Bonus story -- Why Whites do White Flight? The Wildboys and Cowboys. Who are the real colonizers?

Arheel's Uncle

Senior Reporter

Walterboro Cowboys gang members sentenced to prison for attempted murder, conspiracy​


by Drew Tripp
Thu, November 30th 2017
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Cowboys gang members sentenced to prison (WCIV)

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CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) — Eight members of the notorious Walterboro "Cowboys" street gang were sentenced this week to serve time in prison on various criminal charges related to multiple attempted murders and illegal drug activity.
U.S. District Judge David Norton sentenced the following Cowboys members to prison on charges of attempted murder in aid of racketeering:

  • Bryant Jameek Davis (aka, "Savo")
  • Zaquann Ernest Hampton (aka, "TOB")
  • Christopher Sean Brown (aka, "Roughish")
  • Quintin Fishburne
Norton also sentenced the following gang members to prison on organized crime conspiracy charges:
  • Khiry Broughton (aka, "K Blacka")
  • Clyde Naquan Hampton (aka, "One Loyal Shooter")
  • Matthew Rashuan Jones (aka, "Boogie Mac")
  • William Lamont Cox (aka, "Wataz")
Jones and Naquann Hampton both are sentenced to 12 years and 7 months. Broughton and Brown are sentenced to 9 years. Zaquann Hampton was sentenced to 7 years. Cox, Davis and Fishburne each were sentenced to time served.

All eight have been ordered additionally to serve three years of supervised release after their sentences are over, and to pay the medical bills of victims injured in their respective crimes.
According to prosecutors:
  • Broughton and Fishburne were sentenced for their role, along with Dashawn Brown, in a Nov. 6, 2015 attempted murder.
  • Naquann Hampton was sentenced for his role in a three shootings between July 2010 and May 2013.
  • Jones and Christopher Brown also were sentenced in connection to two drive-by shootings in May 2011 and May 2013.
  • Davis was sentenced for his role in a Sept. 2014 shooting.
  • Cox was sentenced for his role in the distribution of crack cocaine and other narcotics.
  • Zaquann Hampton was sentenced for his role in a 2012 robbery and shooting.
The convictions for the eight Cowboys members means 13 out of 14 members of the Colleton County-based Wildboys and Cowboys gangs indicted by a federal grand jury in February 2016 have now been convicted and sentenced.
Wildboys gang member Devin Brown was sentenced earlier in November to 20 years in prison.
Wildboys member Joshua Manigault was sentenced in August to serve 10 years in prison.
In June, Wildboys members Brian Manigo and Damien Robinson, were sentenced to 10 years in prison, while Wildboys member Kelvin Mitchell was sentenced to 3 years, 3 months. All five are charged with attempted murder in aid of racketeering.
Dashawn Trevell Brown, another member of the Cowboys, has pleaded guilty to organized crime conspiracy charges, and is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 15.
Federal prosecutors say the Cowboys are a "Bloods" affiliated street gang that originated in “Eastside” area of Walterboro. Members wear red, white, and blue clothing, often including depictions of the American flag. They are also known as the "Get Money Cowboys," according to law enforcement investigations.
Khiry Broughton was the purported ring leader of the Cowboys.
Authorities say the Cowboys and Wildboys, both based in Colleton County, were aligned for several years and shared common enemies. Members of the two gangs commonly posted threats on social media, as well as photos of themselves with firearms, large amounts of cash, and narcotics.
The case was investigated by the ATF, SLED, Walterboro and Summerville Police, the Colleton, Charleston and Dorchester county sheriff’s offices.
“We trust the system and the courts decisions. This was a long process, in which many different law enforcement agencies, with the Colleton County Sheriff’s Office leading, collaborated to bring justice. We hope that this will send a message that Walterboro will not stand for this type of violence,” said Walterboro Police Chief Wade Marvin.


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Walterboro, SC Area Guide - AreaVibes

Walterboro Area Facts. Walterboro has a Livability Score of 56 /100, which is considered below average. Walterboro crime rates are 195% higher than the South Carolina average. Cost of living in Walterboro is 6% lower than the South Carolina average.
 
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Walterboro Area Facts.
Walterboro once had a heavily Jewish presence, in fact, thee Jews founded and built the town of Walterboro from the dirt up around 1900, built their Synagogue there around 1950. Now, in Walterboro d/t the constant negro crime, although the Jews will never admit the reasons, the Jews of all ages took flight. Only about 10 Jews go to the services there.


The thing about White Flight is Whites and Jews eventually leave areas because of violent blacks who move into our towns, they bring violent black gangs, gangsta's black criminal turf wars and general daily violence - theft and riots causing more White Flight, the
blacks are the real colonizers of towns once populated by Jews and or Whites.
 
I have another recently fully colonized city, by blacks. I'll add it here later.

Added:

Zion Triangle​

Zion Triangle​

This text is part of Parks’ Historical Signs Project and can be found posted within the park.
In 1896, the City of Brooklyn acquired this triangular property, bounded by Legion Street, Pitkin, and East New York Avenue at the junction of Eastern Parkway. The new park, or “gore” (small, triangular parcel) as it was called then, was donated by landowner Peter L. Vandeveer, and known in its early years as Vandeveer Park. The 1896 Brooklyn Parks Annual Report noted a small shelter at the site and noted that the park “will be exceedingly useful as a resting place for bicycle riders who use the Glenmore Avenue route to the good roads of Queens County.” In 1911, the park was renamed Zion Park by the Board of Aldermen. Zion is derived from an Old Testament reference to the City of David.

In 1923, [Jewish] Alexander S. Drescher
, chairman of the Citizens’ Memorial Committee and the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Memorial Committees of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars (Local Boards 82 and 88), petitioned Brooklyn Borough Parks Commissioner John N. Harman to erect a World War I monument here, and sought $5,000 worth of site improvements to accommodate the memorial. Though delays in financing postponed construction, the project went forward in 1925. The Zion Park War Memorial, also known as the Brownsville War Memorial, was created by the well-known sculptor Charles Cary Rumsey (1879–1922) [Rumsey married into E.H. Harriman family - railroad owner] and dedicated in 1925.
The neighborhood of Brownsville was named for Charles S. Brown, who built a small tract of homes here in the mid-19th century. After [Harriman] train service was extended to the area, the neighborhood became populated by Manhattan garment workers [mostly Jewish refugee women]. In 1911, when Zion Park was named, the neighborhood was largely Jewish, and many notable Americans grew up in the area, including composer [Jewish] Aaron Copland (1900–1990) and performer [Jewish] Danny Kaye (1913-1987). The W.P.A. Guide to New York City, written in the 1930s, reported that there were over 70 orthodox synagogues in Brownsville.

The park was renamed Loew Square by the Board of Alderman in 1930. The Loew’s Pitkin Theatre, part of the movie theater chain started by [Jewish] Marcus Loew (1870–1927), formerly stood nearby on the corner of East New York and Pitkin Avenues. After World War II the area’s residents [Jews & Whites, d/t crimes by blacks who moved into the area] began moving to the suburbs [MASSIVE WHITE FLIGHT]. Today the neighborhood [has been colonized by blacks] is largely African American; boxers Mike Tyson and Riddick Bowe both hail from Brownsville. In 1987, Commissioner Stern restored the name Zion, and in 1997 it became Zion Triangle, reflecting its size, shape, and relative lack of vegetation.

Zion Triangle Monuments - Zion Park War Memorial : NYC Parks

The completed work was dedicated November 1, 1925, by Brooklyn Borough President Joseph A. Guider (1870-1926), Brooklyn Parks Commissioner Edward T. O'Loughlin, and numerous local Jewish and veterans organizations.

Anytime you are called COLONIZERS by blacks, just know, it is one BIG LIE.
BLACKS ARE THE REAL "COLONIZERS" in countless towns and cities across the entire country.
 
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Four in custody, others sought following related gang shootings


En Espanol

Saturday, December 14, 2013​



COLLETON COUNTY, SC (WCSC) - Colleton County investigators say four people have been charged and another four are being sought following two related shootings on Tuesday involving gang activity.

Officials with the Walterboro Public Safety Department say a Tuesday afternoon shooting outside a home on Green Pond Highway led to a retaliatory shooting a few hours later at a gas station on Ace Basin Parkway.

Walterboro police say the first shooting happened at a home on Green Pond Highway where two people, an 18-year-old woman and 19-year-old man, had each suffered a gunshot wound to their leg.

At 1:35 p.m., officers responded to the location for a report of someone being shot. When officers arrived they learned that someone had taken one of the reported victims to the hospital.

Witnesses reported that as a white vehicle was passing the area, a man inside the vehicle took out a gun and started firing at the victims.

A citizen also reported to police that a man carrying a gun was seen running through the woods.

Several people called police and reported seeing a man fitting the description of the suspect running in the area of Green Pond Highway and enter the woods.

Police say they were able to make contact with the subject, identified as 17-year-old Kareem Risher, who told officers he did not have a weapon in his possession, but said he had fired a weapon in self defense.

A police report states after officers spoke with Risher, Risher took police to the location of the weapon he fired. Risher was charged with discharging a firearm within city limits.

Investigators also charged 18-year-old Rashaan Tysean Donaldson and 18-year-old James R. Pierce with attempted murder for the incident.

According to officials with the Colleton County Sheriff's Office, less than two hours later, a retaliatory shooting happened at the Ashepoo Grocery gas station parking lot on 8642 Ace Basin Parkway.

Callers said two groups of people in two vehicles had exchanged gun fire in the parking lot of the business. A caller told authorities that at least two people were struck by bullets, while another witness reported that his vehicle had been stolen from the scene.

Authorities say they were able to find one of the vehicles and detained four individuals, including a 19 year old male suffering from two apparent gunshot wounds. Several minutes later, the stolen vehicle was located at a nearby residence. Another person of interest was also located at that scene.

The sheriff's office says one of five men sought in the incident is in custody. Investigators say 21-year-old Dylan Davarn Brown surrendered to authorities and is fully cooperating with their investigation.

The Colleton County Sheriff's Office is continuing to look for 24-year-old Raheem Jamal Henderson, 22-year-old Tyrell Keron Jackson, 20-year-old Matthew Rashaun Jones and 21-year-old Charlie Edward Martin.

Investigators from Walterboro Public Safety and CCSO say they are working together to quickly resolve both incidents. According to an incident report, all evidence indicates the shootings are related to local gang activity.

Both incidents are still under investigation.
 










DDG: WALTERBORO SHOOTING

Anytime you are called COLONIZERS by blacks, just know, it is one BIG LIE.
Using the Afro-American violence playbook, BLACKS ARE THE REAL "COLONIZERS" in countless towns and cities across the entire country.
 
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