Alhambra Press-5/20/2021

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Alhambra PRESS

Go to AlhambraPress.com for Alhambra Specific News Local. Relevant. Trusted.

THURSDAY, MAY 20 - MAY 26, 2021

Since 1996

VOL. 9, NO. 19

George Floyd’s family, Ben Crump join Pasadena rally for Anthony McClain City Council canceled scheduled meeting due to rally Terry MILLER tmiller@beaconmedianews.com

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n an unusual development Monday, Pasadena City Council cancelled the regularly scheduled Monday evening meeting due to a large rally planned at City Hall in the memory of Anthony McClain who was shot and killed in August 2020 by Pasadena police. McClain, a 32-yearold Black man, was in the passenger seat of a vehicle stopped for a missing front license plate. Police officer Edwin Dumaguindin shot McClain twice while he ran away from the scene, back turned to officers. He died later from his injuries. The family wants Dumaguindin fired and legal action taken against all involved. Police contend McClain grabbed a gun from his waistband and turned toward the officer. The police videos do not show

the weapon. McClain’s family said he was actually reaching toward his belt buckle. They strongly dispute that a gun, later recovered across the street according to police, was McClain’s. Rodney and Philonise Floyd, brothers of the late George Floyd, flew to California for the protest and spoke along with local activists at the Pasadena rally. Philonise told the rallygoers: “He [McClain] didn’t die of natural causes. He was killed by a police officer that should be locked up.” A jury last month found ex-cop Derek Chauvin of guilty of murdering of George Floyd. Along with celebrated attorneys Ben Crump and Caree Harper, the families stood in solidarity demanding justice for McClain’s death. “We’re here because, Caree Harper [McClain

attorney] told me there is a pattern and practice, a history, in Pasadena, California, where they just kill Black people and sweep it under the rug as if their lives didn’t matter,” noted civil rights attorney Crump told the audience. An estimated 350 people attended the rally with signs and banners asking to defund the police and justice for the slain Black men in this country. Rock & Roll Hall of Fame honoree George Clinton also spoke at the event. “We are a nation under one groove, we cannot let him down,” Clinton stated emphatically. Demanding police accountability for the death of McClain, protesters chanted “Say his name, Anthony McClain” repeatedly as the speeches continued. Crump said of the city not willing to listen to their appeals, “We’ll be back.”

Ben Crump was on hand for Monday’s rally. | Photo by Terry Miller / Beacon Media News

Arcadia, the ‘Community of Homes,’ starkly divided on helping the homeless Terry MILLER tmiller@beaconmedianews.com

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here’s a moderately new homeless encampment at 2nd Avenue and Colorado Boulevard in Arcadia. Scores of people

have set up temporary dwellings below the freeway along the pylons next to the Santa Anita Wash, much to the chagrin of neighbors, The size is not staggering, not the level seen in so many Los Angeles communities, but it still put Arcadia

at a crossroads. On May 6, the City of Arcadia held a public forum to address the issues at hand. The more than fourhour meeting displayed homeowners’ unhappiness with not only the location of the encampment but also

the city’s proposal to help these unhoused individuals. That way comes in the form of the Tiny Shelter project. The plan would involve building a village of “tiny homes” on county land at the Peck Park access road site. The city website

states, emphatically, that the project has “NOT” yet been approved. On Saturday morning, around 30 Arcadia residents gathered outside city council members’ homes to voice their collective arguments, particularly with the

proposed tiny home project. The Not in My Backyard (NIMBY) mindset has been a voice in California cities for decades and remained loud and clear at the demonstraSee Helping the homeless Page 3


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