Coil cW 1 "J 1 f 1 " 1 1 ' 1 • • > 1 ■ ■ I 1 • Il I ■ l> > 11 I 1 1 I 1 II I 1 , Ih ! t , I , 1, 1 WILS 08/20/9'5 **CH I LI- WILSON LIBRARY M C COLLECTION - UNC-CH P D BOX 8090 CHAPEL HILL NC 27515-8090 juror issued challenge during talks in officer’s trial in Charlotte ■ By Tom Foreman Jr. ICHARLOTTE (AP) - A lor who heard evidence It he trial of a white North 'arolina police officer said he bllenged his colleagues to kermine what an unarmed lack man did to lead the de- Idant to fatally shoot him. I‘I wrote on the board: ■hat did Jonathan Ferrell land I underlined “do,” to arrant death: 10 shots.’I had pre this because there was Bhing that I had seen in the leeks preceding that showed I what he had done,” said tor Moses Wilson, who was ■ of the jurors who chose to vict Officer Randall Ker- : of voluntary manslaugh- ‘And I said that if anyone show me what he did, I ;ht change my vote - which ;oing to be for conviction acquittal, and every day, was my challenge,” he Ifter four days of delib- ations, the jury was dead- cked, 7-5 on an initial vote id 8-4 on the succeeding ree votes. And when Judge obert C. Ervin asked thejury reman last Friday (Aug. 21) further deliberations would five the impasse, the te rse was no. Ervin then ared a mistrial - a move sparked protests outside lourthouse and elsewhere, east two people were ar id. Tilson said when he first t into deliberations, he ’t know how he was go- o vote. From there, he de ci to review his notes and n his opinion. Vhile the military veteran 'ilson served two tours of tnam - and former Boston stable thought the pros- tion’s case should have id, Wilson said he was icularly upset with the de le’s presentation, which he I put Ferrell on trial. ■It became, not what he J, or what they did to him, it more, what he didn’t do, riat he should have known tat to do, so that the police Itld not either beat him sil- or shoot him,” Wilson said. .Kerrick, who is suspended thout pay from the force, ed 12 shots at Ferrell, hit- I him 10 times. Pros- utors said nonlethal force ould have been used to sub- I Ferrell, a former Florida ■M football player, in Sep- nber 2013. Two officers th Kerrick didn’t fire their ns. One of those officers Ruse a Taser. But Kerrick’s attorneys said 1 officer feared for his life ran he shot and killed Ferrell ale responding to a breaking- Bentering call. Wilson pointed to the three cl ients of voluntary manslaugh- described to the jury by Er- ■ including whether Kerrick deeded matching the threat to n by something far more ex- isive than what was needed to I the threat. ■That’s where we had our iblems,” he said, He said the entire incident bunted to “a night of mis- es” on both sides, but he said ' most egregious was that Ker- I didn’t do what he was sup- sed to do as a police officer. ’“You are not the judge. You notthejury,” he said. “You’re f person who comes to investi- 1 and decide whether a person >uld be arrested and sent else- ere.” MEMBERS OF THE DURHAM BRANCH OF THE NAACP REMEMBER JULIAN BOND Durham Branch NAA CP Remembers Julian Bond WASHINGTON (NNPA)/Staff Reports Members of the Durham Branch of the NAACP gathered on Sat., Aug. 22, at 2 p.m. to remember the late NAACP Chairman Julian Bond. Bond’s family had asked those who could make the trip to the family’s program to participate by spreading flowers into water at 2 p.m. “The family of Julian Bond wife, [Pam Horowitz, sons, Horace Mann Bond II, Jef frey and Michael; daughters, Phyllis Jane Bond McMillan and Julia Louise Bond; sister, Jane; brother, James; and his eight grandchildren] has issued the following statement: “We realize that many people loved and admired Julian. We understand that at this time of great loss for our family, that many you are feeling your own sense of loss. We also very much understand the need for community closure and an opportunity to celebrate the life of a great husband, father and grandfather, but also a great national treasure and civil rights icon. “To that end, we would like to provide the following explanation and invitation. “As all ofyou are aware, Julian Bond was a man who took strong positions and held fast to the things he believed in. Julian directed all of us, with respect to his desires for his final rites. We are honoring his wishes that his body be cremated and his ashes be committed to the Gulf of Mexico. This will be a private, family only, service. “This final request will be carried out in a burial at sea on Saturday, August 22, 2015 at 2:00 pm, Central Daylight Time. NAACP member Charles Perry led the delegation to a spot on the Eno River at the West Point on the Eno State Park. “Julian Bond contributed for years to the NAACP and this the least we can do for him. He was a giant.” Rev. Rachel Green led a prayer of remembrance on how he was instrumental in SNCC and moving the NAACP forward. Those sentiments were echoed at the Durham Branch’s monthly meeting on Sun- Aug. 23. Bond’s family continued: “Since we fully understand and appreciate that many of you consider Julian to b part of your family and would like to be a part of his official home going, we extent the following invitation. We invite you to gather at a body of water near your home ant precisely at 2:00 pm, CDT, spread flower pedals on the water and join us in biddins farewell to Horace Julian Bond. This gesture will mean a great deal to us as a famih and also provide some comfort in knowing that you share our loss. “Finally, as we join together as a family to help each other through this time, wt are well aware that there must be a public opportunity for all of Julian’s friends, Civi Rights Colleagues, students and admirers to come together in a memorial celebration o his life to share memories and expressions of love and appreciation. We will announci plans for such a gathering very soon. “Thank you for sharing Julian with us, and thank you for allowing us to honor hi: wishes. Thank you.” Meanwhile, tributes continue to pour in for Bond. “Julian Bond was a huge hero in the fight against HIV and AIDS,” said Phil Wilson president and CEO of the Black AIDS Institute. “I never had to explain why it wa: important for him to show up on any of the many occasions I called him for his help He made sure that HIV/AIDS was front and center on the NAACP’s agenda. He wa: the first leader to create an AIDS strategy for a national civil rights organization. An when I called him asking him to be photographed and to publicly take an HIV test, hi did not hesitate.” Equally important, Wilson said, “Julian understood probably better than anybody else that injustice is of a whole cloth - you cannot embrace any of it and still call your self just. The threads are woven throughout. You can’t say that I’m opposed to racism but I’m okay with sexism; you can’t be anti-misogynistic yet homophobic. Julian spen his entire life fighting for justice. Not just some of the time, in some places, for somi people.” Wine train issues apology to black women booted from train By Kristin J. Bender SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The Napa Valley Wine Train issued an apology Aug. 25 to a book club that includes mostly black women who said they were booted from a tasting tour because of their race. The company also promised additional training for employees on cultural diversity and sensitivity, and offered the group free passes for 50 people for a future trip. “The Napa Valley Wine Train was 100 percent wrong in its handling of this issue,” CEO Anthony “Tony” Giaccio said in a statement. “We accept full re sponsibility for our failures and for the chain of events that led to this regret table treatment of our guests.” The 11 members of the book club, all but one of whom is African American, said rude employees ordered them off the train on Saturday (Aug. 22), mid- journey, and marched them down several aisles to their embarrassment. “We didn’t do anything wrong,” club member Lisa Johnson, who chronicled the episode in cellphone videos and social media, told KTVU Monday (Aug. 24). “We still feel this is about race. We were singled out.” One member of the group is 83. Johnson was not immediately available for comment Aug. 25) Tuesday to The Associated Press. Wine train spokesman Sam Singer said employees had repeatedly asked the women to either quiet down or get off the train and accept a free bus ride back to their starting point. Giaccio said he had a conversation with Johnson, a leader of the Sistahs on the Reading Edge Book Club, and offered the group the free passes for a re served car “where you can enjoy yourselves as loudly as you desire.” “We were insensitive when we asked you to depart our train by marching you down the aisle past all the other passengers,” he said in his letter. “While that was the safest route for disembarking, it showed a lack of sensitivity on our part.” The Napa Valley Wine Train offers food and wine to passengers as they roll to Napa County wineries in updated Pullman cars. On average, Singer said, individuals or groups are asked to get off the wine train once a month for various reasons. Wine train employees had called police in St. Helena about the book club members, who were already off the train when officers arrived. Police spokeswoman Maria Gonzalez said it was the first time in memory that the wine train had sought such assistance from the department. REGISTER TO VOTE