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US Justice Department acknowledges wide-ranging surveillance of AP journalists

thepeoplesrecord:

May 14, 2013

The president of the Associated Press has sent a letter of protest to US Attorney General Eric Holder over the Department of Justice’s broad surveillance of individual reporters’ phone conversations.

In a letter received by the AP on Friday, the Justice Department acknowledged but offered no explanation for the seizure of two months’ worth of telephone records of reporters and editors. AP’s president, Gary Pruitt, called the ongoing monitoring a “massive and unprecedented intrusion.”

The AP believes that more than 100 journalists are involved in the DOJ’s phone surveillance, which would have involved a wide variety of stories regarding government and other topics. Pruitt has called for the return of obtained phone records, as well as the destruction of all copies.

There can be no possible justification for such an overbroad collection of the telephone communications of The Associated Press and its reporters. These records potentially reveal communications with confidential sources across all of the newsgathering activities undertaken by the AP during a two-month period, provide a road map to AP’s newsgathering operations, and disclose information about AP’s activities and operations that the government has no conceivable right to know,” said Pruitt.

According to the AP’s own reporting of the alleged phone taps, Justice Department rules require that subpoenas of such records from news organizations must be approved by the attorney general. Notification to the AP was made by a letter sent by Ronald Machen, US attorney in Washington, but did not clarify if such rules had been followed.

It is believed that phone records were obtained as part of a criminal investigation into leaked information about a CIA operation in Yemen that unraveled an Al-Qaeda plot in the spring of 2012 to detonate an explosive on a US-bound jet airliner.

Speculation on a link to that particular story was made by the AP based on the fact that phone numbers were obtained by the DoJ for five reporters and an editor involved in the May 7, 2012 story.

According to the AP, CIA Director John Brennan was questioned by the FBI as to whether he had been the source of the leak. In testimony regarding the story in February, Brennan called the leak an “unauthorized and dangerous disclosure of classified information.”

Records obtained by the Justice Department detailed incoming and outgoing calls, as well as the duration of calls, for work and private numbers of AP reporters and offices in New York, Washington, and Hartford, Connecticut, as well as the main number for reporters in the House of Representatives press gallery.

In its statement regarding the phone taps, the Department of Justice cited an exception to notifying a news organization in advance if it would hamper its own investigation:

We take seriously our obligations to follow all applicable laws, federal regulations, and Department of Justice policies when issuing subpoenas for phone records of media organizations. Those regulations require us to make every reasonable effort to obtain information through alternative means before even considering a subpoena for the phone records of a member of the media. We must notify the media organization in advance unless doing so would pose a substantial threat to the integrity of the investigation. Because we value the freedom of the press, we are always careful and deliberative in seeking to strike the right balance between the public interest in the free flow of information and the public interest in the fair and effective administration of our criminal laws,” the statement reads.

The rights of the US citizens are increasingly under attack, acknowledged Caleb Maupin from International Action Center.

“All the things that the Democratic Party lambasted George W. Bush for doing – they are now continuing. It is a trend in repression,” he said.

“This is an act of intimidation against the Associated Press. It was a real fear in the House of Power, which includes both the Democrats and the Republicans, that the press might start doing its job and actually speaking truth to power, actually exposing some of the crimes that has been committed,” Maupin said.

“They are going to threaten and intimidate journalists and keep that from happening – that is what’s behind this,” he concluded.

“The Obama administration has aggressively investigated disclosures of classified information and has actually brought six cases of people actually suspected of leaking classified information to trial – and that is more than all previous administrations combined,” RT America correspondent Meghan Lopez said, specifying that Bradley manning is only one of them.

Eric Draitser, an independent geopolitical analyst based in New York City who spoke to RT on Monday says that news of the DoJ’s monitoring of the AP has wider implications:

“This kind of surveillance is used for the purpose of persecution, it is the persecution of whistle blowers primarily. So what you see are that the records sought were records of various journalists, in an attempt not to so much surveil the journalists but to track down who their sources are,” says Draitser.

“And much of this emerges out of this case in Yemen, with regard to CIA Director Brennan, and the idea of this leaked information. The Obama administration, perhaps more so than any other administration before it, has been vehemently persecuting whistleblowers of all kinds,” added Draitser.

Source

“It is not unprecedented for the Justice Department to secretly get the numbers of reporters. What’s remarkable is the sweeping nature of this, the dragnet approach … and that’s why you have some press watchdog groups tonight, and freedom of the press groups saying this is positively Nixonian. They have not seen a precedent for this in decades.” - Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein.

The Obama administration’s war on whistleblowers & information continues.

(via silas216)

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iamonebeing:

Apple deluged by police demands to decrypt iPhones by Declan McCullagh 
 May 10, 2013 4:00 AM PDT
ATF says no law enforcement agency could unlock a defendant’s iPhone, but Apple can “bypass the security software” if it chooses. Apple has created a police waiting list because of high demand.
Apple receives so many police demands to decrypt seized iPhones that it has created a “waiting list” to handle the deluge of requests, CNET has learned.
Court documents show that federal agents were so stymied by the encrypted iPhone 4S of a Kentucky man accused of distributing crack cocaine that they turned to Apple for decryption help last year.
An agent at the ATF, the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, “contacted Apple to obtain assistance in unlocking the device,” U.S. District Judge Karen Caldwell wrote in a recent opinion. But, she wrote, the ATF was “placed on a waiting list by the company.”
A search warrant affidavit prepared by ATF agent Rob Maynard says that, for nearly three months last summer, he “attempted to locate a local, state, or federal law enforcement agency with the forensic capabilities to unlock” an iPhone 4S. But after each police agency responded by saying they “did not have the forensic capability,” Maynard resorted to asking Cupertino.
Because the waiting list had grown so long, there would be at least a 7-week delay, Maynard says he was told by Joann Chang, a legal specialist in Apple’s litigation group. It’s unclear how long the process took, but it appears to have been at least four months.

Excerpt from ATF affidavit, which says Apple “has the capabilities to bypass the security software” for law enforcement. Click for larger image.

The documents shed new light on the increasingly popular law enforcement practice of performing a forensic analysis on encrypted mobile devices — a practice that can, when done without a warrant,raise Fourth Amendment concerns.
Last year, leaked training materials prepared by the Sacramento sheriff’s office included a form that would require Apple to “assist law enforcement agents” with “bypassing the cell phone user’s passcode so that the agents may search the iPhone.” Google takes a more privacy-protective approach: it “resets the password and further provides the reset password to law enforcement,” the materials say, which has the side effect of notifying the user that his or her cell phone has been compromised.
Ginger Colbrun, ATF’s public affairs chief, told CNET that “ATF cannot discuss specifics of ongoing investigations or litigation. ATF follows federal law and DOJ/department-wide policy on access to all communication devices.”
In a separate case in Nevada last year, federal agents acknowledged to a judge that they were having trouble examining a seized iPhone and iPad because of password and encryption issues. And the Drug Enforcement Administration has been stymied by encryption used in Apple’s iMessage chat service, according to an internal document obtained by CNET last month.
Bypassing Apple’s securityThe ATF’s Maynard said in an affidavit for the Kentucky case that Apple “has the capabilities to bypass the security software” and “download the contents of the phone to an external memory device.” Chang, the Apple legal specialist, told him that “once the Apple analyst bypasses the passcode, the data will be downloaded onto a USB external drive” and delivered to the ATF.
It’s not clear whether that means Apple has created a backdoor for police — which has been thetopic of speculation in the past — whether the company has custom hardware that’s faster at decryption, or whether it simply is more skilled at using the same procedures available to the government. Apple declined to discuss its law enforcement policies when contacted this week by CNET.
Mobile device users should take this as a warning that Google and Apple can provide access to data stored on an encrypted device at least in some circumstances, saysChristopher Soghoian, principal technologist with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy and Technology Project.
“That is something that I don’t think most people realize,” Soghoian says. “Even if you turn on disk encryption with a password, these firms can and will provide the government with a way to get your data.”
An August 2012 article in MIT Technology Review by Simson Garfinkel, an associate professor at the U.S. military’s Naval Postgraduate School, says “Apple customers’ content” is so well-protected that often “it’s impossible for law enforcement to perform forensic examinations of devices seized from criminals.”
That depends largely, however, on the length of the passphrase or password that someone selects to protect a modern iOS device. (Because the original iPhone and iPhone 3G did not use hardware encryption, they were protected only by a passcode that could be easily bypassed.)
Elcomsoft claims its iOS Forensic Toolkit can perform a brute-force cryptographic attack on a four-digit iOS 4 or iOS 5 passcode in 20 to 40 minutes. “Complex passcodes can be recovered, but require more time,” the company’s marketing literature says. But the iPhone 5 doesn’t appear in Elcomsoft’s list of devices that can be targeted.
Garfinkel estimates that if a user chooses a six-digit passcode, the maximum time required to guess the number would be 22 hours, while a nine-digit PIN would require two and a half years. A 10-digit PIN would take 25 years. Average times, of course, cut those maximum brute-force durations in half, and that could be whittled down much further if it’s possible to guess PINs a suspect is more likely to use.
The Kentucky case began when the defendant, 24-year old Mark Edmond Brown, was spotted by Lexington cops smoking the tires of a black Ford F-450 at 3 a.m. behind Tolly-Ho, a 24-hour restaurant on South Broadway known for its quarter-pound burgers. Lexington police say they approached the pickup truck and noticed two pistols in his lap — a .40-caliber Taurus and a .357-caliber Glock — and recorded the serial numbers before returning them to him.
The next day, police chased a black Cadillac Deville and, when the driver stopped and fled, say they recovered the same Glock handgun they previously spotted in Brown’s possession.
Two Lexington police officers and an ATF agent visited Brown shortly afterward, who said, according to law enforcement, he had just returned from hauling horses and was waiting for “some females” to show up. He reportedly claimed he had been to a party at a hotel with a girl, got drunk, and lost the firearm, which he had regularly used at Bud’s Gun Shop’s shooting range. He also reportedly claimed to have sold the black Cadillac for $500.

ATF search warrant for the seized iPhone 4S, signed by a magistrate judge last year. Click for larger image.

A search of the abandoned Cadillac turned up two marijuana cigarettes in the ashtray, the ATF claims.
About a month later, also at around 3 a.m., Lexington police showed up at the Tolly-Ho restaurant again. This time they came at the request of the restaurant’s security guard, who blamed Brown and an acquaintance, Chasmagic Lawton, for making a disturbance before leaving in the black F-450 pickup.
A few minutes later, Lexington police spotted the F-450 at a Speedway gas station less than a mile away. Brown was arrested for disorderly conduct and intoxication, and Lawton was nowhere to be found. One police officer, Sgt. Todd Phillips, told the ATF that “this behavior was very out of the ordinary for Brown, who is regularly very compliant with law enforcement.”
ATF agent Maynard eventually arrested Brown in April on charges of receiving a firearm while under indictment for another crime. During that federal arrest, Maynard discovered that Brown possessed a receipt from a Chick-Fil-A and a white iPhone 4S that was locked.
Maynard’s initial search warrant asked for “all recoverable data” that would “show any relationship” between Brown and Lawton, on the suspicion that a contact called “Bra-Bra” was really Lawton. Brown’s lawyer argued that the ATF took too long to search the iPhone, and asked the court to throw any evidence obtained from it.
Judge Caldwell granted Brown’s request to suppress the results from a search of his earlier phone during the Speedway gas station arrest, in which police copied down the contact list from his phone without a warrant. But Caldwell would not throw out the results from the federal arrest and search conducted with a warrant: “The court finds nothing in the record to demonstrate any evidence of bad faith or unnecessary delay in procuring assistance from Apple to unlock the phone.”
Lawton pleaded guilty last year to being a felon in possession of a firearm. Brown signed a written agreement last month pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute less than five kilograms of crack cocaine. The agreement permits him to appeal his prison sentence if it’s more than 9 years. Sentencing has not yet taken place.
CNET:
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57583843-38/apple-deluged-by-police-demands-to-decrypt-iphones/

iamonebeing:

Apple deluged by police demands to decrypt iPhones by  

 May 10, 2013 4:00 AM PDT

ATF says no law enforcement agency could unlock a defendant’s iPhone, but Apple can “bypass the security software” if it chooses. Apple has created a police waiting list because of high demand.

Apple receives so many police demands to decrypt seized iPhones that it has created a “waiting list” to handle the deluge of requests, CNET has learned.

Court documents show that federal agents were so stymied by the encrypted iPhone 4S of a Kentucky man accused of distributing crack cocaine that they turned to Apple for decryption help last year.

An agent at the ATF, the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, “contacted Apple to obtain assistance in unlocking the device,” U.S. District Judge Karen Caldwell wrote in a recent opinion. But, she wrote, the ATF was “placed on a waiting list by the company.”

A search warrant affidavit prepared by ATF agent Rob Maynard says that, for nearly three months last summer, he “attempted to locate a local, state, or federal law enforcement agency with the forensic capabilities to unlock” an iPhone 4S. But after each police agency responded by saying they “did not have the forensic capability,” Maynard resorted to asking Cupertino.

Because the waiting list had grown so long, there would be at least a 7-week delay, Maynard says he was told by Joann Chang, a legal specialist in Apple’s litigation group. It’s unclear how long the process took, but it appears to have been at least four months.

Excerpt from ATF affidavit, which says Apple "has the capabilities to bypass the security software" for law enforcement.

Excerpt from ATF affidavit, which says Apple “has the capabilities to bypass the security software” for law enforcement. Click for larger image.

The documents shed new light on the increasingly popular law enforcement practice of performing a forensic analysis on encrypted mobile devices — a practice that can, when done without a warrant,raise Fourth Amendment concerns.

Last year, leaked training materials prepared by the Sacramento sheriff’s office included a form that would require Apple to “assist law enforcement agents” with “bypassing the cell phone user’s passcode so that the agents may search the iPhone.” Google takes a more privacy-protective approach: it “resets the password and further provides the reset password to law enforcement,” the materials say, which has the side effect of notifying the user that his or her cell phone has been compromised.

Ginger Colbrun, ATF’s public affairs chief, told CNET that “ATF cannot discuss specifics of ongoing investigations or litigation. ATF follows federal law and DOJ/department-wide policy on access to all communication devices.”

In a separate case in Nevada last year, federal agents acknowledged to a judge that they were having trouble examining a seized iPhone and iPad because of password and encryption issues. And the Drug Enforcement Administration has been stymied by encryption used in Apple’s iMessage chat service, according to an internal document obtained by CNET last month.

Bypassing Apple’s security
The ATF’s Maynard said in an affidavit for the Kentucky case that Apple “has the capabilities to bypass the security software” and “download the contents of the phone to an external memory device.” Chang, the Apple legal specialist, told him that “once the Apple analyst bypasses the passcode, the data will be downloaded onto a USB external drive” and delivered to the ATF.

It’s not clear whether that means Apple has created a backdoor for police — which has been thetopic of speculation in the past — whether the company has custom hardware that’s faster at decryption, or whether it simply is more skilled at using the same procedures available to the government. Apple declined to discuss its law enforcement policies when contacted this week by CNET.

Mobile device users should take this as a warning that Google and Apple can provide access to data stored on an encrypted device at least in some circumstances, saysChristopher Soghoian, principal technologist with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy and Technology Project.

“That is something that I don’t think most people realize,” Soghoian says. “Even if you turn on disk encryption with a password, these firms can and will provide the government with a way to get your data.”

An August 2012 article in MIT Technology Review by Simson Garfinkel, an associate professor at the U.S. military’s Naval Postgraduate School, says “Apple customers’ content” is so well-protected that often “it’s impossible for law enforcement to perform forensic examinations of devices seized from criminals.”

That depends largely, however, on the length of the passphrase or password that someone selects to protect a modern iOS device. (Because the original iPhone and iPhone 3G did not use hardware encryption, they were protected only by a passcode that could be easily bypassed.)

Elcomsoft claims its iOS Forensic Toolkit can perform a brute-force cryptographic attack on a four-digit iOS 4 or iOS 5 passcode in 20 to 40 minutes. “Complex passcodes can be recovered, but require more time,” the company’s marketing literature says. But the iPhone 5 doesn’t appear in Elcomsoft’s list of devices that can be targeted.

Garfinkel estimates that if a user chooses a six-digit passcode, the maximum time required to guess the number would be 22 hours, while a nine-digit PIN would require two and a half years. A 10-digit PIN would take 25 years. Average times, of course, cut those maximum brute-force durations in half, and that could be whittled down much further if it’s possible to guess PINs a suspect is more likely to use.

The Kentucky case began when the defendant, 24-year old Mark Edmond Brown, was spotted by Lexington cops smoking the tires of a black Ford F-450 at 3 a.m. behind Tolly-Ho, a 24-hour restaurant on South Broadway known for its quarter-pound burgers. Lexington police say they approached the pickup truck and noticed two pistols in his lap — a .40-caliber Taurus and a .357-caliber Glock — and recorded the serial numbers before returning them to him.

The next day, police chased a black Cadillac Deville and, when the driver stopped and fled, say they recovered the same Glock handgun they previously spotted in Brown’s possession.

Two Lexington police officers and an ATF agent visited Brown shortly afterward, who said, according to law enforcement, he had just returned from hauling horses and was waiting for “some females” to show up. He reportedly claimed he had been to a party at a hotel with a girl, got drunk, and lost the firearm, which he had regularly used at Bud’s Gun Shop’s shooting range. He also reportedly claimed to have sold the black Cadillac for $500.

ATF search warrant for the seized iPhone 4S, signed by a magistrate judge last year. Click for larger image.

ATF search warrant for the seized iPhone 4S, signed by a magistrate judge last year. Click for larger image.

A search of the abandoned Cadillac turned up two marijuana cigarettes in the ashtray, the ATF claims.

About a month later, also at around 3 a.m., Lexington police showed up at the Tolly-Ho restaurant again. This time they came at the request of the restaurant’s security guard, who blamed Brown and an acquaintance, Chasmagic Lawton, for making a disturbance before leaving in the black F-450 pickup.

A few minutes later, Lexington police spotted the F-450 at a Speedway gas station less than a mile away. Brown was arrested for disorderly conduct and intoxication, and Lawton was nowhere to be found. One police officer, Sgt. Todd Phillips, told the ATF that “this behavior was very out of the ordinary for Brown, who is regularly very compliant with law enforcement.”

ATF agent Maynard eventually arrested Brown in April on charges of receiving a firearm while under indictment for another crime. During that federal arrest, Maynard discovered that Brown possessed a receipt from a Chick-Fil-A and a white iPhone 4S that was locked.

Maynard’s initial search warrant asked for “all recoverable data” that would “show any relationship” between Brown and Lawton, on the suspicion that a contact called “Bra-Bra” was really Lawton. Brown’s lawyer argued that the ATF took too long to search the iPhone, and asked the court to throw any evidence obtained from it.

Judge Caldwell granted Brown’s request to suppress the results from a search of his earlier phone during the Speedway gas station arrest, in which police copied down the contact list from his phone without a warrant. But Caldwell would not throw out the results from the federal arrest and search conducted with a warrant: “The court finds nothing in the record to demonstrate any evidence of bad faith or unnecessary delay in procuring assistance from Apple to unlock the phone.”

Lawton pleaded guilty last year to being a felon in possession of a firearm. Brown signed a written agreement last month pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute less than five kilograms of crack cocaine. The agreement permits him to appeal his prison sentence if it’s more than 9 years. Sentencing has not yet taken place.

CNET:

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57583843-38/apple-deluged-by-police-demands-to-decrypt-iphones/

Tags: news
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California Attorney General Sues J.P. Morgan Over Alleged ‘Fraudulent and Unlawful Debt-Collection Practices’

iamonebeing:

Published May 09, 2013

| Dow Jones Newswires

The attorney general alleges in the complaint that J.P.Morgan Chase, the nation’s largest bank by assets, robo-signed legal documents deployed in credit card debt-collections. Such signing is a practice previously used by banks in dealing with the massive number of home foreclosures, which led to regulatory sanctions.

“At the heart of the defendants’ unlawful conduct is the rampant use of ‘robo-signing’ — a practice of signing declarations, affidavits, and other documents in mass quantities, typically hundreds at a time, without any knowledge of the facts alleged in the document and without regard to the truth or accuracy of those facts,” according to the complaint,

Attorney General Harris said she demands J.P.Morgan Chase cease the alleged practices, which include flooding California courts with collection lawsuits and claiming inaccurate amounts—and compensate allegedly harmed borrowers.

“From January 2008 through April 2011, Chase filed thousands of debt collection lawsuits every month in the State of California,” the Attorney General’s office said a news release. “On one day alone, Chase filed 469 such lawsuits in California.”

The bank “employed unlawful practices as shortcuts to obtain judgments against California consumers with speed and ease that could not have been possible if Chase had adhered to the minimum substantive and procedural protections required by law,” according to the news release.

A spokeswoman for J.P.Morgan Chase declined to comment on the lawsuit.

Write to Matthias Rieker at matthias.rieker@dowjones.com

Copyright © 2013 Dow Jones Newswires



Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/news/2013/05/09/california-attorney-general-sues-jp-morgan-over-alleged-fraudulent-and-unlawful/#ixzz2T9c1Sgqg

Tags: news banks
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tainopunk:

theuppitynegras:

queennubian:

SERIOUSLY!

FLORIDA IS THE WORSE FUCKING STATE!

i live here and the school system is #1 for treating kids like dirt

(Source: angryblackchickk, via patrickandmarcus)

Tags: news smh
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“Violence in all its forms against women is the big issue, if you will. Sexual harassment is a part of what keeps us from achieving true equality. It works on us economically and it works on us in terms of our advancement through the workplace, our sense of belonging in the workplace and the authority that we have in the workplace, regardless of how much we get paid.”

[The new documentary] “Anita” traces the bewildering onslaught that beset Hill the moment she naively stepped forward to address the all-male Senate committee.

Before a rapt television audience, she was made to recount humiliating encounters with her former boss and endure a nine-hour grilling by politicians who displayed little understanding of sexual harassment.

Clarence Thomas was confirmed by the committee and remains a Supreme Court justice.

After the hearing, the documentary reveals Hill was attacked privately for years afterwards — vindictive state politicians pressured Hill’s university to fire her, while other critics sent bomb threats to her office and threatening packages to her home.

Link

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Tags: news
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siddharthasmama:

My heart is so heavy right now.

Marvell went to my high school — he was a freshman when I was graduating, but he was a face amongst my social sphere despite how young he was. He also lived in my mothers’ neighborhood, where I lived until last year. This is such a senseless tragedy. The worst part is, and I hope this is revealed with their investigation, but word is that Marvell got out the water and was forced back in to complete the hazing. A surviving witness says they were to form a human link to cross the river, but the current was so strong (hello, it’s midnight in the water in the north).

The thing that gets me so badly is that I just lost my friend Bryan like this in September of 2011. He went out with two boys, drunk, against his will (he did not swim) in a stolen canoe at the West Norfolk bridge; someone stood, tipped the boat, and the two boys swam back to safety… leaving Bryan. His body was missing for 2 days and eventually was found, deceased.

These poor boys did not need to die like this, drowning for some selfish shit like hazing to get into an organization that isn’t even recognized by VSU! These men need to see punishment and justice needs to be served. Once he got out and they threw him back in, that is negligent homicide. That poor boy had to be so tired from fighting to save himself in those waters and they killed him.

Rest in Peace, Marvell and Jauwan.

(Source: thepoliticalfreakshow)

Tags: hazing news rip
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theuppitynegras:

kingerock288:

radicalrebellion:

It seems like a case of when keeping it wrong goes real.

What started as a celebration of the Hopkins High School’s cross country ski team qualifying for the state tournament culminated is outrage, signs in protest and the suspension and criminal charges of two African-American students who decried what they felt was racial mockery. And, according to supporters of the African-American students, no disciplinary action was taken against the white students who openly mocked African-Americans.

The incident began on Feb. 13; when eight to 10 white members of the school’s ski team came to school dressed in motley ensembles of do-rags, fur coats, white tank top undershirts, sagging pants and gold chains. One even had a fake marijuana joint tucked behind his ear. Somehow word spread that the students were celebrating a “Ghetto Spirit Day.” Those who came to school in costume dispute this assertion, and claimed to school administrators that they were dressing up to mimic popular white rapper, Macklemore, who sings “Thrift Shop.”

“That’s absurd,” said Nekima Levy-Pounds, a civil rights attorney and associate professor at the University of St. Thomas’ School of Law. “They called it ‘Ghetto Spirit Day’ and when I looked at the pictures and video of them it was evident their intent was to mock African-Americans. What they claim is laughable, just laughable.”

Levy-Pounds said the Macklemore claim is just a convenient out for the members of the ski team. In Macklemore’s hit song, “Thrift Shop” he tells a tale against designer consumerism. Macklemore is very out front about showing cultural tolerance, even choosing to perform in t-shirts that call for the legalization of gay marriage. A very detailed image search of Macklemore could not find the rapper dressed in any of the attire the Hopkins students donned, minus the fur coat, which he wears in his video for “Thrift Shop.”

What has Levy-Pounds and others so outraged is the notion that, to date, no disciplinary action has been taken against members of the ski team for violating the school’s policy of racial harassment and bullying, but two African-American students who posted signs in protest of the “spirit” activities were suspended due to their protest efforts, given criminal citations for a non-physical dispute with an assistant principal and, according to Levy-Pounds, one was even handcuffed. According to Levy-Pounds, the criminal charges stemmed from the students trying to retrieve their protest posters from the trash, where the assistant principal had placed the posters.

“The way (the African-American students) were treated it felt like they were being retaliated against for standing up. Rather than using the incident as a teachable moment, the school used it to criminalize these young African-American men,” said Levy-Pounds. “I applaud (the two students) for not responding with violence and addressing the situation in the manner they did.”

Levy-Pounds said the school’s response is indicative of a pervasive school culture that seeks to indoctrinate African-Americans into the criminal justice system.

“It’s a part of a pattern; part of a system that continues to devalue young Black men,” said Levy-Pounds.

Hopkins Superintendent John Schultz said due to federal student privacy rights he could not discuss and disciplinary actions taken by the school, but said the actions of the ski team were not reflective of the overall environment at Hopkins High.

“There was no spirit week going on and there was no Ghetto Spirit Day,” said Schultz. “This was all student driven by some members of the cross country ski team, who said they were dressing like a rapper.”

Schultz said the members of the ski team were pulled aside by faculty the day of the incident and informed that their attire may be offensive to people of different cultures. However, according to Levy-Pounds, nothing more was done and days later the team went on to compete in the state championships. Levy-Pounds said the ski team’s antics clearly violated the school’s written policy against racial harassment and should have warranted disciplinary action.

Levy-Pounds said she has called on the district to bring in a third party investigator to look into the incident and make disciplinary recommendations. Schultz said the district is bringing in a third party investigator, but that investigator has yet to be determined.

Civil rights attorney Levy-Pounds has also called for the district to expunge the suspensions from the affected African-American students’ records and to have all criminal charges dropped.

“These students should be given a written apology from the district,” said Levy-Pounds.

this is some bullshit. So white kids can violate school policy and nothing happens, but tow Black students put up signs and they fucking get arrested?? 

Bet you if it was the other way and they did some kind of white spirt or redneck day those black students would of been expelled as soon as they set foot on campus.

they just do us any ole’ type of way!

(via posttragicmulatto)

Tags: news racism
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