December 6, 2014 - December 6, 2014, www.afro.com
Volume 123 No. 18
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The Afro-American
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DECEMBER 6, 2014 - DECEMBER 12, 2014
Mayor Says City ‘Will Have Body Cameras’
NYC Grand Jury: No Charges for NYPD Officer in Killing of Eric Gardner
By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake guaranteed the implementation of a body camera program in Baltimore City and stated numerous times that her main concern was to get the program right during a recent conversation with the AFRO. RawlingsBlake also said that her rejection of the Baltimore City Council’s recent bill on the matter, which she has vetoed, was about substance and that she had been willing to work with the council to improve their bill, a claim the office of City Council President Bernard Young has challenged. “We will have body cameras in Baltimore. I just
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By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO
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Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said the city will soon implement a body camera program. want people to be very very clear,” said the mayor at the outset of our conversation, where she laid out a number of the policy concerns a city work group she convened last month is currently investigating in order to make recommendations to the city in early 2015. Among those concerns are the collection and retention of data, which includes determining whether the city will create its own IT infrastructure for storing and documenting the data or use a
private, cloud-based solution; determining how and when videos are attached to incident reports; when officers are allowed to review the video with respect to writing reports or making statements about a particular incident; how long data should be stored; and an accurate estimate of costs to ensure the sustainability of any program implemented. Maryland’s body camera working group—an independent effort of the state not connected to the city’s Continued on A3
The NYPD officer whose chokehold led to the death of Eric Gardner last July will not be indicted by the special grand jury impanelled this fall to consider charges against him, according to reports from various news agencies. Garner family attorney Jonathan Moore tells the Associated Press (AP) that he has been informed that no charges would be issued by the grand jury. “I am actually astonished based on the evidence of the video tape, and the medical examiner, that this grand jury at this time wouldn’t indict for anything, is really just Courtesy Amtersdam News astonishing,” Moore told the AP. Eric Garner and wife, Esaw Garner The grand jury had been convened in September and was officers while arresting him for selling loose, investigating whether there was sufficient untaxed cigarettes. He has been suspended evidence to charge officer Daniel Pantaleo from the force and still faces an internal with any crimes in Garner’s death. Pantaleo investigation by the NYPD, reports the New had placed Garner in a chokehold and wrestled York Times. him to the ground along with a group of other ralejandro@afro.com
Young Bishop Describes Harrowing Encounter with City Police
playing with my brother, his uncle,” said Wilson. “The police come rushing out there in the parking lot. [My nephew and brother] are just laughing a little bit, talking about some things that just went on in the meeting, that’s all. . . . The police come rushing out with guns. Actually, two police officers, one African American, one Caucasian. “The African American guy knew that we were just playing, that there was no serious issue. However the Caucasian officer pursued—I mean he has his gun out, he’s screaming and hollering. “So I say to him—of course Continued on A3
By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO
Bishop Mark-Anthony Wilson of Love and Liberty Ministries shared an unnerving experience he had last July in the parking lot of the Madison Park North Apartments (MPNA), where he was renting commercial space for worship and meetings. Wilson says the incident occurred after two officers on foot patrol in the complex observed Wilson’s 13 year old nephew having a somewhat loud conversation with Wilson’ 26 year old brother after leaving a meeting at the church. “One of my nephews was
Shouts of “No justice, No peace” Follow Advocates Say Efficiency is Equal to Water Privatization Inauguration Ceremony in Towson By Linda Walker Dorsey Special to the AFRO BALTIMORE COUNTY – On Monday December 1st, elected officials of Baltimore County government were sworn in for the second time under County Executive Kevin Kamenetz’s administration. Most noteworthy among those individuals taking the oath of office at what was a brief, but officious, inaugural ceremony held at the new Towson University SECU Arena was Julian Jones. He is only the second African American councilmember in Baltimore County history. Baltimore City Mayor Stephanie RawlinsBlake, four former County executives including Congressman Dutch Ruppersberger, several state delegates and senators, members of the Executive cabinet and about three hundred members of the general public were on hand for the event, which was opened by the Milford Mill High School Marine JROTC. Stan Stovall, anchorman for WBAL
TV, served as master of ceremony for the inauguration which lasted two hours and was followed by a reception. The ceremony also included a video celebration of Baltimore County government’s accomplishments, efficiency and progressiveness. County Executive Kamenetz chose to center much of his inaugural address on inclusiveness and diversity in his administration, including the police and fire departments, an obvious contrast of Baltimore County’s reality to places like Ferguson. Outside the calm of the Towson University based Inauguration festivities, however, at noon arrangements were well underway on the other side of campus for a largely Towson University student organized march protesting events in Ferguson, Missouri. Just after noon about 200 black and white students and other members of the public carrying signs, left their classes and work to march peacefully from the Towson University Continued on A4
By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO
‘Efficiency’ is just privatization by another name, say community activists and advocacy groups pushing against Baltimore City’s request for an external efficiency review of its water and wastewater treatment operations. At a time of declining federal funding, and after years of losing their best and brightest, the Dept. of Public Works (DPW) says it is simply trying to improve and modernize its operations within the context of the human and financial resources it currently has at its disposal. In mid-May, DPW published a request for proposal (RFP) to conduct an efficiency study of the city’s water and wastewater treatment plants, the oldest of which is 100 years old, according to Jeffrey Raymond, division chief of communications and community affairs for DPW. The request went out in four Baltimore newspapers, including the AFRO, and two proposals were received by the July deadline. The city is still conducting a review of the proposals and no contract has yet been awarded. One of the proposals submitted is from Veolia Water North America Operating Services, a company whose track records, advocates say, is one of taking over municipal water systems, driving up rates for consumers, labor abuses, and failing to Continued on A4
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