0^\ LUME 94 - NUMBER 32 RU THL DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 2015 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 50 CENTS Half of blacks say police have treated them unfairly ’resident Barack Obama listens as Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga. speaks in the South irt Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White ise complex in Washington, Thursday, Aug. 6, on the 50th anniversary of the ing Rights Act. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster) Mobilizing for the Oct. 10 'Justice or Else’ March in D.C. By Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. PA Columnist Ken The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan issues a sacred clarion call for a national and interna- Imobilization for justice, freedom and equality, millions of people across America and throughout rid respond with responsive enthusiasm and energy. Such was the case in response to the minister’s rthe Million Man March (MMM) in Washington, D.C. 20 years ago. I believe that history will be once again this year on October 10 in Washington, D.C. Analysis lister Farrakhan boldly has issued a new call: Justice Or Else mobilization on the occasion of the nniversary of the Million Man March on the National Mall. The minister asserted, “On 10.10.15, low the world our unity.” Our demand for justice will be a united demand. It will be an unequivocal d for equal justice. bout hesitation or fear, I made a decision to join Minister Farrakhan in 1965 to help him organize obilize the historic Million Man March as its national director. Being an ordained minister in the IChurch of Christ, I knew then as I still know today that God continues to bless Minister Farrakhan sly with the vision and mission to redeem and empower black Americans, Latino Americans, Native cans and all others who struggle for a better quality of life in America and throughout the world. four times the size of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, the Million Man is believed to have been the largest march ever on the nation’s capital. I believe that God hears swers the prayers of people and communities that cry out for justice. Today, we must organize and ze again with renewed vigor and determination. lost every day now we hear and learn of another dastardly fatal act of racially motivate police I 1 ' 1 - and misconduct that leaves our families and communities in great sorrow, grief and anger. As ■dent and CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), Igetthedailyreportsand ■ feeds about the growing systematic injustices in the United States from our 206 African American- Bd newspapers based in every region of the nation. We are the trusted voice of black America and I am telling you that the suffering cup of patience in :k America has run over. The madness of constant videotaped modern-day lynching of black people ■ U.S. has become intolerable. We are simply not going to take it anymore! It is providential and a welcome sight to witness the steady growth and development of Justice Or Else 1M 20th Anniversary Local Organizing Committees (LOCs) in every major city. A broad cross section deal community activists from the NAACP, the National Urban League, National Action Network, the Blow PUSH Coalition and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), Latino and Native terican organizations and many others are joining with Nation of Islam organizers and officials to build Bng national network of LOCs. Bontinued On Page 3) •ashboard video key in police officer’s manslaughter trial By Jeffrey Collins HARLOTTE (AP) - Jurors have heard their first account of what happened in the seconds when - Charlotte police officer shot and killed an unarmed black man looking for help after a car crash. a ootage from officer Adam Neal’s dashboard camera was shown publically for the first time as Neal bed in the third day of fellow officer Randall Kerrick’s voluntary manslaughter trial. eal returned to the stand Aug. 6. n the September 2013 video, Jonathan Ferrell runs out of the camera’s view just before he is shot Kerrick can’t be seen firing his gun 12 times. But the sound of each shot was recorded through the ophone on Neal’s uniform, along with the voice of someone yelling “Get on the ground!” three times, errell was hit by 10 bullets. urors watched 36 minutes of video. The critical portion lasted only about five seconds. errell is seen in the headlights of officer Adam Neal’s cruiser as Neal pulls up without using his blue s or siren. Neal testified that Ferrell was pacing, and Neal saw red laser dots on Ferrell’s chest as her officer aimed his Taser at Ferrell. s Ferrell runs out of the camera’s view, a voice is heard yelling “Get on the ground!” Four shots are , then a pause and eight more shots are heard as someone keeps yelling to for Ferrell to get on the nd. After the final shot, a voice yells “Don’t move!” rrell’s family had seen the footage as part of a wrongful death lawsuit they settled with the city of irlotte for $2.25 million. They showed no reaction to it last Wednesday. I Dashboard footage from Kerrick’s car and the car of a third officer is al so expected to be introduced [Vidence. prosecutors said Kerrick is guilty because he overreacted when he killed Ferrell. Authorities said the cers did not identify themselves and Neal’s video appears to confirm that. Defense lawyers said the shooting was justified because Ferrell charged officers before they could w out what was going on and tried to grab Kerrick’s gun when he fell on the officer. gal testified he didn’t pull his gun, Taser or baton because he planned to wrestle the 24-year-old for- Florida A&M football player to take him into custody. Neal and other officers were investigating after Oman called 911 and reported Ferrell was trying to break down her door as he pounded on it looking iFP- wider cross-examination, Neal said he didn’t fire his weapon because he would have hit Kerrick. He •agreed that he told investigators Ferrell looked like he was “amped up” and was in a“zombie state.” Derrick, 28, faces up to 11 years in prison if convicted of voluntary manslaughter. The Charlotte- yklenburg Police Department hired him in 2011 after he had worked as an animal control officer. By Jesse J. Holland WASHINGTON (AP) - A majority of blacks in the United States - more than 3 out of 5 - say they or a family member have personal experience with being treated unfairly by the police, and their race is the reason. Half of African-American respondents, including 6 in 10 black men, said they personally had been treated unfairly by po lice because of their race, com pared with 3 percent of whites. Another 15 percent said they knew of a family member who had been treated unfairly by the police because of their race. This information, from a sur vey conducted by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, comes as the Michael Brown shooting in Fer guson, Missouri, approaches its first anniversary and the nation continues to grapple with police- related deaths of black Ameri cans. . White Americans who live in more diverse communities - where census data show at least 25 percent of the population is non-white - were more likely than other whites to say police in their communities mistreat minorities, 58 percent to 42 per cent. And they’re more likely to see the police as too quick to use deadly force, 42 percent to 29 percent. Larry Washington, 30, of Merrillville, Indiana, described his encounter with a white po lice officer when he was arrested for theft in Burbank, Illinois, as a teenager. “When I got to the police station, the officer who ar rested me told me that I looked like I wanted to do something about it,” Washington said, add ing, “And he kept calling me 'nigger.’” “It’s been like this for a long time,” Washington said. “It’s just now that everybody starting to record it and stuff, it’s just hitting the spotlight. Most Caucasians, they think it’s just starting to go on when it’s been like this.” The AP-NORC poll also showed: -More than two-thirds of blacks - 71 percent - thought po lice are treated too leniently by the criminal justice system when they hurt or kill people. A third of whites say police are getting away with it, while nearly half - 46 percent - say the police are treated fairly by the criminal jus tice system. -Sixty-two percent of whites said a major reason why police violence happens is that civil ians confront the police, rather than cooperate, when they are stopped. Three out of 4 blacks, or 75 percent, said it is because the consequences of police mis conduct are minimal, and few officers are prosecuted for ex cessive use of force. More than 7 in 10 blacks identified problems with race relations,. along with poor police-community' rela tions, as major reasons for police violence. -Nearly 3 out of 4 whites - 74 percent - thought race had noth ing to do with how police in their communities decide to use dead ly force. Among blacks, 71 per cent thought police were more likely to use deadly force against black people in their communi ties, and 85 percent said the same thing applied generally across the country. Fifty-eight percent of whites thought race had noth ing to do with police decisions in most communities on use of deadly force. Seventy-two percent of whites said they always or often trust police to do right by them and their community, while 66 percent of blacks said they only sometimes, rarely or never trust the police to do what is right. David A. Clarke Jr, sheriff in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, said African-Americans have more encounters with police than whites because of crime rates in urban areas. “If you have more interaction with the police because of the crime and the disorder in our urban centers - the American ghetto I like to say it - it’s going to skew the numbers,” Clarke said. (Continued On Page 3) Attendees react to President Barack Obama during his re marks in a town hall at the Young African Leaders Initiative (YAL1) Mandela Washington Fellowship Presidential Summit at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington, D.C., Aug. 3. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza) Confederate monument vandalized for second time in 3 weeks By Emily Masters RALEIGH (AP) - A Confederate monument in Charlotte has been vandalized for the second time in three weeks, police said Tuesday. The names of eight of the nine people killed in the mass shooting inside a historic black church in Charleston, South Carolina, were spray painted on one side of the monument. Shooting victim Ethel Lance’s name was not included. The phrase, “The cause for which they fought -- the cause of slav ery - was wrong,” was spray-painted on the other side of the granite monument, which was first unveiled in 1929. No one has been charged and the investigation is ongoing, said Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police spokesman Keith Trietley. Police be lieve the monument was vandalized between 11 p.m. Monday and 9 a.m. Tuesday. On July 16, liquid cement was smeared on the monument, which was cleaned at Mecklenburg County’s expense. The monument’s inscription gives “grateful recognition” to the Confederate soldiers who “preserved the Anglo-Saxon civilization of the South.” The granite monument also features four Confederate battle flags. The vandalism comes as the nation debates the appropriateness of the Confederate battle flag and Confederate monuments after the shooting of nine worshippers at 'Mother Emanuel’ AME. Church in Charleston, South Carolina. The suspect in that case, a white man, posed with the Confederate flag in photographs. Last month, South Carolina removed the Confederate battle flag from its statehouse grounds but left the Confederate memorial stand ing. Also in July, North Carolina passed a law banning state or local authorities from removing “objects of remembrance” — including Confederate monuments -- from public property without state leg islative action. The Mecklenburg County monument was one of two monuments vandalized in Charlotte on July 16. The word “racist” was spray- painted on a memorial at Old City Hall. The city removed the monu ment and relocated it to a city warehouse for cleaning, where it re mains. “The city is still working to determine the most effective and cost- efficient measures to clean and repair the monument,” said corporate city spokesman Ken Brown. “Considering the possibility of repeat acts of vandalism, the city is also exploring measures to apply a pro tectant.” . The Old City Hall monument was donated by the Confederate Memorial Association of Charlotte in 1977. The United Confederate Veterans raised funds with Charlotte citizens to pay for the Mecklen burg County monument. Maya Angelou for sale: Belongings of late poet draw buyers WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - Crowds are funneling through late poet Maya Angelou’s home for a sale of some of the furniture, books and everyday possessions she left behind. The three-day estate sale for the acclaimed writer and activist is wraped up Saturday in Winston-Salem. Items for sale ranged from boxes of light bulbs and bags of cheese knives to Angelou’s personal typewriter. Proceeds will be donated to Angelou’s foundation and other chari ties.