Archive for August, 2007



Al Sharpton “The Frenzy Was When the Levees Broke”

Friday 31 August 2007 @ 10:51 pm

“The frenzy was when the levies broke!”




A Day of Presence on August 29 in New Orleans

Friday 31 August 2007 @ 10:49 pm

‘A Day Of Presence’ in Support Of Gulf Coast Recovery: We Matter, We Care, We Act
NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 1 PRNewswire-USNewswire — Appalled by the lack of progress in the Gulf, a group of prominent business, civic and entertainment organizations have joined forces to mobilize Americans to converge upon New Orleans on August 29, the second…





SEN. MARY LANDRIEU’S HOPE AND RECOVERY P0ST-KATRINA SUMMIT IN NEW ORLEANS

Friday 31 August 2007 @ 10:47 pm

SEN. MARY LANDRIEU’S HOPE AND RECOVERY P0ST-KATRINA SUMMIT IN NEW ORLEANS
The Rev. Al Sharpton listens from the audience to a presidential leadership forum on Hurricane Katrina at the University of New Orleans August 27, 2007. (UPI Photo/A.J. Sisco) Photo via Newscom Photo via Newscom.





Al Sharpton Speaks in Savannah

Friday 31 August 2007 @ 10:41 pm

The Reverend Al Sharpton was in Savannah Thursday night - helping raise money for the family of a man shot and killed by police.

He spoke at a fundraiser for 22-year-old David Willis’ three children, one of them unborn.

Willis was fatally shot by officer Kevin Mckoon nearly two weeks ago.

Police say Willis was pulled over for a traffic stop, when he tried to run the officer over.

The Second St. John Missionary Baptist Church  was filled to capacity, an hour before Reverend Al Sharpton arrived.

Organizers say it wasn’t a rally to say who’s wrong or right, but a way to reach out to Willis’ family and heal.

The attached link  is a portion of Reverend Sharpton’s speech. 

http://www.wsav.com/midatlantic/sav/news.apx.-content-articles-SAV-2007-08-31-0025.html




Al Sharpton Speaks At a Church In Jena, Louisiana

Friday 31 August 2007 @ 10:32 pm

attempted murder charges leveled against six black teens show “one rule for white kids and one for black kids.”
Sharpton and an entourage of three dozen religious and civil rights leaders met and prayed privately with one of the teens, 17-year-old Mychal Bell, for about 15 minutes at the LaSalle Parish courthouse.

Bell faces up to 22 years in prison after being convicted of aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated second-degree battery. He had initially faced attempted murder charges. Four 18-year-olds and a juvenile—who round out the group dubbed the Jena Six—are awaiting trial on attempted murder and conspiracy charges.

“I did not come to Jena to start trouble,” Sharpton said while preaching at a local church service after the meeting. “I came to Jena to stop trouble.”

Bell and five other teens were charged in the December 2006 beating of a white schoolmate, 18-year-old Justin Barker. Barker was treated for a swollen and cut face and released the same day, but said he took pain medication for a week.

Black community leaders across the country were outraged, protesting that the attempted murder charges were too harsh.

In comments directed at District Attorney Reed Walters, who is prosecuting the Jena Six, Sharpton said, “You can’t sit in the courthouse and have one rule for white

kids and one for black kids.”
Walters did not return a call for comment left on an answering machine at his residential number. No one answered Sunday at his office.

Jena, a town of 3,000, is mostly white with about 350 black residents. Residents said racial tensions have escalated because of events at Jena High School.

Last year, the morning after a black student sat under a tree on campus where white students traditionally congregated, three nooses—unmistakable lynching symbols in the old South—were hung in the tree.

Students accused of placing them were suspended from the school for a short period, and tensions increased.

Then on Dec. 4, six black students were accused of jumping Barker and beating and kicking him. A motive for the attack was never established.

“You cannot have two levels of justice,” Sharpton said Sunday. “Some boys assault people and are charged with nothing. Some boys hang nooses and finish the school year. And some boys are charged with attempted murder.”




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