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This is what the Bush Regime wants for Black Americans! |
Another Twin Towers Murder!
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Just like the Johnson murder years ago, we have another Black American male that turns up dead in Twin Towers and the Sheriff Deputies say "he hung himself."
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| The Bush Family Regime has declared "Open Season" all across the United States against Black Americans! This is being accomplished by his "Gestapo" police forces that are killing Black Americans all across the United States and our judicial system! In Los Angeles, California he is allowing foreigners to brutalize, murder, and frame-up Black Americans with impunity through his judicial system! His judicial system and law enforcement have a set attitude of "no protection" under the law for Black Americans and is railroading many into prison concentration camp systems. The Bush Family Regime is flooding Los Angeles, California with legal and illegal immigrants and allowing employers to refuse secure employment for Black Americans. This is forcing many Black Americans into homelessness! Whole communities have been decimated! |
Indictment of former police officer in 1964 killings of 2 black teens! Special Report Coming Soon! |
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By BETTY PLEASANT, Contributing Editor 03.MAY.07 In a lawsuit initially filed in February 2006 and amended in January, Shah, 33, calls himself a “whistle blower” against an anti-African-American culture that thoroughly pervades the Sheriff’s Department — from the jail cells the deputies control, down to the neighborhood streets they patrol. In his complaint, Shah states that he has observed sheriff’s deputies plant illegal items on African-Americans, use neighboring law enforcement agencies to make unwarranted arrests of blacks and lie in court proceedings about their wrongful acts. “It doesn’t have to be a ‘Rodney King-type’ thing,” Shah said. “We don’t have to lay a hand on you. It’s in what we write and what we say. All we have to do is write it down and say it and it’s gospel. We can go anywhere in any city in this county and do what we want. “If we don’t like somebody or are in a mood for mischief, we write a report on that person that jams them up forever,” Shah said in an interview Tuesday. “And it happens more frequently to African-Americans then to anybody else. “They hate black people, all black people: males, females, old, young, rich, poor. They don’t have to be gang member, they don’t care,” Shah continued. “They treat blacks worse than any other people — whites, Latinos, Asians. They treat blacks like they aren’t even human. I’ve seen some horrible treatment of blacks. And I’ve had all I’m going to take, because it makes no sense. It really makes no sense to Shah because the deputy, who is as white as the driven snow, is probably blacker than me. He was adopted by a black family and grew up in Watts, at 8829 Holmes Ave. He currently lives in Ladera Heights and is a member of the all-black House of Prayer Church of God in Christ, which is pastored by his ste father, and he has a 5-year-old son, Sayeed Isaiah Shah, who lives with his black mother in Compton. An anti-black racist culture is not something Shah can easily tolerate. And he said his refusal to tolerate it has resulted in his being harassed, framed, defamed, labeled insane and threatened by his fellow sheriff’s deputies. He wears a bullet proof vest and has been on medical leave ever since he began defying the culture.
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Shah (pronounced Shaw) has been a law enforcement official for eight years. He was originally an officer with the Compton Police Department, a job he loved. “Working with the Compton PD was a wonderful experience,” he said. “I loved the city, the people. I worked with a lot of great guys and we really felt good about doing the job out there.” He remained with his beloved Compton PD for only a year and a half because in 2000, Compton disbanded its own police force and handed its law enforcement chores over to the Sheriff’s Department. The Compton police officers were absorbed into the county department and Shah became a sheriff’s deputy. He was assigned to the jail system “and that’s when I began seeing all these horrible acts being directed at black people,” Shah said. “In the jails, it seemed like more of them were being sent to the hole for disciplinary reasons. They got short-changed on blankets and food, they were just treated worse than any other race of people and I just couldn’t figure out why. “But I was brand new and was trying to be a good deputy like they wanted and kept my mouth shut and that was it,” he said. “Then I left the jail a year later and hit the street and I saw that the practices, the way they treated black people were just horrible, just horrible. Blacks are just not liked, period. At least in the areas where I worked. They’re just not liked and I can’t understand why.” The proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back occurred in the summer of 2005 when Shah responded to a disturbance call aboard an MTA bus in Leimert Park. After he conducted his initial investigation, he determined that a crime had occurred and began writing a misdemeanor crime report. He turned his report over to a sergeant [whose name has been redacted from the complaint] for review. The sergeant asked for a description of the suspect. Shah told him he was an African-American in his mid-20s. According to the complaint, the sergeant insisted that Shah change the misdemeanor report to a felony report. Shah refused and the two argued. The sergeant allegedly told Shah: “What’s wrong with you? That guy needs to go to jail. You never take black people to jail. Do you think you’re black too, Deputy Shah? I order you to change the report to a felony, or I will write you up.” Shah defiantly said no. Then the sergeant reportedly said: “You’re not black. Don’t talk black. Don’t act black. This black guy needs to go to jail. Stop being afraid of taking black guys to jail. You need to take more black people to jail.” |
Shah had to take his report to another supervisor to get a misdemeanor crime report approved. His court document states that when he began reporting deputies’ wrongdoings to higher-ups and complaining about the mistreatment of blacks to department heads, he was branded “crazy” and targeted for various forms of retaliatory actions, including false reports as to the quality and quantity of his work. You know, the usual things that happen whenever a worker bucks the bosses. And Sheriff Lee Baca and the rest of these bosses have been doing everything they can to get this case thrown out of court. The county has hired a private law firm to fight Shah’s suit and “the people’s lawyers” have hurled a ton of paper at it, filing motion upon motion, forcing amended complaints, stalling depositions, etc. The depositions are currently under way, however. In addition to the racial ramifications of this suit, some sympathetic sheriff’s insider has provided Shah and his attorney, Lola M. McAlpin-Grant, a lovely black woman from Inglewood, with complicated confidential data which shows the Sheriff’s Department may have committed fraud with its Metropolitan Transit Contract communities, an allegation McAlpin-Grant has incorporated into Shah’s suit. A jury trial, as demanded by Shah, would be anathema to the Sheriff’s Department. They’ve pulled out all the stops and are trying to make this one go far, far away. Yet, sheriff’s spokesman Steve Whitmore, said about Shah’s suit, as he does about every complaint made against his department, “we look forward to telling the whole story about this case in a court of law. Nowhere near the whole story is being told now,” blah, blah, blah. (I asked him if he was ready to tell the promised “whole story” about the sheriff’s deputy beat down of Mark Young, the black middle-aged but well-built probation officer, several weeks ago. He wasn’t.) Activist Najee Ali is aware of Shah’s suit and he said Wednesday that he stands with the deputy. “When this case goes to trial, the black leaders and the black community will be there to support this deputy,” Ali said. “He has shown tremendous courage to blow the whistle on racism in the Sheriff’s Department. This officer is only confirming what many black people have said and experienced all along.” After summing up his experiences with the Sheriff’s
Department, Shah shook his head and wondered why the Los Angeles Police
Department is under a federal consent decree order to reform its racist
ways, but the Sheriff’s Department — the principal law enforcement
agency for the entire county of Los Angeles — does not. I wonder
the same thing. |
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