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Tag: Ben Crump

  • Illinois deputy found guilty of murder in the shooting of Sonya Massey, a Black woman who called 911

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    An Illinois jury on Wednesday convicted a former sheriff’s deputy of second-degree murder in the shooting death of Sonya Massey, a Black woman who called 911 asking for help.The jurors, though, did not convict Sean Grayson on the first-degree murder charge that prosecutors sought and that carries a prison sentence of 45 years to life. The 31-year-old Grayson instead could be sentenced to up to 20 years in prison, or probation. Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 29.Grayson and another deputy arrived at Massey’s home in Springfield, Illinois, early on the morning of July 6, 2024, after she reported a prowler. Grayson shot the 36-year-old woman after confronting her about how she was handling a pot of hot water she had removed from her stove. Grayson and his attorneys argued that he feared Massey would scald him with the hot water.Massey’s killing raised new questions about U.S. law enforcement shootings of Black people in their homes, and prompted a change in Illinois law requiring fuller transparency on the background of candidates for law enforcement jobs.Grayson originally was charged with first-degree murder, but after the seven-day trial, the jury was given the option of considering second-degree murder, which applies when a defendant faces a “serious provocation” or believes their action is justified even if that belief is unreasonable.He could be sentenced from four to 20 years, a sentence that could be halved if he behaves behind bars. He could also be sentenced to probation and avoid prison time entirely.Body camera video recorded by the other Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy on the scene that morning, Dawson Farley, was a key part of the prosecution’s case. It showed Massey, who struggled with mental health issues, telling the officers, “Don’t hurt me,” and repeating, “Please God.”When the deputies entered the house, Grayson saw the pot on the stove and ordered Massey to move it. Massey jumped up to retrieve the pot and she and Grayson joked about how he said he was backing off from the “hot, steaming water.” Massey then replied, “I rebuke you in the name of Jesus.”Both Grayson and Farley drew their pistols and yelled at Massey to put the pot down. Grayson told investigators he thought her “rebuke” meant she intended to kill him and, in the following commotion, fired three shots, striking Massey just below the eye.Farley, who at the time of the shooting was a probationary employee subject to firing for any reason, testified that Massey didn’t say or do anything that caused him to view her as a threat. But under cross-examination, he acknowledged that he initially reported to investigators that he feared for his safety because of the hot water. Farley did not fire his weapon and was not charged.Grayson testified in his own defense and was the first witness his attorneys called. He told jurors he noticed the bottom of the pot was red and he believed Massey planned to throw the water at him. He said Massey’s words felt like a threat and that he drew his gun because officers are trained to use force to get compliance.“She done. You can go get it, but that’s a head shot,” Grayson told Farley after the shooting. “There’s nothing you can do, man.”Grayson relented moments later and went to get his kit while Farley found dish towels to apply pressure to the head wound. When Grayson returned, Farley told him his help wasn’t necessary, so he threw his kit on the floor and said, “I’m not even gonna waste my med stuff then.”Prosecutors said that response indicated Grayson’s disregard for public safety, an argument that persuaded Judge Ryan Cadagin to keep Grayson in jail awaiting trial. An Illinois appellate court subsequently ruled that Grayson should be released under the Pre-Trial Fairness Act. An appeal to the state Supreme Court has yet to be decided.Massey’s death also forced the early retirement of the sheriff who hired Grayson and generated a U.S. Justice Department inquiry. The federal probe was resolved with Sangamon County Sheriff’s Department’s agreement to fortify training, particularly de-escalation practices; develop a program in which mental health professionals can respond to emergency calls; and to generate data on use-of-force incidents.Massey’s family, with the assistance of civil rights attorney Ben Crump, settled a lawsuit against the county for $10 million and state lawmakers changed Illinois law to require fuller transparency on the background of candidates for law enforcement jobs.

    An Illinois jury on Wednesday convicted a former sheriff’s deputy of second-degree murder in the shooting death of Sonya Massey, a Black woman who called 911 asking for help.

    The jurors, though, did not convict Sean Grayson on the first-degree murder charge that prosecutors sought and that carries a prison sentence of 45 years to life. The 31-year-old Grayson instead could be sentenced to up to 20 years in prison, or probation. Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 29.

    Grayson and another deputy arrived at Massey’s home in Springfield, Illinois, early on the morning of July 6, 2024, after she reported a prowler. Grayson shot the 36-year-old woman after confronting her about how she was handling a pot of hot water she had removed from her stove. Grayson and his attorneys argued that he feared Massey would scald him with the hot water.

    Massey’s killing raised new questions about U.S. law enforcement shootings of Black people in their homes, and prompted a change in Illinois law requiring fuller transparency on the background of candidates for law enforcement jobs.

    Grayson originally was charged with first-degree murder, but after the seven-day trial, the jury was given the option of considering second-degree murder, which applies when a defendant faces a “serious provocation” or believes their action is justified even if that belief is unreasonable.

    He could be sentenced from four to 20 years, a sentence that could be halved if he behaves behind bars. He could also be sentenced to probation and avoid prison time entirely.

    Body camera video recorded by the other Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy on the scene that morning, Dawson Farley, was a key part of the prosecution’s case. It showed Massey, who struggled with mental health issues, telling the officers, “Don’t hurt me,” and repeating, “Please God.”

    When the deputies entered the house, Grayson saw the pot on the stove and ordered Massey to move it. Massey jumped up to retrieve the pot and she and Grayson joked about how he said he was backing off from the “hot, steaming water.” Massey then replied, “I rebuke you in the name of Jesus.”

    Both Grayson and Farley drew their pistols and yelled at Massey to put the pot down. Grayson told investigators he thought her “rebuke” meant she intended to kill him and, in the following commotion, fired three shots, striking Massey just below the eye.

    Farley, who at the time of the shooting was a probationary employee subject to firing for any reason, testified that Massey didn’t say or do anything that caused him to view her as a threat. But under cross-examination, he acknowledged that he initially reported to investigators that he feared for his safety because of the hot water. Farley did not fire his weapon and was not charged.

    Grayson testified in his own defense and was the first witness his attorneys called. He told jurors he noticed the bottom of the pot was red and he believed Massey planned to throw the water at him. He said Massey’s words felt like a threat and that he drew his gun because officers are trained to use force to get compliance.

    “She done. You can go get it, but that’s a head shot,” Grayson told Farley after the shooting. “There’s nothing you can do, man.”

    Grayson relented moments later and went to get his kit while Farley found dish towels to apply pressure to the head wound. When Grayson returned, Farley told him his help wasn’t necessary, so he threw his kit on the floor and said, “I’m not even gonna waste my med stuff then.”

    Prosecutors said that response indicated Grayson’s disregard for public safety, an argument that persuaded Judge Ryan Cadagin to keep Grayson in jail awaiting trial. An Illinois appellate court subsequently ruled that Grayson should be released under the Pre-Trial Fairness Act. An appeal to the state Supreme Court has yet to be decided.

    Massey’s death also forced the early retirement of the sheriff who hired Grayson and generated a U.S. Justice Department inquiry. The federal probe was resolved with Sangamon County Sheriff’s Department’s agreement to fortify training, particularly de-escalation practices; develop a program in which mental health professionals can respond to emergency calls; and to generate data on use-of-force incidents.

    Massey’s family, with the assistance of civil rights attorney Ben Crump, settled a lawsuit against the county for $10 million and state lawmakers changed Illinois law to require fuller transparency on the background of candidates for law enforcement jobs.

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  • Aurora community continues call for justice during vigil for Rajon Belt-Stubblefield

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    AURORA, Colo. — Around a dozen community members gathered outside Aurora’s Municipal Center Wednesday, holding candles and demanding justice for Rajon Belt-Stubblefield, a 37-year-old man shot and killed by Aurora police on Aug. 30.

    Belt-Stubblefield’s family and their attorneys have called the shooting excessive use of force, while Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain said his officer’s actions were justified.

    Denver7

    “The actions of the suspects dictate what our officers have to do,” Chamberlain said during a Sept. 26 news conference. “I stand by where we are at procedurally. I stand by our policies.”

    Pastor Arthur Porter, Belt-Stubblefield’s pastor, told Denver7 that Wednesday’s vigil will be the first of many calling for accountability within the Aurora Police Department.

    “We just don’t want to let things continue to happen,” Porter said.

    Pastor Arthur Porter

    Denver7

    Pictured: Pastor Arthur Porter with New Nation Church in Aurora

    Friends, family and community activists insist deadly force was not warranted and that Belt-Stubblefield could have been arrested peacefully.

    “This is yet another body, another body count, for the Aurora police, and the community has been tired,” said MiDian Shofner, CEO of Epitome of Black Excellence. “So we’re here to say enough, we’re not going to take anymore.

    MiDian Shofner

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    Pictured: MiDian Shofner, CEO of Epitome of Black Excellence

    The officer’s body camera and nearby surveillance cameras from 6th Avenue and Sable Boulevard in Aurora captured the moments leading up to the fatal shooting on Aug. 30.

    The incident began when an Aurora officer tried to pull Belt-Stubblefield over for a traffic stop. Belt-Stubblefield fled from the officer and crashed into a pair of cars at the intersection of 6th Avenue and Billings Street.

    In the video, the officer can be seen approaching Belt-Stubblefield’s car with his gun drawn. He made multiple demands for Belt-Stubblefield to put his hands in the air. Belt-Stubblefield disregarded those commands, got out of his car and walked toward the sidewalk.

    Rajon Belt-Stubblefield bodycam video

    Aurora Police Department

    At that point, the officer tried to tackle or apprehend Belt-Stubblefield and was unsuccessful. It’s during that first physical contact that Belt-Stubblefield reportedly tossed a handgun into the grass nearby.

    Then, Belt-Stubblefield advanced toward the officer as the officer backed away, gun drawn, down the 6th Avenue sidewalk. During his retreat, the officer made multiple commands to “get on the ground,” at one point warning Belt-Stubblefield, “I’ll shoot you.”

    In the seconds before he’s shot, Belt-Stubblefield said at least six times, “Are you ready for this?” as his son could be heard saying, “Dad, chill!” and “officer, chill!” while the officer told him to “get on the ground.”

    AUORRA POLICE 2.png

    Aurora Police

    The officer backed into the roadway as Belt-Stubblefield continued his advance. After retreating roughly four steps onto 6th Avenue, the officer shot Belt-Stubblefield twice in the shoulder. He then fired a third shot that hit Belt-Stubblefield in the head.

    The case has attracted the attention of Ben Crump, one of the attorneys who represented George Floyd’s family. Crump is now representing Belt-Stubblefield’s family.

    “I mean, you just look at the video and the aggression of the police officer,” Crump said at Belt-Stubblefield’s funeral.

    The case remains under review by the 18th Judicial Critical Incident Response Team (CIRT).

    Rajon Belt-Stubblefield vigil

    Denver7

    In the meantime, community members continue to condemn the shooting and demand their voices be heard.

    “We know Aurora must do better, and we must help them do better,” Porter said.

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    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Claire Lavezzorio

    Denver7’s Claire Lavezzorio covers topics that have an impact across Colorado, but specializes in reporting on stories in the military and veteran communities. If you’d like to get in touch with Claire, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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    Claire Lavezzorio

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  • Disability played no role in man’s death after riding Universal roller coaster, lawyers say

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    Lawyers representing the family of a 32-year-old man who died after riding on a Universal Orlando Resort roller coaster said he likely died as a result of an injury incurred during the ride and that his disability played no role in his death. 

    Kevin Rodriguez Zavala, who had a spinal disability and used a wheelchair, became unresponsive while on the coaster last week at the recently opened Epic Universe theme park in Florida. He was transported to a local hospital and later died. 

    Attorneys for Zavala’s family said Monday they believe he hit his head on a restraint during the coaster’s downward thrusts and that he was unconscious for most of the ride. He had no medical issues before boarding the ride, they said. 

    Natalie Jackson, another of the family’s attorneys, said they believe Zavala suffered repeated head strikes based on what witnesses have said. “His disability did not kill him,” Jackson said. “It was the blunt force trauma.”

    The medical examiner for the Orlando area ruled the cause of death as multiple blunt impact injuries and said the manner of death was an accident.

    At a news conference in Orlando, the lawyers also took issue with a top Universal executive last weekend saying in a note to employees that “internal findings” showed the ride worked as it should have.

    “They are quick to say that, ‘Well, the ride functioned as it was supposed to. Everything works properly.’ Well, just because it didn’t malfunction does not lead us to believe that there were not safety issues because we know something caused him to die,” said famed civil rights attorney Ben Crump, whose law firm is representing the family.

    Karen Irwin, Universal Orlando Resort’s president, said in her note that the internal findings showed ride systems functioned normally, equipment was intact and Universal workers followed the proper procedures. Investigators with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said on September 19 that their initial findings align with that of the theme park.

    The roller coaster remains closed as Universal conducts a comprehensive review of the ride with its manufacturer.

    “Safety is, and always will be, at the forefront of everything we do,” Irwin said.

    The ride involved in Zavala’s death, called Stardust Racers, is a dual-launch coaster that reaches speeds up to 62 mph. 

    Epic Universe was the first major theme park to open in Florida in more than 25 years when it welcomed visitors just before Memorial Day weekend

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  • Dock tragedy is latest chapter in Gullah Geechee community’s long struggle

    Dock tragedy is latest chapter in Gullah Geechee community’s long struggle

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    (CNN) — For the young daughters of Michael and Kimberly Wood, it was their first time at the annual festival celebrating the culture of the Gullah Geechee community on Georgia’s remote Sapelo Island, the birthplace of their maternal grandmother and other descendants of enslaved Africans.

    After a day of storytelling, poetry, religious dance and hope-filled spirituals a week ago Saturday, the Woods, other family members and dozens of festival goers waited on a floating dock and adjoining gangway for the scenic ferry ride to the mainland across marshy Doboy Sound.

    A loud cracking sound and a sudden shifting of the gangway were the only warning before the relatively new dockside aluminum walkway plunged into the water about 60 miles south of Savannah. The collapse killed seven people, injured several others and gave his two girls what Michael Wood said was their first glimpse of the Gullah Geechee community’s longtime heartache and resilience.

    “It’s that fight to survive,” said Wood, a quality assurance engineer who slid down the collapsed gangway, snatched his 74-year-old mother out of the water and handed her to a stranger on the dock.

    Wood said he unsuccessfully attempted to reach his 8-year-old daughter Hailey, who was eventually rescued by the boyfriend of a relative as she clung to part of the dock. His wife Kimberly, clinging to their 2-year-old daughter Riley and using a book bag as a flotation device, drifted away in the strong current before another stranger pulled them safely to shore.

    The October 19 tragedy is the latest chapter in the struggles of one of the last surviving Gullah Geechee communities in the Georgia Sea Islands. These descendants of Africans who were enslaved on coastal plantations in the Southeast have fought to preserve their ways of life amid what they describe as a long-standing policy of neglect by state and county officials.

    “The call that the community has to its preservation is strong and runs deep, even risking their lives to save a life,” said Joyce White, a professor and interim director of the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Center at Georgia Southern University. “The risk of life, or death in this instance, is for future survival.”

    Four women and three men, all of them older than 70, were killed in the collapse, which the head of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources said appears to have been caused by a “catastrophic failure of the gangway.” An engineering and design firm will conduct an independent investigation in the cause, the DNR said Friday.

    The victims were identified as Jacqueline Crews Carter, 75; Cynthia Gibbs, 74; William Johnson Jr., 73; Carlotta McIntosh, 93; Isaiah Thomas, 79; Queen Welch, 76; and Charles L. Houston, 77. They had traveled to the festival from Jacksonville, Florida, Atlanta and Darien, Georgia.

    Gangway inspected in 2022 after a ‘loud noise’

    Those who died were among 700 visitors to the island for the annual Cultural Day celebration, which residents said used to attract as many as 2,000 people. Only 29 original descendants remain in the small hamlet known as Hogg Hummock or Hog Hammock, where their enslaved ancestors settled after being forcibly brought there in 1802. The state now owns most of the island.

    As festival goers waited to board a ferry returning to the mainland, the gangway came down. At least 20 people plunged into the Duplin River, officials said. There were as many as 40 people on the walkway at the time.

    The ferry dock was rebuilt in 2021 after a group of Gullah Geechee residents reached multimillion-dollar settlement with the state over what they claimed in a 2019 lawsuit were soaring property taxes and inferior treatment compared to the residents on the mainland. In 2015 federal civil rights claims, residents said they were paying high property taxes and receiving inadequate services including “water, emergency medical, fire, road maintenance, trash, and accessible ferry services to members of the community.”

    The lawsuit against the state was settled in 2020 and the case against the county was settled two years later. The state settlement included the construction of the dock and “new aluminum gangways” as well as improved ferry service.

    “There should be very, very little maintenance to an aluminum gangway like that,” DNR Commissioner Walter Rabon told reporters last Sunday, adding there were “almost daily” visual inspections of the structure.

    The gangway passed four safety inspections since 2022, DNR said in a statement on Thursday. A subcontractor inspected the structure in May 2022, one day after the agency was “made aware of a loud noise that had been heard by a group on the gangway,” according to the statement.

    The May 2022 inspection and a follow-up later that year in December both found “no structural concerns with the gangway,” said the agency, which owns and runs the docks and ferries. Two additional inspections were conducted after recent hurricanes Helene and Milton and “no concerns” were identified, the statement said.

    The cause of the collapse is also being looked at by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump – who is representing relatives of some victims – as well as a number of island residents have called for a federal probe.

    ‘See where their grandmother grew up’

    A week ago Saturday, Michael and Kimberly Wood, their two daughters, his mother Susie, and several other family members arrived on Sapelo from their homes throughout the state. The barrier island, about 7 miles off the coast of Georgia, is accessible only by boat or ferry.

    “I wanted my daughters to experience Cultural Day and see where their grandmother grew up,” Michael Wood said.

    On the way back after the event, however, the gangway collapsed and Wood, 43, said his family got a firsthand look at the resilience and strength of an imperiled community that refuses to go away.

    “A lot of people that attended the festival jumped into action,” he said. “People were falling into the water and screaming everywhere. And others rushed over from the festival to save anyone that they could.”

    Video footage from the scene showed people desperately clinging to a section of the walkway, which hung at a steep angle in the water. Others in the water were dragged away by the current. Still, people dove in to help. Some hurled life jackets into the water as survivors drifted away.

    Wood said he learned from his sister on the shore that his 8-year-old daughter had been rescued. He ran up and down the rugged shoreline, desperately looking for Kimberly and Riley, shouting out their names and fearing the worst. “My heart was just dropping,” he said. His sister, a nurse, performed CPR on a number of people along the way.

    Eventually, the couple, their daughters and other family members were reunited and tightly held one another with tears in their eyes.

    “The visitors and everybody at the event jumped in quickly,” said Kimberly Wood, 42, her voice still shaky days after the tragedy.

    “They basically took over. They were throwing life vests. We drifted very far away and I had to wait for a life vest to float over to me. I’m thankful for all the visitors and the descendants for their quick action. I do not know their names, maybe their faces, but thank you.”

    ‘We would want the same type of response’

    J.R. Grovner, 44, who runs an island tour company and had his boat at the dock, said the initial rescue efforts in the first 30 to 45 minutes after the gangway collapse involved mostly locals and festival goers. Vessels and a helicopter from the Coast Guard and DNR appeared later, he said. Others who were there gave similar accounts.

    “For almost an hour we had hell on Sapelo … and it was being tended to by civilians,” he said.

    The DNR said other emergency agencies assisted with the deployment of boats equipped with side-scan sonar and helicopters for search and rescue missions. But officials have not released a specific timeline of the those efforts.

    “This is part of our ongoing investigation. We will provide additional updates as they are made available,” DNR Deputy Commissioner Trevor Santos said in an email Friday.

    At a news conference after the collapse, Rabon, the DNR commissioner, thanked civilians who took time to help. “Their quick response and action saved additional lives,” he said.

    Grovner said when he arrived at the dock shortly after the collapse, he noticed someone had loosened his boat, which had drifted away because they had been unable to start its engine. “It was like a horror scene in a movie,” he said, noting that he momentarily attempted to revive a person on the shore.

    He jumped in the water. Another boater picked him up and delivered Grovner to his own vessel, where he said he found a cousin performing CPR on two people who were already dead. They returned to the dock area and left the two bodies on the shore. Grovner said he then heard his goddaughter yell at him: Her 2-month-old daughter was unconscious after falling in the water.

    Grovner took the baby into his speed boat. A woman at the scene left her child with one of his relatives and volunteered to give the girl CPR as he raced to the mainland. His goddaughter suffered a fractured knee in the collapse. He left her baby girl in the hands of paramedics on the mainland, he said. She survived.

    The other day, Grovner recalled, his granddaughter told him she doubts she’ll return to Sapelo. “You don’t want to hear somebody say that when their roots are from the island,” he said.

    The day of the collapse Grovner eventually returned to the dock area, where he and others covered some bodies with blankets. They also used blankets to carry the injured to boats waiting to transport them to the mainland for emergency care, he said.

    Reginald Hall, 59, an island native who helped chronicle the claims and organize the residents involved in the lawsuits, joined Grovner at a news conference last weekend. They demanded answers from state and county officials.

    “What I saw that day was the human fabric pull together and have an opportunity to make every effort they could – we could – to place ourselves not only in the shoes of the people who were suffering, but to place ourselves inside the rescue effort and say, if that were us, we would want the same type of response,” Hall told CNN.

    White, the Georgia Southern University professor, added: “The Gullah Geechee community has always had to fight for their survival. And the assaults on the culture are unceasing.”

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  • Bronze Lens Film Festival celebrates 15th anniversary with 140 films from 59 countries

    Bronze Lens Film Festival celebrates 15th anniversary with 140 films from 59 countries

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    The first year of the Bronze Lens Film Festival had a modest start of presenting 23 films. Now a decade and a half later, the Atlanta-based festival will present over 140 films from 59 countries including the USA, the United Kingdom, Nigeria, Spain, Canada, Tobago, Trinidad, and the Netherlands. 

    For the first time the festival will showcase at the Tara Atlanta Theater, 2345 Cheshire Bridge RD NE in Atlanta, August 21 – 25.  

    Among that diverse array of films will be 48 world premieres. Twenty-eight of the films were produced in Georgia. From modest beginnings to Bronze Lens has become one of the premiere showcases for independent filmmakers of colors. Along the way, the festival has become a qualifying festival for Oscar nominated shorts. 

    Founder and Executive Producer Kathleen Bertrand said each year it’s becoming more and more difficult for the Bronze Lens staff and judges to reduce down the large entries of films. 

    “You want those films that have scored highest with the judges, but when everybody is scoring the highest it becomes a very difficult process, “ Bertrand said during the festival’s kick-off reception. “ I take my hat to Deidre McDonald (Creative Director) and her team for selecting the most excellent films you will get to see over five days”. 

    The films are produced or directed by well known members of the legal, film and entertainment industries, Bertrand said. Among those of note: Jamie Foxx is a producer for the film “Unhappy Things;” Civil Rights Attorney Ben Crump is a producer of the documentary “How To Sue The Klan” and “The Waterboys”; Jamie Lee Curtis is a producer of “Burnout”; Debra Riley Draper is co-director of RATIFY; Three films will be screened by The Horne Brothers including insightful documentary done in cooperation with The Atlanta Journal Constitution “ The South Got Something To Say”; and Morris Chestnut is a producer of the film “Origin”.

    “We love seeing those that made it come back and invest in those that are trying to make it,” Bertrand said.  

    In addition to the informative panels which will be held during the day, two new components will be held. On Friday night, Bronze Lens After Dark will debut at the UpTown Comedy Club hosted by comedian/actor Jonathan Slocumb. The next night, Atlanta City Hall will be the site of the Inaugural Filmmakers Sneakers Ball. Bertrand said all of the filmmakers who have ever presented at Bronze Lens are invited. 

    The panels are once again designed to aid the filmmaker navigate the many obstacles that hinder many independent films from getting made. Some of those include: “iPhone Magic: Turn Your Phone Into a Storyteller’s Toolkit”; “Crowdfunding to Build Independence”; “Seal the Deal: The Greenlight Blueprint”; “Beyond the Screen: How Tech is Transforming Storytelling”; “Made in Georgia: Cultivating a Thriving Film Community”; “Acting: Respect Tha’ D*#n Craft”; “Podcast Power: How to Engage and Grow Your Audience” and “Preventing Legal Nightmares in Indie Filmmaking.” 

    The festival will wrap on Sunday with the usual Cinema and Social Justice Sunday screening at the Tara. The festival will end Sunday evening with the awards program at the Ray Charles Performing Arts Center at Morehouse College. 

    (For a more detailed schedule go to: www.bronzelens.com)

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  • So Sad: Roger Fortson’s Younger Brother, Andre Fortson, Killed By Gun Violence In GA, Grief-Stricken Community Demands Justice

    So Sad: Roger Fortson’s Younger Brother, Andre Fortson, Killed By Gun Violence In GA, Grief-Stricken Community Demands Justice

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    The Fortson family is mourning the loss of two young members, their lives tragically cut short by gun violence.

    Source: Hurlburt Field/Facebook

    U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Roger Fortson was gunned down by a Florida deputy just months before his 16-year-old brother, Andre Fortson, was fatally shot in Georgia.

    Officials say this latest tragedy unfolded at Summit Hill Apartments in DeKalb County, just east of Atlanta.

    According to USA Today, Andre was found with gunshot wounds in a breezeway at the apartment complex shortly before 10:00 p.m. Authorities swiftly arrested 20-year-old Quintavious Zellner, charging him with aggravated assault.

    Preliminary investigations indicated that “two groups of subjects were shooting at each other” for reasons still unknown. 

    A neighbor named Jaqueia told USA Today that she tried desperately to save Andre, performing CPR and describing him as a “really good boy” who was never disrespectful or involved in any altercations.

    “I tried to save him, doing CPR because I couldn’t save him,” said Jaqueia.

    Call for Justice: Community and Family Reactions

    This story continues to amplify the need for justice for Roger Fortson.

    Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, known for his relentless pursuit of justice in cases of police misconduct, is calling on Florida State Attorney Ginger Bowden Madden to prosecute former sheriff’s deputy Eddie Duran, who fatally shot Roger Fortson on May 3. 

    Crump is emphasizing the urgency for the State Attorney to act now that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement has completed its investigation.

    “The actions of Deputy Duran were not just negligent, they were criminal,” said Crump.

    The Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Office disputes Crump’s claims, asserting that the deputy reacted in self-defense after encountering Fortson armed with a gun. However, Crump and the Fortson family challenge this narrative, highlighting discrepancies in the police response and the alleged misidentification of the apartment involved in the disturbance call.

    Chantemekki Fortson, the boys’ mother, is demanding justice for her son Roger, calling for the revocation of the deputy’s credentials and pension.

    “I want justice for my child. You’re not going to throw me a bone. Take his credentials. Take his pension,” said Chantemekki.

    Crump reinforced her sentiments.

    “This has been an incredibly challenging time for them with the loss of Roger. Losing the life of yet another young family member – a mere child – has been an absolute devastation,” Crump said, noting the family’s immense grief from the loss of both Roger and Andre.

    Crump’s Advocacy

    Bodycam footage showed Duran shooting Roger Fortson, who opened his door holding a legally owned gun pointed at the ground. Crump pointed out the extensive call history to a different apartment in the same complex, raising questions about the validity of Duran’s actions.

    Sheriff’s records showed another unit in the apartment complex had repeated domestic calls and welfare checks, which Crump highlighted during a press conference.

    MSN states that Okaloosa Sheriff Eric Aden refuted Crump’s claims, stating that the deputy did not enter the wrong apartment. However, the administrative investigation concluded that Duran’s use of deadly force was unreasonable and violated agency policy, leading to his termination in June.

    “We will never let them stain the reputation of Roger Fortson, not today, not tomorrow, not forever. We will remember him as the true American patriot that he was,” said Crump.

    Duran, a former U.S. Army serviceman, was current on his response to resistance training and firearm qualifications at the time of the shooting. As BOSSIP previously reported, he was dismissed from the Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Office for using unreasonable deadly force in the shooting of Roger Fortson. 

    According to MSN, Crump emphasized the importance of holding law enforcement officers accountable to prevent future tragedies and rebuild trust within communities.

    “This tragic incident should never have occurred, and we must ensure that there are consequences for such reckless actions. Roger Fortson’s family deserves justice, and our community deserves accountability,” said Crump.

    Family Calls for Justice in Wake of Devastating Loss

    As the Fortson family continues to navigate the unimaginable grief of losing both Roger and Andre, their call for justice grows louder. Their story is a stark reminder of the urgent need for accountability and reform within law enforcement to prevent such tragedies from recurring.

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    Lauryn Bass

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  • Family of teen killed by US Park Police presses for answers on the anniversary of his death – WTOP News

    Family of teen killed by US Park Police presses for answers on the anniversary of his death – WTOP News

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    One year after Dalaneo Martin was killed by U.S. Park Police, his family called on the Justice Department for answers in the investigation into his death.

    Attorney Ben Crump speaks at a news conference outside the Department of Justice on the one-year anniversary of Dalaneo Martin’s death. (WTOP/Kate Ryan)

    One year after 17-year-old Dalaneo Martin was shot and killed by U.S. Park Police, his family and their attorneys called on the Department of Justice for answers in the investigation into the D.C. teen’s death.

    On the morning of March 18, 2023, Martin was found sleeping in a stolen car in a Northeast D.C. neighborhood when D.C. police and members of the U.S. Park Police arrived on the scene. Body camera video from D.C. police showed the officers formulating a plan to get Martin out of the stolen car.

    The video showed a D.C. police officer directing the group not to get into the vehicle. The same video showed a U.S. Park Police officer getting into the back seat of the car, and Martin driving off. At that point, the officer fired his service weapon, hitting Martin multiple times.

    Outside the Department of Justice building on the anniversary of Martin’s death, family members and attorneys chanted “Justice for Debo,” using the teenager’s nickname.

    His mother Terra Martin took a deep breath before telling reporters that by the time she arrived to the scene of the shooting, a white sheet was draped over her son’s body.

    “Six shots to the back. How can you justify that?” she asked.

    Attorneys Andrew Clarke, Ben Crump and Billy Murphy were joined by Judge Greg Mathis, who complained about the lack of information on the ongoing civil rights investigation opened by the Department of Justice in April 2023.

    “What are you hiding?” Mathis asked.

    “This is a tragedy of the police’s own making,” Murphy said, expressing frustration as he referenced the high-profile cases of Freddie Gray, George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

    “Day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, we see the same kinds of unnecessary deaths at the hands of the police,” Murphy said.

    The attorneys said that until today, they had not heard from the Department of Justice since April, when its investigation into Martin’s death began. But Crump said they have been told that they will get a briefing sometime this week.

    Nee Nee Taylor, with the organization Harriet’s Wildest Dreams, also spoke at the news conference.

    Taylor told the group, which included Martin’s nine brothers and sisters and one of his two sons, “We are calling for transformation and accountability of policing in our society so that it no longer serves as an agent of anti-Blackness.”

    Taylor added, “We’re going to show you better than we can tell you that we’re going to get justice for Debo,”

    Crump was asked what justice would look like for Martin’s family.

    “Criminal charges, certainly,” he said, adding that civil action, including seeking compensation, is something the legal team is working on. Crump said the goal of a civil case would be to produce changes that prevent deaths like Martin’s.

    “That could be the legacy of Debo. Not just justice for Debo, but justice for us all,” he said.

    Attorney Clarke echoed that sentiment, saying policy changes and approaches in policing to avoid escalation are critically needed.

    “That’s what justice looks like, because had that officer taken that same care with Debo that same day, none of us would be here,” Clarke said.

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    Kate Ryan

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  • Far From Finished: 2 More Men Buried In Mississippi Pauper's Field Just Like #DexterWade Without Family's Knowledge, DOJ Called To Investigate

    Far From Finished: 2 More Men Buried In Mississippi Pauper's Field Just Like #DexterWade Without Family's Knowledge, DOJ Called To Investigate

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    Not again…

    Source: Gerd Harder / Getty

    In October, we reported on the tragic and egregious story of Dexter Wade. His mother, Bettersten Wade, had lost contact with the 37-year-old and wasn’t informed that he was killed after being hit by a police car until several months after the fact.

    Dexter was buried in an unmarked grave without his family’s knowledge or consent shortly after his killing. Now as it turns out, Dexter and his family weren’t the only victims of the cruel negligence that denies loved ones the right to mourn and lay to rest family members shortly after they have passed.

    Famed civil attorney Ben Crump recently announced that he’s representing the families of two other deceased people besides Dexter, who were also buried without their families knowing—and in the same damn pauper’s field, no less.

    According to the Mississippi Clarion Ledger, 40-year-old Marrio Moore and 39-year-old Jonathan Hankins were buried without the knowledge of their families in Hinds County Pauper’s Field, the same burial ground where Dexter was buried for 172 days before Bettersten had a clue what had happened to him.

    “People all across America are scratching their heads in disbelief about what’s happening in Jackson, Mississippi, with this paupers graveyard,” Crump said during a news conference Wednesday. “It went from talking about the water to now we’re talking about the graveyard, what is going on in Jackson, Mississippi?”

    Crump was joined by members of all of the victims’ families as well as attorney Dennis Sweet, who is also representing them.

    Along with Crump and U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, Sweet is calling on the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate whatever the hell is going on in Jackson that results in people being buried without anyone who loves them knowing where or why.

    “Jackson, we can do better. We can do better,” Sweet said. “You’re going to hear from these families, they’re going to tell you their stories … they’re citizens, their children were citizens. We can do better.”

    The Clarion-Ledger reports that Moore, another Black man, was killed via blunt force trauma on February 2 of this year. According to his mother, Mary Moore Glenn, it took eight months for the family to be notified. Glenn, who said her son was struck 22 times, wrapped up in a tarp, and left on the street, said after finally finding out what happened to Moore, she had to pay $250 to get her son’s death certificate from Hinds County. Incidentally, $250 is the same amount Bettersten Wade said she had to pay the coroner’s office just to claim Dexter Wade’s body.

     

    “We had to buy him back from the state,” Glen said of her son. “When I went to try to get a death certificate for him I couldn’t get one because he was in the state’s property … me and my family, we don’t deserve that.”

    “They got him and just threw him in a hole like he wasn’t anybody, like he wasn’t important,” she continued.

    Hankins’ case is somehow even more confounding. According to his mother Gretchen Hankins, he was first reported missing in June 2022. It took until December 4, one year and seven months later. Gretchen said she last saw her son on May 20, 2022. He was killed on May 23, 2022.

    From the Ledger:

    His body was found in a hotel room in Jackson. This must have meant he had identification on him, Gretchen said, because you can’t check into a hotel room without an ID.

    Gretchen said his body was identified and a picture of Hankins was shown on TV as a missing person. Still, law enforcement did not reach out or come to her house to her to tell her they had position of her son’s body.

    “How could they (law enforcement) do that? What if someone did that to their children?” she said.

    Gretchen said she has been unable to retrieve a death certificate for her son. If and when she does, she’ll also have to pay that absurd $250 fee.

    One time was unjustifiably horrible enough. The fact that this has happened at least three times that we know of is—honestly, there’s really no word for it.

    “How many more? We need justice. We need accountability. We need some answers,” Bettersten shouted during the news conference.

    “How many more?”

    That’s arguably the most important question to ask. No family deserves this. No victim deserves this. So, how many more are suffering and still left in the dark? And when will it end?

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    Zack Linly

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  • Tyre Nichols’ funeral to be held in Memphis on Wednesday, with civil rights leaders set to speak. Here’s how to watch.

    Tyre Nichols’ funeral to be held in Memphis on Wednesday, with civil rights leaders set to speak. Here’s how to watch.

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    Tyre Nichols, whose violent arrest and subsequent death prompted widespread grief and outrage, will be laid to rest Wednesday in Memphis. Nichols died on Jan. 10, three days after he was beaten by police at a traffic stop. Five officers were fired and charged with second-degree murder.

    His funeral will be attended by Vice President Kamala Harris, the White House announced Tuesday, along with several other administration officials. Members of Nichols’ family, along with the Rev. Al Sharpton and civil rights attorney Ben Crump, are set to speak.

    Nichols, who was 29 years old, worked for FedEx and had a 4-year-old son. He grew up in Sacramento but moved to Memphis right before the pandemic to join his mother and stepfather.

    “My son loved me to death, and I love him to death,” his mother, RowVaughn Wells, told CBS News, sharing that her son had a tattoo of her name on his arm. A self-described “aspiring photographer,” his family said he loved photographing landscapes and sunsets. 

    Tyre Nichols
    Tyre Nichols, seen in a photo provided by his family.

    Courtesy of the Nichols family via AP


    Friends from his youth in California shared memories of him with CBS Sacramento. Nichols was an avid skateboarder, and his friend Jerome Neal described him as “well-loved” at his local skate park.

    “He just touches anybody who gets around him,” another friend, Austin Robert, told the station. “He’s a fantastic person and that’s how I really want everybody to remember him.”

    “It’s honestly pretty devastating to see such a good human go through such unnecessary brutality, such unnecessary death,” Brian Jang, a friend of Nichols’ from Memphis, told CBS News.

    Nichols was on his way home when he was pulled over the night of Jan. 7 — allegedly for reckless driving, although the police chief later said no evidence was found to support that. Disturbing bodycam footage and surveillance camera video released by the city on Friday showed him being punched, kicked and pepper sprayed. 

    He died Jan. 10 of what his stepfather, Rodney Wells, said was a cardiac arrest and kidney failure. An official cause of death has not been released, but the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said he “succumbed to his injuries.” 

    Five Memphis police officers were fired and are facing charges of second-degree murder, aggravated assault, aggravated kidnapping, official misconduct and official oppression. Two other officers were relieved of duty, authorities said, and three members of the Memphis Fire Department who responded to the scene were fired. Shelby County Sheriff Floyd Bonner Jr. said two deputies have also been relieved of duty.

    “The sad reality is police brutality will be an ever-present threat for Black and Brown Americans unless cops continually see that those who use blunt force will go to jail. They need to understand that a badge isn’t a shield that lets them kill someone during a traffic stop,” Sharpton said in a statement following the release of the police footage. “And the only way to do that is through convictions and legislation. I thank the Justice Department for opening a civil rights investigation and urge its lawyers to be swift and transparent. Our entire nation must come together to condemn this grotesque violation of human rights.” 

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  • Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sued over rejection of AP African American studies pilot program

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sued over rejection of AP African American studies pilot program

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    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sued over rejection of AP African American studies pilot program – CBS News


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    Civil rights attorney Ben Crump is suing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis over his decision to reject an Advanced Placement African American studies pilot program in the state’s high schools. Timothy Welbeck, an assistant professor of instruction in the Department of Africology and African American Studies at Temple University and the director of the Center for Anti-Racism, joins CBS News to discuss the controversy.

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