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Police mistakenly think black teen is home burglar
911 caller: i saw a negro enter a house :helpme im in the panic room with the family
FUQUAY-VARINA, N.C. (AP) ? Police mistook a black teenager for a burglar and pepper-sprayed him inside the home of his white foster parents. It was Monday afternoon when 18-year-old DeShawn Currie came home from school and went up to his room. Unknown to him, a neighbor thought they saw something amiss in a neighborhood of mostly modest brick ranch homes that's had a run of crimes lately. Police were called. A possible burglary in progress. The three officers dispatched to investigate found the side door ajar and walked in, guns drawn. Barefoot and dressed in a tank-top and shorts, Currie came downstairs and met them in the dining room. Not knowing if Currie was a burglar, whether he was armed or who else was in the house, an officer barked orders. Currie tried to explain this was his home. They told him to shut up. "I did everything that they asked," said Currie, who is about 5-foot-8 and 200-pounds. "I was calm and being compliant with them until something happened." One of the officers noted the faces of three small white children in the family photos on the mantel. Currie is black. "Where's your picture if you say you live here?" Stacy Tyler, who made Currie her foster child last December, recounts one of the officers as asking. "He (Currie) snapped. And that's when he got loud and yelling." Officers raked his face with pepper spray. "Mr. Currie became very volatile, profane and threatened physical violence toward the police officer," police in this Raleigh suburb said Wednesday in a prepared statement. "In an effort to calm Mr. Currie, the police officer asked him several times to have a seat, which he refused. Mr. Currie became increasingly belligerent and profane and the police officer attempted to restrain Mr. Currie with handcuffs to insure the police officer's and Mr. Currie's safety. Mr. Currie then struck the police officer's left arm knocking the handcuffs to the floor." That's what led to the pepper spray, police said. No charges were filed against Currie. "The Fuquay-Varina Police Department does not engage in nor does it condone racial profiling. At no time during this event was race a factor," their statement said. Stacy Tyler said she believes all of the officers involved are white. Police have not said how many officers entered the home, their length of service with the department or their race. Police Chief Larry Smith, two police captains and a police spokeswoman did not respond to emails from The Associated Press asking what specific instructions Currie did not follow. Police also did not describe what kinds of crimes had been committed in the neighborhood and how recently. Stacy Tyler said a bicycle was stolen out of her home's back yard a couple of weeks ago. Tyler said she arrived home Monday after picking up her other three children from school, running errands and buying them ice cream to find Currie crying inside an ambulance. He was handcuffed as his face and eyes were doused with water to flush out the pepper. "That was the part that broke my heart, knowing all the work that my husband and I have put into rebuilding his life and giving him a good and normal teenage life," Tyler said, chatting outside her rented home as a black cat snoozed in a wicker rocking chair on the porch. "You don't get in foster care and not have scars, and he's been in foster care a very long time." The 29-year-old, stay-at-home mom met Currie during the 18 months she and her husband Rickey lived and worked at the children's home. She said she and Rickey, a 30-year-old construction foreman, decided simultaneously to bring Currie into their home last year. They moved next door to a black family in a mostly white neighborhood less than three months ago, Stacy said. The neighbor who called the police apologized Tuesday for prompting what could have become a tragedy instead of a sudden heartbreak. Currie said his eyes still sting and his heart still hurts. "I'm getting over it and whatever slowly," he said. "But there's still that big emotional part." full article... |
obsessed much?
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This is almost like a skit from Chris Rock.
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fucking stupid neibourg watch :D
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Dave Chappelle joke:
"In New York I didn't even call the police. I wanted to, but i couldn't. My crib was too nice. Not that it's too nice, but it's too nice for me. You know how the police are in New York. Soon as I open the door, they'd be like. Ha, he's still here! Open and shut case, Johnson. Apparently this black guy broke in and hung up pictures of his family everywhere. Never seen anything like it." |
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Start a Militia like a white person would do, lol
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Ok I read the story - 2 things pop out. right away to me. The neighbors have no idea who is living next door to them. So much for Southern hospitality and being neighborly getting to know your neighbors in your community. Second the police statement was no where near an admission of an error - they STILL blame the kid the " Scary black kid made be Pepper spray him" defense the cops used is a classic route. No asking for ID of confirm with a phone call?
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I'm sure he was guilty of something.
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I wonder why they chose to mention that the sleeping cat was black? Weird story.. luckily they "only" used pepper spray.
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Can't believe anyone would suspect black teen as a burglar. They usually spend their time in libraries studying for SAT tests. Must be racial profiling
http://www.occidentaldissent.com/wp-...ation-2009.bmp |
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And anyway, the point is obvious: if you separate whites from hispanics, whites are committing negligible amounts of violent crime. |
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Sure the cat was sleeping; but it's still a gato negro. :1orglaugh |
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All the Barack Obamas in the hood laughed out loud about how race is counted. :2 cents: |
What the fuck ever. Someone saw someone enter a house and investigated, end of story.
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by the way, why does the american media focus on race so much? to breed more racist people like brassmonkey?
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Put yourself in that situation. Police walk into your home. What do you do? Remain calm and answer their questions or do you go nuts to the point that you must be physically restrained and sprayed? What this guy did was not normal. It's too bad that the mistake to call 911 was made, but the police are not to blame. The guy with the explosive temper is to blame. |
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also sounds like he was fine and then they acted like assholes. "The three officers dispatched to investigate found the side door ajar and walked in, guns drawn. Barefoot and dressed in a tank-top and shorts, Currie came downstairs and met them in the dining room. Not knowing if Currie was a burglar, whether he was armed or who else was in the house, an officer barked orders. Currie tried to explain this was his home. They told him to shut up. "I did everything that they asked," said Currie, who is about 5-foot-8 and 200-pounds. "I was calm and being compliant with them until something happened." One of the officers noted the faces of three small white children in the family photos on the mantel. Currie is black. "Where's your picture if you say you live here?" Stacy Tyler, who made Currie her foster child last December, recounts one of the officers as asking. "He (Currie) snapped. And that's when he got loud and yelling."" |
So glad you can copy paste the news! Thanks again for the great threads!
http://i.imgur.com/qP8ZShu.png |
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hispanic ladies got good pussy.
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I think it's terrible that this happened to the kid.
BUT, the cops were responding to a call reporting the break in of a white family's home by a black youth, and found what initially appeared to be just that. The kid got belligerent, assaulted a police officer, and got pepper-sprayed as a result. If he had instead kept his cool and cooperated with sorting it out, that likely would have been the end of it. While the first impulse is to blame the cops for this, if you read the article dispassionately, it sounds like they were attempting to talk things out up until the assault and threats of physical violence. The cops took non-lethal action to prevent further escalation. I also think part of the fault must lie with the neighbor, who obviously did not know his new neighbors well enough to know the kid was part of the family. I would be interested in hearing the exact words he used when he made the call. |
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Typical. |
Well damn... get to know the people you live around
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