Akai Gurley Protesters Gather At Housing Project Where He Was Killed

NEW YORK — As rain poured down in New York City on Saturday afternoon, more than 50 protesters gathered at the Louis Pink Houses, the Brooklyn housing project where a police officer shot and killed an unarmed man last month. The New York Police Department has called the shooting of 28-year-old Akai Gurley an accident. To keep dry, the protesters huddled under a red tent at the entrance to the building where Gurley was killed. Protesters chanted “We are all Akai Gurley” and “From Ferguson to Palestine, occupation is a crime.” They held yellow signs that read “Jail Killer Cops” and “Fists Up, Fight Back.” Rosetta Jordan, 65, lives in the neighborhood. She said Gurley’s death enraged but didn’t surprise her. “That’s become the…

NEW YORK — As rain poured down in New York City on Saturday afternoon, more than 50 protesters gathered at the Louis Pink Houses, the Brooklyn housing project where a police officer shot and killed an unarmed man last month. The New York Police Department has called the shooting of 28-year-old Akai Gurley an accident.

To keep dry, the protesters huddled under a red tent at the entrance to the building where Gurley was killed. Protesters chanted “We are all Akai Gurley” and “From Ferguson to Palestine, occupation is a crime.” They held yellow signs that read “Jail Killer Cops” and “Fists Up, Fight Back.”

pink houses

Rosetta Jordan, 65, lives in the neighborhood. She said Gurley’s death enraged but didn’t surprise her. “That’s become the norm here. All you can do is pray for your kids and pray for yourself,” she said.

Someone should be punished for killing Gurley, Jordan said. “That was someone’s son. You can’t just take a life like that.”

She doesn’t trust the cops, she said, because they harass everyone. “They harass the children. They harass people for sitting in a bench. You can’t even sit down on a bench — it’s like a prison. They send cops out here that don’t know the community, so they’re frightened and the community is frightened,” she said. “The cops are supposed to be there to help us, but instead they’re killing us.”

pink houses protest 1

Gurley’s wake was held on Friday, just days after a grand jury on Staten Island chose not to indict a police officer on charges in the chokehold death of Eric Garner. That decision, along with a similar decision in the Michael Brown case in Missouri, touched off widespread protests in New York and elsewhere. The three men all died at the hands of police officers; the three men were all black.

On Friday, Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson announced that he would impanel a grand jury to consider charges against Officer Peter Liang, the rookie cop who shot Gurley. That came on the heels of a report in the New York Daily News alleging that Liang had texted his union representative, rather than call for help, in the immediate aftermath of the shooting.

pink houses protest 2

Alex Salazar, a former officer with the Los Angeles Police Department and current private investigator, was one of the protesters at the Pink Houses on Saturday. He said he had come to New York to show solidarity.

“I’m an ex-pig,” Salazar told the crowd. “I was in the 1992 riots. I saw the city of Los Angeles almost burn down because people were tired of this.”

akai gurley

Victoria Phillips, 34, who goes by Miss V., used to live nearby. She said that three days before Gurley was killed, she had blogged about being searched in the area. She spoke to the crowd through a bullhorn.

“That officer had his gun out, hand on the trigger because he’s scared of black people,” she said, conjuring the scene on the day Gurley died. “They can call it an accident, but I’m going to call it what it was. … They say he heard some noises and got scared. Well, he was in a residential hall. What the hell did he expect?”

pink houses protest 3

She claimed that police are scared now because they don’t know where the next protest will pop up.

“They are scared, they are terrorized,” she said, referring to the police. “Why? Because they don’t know what the f**k to expect. We gotta keep it up.”

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Akai Gurley Protesters Gather At Housing Project Where He Was Killed

No Felony Charges For SPD Cop’s Bone-Breaking Punch Of Handcuffed Woman

Federal prosecutors say they will review an incident in which a Seattle police officer punched and seriously injured a handcuffed, intoxicated woman, after King County prosecutors said Friday they won’t charge the officer.

Federal prosecutors say they will review an incident in which a Seattle police officer punched and seriously injured a handcuffed, intoxicated woman, after King County prosecutors said Friday they won’t charge the officer.

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No Felony Charges For SPD Cop’s Bone-Breaking Punch Of Handcuffed Woman

‘My Son Wasn’t Just Diagnosed With Autism. He Was Diagnosed With A Target On His Head’

Two months ago, my wife and I sat in the Marcus Autism Center’s exam room and heard the doctors tell us our son, Langston, had Autism Spectrum Disorder. I can’t articulate how I felt then because now, even weeks removed, I can barely articulate how I’m feeling now as I type these words.

Two months ago, my wife and I sat in the Marcus Autism Center’s exam room and heard the doctors tell us our son, Langston, had Autism Spectrum Disorder. I can’t articulate how I felt then because now, even weeks removed, I can barely articulate how I’m feeling now as I type these words.

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‘My Son Wasn’t Just Diagnosed With Autism. He Was Diagnosed With A Target On His Head’

To Address Tech’s Diversity Woes, Start With The Vanishing Comp Sci Classroom

In May 2014 at the all-girls Emma Willard School in upstate New York, nearly a third of the school’s 300+ students were preparing for their final Advanced Placement (AP) exams. But exactly three were studying for the AP Computer Science exam—and they weren’t doing so on campus. The school (full disclosure: my alma mater) completely eliminated its computer science program in 2009.

In May 2014 at the all-girls Emma Willard School in upstate New York, nearly a third of the school’s 300+ students were preparing for their final Advanced Placement (AP) exams. But exactly three were studying for the AP Computer Science exam—and they weren’t doing so on campus. The school (full disclosure: my alma mater) completely eliminated its computer science program in 2009.

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To Address Tech’s Diversity Woes, Start With The Vanishing Comp Sci Classroom

Here’s The First Trailer For Lifetime’s Whitney Houston Biopic

The first trailer for Lifetime’s Whitney Houston biopic is finally here, and it looks pretty promising. “Whitney,” which is Oscar-nominated actress Angela Bassett’s directorial debut, will follow the life story of the singer, focusing on her tumultuous relationship with Bobby Brown. The music legend will be played by Yaya DaCosta, who has appeared in “Lee Daniels’ The Butler,” “House” and “Ugly Betty.” Recent criticisms from Houston’s family have brought attention to the biopic. Back in July, the singer’s mother Cissy Houston told “Entertainment Tonight” that the family was “exhausted by the continuing misinformation and comments.” Despite the fact that Bassett had a personal relationship with Houston when they worked…

The first trailer for Lifetime’s Whitney Houston biopic is finally here, and it looks pretty promising.

“Whitney,” which is Oscar-nominated actress Angela Bassett’s directorial debut, will follow the life story of the singer, focusing on her tumultuous relationship with Bobby Brown. The music legend will be played by Yaya DaCosta, who has appeared in “Lee Daniels’ The Butler,” “House” and “Ugly Betty.”

Recent criticisms from Houston’s family have brought attention to the biopic. Back in July, the singer’s mother Cissy Houston told “Entertainment Tonight” that the family was “exhausted by the continuing misinformation and comments.” Despite the fact that Bassett had a personal relationship with Houston when they worked on the 1995 film “Waiting to Exhale,” Cissy Houston said, “No one connected with this movie knew Whitney or anything about her relationship with Bobby.”

On HuffPost Live back in October, Bassett responded to the film’s criticisms. While the actress admitted that she didn’t know the singer very intimately, she said she knows “a little about being in the spotlight, a little about celebrity and its demands.”

“I know about being a woman, about being a black woman that came up in a little hometown,” Basset said. We just hope it’s better than Lifetime’s Aaliyah biopic.

“Whitney” premieres on Jan. 17 at 8:00 p.m. ET on Lifetime.

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Here’s The First Trailer For Lifetime’s Whitney Houston Biopic

More Protests Expected After Funeral Of Akai Gurley

(Adds Brooklyn funeral, paragraph) By Robert MacMillan and Andrew Chung NEW YORK, Dec 6 (Reuters) – A fourth evening of demonstrations against police violence was expected in New York on Saturday after the funeral of a black man who was unarmed when he was shot dead by a police officer in a darkened stairwell of a Brooklyn apartment building. The shooting of Akai Gurley, 28, by a New York city police officer at a city housing project last month is the latest in a series of incidents fueling public outrage over what many see as a pattern of callous misuse of lethal force against minority groups. The district attorney in the New York City borough of Brooklyn said on Friday a grand jury would consider charges against Peter Liang, …

(Adds Brooklyn funeral, paragraph)

By Robert MacMillan and Andrew Chung

NEW YORK, Dec 6 (Reuters) – A fourth evening of demonstrations against police violence was expected in New York on Saturday after the funeral of a black man who was unarmed when he was shot dead by a police officer in a darkened stairwell of a Brooklyn apartment building.

The shooting of Akai Gurley, 28, by a New York city police officer at a city housing project last month is the latest in a series of incidents fueling public outrage over what many see as a pattern of callous misuse of lethal force against minority groups.

The district attorney in the New York City borough of Brooklyn said on Friday a grand jury would consider charges against Peter Liang, the officer who shot Gurley. Police have said Liang may have accidentally discharged his gun.

Gurley was eulogized on the morning after a cold, drenching rain helped tame protests in New York on Friday. There were less than 20 arrests, police said, compared with more than 200 the night before.

The demonstrations began in New York and other cities on Wednesday after a grand jury declined to bring charges against Daniel Pantaleo, a white New York City police officer, in the July death of Eric Garner, a black 43-year-old father of six.

That decision came nine days after a Missouri grand jury chose not to indict a white policeman for the shooting death in August of an unarmed black teenager, spurring two nights of arson and unrest in a St. Louis suburb.

The killings and the decisions by grand juries to return no indictments against the officers involved have rekindled a national debate over race relations in the United States.

In Brooklyn, mourners gathered on rainy Saturday morning at a Baptist church to remember Gurley, the father of a 2-year-old girl.

“Today we’re here because of how Akai was killed, and it’s called racial profiling,” Kevin Powell, a community activist, was quoted by local media as saying in his eulogy.

The turnout for Friday’s protests was sharply lower than the thousands of demonstrators who briefly disrupted traffic at key interactions, bridges and highways on the previous two nights.

Even so, protesters and police alike have showed restraint since the demonstrations began, and no major violence has flared despite the outrage felt by many over the deaths of black men at the hands of police in New York, Missouri and elsewhere.

“The protests remained very peaceful throughout the night,” Detective Michael DeBonis, a spokesman for the New York Police Department, said on Saturday.

While the demonstrations were smaller, they were arguably more dramatic. More than 100 people stormed into an Apple Store on Fifth Avenue to stage a five-minute “die-in,” sprawling on the floor as surprised holiday shoppers and employees watched in bewilderment.

Similar demonstrations were staged at Macy’s flagship department store in Herald Square and at Grand Central Terminal.

Protests also unfolded in Chicago, Boston, Washington, New Orleans and Oakland, California where marchers chanted phrases such as “Black lives matter.”

In Cleveland on Friday, the family of a black 12-year-old boy fatally shot by police filed a lawsuit against the city, a day after the federal government found the police department systematically uses excessive force. (Additional reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Writing by Frank McGurty; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)

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More Protests Expected After Funeral Of Akai Gurley

Nicki Minaj Shares Selfies From ‘SNL’ Rehearsals

Nicki Minaj is set to perform on “Saturday Night Live” this week, and she’s so excited that she decided to share two selfies with fans. The rapper posted two rather revealing photos to her Instagram on Friday night during “SNL” rehearsals. Wearing a plunging blue lace top, Minaj smiled in one photo with the caption, “SNL REHEARSALS R GIVING ME LIFE. WATCH TMRW.” In the second Minaj looks a little more serious, and, as E! Online pointed out, came rather close to a nip slip. SNL REHEARSALS R GIVING ME LIFE. WATCH TMRW A photo posted by Nicki Minaj (@nickiminaj) on Dec 12, 2014 at 3:04pm PST A photo posted by Nicki Minaj (@nickiminaj) on Dec 12, 2014 at 3:12pm PST Minaj…

Nicki Minaj is set to perform on “Saturday Night Live” this week, and she’s so excited that she decided to share two selfies with fans.

The rapper posted two rather revealing photos to her Instagram on Friday night during “SNL” rehearsals. Wearing a plunging blue lace top, Minaj smiled in one photo with the caption, “SNL REHEARSALS R GIVING ME LIFE. WATCH TMRW.” In the second Minaj looks a little more serious, and, as E! Online pointed out, came rather close to a nip slip.

SNL REHEARSALS R GIVING ME LIFE. WATCH TMRW

A photo posted by Nicki Minaj (@nickiminaj) on

A photo posted by Nicki Minaj (@nickiminaj) on

Minaj will be joined by host James Franco on Saturday, and the two are apparently such good friends that they even have a secret handshake. We just hope they end up in a skit together.

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Nicki Minaj Shares Selfies From ‘SNL’ Rehearsals

Andre 3000 Reveals He Never Wanted To Do Outkast Reunion Tour

There’s a reason Andre Benjamin, best known under his stage name Andre 3000, wore 47 custom jumpsuits during this summer’s Outkast reunion tour. In a recent interview with The Fader, Benjamin revealed that the jumpsuits, which are currently being shown in an exhibit at Art Basel in Miami, were his way of expressing his feelings about the hip-hop duo’s 20th anniversary tour. “Honestly—I didn’t wanna do the tour,” Benjamin said. The rapper may have reunited with Outkast partner Big Boi for the first time onstage in 10 years, but he wasn’t excited about the music. “I’m like, how am I gonna present these songs? I don’t have nothing new to say,” Benjamin told the magazine. To add something fresh to his…

There’s a reason Andre Benjamin, best known under his stage name Andre 3000, wore 47 custom jumpsuits during this summer’s Outkast reunion tour.

In a recent interview with The Fader, Benjamin revealed that the jumpsuits, which are currently being shown in an exhibit at Art Basel in Miami, were his way of expressing his feelings about the hip-hop duo’s 20th anniversary tour. “Honestly—I didn’t wanna do the tour,” Benjamin said.

The rapper may have reunited with Outkast partner Big Boi for the first time onstage in 10 years, but he wasn’t excited about the music. “I’m like, how am I gonna present these songs? I don’t have nothing new to say,” Benjamin told the magazine. To add something fresh to his performances, Benjamin said that he came up with the idea to create jumpsuits with unique slogans on them. “It became a theme where I was more excited about this than the actual show,” he said.

But overall, the rapper still feels that he let his fans down and is doing the Art Basel exhibit to make up for it in a way. “I felt like a sell-out, honestly,” Benjamin said. “So I was like, if I’m in on the joke, I’ll feel cool about it.”

A film by Greg Brunkalla titled “Trumpets” is also playing alongside Benjamin’s exhibit. It will project the quotes from the suits along with images to provide further commentary.

For the full interview, head to The Fader.

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Andre 3000 Reveals He Never Wanted To Do Outkast Reunion Tour

St. Louis Police Pursue Assault Charge Against Youngest Member Of Ferguson Commission

WASHINGTON — The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department this week convinced the local prosecutor’s office to charge a prominent young Ferguson protester with misdemeanor assault because he allegedly made fleeting physical contact with a law enforcement official blocking access to St. Louis City Hall during a demonstration last month. Rasheen Aldridge, a 20-year-old community activist, has been protesting in and around the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson on a regular basis ever since then-police officer Darren Wilson shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown on Aug. 9. Last month, Gov. Jay Nixon (D) named him to the Ferguson Commission, a task force intended to address problems in the St. Louis region that…

WASHINGTON — The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department this week convinced the local prosecutor’s office to charge a prominent young Ferguson protester with misdemeanor assault because he allegedly made fleeting physical contact with a law enforcement official blocking access to St. Louis City Hall during a demonstration last month.

Rasheen Aldridge, a 20-year-old community activist, has been protesting in and around the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson on a regular basis ever since then-police officer Darren Wilson shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown on Aug. 9. Last month, Gov. Jay Nixon (D) named him to the Ferguson Commission, a task force intended to address problems in the St. Louis region that were highlighted in the wake of Brown’s death. On Dec. 1, Aldridge was at the White House to meet with President Barack Obama to discuss the relationship between law enforcement and local communities. (He later said he left the meeting “disappointed” with Obama, whom he used to consider his “idol.”)

It’s no surprise, then, that the misdemeanor assault charge brought by St. Louis Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce against Aldridge grabbed local and even international headlines and gained traction in conservative circles. After all, a story about a prominent Ferguson protester being charged with assault fits in perfectly with the broad generalizations that many have made about those demonstrators: namely, that they’re violent “thugs” with no respect for the law.

“From street mob activist to White House guest,” conservative blogger Jim Hoft wrote on his website, Gateway Pundit, about the charge against Aldridge. “Torch a town — Get invited to White House!” he added. But Hoft offered absolutely no proof that Aldridge had participated in any capacity in the looting, vandalism and arson that hit parts of Ferguson after a grand jury decided not to indict Wilson in Brown’s death last month.

One video of the alleged misdemeanor assault appears to show Aldridge, in a gray cap, attempting to gain access to St. Louis City Hall along with a number of other demonstrators on Nov. 26, less than 48 hours after the grand jury decision was announced. At the time, the public building was on lockdown because authorities thought someone in the crowd may have had spray paint.

charlie riedel ferguson
Rasheen Aldridge (center in the gray cap) shortly before he came into brief contact with a city marshal (left) as protesters tried to enter St. Louis City Hall on Nov. 26, 2014. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Aldridge — who is just 5 feet 4 inches tall and weighs 110 pounds, according to court documents — seems to be trying to open a City Hall door as a much larger city marshal stands guard. The marshal then appears to shove Aldridge, and the protester’s hand touches and perhaps pushes the official.

Soon after the incident, police in riot gear wielding pepper spray would break up the demonstration around City Hall, claiming that the entire daytime assembly was unlawful because a few demonstrators “made contact” with law enforcement.

Susan Ryan, a spokeswoman for the Office of the St. Louis Circuit Attorney, emphasized that the third-degree assault charge against Aldridge is the “lowest-level misdemeanor available under the law.” Aldridge has not been arrested, according to Ryan. Instead, she said, “He’ll get a note in the mail, just like a parking ticket.”

Ryan said that the prosecutor’s office had a duty to evaluate the case after it was referred to the office by the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department.

“When we’ve got evidence that somebody has violated the law, then we review that evidence, and if we believe we can prove it beyond a reasonable doubt, we will charge somebody,” Ryan said. “All over the county, protesters are being arrested for violating the law, and it’s unfortunate. But there are peaceful ways to protest without shoving city marshals or without hurting police officers.”

Joyce, the circuit attorney, made a similar point in an interview with a local Fox station.

“This has nothing to do with the protest or the speech or anything that anybody was saying,” Joyce said. “You can say anything you want, but what you can’t do is physically, you know, touch someone or push them or shove them or spit on them. And so that’s the line, and that line was crossed here.”

Aldridge is a first-time offender, according to Ryan, and it is “highly unlikely” that he will face any jail time if he is found guilty. “He’ll probably get probation, and he’ll probably get a probation that would require some community service, and after a certain amount of time it would be erased from his record,” she said, while adding that it was not her decision to make.

Ryan said that Aldridge’s role on the Ferguson Commission did not play any part in the decision to charge him. She referred questions about the police investigation to the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, but a spokeswoman there declined an interview request because the case is now in the hands of the circuit attorney. Ryan said that her office was in a “no win” situation because of Aldridge’s higher profile.

“If the evidence was there, and it was, and if we had decided not to charge him because of his role on the commission, we would have been criticized for having him have special treatment,” Ryan said. “If we charge him based upon the evidence, then we’re criticized for charging someone who is on the commission.”

But the lack of any sort of swift disciplinary action against many police officers who used very aggressive force against peaceful demonstrators in the months after Brown’s death versus the speedy charges against one prominent protester for very minor physical contact with a law enforcement official raises concerns in the community.

“The contrast that we see … between the actions of police that are caught on camera versus the actions of protesters that are caught on camera, how and whether these things are prosecuted — the disparity is remarkable,” Rev. Starsky Wilson, the co-chair of the Ferguson Commission, told The Huffington Post.

“I’ve had a team of my church members who have been involved in actions, including being present for some of those actions downtown last Wednesday, and they were concerned about the level of aggression that they saw from police out on those lines, particularly from City Hall,” Wilson said.

The Don’t Shoot Coalition issued a statement condemning the “retaliatory” action and declaring that it fit into a pattern of “exaggerated charges” being brought against protesters.

“Numerous activists in our movement have been followed, harassed and intimidated by the St. Louis Metropolitan Police and other local police agencies,” Michael T. McPhearson, co-chair of the Don’t Shoot Coalition, said in a statement. “The treatment of Rasheen stands out as politically motivated in response to his leadership on the ground and as a Ferguson Commission member.”

So far, the charge seems unlikely to affect Aldridge’s role on the Ferguson Commission. Wilson said that Aldridge’s perspective is “remarkably valuable for the work that we have to do.” Representatives of Gov. Nixon’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Chris King, managing editor of The St. Louis American, said that he was made aware of one of the videos showing Aldridge’s interaction with the marshal before the charge was brought forward and that he believed the charge was “avoidable.”

“In a way, if you think about it, it makes him even a better commissioner, given the role he was expected to play on the [Ferguson] Commission, which is a kid that’s been there,” King said. “How perfect that he’s appointed as the youth protester commissioner and then gets [charged].”

Aldridge’s lawyer told The St. Louis American that he planned to fight the case. “This is a bogus charge. Looking at the video, you don’t see him intentionally act against that law enforcement officer,” said Jerryl Christmas.

Aldridge did not respond to HuffPost’s interview request, but tweeted on Friday that “Fighting against injustices is in my DNA cant stop me even if they tried.”

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St. Louis Police Pursue Assault Charge Against Youngest Member Of Ferguson Commission

A City Of ‘Broken Trust’

Eleven days after a Cleveland police officer shot and killed Tamir Rice, an overwhelmingly black congregation of mourners gathered to say good-bye to the 12-year-boy.

Eleven days after a Cleveland police officer shot and killed Tamir Rice, an overwhelmingly black congregation of mourners gathered to say good-bye to the 12-year-boy.

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A City Of ‘Broken Trust’