Author name: Jacob Leidolf

Jake is an artist / graphic and web designer.

Events, Features, Focus on Law Enforcement, Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety, News

Talkin’ to the Police 6/15/20

https://cutt.ly/TALKIN2POLICE A community conversation with police officers about Police Reform. Topic: Talkin’ to the PoliceTime: Jun 15, 2020 06:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meetinghttps://cutt.ly/TALKIN2POLICE Meeting ID: 876 6416 9639Password: 536340 One tap mobile+13126266799,,87664169639#,,1#,536340# US (Chicago)+16465588656,,87664169639#,,1#,536340# US (New York) Dial by your location+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)+1 646 558 8656 US (New York)+1 301 715 8592 US (Germantown)+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)+1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose)+1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)Meeting ID: 876 6416 9639Password: 536340Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kczRPR4DT1

Events, Features, Focus on Law Enforcement, Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety, News

Black & Blue III – PPP (Plans, Policies & Proposals)

Black and Blue Community Conversation on Police / Community Relations and Police Accountability http://cutt.ly/blknblu Topic: Black & Blue III – PPP (Plans, Policies & Proposals)Time: Jun 11, 2020 06:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meetinghttps://cutt.ly/BLKNBLU Meeting ID: 857 2571 3069Password: 047721 One tap mobile+13126266799,,85725713069#,,1#,047721# US (Chicago)+16465588656,,85725713069#,,1#,047721# US (New York) Dial by your location+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)+1 646 558 8656 US (New York)+1 301 715 8592 US (Germantown)+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)+1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose)+1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)Meeting ID: 857 2571 3069Password: 047721Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdaSCGeMV3

Arts & Culture, Community, Community Spotlight, News

Solidaridad Benefit for Puerto Rico

[Via Distillery Boston]   Solidaridad Benefit for Puerto Rico, We Can Make A Difference! Please join us in Solidaridad with Puerto Rico, Thursday November 9, 5-9 PM.  We are hosting a Solidaridad Art Auction to benefit and support relief efforts in light of the current Puerto Rican humanitarian crisis and disaster. Funds raised will go to grassroots organizations and the transportation of direct delivery relief and more. Over 30 artists are generously donating original art for the auction. During the auction Radio Wolftown will be spinning a live DJ set and Lady Enchantress will be performing followed by a report back on the relief efforts in Puerto Rico by AgitArte. Participation in this event will help support lifesaving initiatives and humanitarian relief efforts. Art enthusiasts and supporters bid for the chance to own a piece of original art for a good cause. The Solidaridad Art Auction Benefit will be followed by an after-party at B3 Restaurant & Bar with DJ Take Flyte spinning hip hop, house, latin & soul from 10 PM-12:30 AM. B3 will provide stationed bites for attendees and 100% of Collective Arts Brewing beer sales will go to PR relief. Participating Artists: Anabel Vázquez Rodríguez, Andy Li, Asma Kazmi, Autumn Ahn, Benjamin Lundberg Torres Sanchez, Candace Khoakham, Caitlin Duennebier, Cey Adams, DonRimx, Erin Shaw, Estefania Puerta, Ewok/ MSK, Georgia Dare Kennedy, Hoxxoh, Jack Arbaugh, Joanna Tam, Jo Dery, Josh Steinbauer / The International Pancake Film Festival, Juan Obando , Kenji Nakayama, Kristin Texeira, Linda Behar, Marka27, Mary Provenzano, Mathieu Bitton, Max Razdow , Molly Greene, Pat Falco, Percy Fortini-Wright, Pippi Zornoza, Scott Listfield , Shey Rivera, Sneha Shrestha, TJ Kelley III, William T. Williams, Xander Marro, and more… See images of included work here: https://solidaritywithpuertorico.tumblr.com Programming: Distillery Gallery – Auction and performances 5 – 8 PM  |  Silent Auction 5 – 9 PM  |  Radio Wolftown 7:30 PM  |  Lady Enchantress 8 PM  |  Introduction and reportback from AgitArte 8 – 9 PM  |  Closing of Bids and art handling. B3 Restaurant & Bar – Afterparty with DJ Take Flyte 10 PM – 12:30 AM  |  Collective Arts Brewing 160 Massachusetts Ave, Boston, MA 02115 Organized by Anabel Vázquez Rodríguez, Liza Quiñonez, Oliver Mak, Pat Falco, & Shane Levi. Funds raised will go to Casa Pueblo Agitarte / Casa Taller/ Papel Machete Movimiento Agrícola Popular Colectiva Feminista Idebajo El Local We will be collecting donations of everything solar; solar panels, solar bulbs, solar lamps, solar cell-phone chargers, solar radios, water filters, and tarps. A trip will be made on November 21st to deliver donated supplies. We will also be accepting donation of airline miles to support the transportation of volunteers. Artwork by Puerto Ricans will go directly to their families in Puerto Rico.

Boston Wrong, Features, Focus on Law Enforcement, Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety, News, Tech & Gadgets, U-Report, Youth

BPD Does the ‘Dap’ – #CommunityDisconnect at its Finest

The BPD is arguably one of the more media savvy police forces, maintaining active Twitter, Facebook and YouTube accounts along with the BPDnews.com site which highlights police activity, especially the warm fuzzy kind of stories that feel like big wet dog kisses from McGruff the crime dog. In a tweet sent Sunday praising recent public engagement, BPD said they “had a great time ‘doing the dap’ and talking public safety with the kids from the Lyndon School in West Roxbury” #CuzWeCare. #CuzWeCare: Our officers had a great time ‘doing the dap’ and talking public safety with the kids from the Lyndon School in West Roxbury. pic.twitter.com/veN3LOM1wq — Boston Police Dept. (@bostonpolice) May 14, 2017 It did not take long for Twitter users to pounce on the mis-identification of the dance move in question prompting a doubling down by the BPD: “‘Dabbing’ or ‘dapping’…it’s still #CommunityPolicing at its finest!” “Dabbing” or “dapping”…it’s still #CommunityPolicing at its finest! — Boston Police Dept. (@bostonpolice) May 15, 2017 Responses ranged from raised eybrow memes and GIFs to more incisive indictments of the Department’s lack of connection to the community it serves, particularly communities of color. While the distinction between a “dab” and a “dap” may seem like a nuance of youth slang / culture, best suited for discourse in the Urban Dictionary comments section, it becomes yet another example of disconnection when used for a photo op-by a BPD that aggressively tries to curate its image and place in the news narrative as much as it avoids engaging with real community critique. This is not the first time the BPD has come under fire for what at the time must have seemed like a great idea for community outreach. Their new $89,000 ice cream truck, purchased for “Operation Hoodsie Cup” (where police give out ice cream to kids around the city) has been blasted as wasteful and ineffective at establishing meaningful relationships with community and youth and programs like “Operation Safe Homes” and “Stop and Frisk” have been called out as unconstitutional by the ACLU and other members of the legal community. Even among their own membership the BPD struggles to find credibility and support in their efforts to diversify and connect with community, drawing and ignoring consistent critique from the Massachuseets Association of Minority Law Enforcment Officers (MAMLEO) while touting token and figurehead appointments lacking on-the-ground power. Meanwhile the latest figures for BPD new hires show 75% of new officers are white although Boston (a “majority-minority” city) is continuing to become even more diverse. The optics problem for the BPD has not gone away and will persist until more than superficial actions are taken to reform the organization. For those who think this was just a twitter blunder, there are more serious questions it points to for anyone who is critical of the BPD and holds them to a higher standard of public service. Who runs their social media / PR? Do they employ any young people? Any people of color? Anyone who would immediately know not to appropriate a dance move for PR without even being able to pronounce (spell) it correctly? Are there follow up resources listed for other citizens/schools to connect with this program or was this tweet merely a pat on the back? Did anyone think to do the public safety engagement which preceded the dab with students from schools / districts more directly impacted by the recent rash of shootings and violence? (The Lyndon School is located in the E-5 Police district which had just over 2% of the city’s homicides over 20 years, whereas Roxbury / Mission Hill had %26, Mattapan, %22 and Dorchester, %19 (some of which occured on school grounds) If yes, why were these engagements not highlighted? Does the BPD ever admit getting anything wrong, even when it is obvious? The answers illuminate a gravity beyond an honest PR goof and the inevitable ensuing twitter roast. Time and again the BPD has been criticized for poor community relations and returned the critique in kind, citing unwillingness from witnesses and citizens as the reason it’s investigations fail to effectively curb violence and shootings or deliver justice. At the same time, efforts to reform the BPD and implement community oversight and accountability have been met with consistent resistance by the department from top brass on down to the union which represents officers. The Blackstonian has been documenting and raising these kind of critiques since well before the new administration took over yet community demands gathered from our Black and Blue Town Hall Meetings, Rally for Solutions and ongoing Mass Police Reform campaign still lack the political and policy backing to become reality. From City Level Reform Goals on Mass Police Reform: Restore good faith of community in BPD, repair disconnect and increase public trust. Establish and maintain “Police Legitimacy” using the practice of “Procedural Justice” Transform BPD’s organization and culture as it relates to deadly force, excessive force and police brutality Update BPD’s Use of Force Policy to meet or exceed current national standards Require De-escalation training for officers and include an evaluation component. Improve Police Accountability Improve Diversity at All Levels Including Command and Management Until the BPD changes its focus from looking good to doing good, from seeming connected to being connected and changes its personnel, policies and culture to make that focus reality, we can count on them to continue to ignore even the most constructive of criticism and remain an organization that not only appears to be woefully out of touch but more troublingly and dangerously one that wishes to be. #CuzWeCare Salute to Anj for the tip. #BlackstonianUReport [callout bg=”#” color=”#” border=”#” radius=”0″ bt_pos=”right” bt_bgcolor=”#” bt_hoverbg=”#” bt_textcolor=”#” bt_texthcolor=”#” bt_bordercolor=”#” bt_hoverborder=”#” bt_radius=”0″ bt_outer_border_color=”#” bt_icon_color=”#”]For more information about Mass Police Reform and the actions being taken on the city, state and federal level visit masspolicereform.org. [/callout]

Boston City Hall
Community, Events, News, Politics

City Council Committee on Government Operations Hearing on Docket #0354

A hearing on an ordinance regarding the right of free petition. The Chair of the Committee is Councilor Michael F. Flaherty. The Sponsor of the matter is Councilor Michelle Wu. Tuesday, April 18, 2017  5:00PM IANNELLA CHAMBER BOSTON CITY HALL FIFTH FLOOR BOSTON, MA 02201 Docket #0354Ordinance Regarding the Right of Free Petition. https://www.boston.gov/public-notices/23886 This matter was sponsored by Councilor Michelle Wu, and referred to the Committee on March 1, 2017.NOTICE:  The Boston City Council may have a quorum in attendance due to standing committees of the City Council consisting of both voting and non-voting members.  However, members attending this duly posted meeting are participating and deliberating only in conjunction with the business of the standing committee. Public Testimony Members of the public are cordially invited to attend and testify.  If you have not testified at a Council hearing before, please arrive five (5) minutes before the call of the hearing to sign up and become familiar with the hearing format, testimony locations and sound system.  Please bring fifteen (15) copies of any written documentation you wish to present at the hearing. Written comments may be made part of the record and available to all Councilors by sending them by email, fax or mail to arrive before the hearing, please use the information below. Mail Address:  Docket #0354, City Council, City Hall, 5th Floor, Boston MA  02201 Fax Number:  (617) 635-4203 Attn: Michelle A. Goldberg, Docket #0354 Committee Email:  ccc.go@boston.gov Staff Email:  michelle.a.goldberg@boston.gov  Staff Telephone:  (617) 635-4645 Broadcast Live on Comcast 8/RCN 82/Verizon 1964 and streamed on: http://www.boston.gov/city-council-tv Video of Original Hearing

Arts & Culture, Blackstonian Radio, Events, News

Get $39 Tickets to Topdog/Underdog at the Huntington Theatre

Blackstonian Interview PLAYING NOW thru April 9. Get your tickets for $39 using the code TOPDOG39 The Huntington’s production of Topdog/Underdog is directed by Tony Award winner Billy Porter. Suzan-Lori Parks wrote the play in 2001 and the show won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2002. Topdog/Underdog is about two brothers named Lincoln and Booth – best friends and bitter rivals. Lincoln, a former 3-card monte hustler, works as a Lincoln impersonator in a shooting gallery; Booth is an aspiring grafter and tries to tempt his brother to get back in the game. Matthew J. Harris (last at the Huntington in Milk Like Sugar) plays Booth andTyrone Mitchell Henderson plays Lincoln. About the production, Director Billy Porter says, “Topdog/Underdog is a different play [than it was in 2001]. It will resonate differently. I actually feel like it’s even more urgent now than it was then.” Billy has also talked about how he thinks this play is going to crack open a dialogue that will ignite change. He sees this play as a vehicle to get people to take action in our current political climate.

Events, Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety, News

Eternally Misunderstood: Documentary Screening & Panel

RSVP Via Facebook Join us for the premiere of “Eternally Misunderstood,” a documentary short featuring interviews with Sisters Unchained and other women of color whose lives have been impacted by the prison industrial complex. The documentary short screening will be followed by a panel discussion with Sisters Unchained participants, and the event will close out with a reception. This event is cosponsored by Harvard Organization for Prison Education and Harvard International Women’s Rights Collective. See the photo posted in the event page for the location of Fong Auditorium (inside Boylston Hall). The location is also searchable at map.harvard.edu. ABOUT SISTERS UNCHAINED: Sisters Unchained is a learning experience for young women between the ages of 14 and 18, with formerly or currently incarcerated parents. A major aspect of the program is to provide our young women with knowledge on oppressive systems like the prison industrial complex and the negative impact it has on our communities. What makes this program so special is the development of our sisterhood. That is who we are to one another. We are sisters. We are family. We are sisters who empower one another. Who support one another. Who challenge one another. Who have the courage to love one another in a world that tells us often that we are not worthy or deserving. Sisters Unchained is about learning the truth about ourselves and learning how to hold on to that truth. RSVP Via Facebook

Legislation Watch, News, Politics

Boston City Council Discusses Right to Free Petition

In the March 1, 2017 meeting of the Boston City Council, Councilors Discussed proposed legislation that would require the Council to hold a public hearing on the subject of any group petition signed by 250 or more residents. The measure was introduced by Boston City Council President Michelle Wu and Signed on to by Councilors George, Jackson, Campbell and Pressley. Councilor Linehan who represents District 2 voiced opposition. The measure now goes to the Committee of Government Operations. Starts at 1:06.

Focus on Law Enforcement, Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety, News

Police Reform Websites

[Via PS] In the past weeks we have launched 3 new websites which will continue to be developed in collaboration . These websites all focus on tracking police misconduct and instituting reforms to prevent discipline it. MassPoliceReform.org Mass Police Reform works to reform police practices to improve respect for basic human and civil rights, reforms should address concerns about policing, racial discrimination/profiling, diversity, excessive/deadly force and corruption. ShotByPolice.Blackstonian.org Shot By Police Boston & Beyond seeks to provide as comprehensive as possible a database of people who have been Shot and Killed by Police in Boston and some surrounding communities. PoliceDecirtification.us Police Decirtification (US) addresses the issue of police decertificaion at a national level. There are currently only 6 States without the authority to revoke a police officer’s license: California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island.

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