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Obama Admin Split Goes Public: FBI Director and President Disagree on Ferguson

President Obama and his FBI director are sparring over whether the so-called “Ferguson Effect” is real, complicating the president’s push to loosen the nation’s sentencing laws.

The dispute could threaten the growing bipartisan momentum behind a criminal justice reform effort that Obama sees as a top second-term priority.

The question of whether police are reluctant to enforce the law because they are afraid of being videotaped has become the subject of fierce debate, as experts struggle to explain an uptick in violent crime in some U.S. cities.

FBI Director James Comey, a Republican, amplified the argument twice over the past week, suggesting anti-police sentiment fueled by the killings of unarmed black men in places such as Ferguson, Mo., has resulted in a crime spike.

“Some part of the explanation is a chill wind blowing through American law enforcement over the last year. And that wind is surely changing behavior,” Comey said in an October 23 speech at the University of Chicago Law School. (Read more from “Obama Administration Split FBI Director and President Disagree on Ferguson” HERE)

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Ferguson and Forgiveness

images (74)The people of Ferguson, Missouri are sitting on a powder keg.

As the nation waits to learn whether or not a grand jury will indict Officer Darren Wilson for the death of Michael Brown, we also are holding our collective breath to see what the effect of the decision, regardless of what it is, will have on that community. If history is any indication, the city is likely to again explode in a hailstorm of hatred, violence and vengeance.

We can do better.

To be sure, the problem extends far beyond the boundaries of Ferguson. All of America has become a vengeful society in many respects. Politicians attack each other mercilessly, not just during bitterly-fought campaigns, but in the very halls of Congress. The corporate world, religious institutions, communities, personal relationships – all have become examples of our growing culture of vengeance.

The specter of vengeance in our cultural relationships is particularly disturbing because it is a part of our history and our national fabric that we should have gotten past by now, and yet the deep wounds of yesteryear – slavery, civil rights, inequality – remain unhealed and vivid in our minds.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the tragic situation that has evolved from the death of Michael Brown. My heart hurts when I think of the life that was snuffed out before it really began, and I also hurt for Officer Wilson, whose life has been forever changed regardless of the eventual legal outcome.

And of course I think of Michael’s parents, whose wounds are still fresh. Like any parents who have lost a child, they are desperate to ease the pain they feel, and I’m sure they have friends and family members who want that for them as well.

The people of Ferguson also have wounds, but I’m gravely concerned that the way many are choosing to address them is not only counterproductive, but actively feeding into our growing culture of vengeance. Each night, the evening news shows footage of agitated citizens who are preparing to take to the streets the moment the grand jury’s decision is revealed, no matter what that decision is. We also see law enforcement officers who are strapping on riot gear in order to respond.

Further riots and disturbances will do nothing to ease the pain of the Brown family, the city of Ferguson and the nation. The only thing that has any hope of doing that is forgiveness.

The people of Ferguson have a tremendous opportunity to follow the wisdom of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who many in that community claim to hold in the highest esteem and yet they refuse to follow either his teachings or his example. He wrote these words while imprisoned for committing civil disobedience during the Montgomery bus boycott and delivered them at a 1957 Christmas service at Montgomery’s Dexter Avenue Baptist Church:

“First, we must develop and maintain the capacity to forgive. He who is devoid of the power to forgive is devoid of the power to love. It is impossible even to begin the act of loving one’s enemies without the prior acceptance of the necessity, over and over again, of forgiving those who inflict evil and injury upon us. It is also necessary to realize that the forgiving act must always be initiated by the person who has been wronged, the victim of some great hurt, the recipient of some tortuous injustice, and the absorber of some terrible act of oppression.”

As always, Dr. King took his inspiration from the Word of God. No matter how many times he was jailed or beaten or had his family’s safety threatened, he refused to seek vengeance but instead forgave.

Ferguson can forgive too.

It seems clear that some so-called “advisors” have attached themselves to the Brown family and are attempting to exert influence over them. That alone is concerning, but it is especially distressing to see that some of those who are pushing the family toward vengeance and away from forgiveness are church leaders. It saddens me to see that at a time when our religious institutions are critically needed, many of our nation’s pulpits have become affected by this trend.

Dr. King used his pulpit not to advocate a culture of vengeance and hatred, but rather one of forgiveness and reconciliation. Let us join him in his jail cell and peek over his shoulder as he writes these words:

“The words ‘I will forgive you, but I’ll never forget what you’ve done’ never explain the real nature of forgiveness. Certainly one can never forget, if that means erasing it totally from his mind. But when we forgive, we forget in the sense that the evil deed is no longer a mental block impeding a new relationship. Likewise, we can never say, ‘I will forgive you, but I won’t have anything further to do with you.’ Forgiveness means reconciliation, a coming together again.”

The people of Ferguson have an opportunity to make history. They can break the cycle of vengeance in America and become a beacon of light, beginning a new demonstration of God’s love through acts of forgiveness. After all, our lives are not measured in the number of years we live; they are measured by the amount of grace and love that we give.

Forgiveness must extend to everyone, even those whose acts we find completely reprehensible. It must extend even to groups like ISIS, whose cruelty is beyond comprehension. Witnessing the evil they commit gives those of us within the Christian community an opportunity to demonstrate the real God by allowing their deeds to provoke not vengeance, but forgiveness.

As Christians, we are compelled to go beyond merely giving lip service to the concept of forgiveness and take bold action according to God’s narrative. That’s why I have committed to a bike trek of more than 2,600 miles – from Jacksonville Beach, Florida to San Diego, California – beginning on December 17. During my 90-day Race to Reconcile journey, I will visit churches, orphanages, veterans’ homes, schools – any place where I can share the message that our only true salvation will come through the essential acts of forgiveness and reconciliation. At various stops during the journey, beginning with the launch in Jacksonville, we will organize day-long Celebration of Forgiveness events, including a free breakfast, panel discussions, luncheons for supporters, and evening programs featuring music and other performances, testimonials, guest speakers and more.

As we wait for the grand jury’s decision, I see the anguish in the faces of Michael Brown’s parents and in the streets of Ferguson, and it is not the result of what transpired on August 9 or the manner in which the police responded to it. It is the result of our country’s culture of vengeance and our seeming incapacity to forgive. This is true among both blacks and whites, and it extends far beyond the boundaries of Ferguson, Missouri into every community in this nation.

That’s why I implore the people of Ferguson to lead the charge away from vengeance and toward forgiveness and reconciliation. I urge the Brown family to imagine what Dr, King would advise if he was in their living room; to stop listening to those who are using them to further their own agendas and instead allow their son’s tragic death to usher in a new wave of forgiveness, love and grace.

Jesus Christ said it on the cross: “Forgive them, for they know not what they do.”

It’s time for us to do the same.

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Watch: Police Release Video Showing Moments Before Ferguson Shooting on Michael Brown Anniversary

downloadBy Phil Helsel. Police on Tuesday released surveillance video that they say shows a teenager appear to pull a weapon from his waistband before he was later shot and critically wounded by plainclothes police in Ferguson, Missouri.

The shooting of Tyrone Harris, 18, Sunday, on the anniversary of the death of Michael Brown, threatened to reignite racial tensions in the city that exploded in unrest after last year’s deadly shooting by a white police officer.

Harris is in critical condition. He is charged with four counts of assault on law enforcement, five counts of armed criminal action and one count of shooting at a motor vehicle.

The surveillance video, given to police by a local business, shows a panicked crowd running for cover and then a young man in a white T-shirt appearing to be holding gun running off screen and pointing the weapon. Police identified that man as Harris. The video appears to dispute some recent reports and witnesses who said Harris was not armed.

St. Louis County authorities declared a state of emergency Monday after Sunday’s violence. St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said the police shooting took place after two separate groups in the vicinity had traded a “remarkable” amount of gunfire — between 40 and 50 shots. He said those involved were “criminals, not protesters” marking the anniversary of Brown’s death. (Read more from “Police Release Video Showing Moments Before Ferguson Shooting on Michael Brown Anniversary” HERE)

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Heavily Armed ‘Oath Keepers’ Group in Ferguson

By CNN Wires. A day of civil disobedience that saw several arrests in Ferguson ended Monday with some rowdy protesters throwing rocks and bottles at police.

The St. Louis County police said frozen water bottles were thrown at officers, prompting them to order the crowd to disperse or face arrest.

“Safety, our top priority, is now compromised. This is no longer a peaceful protest. Participants are now unlawfully assembled,” the department tweeted

Police Chief Jon Belmar tried to deescalate the tension by speaking with some demonstrators, who then moved from the street to the sidewalks.

However, others were seething with anger as word spread that police had arrested a 12-year-old girl. Police contended she was 18, according to her ID. (Read more from this story HERE)

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A Massive Revelation About 18-Year-Old Shot by Police in Ferguson Just Shocked Liberals to the Core

shutterstock_211114435-913x512One year after Mike Brown’s death, another 18-year-old black man was shot by police in Ferguson, Mo. Riots once again overtook streets in the St. Louis suburb as the anniversary of Brown’s death recently passed, culminating in a weekend shootout between Tyrone Harris Jr. and local police.

KTVI was near the scene when what St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar called a “remarkable amount” of bullets began flying toward an unmarked police vehicle.

“The plain clothed detectives returned fire from inside of their van,” he concluded . . .

Harris was shot and transported to an area hospital in critical condition. In the wake of the shooting, additional reports have surfaced regarding Harris’ criminal background and apparent propensity toward violence.

A Facebook post represented by KTVI as belonging to Harris featured numerous photos of the man holding handguns and identified him as Ty Glocks. Many of his posts were accompanied by the hashtag #pistolgang.

In a reference to the area in which he was ultimately shot, Harris’ most recent Facebook post declared he planned to “f—k around go on West Florissant tonight.” KTVI reported that, since its initial article, the account has been disabled. (Read more from “A Massive Revelation About 18-Year-Old Shot by Police in Ferguson Just Shocked Liberals to the Core” HERE)

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Watch: Ferguson Protesters Caught on Camera Chanting 4 Horrifying Words Just Before Shots Fired

RTR4FGPD-1024x682Protesters gathered in Ferguson on Sunday [and Monday] to mark the one year anniversary of the shooting death of Michael Brown. Among the crowd were those chanting some disturbing words.

CNN reports that hundreds gathered near the location where Michael Brown was killed in a confrontation with Officer Darren Wilson on August 9th, 2014.

In the crowd some chanted, “We’re ready for what? We’re ready for war.” The chants came minutes before a man identified to be in his late teens shot at Ferguson police officers shortly after 11pm.

The unnamed man unleashed a “remarkable amount of gunfire” against the officers, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said. Plain clothes officers pursued him, exchanging fire and hitting him multiple times. He has been hospitalized and is reportedly in critical condition.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch identified him as Tyrone Harris, 18, a close friend of Brown’s.

“There is a small group of people who are intent on making sure we don’t have peace. That’s unfortunate,” Belmar said. “We can’t afford to have this kind of violence.” (Read more from “Watch: Ferguson Protesters Caught on Camera Chanting 4 Horrifying Words Just Before Shots Fired” HERE)

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State of Emergency Declared in Ferguson After Police Shoot and Critically Injure Man During Protests [+video]

2048By Wesley Lowery, William Wan and Mark Berman. A man who was shot and critically injured by police here after authorities said he opened fire at officers was in critical condition Monday, his father said, as questions remained about what sparked the gunfire amid protests marking the first anniversary of the fatal shooting of Michael Brown.

The late-night shooting was a violent coda to a mostly peaceful day of protests and vigils commemorating a year since Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old, was shot and killed by a white Ferguson officer, an event that thrust this small suburb of St. Louis into the center of a national conversation on how police officers use lethal force toward minorities.

It heightened fears about what the latest bloodshed could do to a tense community that has repeatedly been unsettled by unrest over the last year. Activists had planned a day of civil disobedience on Monday, and dozens of people were arrested in St. Louis on Monday.

On Monday afternoon, the St. Louis County executive declared a state of emergency in response to what he called “the potential for harm to persons and property” in the area.

“The recent acts of violence will not be tolerated in a community that has worked so tirelessly over the last year to rebuild and become stronger,” Steve Stenger, the county executive, said in a statement. “The time and investment in Ferguson and Dellwood will not be destroyed by a few that wish to violate the rights of others.” (Read more from “State of Emergency Declared in Ferguson After Police Shoot and Critically Injure Man During Protests” HERE)

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Man Shot by Police in Ferguson During Protests

By Tom Cleary. An 18-year-old man was shot by police in Ferguson, Missouri, during protests on the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown’s death in the same St. Louis-area city.

The victim was shot by four plainclothes detectives, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said. He is in surgery at a local hospital. Police said the victim fired at the officers during the incident and they returned fire.

The victim’s father identified him as Tyrone Harris Jr., a recent Normandy High School graduate who was “real close” with Brown, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports.

Brown, 18, was fatally shot by Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson on August 9, 2014, who was never charged in the death . . .

Plainclothes detectives were in the area tracking a person they believed to be armed with a gun. The officers said the victim shot at police officers and returned fire from inside a van. The victim then ran and turned back, as the detectives exited their vehicle and shots were fired again. Four officers, who were wearing vests identifying them as police, fired at the victim again. (Read more from this story HERE)

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Darren Wilson Just Broke His Silence on Ferguson, Drops This Truth Bomb

darren-913x512Former Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson broke his silence as the one year anniversary of the shooting death of Michael Brown approaches.

Wilson, who now lives more-or-less in exile in a St. Louis suburb, sat down for a lengthy interview with New Yorker Magazine and discussed issues such as race relations and the fallout in his life from that fateful day, August 9, 2014 . . .

The former Ferguson officer told The New Yorker that he had not read the Justice Department’s report on racism in Ferguson. “I don’t have any desire,” he said. “I’m not going to keep living in the past about what Ferguson did. It’s out of my control” . . .

The New Yorker’s Jack Halpern reports:

Later that night (after the shooting)…they turned on the television and watched live coverage of unrest in Ferguson. Barb recalled, “We stayed up all night watching, like, ‘Oh, my God—what’s going on? What are they doing?’ Barb’s younger son, who was then six, asked why there were images on television of Ferguson burning. Wilson told me, “I said, ‘Well, I had to shoot somebody.’ And he goes, ‘Well, why did you shoot him? Was he a bad guy?’ I said, ‘Yeah, he was a bad guy…’”

Halpern asked Wilson if he “thought Brown was truly a ‘bad guy,’ or just a kid who had got himself into a bad situation. ‘I only knew him for those forty-five seconds in which he was trying to kill me, so I don’t know,’ Wilson said.” (Read more from “Darren Wilson Just Broke His Silence on Ferguson, Drops This Truth Bomb” HERE)

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The ‘Ferguson Effect’: How Obama’s Racial Pimping Has Endangered ALL Americans

The effort to paint the nation’s police officers as uniformed crime families — led by the Obama administration, former Attorney General Eric Holder and America’s racial grievance industry– has created a “Ferguson Effect” of growing crime — and not just in the city’s where rioting has taken hold.

A Wall Street Journal column on Friday slammed the growing trend by the Obama administration and race baiters like Al Sharpton and media outlets such as CNN for seizing moments like the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson and Freddie Grey in Baltimore to create what writer Heather McDonald called the “Ferguson Effect.”

The consequence of the false narrative they’ve created is the end of the nation’s two decade long drop in crime.

According to the Journal, gun violence has risen 60 percent compared to where it was last year in Baltimore; homicides are up 180 percent in Milwaukee; St. Louis has seen a 39 percent increase in shootings, 43 percent in robberies and a 25 percent growth in homicides . . .

Those numbers are shocking. By declaring police to be the problem in inner cities, authority figures like President Obama have made criminals feel empowered to commit more crimes knowing officers would look to avoid situations that could result in them going to jail just for doing their jobs. (Read more from “The ‘Ferguson Effect’: How Obama’s Racial Pimping Has Endangered ALL Americans” HERE)

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Louis Head, Stepfather of Michael Brown, Boldly Walks to the St. Louis County Circuit Court Wearing Profane Jacket

On the very day that the Brown family announced their intent to file charges in a civil lawsuit against the City of Ferguson, Missouri, Louis Head, the stepfather of Michael Brown, had another idea. Pictured below is Louis Head crossing the street on his way to the City of St. Louis Circuit Court Building wearing a jacket emblazoned with what appears to be a side-by-side image of Barrack Obama and Michael Brown, with a lower image of an individual throwing a flaming Molotov cocktail.

image (17)

Louis Head, the boyfriend of Michael Brown’s mother Lesile McSpadden, has been subject to media scrutiny after a video emerged depicting him of saying multiple times to, “Burn this bit** [Town of Ferguson] down” following the grand jury decision to not formally indict Officer Darren Wilson of any crime in the shooting death of Michael Brown. The night following the grand jury’s “no true bill”, looting and burning of local businesses occurred similar to the days immediately following Brown’s death. These destructive acts happened amid the presence of Al Sharpton whom spoke at times of a peaceful protest. At other times, he suggested that the looters were actually liberators.

In the days following the second spat of burnings and lootings, the State of Missouri’s Lieutenant Governor, Pete Kinder suggested that Louis Head should be indicted for inciting a riot. Prior to those comments, Missouri Governor, Democrat Jay Nixon released a statement suggesting that that the video footage of the alleged strong-arm robbery of the convenient store, where Brown stole a box of cigars, was put forward to discredit the character of Michael Brown.

Although Nixon’s opinion on that issue never wavered in light of the contrary evidence, he did order in the days leading up to the grand jury announcement that the National Guard be called into service. After the first night of looting and rioting following the grand jury decision, ostensibly egged on by Louis Head, Nixon called in the Missouri National Guard to aid in restoring order to the local community.

Now, the mother of Michael Brown has filed suit, claiming damages of $75,000 plus legal fees in the highly controversial death of her son. Obviously, she is forgetting the physical damage to the community that her boyfriend caused by his actions. What needs to be made clear is on Monday November 24, 2015, the police officer in question was acquitted of any wrong doing in the shooting death of Brown by a grand jury. The jury deliberated and issued a “no true bill” to that affect. Additionally, the U.S. department of Justice, led by U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, ran a concurrent investigation to determine if the civil rights of Michael Brown were violated, and similarly found no grounds to pursue federal charges. According to MSNBC contributors Trymaine Lee and Adam Howard, “In an 80-plus page report, the DOJ said that there was no evidence that Wilson had the intent to kill Brown, nor was their any proof that the former officer didn’t fear for his safety.”

Ultimately, serious moral and ethical problems plague Louis Headley, and those who continue to support him after each of his outlandish acts. At present, the mainstream leftist news organizations appear to be giving tacit approval, if not moral support to his radical cause. Meanwhile, the average person working in Ferguson suffers. Media outlets like MSNBC, Huffington Post, and ThinkProgress.org apparently have no issue with Head’s incendiary comments. It will be rather telling if they have enough journalistic integrity to report on Head’s outrageous outerwear, praising violence, Michael Brown and Barack Obama. Perhaps they should also remind Americans that the President – in the wake of the grand jury decision – went to the United Nations and suggested that the United States has its own genocide problem akin to ISIS. Maybe it is time for Obama to put the shoe on the other foot, and publicly condemn the actions of Louis Head. While he’s at it, he shouldn’t forget to condemn the actions of ISIS, as well.

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Ominous: Troops Referred to Ferguson Protesters as ‘Enemy Forces,’ Emails Show

guard-ferguson-600x400 (1)As the Missouri national guard prepared to deploy to the streets of Ferguson last year during protests sparked by the shooting death of Michael Brown, the troops used highly militarized language such as “enemy forces” and “adversaries” to refer to citizen demonstrators.

Documents detailing the military mission divided the crowds that national guards would be likely to encounter into “friendly forces” and “enemy forces” – the latter apparently including “general protesters”.

A briefing for commanders included details of the troops’ intelligence capabilities so that they could “deny adversaries the ability to identify Missouri national guard vulnerabilities”, which the “adversaries” might exploit, “causing embarrassment or harm” to the military force, according to documents obtained in a Freedom of Information Act request by CNN.

And in an ominous-sounding operations security briefing, the national guard warned: “Adversaries are most likely to possess human intelligence (HUMINT), open source intelligence (OSINT), signals intelligence (SIGINT), technical intelligence (TECHINT), and counterintelligence capabilities.”

In less military-style language, the briefing then goes on to detail how protesters might obtain this intelligence – a list of sources no more technical than public records, social media and listening to conversations “being carried out in public” by civic officials or law enforcement, according to the report. (Read more from “Troops Referred to Ferguson Protesters as ‘Enemy Forces,’ Emails Show” HERE)

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