Dec 13, 2013

Analysis of federal statistics on black-on-White violence

Source

The “New Century Foundation” studies Federal crime reports, and found significant differences in crime ratio between races, verified by the FBI’s NCVS, National Crime Victimization Survey, and The Department of Justice’s UCR, Uniform Crime Reports, FBI Communication’s Division, 304-625-4995.

They state emphatically that the Judicial System is not biased against minorities.

Blacks are seven times more likely than people of other races to commit murder, and eight times more likely to commit robbery.

Blacks are three times more likely to use a hand gun, and twice more likely to use a knife.

Hispanics commit three times more violent crimes than whites, but the statistics are nebulous because sometimes they are classified as white, so it could be far higher.

The best indicator of violent crime levels in an area is the percent of the population that is black and Hispanic.

Blacks are 39 times more likely to commit a violent crime against whites then vice versa, and 136 times more likely to commit a robbery.

Forty-five percent of black crime is against whites, 43 against other blacks, and 10 percent against Hispanic.

Blacks are seven times more likely to go to prison, Hispanics three times, and the reason is clear, because from 1980 to 2003 the US incarceration rate has tripled, and so proves that Justice is not only hard won, but well served.

Verification of these claims comes from the sources below, extrapolation methods are verified by the New Century Foundation, http://www.amren.com/color.pdf.

From FBI:

Mr. LaRive:

The Uniform Crime Reporting Program does not collect the age, sex, or race of victims in conjunction with offenses reported to the police with the exception of murder and nonnegligent homicide. You will find the data on the race of victims of homicide at http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/cius2006/offenses/expanded_information/data/shrtable_02.html.

Age, sex, and race of offenders are collected in conjunction with arrest data. You will find the arrest data by race at http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/cius2006/data/table_43.html. If you need further assistance with UCR Program data, please contact the FBI’s Communications Group at 304-625-4995.


Retired judge confesses he was acting on anti-White sentiment when he wrongly convicted White man of killing black

Source

A judge has said he wants a white man he convicted in 1999 of killing a black man to be freed because he found him guilty due to his own reverse racism.

Frank Barbaro, a retired Brooklyn Supreme Court judge, said he convicted Donald Kagan, now 39, of shooting Wavell Wint, 22, because he saw the man as 'a bigot'.

He said that he had denied Kagan a fair trial because of his own civil rights activist opinions.


'Mr. Kagan had no intent to kill that man,' Barbaro, 86, told Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice ShawnDya Simpson in court, the New York Post reported.

'I believe now that I was seeing this young white fellow as a bigot, as someone who assassinated an African-American.'

He said his work during the civil-rights movement caused his bias in the case.

Read more at: Retired judge confesses he was acting on 'reverse racism'

VIDEO: Why I hate white people

Source

Not something you see every day:

http://whitegirlbleedalot.com/new-why-i-hate-white-people/

or do you?

Arrest made in shooting death of White, Tampa cab driver

Original Story

TAMPA — Tampa police arrested a 19-year-old man Tuesday night in the fatal shooting of a taxi cab driver that occurred Sunday night.

Devante Bell, of 1509 New Orleans Ave., faces one count of first-degree murder with a firearm and attempted armed robbery with a firearm in the shooting death of John Dooley, 56, police said

Bell was being held in the Hillsborough County Jail. He was denied bond.

About 7:45 p.m. Sunday, Bell and another suspect entered a Yellow Cab driven by Dooley. As Dooley took them to the location they requested, he was shot by his passengers at Eskimo Avenue and North 18th Street, police said.

Bell and the other suspect ran from the scene after the shooting, police said.

The second suspect hasn’t been identified. The case remains under investigation.

Black male accused of killing White teen over $10, a cell phone, & sandwich will take plea deal

Original Story

The man accused of killing a teen just before Christmas in 2012 is expected to take a plea deal in court Thursday.

Quintel Raheem Grady will like plead guilty to his involvement in the death of Joshua Proutey, who was shot in December 2012 while heading to his car after working an event at the Community Arts Center on Second and Orange Streets.

Grady and three others were charged in connection with Proutey's death. One of the teens involved said Grady had bought the revolver that killed Proutey hours before the shooting and is also the one who pulled the trigger.

District Attorney Ben David said Grady approached Proutey and demanded money. He says Proutey pulled out $10 to hand over, but asked to keep it. According to David, Proutey was ordered back into his car, but froze, so Grady shot him.

Prosecutors said they intend to seek the death penalty in this case because of aggravating factors. Authorities say Grady had priors on his record, including under 18 robbery with a weapon, fleeing to allude arrest and possession of a stolen motor vehicle.

Charges are still pending against Christopher Cromartie, Daniel Henry and Jasmine Dottin in this case.

Black male who strong-armed elderly White female crossing guard, arrested again for robbery

Original Story

(WMC-TV) - A Memphis man already accused of attacking a popular crossing guard is back in jail.

Donell Johnson, 20, is all smiles in his mug shot, but he is facing more time after his second arrest on robbery-related charges.

The first time involved popular Richland Elementary crossing guard Linda Foster.

Memphis Police say Johnson swiped her purse after Foster put up a fight during an attempted carjacking at an ATM.

"He got scared and then he reached over there and got my purse that had my teeth and my hearing aid in it," said Foster.

Action News 5 helped Foster replace her stolen items, and she later identified Johnson in a lineup.

But within weeks of a court appearance, police say he was back to his old ways.

They say Johnson was caught on surveillance camera at the Stage Road Home Depot.

He and an accomplice are accused of trying to rob a female customer at gunpoint in the parking lot before driving away.

Johnson was arrested last Friday and charged with that crime.

Johnson's rap sheet includes at least eight arrests in Shelby County on charges including robbery and theft.

He is being held on a $350,000 bond.

White co-ed, Martha Childress, on black shooter who almost took her life

Original Story

On Oct. 13, 2013, 18-year-old Martha Childress' life changed forever.

As she awaited a taxi to take her back to her dorm room on the campus of the University of South Carolina, Childress was struck by a stray bullet fired from a gun by a man she had never even met.

The bullet hit Childress in the ribcage and she immediately collapsed to the ground. She says she remembers everything that happened in the moments after she was hit.

"I didn't really know I was shot at first. I just knew I heard a loud bang and I fell and didn't really know what was going on and I couldn't feel my legs," said Childress. "I looked over to my best friend, who was standing next to me, and I just told her, 'I can't feel my legs. I can't move.'"

Childress says chaos surrounded her in those desperate moments where she didn't exactly know the extent of her injuries. She repeatedly asked anyone in the area what happened and she finally received the word as her lungs began to fill with blood.

"Then finally, I was like, 'Please tell me what's going on,' and they told me I was shot," said Childress. "I just went quiet. I had no idea, and then all these crazy questions went through my mind like, 'Why would someone do this to me, what happened, why did I deserve this?'"

She was transported to Palmetto Health Richland Hospital in critical condition where doctors finally told her she was paralyzed. It was a fact Childress said she already knew

"I had the worst idea in my mind, I knew, though, I was. It just confirmed what I already knew," said Childress. "It was hard."

After almost a week in intensive care, Childress was moved to the Shepherd Center in Atlanta to begin the long rehabilitation process. It was a transition she was not prepared for, she said

"Coming here was a big adjustment," said Childress. "I wasn't ready for what I was about to get into. It's very demanding and grueling here. It's hard to learn these things because you start all over.