Anonymous ID: 679e6d June 5, 2020, 1:49 p.m. No.9490408   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0456 >>0771 >>0867

Black Lives matter- file it

 

https://fox40.com/news/local-news/father-arrested-as-suspect-in-death-of-7-year-old-daughter-stockton-police-say/

 

TOCKTON, Calif. (KTXL) — Stockton police say a man was arrested Saturday as a suspect in the death of his 7-year-old daughter.

 

Family identified the girl as Billie Williams.

 

“My niece was a very good little girl. very quiet,” said a family member of Billie Williams. “She just did what any other kid did. Play in the dirt, whatever. She didn’t deserve any of that that happened to her.

 

According to officials, police conducted a welfare check at a home on Candlewood Way near Ravenwood Drive around 4:44 a.m. When they arrived, Billie was found unresponsive inside the garage.

 

Police say she died at the scene.

 

Family members, who didn’t want to be identified, stood outside the home to mourn her death.

 

“We was getting prepared for my other grandson’s birthday party today and it was bittersweet,” said a family member.

 

“Officers took the father into custody and he was booked and processed into the San Joaquin County Jail,” said Officer Joe Silva.

 

According to detectives, they arrested 30-year-old Billy Williams on suspicion of torture and assault on a child resulting in death.

 

But family members say they still have questions.

 

“Soon as the police came they took him into jail, and then she get to stay in the house,” said a family member. “But I feel like if you at the house when a child die, everyone in the house should go to jail.”

 

While family members wait for answers, police are still investigating what happened.

 

“People in the home including the stepmother who lived there, and the 7-year-old’s biological mother, they have been talked to by investigators,” said Silva.

According to detectives, they arrested 30-year-old Billy Williams on suspicion of torture and assault on a child resulting in death.

 

But family members say they still have questions.

 

“Soon as the police came they took him into jail, and then she get to stay in the house,” said a family member. “But I feel like if you at the house when a child die, everyone in the house should go to jail.”

 

While family members wait for answers, police are still investigating what happened.

 

“People in the home including the stepmother who lived there, and the 7-year-old’s biological mother, they have been talked to by investigators,” said Silva.

 

more sauce:

https://www.recordnet.com/news/20200526/da-stockton-father-will-be-arraigned-on-suspicion-of-torture-child-abuse

 

https://www.crimeonline.com/2020/05/24/7-year-old-girl-found-dead-in-garage-father-in-custody/

 

#Shecouldn'tbreathe

Anonymous ID: 679e6d June 5, 2020, 2:20 p.m. No.9490824   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0867 >>0880

>>9490793

 

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/04/crime_is_the_new_black_entitlement.html

 

Crime is the new black entitlement.

 

As long as black people are permanent victims of relentless white racism, cops should not chase them, juries should not convict them, judges should not sentence them, schools should not punish them, and white victims should not complain about the black crime and violence so wildly out of proportion.

 

This is what a growing number of lawmakers, professors and, of course, reporters are prescribing as a way to “improve the way our system serves justice.”

 

The latest came on NPR a few days ago when Georgetown Law professor and former federal prosecutor Paul Butler broke it down for the racially unenlightened:

 

“If you go to criminal court in D.C., you would think that white people don’t commit crimes,” Butler said. “White people don’t use drugs, they don’t get into fights, they don’t steal, because all you see are African American people.”

 

Before you pack your child off to Georgetown Law school or if you usually do not believe something too ridiculous to be true you might want to hear the distinguished professor wax at length on this video: Racial Jury Nullification at Georgetown Law.

 

One group of “African American people” Butler will never see in a D.C. court are the black people who beat the white husband of an NPR executive into a bloody, broken mess on the D.C. Metro line. You can find the details here from my account at the American Thinker, but not from NPR, which never covered it. NPR Another Victim of Black Violence and Denial.

 

Neither will Butler find the black people who attacked the NPR producer from Kentucky, in D.C. on company business. You can find the details of that in the scintillating best seller Don’t Make the Black Kids Angry. But not on NPR.

 

And yes, professor, black criminality is just as wildly out of proportion in Washington as it is in the rest of country. Even more so.

Anonymous ID: 679e6d June 5, 2020, 2:21 p.m. No.9490834   🗄️.is 🔗kun

the civil rights act made a lot of the constitution null and void

 

https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/roots-partisan-divide/

 

"So overpowering is the hegemony of the civil rights constitution of 1964 over the Constitution of 1787, that the country naturally sorts itself into a party of those who have benefited by it and a party of those who have been harmed by it."

 

civil rights came to dominate—and even overrule—legislation that had nothing to do with it

 

IMPORTANT!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

These policies, qua policies, have their defenders and their detractors. The important thing for our purposes is how they were established and enforced. More and more areas of American life have been withdrawn from voters’ democratic control and delivered up to the bureaucratic and judicial emergency mechanisms of civil rights law. Civil rights law has become a second constitution, with powers that can be used to override the Constitution of 1787.

 

this is how we ended up where we are today