Story Archives 2000

Fighting to Stay Alive, Part 1 Update: Justice for a Few, Part II

09/24/2021 - 11:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Since 1976, when the death penalty was reinstated, thirty-four mentally disabled prisoners have been executed in the United States.

 

 
 

by Leroy F. Moore, Jr.

In 1916 Jesse Washington, a Black , mentally disabled, young adult, was hauled out of court and dragged through the streets of Waco, Texas. He was then stabbed, mutilated and finally burned while 10,000 men, women and children cheered. What happened to Jesse Washington is not an isolated case and we can't chalk it up to history; we are still healing from the 1998 dragging and killing of a Black, disabled man, also in Texas, named James Byrd. Since the dawning of day individuals with disabilities, especially those of color who are poor, have had to and still are fighting to stay alive.

People with disabilities are not excluded from the brutal history of this country, a history that is still being played out today. Systematic discrimination and harsh brutality by individuals, institutions and the state against people with disabilities has, until very recently, been glossed over. The state has played and continues to play a big role in the physiological, mental and physical abuse of people with disabilities, especially disabled people of color. Look at the days of slavery, the Eugenics Movement, institutionalization to deinstitutionalization, and now the US Supreme Court is looking at the debate over state executions of mentally disabled prisoners. All of the above examples have one key component in common and that is they had the legal backing of the state. When the state institutions have the legal platform to end a person's life or to help create an environment that leads to brutality, it makes it harder for individuals to fight against this injustice because it is institutionalized.

Since 1976, when the death penalty was reinstated, thirty-four mentally disabled prisoners have been executed in the United States. The website of LOST SOULS STOP KILLING MENTALLY RETARDED, www.geocities.com, reports that many of the prisoners were and are people of color. Since the state of Georgia mistakenly executed Jerome Bowden, a Black, mentally disabled prisoner, the state has issued a ban on executions of the mentally disabled. This case helped the campaign to gain momentum, especially as it won the support of the American Bar Association. Now Arkansas, Colorado, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, South Dakota, Tennessee and Washington have also banned the practice.

Even Florida's own Attorney General Bob Butterworth, historically one of Gov. Jeb Bush's strongest advocates for speedier executions, supported the bill sparing persons with mental retardation from capital punishment. However, the bill did not pass and now Florida is the next state targeted by the campaign to end execution of mentally disabled prisoners.

As a researcher and writer on race and disability, I have noticed that the concepts of race, sex, disability and class have not been discussed in the executions of people who are mentally disabled. There are cases like Anthony Porter's and Earl Washington's, both Black men who are mentally disabled and poor. Both were on death row for crimes they didn't commit but confessed to because of their inability to understand what they were confessing. Both men were cleared by DNA testing and other evidence that was buried in their first hearing. Anthony Porter served seventeen years and Earl Washington had to wait until the beginning of this year to be released from custody. Many advocates are working on this issue but I don't see disabled, race and class advocates and organizations coming together with one voice on the execution of people who are of color, poor and have a mental disability.

"Crimes against people with development disabilities, i.e. mental disabilities, have reached epidemic proportions. Although it is similar to elder abuse, child abuse and domestic violence, it remains largely invisible and unaddressed." This statement comes from a report entitled "An Epidemic of Violence: A Collective Challenge", by Daniel D. Sorensen. Sorensen works at the California Victims of Crimes Committee which sponsored the federal Crime Victims With Disabilities Awareness Act. The Act requires the National Crime Survey to begin collecting data on crimes against people with disabilities. It also requires the US Attorney to issue a report on crime and violence against people with disabilities.

This committee helped convince Governor Gray Davis to establish the Crime Victims With Disabilities Initiative. This is the first permanent state government program that addresses the issue of crime against people with disabilities. Although the above accomplishments are helping to get the issue of crimes against people with disabilities out there in the public, it is a taboo subject for many in the disabled community and in the general public.

Is there justice in the US justice system for people with physical and mental disabilities? Many studies have found that individuals with disabilities, especially people with mental disabilities, who become involved in the criminal justice system, are more likely to face injustice if the system does not consider their disabilities and capabilities. According to www.geocities.com's story "Stop Killing the Mentally Retarded", most attorneys, judges, law enforcement officers and juries lack the knowledge and skills necessary to ensure that people with mental disabilities obtain equal justice. It goes on to say that appropriate investigations and expert testimonies are costly. The fact is that individuals with mental disabilities lack the resources and income to get a fair trial.
A good example of how money can shape justice in the criminal justice system is Wanda Jean Allen, a poor, disabled, Black lesbian in Oklahoma who was executed in January for the murder of her lover. Wanda's family approached Bob Carpenter to handle the case. Since Mr. Carpenter believed that the case was not a capital case he agreed to represent Wanda for $5000. Wanda's family gave an initial payment of $800. However, the state charged Wanda with third degree murder and announced it would seek the death penalty, refusing Mr. Carpenter's request to drop the case.

In the end Wanda was left with an attorney who had never tried a capital murder case before and had a lack of resources to investigate her mental disability and other key elements in the case. In fact, Mr. Carpenter was quoted in the Associated Press and in the Canadian Coalition Against the Death Penalty's website as saying that he had only learned about Wanda's disability after the case.

Although Allen did kill her lover, did the justice system kill Allen because her family's economic status instantly created an obstacle to her receiving equal justice? Right up until her execution, Wanda maintained she had shot her lover in self-defense, but the scar on her face from her lover's assault and the weapon that made that scar were not included as evidence of self-defense in her case.

The same is true for Michael Manning, a Black disabled young man who is fighting for his life in Pennsylvania's criminal justice system in a self-defense that is detailed on-line at http://michealmanning.homestead.com. For the past three months, I have been e-mailing Michael's parents to get his story. Their e-mail is mannfam@pnpa.net.

For almost four years the Manning family has been trying to receive media coverage and justice for their 30-year-old, physically disabled son, who is serving a 12 to 30 year prison term in Pennsylvania for what the justice system defined as first degree murder. But Michael and his lawyer, Salvatore Vito, have clearly demonstrated a case of self-defense. On September 15, 1999 a jury of nine women and three men (not his peers) of Monroe County, Pennsylvania convicted Michael Manning for the third degree murder of Harry Burley Jr. on June 16,1997.

Michael, friends, co-workers and family all took the stand and came to one conclusion—he acted in self-defense. According to Michael's lawyer and his parents, on June 16, 1997 Michael was on his way to pick up his mother from work. Noticing he needed gas, Michael pulled into a gasoline station. Michael also noticed he was being followed and subsequently endured an unexpected knife attack by two men. One was Michael's stepsister's boyfriend, Harry Burely, and the other was a drug dealer well known to the Court of Monroe County. After a few minutes of Michael struggling to defend himself, Burely fell to the ground.

The real tragedy began with the investigation and trial. The DA and Detective Thomas Lynott cleared Michael of any charges. However on November 5, 1997 Michael was arrested even though the fingerprints on the knife at the time didn't match Michael's. During Michael's case, justice was nowhere in courtroom. Firstly, there was the lack of fingerprints, and secondly, there were the instructions from the DA to the jury to bring back a verdict or he would have to sharpen his jury selection skills. Although the accomplice in the attack was proven to be a well-known drug dealer who had previously lied in another police matter and was currently on parole, he was allowed to testify.

To completely close the door on justice, Michael's parents found out that Judge Ronald E. Vican made a racial remark at another self-defense case of a Black man, stating, "I suspect this goes back to the cultural thing." He then invoked Michael's name and spoke of the case. The DA made derogatory remarks about Michael's disability after he demonstrated his walk to the jury. These remarks and the lack of awareness of Michael's physical limitations are stunning when you consider that Judge Ronald E. Vican has a noticeable disability and his wife is a physical therapist.

Now it is 2001 and the Manning family is still trying to find justice and media for their son. The latest news is that on April 5, 2001 Michael was scheduled for an evidentiary hearing with a new judge. The judge has a reputation of being a "man of justice". I pray for justice for Michael but he and his family need you, i.e. the Black community, the media, and his disabled brothers and sisters all across the country.

Through e-mail, the Manning family has reaffirmed why I do what I do. Michael's parents have contacted many disabled organizations and on-line disabled groups, but haven't gotten any support. The same goes for certain Black organizations. For example, Michael's parents contacted the NAACP, Jesse Jackson's Rainbow-PUSH organization and the Reverend Al Sharpton. The only response the Manning family has received is from Jesse Jackson, plus the Black media.

Our disabled brothers and sisters of color are fighting to stay alive but we can't do it alone! Here are some resources for more information on how you can get involved in helping rescue people with disabilities who are searching for justice and fighting to stay alive:

For family members who have a loved one on death row who is mentally disabled:
The United Nation Economic & Social Council campaign to eliminate the death penalty for persons who are mentally disabled. Information is available on-line at www.geocities.com in "Stop Killing Mentally Retarded" or go to your local Association of Retarded Citizens (ARC). The US Senate will vote on it next session.

For families with disabled youth in the juvenile justice system contact:

The National Center on Education, Disability and Juvenile Justice
University of Maryland
1224 Benjamin Building
College Park, MD 20742
(301) 405-6462
www.edjj.org

Protection & Advocacy
100 Howe Ave. ST 185N
Sacramento, CA. 95825
(916) 488-9955

Victims of crime contact:

International Coalition on Abuse and Disability
www.quasar.ualberta.ca/ddc/ICAD/icad.html

Office for Victims of Crime (provided funding to the National Organization for Victims Assistance (NOVA) for the project Working with Crime Victims with Disabilities, www.ojpusdoj.gov/ovc/, they offer grants and other funding)

Crime Victims with Disabilities Initiative
State Department of Mental Health
1600 9th Ave., Room 100
Sacramento, CA. 95814
(910) 654-6567 - Lisa Bowman

Justice for a Few
Update on Fighting to Stay Alive

Executions of the Mentally Retarded:

Texas : Last year Gov. Bush voted against a bill banning executions of the mentally retarded. He also refused to talk about the highly visible Johnny Paul Penry case. Now Gov. Rick Perry was quoted in the Houston Chronicle of May 31, 2001 as saying, "Texas already has safeguards against putting the mentally ill to death." In the same article he is further quoted as saying during a speech that we (Texas) do not execute the mentally retarded. Has he forgotten about the six mentally retarded Texans put to death since 1982? While the new governor of Texas is hesitating about signing the bill, legislators and the House of Representatives are moving ahead to pass a ban on executions of people who are mentally retarded.

Although Bush is in Washington now, the case of Johnny Paul Penry has fueled the debate on the executions of people with mental disabilities. His lawyer argues that his mental state should bar him from execution, a key element that was overlooked in his original case. In 1979 he was found guilty of the rape and murder of Pamela Mosely Carpenter. Penry has been on death row since 1979 and is White. The June 5, 2001 issue of the LA Times reported that the US Supreme Court overturned Penry's death sentence, stating that jurors were not clearly told to consider Penry's mental retardation as a reason to spare his life. So Penry escapes death one more time, for now. This was not the first time Penry was granted a stay. Last November Penry was hours away from being executed when the court granted a stay.

The official ruling that will consider whether the execution of mentally retarded defendants is always cruel and unusual punishment, and should therefore be stopped as unconstitutional, will be voted on in the fall. More and more states are joining the campaign to ban executions of people who are mentally disabled. Florida has passed a bill, but Gov. Jeb Bush has yet to sign it.

On June 5, 2001 Connecticut became the fourteenth state in the country to exempt mentally retarded criminals from execution. The state didn't stop there. It also wants to establish a nine member commission to study the death penalty, including whether or not there are disparities in prosecutors' decisions to seek death sentences based on the defendants' or victims' race or economic status. Bingo!! These are the issues that I brought up in Fighting to Stay Alive.

I wonder if Wanda Jean Allen a Black, disabled lesbian, as well as many other defendants of color who are poor and mentally disabled have the same access and resources as Penry. Can they get top notch lawyers like his? If you remember from my article, Wanda Jean Allen's lawyer did not discover her mental disability until after the trial. Because Allen's family could not afford to pay the lawyer in full, he could not do a full investigation. Earlier this year Gov. Frank Keating of Oklahoma denied Allen's request for a stay of execution and a new clemency hearing. Hours later, the US Supreme Court denied her final appeal.

From my e-mails it is clear that many who are fighting to ban executions of the mental retarded haven't consider race as part of the issue. Ummmmm interesting!!!!! This is one more thing to think about my brothers and sisters in California. The LA Times reported on June 5, 2001 that California has the largest population of inmates on death row but has not adopted the ban. In California, because the capital punishment law was approved by a state vote, to ban the executions of people with mental retardation would require a statewide referendum. For more cases of race, disability, class, and the justice system look up Oliver Cruz, Kim Lim, Earl Washington, just a few of the countless cases needing further investigation.

Michael Manning, a disabled, Black man is still locked up on self-defense! In my last article, I laid out Michael's story communicated to me via e-mails with his mother. At the time the article Fighting to Stay Alive appeared, Michael was waiting for his second trial with a new judge. Days after the article, while Ms. Manning was thanking Poor Magazine and me for coverage of her son's situation, injustice was served once again in court. Michael's lawyer appealed the first decision handed down by Judge Ronald E. Vican. The Manning family and Michael's lawyer had had high hopes and had expected that this new judge would notice the blunt injustice of the case. But the outcome was not in Michael's favor and he is still in jail for 12 to 30 years for the June 16, 1997 third degree murder of Harry Burley Jr.

This was not the first appeal that was rejected. A previous appeal was rejected by the Superior Court in 1999. This time Judge Peter J. O'Brian denied Michael's post-conviction appeal in which Michael said he received faulty defense from Salvatore Vito. The appeal also asserted that the questioning of a witness during the trial by Presiding Judge Ronald E. Vican prejudiced the jury against Michael. O'Brien found Vican's questioning "clearly unbiased". Michael's lawyer, Jeffery Velander, said that the way the judge wrote the opinion gives Michael much more latitude in Superior Court. The Mannings are planning to appeal the decision. Michael's new lawyer feels Michael has a very good chance of reprieve when his case is heard in Superior Court. His lawyer goes on to say that it is rare that convictions are overturned in the lower courts.

Media be on the lookout. The Manning family has put together a campaign to inform the media and the public at large of the travesty of justice that their son is enduring. They have contacted Geraldo Rivera at MSN Investigates, Oprah, and various newspapers. While some Americans stand by and watch this injustice unfold, many are closely following Michael's case and helping out in many ways.

Thanks to Michael's family's campaign, a Danish man found out about Michael's case and translated the case into danish and sent it to newspapers and radio and TV stations in Denmark. He also appeared on a Danish TV talk show with the US Ambassador to Denmark and spoke about Michael's case. In addition, Rubin Hurricane Carter's organization took an interest in Michael's case and is looking into the case. Mr. Carter has contacted Michael's attorneys. For more updates on Michael Manning's case visit www.michaelmanning.homestead.com and sign the petition!!!!!

WAKE UP! OUR DISABLED BROTHERS AND SISTERS ARE SCREAMING AND CRYING FOR JUSTICE!

 

 

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Crap No Care's Answer

09/24/2021 - 11:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Are on Prop.N people
neo Troglodytes?

Beating up a respected
Black C.O.H. Homeless Advocate
for differing political views.

by Joe B.

An Open Letter On Perception For Anyone With Brains And Hearts To Listen.

Weeks ago while walking from work to home I waved to Willie Warren, a Coalition On Homelessness Advocate.

Besides being a poet and being politically aware he’s a large, strong, even tempered guy who wouldn’t bully anyone about anything.

Except to print embarrass using facts on what’s wrong with political and economic systems.

When he tells his horrendous story of being set up for attacks behind by two white guys who first had a problem with his "tan."

Then after finding out he’s a Homeless Advocate they go nuts and beat or stomp the 'livin bloody mud hole out of him.

I think these two clowns white or black have psychological problems to begin with but to follow, talk, then explode in violence means they wanted "beat down" on someone anyone not their shade or political persuasion.

What’s telling is these are "Gavin Newsom" CNC supporters to me that’s scary.

If they see black guys with backpacks and assume homelessness then go after him-her for his job as homeless advocate as an excuse.

It’s a two-for one beat down.

These two cowards have the gall calling out the "N" word thinking Warren would just flip out then have to follow him as he wisely decides to leave.

I’ve had my own run in but it wasn’t as severe or potentially deadly.

As I read the letter the first sign of trouble to me is two white guys fuming; for me it means go a different route.

Are my senses more acute?

I usually steer by angry people let alone a couple it could be I’d rather avoid confrontation than face it especially when the odds favor two or more against one.

These guys may be the tip of a racist – homophobic iceberg.

What kind of people or persons attack people wearing backpacks assuming those who have them are homeless.

What about tourists, school children without a dress uniform or bucking the code, college, or university students and graduates also undergraduates.

Do you think these kind of people quietly fuming mad about the so called homeless problem will differentiate between different people walking in and around the city wearing backpacks?

I carry a backpack, my mother who’s taking up creative writing in a community college totes a backpack!

How many of these people are walking around itching to attack anyone because they either appear, not neat or cleanly dressed, or are perceived as homeless.

Even being a homeless advocate thus on the left of the political spectrum.

Is this the ultimate answer of conservatives action?

Someone or thing is giving out a message or its being twisted to convey:

Houseless People, Working Poor Folk and families and now Homeless Advocates are seen as targets of opportunities.

Guess I’ll brush up on the empty hand and Ninja techniques to make whatever I can find as weapons of opportunity if I am also to others a beat down one.

When I was young I was forced to carry a sharp kitchen knife in a paper bag to protect myself against being ganged up on because I was small runt of kid.

The knife was never used but felt good having it just in case.

Now I might have be a weapon even when carrying none using my brain to learn and relearn self protection.

I an average peaceful, husky, (slightly overweight black guy.

I’ve been beaten up by girls that couldn’t say they liked me guys know how that is when they hit girls they really liked.

Women, girls are bad enough but I won’t get stomped on for someone else’s perception of me who doesn’t know me at all.

People, I may be wrong but whatever happens with Proposition N. Please for men, women, girls, boys learn self defense and if you know enough teach folks who want to learn.

As for gun will there are Teflon bullet proof vest but buy extra to cover head, neck, under shoulder.

Yes, I’m afraid being mortal brings that out.

I end my open letter saying be aware folks, be very aware.

There's in an undercurrent of anger by persons so fed up with the homeless they’re willing to beat up people or worse.

I hope this is not leading for "A Final Solution" the world has gone that route before lets not revisit the worst humanity has to offer itself. Bye.



Wary and Worried

Joseph Bolden

Cc: The Street Sheet

Cc: Board Of Supervisors

Cc: The Chronicle’s Editor

Cc: The Examiner’s Editor

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To tell or not to tell... That is the question

09/24/2021 - 11:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Homeless Voucher plan shrouded in
bureaucratic secrecy.

by Kaponda

An eerie hush passed through the grandiose structure
as Scott and I walked through the doors of the
building at Dr. Carlton Goodlet Street. We had
planned to seize the area bordering the space inhabited
by the Mayor and, therefore, arrived 15 minutes
earlier than his scheduled press conference.

Shrouded in secrecy the entire week, the homeless
voucher plan had been expected to be announced by
Mayor Willie Brown during his press conference on
Friday, March 24, 2000. Advocates of the homeless
had interpreted these private meetings of City officials
as veiled threats.

The homeless voucher plan (hereinafter, "the plan"),
according to inside information, features elements
similar to the ill-fated initiative set forth by Earl
Rynerson, Proposition E. Instead of welfare
payments, the plan would provide vouchers to
homeless people. It would cause people to scurry
throughout the city to find compassionate landlords
who would accept vouchers instead of lucre.

As we ascended the ritzy stairs to the second floor of
City Hall, Scott and I reviewed one of the many
questions propounded as a reality check for the
Mayor. If Proposition E was soundly and decisively
defeated by the voters of San Francisco, why are you
creating a plan that voters have strongly opposed?
Paul Boden of the Coalition on Homeless mirrored
the sentiments of San Franciscans in his statement,
"San Franciscan voters have recognized what people
tracking housing and treatment trends across
Clinton's America have been saying for years.
Vouchers do not build housing nor can they create
treatment slots."

The inside informant further advised that the proposed plan
would create a state of emergency, as many homeless
welfare recipients would be unable to secure housing or a
place in a shelter. During a daylong symposium on
affordable housing, Lyle Wray, a housing official from
Minnesota was quoted as saying, "It's like the twilight
zone here. By our standards, nothing is affordable in San
Francisco." Mayor Brown also stated at the same
symposium, "....This [San Francisco] is a place where
everyone wants to live and everyone wants to work. It's a
creative challenge to help find enough housing for
everyone."

The only possible rationale, according to inside
information, to institute a voucher policy is that it would be
cost effective, and; therefore, would stack the City's coffer
on the overburdened backs of homeless people. But those
cohorts in this putrid scheme have to understand that a plan
of this magnitude would devastate the very foundation of
this great City. It should be conveyed to the various heads
of agencies that vouchers as a way of paying rent will not
work in any form. They do not work because they are
inherently less valuable than cash. Vouchers do not afford
an individual the opportunity to save money for permanent
housing. Lastly, vouchers will not work because of the
abundance of red tape on both the Department of Human
Services and the prospective property owner.

There were many other questions that needed to be
addressed on this Friday morning. The names of the
participants who helped devise this plan? Also, if those
participants had spoken to the Local Homeless
Coordinating Board, the Coalition on Homelessness, or
shelter clients? Would a voucher guarantee a shelter bed?
From where would the 1,900 additional shelter beds come?
(DHS estimates there are about 3,000 homeless people in
the CAAP programs and there are currently only 1,100
shelter beds for single adults.)

The slender blond appeared caught off guard as Scott and I
inquired concerning the press conference. Ms. Bender,
Mayor Brown's press secretary, located the strategically
placed calendar to make certain that there was no scheduled
press conference. In a pleasant tone, she, again, told us,
"I'm sorry, Mayor Brown does not have a press
conference scheduled this morning."

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Lakota TwoCrow (Southern Ute)

09/24/2021 - 11:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

by Boys and Girls Club of the Southern Ute Indian Tribe

Lakota TwoCrow

Slam Bio


I like the color green

My taste is sour

My smell is pizza

My touch is hard

Chameleon

I’m from many tribes

I live with my mom

I live with my dad sometimes

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Poverty Scholar R.I.P.

09/24/2021 - 11:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

By Bruce Allison and Thorton Kimes

by Staff Writer

While swimming in Hawai’i, Larry Lattimore, Father and Grandfather, had a fatal heart attack. Six months earlier he went there to recharge his batteries and his faith in activism and people after 20 unbroken years of working to change the world for the better.

I met Larry 10 years ago, when he’d already co-founded POWER (People Organizing To Win Employment Rights), the first night of the founding of the Living Wage Coalition. I didn’t speak to him then, he looked cranky; I later found out that was his armor against the world, we became good friends.

Intelligent, to almost genius level, he worked for San Francisco General Hospital as a janitor, picking up hazardous waste without proper safety equipment, like gloves. Larry caught an immune difficiency disease doing Workfare for the General Assistance Welfare program, and got SSI benefits after fighting for them until 2005.

We worked together on the San Francisco Living Wage Coalition in 2000, when he was elected Co-Director. I remember the night we got the Living Wage, sitting in the SEIU union’s local office negotiating with SF Mayor Willie Brown. He was in an air-conditioned hotel in New York, we were on the 14th Floor of Fox Plaza: 20 people in a hot room.

Josie Mooney, Secretary-Treasurer of SEIU Local 1021 (it was 790), made an unofficial deal this poverty scholar can’t prove, which excluded CalWorks and GA Workfare workers from the receiving the Minimum Compensation Ordinance benefits, including health benefits which would have gone to anyone working or any company accepting city contracts.

In 2005 Larry and I were on the Committee To Get A Minimum Wage, which fought to raise the San Francisco County minimum wage to $10 per hour, enduring 4-hour meetings once a week to get through one agenda item. Larry was patient, this poverty scholar (to be polite) wasn’t.

After petitioning to get the MW on the local ballot, Larry was the happiest person I saw on Election Night. I never had an easier friend and ally to work with. We went to Sacramento often enough, to lobby and to protests that we knew every tree by name.

The night he got his daughter back in his life, we were hanging out in the Living Wage offices. He had an ear-to-ear grin on his face. They lived in a Winnebago until a better place could be found. Larry gave his daughter a home-school education and did a great job. His activist work and his daughter are his legacy to the world.

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'OOOh, a SCARY, MYSTERIOUS PLACE: MARKET STREET, 'YEAH RIGHT.'

09/24/2021 - 11:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

I didn't go to the
Mid Market PAC meeting, it's
time for more elequent persons
than I to watch the M.M.P.

Time for an endless
stream of unfamiliar and
articulate voices to
Pack the PAC
let the whole San Francisco
community know what's going down.

by Joe B.

Tuesday, Oct.16, 2001, 8:45 am.

Whisper of winter not chilly enough for an overcoat.

Seeing Select President G.W.Bush Jr. actually say no to the Taliban regime when they suggested a neutral country to discuss terms of handing over Osama Bin Laben.

Only when he's satisfied! Does this guy know he's President of all the people not just hawks but doves, conscientious objectors, and anti-war activist's also?

It is chilling to see him determined to "stay the course of" war and not even contemplate alternate ways to settle this quickly, safely, using diplomatic means.

We do not have a King but G.W. is acting like one. Let’s not compound the problem in 2004. Bye

Please send donations to Poor Magazine C/0 Ask Joe at 255 9th St. Street, San Francisco, CA. 94103 USA

For Joe only my snail mail:
PO Box 1230 #645
Market St. San Francisco, CA 94102
Email: askjoe@poormagazine.org

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"An Altercation..."

09/24/2021 - 11:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Homeless resident of UN Plaza shot by federal
police officer

by Maurice J., Darrin Lewis and Tiny

It was late.... so late and so dark, even the streetlamps started to fade
and flicker in that disturbing way they do at dusk and dawn. In this hour
of darkness something happened to a homeless friend of mine at the United
Nations Plaza in San Francisco..something that left him.in critical
condition..something that involved my friend and several police
officers...


a knife.." an altercation".... a shooting .


I didn't see my friend hurt. hardly anyone was around..... I did see the faint
glow of police searchlights flicker in tandem with the flickering streetlamps.
The birds, sparkling charcoal clouds and moist brick sidewalks whispered
to me that something was wrong but I was hidden and it is o hard to find
a good place to sleep when you are living outside that I denied what might
have been going on around the corner.


As a homeless not-resident of UN Plaza it is very clear to me, that between
the Mayor's office, the sheriff's department and the federal police, WE
ARE NOT WANTED HERE! Further, my opinions on this event and/or that of
any homeless witnesses, will not hold any weight, suffice to say we know
through personal experience, poor people are rarely believed, and their
opinions are rarely legitimized My neighbors and friends are saying it
was attempted murder by a federal police officer who wants us out of here
- my neighbors and friends are very scared because they feel like its
just a matter of time before they are the next "altercation" The FBI,
the branch of government who are "Handling this investigation" have released
the following statement:


At approximately 10:00 pm on Thursday, August 10th, an as yet unidentified
federal police officer encountered an as yet unidentified individual in
the small alleyway in UN Plaza, behind the fountain, that leads to McAllister
street. As per federal regulations the investigation is now being handled
by the FBI.The individual pulled a knife and proceeded to attack the officer.
After sustaining several cuts the officer then pulled his weapon and shot
the man in self-defense. The suspect is still in General Hospital while
the officer was treated and released that night.


At this point the homeless residents of UN Plaza have no official statement,
so far it is only that, "we are scared"


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Ian Twiss (Sicangu Lakota)

09/24/2021 - 11:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

by Boys and Girls Club of the Southern Ute Indian Tribe

Ian Twiss

Slam Bio


I am as red as the tide tingles off your tongue letting it lick your ankles in the softness of a new moon

Eagle

My culture is of a burnt thigh, that’s why we’re Sicangu

Sometimes I forget where home is

I could drive the 2 blocks but still be a 1,000 miles from home

Sometimes I’m white, sometimes I’m not

Sometimes I’m red, sometimes I’m not

I think sometimes circles aren’t coherent, like the ones we have to run in

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