Archive for the ‘Al Sharpton’ Category

Crystal Wright: Al Sharpton should not allowed anywhere near Obama’s task force on race – Video


Crystal Wright: Al Sharpton should not allowed anywhere near Obama #39;s task force on race
"THIS VIDEO IS FAIR USE UNDER U.S. COPYRIGHT LAW BECAUSE IT IS (1) NON-COMMERCIAL, (2) TRANSFORMATIVE IN NATURE, (3) USES NO MORE OF THE ORIGINAL WORK THAN ...

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Crystal Wright: Al Sharpton should not allowed anywhere near Obama's task force on race - Video

MVI 4291Al Sharpton Threatens St. Louis Missouri Prosector! – Video


MVI 4291Al Sharpton Threatens St. Louis Missouri Prosector!
Attached is a link where Al Sharpton clearly threatens St. Louis State Prosecutor, Robert McCulloch. http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/sharpton-ferguson-stlouis-fight/2014/11/30/id/610166.

By: Gabor Zolna

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MVI 4291Al Sharpton Threatens St. Louis Missouri Prosector! - Video

Al Sharpton Defends Dual Roles as TV Host, Activist: I Talk to the People – Video


Al Sharpton Defends Dual Roles as TV Host, Activist: I Talk to the People
After a lengthy discussion with the mother and widow of Eric Garner, Al Sharpton took a minute to defend his role as both a host on a national cable news network and an activist, taking shots...

By: NewsOnline

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Al Sharpton Defends Dual Roles as TV Host, Activist: I Talk to the People - Video

Al Sharpton, activists vow new civil rights era after Eric Garner case

Activists outraged over a grand jurys decision to not indict a white policeman in the death of Eric Garner, an unarmed black man, vowed Thursday to launch a national campaign modeled on the 1960s civil rights movement to press the federal government to intervene in cases of alleged police abuse.

Marches and boycotts led to the '64 Civil Rights Act, Al Sharpton, head of the National Action Network, said after a meeting with other leading activists in his Harlem headquarters. They included Urban League President Marc Morial and Cornell Brooks, the president of the NAACP.

Sharpton said demonstrators needed to centralize their battle and focus on the federal government, and repeated plans for a mass march in Washington on Dec. 13 to launch the movement.

For weeks, scattered protests have been held nightly in cities across the country to protest a string of deaths of unarmed black men at the hands of law enforcement. The demonstrations went into especially high gear after a grand jury in Missouri last month declined to indict white police Officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old.

More protests erupted from coast to coast on Wednesday after the 23-member New York grand jury failed to indict New York police Officer Daniel Pantaleo in the death of Garner. Garner, 43, died on July 17 after Pantaleo wrapped an arm around his neck during an altercation on a Staten Island sidewalk.

The encounter was caught on video. The city's medical examiner ruled Garner's death a homicide due to compression of his neck and chest.

While the protests have been boisterous and have led to traffic tie-ups and some arrests, the activists who met in New York on Thursday said they were not enough to bring about the institutional change that is needed.

We need to centralize, Sharpton said, and make clear that we want the Justice Department to deal with the fact that the grand jury systems on a state level are broken.

Morial and Sharpton echoed the disbelief expressed by Garners mother, Gwen Carr, who has repeatedly questioned how jurors who watched the video of Pantaleo pressing Garner's head into the sidewalk as Garner gasped, "I can't breathe" could not find cause to indict him.

Morial called it a travesty of justice.

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Al Sharpton, activists vow new civil rights era after Eric Garner case

Sharpton Leads Civil-Rights Meeting on Chokehold Decision

Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) -- On Morning Must Read, Bloombergs Brendan Greeley recaps the op-ed pieces and analyst notes that provide insight into today's headlines. Turnaround Author Peter Henry also speaks on Bloomberg Surveillance. (Source: Bloomberg)

Civil-rights leaders called for a national march and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio spoke about how police can avoid confrontations a day after the U.S. Justice Department began investigating the death of a black Staten Island man choked by a white police officer.

A state grand jury yesterday declined to charge Officer Daniel Pantaleo in the death of Eric Garner, 43, whose fatal altercation with police was recorded on video by a bystander. The announcement sparked protests across New York City, a reprise of rallies that swept the U.S. after a Missouri grand jury last week declined to indict an officer in the shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson.

The Reverend Al Sharpton, the television host and activist, brought together 25 civil-rights leaders today at his National Action Network in Harlem. Seeking redress on what Sharpton called a dysfunctional state grand jury system will be the focus of a rally in Washington planned for Dec. 13, he said.

We want a centralized march around a broken system that these grand jury decisions have underscored, when even with a videotape you cannot decide whether there is probable cause to go to trial, Sharpton said. A man laying down already surrounded by police choking him, and the man saying, I cant breathe. You cant tell me thats not probable cause to send the case to trial.

People march in protest on the West Side Highway after it was announced that the New York City police officer involved in the death of Eric Garner was not indicted, on Dec. 3, 2014, in New York. Close

People march in protest on the West Side Highway after it was announced that the New... Read More

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People march in protest on the West Side Highway after it was announced that the New York City police officer involved in the death of Eric Garner was not indicted, on Dec. 3, 2014, in New York.

The fact that a grand jury couldnt find even a criminal charge of negligence showed that it was biased in favor of the police, Sharpton said. He was joined by speakers including Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League; Melanie Campbell, chief executive of the Black Womens Roundtable; and Hazel Dukes, New York state president of the NAACP.

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Sharpton Leads Civil-Rights Meeting on Chokehold Decision