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Rally for Solutions on City Hall Plaza – Report Back

Yesterday, as many of you who joined us know, the Blackstonian organized a “Rally for Solutions” at City Hall Plaza to address violence in the city. We were motivated by our count of the shootings since the Boston Marathon passing the tragic milestone of 100 since April 15, 2013. Over 100 people joined us to offer their support, express their concern for this issue and present solutions to city government, law enforcement and the community at large. Present were members of Voices of Liberation, Organize the Hood Boston, 10,000 Strong Boston, BloodSkinLand Productions, Young Gifted and Black Movement, Grassroots Grind Group, Pen & Sword Political Pirates, Greatest Minds, National Black College Alliance, Mothers for Justice and Equality and many more community organizations as well as concerned citizens of all ages, races, ethnicities, denominations and sexual orientations. There were several elected officials who were in attendance including City Councilor Charles C. Yancey who participated in the speaking program along with Minister Kim Odom and others, adding their solutions to those presented and documented in the video below. Following the rally, a group of 47 of us remained to go to the mayors office and demand (again) a public meeting with Mayor Menino and BPD Commissioner Ed Davis where the community can present their ideas and concerns about violence and policing. A member of the Mayor’s staff informed us the Mayor was out but assured us she would relay the message. We have since reiterated the demand in writing and included the ideas presented in the video below: Photos from the event can be seen on the Blackstonian Facebook page. The event was covered by Boston Magazine and The Boston Globe. Excerpt from Community Will ‘Rally For Solutions’ After 100 Reported Shootings Since Marathon by Steve Annear Residents are calling on members of the community to come together in a show of unity on the steps of City Hall to seek solutions to the ongoing gun violence in Boston, after the shooting toll since April 15 recently reached 100 incidents and counting. “This is a rally for solutions—we are trying to get a real platform for real ideas and policies, not just rallying about the violence that has long been ignored,” said activist Jamarhl Crawford, publisher and editor of the website Blackstonian.com. Crawford said there is a drastic disparity between what happens to black and Latino people, and what happens to “white counterparts” in terms of how people react to violence in Boston, and that Monday’s rally is meant to put the spate of violence on the forefront of peoples’ minds by using the “sad, sick milestone” of the 100-plus shootings to highlight the “devaluation” of the lives of people in the urban community. “For some reason, black and Latino life in the urban city environment is devalued. There are ‘abnormal’ acts of violence, and that’s what gets attention, as with my community, however, [violence is] almost expected. It’s become ‘normalized,’” he said. “I want people to see we are regular people too. If you prick us do we not bleed?” The “Rally For Solutions” will begin at 3 p.m. at Government Center, and last roughly two hours, highlighting the notion that “no life [is] worth more than another and one life lost is too many.”

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Officer Involved Shooting Under Investigation in Old Colony, South Boston

According to a BPD report, at apporximately 1PM officers responded to a radio call for drug investigation. Police approched a suspect matching the description from the call and announced their presence. The suspect allgedly fled and began shooting at officers. The suspect was shot in the chest and transported to Tufts Medical Center with life-threatening injuries. Police recovered a firearm and “assorted narcotics”. “The Boston Police Department is actively investigating facts and circumstances surrounding this incident.” We have no information as of this posting as to the condition or identity of the suspect.

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BPD Shoots and Kills Armed Man Outside House Party in Dorchester

According to BPDnews.com, police responded twice to reports of shots fired in the area of 76 Willowwood St., Dorchester and around 1:50 AM they shot and killed an armed suspect after he allegedly turned his gun on them. Witnesses still on scene at a party told officers a male had a firearm and was shooting. Officers approached the suspect who was in his motor vehicle. During the confrontation, the suspect fired at officers, who returned fire. The suspect was shot and was pronounced deceased at Boston Medical Center. According to Universal Hub A source identifies the man killed as Ross Baptista, 38, of Dorchester, who was released earlier in the year after having served 20 months of a federal prison sentence for two counts of possession of heroin with intent to distribute. The incident will be investigated by The Boston Police Internal Affairs Unit and the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office.

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Justice for Mark Fernandes McMullen – Online Petition

Sign the Petition By: Karen McMullen My brother Mark Fernandes McMullen was shot and killed on Sept 7, 2011 by Boston Police Officer Christopher Carr. Even though Mark was unarmed and immobilized, and Carr was outside of his city limits, Carr was cleared of any wrongdoing in a closed investigation. The request for a public inquest by the family, their lawyers and prominent organizations such as the ACLU, NAACP, National Police Acccountability Project and Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights is being ignored. While the authorities have ended their investigation, they still refuse to release key evidence in the case, including photos that hold the key to what actually happened that day. The Why was Mark Shot Coalition is an organization created after the death of our son, brother, husband and friend Mark at the hands of the police. The coalition is made up of family; police abuse victims, survivors, and their families; and advocacy and community groups. The Why was Mark Shot Coalition calls for justice for Mark and all victims. We call for an independent prosecutor, the release of all evidence, a public inquest and full accountability of all officers and supervisors involved. We want an end to the pattern of police killing defenseless people and going unpunished. Sign the Petition

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More answers sought after man fatally shot by police

SOURCE: Boston Metro Friends of the 26-year-old man who was fatally shot by police were in disbelief yesterday and were left wondering what happened a day after a Boston police officer shot him. Friends identified the man as Burrell Ramsey-White and said he lived on Yarmouth Street, about a block from where he was shot by police Tuesday in the South End. “There’s an explanation due to his mother,” said one woman who described herself as a friend but did not want to disclose her name. Police provided few additional details yesterday about the incident that started around 5:45 p.m. on Dartmouth Street. Officers tried to pull over Ramsey-White in a Cadillac. A short foot chase followed, and he allegedly produced a gun, police said. Officers then shot him once in the chest on Yarmouth Place. Commissioner Ed Davis would not say yesterday why Ramsey-White was being pulled over. “You may find that unusual at this point in time,” Davis said. “We will not confirm the actual reasons for the stop until we interview the officers, which will be [today].” The officer who shot Ramsey-White is a five-year veteran. Both officers involved in the incident are on paid administrative leave and were taken to a hospital for stress after the shooting. Davis did say that the owner of the car was stopped on Saturday and arrested for possession of heroin. He also said the victim was in a Roslindale home where an unsolved fatal shooting took place earlier this month. Four men were shot and one died. A gun was recovered at Tuesday’s scene and is being examined by investigators, Davis said. Ramsey-White also has a criminal record, but friends yesterday remembered him for his joking personality. SOURCE: http://www.metro.us/boston/local/article/1150483–more-answers-sought-after-man-fatally-shot-by-police

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Man stabbed to death in South End

Man stabbed to death in South End By James Hinton  |   Sunday, July 31, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com |  Local Coverage A man believed to be in his 20s was stabbed to death in the South End early yesterday morning. At 4:41 a.m., officers responded to the area of 25 Trotter Court for a person on the ground. On arrival, officers found the victim suffering from several stab wounds. He was tended to by EMS paramedics, who pronounced him dead at the scene. Police did not release the man’s identity. “It’s still an active investigation,” said Officer Eddy Chrispin. “No suspects are in custody, but we’re looking for members of the public to contact us directly or call our tip line.” Anyone with information is asked to call the Homicide Unit at (617) 343-4470 or deliver an anonymous tip via CrimeStoppers Tip Line at 1(800) 494-TIPS or by texting the word ‘TIP’ to CRIME (27463). Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1355469  

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Boys in blue go green at new Roxbury station Top cop says $15M eco-friendly building all about ‘community’

Boys in blue go green at new Roxbury station Top cop says $15M eco-friendly building all about ‘community’ By Richard Weir  |   Sunday, July 31, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com |  Local Coverage Photo by Faith Ninivaggi It has a roof covered in eco-friendly, drought-resistant sedum plants, with a cherry wood lobby and slate floors, which may make some criminals think they’re being booked at the Cop Mahal. But the new $15 million District B2 police station is all about making the good people of Roxbury feel welcome. “This is about more than just a new city building,” Mayor Thomas M. Menino said at the ribbon-cutting yesterday for the soaring 34,500-square-foot, three-story sandstone-encased station built on the once-polluted site of the former Modern Electroplating Co. plant. “This project is really symbolic of the transformation that’s happening in Dudley . . . What was one of the worst Brownfield sites in our city is now a shining example of green building.” Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis said the thin blue line’s new green building, with its airy, windowed lobby and its attractive, sun-drenched community room, is a purposeful contrast with its gloomy concrete-and-brick predecessor, or as he called it, “the fortress next door.” “This building is emblematic of a new philosophy in policing, where people matter,” Davis said, noting that the department realizes that it needs local residents to join in the battle against crime. “It emphasizes the true meaning of community policing.” Asked how the city can lavish so much money on a precinct when it has been forced to lay off school teachers and close libraries in recent years, Meredith Weenick, the city’s chief financial officer, said its funding comes from bonds issued as part of a five-year, $1.7 billion capital improvement plan, not the operating budget. “The B2 project has been in the pipeline for years, many years before the Great Recession” she said. Catherine Hardaway of the Dudley Vision Advisors Task Force, a mayoral group charged with overseeing new city projects in the area, said one of the main goals of the new station was to create a place where citizens felt welcome. “It’s much more of an open and inviting environment in here, from being in a closed, dark building over there,” she said, pointing to the old crumbling, paint-peeling B2 station. “People can look in and see and they can look out and see the community. And they feel a part of the community and connected to the police.” Noting the community room’s 20-foot windows, she said, “The light puts you in a better mood. The sun is shining.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1355295  

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