This 20 April 2015 video from the USA is called Michael Brown memorial tree vandalized.
From Associated Press in the USA:
Ferguson officials: Sapling planted in Michael Brown’s memory destroyed
April 20, 2015 – 7:45 PM
FERGUSON, Mo. — Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, say they will replace two recently planted saplings this week, including one planted in memory of 18-year-old Michael Brown.
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that both trees were found damaged Sunday. They were planted in January in Wabash Park and had been donated by the Black Caucus of the American Library Association.
One of the trees was dedicated to Brown, who was fatally shot by Ferguson officer Darren Wilson in August, setting off months of protests. The second sapling was dedicated by a Ferguson resident to a dead pet.
City officials say both trees were chopped off at the trunk. Concrete plaques placed at the bases of both trees were taken.
Authorities in Ferguson, Missouri say a memorial to Michael Brown, the 18-year-old unarmed African-American man killed by a local police officer last August, was vandalized over the weekend. The tribute has since been replaced: here.
A tree planted in Ferguson, Missouri, in memory of Michael Brown—the teenager fatally shot last year by a local police officer—was ripped in half last weekend the day after it was planted. The Black Caucus of ALA [American Library Association], which donated the tree, said it would not be deterred by vandalism: here.
Ferguson Police May be Held in Contempt of Court for Continuing to Arrest Citizens who Record (Updated II): here.
A haunting video from last year has surfaced of a black man killed by St. Louis County police officers Friday night. On August 17, St. Louis Post-Dispatch photojournalist David Carson recorded 23-year-old Thaddeus McCarroll chanting with a group of young men and women during a protest near Ferguson, Missouri. It was eight days after Officer Darren Wilson had killed Michael Brown. The group is holding signs and chanting the phrase, “I got my hands on my head … please don’t shoot me dead.” Eight months later to the day, McCarroll was killed by police: here.
Reblogged this on rennydiokno.com.
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Reblogged this on It Is What It Is and commented:
Why? Why are humans so petty? Why damage and vandalize?
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Thank you, and all rebloggers!
This vandalism may be part of tendencies going back to the nineteenth century, when there used to be slavery in Missouri.
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Reblogged this on The Militant Negro™.
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Some people used to shoot at Martin Luther King’s tombstone so what do you think Mike Brown ‘s got coming? .His sin is his skin.
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I hope there will be many people at the Michael Brown tree re-planting; and that they will watch the tree, so this vandalism won’t happen again.
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Shalana Little’s arrest for “Lynching” is an outrage. She stands trial in June – Take action now!
SIGN the ONLINE PETITION HERE
http://peoplespowerassemblies.org/petitions/shalanapetition/
Mass Protest and L.A. Cop Line Nov 26, 2014
November 26, 2014, Mass protest in Los Angeles in response to no indictment verdict of police officer Darren Wilson for killing Michael Brown
On December 19, 2014, the Los Angeles Police Department arrested Shalana Little, an activist in the Ferguson solidarity movement in LA, on the outrageous charge of felony “lynching”, following the aggressive tactics of the police to disrupt a march in Hollywood. She was severely mistreated during her arrest, was held on $30,000 bail for four days, and finally released on Christmas eve. Although the lynching charge has been dropped against her, she faces the possibility of years in prison on the remaining charges.
Shalana is not the only Californian activist facing charges that paint protesters as violent agitators. Over 400 people have been arrested in recent months during mass protests against police brutality in Los Angeles, but Shalana and a few others are facing some of the most serious charges. Xaime Casillas stands trial this Monday – May 18 – for five counts of resisting arrest and one count of battery against an officer — crimes of which he is innocent. In Sacramento, Maile Hampton faced arraignment on a lynching charge, which was subsequently dropped to one count of resisting arrest last month.
Using California’s lynching law against protesters is an outrage. First passed in 1933, the law was passed to prevent mobs from forcibly taking people from police custody in the name of vigilante justice. Yet, today, a law once won in large part by anti-racist activists is now being used to perpetuate police repression against those anti-racist activists fighting against police terror. These arrests and prosecutions are part of a national trend to target Black activists with more serious charges like “lynching,” while doing nothing to stop the true lynchers: the killer cops.
But we are fighting back!
Shalana is going to trial in late June. Xaime stands trial this Monday on May 18th. We won’t play their game any longer. We must pressure the prosecutor to drop all these charges now!
What you can do:
1) Click here to sign the petition demanding that the Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer drop all charges against Shalana Little, Xaime Casillas, and all other protesters now.
2) Make a personal phone call to the Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer directly at 213-978-8100, and demand that Shalana’s and Xaime’s charges – and all other charges against protesters – be dropped. Twitter storm @Mike_Feuer and @cityattorneyla with the following tweet:
@Mike_Feuer @cityattorneyla Drop the charges against Shalana Little, Xaime Casillas and all who protest racist police killings NOW!
3) Contribute to Shalana’s and Xaime’s legal defense fund
Shalana at Court House
Shalana Little (on the right in cap) and Xaime Casillas (center in suit and tie) with supporters in front of county courthouse in Los Angeles.
Read more:
When she was arrested, the LAPD falsely claimed that Shalana was guilty of obstructing justice and removing a person from police custody — “lynching” under California law.
Shalana’s charges have since been reduced to three counts of resisting arrest and one count of failure to disperse. We should not, however, mistake these reductions as a ‘win’. The reduction of charges is all part of a strategy pursued by the city attorney in close cooperation with the LAPD to appease the public: it lessens the possibility of an outcry against the LAPD’s racist arrest, while ensuring that activists of color continue to be prosecuted for their commitment to justice. Instead of dropping all charges–as the city attorney should have done–they have used the lynching charge and their decision to reduce the charges to pressure activists to take plea agreements while appearing to be “compassionate.” But nothing could be further from the truth: this racially loaded strategy of over-charging and subsequently dropping those charges is part of a carefully choreographed stunt to get us to stop fighting for justice for Shalana and all be happy she “only” has to spend four years in jail for defending Black lives.
Lynching is what mobs of white racists committed against thousands of Black people in the United States. They took Black people from the custody of the police with the tacit consent of the cops and state. The mobs then beat, mutilated, tortured and hanged them. This ironic plot to charge an anti-racist Black protester with lynching screams arrogance on the part of the cops and the DA. The people see through these charges. We charge the state with lynching. We charge the state with attempting to lynch the Black Lives Matter Movement.
In fact it is the police who are guilty of obstructing justice, in this case and historically. These charges against Shalana are in reality “revenge” charges against leading activists of the Black Lives Matter movement. We in the S.T.O.P. Brutality coalition, along with a wide network of endorsing organizations, are mobilizing to fight back against this police repression.
The story that the police and city attorney present is entirely different from the facts of what actually happened. In reality, on the two nights that Shalana was arrested – Nov 26 and Dec 19 2014 – Black Lives Matter marches were disrupted by police who wanted to shut it down because of its political content. The police violated the protesters’ right to free speech and arrested several people. The police were the aggressors, not the activists. It is the police who are obstructing justice, not the protestors.
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