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A Spiritual Discovery in Little Liberia: Bridgeport’s Forgotten Gateway to Freedom

They say history rewards those who are willing to search for it, and as a journalist, a Black man, and a descendant of people whose history was too often stolen, buried, distorted, or deliberately erased, I have developed an endless thirst for knowledge about the story of my people. Black and Indigenous people in America.

Black Citizens Out of Options: A South Carolina Jury Sends Latest Message Regarding Black Youth In America

I’m very angry today and I am certain that I am not alone. The problem is that my anger is two-fold. How does a store owner falsely acuse a 14-year-old kid of stealing bottles of water, chase him out the store off the property, shoots him in the back as he fled, and a jury

Baltimore City Justice On Trial Again: Michael Johnson’s Rape Conviction Reopens the Wound Phylicia Barnes’ Killing Left Behind

It was a very emotional time last night when I message Shauntel Sallis (Phylicia Barnes’ older maternal sister) to determine if she had heard the verdict. She expressed sadness despite the conviction though, as I’m sure many who supported Phylicioa Barnes and her family did, when the relizatkiion that the man who was charged and

From A Flower In A River To Another Girl’s Nightmare: Has Michael Maurice Johnson Struck Again?

They say lightning never strikes twice. But in the case of Michael Maurice Johnson, that old saying feels less like wisdom and more like a lie we tell ourselves to feel safe. For those of us who still carry the memory of “A Flower in the River” (the tragic story of Phylicia Barnes, a bright

A Flower In The River: The Child Baltimore City Allowed to Drift Into Silence

Her Dad Raheem Mustafa once told me Phylicia Barnes kept her head in the skies. Redfelecting upon the memories of when he used to take her to the airport to watch airplanes take off, and like any child still full of wonder, she looked upward toward possibility, toward hope, toward life. Her mother Janice-Sallis-Mustafa, shattered

A Black Panther’s Last Stand: The Perilous Fight Of America’s Last Political Prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal Persist

Posted by David Adams on March 2nd, 2018

While many within the black community are now mesmerized by the Marvel film Black Panther, which is based on a futuristic fantasy of a technologically advanced African Nation called Wakanda, the perils of a true Panther is continuously embroiled in a realistic fight for justice, for judicial correctness, and the power of people’s longevity in a fight to free a convicted “cop killer” despite the mountain of evidence that suggest not only his innocence, but that police along with a corrupt prosecutor’s office consciously framed former Black Panther Mumia Abu Jamal. He has never obtained nearly as much support from black people in this country as the fictional comic book character Black Panther has garnered.

Dubbed all over the world as a political prisoner, Jamal’s decades old fight for freedom has garnered international attention, and for 37 years Abu Jamal has continuously maintained his innocence in the killing of Philadelphia Police Officer Daniel Faulkner. A former member of the Black Panthers party, Mumia was already a prominent journalist and activist at the time of the incident. He has always claimed his innocence and people around the world have stood in solidarity with him since then, organizing events, spreading information and petitioning authorities to “Free Mumia.” In fact if you don’t know his story, then perhaps you haven’t been living on the planet earth the past 40 years.

Followers of his globally renowned case say that many within the African American community have failed Mumia. Although he continues to maintain tremendous support from Black America, the base of his support has always primarily come from social groups, governments, and other human rights organizations from outside of the United States. His case has always been racially biased and politically motivated. Mumia was framed by the Philadelphia police department and the prosecution, with help from the Attorney General’s office and the FBI, because he was so outspoken in his defense of the oppressed, particularly the politically oppressed, such as the MOVE organization at that time in Philadelphia.

In fact, Mumia’s troubles began during his teen years when he was the Minister of Information for the Philadelphia branch of the Black Panther party. When Mumia’s COINTELPRO records were obtained from the U.S. government, it showed that they had a dossier on him when he was just 15 years old, in the late ‘sixties. There they said, in effect, despite his young years, he should be on the ADEX file (a list of who the FBI felt should be rounded up and put into concentration camps if there was any political turmoil in the country). They said Mumia belonged on that list because of his ability to speak out in advocacy. Mumia was also once featured in a front-page story in the Philadelphia Inquirer, which described this young man who was speaking out in defense of the Panthers and against police brutality. The cops in Philadelphia knew who he was and they were tracking him.

So there is a long history there of knowing who Mumia was, targeting him, trying to silence his voice and ultimately to murder him. What happened on the night of December 9, 1981 was that Mumia came across a police altercation in the street. He was driving a cab at that point because he had been drummed out of mainstream news reporting for his defense of the MOVE organization. In the midst of a purported shoot-out, a police officer named Daniel Faulkner was shot and killed. Depending upon who you believe, the events of that night are perplexing to say the very least. Shady witnesses, coerced witness testimony, crime scene manipulation, crooked cops, and a corrupt prosecutor’s office would all culminate in the successful prosecution and subsequent conviction of Mumia Abu Jamal.

Several people have testified against him, claiming he’s the man they saw shooting Faulker. Some have said they saw a third man shooting and running (those accounts were thrown out by the judge presiding over the initial trial). Others have even confessed they were the shooters themselves (The confession of Arnold Beverly) acting as hit men for the police, who commissioned them to get rid of Faulker as he was interfering with their corrupt businesses (The first working day after Abu Jamal’s trial and conviction were completed, 30 Philadelphia cops were indicted in the “Center City” police corruption sting), giving tremendous credibility to the allegation that dirty Philly cops wanted the young cop (Faulkner) dead, but despite a volume of compelling evidence regarding the case against Abu Jamal, his conviction stood, and for thirty years he was on death row until his punishment was commuted to life in prison without the possibility of parole in 2011. Now a potential new front has opened up in the fight to free Mumia Abu-Jamal.

About a year ago, in a different case, after many attempts to get a ruling, it was found that it is a conflict of interest and a denial of a fair and impartial appeal process to allow a judge to sit, who had previously been personally involved in a significant fashion in the earlier prosecution of the same case. Basically, it required all the appeals that a judge had sat on, and that had been negatively decided against the defendant, to be thrown out and to be able to start over again.

This ground breaking judicial ruling, now case law, applies directly to Abu Jamal, and specifically his appeals. In a very important case that was decided by the United States Supreme Court. It involved the fact that one of the justices who became the Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, Ronald Castille, had been the prosecutor in Philadelphia, following Rendell as the chief DA. He had been a DA and ran on a law-and-order platform, and was endorsed and received major funding from the Fraternal Order of Police. Nonetheless, when he became a Philadelphia Supreme Court justice he sat and ruled on a number of cases, including Mumia’s case, despite  Abu Jamal’s requests for him to remove himself on grounds of bias and conflict of interest. When Castille became a state supreme court justice, he had already been the architect of all the DA’s support of Mumia’s conviction.

Many instances in Mumia’s case, and with all the challenges to Mumia’s conviction that began in 1995 and went on through 2008, Castille refused to removed himself from the case and instead ruled against Mumia in each of these cases. The argument is now being made in conjunction with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that Castille violated the fundamental precept that as a prosecutor involved in the case he should never have sat as a judge, especially in adjudication of any Mumia Abu Jamal cases.  Mumia has finally gotten some compelling arguments. The DA’s office tried to get it thrown out on grounds that it was brought too late and didn’t apply anymore. The judge ruled that it did in fact apply and that the case should go forward. Now it has become an issue of the DA’s office being ordered to produce evidence that shows Castille’s involvement in Abu Jamal’s cases. They have been noncompliant with the order and recalcitrant in not providing real information, instead provided no record of his involvement in Mumia’s case.

Now the Philadelphia’s DA office is stonewalling, pretending that Castille’s involvement in Mumia’s prosecution and appeals didn’t exist. They are concealing evidence and refuse to open their files. it will take more political pressure and protesting to further agitate justice for Mumia. Now, Mumia is 63 years old and is suffering from cirrhosis due to the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections purposefully, and consciously mistreating his hepatitis C disease. We must continue to agitate his injustice conviction. Free Mumia Abu Jamal now!

 

The People’s Champion

I’m Crime Blogger David B Adams

 

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Racial Profiling In America At Its Best: Profiling Of Two Black Rockhurst University Women Highlights Dining While Black In Missouri

Posted by David Adams on February 11th, 2018

Can you image spending hours of free time shopping at your local mall? Its a pass time shared by many American women for generations. At some point though, all of that foot work tends to wear down on consumers, and most venues have various places to eat within the facility, like a food court, and some malls even have family style restaurants where shoppers can sit in and dine. For two Kansas City, Missouri black women a trip to the mall and a dinner afterwards would prove to be very compelling, as to why the NAACP has declared the entire state a Missouri unsafe” for black Americans.

A video which is now going viral was posted on the Facebook page of Alexis Brison depicting two black women who are students at Rockhurst University in Kansas City, Misoouri, encountering police at an Independence area Applebee’s Family restaurant. In the caption above the video Brison writes “Hey facebook friends and family I need your help reposting this. Especially in black history month black people cannot continue to be treated this way. My friend and I were shopping at the independence center in independence, Missouri(Near Kansas City), when we were done we decided to get a bite to eat at Applebee’s. About an hour into out dinner we were approached by a Independence police officer, a mall cop, and the restaurant manager. We were told that we were accused of eating and not paying for CHICKEN the day before (dining and dashing). Mind you that we have proof that can show our whereabouts and it’s not even in our character to steal. After being mocked, humiliated, and embarrassed we were asked to pay for our food, leave, and not come back. After leaving, calls were made to the restaurant and the manager stated that our accuser remembered that there was a SKINNY girl and a girl who wore MAKEUP. In 2018 is this really what we’re debased to? Our weight and whether or not we wore makeup. She could not recognize any facial features or any defining characteristics . This is a clear example of RACIAL PROFILING that should not be stood for. Just because we are black does not mean we are all criminals and I will not be treated as such.”

Brison’s commentary is needed to give context to what actual occurred in the video, because where the clip starts doesn’t necessarily give a clear picture of what’s happening. The young ladies make it clear that they haven’t been to the restaurant, state they haven’t done anything, and at one point just wanted to pay for their food and leave. Mean while the Independence police officer who is accompanied by a mall security officer, and the restaurant manager appear to down play the situation and even jokingly stated, “make sure you get my good side” refering to the women filming the incident on their cellphones. He was even rebuffed by one of the women after he repeatedly tried to blow the incident off as not a big deal. The officer stated to the women, “You all are getting worked up for nothing.” One of the women replied, “this is too big of an accusation to call it nothing.”

Then one of the women telephoned a relative and explained to them their situation. The women repeatedly stated that they aren’t from the town and haven’t been to Applebee’s. As the phone is recording you can see what appears to be a white female standing next to the booth then walking away after stating that she is almost positive that it was these two women, which gives credibility to their claim of having been accused of not paying for a previous meal yesterday. One of the women begins to become visibly upset and starting crying. The video goes blank for periods of time, but their is still audio. The women (Asia) tells the women she telephoned to come to the restaurant because it wasn’t funny what was happening to them. The police officer is overheard stating “Wow! Is she always this emotional?” His demeanor was unprofessional, apathetic toward her emotions, and lacked any compassion at all for these young women despite only having mere allegations having been lodged against them.

While reading the Facebook thread where many followers of the story have commented, many took note of the officer’s disposition and the sarcastic comments he made, even though this young woman was visibly distraught. Its not a defining moment on race in that town, because with the high profile protest following police shootings of Michael Brown and Anthony Lamar Smith in the state of Missouri with both cops being found not guilty, racism in Missouri is common place. Followers should be more cognizant of the fact that white police officers are capable of displaying such apathy toward emotional black women. In fact some even believe that his tactics were purposeful, in hopes of getting the two women to become disruptive so that they could exact an arrest. We can see this clearly when the officer continuously ask the women “Am I yelling at you?” Neither of the two women were yelling, perhaps a little intense due to the accusations against them, but neither of them yelled at the police.

The women were upset and probably felt that they were going to be arrested. I’m not sure why the officer didn’t understand why the woman was so distraught. He appeared to have a serious problem with the fact that she was crying. He orders them to stop talking over him and to listen to him. Then he explains that the restaurant has requested that they pay for their meal leave and never come back. The women both agreed and appeared eager to get out of there after realizing they weren’t going to be arrested. There was back and forth about the check and Asia began crying uncontrollably, while the woman on the phone and her friend tried to calm her. You could here Crissy (on the phone) attempting to instruct Asia on what pertinent information she needed to obtain. Her crying for many was simply unbearable, and the officer’s sarcastic and carefree demeanor made it worst. The women left the restaurant upset and I’m sure embarrassed, and humiliated.

However, if we take a look at the entire situation we see that while they were accused of skipping out on a check the day prior, the women were seated, had their order taken, and served by the wait staff. It wasn’t until an hour into their meal that they were approached by the police regarding the theft accusation. Let’s face it, none of the followers of this story were there during this incident, don’t know if the women did in fact commit theft of food the day before, but we have to admit, if the allegations were in fact true, these two women are probably two of the most dumbest criminals ever. With that being said, its simply unconscionable and highly unlikely that they would be so brazen to reappear in the same restaurant the very next day. The waitress didn’t even seem certain herself if they were the correct women, and if so, why did they take their orders and serve them their food while possibly risking having them walk out without paying again. That’s just common sense, and they know the women shopuld have been approached about the theft at the door.

Also, was there surveillance footage that captured the two women who left without paying the day before, and was those images compare to the two women seated the day of this incident? If not, the cops and the restaurant risk potential liability based on the unfounded accusations alone. The cellphone video that the women captured will go a long way in a civil case to prove why punitive damages should be awarded to these ladies. If I’m a manager I’m not calling the cops on a customer based on speculation alone. I need proof that these are the right people simply to avoid civil liability against myself and the company. That clearly wasn’t the case in this instance. A waitress speculating that “I’m pretty sure its them” doesn’t pass the smell test. The waitress who made the accusation should be fired and the manager should be terminated as well. Even if the women did commit the theft, the restaurant nor the police presented evidence to prove that they did.

This entire incident appeared to be more about discouraging black patrons from dining at this establishment, because without definitive proof that these ladies had committed a crime, the cops should never have been notified. Making a customer feel like they’re about to get arrested is grounds for a very good lawsuit. These kind of practices may even be more widespread and not necessarily isolated to this case. I wouldn’t even be surprised if this was a trend by black patrons at this establishment to walk out without paying for food, but like Alexis Brison stated in her commentary to the video, “Just because she’s black doesn’t make her a criminal,” and restaurants and other businesses must be certain that they are accurate when bringing criminal charges against consumers who patronize their establishments. Which brings me to a vital point and a lesson that many of our young people can learn from this kind of experience. With the racial climate in this country, these kinds of racial flare ups are going to become increasingly more frequent. Therefor, we must be vigilant, remain calm, and be mindful to obtain as much pertinent information as possible.

I’m quite sure the young sister who was crying uncontrollably probably was very distraught and traumatized by this incident, it wasn’t helpful to allow anger, hurt, and frustration to consume her to the point that she lost focus on what was important at that moment. We must train our young people to be cooperative at all times (these two women were), especially when you know that you haven’t done anything wrong. Get names, times, and the date of the incident to have as reference later on. You might think that with the current racial climate in the state of Missouri alone, some might take pause to consider their actions out of fear of being labeled racist, but in this instance I believe they deemed these two young African American women as vulnerable and simply didn’t care nor feared potential consequences. Applebee’s must be held accountable to in sure there are no more “dining while black incidents in America.”

The Applebees Restaurant in question information:

Applebees Restaurant

Corporate Headquarters HQ

Adress:

8140 Ward Parkway

Kansas City, MO 64114

Phone Numbers:

Customer Service – 888-592-7753

Additionally, Dine Equity owns Applebees and IHOP, so don’t support IHOP either.

Dine Equity

50 North Brand Boulevard 7th Floor

Glendale, CA 91203

Corporate – 818-24-6055

 

The People’s Champion

I’m David Adams

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Caught In The Act: Maryland Hospital Exposed By Mental Health Professional In Growing National Crisis Of Patient Dumping

Posted by David Adams on February 5th, 2018

While I’m certain that many across the nation were outraged at a video surfacing on social media, in which a female patient was dumped on a bus stop, only wearing socks and a thin night gown on a frigid night in midtown Baltimore a few weeks ago, the practice is not an anomaly, and more commonly referred to as “patient dumping.” Its a growing problem across the country that depicts the heartless, uncompassionate, and apathetic manner hospitals are choosing to dispose of medically discharged patients who are either suffering from mental health issues or homeless.

Now that the video which captured the incident recorded by a man name Imamu Baraka has gone viral and has garnered national attention, the growing outrage and fallout must be attributed to Baraka’s determination to do something, and become a voice for a woman who clearly appeared disoriented and mentally challenged, as well as other patients just like her who are being dumped onto the city streets.. While her case looked as bad as it could possibly get, the treatment of certain patients in large metropolitan hospitals across the country is unbelievably far worst. I have witnessed similar situations at the University of Maryland Hospital, Johns Hopkins, and even at Bridgeport Hospital here in the town where I currently reside.

At the center of many of these issues are difficult patients who either have psychiatric issues, are homeless, or can’t pay their medical  bill. Despite most of these medical institutions receiving federal dollars to insure every patient gets treated, medical staff routinely shuffle these “bothersome” patient cases out of the ER or clinic for no other provocation in many cases, other than the fact that a patient was deemed disruptive, disrespectful to staff, or otherwise uncooperative. I have worked in hospitals for years dealing with these kinds of patients, and what troubles me the most regarding this particular incident is the callous disregard the security personnel had for this woman.

Typically when a patient has been medically cleared in the ER by either the Physician, PA, or Nurse, a discharge process transpires. The manner in which the patient release is conducted may vary from institutions to the next, but it usually occurs with a patient’s safety in mind. In the subject instance, I’m struggling to ascertain how any medical professional at the hospital could have deemed the woman fit to be released. She clearly didn’t have all of her faculties, and was practically nude. Patients have rights and discharging a patient who clearly is incapable of making sound judgement on their own is a direct violation of HIPPA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) laws. Besides why would you put a person (especially a female) on the street in a paper thin hospital gown with no other clothing on on a frigid night like the evening of this disturbing event?

I am no medical professional but I have worked in various hospital settings for years, either transporting patient prisoners or supervising psychiatric patients. Once the patient was medically cleared the Nurse should have quizzed the patient as to whether they had transportation home. If the patient couldn’t make it home on their own, an effort should be made to contact a next to kin to help the patient return to their home safely, and in this instance I can’t see how the woman would have even been able to advise medical staff of a relative that could come to pick her up, let alone get home by herself. That’s when medical staff should have contacted the social worker working at the hospital to assist with the patient’s transition from the hospital to her home. In the mean time, if the patient is disruptive, belligerent, disrespectful, or disrupting the hospital the appropriate manner to handle such incidents is to have the patient monitored by hospital security personnel, and perhaps even restrain them to their bed in an effort to avoid the patient from harming themselves and others.

However, if a patients behavior is of such a nature, perhaps discharging the patient isn’t appropriate in their condition, and should be referred to the hospital’s Psychology Department where they can be evaluated further until such time a relative can be contacted or other information related to the patient’s medical history can be obtained. At any rate, a decision pertaining to the patient’s status should be determined by the hospital administrator and social worker. Every hospital has an acting administrator on duty to make difficult decisions similar to the subject female’s case. If their is no administrator on duty then usually an Attending Physician, PA, or even a Charge Nurse acts as the administrator and becomes an advocate for the patient. The fact that this woman was simply discarded on the street in the manner Mr. Baraka captured, is despicable, and possible may have been predicated on some other superficial factor.

Considering this was a female patient that appeared not to have on any underwear, I’m completely disturbed and troubled that one of the security persons was also female, participated in the action, and appeared unmoved that another woman was being placed on the street in the cold weather nearly nude. Not just that though, how did a group of black hospital security persons become so desensitized by displaying such lack of compassion for a patient who clearly didn’t appear to be in their right mind. I seriously doubt that a medical professional working at the hospital either directed or authorized the security staff to discharge that patient in such a manner. Even if they had done so, I’m sure that they won’t admit it after the case garnered such media exposure.

People who work in public safety like security professionals are normally held to a higher moral standard, and I find it difficult to believe that they collectively condoned their actions in regards to putting the woman on the street in that manner. If medical staff gave them such a directive, one of them should have contacted an administrator or supervisor within their respective department to get clarification on whether to actually proceed with the directive from medical staff. There is no excuse because everyone working in a hospital setting is require to complete in service training related to patient rights and HIPPA laws. So even if the security personnel was actually directed to put the patient on the street in that fashion, they should absolutely have known that not only were their actions wrong and improper, but they were in fact violating the law.

Patient dumping is a growing crisis across the country especially when it comes to the homeless and mentally ill, but the incident that Mr. Baraka captured probably is the first time that such a brazen case of “patient dumping” was actually recorded during the act. Although the hospital’s top administrator condoned the action, vowed to get to the bottom of what happened, and stated that the incident wasn’t indicative of the institutions policy related to patient care, suspicion lingers regarding how widespread the practice of dumping patients actually is at the medical facility. A more frightening thought is what might have happened to this patient if Mr. Baraka hadn’t decided to intervene of the woman’s behave. Thank God for caring medical professionals like him, because the hospital failed this patient at every turn, and society should be thankful that he caught them in the act.

 

The People’s Champion

I’m David Adams

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Honors Teen Phylicia Barnes Went Missing In Baltimore 7 Years Ago Today: Shauntel Sallis-Evans Gives Disturbing New Details In The Case And Recounts The Horror Of Searching For Her Kid Sister

Posted by David Adams on December 28th, 2017

In the past seven years I have spoken to Shauntel (Phylicia Barnes’ oldest sister), her mother Janice, and other members of the Barnes family for various articles I have written about Phylicia case, so when I reached out recently to the health care professional (Nurse) on social media she agreed to speak to me again, regarding what is unfortunately now the 7th anniversary of her kid sister’s disappearance. Knowing essentially all of the details about the heartbreaking story of a little girl who came to Baltimore to visit relatives and was subsequently found in a river, I was prepared to focus on reflections of the case since justice for her sister was entangled in Baltimore’s difficult justice system (mistrials and appeals), but the words that came out of Shauntel’s mouth were extremely disturbing to me, and caught me completely by surprise.

When she answered the phone I was greeted with her usual calming voice that spoke with a subtle southern accent, a sound I have become accustomed to when speaking to Phylicia’s family. This time though, Shauntel spoke with an urgency and intense tone I had never encountered before. The married mother of a handsome little boy spewed details of a recent incident involving her sister’s case that she personified with frustration, anger, and some hostility that gave the impression that Phylicia’s story had just happened yesterday. She explained that a private investigator had came to her home last week asking questions about her and Phylicia. Shauntel said that a few minutes into the conversation with the PI, she discovered he was working for the defense (Michael Johnson), the man who was the last person who saw Phylicia alive, and on the hook for the promising kid’s murder. She asked the man “what do you want to talk to me for?”

Her initial instinct was not to talk to him, but she became curious to what the man wanted. A very distinct trait of Shauntel’s that I have learned about her. She has that natural inquisitivity and ability to see through the surface, and reach the core of what people are trying to accomplish. In fact it was Shauntel’s inquisitions while looking for her kid city in Baltimore back in 2010 that prompted police to close down Deena Barnes’ apartment, and establish a crime scene but I’ll get to that later in the article. Shauntel listened very intently to this PI’s questions as he probed her with personal questions regarding her life, and eventually outright asked her if she had ever been a prostitute. This sparked her interest even further and she couldn’t help but wonder where he had heard such a preposterous allegation, and what did it have to do with who killed her little sister. So, she engaged him further to obtain a better understanding of why the PI had traveled all the way from Odenton Maryland to her home in New York city asking these ridiculous questions.

According to Shauntel, the PI allegedly said Deena Barnes had told him that she was a prostitute and her kid sister Phylicia had run away to Baltimore to be just like her. Shauntel said she was extremely appalled that this man had made such an assertion. After all the family had been through grieving Phylicia’s murder, the mistrials and appeals, this man had the audacity to come to NY and basically defecate on her sister’s memory. That moment during our telephone call was awkward and intense, and if it wasn’t for the fact of me having the benefit of knowing Shauntel I would have had serious doubt about the credibility of what she told me. However, everything I had extracted from her regarding her sister’s case had proven to have merit in the past, and I have no other recourse but to accept her recent comments as having merit also.

Shauntel says she was so upset that she telephoned her husband to advise him of what was going on. While she was on the phone was Rob (husband), she said the PI simply opened the door to their home and left. As we continued to talk I advised her that often times attorneys hire Private Investigators to obtain data extracted from witnesses to utilize in court, and since Phylicia’s murder was such a high profile crime that the involvement of a PI isn’t unusual. I was concerned where Michael Johnson obtained the resources to retain a PI (very expensive) for his upcoming third trial scheduled for March of 2018, but Shauntel reminded me that Johnson had a Public Defender, which made the use of a PI even more bizarre as public counsels typically are allowed limited resources to aid in the legal representation of criminal defendants,

Even more interesting though, the PI told her that they were trying to rule out the man found in the Susquehanna River (who was also from North Carolina) as being connected to Phylicia’s murder. That man, Darryl Harper (53) who was actually from Richmiond Virginia had been identified by investigators and determined to have had mental health issues and was suspected of committing suicide. The fact that the PI allegedly offered such a rationalization to Shauntel convinces me that it was just a quick untruthful quip he quickly spewed on his feet to justify the questions he asked her. Also, it almost seems that the prostitute allegations and the mention of the unrelated body found in the river, could potentially be suggesting that the man may have been a “John” of Phylica’s, but then there would have to be a dynamic story behind all of that outlining how they both ended up dead in the river.

I initially offered to Shauntel the rationalization that Johnson’s defense was simply trying to muddy up the waters by casting negativity about Phylicia in preparation for the upcoming criminal trial. Its a dirty tactic but often effective in creating doubt about the facts in many criminal cases. Although it was apparent that’s what the PI’s objective was, but it still didn’t make any since to Shauntel or me. I even said to her, let me play devil’s advocate her. So, you mean to tell me that they (Johnson’s counsel) are tying to say that because you allegedly was a prostitute, that some how justifies the feaky sexual culture they exposed Phylicia to and why she was murdered? We both concluded that such an assertion was simply insanity, but depicted the length Johnson’s defense counsel maqy be willing to reach to create a diversion or doubt of his guilt in the pretty girl’s homicide.

Shauntel went on to recount the events of that infamous night on December 28 back in 2010, with incredible memory of many of the disturbing details. She recalls getting to Deena Barnes’ apartment and immediately asking who was the last person to see her sister alive. She said Deena told her “Michael” (defendant), and she asked for his phone number. Shauntel would call Michael later on that day, she said Michael gave her various accounts about his recollection of when he last saw Phylicia. She said Michael told her he was there taking a shower, then he said he was moving out of the apartment, and he also said he there was washing clothes. Johnson also allegedly told Shauntel thast Deena would keep the door to her apartment unlocked on a regular basis, something that Phylicia had previously shared with Shauntel prior to her disappearance.

Shauntel said Michael’s comments made her become suspicious of him early on. During the time that Shauntel and members of Phylicia’s North Carolina family were there looking for Phylicia, Michael Johnson was nowhere to be found, but when Shauntel confronted Deena over the phone about leaving her apartment door open, Shauntel says she overheard Deena say to Michael “you told her that?” Shauntel said it proved to her that Michael wasn’t exactly missing, that he and Deena were still together, and she believes that’s when Deena began treating Michael as the villain. Shauntel also remembers standing in the apartment while Phylicia’s father Russell Barnes was there, and saw Deena show him a text from Michael, which Shauntel says read in part “I thought we were a team” and other comments. That gave her the impression that Deena and Michael were allegedly working in harmony to subvert, conceal, and cover up the truth about what happened to her little sister. Shauntel also said that the fact Kelly missed picking Phylicia up for a hair appointment was suspicious. “Getting our hair down is what we do as females and if “Simone” (Phylicia) knew she was getting her hair done it, she was probably on the internet bragging about going to the salon, that’s a big deal especially for a teen girl.” Shauntel said the general demeanor of the Baltimore Barnes family gave her the impression that they all already knew that her sister was dead. Shauntel said it was as if they were actually having Phylicia’s repast. There were a volume of family members there cooking, and no one had a sense of urgency to find young Phylicia, Shauntel alleges.

Shauntel said that Russel Barnes did hold a prayer circle in which they called on God to help resolve the situation. Se went on to say that her mother (Janice Mustafa) told them all that she appreciate and thank them for their prayers, but she needed them to go with her to help find her baby. Shauntel says that never happened. In fact she says that no one from the Johnson family nor the Baltimore Barnes family assisted them in helping look or search for Phylicia. Shauntel noted that even the Guardian Angels helped their family beat the streets to locate Phylicia. Later on the Barnes’ in Baltimore did begin to pass out flyers and stand on the street corners in the Reisterstown Plaza area regarding Phylicia’s case, but Shauntel believes that was only after investigators shut down Deena’s apartment and turned it into a crime scene. Shauntel blames Deena a great deal for what happened to Phylicia. She was disgusted by the sex tape that was found on Deena’s cell phone. She has always displayed visible anger regarding the kinds of things they introduced Phylicia to.

Shauntel admits not having viewed the sex tape that was used in Johnson’s initial criminal trial, but says she was told that the tape depicted a scene in a school playground near Deena’s apartment, where Johnson was performing oral sex on Deena while looking up at Phylicia. Shauntel also said that Michael and Phylicia went streaking (nude) alone on at least one occassion, and it angered her that Deena allowed this to happen by introducing Phylicia to this sexual culture. Shauntel says her sister didn’t know anything about what she was being exposed to. She says that the nearly 500 text exchanged between Michael and Phylicia were characterized by investigators as inappropriate, and she believes that her inexperienced little sister probably had feelings for Johnson. “It’s like she had her own secret little life that she could be a talking point with her friends that she could brag about,” Shauntel said. Before Phylicia’s mother left to go to Baltimore after learning that her daughter had gone missing, one of Phylicia’s closes friends tearfully described to Janice Mustafa with guilt, that Phylicia had revealed to her some of the activities that she had been allowed to participate in while visiting Baltimore, which adds credibility to Shauntel’s perspective about her kid sister using her interaction with Johnson as a talking point with her friends.

After all this time Shauntel says she still believes that Johnson is at the very least one of the people responsible for the killing of her sister. In many of my articles over the years about Phylicia’s case, I have highlighted that I believe that Johnson may not have been the only person at Deena’s apartment on the morning of the day Phylicia went missing. I reminded her of a Tweet by Glenton “Bootz” Johnson (Michael’s younger bother). Michael has always been on record as offering 1:30 p.m. as the time he last saw Phylicia alive. “Bootz’s” tweet was at exactly 1:27 p.m. that day and read “don’t tell her twice, whoop her ass.” The fact that Sleuth Detectives (Online Psychics and Investigators) were able to preserve the text and other social media content of the Johnsons, indicates that the data was available to investigators, and Shauntel is extremely troubled by the information having never entered the case at all. We even discussed the fact that the Tweet and its digital time stamp would have given police a location of the cell tower that his phone was connected to. It may show that he was near Deena’s West Baltimore apartment when he made the Tweet. The cops could have pressed him for answers, got him on the record, and established his credibility on the matter. This never happened as far as we know.

There was even more information that investigators missed opportunities to get people on record, like the January 28, 2011 Tweet (exactly one month after Phylicia disappeared) by a girlfriend of Dorian Carpenter (A Johnson cousin, who was one of the people who hanged out at Deena’s apartment on a regular basis, and one of the initial people that investigators spoke to when Phylicia went missing), that read “its trapped at the damn, don’t pull the lever.” It was a piece of information that I personally received via email from online Sleuthers, and information I turned over to the Maryland State Police detective investigating Phylicia’s murder. Shauntel has a serious problem understanding the Tweet. “If you know somebody did something, why would you just put it out there like that,” she said. I told her that the girl may have been attempting to send a message as to where Phylicia was, before her nude body was discovered near the Conowingo Damn inside the Susquehanna River in Northern Maryland. Shauntel admitted that it was simply incredulous and not a coincidence that a girlfriend of a Johnson relative, who hanged at the apartment where Phylicia was staying, gave an early lead describing as to the type of area where the teen would ultimately be found. We both agreed that the girl definitely knew something about the case, and the cops simply missed it.

During the first trial Shauntel learned through testimony from Deena Barnes that Deena had observed Michael Johnson attempting to touch Phylicia in her private area, a incident that Shauntel says should have prompted Deena to prohibit Michael from having any further contact with Phylicia. Shauntel also believes that, although the state’s star witness (James McCray) may have lied on the stand regarding having allegedly testified for Montgomery County in a criminal case, he may not necessarily have been lying about seeing Phylicia’s lifeless body at Deena’s apartment before Johnson disposed of her sister’s body. The fact that McCray lied is unfortunate, but the state knowingly withholding discovery (exculpatory evidence) from Johnson’s legal counsel was the state simply shooting itself in the foot, while knowing full well that it almost certainly would result in the judge declaring a mistrial. Shauntel believes that McCray wasn’t lying about his account of seeing Phylicia’s body wrapped in sheets. “Why would he (McCray) implicate himself in a murder case and risk potentially being criminally charged himself?” Shauntel was eluding to how charges are often filed for a person’s involvement in serious crimes after the fact, and Shauntel doesn’t believe McCray was lying about seeing her sister wrapped in a sheet at Deena’s apartment because the state could have charged him.

Now after two mistrials and an illegal acquittal by the last judge who chaired the second trial, she has little hope that Johnson will be convicted for the murder of her little sister. I tried to comfort her by suggesting that we shouldn’t speak his acquittal into existence, but Shauntel said “I’m just telling you what my gut feelings are. They (the state) don’t have this guy’s testimony anymore, so what do they have now? All the social media stuff and text? Are they going to go back and use that now?” Shauntel also said that the state let Deena and others off the hook even though they were in a nude sex tape with Phylicia. “I don’t know, something happened, but I just don’t know what it is, and the way they investigated her case without using all the social media stuff.” Shauntel says she’ll be in the court room for the third trial in March, “but I’m not getting my hopes up, it is what it is. I just think he’s gonna walk.”

For other articles I’ve written about the Phylicia Barnes case, go to home page and type in here name the top right corner of the. 

 

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I’m Crime Writer David Adams

 

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An Officer Down: The Dichotomy Of Baltimore’s Policing In Wake Of Slain Detective

Posted by David Adams on November 16th, 2017

The entire city of Baltimore has been on edge the last few months with a rash of shootings that has raised the homicide rate in the city to over 300 for the second straight year. Crime as a whole seems to have began to spiked with a rash of violent crimes being committed by juveniles in downtown, becoming a major concern for city leaders, and while being highlighted in the media primarily because the crimes have struck at the heart of the city’s main financial district (the Inner Harbor). The Mayor and city leaders have tapped into every resource possible in a desperate attempt to curve the violence, but appears to be spinning its wheels as the body count continues to rise. As the crime wave swarms over the entire city, no one seems to be immune, while two Baltimore cops have also fallen in a month’s time, and are glaring casualties to the brutality of senseless street violence.

Last night 18-year Baltimore police veteran, Detective Sean Suiter became the city’s 306th homicide victim, when he was shot in the head by an unknown gunman while investigating a lead into a previous homicide. The cop’s investigation took him into the Harlem Park section of the city, one of the toughest turfs on Baltimore’s west side. City Police Commissioner Kevin Davis had been asking all night that the city pray for the fallen officer and his family, as the cop’s condition was dire and appeared bleak because he sustained injury to his brain. Despite the efforts of doctors at shock trauma, Det. Suiter eventually succumbed to his injuries.

The threads on most local news outlets social media websites were filled with heartfelt expressions of condolence for the cop, his family, and the entire city of Baltimore as a whole. The basic sentiment seems centered around a common theme, which is the exhaustion that everyone has with the violence in Baltimore. The discourse regarding “how to solve Baltimore’s violence” is a decades old dialogue that seems to fall upon death ears. The issue tends to reduce into finger pointing, blaming, and a culture of divisiveness resulting in a “us against them” between city government, its police force, and the citizens who largely reside in marginalized and poor sections of Baltimore.

Split right down the middle are diverse perspectives related to the recent killing of a city cop. Some point to a volume of police misconduct incidents like cops who were caught planting drugs of citizens, the recent indictment of 8 police officers in the department’s now defunct gun unit, and the handling of the Freddie Gray case that led to riots a few years ago, as perhaps the most pervasive premise for while its now open season on police in Baltimore city. The relationship between cops and citizens in Baltimore has always been tenuous at best.  Other postures consist of people who regard cops as public servants who protect the various communities that make up the multi cultural communities of the city.

However, regardless what position you possess regarding city politics and the violent crime that plagues Baltimore, one thing is blatantly obvious, and that’s the manner in which cops react to crimes when one of their own are slain, verses when a normal citizen is killed. Some have made the argument that if city police would respond in the same manner when killings of citizens occur as they do when a cop gets killed, that the city probably wouldn’t have as many homicides or as much violent crime. Police officials go to tremendous lengths to bring cop killers to justice and even take unusual measures to catch these kind of killers, like bringing entire classes of police trainees from the police academy to beat the streets knocking on doors, and to obtain even the slightest amount of intelligence that they hope will aid in their investigation.

Its this dichotomy of policing in Baltimore that has fed an ever growing visceral hatred for cops in the city that has spanned decades. In a town where “stop snitching” is the anthem for this kind of crime, a$69.000.00 dollar bounty may not be sufficient to lure support from the community to help solve this crime. Maybe my perspective is unorthodox, or perhaps poorly timed in the wake of this senseless tragedy, but in many communities, not particularly for this fallen police detective, however the tears are few primarily for this city police agency who has failed them, abused them, and remain indifferent from the very people they are charged to serve.

Now in an irony made only for a television crime series like “The Wire” and “Homicide,” city police are now dependent upon the citizens of Baltimore to help jump start their most current and intense hunt for a murderer who killed a cop last night. Those of us who know Baltimore cops well, already know how it will all unfold. They’ll get their man, because they will leave no stone unturned in their pursuit, even if it means having to violate the law or the civil and constitutional rights of private citizens to accomplish this. The citizens of Baltimore wonder though, will city police ever exercise such diligence and tenacity investigating a murder when a common citizen is gunned down as a result of senseless violence?

While cops vehemently mourn the killing of one of their own, other locations all over the city that possess makeshift memorials where Baltimore’s children have fallen, serve as reminders of the horror, the danger, and the shame of a city so engulfed with violence that it snatched the life of a soldier sworn to protect her citizens. There can be no distinction between the police response when citizens fall to gun violence juxtapose to when one of their own is struck down, and if Baltimore ever heals from its own contestation, the gap between its government, police, and her poor citizens must be mended to insure the life of brave cops like Detective Sean Suiter wasn’t lost in vein.

 

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I’m Crime writer David B. Adams

 

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Goodson Cleared In BCPD Internal Probe: Did Wagon Driver Get Away With Killing Freddie Gray?

Posted by David Adams on November 9th, 2017

Now that a Baltimore City Police Department internal probe of officer Ceasar Goodson has concluded with his acquittal for his alleged misconduct in the death of Freddie Gray, outrage and other questions continue to linger about how Gray sustained what would be fatal injuries on the day he was arrested on Baker street in West Baltimore several years ago. A tragic death that resulted in city wide protest and riots that made national media, has in many ways divided Baltimore’s citizens, politicians, clergy, and its police department.

Authorities claim Gray who had many arrest for petty drug soliciting, intentionally inflicted injuries to himself to avoid having to go to a lockup at central bookings, a tactic police say Gray was known for. Despite amature video recorded by a witness’ cellphone at the scene of Gray’s arrest going public, and depicting Gray seemingly in pain and discomfort, police say it was all an act. Subsequently, Gray was driven around in a police wagon while Goodson made at least 5 stops before cops realized that he was unconscious and not breathing. Gray would succumb to a severed spinal cord a week later.

His death highlighted a long standing claim of police brutality by citizens from many communities just like Sandtowne Windchester where Gray was raised and lived. Anger over yet another unjust killing of a black man while in police custody ushered in tremendous fallout from a public with visceral hatred of its police force, and painted a backdrop of arson, violence, and youth clashes with police throughout the city. In a scene resembling events in Baltimore that followed the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Baltimore in many respects had seemingly grown impatient with its city government’s lack of accountability of its heavy handed police force.

While the media, police, and city government chose to focus on the unrest that followed Gray’s death by citizens during the riots and uprising, the central issue of exactly what happened to Freddie Gray became lost in a vacuum of political scapegoating and finger pointing which decried the obvious deficiencies within Baltimore’s social, economic, and political landscape that hand been simmering for decades. The criminal cases of police officers involved in Gray’s arrest being dismissed by Baltimore’s top prosecutor Marilyn Mosby, only added fuel to a fire that has yet to be extinguished in a city where many of its citizens are illiterate, and remain angered by policing that has historically brutalized them.

In a October 2015 blog article, A “Chink In The Armor” For BCPD Officers Charged With Killing Prisoner: Cop’s Account May Solidify State Case In Freddie Gray Death, I outlined the timeline of Freddie Gray’s arrest by city police. In the breakdown of the various stops that officer Goodson made, the stop at Freemont and Mosher streets is perhaps the most interesting. In a surveillance video obtained from a corner convenience store during a separate investigation by the Baltimore city sheriff department which was ordered by Mosby, Goodson is captured stopping the vehicle and going into the back of the wagon. Police say he was simply checking on Gray, but it is quite plausible that Gray may have sustained his fatal injuries during that time.

Gray who many experts argue was a victim of “contempt of cop” (targeted by police who have arrested him a number of times without meaning punishment) had been placed in the police wagon head first and faced down. Goodson who probably was annoyed by Gray’s behavior in the rear could have went inside of the wagon and stomped on Grays neck causing his spinal cord to be severed, and while there is no proof of such a claim in my argument, Goodson having made that particular stop (a stop that would not have been brought to light if Mosby hadn’t ordered a parallel investigation by the sheriff’s office)  should have been under intense scrutiny to determine why he stopped. Lt. Rice had just ordered Goodson to stop and allowed officers to remove Gray to place shackles on him before being transported to Central Booking.

The Freemont and Mosher stop and the Druid Hill Avenue stop are both suspicious. They leave tremendous suspicion on police interaction with Gray during these time periods, while no officer deemed it necessary to seek medical attention for an arrestee in their custody. All of the stops made by cops while going in and out of the back of the wagon isn’t normal behavior or procedure. It is however common for Baltimore police to stop and pick up other prisoners while in transit to Bookings, but very unusual and suspect for a wagon to turn around in travel in an opposite direction to make a pick up, especially when the wagon is merely blocks away from Central Booking when a call is put out for a transport vehicle.

Some say Goodson was a scapegoat and simply transported Gray, while the injuries to Gray must have occurred during his arrest. A perspective that is highly disputable based on police standards related prisoner transport. Goodson had the right at anytime to call a medic for Gray, solely predicated on the fact that once he accepted Gray as a prisoner in a police vehicle he was operating, he obtained full responsibility of Freddie Gray’s well being. Officer Goodson was present at the scene where Gray was arrested and stood by while cops loaded a man who on the surface appeared to be injured, and was visibly crying out for assistance. Goodson should never have accepted Gray as a prisoner in his custody based on those facts alone.

Consequently, all of the stops that Goodson made while having custody and control of Freddie Gray goes a long way to establish a depraved attitude toward the security and well being of a prisoner in Goodson’s care. More alarmingly though, as it relates to criminal and internal police charges against officer Ceasar Goodson, is the unconscionable decision to arrive at an acquittal on all charges by a police investigative panel that amounted to nothing more than a body of self governance (a measure widely scrutinized by critics who argue that Baltimore police is constantly being allowed to police themselves). The panel’s weak rationalization of blaming the police department’s failure to widely disseminate a new departmental memo regarding seat-belt requirements for all prisoners being transported, is regarded by many within the public as a disturbing basis for letting Goodson off the hook for his role in the death Gray’s death.

At the very least Goodson was expected to receive some punishment surrounding the entire Gray matter. Goodson failed to not only follow police procedure (failure to notify all personnel regarding the seat-belt policy doesn’t mean Goodson, who should have known the policy regardless, doesn’t mean he was unaware), he failed to follow a direct order given by Lt. Rice, who directed him to transport Gray to Central Bookings. If there ever was a person to use as a fall guy, Goodson was well positioned to take such a hit, but the fact that none of the police officers involved in the Freddie Gray matter have ever been held accountable, speaks volumes about the culture of policing in Baltimore that has been long decried by citizens as a brutal and heartless agency run by thugs.

Advocates and others who support the police will try to move on from the tragedy that resulted in the death of Gray, who himself had a troubling upbringing. The victim of lead poisoning as a child created developmental issues for Freddie Gray and his twin sister all of their lives, and prior the circumstances that resulted in his senseless death being national news, the story of Freddie Gray’s life was perhaps the most tragic story told. Now those who reject the posture from the public seeking accountability for brutal cops, are using the Freddie Gray story to rationalize a spike in Baltimore’s current climate that has seen a spike in violent crime, but those educated on Baltimore’s police know that Gray’s case and current crime are like apples and oranges, because despite much of the innuendo and other hyperbole being spewed about Freddie Gray’s character, he was never convicted for any violent crimes.

So, while the political cat and mouse continues with Baltimore’s version of a national epidemic (police brutality), the scars of a city’s pain will forever be seen through the tragic story that unfolded on Baker street in Baltimore’s historic community of Sandtown-Winchester, when cops failed to assist a man name Freddie Gray who called out for help while in their custody. More importantly, what happened when officer Ceasar Goodson entered the back of the police wagon with no one around to bare witness, should be facts about Gray’s story that we should equally remember, and stamped within our hearts and minds for ever.

 

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I’m Crime Writer David Adams

 

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Slain Honors Teen Phylicia Barnes Remembered In Fashion Line: E’nomisis Apparel Helps Family Recover From Tragic Ending Of Promising Kid From North Carolina

Posted by David Adams on October 31st, 2017

Its hard to believe that in the seven years since Janice and Raheem Mustafa’s middle daughter (Phylicia Simone Barnes) met a fateful tragedy while visiting relatives on her biological father’s side of the family, no one has ever been prosecuted for this promising child’s murder. In the years following her killing, a lot of tears, hurt, and continued pain has engulfed her family as the reality of coping without such an intelligent and beautiful daughter begins to settle.

Phylicia was called “Simone” by her close relatives, like her big sister Shauntel and baby sister Iyana. Three beautiful females who were very close. Its a bond that despite Simone’s passing, remains in tact to this day. Shauntel explains that when they were younger the sisters had a thing of calling each other by there favorite names, but only in reverse. For instance ‘Letnuahs’, ‘Enomis’, and ‘Anayi’. It was a silly girl’s past time that was only unique to Janice’s beautiful female children.

Since Simone was murdered you can imagine the grief that the surviving daughters must have endured, considering that a link in the chain was broken among a closely knit family of mostly females. Growing up in what would be the Mustafa home, I’m sure there were fights, indifference, and other disputes just like any other family. Yet, it was just unconscionable to think that something so tragic would happened to one of Janice’ girls, especially Phylicia. Described as a “silly naive country girl” by her mother, Simone was often times the center of attention within the many social circles she belonged.

Janice told me that her daughter was a student leader at the Academic Academy high school she attended, acting as a mentor and even began working as a youth counsel to underclassmen at her school. Simone was described as a self starter, who got a job to help her parents buy her own car. She always kept her head to the skies, Raheem said. “My baby girl always wanted me to take her to the airport to watch the airplanes take off and land,” a past time he enjoyed with young Simone.

Simone and all of the kids who grew up in the Mustafa home weren’t street kids. They had structure, guidance, and two hardworking parents in the household that brought up their children in rural North Carolina. If you’ve ever had the opportunity to interacted with Janice’s kids, you could easily see the amazing job she accomplished with her girls. That’s what makes her story so heartbreaking. She was a child on an expedition to connect with her biological father’s family in Baltimore when evil reared its ugly head, and snatched this precious child from this world forever.

Over the years I have written a volume of articles about this promising kid’s tragic story. You can read them all at The People’s Champion Blog, by typing Phylicia Barnes in the search engine at the top right corner of the homepage. My efforts have have help keep this child’s story in the public in hopes that people will come forward to help solve her cold case.

Mean while, Shauntel and Iyana have launched an apparel website in memory of their slain sister to help fund and bring awareness to the growing issue of Missing and Exploited children. The website can be reached here: Enomisis (E’ nomis-sis) and stands for Simone Sis backwards. The site features a volume of lady t-shirts with the Enomis insignia, SLUT (Sophisticated, Luxurious, Unique, Trend) T’s, a variety of mink eyelashes, and trendy knee high socks in flavors with the Enomis logo. In addition, Shauntel is the designer of her own wig line. The site has contact information to reach out to her for custom orders and other request.

While they probably will never fully overcome the horror of this senseless tragedy, their tribute to their sister gives them a project, a purpose, and a venue to continue fighting for her justice. The T-shirts says something about one’s character. It says innocence, beauty, as well as intelligence. It speaks to the never ending bond of sisterhood and togetherness. a family trait that her surviving sisters want to share with the world, in hopes that you never forget the pretty purple flower who was found floating in a river. A very sad commentary. #enomis #justiceforphyliciabarnes

 

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I’m Crime Blogger David B Adams

 

 

 

 

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Slain Georgia Teen’s Cold Case Turned Five Years Old: Crime Blogger Has An Audio Message About “Honey” Marie Malone

Posted by David Adams on October 25th, 2017

The tragedy of what happened to Flora Malone’s youngest daughter five years ago is simply too heartbreaking to some up in pages of the local press or on a blogger’s headlines. Vanessa who was affectionately known as “Honey” was only 100 pounds soak and wet a family says, which makes it more disturbing that someone would shoot her in the back, snuffing out her life, and taking her from her family forever. A cowardice act by an even more cowardice individual.

The details of that fateful night has always been sketchy, but in five years since her tragic killing the police claim they have no solid leads, and only say one man is a person of interest. The pleas for someone to come forward and tell what they know has always fallen upon death ears, as the streets in Stone Mountain turned its back on one of their own. Honey was a native daughter who lived, worked, and went to school in the community. What happened to this teen could have happened to any other young female coming up and that neighborhood.

The fact that she was shot in the back should outrage everyone living there, as I’m sure young Vanessa didn’t pose any threat to a gang of heavily armed men. How could you sleep, walk in that community, or even simply go through every day life knowing something a brutal murder case? The world is dark and heartless. Do the right think. Here’s my audio Message about ‘Honey.”

 

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I’m Crime Blogger David B. Adams

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The Tragedy Of An Entire Baltimore Family’s Murder By Drug Dealers: Dawson Safe Haven Community Center Erected At Site Of House Fire In Memory Of Slain Family

Posted by David Adams on October 20th, 2017

She wasn’t a typical Baltimore mother, passionate, tough, and a woman who cared about the community that her children were growing up in. Angela Dawson and her husband Carnell were raising 6 kids in a small neighborhood tucked away behind the infamous Greenmount Cemetery in a gritty section of East Baltimore, where the remains of John Wilkes Booth are interned, and one of many poor sections of the city known to residents as Oliver.

The landscape of the Dawson family’s home was no different from other parts of town, where urban blight is common place. Oliver and surrounding communities had boarded up houses that emerged during the onset of high drug traffic, homicides, and other violent crimes that has permeated the predominately African American community for decades. Like much of the city, Oliver’s abandoned housing problem left many streets with just a few residents still living on the block. The seemingly abandoned neighborhoods gave way to a proliferation of drug soliciting that brought addicts into the community, who descended on the neighborhood like the walking dead.

Drug dealers pounce on blocks that hold few residents, because the cops usually don’t patrol streets that have little to no activity. That’s when Angela Dawson took action and began a consistent campaign to rid her block of drug activity, so her kids could at least play on the streets and sidewalks near their own home. Her constant complaints to police resulted in conflicts with local dealers who used intimidation tactics in retaliation for disrupting their drug operations.

Baltimore Police say that Angela Dawson called the police to report drug activity on her block 109 times between 2000 and 2002. After Angela had repeatedly alerted police to drug dealing, assault, and other crime, that’s when her family became a target.  In retaliation for reporting crime to police, the Dawsons endured repeated vandalism of their home, and then on October 3, 2002, an arsonist threw a molotov cocktail through a window of the Dawson home. A neighbor, Darrell L. Brooks was suspected of committing that crime, but despite the man (21) being on probation for car theft, reports indicate that the probation officer assigned to him never contacted him even when Brooks failed to contact his PO.

Just thirteen days later the convicted criminal kicked down the door of the Dawson home during the early morning hours while the family slept, doused the home with gasoline and set it ablaze. Carnell Dawson was able to jump out of a window to the house, but succumbed to his injuries days later. Angela and five of her six children perished in the fire, creating outcry over the magnitude of the crime that was only matched by the frustration many residents expressed who simply could not believe that city officials who were aware of the escalating violence, had been unable to protect the family. While authorities were strongly criticized by the public over the killing of an entire family by drug dealers, City officials defended their actions, saying an offer to relocate the family was refused.,

The charred home of the Dawson family after it was firebombed in retaliation for reporting crime to police…

Some community leaders argue that police and investigators often meet a wall of silence when crimes occur in the city, people are witnesses to shootings and killings, know exactly who did it, and won’t tell the police, fearing the kind of retaliation that happened to the Dawson Family. However, leaders believe the city should have been more proactive in insuring the family’s safety. Angela Dawson was seen by many as an “anti drug crusader,” a trait rarely possessed by citizens living in Baltimore and other urban settings around the country, and many following this tragic story believe that the police should have protected the family, despite their unwillingness to relocate.

Now, it was more obvious than ever that the Dawson killings showed how far Baltimore’s drug rings would go to retaliate against someone who interfered with their operations. A street code of silence has always been the order of the day in Baltimore, and an immature DVD called “stop snitching” is the anthem used by criminals in the city that was produced by a local Baltimore drug dealer. The high volume of crime and violence has created a long lasting culture of no cooperation by citizens with the police, and leaving fear within many communities while criminals operate with impunity.

After the Dawson murders the city and community leaders sought to redevelop the Oliver community, and spent a $1 million dollars to rebuild the structure that was once the Dawson Family home. Erected in its place out of tragedy rose something positive. The Dawson Safe Haven offers a program where kids, mostly from poor homes, could come after school for a snack, to play games, do home work, and other activities designed to protect the kids in Oliver, from the pervasive culture of drugs and violence. The program is a benchmark for the community, honoring the memory of a senseless tragedy while protecting young children, ironically in the same manner that Angela Dawson sought for her kids.

The Dawson Safe Haven Community Center, erected on the site where a firebomb charred a home killing the entire family, in the Oliver section of East Baltimore…

While the charred smell from a burnt building no longer stings the air, echoes of the Dawson family attack still linger, as the Oliver Community and other sections of Baltimore City continue to struggle with the problems of drugs, and violence. Yet, the brazen and heartless nature of the crime that snuffed out the Dawsons, is one of the saddest stories a city could ever tell. After rigorous efforts to rid her street with drugs and violence, constant dispute and retaliation from criminals, the story ends with Mrs. Dawson and five of her youngest children (ages 9-14), burning to death in an engulfed bedroom, and a young man from down the street in jail.

In Baltimore the Oliver Community is one of America’s most dangerous neighborhoods in one of the country’s most violent cities. People are use to the makeshift memorials marking sidewalks where their sons and daughters fell after meeting a violent end. Gun violence as the result of drugs have emptied many bedrooms, but most can’t ever recall an entire household, with five children being wiped out at once.

The neighborhood where the Dawsons lived is known as the badlands. More than half of the row houses are boarded, and the streets are now held down by young teenagers in puffy coats watching over their shoulders as they move through the community. Despite the eerie feeling lingering around the block, this story made even the most hardened and toughest of men tear up after the Dawson family home was firebombed. There is still positive change that can be seen though, as city and state agencies have established programs in Oliver to combat the proliferation of drugs. Baltimore is the most violent of the nation’s 20 largest cities.

The city has made strides fighting crimes, in one of the largest urban communities with one of the highest per capita rates of intravenous drug use. Residents who remember Angela Dawson say she was a lively person and a great mother, who would often be seen playing ball in the streets with her boys, and shooing away drug dealers from around her children. People in Oliver say they will not be intimidated by what happened to the Dawson family, and police have vowed to crack down on offenders who intimidate citizens, but reality is different. Oliver remains a poor community struggling to emerge from its dark past, and using the Dawson Safe Haven Center as a guiding light of hope. After 15 years, the bitterness and sadness is still felt within the community, and can visibly be seen when residents walk by, or drop their children off at the center.

Not long ago the sounds of the Dawson children playing in the streets were echoed on the block. Today there are still sounds of children playing, but they’re kids safely snuggled inside a building and on the grounds where the previous occupants were martyrs, seemingly to save the lives of countless other children. Their names are fresh in the minds of people who had kids that played with the Dawson children, and while they are all gone now, they will forever be remembered in this senseless tragedy by a community still struggling to exist. In their memory!

The People’s Champion Blog

I’m Journalist and Crime Blogger David B. Adams

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Chicago Teen’s Death Sparks Outrage: Kenneka Jenkins Was Found Dead In A Hotel Freezer, While Friends Claim They Don’t Know What Happened

Posted by David Adams on September 14th, 2017

When 19=year-old Kenneka Jenkins got permission to borrow her mothers car to celebrate her girl friend’s birthday, it was suppose to be a night of fun filled partying as the youth settled in at a Chicago area hotel. A volume of video clips shared from party goers cellphones, depict an atmosphere of loud music, drinking, and marijuana usage. It’s a typical teen party, but many question why the party was being held at a hotel? Additionally, Kenneka and many of the females seen at the event were dressed wearing half shirts with an excessive amount of cleavage being displayed. Still the scene is reminiscent of a typical modern teen party.

But something happened that hasn’t fully been brought out into the open. Some how young Kenneka became separated from her best friend at the party, was allegedly declared missing (that’s what they told the teen’s mother at least), and was later subsequently found dead inside a large walk in freezer at the hotel where the party was being held. The limited facts about this tragic case have been confusing and contradicting to say the least. This has caused a backlash from the public towards Kenneka’s so called best friend Monifa, whose birthday party was being held.

Also, a Facebook live video which has gone viral:

Is a very disturbing video, because sound analyse have produced edited excerpts from the footage that seem to suggest that young Kenneka may have been raped, and that the other three females captured in the video were present during the suspected sexual assault. In the edited audio evidence produced by independent sound technicians, one of the young women at the party appears to have said “they are stupid for raping her.” In another portion of the clip, technicians highlight a part of the sound that offers apparent moaning, a female voice in what sounds like a subtle utterance pleading for help. Precisely at that moment someone turns up the music, seeming to drown out the sounds in the background.

You decide for yourself if there is any credibility to the alleged rape scenario by listening to the edited and enhanced audio done on the video from the hotel room that I have obtained from the “Lions Ground” podcast:

In addition to the rape allegation, another plausible version of what may have happened is starting to gain traction on social media. Sources close to this case are saying that Kenneka’s friend Monifa may have received $200 dollars for a birthday sex romp with some of the males attending the party, and that Kenneka was supposedly have been offered up for sex with one of the guys. Apparently, Kenneka wasn’t a willing participant in the sex part of the partying. The video depicts Monifa telling Kenneka that she needs to relax and have a good time, with Kenneka responding “I am having a good time.” However, too often young people fall prey to violence and other negative situations due to peer pressure, and simply making bad decisions under the influence of alcohol and or drugs.

If this young women was in fact raped while others were present, they are all subject to potential criminal charges, in what would be perhaps an extremely disturbing case resulting in the death of their supposed friend. While the million dollar question remains as how did this teen end up dead in a freezer, when she was supposed to be celebrating her best friend’s birthday?

Moreover, Its highly suspect that this teen who was described by people who were there as being completely inebriated to the point that she could barely walk, some how became separated from her friends. This where the outrage comes from, because females say that as a culture, when they go out they have each others back to avoid these kind of situations. The fact that Kenneka remained missing, and her friend Monifa was at home on Facebook doesn’t settle well with most following this horrible story.

The onslaught of fighting, name calling, and finger pointing that has exacerbated within social media doesn’t serve this teen’s case any good what so ever. Those who were there should promptly speak with police officials to aid in determining what happened to this young women. I am troubled by the limited mindset of partying at a hotel by attractive young women. Even int the most rural towns across this country, when women show up at hotel parties dressed in provocative attire, while they may have no intention to indulge in sex, it often sends a  strong message to males who interpret it as an invitation for sex.

Its a disturbing story that needs an intense public exposure to get to the bottom of what happened on that night that led to Kenneka Jenkins’ tragic ending…

To Be Continued…

 

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I’m Crime Blogger David B. Adams

 

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