Nigg*r arrested for wearing sideways baseball hat

Hellcat

Registered
3

Emily Bittner
The Arizona Republic
Mar. 13, 2004 12:00 AM


By most accounts, Marlon Morgan is a great kid. The soft-spoken junior plays basketball for Saguaro High School. He was nominated for Youth of the Year last year by a branch of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Scottsdale.

So why were his classmates wearing "Free Marlon" T-shirts last week?

The 17-year-old had just been arrested on campus during lunch for wearing his baseball cap sideways instead of to the front and refusing to turn it the other way.

Morgan, who is Black, believes he was singled out. Other teens in the same room were wearing their hats that way.

His family criticized both
police and school officials' handling of the incident, which happened March 5, the day before spring break. The local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and Morgan

&#39
;s mother are meeting Wednesday with Scottsdale Police Chi
ef Alan Rodbell and Scottsdale Unified School District officials.

Morgan was suspended from school for three days, beginning Monday when Saguaro returns from spring break. Though he was held in a jail cell at police headquarters for several hours, he wasn't charged. He was held on suspicion of disorderly conduct, failure to obey a police officer, trespassing and interfering or disrupting an educational institution.

School officials and police defended their actions.

Scottsdale police Detective Sam Bailey said Officer Brian Zeller, who is assigned to the school, knows the teen and didn't want to arrest him. "From what I gather, he's a pretty good kid," Bailey said. But the officer was worried the situ
ation could escalate because other students were starting to gather.

Morgan was having lunch when Saguaro security guards approached him about his hat. It is against school policy to wear hat
s si
deways becau
se it can be a sign of disrespect for authority, the police report said, but Mo
rgan said that the rule is enforced selectively. According to a police report, he pointed to several White students whose hats were on sideways.

"Usually I don't have a problem, (but) when you walk around you see everyone else with their hats like that. I just kind of got fed up with it," he told The Arizona Republic.

When Morgan wouldn't do as the security guards and three assistant principals asked, Officer Zeller was called in.

The police officer also told Morgan to straighten his hat, and he didn't.

Assistant Principal Steve Salcito ordered Morgan to the school office, but the teen didn't move, police said.



Salcito told Morgan he was being suspe
nded for insubordination and was trespassing on school grounds, according to the police report.

Morgan said he stood up to leave. But according to the report, he told Zeller he wasn&#
39;t goi
ng anywhere. "I
didn't think he (Zeller) was going to arrest me," Morgan said.

But Bailey said that at one point Morgan turned arou
nd, held his hands behind his back and said, "Just put the cuffs on."

Although Morgan and his mother, Bobbie Morgan, said his behavior was rebellious, they denounced the school's reaction as "uncalled for."

"I shouldn't have had to walk out of there in handcuffs in front of all my friends," Marlon Morgan said.

Shortly after Morgan's arrest, classmates staged a protest with one student being suspended for 10 days.

A spokesman for the school district said the guards and principals acted appropriately. "School officials did everything they were supposed to do," said Tom Herrmann, a spok
esman for the Scottsdale Unified School District. Herrmann declined to comment on the dispute's specifics.

Morgan's mother said security guards need better training to
deal with s
tudents. She also questioned
the police presence at the school.

"When does school discipline stop and you start using police officers to do the job of the principal and the vice principal and the parents?" she asked.
n
Bailey said such an incident normally wouldn't involve police, but the officer got involved because the student defied officials.

The Rev. Oscar Tillman, head of the local NAACP and a former school board member, said schools rely too heavily on police officers on campus to resolve conflict. "I would not even dream of the principal or security calling in the police," Tillman said. "Police are not the disciplinarians for the school."

Sophomore Della Rhodes, 15, was sitting one table away from Morgan when the dispute happened. "I didn&#39
;t think it was a big deal," she said, adding that lots of students wear their hats turned to the side. "That's just how the style is now," Rhodes said. &q
uot;I've nev
er seen anybody get in trouble for i
t."



Blacks make up only 2 percent of the students at Saguaro, which is near Hayden Road and McDonald Drive.

Morgan's adult supporters praised him. Morgan has been coming to the Boys & Girls Clubs' Rose Lane branch for years. He has worked th
e front desk and now watches kids while they play outdoors.

"He's a very responsible young man and a good role model," said Mandy Terre, a youth development supervisor the Boys & Girls Clubs.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/n...13marlon13.html
 
3

Yo there , Hellcat,

Methinks this is more than a little fishy.??

So my PARANOIA kicks in.


How's this.?

His family wants some free cash,

they all cook up a way to defy authority

( nigs just do that naturally )

that will put the school and the police in an untenable position.

It works and the lawyers are waiting in the wings with

a couple or three lawsuits against the school, the cops, the county,

each and every teacher, the school nurse, and the janitor. WHOOPS !

The school "custodial engineer". ( 'scuse me, little PC slip there , HEH. )

Now why else would a nig with a GOOD SCHOOL R
CORD ( ? )

incite a confrontation involving many and sundry

persons of official standing ?


Have I lived among the jews so long I can smell a law suit being set-up?

<

br>O
r is it so common it has become easy to spot ? :rolleyes:


Just give the nigs the
money and pay off the lawyers and be done with it !


what was that about sterilizing agents in the water supply ?
 
3

I have a New Nation News page devoted to

"Bias Lawsuits" - (especial 'black bias' ripoff lawsuits)

but haven't updated the page recently.

New Nation News on 'bias lawsuits'

"I had a dream - of retiring a millionaire from a racial bias lawsuit."

Shakedown.jpg



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Make big money with bias lawsuits: NO experience needed - Money back guarantee - free video included if you order today - see how others get rich $$$ and you
r
can
too! If you are a minority, migrant, disabled, retarded or illiterate you may qualify... Habla spanglish - bilingual operators ready to answer your call - cash in on the American Dream!
 
3

:( True, the punk is a Vandal n-gger...and fortunately the Vandals only comprise 2% of Saguaro Highschool...so the Vandal did get what he deserved. Also, if that school were 30% or more Vandalic, the school would be one big zoo.
To me, however, the big question is not his rights, but the rights of all law-abiding Whites. What happens when the gestapo arrests a White for having a non-profane, but politically charged tee-shirt such as "911? Don't blame the Arabs, blame Osama bin Bush!" "Free Ernst Zunde
Now!!!" or "Want some dope, just plant a Bush"? What happens if he is outside the school, say on a saturday, but he still is arrested and later suspended or expelled from sc
hool
for
doing something that was his Constitutional right?
Yes, Vandal n'iggers are most often nothing but trouble...but the "law" often starts with them as a test run...then law-abiding Aryans will eventua
lly be targeted, no thanks to Osama bin Bush's "patriot Acts" I and II as well as Homeland InSecurity. :angry: : :( :angry:
 
3

Saguaro HS newspaper pulled over photo flap

Dave Seibert/The Arizona Republic
0315marlon-ON.jpg

Marlon Morgan, arrested this spring when he refused to turn his sideways baseball cap to the front, inspired some satire in the school newspaper.

Emily Bittner
The Arizona Republic
May. 20, 2004 12:00 AM


Saguaro High School officials pulled the senior issue of the student newspaper after the staff ran a picture of a student wearing a baseball hat sideways.

The student was sitting beside Marlon Morgan, a Black youth-of-the-year nominee who was arreste
this spring in the school cafeteria after he refused to turn his hat to the front.

The picture was included in the Saguaro Sabercat's page of future section editors. Morgan, who will be a sport

s e
itor, wore a sweatband, but the co-sports editor wore a hat cocked to the side.


Tom Herrmann, a spokesman for the Scottsdale Unified District, said the newspapers were handed out in classrooms May 7 but taken off campus racks the next Monday after the principal saw the photo.



"If we're trying to enforce a policy and if we're trying to keep a consistent message to all the kids, that's really not a photograph that reinforces that message, that we're trying to treat all the kids the same," he said.

The school yearbook has several photos of students with their hats turned sideways, but wasn't pulled because of cost, Herrmann said. The other sports editor wasn't disciplined for wearing his hat sideways.

Morgan and other newspaper st
udents spent the day Wednesday removing the picture.

"When do the repercussions of the whole thing end?" asked his mother, Bobbie Morgan. "I just want them to be fair. Now his
pic
ture will b
e the only one not in the paper."

Marlon's arrest in March created a controversy as classmates said that others often wear their
hats sideways with no consequences. Marlon claimed that he was singled out because he is Black.
http://www.azcentral.com/families/educatio...0saguaro20.html
 
3

From the looks of this negro I'd say he should never have to worry about getting the death penalty.

T.N.B.
 
3

:D :D :D

From the
looks of this negro ....

he will get a lot of attention from the Bubbas in the joint.

By the time h
e runs out of a
npeals his butt will rival

the Queens Midtown Tunnel!

Gratis his own kind !

:D :D :D
 
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