New Nation Noose News

More NY nooses found, one with swinging tarbaby

More NY nooses found, one with swinging tarbaby

Nooses Found Hanging From Forklift On Long Island
One Hanging Around Neck Of Stuffed Doll With Tar Spread Across Face

NEW YORK (CBS) ― Hempstead Town Supervisor Kate Murray and Councilwoman Dorothy Goosby said that two nooses were left dangling from a forklift at the town's highway yard in Roosevelt, Long Island.

One of the nooses was apparently hanging around the neck of a stuffed cartoon figure that had tar spread across its face.

Murray says the nooses were found around lunchtime by a yard worker.

This isn't the first time a noose was found in the town of Hempstead recently. Less than a month ago a noose was discovered inside the men's locker room at the Hempstead police department.

It's just the latest in a string of racial incidents that have jarred New York City in recent weeks.

Last week, there was a disturbing discovery near Ground Zero in Manhattan, where a noose was found hanging from a lamppost at the Church Street Post Office.

Postal workers in a second floor office at Church Street noticed the noose Thursday afternoon.

Building managers removed the noose and turned it over to the NYPD's hate crimes unit for investigation.

Speaking to reporters following a ceremony at a police memorial, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly suggested that the noose outside the post office could have been an attempt to imitate a discovery of a noose at Columbia, which shocked the Ivy League campus and received extensive news coverage.

"We have to be concerned about a copycat being out there," he said, adding that police had no suspects or motives in either incident.

Meanwhile, detectives at the NYPD Hate Crime task force have 56 hours of surveillance tapes to comb through, trying to catch the person who hung a noose on Professor Madonna Constantine's door at Columbia University.

Nooses -- deplored as symbols of lynchings in the Old South -- have appeared in recent incidents in the New York area and across the country.

In Queens, a white woman was arrested after threatening to kill her black neighbor's children with a noose.

Other nooses have been found at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut, and in the Hempstead Police Department's locker room on Long Island.

Hate crimes in New York City were up 10 percent last year, with 256 incidents reported. Most recently, a Swastika was discovered in a bathroom stall at Columbia University.
 
Another Liberal Noose-ance

Liberals are so invigorated by the story about a noose being found on an obscure Columbia University professor's door that now nooses are popping up all over New York City. Liberals love to make believe the Night Riders are constantly at their doors.

I'll be shocked by a noose appearing on a college campus the day an actual racist does it.

Could Columbia at least produce one student or professor who supports racism before holding another "rally against racism"? Every concrete example of the racism allegedly sweeping the nation's campuses keeps turning out to be a fraud. Far from "institutional racism," there is "institutional racial hoaxism" run amok in this country. Will anyone rally against that?

Out of legions, here are just a few hoax hate crimes on college campuses.

-- In 1997, at Duke University, a black doll was found hanging by a noose from a tree at the precise spot where the Black Student Alliance was to be holding a rally against racism. Two black students later admitted they were the culprits and were immediately praised for bringing attention to the problem of racism on campus. Indeed, four years later the president of Duke gave a baccalaureate address nostalgically describing the hoax as a "protest" against racism. Next stop: the Nobel Peace Prize.

-- In 2003, vile racial epithets were scrawled on the dorm room doors at Ole Miss, producing mass protests and a "Say No to Racism" march. And then it turned out the graffiti had been written by black students, against whom no charges were brought. A "Say Yes to Racism" rally at Ole Miss was later canceled due to lack of interest.

-- In 2005, obscenity-laced racist and anti-Semitic messages appeared on dormitory walls at the College of Wooster in Ohio. The fliers were instantly blamed on "typical white males," even though all the letter I's in the epithets were dotted with little hearts. Breadcrumbs left by the culprits included the message "Vote Goldwater" among the obscenities. The matter was dropped and flushed down the memory hole when the perpetrators turned out to be a group of leftist students led by a black studies major.

-- Just this year, anti-Muslim fliers were put out on the George Washington University campus -- by leftists, including a member of "Iraq Veterans Against War." When it was thought the leaflets were from the conservative group Young Americans For Freedom, the dean called for the expulsion of the culprits and the university demanded that YAF officers sign a statement disavowing "hate speech." But when it turned out leftists had distributed the fliers, the matter was dropped faster than Larry Craig was dropped from Mitt Romney's campaign.

The one real example of racism on a college campus in recent memory was perpetrated against white men of the Duke lacrosse team. As that injustice was being perpetrated, gender and ethnic professors at Duke kept droning on about the "racism and sexism" students "live with every day" -- as the professors put it in an open letter that falsely presumed the players were guilty of rape. We don't expect a rally against the prejudiced professors, but an apology might be nice.

Playing the game of He Who Is Offended First Wins, Americans seek status not by claiming to be rich or of royal lineage, but by portraying themselves as victims. In one recent hoax hate crime, a white woman professor at Claremont McKenna College said her car had been vandalized with racist and anti-Semitic graffiti, with the words "Shut Up!" spray-painted on the hood of her car.

She was not black or Jewish, but had recently converted to Judaism and spoke out against racism. So she was a victim! After the vandalism of her car, she promptly became Queen for a Day. Far from "silenced," this anonymous mountebank was given a national microphone to bore us with her race-gender-culture theories. The campus was shut down for a day for anti-racism rallies in the charlatan's honor. Then eyewitnesses identified her as the one who had spray-painted her own car, and the pity party was over.

These liberal racism-hunters are like dirty old men who spend their days poring through pornography in order to better denounce it -- but enough about the Warren court.

Assuming against all reason and experience that the Columbia noose is not another hoax by a high-status victim, how is it that a pimply adolescent can cause such tumult in liberal New York City?

Liberals claim to believe the Klan has established a beachhead at Columbia University, Bill O'Reilly is head of the Manhattan branch, Rush Limbaugh despises the troops, I'm planning a pogrom from the heart of Manhattan, and George Bush is establishing fascism in America.

Some anonymous liberal hag on Air America Radio, which no one knew was still on the air, fell down outside her Park Avenue apartment this week, and her liberal colleagues were claiming it was Kristallnacht.

If it rains after a liberal washes his car, they say it's a right-wing dirty trick.

Liberals love nothing more than these constant self-righteous-athons -- as if they would ever have the courage to stand up for any cause not universally supported by everyone around them.

http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=22909&email
 
Hanging Vick Display Stirs Racial Tension

Hanging Vick Display Stirs Racial Tension

A Halloween display is stirring racial tension in Tennessee. Three corpses are hanging from a tree in front of Richard Hardaway's Madison home, and one of them is wearing a Michael Vick jersey.

071022161413_vicknoose.jpg


Hardaway claims this is not the first time he has put the stuffed shirts in his front yard. However, due to the Jena Six case this year, some residents are seeing the display as racist.

"I was perplexed by the racism. I didn't really know what to think, I didn't expect this to be going on in kind of a major city," said Trevor Stephens.

Hardaway is denying that there are any racial undertones to the display

"I'm not being racist or calling Michael Vick out. It's a Falcon's jersey and I'm a Titans fan. I'm just putting it to good use," Hardaway said.
 
New Nation News Noose

Halloween nooses in yard lead to complaints

Halloween nooses in yard lead to complaints

STRATFORD - The "hanging man" was supposed to be another ghoulish feature in a family's front yard Halloween display.

But the figure twisting among the gory holiday decorations at 445 E. Main St. - which some thought resembles a black man hanging from a noose - prompted black leaders, clergy and neighbors to denounce it as an offensive symbol of racial lynchings.

20071023_104012_20071022__StratHalloween_1_Gallery[1]_GALLERY.jpg


The homeowners, Joyce Mounajed and Jennifer Cervero, insist the decoration was only part of their elaborate Halloween decor.

On Monday, they initially said they would not succumb to pressure by the community and police to take it down.

"This is our property and no one is going to tell me I can't put up whatever Halloween decoration I want to," Joyce Mounajed said when confronted by civil-rights leaders, clergy and police.

But by the end of the day, Mounajed changed her mind after a closed-door meeting with Mayor James R. Miron, Police Chief John Buturla and other community leaders.

The two women instead agreed to remove the figure from the noose and incorporate it into the general Halloween display, sitting on the house steps with a knife through the heart.

"We don't want to make anyone feel uncomfortable, that was not the intention," Mounajed said. "After speaking with the mayor and the others, we decided to take it down. Nobody forced us to do it."

Earlier in the day, Mounajed and her daughter tried to defend the display.

"It's all just for fun. It's not like we said, 'Let's go out and get a display that included a black man being lynched,' " she said.

The Rev. Johnny Gamble, of Friendship Baptist Church in Stratford, called the police Saturday when he noticed the display next to the front door of the mother and daughter's house. He went to the home Monday to confront them, shouting, "Suppose my great-great-grandfather were lynched, like thousands of blacks were! This is sickening and sadistic."

Craig Kelly, president of the Greater Bridgeport branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said after reviewing the display, "This is clearly a reminder of the very painful and disturbing history of lynchings of African-Americans in the South.

"I think it's more ignorance on the part of the homeowners than overt racism," Kelly said. "I think after listening to what we had to say, they showed better judgment by agreeing to take down what clearly looked like a black man being lynched."

Kelly said racial strife in Stratford in recent years, including the emergence of a hate group known as the "White Wolves" and a racially charged brawl last year, makes it "particularly important that residents avoid creating further tensions."

The latter incident involved Town Council Minority Leader Alvin O'Neal, D-2, and a teenage girl - both black - who accused a white police officer of brutality during the girl's arrest. A rally calling for attention to the problem was organized later in the summer.

Kelly said the widely publicized hangman's noose case at a Louisiana high school, which resulted in the arrest this year of the so-called Jena 6, as well as more recent episodes of blacks being taunted with nooses, make the Halloween "hanging man" in Stratford particularly disturbing. "I intend to find out which manufacturer is distributing these kinds of disgraceful displays," Kelly said.

Similar decorations have been incorporated into Halloween displays in communities across the nation - with some homeowners taking them down under community pressure, while others strongly defend their right to keep them up.

Some passing by the Stratford display said they found it so distasteful they left a note for the homeowners in their mailbox imploring them to take it down. As a result of the complaints, the Mounajed and Cervero on Sunday applied some white paint to the dummy's head - but at that point the furor had grown.

"It appeared clearly to be a depiction of the lynching of an African-American and is very offensive," said Dennis Keenan of Shelton, who left a note in the mailbox late last week.

Gamble vowed that if the hanging man were not removed, there would have been a "massive protest" in front of the house, but said he was pleased with the outcome.

"I'm glad these people were willing to listen to reason and change their minds about keeping that awful display up," Gamble said. "I was shocked and horrified when I saw it."

Buturla said after consulting with the state's attorney's office, the display - while "highly disturbing and distasteful" - does not fall into the category of a hate or bias crime.

But the mayor said he was determined to convince the family to remove the display.

"Given the history of brutal lynchings of blacks in this country, and the symbol that is conjured up by a man hanging from a noose, this display had to come down," Miron said. "Ghosts, goblins and ghouls are one thing this kind of display hits too close to home."
 
4 contractors fired for hanging nooses at work
02:56 PM CDT on Wednesday, October 31, 2007

HOUSTON -- Four contractors working for an oil-field services equipment company have been fired after they allegedly hung nooses at one of the company’s Houston facilities.

The unidentified workers—three men and one woman—are accused of hanging nooses in two separate incidents at a facility run by F-M-C Technologies.

Spokeswoman Maryann Seaman tells the Houston Chronicle that the company hasn’t informed law enforcement yet—but would once an internal investigation is completed.

The first noose hanging occurred about a month ago and involved the three male workers. Another noose was found hanging at the same facility last week and involved the woman, Seaman said.

Yolanda Smith, executive director of the Houston branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, called it a sad situation.

Seaman says no complaints about the nooses have been filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

http://www.khou.com/news/local/stories/khou071030_tj_noose.1c285e0ea.html

*********************************

Fired Man Denies Hanging Noose At Work
POSTED: 7:46 am CDT November 1, 2007
UPDATED: 8:01 am CDT November 1, 2007

HOUSTON -- A man accused of hanging a noose at a north Harris County business said he is innocent, KPRC Local 2 reported Wednesday.

James "Red" Cowan was one of four contract employees banned from FMC Technologies property after two nooses were found.

"I didn't do it, bottom line," he said.

Cowan said he is not racist and he did not hang either of the nooses. He said he cannot figure out why, out of 1500 employees, he has been accused of such an act.

"I don't have enough hate in me to do that," said Cowan.

He said one of his best friends from the Marines was black, and he still wears his dog tags around his neck.

Cowan admitted to seeing the first noose hanging on a sign in a smoking area earlier this month.

"I should have taken it down, but I was afraid to let anyone see me touching that thing," said Cowan, who had been a quality control inspector at FMC for just over a year.

He said he did not know that a second noose was found last Friday in a different part of the facility, until he got a phone call.

"It was in an area I don't have access to," he said.

The company banned Cowan, along with two other men and a woman, from their property, saying they have zero tolerance for those type of acts.

The FBI has begun conducting a hate crime investigation.

Quanell X, leader of the New Black Panther party, took a tour of the facility Wednesday. He said he is standing by Cowan, believing he's innocent.

Cowan said he just wants to clear his name and get his job back. He said he is willing to take a polygraph to do that.

http://www.click2houston.com/news/14478253/detail.html
 
http://www.macon.com/198/story/176749.html Police looking into noose at City Hall
By Phillip Ramati - pramati@macon.com
P

Macon police spokeswoman Sgt. Melanie Hofmann said Friday an extension cord in front of City Hall tied into a noose is being investigated.

The noose was apparently tied Wednesday afternoon on the tree that is used for the city's Christmas tree.

Mayor Jack Ellis, who was in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday when the incident occurred, said Friday that he hoped the noose was an isolated incident.

"I'm hoping it's just a copycat," he said. "It was in front of the same window that someone threw a brick through my second day in office. I hope our city is better than that. Do we have bigots here? Yes, but I hope it's just a small minority."

Ellis said police are looking into the incident, but "I don't want police to spend a lot of money or time on it. ... If we find someone who did it, then they should be brought in for justice."
 
Police Officer Fired for Hanging Noose in Car

Police Officer Fired for Hanging Noose in Car

THIBODAUX, LA -- A Thibodaux, Louisiana police officer has been fired for hanging a noose from the rear-view mirror of his personal car.

A group of black police officers went to the chief of police after noticing the display.

07116152557_noosecop.jpg


Corporal Michael Rodrigue had the vehicle parked on city property.

"They're hurt by it. You know, what could he possibly be representing to put something like this up?" Chief Craig Melancon said.

Rodrigue originally was suspended with pay.

His termination came, Melancon said, after the officer couldn't come up with a reasonable explanation for the noose.

"I to this day do not know what that noose meant to him as an individual," Melancon said.

Neither Rodrigue nor his family would comment about the incident, other than to say they're planning to hire an attorney.

Rodrigue has 15 days from the date he was terminated to file an appeal with the local civil service board.
 
FBI Investigating ExxonMobil Nooses Found

Last Edited: Wednesday, 14 Nov 2007, 5:44 PM CST
Created: Wednesday, 14 Nov 2007, 5:44 PM CST

An FBI investigation is underway into whether nooses found hanging at the ExxonMobil refinery in Baytown are federal violations.

An FBI agent from the Houston Field Division tells FOX 26 News, "the FBI is working with ExxonMobil corporate security to determine the motivation or intent of the noose-hanging incident." The FBI agent added, "It is a federal violation if the intent was to intimidate a person from engaging in federally protected activities." Federally protected activities include the voting process, employment and education.

FOX 26 News learned from an Exxon-Mobil spokesperson Tuesday that two nooses were found hanging from scaffolding over the past three days at the Baytown refinery location.

The discovery of the nooses at ExxonMobil followed two similar incidents at a Houston firm and a Pearland school that took place within the last month.

According to Connie Tilton of Exxon-Mobil, the two incidents at the Baytown refinery, which violate the Harrassment in the Workplace Policy at the oil company, are under investigation.

http://www.myfoxhouston.com/myfox/p...n=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.2.1
 
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071116/NEWS06/711160393/1001/NEWS MT. PLEASANT

Police investigate nooses found at CMU
November 16, 2007

Central Michigan University police are investigating the discovery of four hangman nooses -- made out of flexible compressed gas lines used for laboratory work -- in a classroom in the Engineering and Technology Building.

After they were discovered by a student Monday, top leaders at the university, including President Michael Rao, were prompted to issue a statement Thursday urging the campus and Mt. Pleasant communities "to join us in our denouncement of this reprehensible act."

To join in, people can send an e-mail listing their name to cmuline@cmich.edu.

The campus also is sponsoring a forum at 7 p.m. Nov. 27 in the Plachta Auditorium in Warriner Hall.

The Detroit-based National Council for Community Empowerment is to hold a rally on campus today to call for federal involvement in the case.

Steve Smith, spokesman for the university, said Thursday that police are questioning students and faculty in the building to try to determine a time frame for when the nooses were placed there and to see whether they noticed suspicious activity.
 
http://www.nbc10.com/education/14652424/detail.html?dl=headlineclick

Racially Charged Graffiti Found At Local Friends School

POSTED: 4:28 pm EST November 20, 2007
UPDATED: 5:23 pm EST November 20, 2007

WYNNEWOOW, Pa. -- A local Friends school is shocked by the discovery of some racially charged graffiti.

It happened at the Friends' Central School in Wynnewood, Montgomery County.

Administrators said the Quaker school's foundation is about equality and peace. So, when a drawing depicting a stick figure with a noose around its neck was found Friday in the boys' bathroom, parents and students were truly disturbed.

"I'm just sort of stunned that anyone would have that amount of anger to do that," said senior Alexander Mazurek, of Bala Cynwyd.

Mazurek a senior at described what he was told two juniors found drawn in the bathroom.

"They said it was a person that it was a person in a noose, with probably some offensive words under it," Mazurek said.

He was told those offensive words were a racial slur and they were quickly reported to school officials, who painted over the drawing. But the notion that someone would draw such a depiction has disturbed him.

"The school is a really, really diverse place and really accepting of every type of race, gender and everything. So it was really shocking to have something like this happen," Mazurek said.

Peggy Wahrman said her son, who is a sophomore, heard about the drawing in an assembly called by the school Monday morning.

"He said that there kids that were crying, that were really upset, that the kids were frightened," said parent Peggy Wahrman, of Bala Cynwyd.

School officials wouldn't speak with us on camera but said a letter was being sent home Tuesday to parents saying in part, "This painful and frightening action is completely antithetical to what we stand for as a Friends school."

The letter also said there will be student adviser meetings to discuss the impact.

"I think for kids, for teenagers, they don't know what to make of it, it's a violent act, it's a violent drawing, and it's quite upsetting to them," Wahrman said.

But students like Mazurek say they hope something good can come from this.

"A lot of people are saying it could be like a learning experience so that we can get the community even closer together :rolleyes2: because this has never happened before," Mazurek said.

School officials told NBC 10 that they are still investigating who may have drawn the stick figure.
 
"Come-as-you-are" is Jena Justice Day attire

Nooses may be displayed, without menacing anyone

JENA - "Come as you are" is the dress-code for Jena Justice Day. No special get-ups, membership-cards or colors are required. However, military, Confederate-re-enactor and sports-team uniforms are welcome. Homemade signs and displays are encouraged. Slogans should be upbeat, such as God Bless Jena, Jail the Jena Six, No Minority-Rule, Abolish the Inter-Racial Committee, Favors for None, Democracy Over Tyranny and Justice for Jeremiah.

Abolish King Day
Since the event protests King Day, such slogans as No King Over Us, Americanism Not Africanism, Down With Communism and Red, White and Blue, Not Red, Black and Green are in order. You may display nooses to protest the Jena Invasion, just do not menace anyone with them.

Bring your own American flags, but American and Nationalist flags will be on hand, free-of-charge. No Black Power, Kingbuster and Crosstar pins will, also, be available, as well as plenty of literature. Nationalists support the Second Amendment; however, do not bring weapons, as a hedge against harassment by authorities. Nationalists have won the right to police-protection in the U.S. Supreme Court, so security will be provided.
 
Noose, Offensive Note Found at Baltimore Fire Station
[SIZE=-1]FOX News - 23 hours ago[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]BALTIMORE — The Baltimore City Fire Department is investigating the discovery of a noose at a city fire station. Fire officials say the noose was found with ...[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]Noose found in city firehouse [SIZE=-1]Examiner.com[/SIZE][/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]Noose, offensive letter found at Baltimore fire house [SIZE=-1]Examiner.com[/SIZE][/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]Threatening note at Baltimore fire station [SIZE=-1]United Press International

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Hangman's Noose in North Cahttanooga.
[SIZE=-1]WDEF News 12, TN - 15 hours ago[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]A North Chattanooga business owner witnesses a construction worker displaying a hangman's noose in direct view of her window this morning. ...[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]Noose-hanging prompts police, FBI investigation [SIZE=-1]Chattanooganow (subscription)[/SIZE][/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]Police Investigate "Noose" on the North Shore [SIZE=-1]WTVC

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UNCC: no racial motivation in noose incident
[SIZE=-1]Charlotte Observer, NC - 20 hours ago[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]UNC Charlotte officials said today that a campus inquiry has concluded there was no racial motivation in connection with two ropes found tied in noose knots ...[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]No charges for UNCC noose incident [SIZE=-1]Charlotte Observer

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police check report of white man hanging noose

[SIZE=-1]The Chattanoogan, TN - 21 hours ago[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]authorities are checking a report of a white man hanging a noose at a construction site in north chattanooga. early wedenesday morning, police were called ...[/SIZE]
 
NYC Police Unable To Solve

Columbia University Noose Caper


:rant::rant::rant::rant::rant::rant:​


Nearly two months after someone hung a noose on the office door of a black Columbia University professor, police say they have no suspects in the apparent hate crime that shook the Ivy League campus.

Police had held out hope that an exhaustive review of tens of hours of images from security cameras would help break the case.

But the analysis yielded "no relevant information," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly told reporters Friday following a promotion ceremony.

Extensive interviews of faculty members and students since the noose was found at Columbia's Teachers College also have failed to produce any promising leads, officials said. Nor, they added, has DNA testing on the 4-foot length of rope.

A separate case at the same graduate school of education -- involving a Jewish professor and a swastika -- remains unsolved.

Police officials said both incidents were part of a recent surge in reports of hate crimes across the city.

In recent weeks, administrators at Teachers College have organized campus forums on race to try to soothe "bruised feelings" while awaiting for news of an arrest, said college spokesman Joe Levine.

"You don't like to think that person's out there, but I think the police are doing everything they can," Levine said.

A telephone message left Friday with the noose victim, professor Madonna Constantine, was not immediately returned.

The discovery of the noose on the morning of Oct. 9 sparked outrage among students, faculty and administrators. Constantine, 44, a professor of education and psychology who has written extensively about race, denounced the attack the next day at a raucous rally.

"I'm upset that our community has been exposed to such an unbelievably vile incident," she said. "Hanging the noose on my door reeks of cowardice and fear on many, many levels."

Nooses are racially charged symbols of lynchings in the Old South and have appeared in a number of recent incidents around the country.

On Oct. 31, professor Elizabeth Midlarsky found a swastika painted on her door at Teachers College. Police on Friday said there still are no suspects in that case as well.

Kelly told a gathering in Brooklyn on Thursday that the NYPD has seen a 30 percent spike in reports of hate crimes in the past three months. They included 16 reports of nooses since the Teachers College incident, plus a spate of spray-painted swastikas on synagogues and homes in Jewish neighborhoods.

"We know these incidents have a tendency to build on each other," he said.
 
Re: New Nation Noose News: Nigra Paramedic Suspended For Noose Incident

http://www.wbaltv.com/news/14751776/detail.html Fire Department Suspends Paramedic In Noose Case

POSTED: 12:04 pm EST December 2, 2007
UPDATED: 8:17 am EST December 3, 2007


BALTIMORE -- The Baltimore Fire Department has suspended a paramedic apprentice who admitted placing a threatening note and a rope shaped like a noose inside a firehouse.

Fire officials said the paramedic, Gary Maynard, is the one who initially reported finding the note and the rope.

Fire department spokesman Kevin Cartwright said Maynard confessed to city police that he left the note and the rope.

A statement from Fire Chief William Goodwin said Maynard's scheme was "meant to create the perception that members within our department were acting in a discriminatory and unprofessional manner."

The note was believed to refer to a cheating scandal involving black firefighters. Maynard, who is black, has not yet been charged with any crime. And probably won't be cuz he bee's havin de post traumatic slave syndrome.
The note said, "we can't hang the cheaters but we can hang the failures," said Henry Burris, the president of the Vulcan Blazers, a black firefighters group.

In a written statement Nov. 21, Mayor Sheila Dixon said she was outraged by what she called a "deplorable act of hatred and intimidation."
 
Firehouse incident with noose was a hoax

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/lo...02dec02,0,5563956.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout

By Justin Fenton | Sun reporter
December 2, 2007

A firefighter who reported finding a knotted rope and a threatening note with a drawing of a noose in an East Baltimore station house last month had placed the items there himself, city officials said yesterday.

The man was suspended last week for performance-related issues and will likely face additional punishment, fire officials said. Sterling Clifford, a spokesman for the Police Department and for Mayor Sheila Dixon, said the man admitted to the hoax and will not face criminal charges.


Officials identified the firefighter who they say acknowledged writing the note as Donald Maynard, a firefighter-paramedic apprentice who is black. Maynard could not be reached for comment.

The rope incident sparked outrage two weeks ago and prompted a federal investigation into possible civil rights violations. It was the latest in a series of incidents that have cast the Fire Department in a poor light over the past year, including the death of a recruit in a training exercise and accusations of racism.

The news of the hoax came a day after a report released by the city's inspector general found that the top performers on two recent Fire Department promotions exams likely cheated amid lapses in testing security.

A black firefighters group had called accusations of cheating racially motivated after union officials questioned the test scores. But the investigation found that five African-American firefighters had studied by using a 2001 exam, which is against test protocol.

On Nov. 21, a handwritten note and a rope were discovered about 1:30 a.m. by two Fire Department employees - one black and one white. It read, "We cant [sic] hang the cheaters but we can hang the failures. NO EMT-I, NO JOB." A small stick figure with a noose and the word "Stop" were drawn below the message.

The note appeared to refer to the cheating investigation and a push by top fire officials to compel emergency medical technicians to become certified as paramedics. Maynard was among those whose jobs were at risk.

In a written statement yesterday, Fire Chief William J. Goodwin Jr. said Maynard had admitted to "conducting a scheme meant to create the perception that members within our department were acting in a discriminatory and unprofessional manner."

"If the department upon investigation found Mr. Maynard's alleged claims to be factual, I would have acted swiftly and severely," said Goodwin, who said last month he would step down at the end of the year. "I will do the same thing regarding Mr. Maynard's unfortunate act of misconduct."

Kevin Cartwright, a spokesman for the Fire Department, said that Maynard's punishment had not been determined but that he could be fired.

Clifford, the spokesman for Dixon, said she was "pleased to find out that, in fact, there wasn't a threat of that nature made at the firehouse." He said the mayor is disappointed in the firefighter.

"It's a terrible thing to be worried that firefighters are treating each other that way, and it's good to know they're not," he said.

Yesterday, the leaders of the two city fire unions denounced Dixon, whose initial reaction to the reported incident was to deplore what she called "an act of hatred and intimidation."

Stephan G. Fugate, head of the city fire officers union, said Dixon's reaction contributed to racial tensions. He said members of the community became hostile toward firefighters after the mayor "came out and, in effect, said racism is running rampant."

Union leaders also criticized the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Vulcan Blazers, a group that represents black firefighters, saying they, too, provoked racial tension by rushing to judgment.

"To put it mildly, this time we're not going to let it go," said Fugate. "The reaction from the NAACP, the mayor and the Vulcan Blazers was sickening, and we're going to demand an apology."

But Marvin L. "Doc" Cheatham, president of the NAACP's Baltimore chapter, said the fact that such an incident could occur shows that pervasive racial problems persist in the department.

"It really saddens us to hear that evidently things have reached a stage that even an African-American does an injustice to himself and his own people as a result of a negative culture in that department," Cheatham said when asked to respond to the unions.

Henry Burris, president of the Vulcan Blazers, when informed that the incident was a hoax, said, "I'm extremely upset, as well as hurt. I believed the person who told me [that the incident was legitimate] was telling the truth."

Fugate said Maynard had been with the department for about six years. The union leader said that that is well beyond the time for an apprentice to have advanced to a more skilled classification.

Because most of the calls for service in the city are medical calls, the department now hires only paramedics who are trained to provide a higher level of care. Goodwin had said that those who had not gained their paramedic certification were "on the bubble" in regard to keeping their jobs.

The racial incident at the Herman Williams Jr. fire station at East 25th Street and Kirk Avenue was the second this year. In May, firefighters at the station came under scrutiny for an incident involving a deer head that had been decorated with an Afro wig and gold chains. Allegations of racism proved to be unfounded.

It has been a tumultuous year for the Fire Department. In February, recruit Racheal M. Wilson died in a training exercise that was found to have violated dozens of national safety hazards. The department was also the subject of an internal investigation for an off-the-books purchasing account that circumvented city requirements.

Racial issues have also simmered. In 2004, the department was pressed to revamp its testing and recruiting practices after criticism of an all-white recruit class.


justin.fenton@baltsun.com

COMMENT FROM A BLOGGER: VOX POPOLI:

By Justin Fenton | Sun reporter
December 2, 2007
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A firefighter who reported finding a knotted rope and a threatening note with a drawing of a noose in an East Baltimore station house last month had placed the items there himself, city officials said yesterday.

The man was suspended last week for performance-related issues and will likely face additional punishment, fire officials said. Sterling Clifford, a spokesman for the Police Department and for Mayor Sheila Dixon, said the man admitted to the hoax and will not face criminal charges.



Officials identified the firefighter who they say acknowledged writing the note as Donald Maynard, a firefighter-paramedic apprentice who is black. Maynard could not be reached for comment.

The rope incident sparked outrage two weeks ago and prompted a federal investigation into possible civil rights violations. It was the latest in a series of incidents that have cast the Fire Department in a poor light over the past year, including the death of a recruit in a training exercise and accusations of racism.

The news of the hoax came a day after a report released by the city's inspector general found that the top performers on two recent Fire Department promotions exams likely cheated amid lapses in testing security.

A black firefighters group had called accusations of cheating racially motivated after union officials questioned the test scores. But the investigation found that five African-American firefighters had studied by using a 2001 exam, which is against test protocol.

On Nov. 21, a handwritten note and a rope were discovered about 1:30 a.m. by two Fire Department employees - one black and one white. It read, "We cant [sic] hang the cheaters but we can hang the failures. NO EMT-I, NO JOB." A small stick figure with a noose and the word "Stop" were drawn below the message.

The note appeared to refer to the cheating investigation and a push by top fire officials to compel emergency medical technicians to become certified as paramedics. Maynard was among those whose jobs were at risk.

In a written statement yesterday, Fire Chief William J. Goodwin Jr. said Maynard had admitted to "conducting a scheme meant to create the perception that members within our department were acting in a discriminatory and unprofessional manner."

"If the department upon investigation found Mr. Maynard's alleged claims to be factual, I would have acted swiftly and severely," said Goodwin, who said last month he would step down at the end of the year. "I will do the same thing regarding Mr. Maynard's unfortunate act of misconduct."

Kevin Cartwright, a spokesman for the Fire Department, said that Maynard's punishment had not been determined but that he could be fired.

Clifford, the spokesman for Dixon, said she was "pleased to find out that, in fact, there wasn't a threat of that nature made at the firehouse." He said the mayor is disappointed in the firefighter.

"It's a terrible thing to be worried that firefighters are treating each other that way, and it's good to know they're not," he said.

Yesterday, the leaders of the two city fire unions denounced Dixon, whose initial reaction to the reported incident was to deplore what she called "an act of hatred and intimidation."

Stephan G. Fugate, head of the city fire officers union, said Dixon's reaction contributed to racial tensions. He said members of the community became hostile toward firefighters after the mayor "came out and, in effect, said racism is running rampant."

Union leaders also criticized the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Vulcan Blazers, a group that represents black firefighters, saying they, too, provoked racial tension by rushing to judgment.

"To put it mildly, this time we're not going to let it go," said Fugate. "The reaction from the NAACP, the mayor and the Vulcan Blazers was sickening, and we're going to demand an apology."

But Marvin L. "Doc" Cheatham, president of the NAACP's Baltimore chapter, said the fact that such an incident could occur shows that pervasive racial problems persist in the department.

"It really saddens us to hear that evidently things have reached a stage that even an African-American does an injustice to himself and his own people as a result of a negative culture in that department," Cheatham said when asked to respond to the unions.

Henry Burris, president of the Vulcan Blazers, when informed that the incident was a hoax, said, "I'm extremely upset, as well as hurt. I believed the person who told me [that the incident was legitimate] was telling the truth."

Fugate said Maynard had been with the department for about six years. The union leader said that that is well beyond the time for an apprentice to have advanced to a more skilled classification.

Because most of the calls for service in the city are medical calls, the department now hires only paramedics who are trained to provide a higher level of care. Goodwin had said that those who had not gained their paramedic certification were "on the bubble" in regard to keeping their jobs.

The racial incident at the Herman Williams Jr. fire station at East 25th Street and Kirk Avenue was the second this year. In May, firefighters at the station came under scrutiny for an incident involving a deer head that had been decorated with an Afro wig and gold chains. Allegations of racism proved to be unfounded.

It has been a tumultuous year for the Fire Department. In February, recruit Racheal M. Wilson died in a training exercise that was found to have violated dozens of national safety hazards. The department was also the subject of an internal investigation for an off-the-books purchasing account that circumvented city requirements.

Racial issues have also simmered. In 2004, the department was pressed to revamp its testing and recruiting practices after criticism of an all-white recruit class.


justin.fenton@baltsun.com


The Tawana Principle


If a member of a self-declared minority reports a "hate crime" that is enthusiastically covered by the mainstream media, it is a hoax perpetrated by a member of that minority, usually the "victim" who reported it:


A firefighter who reported finding a knotted rope and a threatening note with a drawing of a noose in an East Baltimore station house last month had placed the items there himself, city officials said yesterday.

The man was suspended last week for performance-related issues and will likely face additional punishment, fire officials said. Sterling Clifford, a spokesman for the Police Department and for Mayor Sheila Dixon, said the man admitted to the hoax and will not face criminal charges. Officials identified the firefighter who they say acknowledged writing the note as Donald Maynard, a firefighter-paramedic apprentice who is black. Maynard could not be reached for comment.

The rope incident sparked outrage two weeks ago and prompted a federal investigation into possible civil rights violations. It was the latest in a series of incidents that have cast the Fire Department in a poor light over the past year, including the death of a recruit in a training exercise and accusations of racism.


This is an interesting confession of the existence of thought crime in the USA. Had a white firefighter in that firehouse done precisely the same thing, he would have been charged with a crime. Thus it is the improper thoughts which are the criminal factor, so watch out, those of you who read the linked story and find yourself thinking, "gee, I wonder if it was the improper grammar was the FBI's first clue....."

American society is a place where everyone wants to be a victim. Poor black gangstas in the ghetto are victims, rich housewives in the coffeehouse are victims, everybody's a victim. Given that, it should come as no surprise that those who feel they are insufficiently victimized should occasionally take steps in order to justify a better public claim on victimhood.
Comments (45)
 
Try this on for size, Buckwheat

Student Accused Of Threatening Another With A Noose

A possibly racially motivated act in a Queen Anne's County School has an Eastern Shore community outraged. Police say a white student approached an Africoon-Americoon student with a noose.

Racism is often regarded as a thing of the past. But sometimes we get a reminder of what once was.

Queen Anne's County Public Schools Spokesman Fred McNeil says, "Important lessons of the late 50's and 60's and 70's about social justice and protecting women and certain minorities, we're beginning to forget those."

Police say this was illustrated at Kent Island High recently when a student, 18-year-old Bruce Settle, allegedly brought a noose into school. Officials say Settle approached an africoon americoon student with the noose and asked him, "Do you wanna try this on?" :lol:

For most, a noose is a symbol of lynching, illustrating a dark past in american society. So when an incident involving a noose happened at Kent Island High School, the community's response can be summed up in just one word: intolerable.

Queen Anne's County Sheriff R. Gery Hofmann III says, "We're not going to allow this type of behavior to occur, we have zero-tolerance to this."

McNeil says, "There is zero-tolerance in the Queen Anne's Public Schools for any type of behavior remotely like this and we will not allow it to happen, our community does not expect it to happen."

Settle has been charged with racial harrassment, second-degree assault and disturbing school operations. Queen Anne's County Schools say they've also taken disciplinary action against Settle.
 
http://www.nbc10.com/newsarchive/14786108/detail.html

City Cooncil May Take Major Step Against Hate, Intimidation

POSTED: 9:54 pm EST December 5, 2007
UPDATED: 10:11 pm EST December 5, 2007

A noose is one of the most vile symbols of hatred to African-Americans. Now, some want to make racist symbols like the noose a hate crime even if there is no violence involved.

The city of Philadelphia may take a major step against hate and intimidation soon.

Two months ago, the NBC 10 Investigators told you about this noose:

"He shook it at me and said that he wanted to hang someone," said construction worker Paul Solomon.

He said he was terrified when a white co-worker shook it in his face at the Comcast construction site.

Wednesday, the alleged victim testified before city council, saying he has not been called back to work since complaining about the incident.

The city is considering a law making these types of racist symbols illegal.

"The mere nature of a person having a cross burned, or having a Swastika or having a noose targeted at an individual should be punishable by law, and that's what we're attempting to do," said Philadelphia City Council Majority Whip Darrell Clarke.

Council officials said they hope to pass the law early next year.

Clarke said if the law is passed, he wants violators to pay a $1,900 fine or spend up to 90 days in jail, NBC 10's Vince DeMentri reported.
 
Fire Department Wants Apology From NAACP

The president of the Baltimore chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People offered an apology to city firefighters that he called racist over a noose incident that turned out to be a hoax.

Firefighters said they were defamed by the civil rights group and by a black firefighters group after a black paramedic apprentice found a threatening note and a rope shaped like a noose inside the Herman Williams Jr. Firehouse last month.

At the time the noose and note were found, a black firefighters group called the Vulcan Blazers and the NAACP made accusations of racism within the department.

NAACP Apologizes After Noose Incident

the president of the Baltimore chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People offered an apology to city firefighters that he called racist over a noose incident that turned out to be a hoax.

Firefighters said they were defamed by the civil rights group and by a black firefighters group after a black paramedic apprentice found a threatening note and a rope shaped like a noose inside the Herman Williams Jr. Firehouse last month.
The paramedic apprentice, Donald Maynard, later admitted to authorities to placing the items there.

According to city fire officials, NAACP President Marvin "Doc" Cheatham arrived at the firehouse at about 8:15 a.m. Wednesday and apologized to 14 firefighters, admitting he made a mistake. According to the fire department, he said that the NAACP "came out, spoke out without communicating with all the parties involved."

Op-ed: Why black America should move beyond hanging nooses

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Carol Swain

A spate of hanging nooses is being reported all over the country. This is creating an environment that has encouraged at least one black man to hang his own noose and place the blame on white co-workers. Donald Maynard, a Baltimore, MD firefighter and paramedic, confessed to hanging a noose found last month in the fire station where he worked. Even though his report sparked a federal investigation and public outcry, Maynard will not face criminal charges for filing a false report. We will never be able to quantify the amount of damage that Maynard's action did to race relations at his job and in the wider community.

It is against this backdrop that I re-assess the implications of last month’s rally outside the U.S. Justice Department, in which the Reverend Al Sharpton and thousands of African Americans protested the failure of the Federal Government to protect them from hanging nooses and unequal treatment by judges and law enforcement officials who frequently use excessive actions to subdue black criminal suspects.

Some of the issues raised by Sharpton are quite valid, but others are misleading. For example, the characterization of hanging nooses as hate crime is a stretch. Hate crime laws are designed to protect individuals from violence caused by the person's race, religion or ethnicity. Under current federal law, the victim has to be attending a public school or engaged in a "federally protected activity" to be covered. By itself, a hanging noose is a chilling symbol and only becomes a hate crime when it is being used to lynch a human being. Most likely the U.S. Supreme Court would consider a noose as protected speech falling under First Amendment protections.

(more at link)
 
Man who says noose left in work locker accused of internal theft
Created: December 5, 2007 11:38 AM Modified: December 5, 2007 11:38 AM

An employee of Lowe's home improvement center in Ruston who said he found a noose in his locker at work was arrested today on internal-theft charges.

Ruston police said they are still investigating the complaint about the noose. They would not say whether they believe it was a legitimate claim or one intended to deflect attention from the theft investigation that had targeted him.

"We are investigating these as separate incidents," police Lt. Curtis Hawkins said. "We know that during this investigation (of the noose) that (Lowe's) brought forth information that he is the suspect in an internal theft."

Jonathan McZeal, 25, of Jennings was booked on felony theft charges. Police said McZeal worked as a cashier and the alleged theft of more than $500 involved making refund payments for merchandise that was never bought.

Police said the investigation by Lowe's corporate security had been underway for several weeks when the noose incident was reported.

McZeal, a former student at Grambling State University, told police he found a noose and a threatening letter in his work locker last month.

Ruston police and the FBI in Monroe are investigating that complaint.

http://www.ktbs.com/news/Man-who-says-noose-left-in-work-locker-accused-of-internal-theft-6976/
 
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