists dead after they were confronted with Israeli forces seeking to stop their ships. The second flotilla was ultimately thwarted without violence.

Walker published “The Color Purple,” based on her own childhood in Jim Crow Georgia, in 1982 to great acclaim. The following year, she became the first woman of color to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

In recent years, she has devoted an increasing amount of time to political activism.

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/alice-walker-stops-hebrew-version-color-purple-blames-israel-persecution-article-1.1098779#ixzz1yZBFYryp

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Black reporter suspended for saying Mitt Romney ‘Is more comfortable around white people’ live on MSNBC

Politico have suspended their White House correspondent Joe Williams after he made comments that suggested Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is more comfortable around white people.

Speaking as a contributor during Martin Bashir’s MSNBC show, Williams, who is African-American said that Romney is more at ease when he makes his frequent appearances on Fox News Channel and implied that race is a consideration.

Saying that Romney ‘is very, very comfortable’ during his appearances on ‘Fox and Friends’, Mr Williams went on to comment, ‘They’re white folks who are very much relaxed in their own company.’

Joe Williams speaking on Martin Bashir’s MSNBC show where he made controversial comments regarding Mitt Romney

With a history of describing Romney and other Republicans in a controversial manner on his Twitter account, Williams was suspended after a meeting with Politico’s founding editors John Harris and Jim VandeHei.

‘Regrettably, an unacceptable number of Joe Williams’s public statements on cable and Twitter have called into question his commitment to this responsibility,’ said the pair.

His comment about Governor Romney earlier today on MSNBC fell short of our standards for fairness and judgment in an especially unfortunate way.

‘This appearance came in the context of other remarks on Twitter that, cumulatively, require us to make clear that our standards are serious, and so are the consequences for disregarding them.

Mitt Romney has made numerous appearances on Fox News Channel especially on ‘Fox and Friends’

‘This is true for all POLITICO journalists, including an experienced and well-respected voice like Joe Williams.

‘Following discussion of this matter with editors, Joe has been suspended while we review the matter.’

Making frequent references to racial factors during his MSNBC appearances, Mr. Williams stepped over the line it seems with his opinions yesterday.

‘It’s very interesting that he does so many appearances on ‘Fox & Friends,’ said Williams as he spoke about Romney during his fateful MSNBC appearance yesterday.

Joe Williams has been suspended from the website Politico after a cumulative series of controversial remarks aimed at Mitt Romney and his presidential campaign

‘And it’s unscripted. It’s the only time they let Mitt off the leash. But it also points out a larger problem he’s got to solve if he wants to be successful come this fall.

‘Romney is very, very comfortable, it seems, with people who are like him.

‘That’s one of the reasons why he seems so stiff and awkward in town hall settings, why he can’t relate to people other than that.

‘But when he comes on ‘Fox & Friends,’ they’re like him.

‘They’re white folks who are very much relaxed in their own company.’

The suspension of Williams follows his continued ridicule of Romney on his Twitter feed.

One of the jibes aimed at Mitt Romney from Joe Williams which pokes fun at his perceived wealth and eating habits

He has made tweets that allude to Romney being served his food by a butler: ‘Jeeves knows my tastes’ he wrote when Romney said he has never eaten anything surprising.

And last week, Mr. Williams felt that it was impossible not to place race at the centre of Daily Caller White House correspondent Neil Munro’s decision to heckle President Obama during a speech.

‘It’s very, very difficult to place race outside of this context,’ said Williams on MSNBC last week.

Mostly because a lot of the interruptions, a lot of the disrespect has been unprecedented.

‘A lot of people will suggest it’s because the Republican party has moved so far to the right that they’re willing to do things that were unthinkable.

‘But certainly in my experience, it’s hard to divorce that because this president doesn’t look like the others.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2163348/Politico-reporter-Joe-Williams-suspended-saying-Mitt-Romney-Is-comfortable-white-people.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

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Connecticut lawmakers to hold meeting on racism concerns

State Capitol_20081015181432_JPG

Two Hartford state legislators have organized a public meeting so members of the General Assembly can hear more about allegations of racism and discrimination at the Department of Children and Families’ juvenile detention facility in Middletown.

Reps. Matthew Ritter and Douglas McCrory said they decided to hold the informational session on July 2 after being approached by employees at the Connecticut Juvenile Training School. The meeting will run from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Legislative Office Building.

The meeting comes about eight months after a youth service officer at CJTS, activist and minister Cornell Lewis, waged a seven-day hunger strike to draw attention to what he called a racist attitude by mostly white supervisors toward employees at the state’s only secure facility for delinquent boys. Lewis is one of four black workers who sued the child welfare agency in 2010 alleging that black employees have been the target of racially motivated disciplinary actions and are promoted at a lesser rate.

“I’m frustrated. Not just me, but the people that work there are frustrated because they want to get things done, they want to change the environment, change the culture,” McCrory said. “I have confidence in the new commissioner, but sometimes, maybe it’s not just the commissioner. Maybe it’s just the whole atmosphere, the culture of the whole place that’s poisoned.”

In a written statement, a DCF said the agency’s commissioner, Joette Katz, won’t be attending the meeting.

“Because of pending litigation, it is against the advice of legal counsel for the commissioner to attend the hearing at this time. However, she looks forward to participating at some point in the future when the litigation is resolved,” according to the statement.

A DCF spokesman said the agency is proud, however, that it is “one of the most diverse agencies in state government. We believe the diversity of our staff is a point of strength for our agency and have made cultural competence a priority for our work.”

In October, Lewis’ hunger strike took the CJTS Superintendent William Rosenbeck by surprise.

“I saw Mr. Lewis two weeks ago, and he didn’t mention any of this to me,” he told The Associated Press.

Rosenbeck is a named defendant in the lawsuit alleging racism at the facility. He said neither Lewis nor other workers informed him of any specific incidences of racism. Also, he said, when Lewis met with Katz in the spring of 2011, he spoke in generalities.

“There is nothing specific that he provided the commissioner that we could sort of look into. Since that time, I have spoken to Cornell, but have never been apprised of any situations that he has experienced recently or that he has brought forward to my attention or to the attention of HR that we could look into,” Rosenbeck said.

Ritter, who has toured CJTS with Lewis, said he’s uncertain how many lawmakers will attend the meeting, considering it is summertime and many people are out-of-state. He urged CJTS employees with concerns to contact their senators and representatives and ask them to attend.

“We’re going to be there to listen and take notes and see where we can go from there,” said Ritter, calling the hearing a “fact-finding sort of thing.”

McCrory said lawmakers are limited in how they can address the workers’ concerns.

“We can shine a light on it. We can show them that we’re watching, we’re monitoring what’s going on. We can maybe set policy that could change some of the things out there,” he said. “But a lot of those issues have to be done internally and have to be done through human resources.”

http://www.wtnh.com/dpp/news/politics/conn-lawmakers-to-hold-meeting-on-racism-concerns#

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racist cop sentenced to 57 months in prison for using slurs during false arrest and beating another victim

Michael Daragjati, 32, faced a judge Friday  in Brooklyn Federal District Court

AN OUTRAGED judge slammed a racist NYPD cop with 57 months in prison for  falsely arresting a black man and participating in an off-duty beating of  another victim.

Disgraced cop Michael Daragjati, of Staten Island, tried to win points from  Judge William Kuntz by criticizing the NYPD’s stop-and-frisk tactics. ‘These  people should hate me and rightfully so,’ Daragjati told the judge.

Michael Daragjati destroyed his police career by getting caught on an FBI  wiretap spewing racial slurs and boasting how he had “fried another nigger.”

But when Daragjati called his fabrication of criminal charges against the  victim a mere “bad judgment call,” Brooklyn Federal Judge William Kuntz decided  he had heard enough.

“Today is also your earthly judgment day,” Kuntz boomed Friday in a courtroom  packed with Daragjati’s family and supporters.

The judge — who is black and a longtime member of the Civilian Complaint  Review Board before he was appointed to the bench last year — took serious issue  with Daragjati’s tortured assertions that using the N-word was not racist, but  rather a term of derision for people who disrespect the law.

“My goodness sir, you just made the worst possible argument a policeman could  make,” Kuntz said.

Kuntz cited the film “Training Day,” in which actor Denzel Washington  casually calls his white partner played by Ethan Hawk “my n—–,” as an example  of a sick culture that threatens the rule of law.

Kuntz also threw Daragjati’s claims of heroism back in his face.

“You knew how to act as a real police officer,” Kuntz said. “You embraced the  anti-cop way, the criminal way.”

Daragjati pleaded guilty to violating the civil rights of Kenrick Gray by  fabricating resisting arrest charges because Gray had mouthed off about a rough  treatment during a stop-and-frisk last year.

During Friday’s hearing, Daragjati attempted to curry favor by claiming that  his time in jail so far has been a learning experience. “People don’t like the  cops,” he said. “This stop and frisk nonsense goes on. …I just spent eight  months in prison with 120 males and I’ve heard their stories. These people  should hate me and rightfully so. I’ve opened my eyes to things I’ve never seen  before.”

Daragjati also apologized to Gray, who was sitting in the courtroom. But he  expressed no remorse toward the other man, who he beat over snow plow theft  accusations in the vigilante attack.

Defense lawyer Ronald Fischetti said eight cops wrote letters to the judge  on behalf of Daragjati and now may face discipline from the Internal Affairs  Bureau.

Daragjati has a history of racism: Previously Daragjati had been the subject  of three civil rights lawsuits and a CCRB complaint, in which a black man  alleged the cop told him to “shut your n—– mouth.”

Daragjati will serve 48 months for the extortion and nine months after that  for the civil rights violation. Kuntz declined to recommend to the U.S. Bureau  of Prisons that Daragjati be sent to a facility within 100 miles of his home in  Staten Island.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/racist-sentenced-57-months-prison-slurs-false-arrest-beating-victim-article-1.1100861#ixzz1yZ1BNgvW

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The C.O.W.S. YURUGU Study Session (Pages 351 – 420) on Friday, June 22nd at 8:00PM Eastern/ 5:00PM Pacific

Talkshoe: http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/97250

Black Talk Radio Network: http://blacktalkradionetwork.com/page/the-context-of-white-supremacy

The Context of White Supremacy hosts the weekly study session on Dr. Marimba Ani’s phenomenal publication, YURUGU: An Afrikan Centered Critique of European Thought And Behavior. This week’s discussion will dissect Chapter …7 (Intracultural Behavior) and Chapter 8 (Behavior Towards Others). Dr. Ani examines the codes that govern how White people behave in relation to other White people. She emphasizes that White people require cultural controls to govern and direct their aggressive and violent tendencies towards non-white people. Without these controls, White people would be slaughtering each other. She emphasizes the role that the Prostestant work ethic has had in molding and regulating the conduct of Racist Man and Racist Woman.

HD Number: 760-569-7676 CODE 564943# *6 to Talk to Host

Talkshoe Number: 724-444-7444 Code 97250# *8 to Talk to Host

SKYPE: FREECONFERENCECALLHD.7676 CODE 564943#

The C.O.W.S. archives:

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Invest in The COWS: http://tiny.cc/ledjb

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A Review of Dr. Francess Cress-Welsing's Theory of Racism

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A Review of Dr. Francess Cress-Welsing's Theory of Racism

onlinestore

 white-supremacy

(written 2012)

Just to be clear, I have tremendous respect for Dr.. Welsing, her dedication, her unrelenting defense of people of Afrikan descent, and her courage in speaking out against what she calls racism/white supremacy. However, I hold the opinion that her theory does not adequately explain the causal elements of the destruction of Afrikans by our enemies.

Read more… 3,984 more words

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Sanford police chief fired over Trayvon Martin murder

In this March 22, 2012 file photo, Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee speaks to the the media during a news conference as city manager Norton Bonaparte Jr. listens at left, in Sanford Fla. Lee, who was strongly criticized for his agency’s initial investigation of Trayvon Martin’s slaying, was fired Wednesday, June 20, 2012, city officials said.

Saying he’s lost the trust of officials, a city manager fired a central Floridapolice chief who was criticized for his agency’s initial investigation of Trayvon Martin’s shooting death at the hands of a neighborhood watch volunteer.Sanford City Manager Norton Bonaparte said in a Wednesday statement that he relieved Chief Bill Lee of duty because he “determined the Police Chief needs to have the trust and respect of the elected officials and the confidence of the entire community.”

“We need to move forward with a police chief that all the citizens of Sanford can support,” Bonaparte said. “I have come to this decision in light of the escalating divisiveness that has taken hold of the city.”

The initial lack of an arrest following the death of Martin, an unarmed black teenager, by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman in February led to protests across the nation and spurred a debate about race and the laws of self-defense. Zimmerman’s father is white and his mother is from Peru.

The local prosecutor recused himself from the case, prompting Gov. Rick Scott to appoint special prosecutor Angela Corey, who charged Zimmerman in April with second-degree murder. The 17-year-old Martin was fatally shot following a Feb. 26 altercation with Zimmerman, who claims self-defense and has pleaded not guilty.

Lee took a leave of absence in March and offered his resignation in April. The city council rejected Lee’s resignation by a 3-2 vote. Several council members indicated they wanted to let a Department of Justice review of the police investigation play out before making a final decision.

In a statement, Benjamin Crump, an attorney for Martin’s parents, said the parents respected the city manager’s decision.

In May, Rick Myers took over as Sanford’s interim police chief, saying he wanted to heal the emotional wounds caused by Martin’s death. He has said he would reach out to people in Sanford who feel they’ve been ignored by the police.

Bonaparte said he had been in contact with the Police Executive Research Forum about the search for a successor to Lee.

“I believe that there are many law enforcement officials who will find accepting the opportunity to serve as Sanford’s Police Chief a welcome challenge for their careers”, the city manager said. “I expect the search for a new chief to take several months.”

Lee will get three months of severance and one week’s salary, in addition to any earned time off, under his contract.

“I wish Chief Lee all the best in his future endeavors,” Bonaparte said.

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