Milwaukee Police Chief Focuses Attention on the "slow-motion mass murders" of Black Males (White Supremacists/Racists are Responsible for Black on Black Violence)
/
More Plans to Use Police Cruisers as Coffins? On Thursday racist suspect Tom Barrett, the Mayor of Milwaukee said, "We are fighting for the freedom of the people in this country to be safe." [MORE] Safe from who? On October 23, 2012 Milwaukee police Chief Edward Flynn (in photo with Barrett) acknowledged that white Milwaukee cops did not act appropriately in the custodial death of Derek Williams, an unarmed Black man. Officers first crushed Williams during a violent arrest and then ignored his final pleas for help in the back of their police cruiser. He suffocated to death while handcuffed, naked from a strip search, begging for their help. It is captured on graphic video which was released in September 2012. (graphic video below, no sound for first minute). [MORE] The problem is white supremacy/racism. Flynn's solution? Officers are now required to call an ambulance if a suspect asks for medical attention." [MORE]
Pretending to promote justice he is also now offering "solutions" to what he has called the "slow motion mass murders" of non-whites -as he has announced more Unconstitional stops & searches of non-white people ("in areas where the violence is highest").
From [HERE] As the conversation over gun violence unfolds in Washington and across the nation, a group of Midwestern mayors, police chiefs, prosecutors and other law enforcement personnel gathered in Minneapolis on Thursday to push for new ways to keep their communities safe. Chief Flynn attracted much of the attention at the summit, outlining differences between massacres such as the shootings in Newtown, Conn., which do not happen frequently, and the daily drumbeat of urban violence, which he termed "slow-motion mass murders."
At the summit, Flynn noted that Milwaukee had 92 homicides last year. There were 86 in 2011 and 95 in 2010. Also, there were 510 nonfatal shootings in the city last year, compared with 473 in 2011. At the summit, Flynn noted that Milwaukee had 92 homicides last year. There were 86 in 2011 and 95 in 2010. Also, there were 510 nonfatal shootings in the city last year, compared with 473 in 2011.
According to Frances Cress Welsing, if you understand that racism is a strategy for white genetic survival then one can understand all present urban (non-white) center epidemics. Today we are witnessing a more subtle systemic approach to white genetic survival. The destruction of black males now is indirect, so that the Black male victims themselves can be led to participate in- and then be blamed for their own mass deaths. The strategy is for Black males to kill and destroy one another and then carry the blame.' [MORE]
According to Neely Fuller, 'whereas the victims of white supremacy who commit unjust acts, are guilty of having committed the acts, they are not responsible for the acts. White Supremacists are responsible for all unjust acts that victims of white supremacy commit against each other. White people dominant all areas of people activity - economics, education, entertainment, labor, law, politics, religion, sex and war. White Supremacists are responsible for everything that happens or does not happen to non-white people. Under white supremacy (racism), non-white people serve as tools and/or instruments through which major acts injustice are carried out.' [the Code]
Police Chief Plans More Unconstitutional Stops & Searches of Non-Whites From [HERE] After an eventful year in which the Milwaukee Police Department was on the defensive on issues involving flawed crime statistics and accusations of police misconduct in several high-profile cases, Chief Edward Flynn has a goal for this year to reduce violence in the city. "It's clear that the early success we had has eroded. (Criminals) have adjusted to our tactics. We have to refocus and repurpose our tactics," he said.
For Flynn, that means directing his staff and officers to focus on smaller areas of the city where crime is most prevalent. It means being more proactive about monitoring the criminals prowling the city's streets. It includes making a major effort to arrest people for firearms violations. And it means police officers will continue stepped-up motor vehicle stops. Flynn said his officers had taken 2,200 weapons off the streets over an 18-month period and sent those weapons to the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for tracing.
But the chief said the number of so-called gun recoveries has slowed down. "One of our theories is that we have vastly increased the number of field interviews and stops. We went from 50,000 motor vehicle stops per year to 189,000," he said.
He said his staff has instructed his officers to make what he called legal pretext stops. "You tightly focus on areas where the violence is highest," he said. "You give them a warning. The goal is to disrupt the criminal environment where robberies, car thefts and shots fired are taking place. Be highly visible to engage."
Flynn said his desire to reduce the violence on the streets competes with something else.
"We recognize that from a management point of view, we are up against the challenge of the unrelenting pressure of 911 calls," he said in an interview while he attended a gun-violence summit this week in Minneapolis. "Those neighborhoods have the highest rates of violence. The same ones that have a high degree of social dislocation and high degrees of social dysfunction that require police for a wide variety of noncriminal interventions. That's a real stress for us."
While Flynn has reducing violence in his sights, his department must still await the fallout from several cases. One includes next month's formal inquest into the death of Derek Williams, who died in police custody in July 2011; the department also is participating in a federal probe into Williams' death.
Another involves an incident in which officer Richard Schoen was accused of punching a handcuffed woman in the face.
And in April, four officers charged with felonies related to illegal rectal searches of suspects will go on trial. All have entered not-guilty pleas.
While no specific solutions were laid out by the summit's participants, Flynn said he intended to speak out on the issues of gun violence and regulation. Yet, he knows that will come at a cost.
"For most social issues, America's police chiefs are considered credible spokesmen," he said. "People listen to them. They are not seen as inherently political. But the firearms issue is so volatile that when police chiefs step forward, they find themselves under the same kind of political attack that their mayors and governors do."
But Flynn says he will participate in the debate. For him, the proliferation of under-regulated firearms threatens communities like Milwaukee.
Flynn says the national Police Executive Research Forum, a police research organization, will hold its annual meeting in Milwaukee in May.
And Flynn plans to pay a visit to Washington as well.