Saturday, November 23, 2019

Can We Just Make It Illegal to Arrest Blacks? Black State's Attorney of 70% Black Baltimore Excuses Away Black Crime, Compares Criminal Justice System to Slavery

Ed.'s note: At some point whites are going to have to step forward and take back control. It's inevitable and means their survival. Jewish Rabbis in fact for the most part, do not like white civilization. They go out of their way to diminish it and degrade it. Go to the end of this post: "Remembering John F. Kennedy's Vision for the Future that Should Have Been" and read what a Jewish Rabbi says about whites. Why is this even tolerated? So let's get this straight: Israel can have an all Jewish nation-state and America can't have an all white nation-state?
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Source: The Unz Review

PAUL KERSEY • NOVEMBER 17, 2019 • 93 COMMENTS


PK Note: Get a copy of The City that Bleeds: Race, History, and the Death of Baltimore. It makes the perfect Christmas gift!

In the current paradigm, the only tolerated answer for why so many black people are in jail (and why they are arrested at such a disproportionate than whites) is due to white supremacy, structural inequalities, and racism deeply imbedded in the criminal justice system.

The simple, logical reason being blacks commit the vast amount of crime in America, and are thus imprisoned for their actions is verboten, an unforgivable sin by any who dares utter or write such blasphemy.

[Baltimore State's Attorney Mosby: Flawed criminal justice system is black Americans’ biggest civil rights issue, Baltimore Sun, November 17, 2019]:
Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby on Saturday cited a flawed American criminal justice system as the single largest civil rights issue facing black residents in Maryland today, saying her office has taken strides toward reducing disparities but still has more to do.

"Black people are six times more likely to be arrested and become a part of the criminal justice system [than] whites," Mosby said at the fall symposium of the University of Baltimore Law Review, which was headlined, "400 Years: Slavery and the Criminal Justice System."

"You have an overmilitarization of police departments all across the country, racially unjust application of laws against poor black and brown people, [and] collateral consequences of these convictions that have kept black and brown people and communities [as] second-class citizens," she said.

Her comments were just some of many Saturday — from prosecutors, defense attorneys, law students, academics and other community stakeholders — that sought to center the legacy of racial injustice in a conversation on how best to move Baltimore and Maryland forward.

As some of the most influential stakeholders in that system, Mosby said prosecutors like her have an obligation to reduce disparities by providing opportunities for young people before they come into contact with the system, alternatives for returning felons who are too often sidelined economically because of their criminal records, and means for seeking redress for those wrongfully accused or convicted.

Mosby cited efforts by her office to do all of the above, including her hosting of youth events, her decision to stop prosecuting marijuana possession in Baltimore, her successful push to vacate convictions that hinged on the word of corrupt police officers and her office's Conviction Integrity Unit, which reviews past cases thrown into question by new evidence.

She said her approach differs from that of many other prosecutors in the country, but that addressing racial inequities built into the system is something all prosecutors should be doing, in part because it will ultimately contribute to public safety.

The Democrat's comments were in contrast to a tough-on-crime platform Mosby ran on when she first sought office five years ago, and came as Baltimore nears the end of its fifth consecutive year with 300 or more homicides.

At the law school forum, Mosby was joined on a panel — titled "Collaborative Methods to Reduce Mass Incarceration" — by Baltimore Public Defender Kirsten Downs, Democratic Prince George's County State's Attorney Aisha Braveboy and Brianna Ford, who is deputy director of the university's Innocence Project Clinic. All agreed they must work together to erase the legacy of racism in their field.
As black elected/appointed officials control more major American cities and entire counties, you can easily expect for decriminalization of basically any and all crime to end racial disparities in who/whom is in jail.

Please go to The Unz Review to read the entire article.
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