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Officer who shot Rayshard Brooks charged with felony murder

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This combination of photos provided by the Atlanta Police Department shows Officer Garrett Rolfe, left and Officer Devin Brosnan. Rolfe, who fatally shot Rayshard Brooks in the back after the fleeing man pointed a stun gun in his direction, was charged with felony murder and 10 other charges. Brosnan, who prosecutors say stood on Brooks' shoulder as he struggled for life after a confrontation was charged with aggravated assault. (Atlanta Police Department via AP)

By KATE BRUMBACK (AP)

Prosecutors brought murder charges Wednesday against the white Atlanta police officer who shot Rayshard Brooks in the back, saying that the black man posed no deadly threat and that the officer kicked him and offered no medical treatment for over 2 minutes as he lay dying on the ground.

Brooks was holding a stun gun he had snatched from officers but was running away and was 18 feet, 3 inches from Officer Garrett Rolfe when Rolfe opened fire, District Attorney Paul Howard said in announcing the charges five days after the killing outside a Wendy’s restaurant rocked the city

I got him!” the district attorney quoted Rolfe as saying.

The felony murder charge against Rolfe carries life in prison or the death penalty, if prosecutors choose to seek it. He was also charged with 10 other offenses punishable by decades behind bars.

“We’ve concluded at the time that Mr. Brooks was shot that he did not pose an immediate threat of death,” Howard said.

A second officer with Rolfe, Devin Brosnan, stood on a wounded Brooks’ shoulder as he struggled for his life, Howard said. Brosnan was charged with aggravated assault and other offenses but is cooperating with prosecutors and will testify, according to the district attorney, who said it was the first time in 40 such cases in which an officer has come forward to do this.

Rolfe was fired after shooting, while Brosnan was placed on leave.

An attorney for Tomika Miller, Brooks’ widow, welcomed the prosecutor’s decision and said Miller wasn’t aware of many of the details released Wednesday, such as Brooks being kicked.

“It’s heartbreaking, but it’s an attempt to redefine justice,” L. Chris Stewart said.

The news came as Republicans on Capitol Hill unveiled a package of police reform measures and the movement to get rid of Confederate monuments and other racially offensive symbols reached America’s breakfast table, with the maker of Aunt Jemima syrup and pancake mix dropping the 131-year-old brand.

The shooting sparked new demonstrations in Georgia’s capital against police brutality, after occasionally turbulent protests in response to George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis had largely simmered down. Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields resigned less than 24 hours after Brooks died, and the Wendy’s restaurant was burned.

About 50 demonstrators were gathered in the parking lot of the restaurant — now a burned shell with “RIP” and “Rayshard” spray-painted on it — as the charges were announced. The news prompted a few raised fists.

Police were called to the restaurant over complaints of a car blocking the drive-thru lane. An officer found Brooks asleep behind the wheel of the car, and a breath test showed he was intoxicated.

Police body camera video showed Brooks and officers having a relatively calm and respectful conversation for more than 40 minutes before things rapidly turned violent when officers tried to handcuff him. Brooks wrestled with officers, snatched one of their stun guns and pointed it at one of them as he ran through the parking lot.

An autopsy found that Brooks was shot twice in the back. One shot pierced his heart, the districtd attorney said.

Ahead of the district attorney’s scheduled announcement, Rolfe’s lawyers issued a statement saying the officer feared for his safety and that of others around him and was justified in shooting Brooks. Rolfe opened fire after hearing a sound “like a gunshot and saw a flash in front of him.”

“Mr. Brooks violently attacked two officers and disarmed one of them. When Mr. Brooks turned and pointed an object at Officer Rolfe, any officer would have reasonably believed that he intended to disarm, disable, or seriously injure him,” the lawyers said.

But the district attorney said the Taser that Brooks held had already been fired twice, and that it was empty and no longer a threat.

The district attorney said both Rolfe and Brosnan were given until 6 p.m. Thursday to surrender. He said would request $50,000 bond for Brosnan on account of his cooperation and would ask that Rolfe be held without bail.

Wednesday’s decision in Atlanta comes as the country is experiencing a dramatic shift in its opinions on policing and race. A new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that more Americans today than five years ago believe police brutality is a very serious problem that too often goes undisciplined and unequally targets black Americans.

Elsewhere around the country, Senate Republicans in Washington announced the most ambitious GOP police-reform package in years, including an enhanced use-of-force database, restrictions on chokeholds and new commissions to study law enforcement and race.

The 106-page bill is not as sweeping as a Democratic proposal set for a House vote next week, but it shows how swiftly the national debate has been transformed since Floyd’s death.

The Senate’s lone black Republican, Tim Scott of South Carolina, led a task force of GOP senators in compiling the package and spoke of his own experiences being stopped by police.

“We hear you,” he said to the families of Americans killed by police. “We’re listening to your concerns.”

Meanwhile, Quaker Oats said it is getting rid of its Aunt Jemima brand because the character was “based on a racial stereotype.” While Aunt Jemima’s image on packages was changed in recent years to make her look like a modern housewife, she was for most of her existence a stout, kerchief-wearing figure who evoked the plantation-era “Mammy” stereotype.

The owner of the Uncle Ben’s brand of rice likewise said it will “evolve” in response to concerns about racial stereotyping.

The University of Nevada, Las Vegas removed a statue of its “Hey Reb!” mascot outside its alumni center, and Houston officials took down a figure of a Confederate soldier in a downtown park.

Vandals spray-painted “White Lives Matter” on a statue of African American tennis legend Arthur Ashe in Richmond, Virginia.

New York’s governor signed an executive order recognizing Juneteenth as a paid holiday for state employees to commemorate the emancipation of slaves in the U.S. It has been a state holiday in Texas since 1980, and Virginia’s governor has also proposed making it a state holiday.

In the Minneapolis case, Derek Chauvin, the officer who put his knee on Floyd’s neck for several minutes as he pleaded he couldn’t breathe, has been charged with murder. Three other officers have been charged with aiding and abetting. All four were fired and could get up to 40 years in prison.

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Social Media Finds Statues of Historical Anti-slavery Figures Destroyed by ‘Woke’ Revolutionaries

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The statues on the Confederate monument are covered in graffiti and beheaded after a protest in Portsmouth, Va., Wednesday, June 10, 2020. Protesters beheaded and then pulled down four statues that were part of a Confederate monument. The crowd was frustrated by the Portsmouth City Council’s decision to put off moving the monument. (Kristen Zeis/The Virginian-Pilot via AP)

By Jared Evan

Police in various American cities especially on the East and West coasts have stood down while fanatical mobs of leftists unilaterally determine which public monuments and statues should be toppled, destroyed, and in some cases beheaded — as in the recent “beheading” of a Christopher Columbus statue at a public park in Boston.

The destruction has not been contained to historical figures associated with slavery and racism. Almost any American historical figure memorialized via a statue or monument has become a target, as the movement has clearly revealed itself and it’s true goals, which have little to do with racism and reigning in bad police.

Reporters and commentators on social media have been tracking this trail of destruction. We have seen this before throughout history, toppling of historical and political statues, destruction and attacking of art, the underpinnings of an attempted ‘cultural revolution’ is underway by the far left.

American history is under attack.

Their target is not the Confederacy. It is the United States, as the Federalist recently reported.  Here is just some proof 

Rayshard Brooks Criminal Background Revealed , Cop Who Killed Him had Multiple Prior Complaints

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This screen grab taken from body camera video provided by the Atlanta Police Department shows Rayshard Brooks speaking with Officer Garrett Rolfe as Rolfe writes notes during a field sobriety test in the parking lot of a Wendy's restaurant, late Friday, June 12, 2020, in Atlanta. Rolfe has been fired following the fatal shooting of Brooks and a second officer has been placed on administrative duty. (Atlanta Police Department via AP)

edited by Jared Evan

In the latest developments regarding the shooting of Rayshard Brooks by an Atlanta cop in a Wendy’s parking lot, it was discovered that Brooks had a serious criminal background including child endangerment, and the officer who killed him, Garrett Wolfe had a long disciplinary history including excessive use of force.

Epoch Times reported :

According to court records, there was a fugitive warrant out for his(Brooks) arrest on Dec. 30, 2019, for violation of probation to notify the community of his new address, and failure to complete theft prevention class for the original offenses of false imprisonment, cruelty to children, family violence, battery, and simple battery.

 

He was later arrested in Ohio on behalf of the state of Georgia on Jan. 6, 2020, according to documents obtained by The Gateway Pundit.

In a video posted on his YouTube channel on May 24, Brooks said he was waiting for probation to give him an interstate compact for his probation. A compact is the only legal mechanism in the country for the interstate transfer of the parole or probation of an adult criminal.

“It’s been two or three weeks now I’ve spoken with probation and I haven’t heard anything back,” he also shared in the video, which is a recording of an online call with another individual. “I’ve been doing my part, but the moment I do something out of hand, back to jail I go”- from Brook’s YouTube video posting.

These revelations have received little attention from the media. It was also reported that former officer Garrett Rolfe, had been investigated for his conduct 12 prior times by Atlanta Police Dept.

11-ALIVE reported

Friday’s shooting is the twelfth time Atlanta Police Department’s Office of Professional Standards has investigated Rolfe, in his almost seven years with the department, according to a summary released by the department. Four of the complaints were filed by citizens between 2015 and 2018. One of those complaints was “not sustained” and he was completely exonerated in the other three.

READ: The full summary of Rolfe’s disciplinary records below

In October 2017, APD issued a written reprimand to Rolfe after internal affairs ‘sustained’ an allegation of improper use of force involving a firearm.  We don’t know any of the details of these internal investigations yet, because APD has only released a summary of the disciplinary records. 

NY UPDATE: Cuomo Ending Daily Briefings on Friday , COVID Numbers Plummet, US Open to Be Held With No Fans

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Edited by TJV news

Gov. Andrew Cuomo will hold his final daily coronavirus briefing this Friday – ending a 97-day streak of press conferences.

“Well do briefings as necessary,” Cuomo told reporters at a Wednesday press conference in Albany. “And I’m sure they will often be necessary, but we’re going to turn the page on the immediacy of this crisis.”

17 – The number of deaths from the coronavirus in New York on June 16. The date with the highest single-day total was April 8, with 799 deaths.

1,479– The number of people currently hospitalized with the coronavirus in New York, as of June 16. The date with the highest single-day total was April 12, with 18,825 people hospitalized.

431– The number of patients in intensive care units in New York, as of June 16.

Out of the 60,568 tests conducted in New York State yesterday, only 631, or 1.05 percent, were positive

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced the U.S. Open will be held in Queens without fans from August 31st to September 13th. The USTA will take extraordinary precautions to protect players and staff, including robust testing, additional cleaning, extra locker room space and dedicated housing and transportation.

Governor Cuomo also announced that hospitals and group homes will be allowed to accept visitors at their discretion. Any facility that chooses to allow visitors must follow state guidelines, including time-limited visits and requiring visitors to wear PPE and be subject to symptom and temperature checks. The hospital visitation program expands on a pilot program that was launched in May, which demonstrated that hospitals could provide safe visitation for patients and families. Hospitals statewide will now be able to provide visitation. Group homes certified by the NYS Office for People with Developmental Disabilities will be allowed to accept visitors beginning Friday provided they adhere to state guidance and certify compliance to OPWDD prior to commencing visitation. The prohibition on nursing home visitors remains in place as the state Department of Health continues to review.

The Governor announced global public health experts have cleared the Capital Region to enter Phase Three tomorrow, June 17th. Business guidance for phase three of the state’s reopening plan is available here.

“I am so proud what the people of this state have done to defeat this virus. The numbers are looking very good, and today we are excited to announce that the U.S. Open will be held in Queens without fans this August,” Governor Cuomo said. “We must remain vigilant and the USTA is taking all necessary precautions with players and staff, but this is an exciting day for the state.”

REPORT: DOJ to Propose Rolling Back Big Tech’s Legal Immunity

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ALLUM BOKHARI (Breitbart) 

The Department of Justice is preparing proposals to roll back the legal immunities enjoyed by Big Tech companies under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA), in measures that will be announced as early as Wednesday, sources told the Wall Street Journal.

Section 230 gives Big Tech companies immunity from lawsuits arising from user-generated content. If a person is defamed on Google, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or other big tech platforms like Reddit, those platforms are not legally liable for the content like a traditional publisher might be. This allows social media platforms to host billions of posts from users without a potentially crippling legal risk.

As Big Tech platforms have grown increasingly interested in censoring content posted by their users, however, many lawmakers have argued that they are behaving like traditional publishers, censoring and editing and approving their users’ posts. As such, a growing number of lawmakers have argued that the legal immunities of Section 230 should be contingent on platforms maintaining a hands-off approach to the speech of their users.

Another problematic element of Section 230 is subsection c-2, which grants tech companies immunity from lawsuits arising from their censorship of “objectionable” content. This immunity gives them broad leeway to censor users, leaving no legal recourse for those who are censored — even if their social media accounts are critical to their livelihood or career.

However, according to the Wall Street Journal, the Justice Department’s proposals go beyond merely addressing the question of censorship:

The department’s proposal, for instance, would remove legal protections when platforms facilitate or solicit third-party content or activity that violates federal criminal law, such as online scams and trafficking in illicit drugs.  The department also wouldn’t confer immunity to platforms in instances involving online child exploitation and sexual abuse, terrorism or cyberstalking.  Those carve-outs are needed to curtail immunity for internet companies to allow victims to seek redress, the official said.

The Justice Department also will seek to make clear that tech platforms don’t have immunity in civil-enforcement actions brought by the federal government, and can’t use immunity as a defense against antitrust claims that they removed content for anticompetitive reasons.

According to the report, it also appears that the Justice Department won’t try to strip tech companies of their immunity for censoring “objectionable” content, instead aim to spur Big Tech to be “fairer and more consistent in their decisions to take down content they find objectionable.”

Are you an insider at Google, Reddit, Facebook, Twitter, or any other tech company who wants to confidentially reveal wrongdoing or political bias at your company? Reach out to Allum Bokhari at his secure email address [email protected]

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News.

Sen. Cotton: ‘Twitter Thought Police’ Tried to Censor Account

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AP

By Sandy Fitzgerald(NEWSMAX)

Sen. Tom Cotton Wednesday accused the “Twitter thought police” of trying to censor his account after he’d posted a tweet saying that military troops could be used to support local police against people who were rioting and looting after the death of George Floyd.

“I came on this program a couple Mondays ago and we talked about the rioting and looting and the need, if necessary, to use the military to back up their police where they are outnumbered by these rioters and looters and anarchists,” the Arkansas Republican said on Fox News’ “Fox and Friends,” after writing an opinion piece for the network about his experience with the social media giant. “Apparently that didn’t sit well with the Twitter thought police.”

In his article, Cotton said that “first on television, then on Twitter, I noted that the National Guard and active-duty troops could be called out to support local police if necessary, as happened during the 1992 Los Angeles riots.”

Sen. Tom Cotton Wednesday accused the “Twitter thought police” of trying to censor his account after he’d posted a tweet saying that military troops could be used to support local police against people who were rioting and looting after the death of George Floyd.

“I came on this program a couple Mondays ago and we talked about the rioting and looting and the need, if necessary, to use the military to back up their police where they are outnumbered by these rioters and looters and anarchists,” the Arkansas Republican said on Fox News’ “Fox and Friends,” after writing an opinion piece for the network about his experience with the social media giant. “Apparently that didn’t sit well with the Twitter thought police.”

In his article, Cotton said that “first on television, then on Twitter, I noted that the National Guard and active-duty troops could be called out to support local police if necessary, as happened during the 1992 Los Angeles riots.”

The senator added his office “called their bluff for 30 minutes,” but Twitter didn’t lock down his account. After two hours, “they got back to us and said okay, you can keep your post up.”

Cotton’s experience came after his opinion piece for The New York Times on the use of the military against protesters was met with protests, including among the newspaper’s workers, leading to the resignation of the company’s editorial page editor.

Trump Signs Historic Order on Police Reform; Grieves Over “Lives Lost”

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Law enforcement officials applaud after President Donald Trump signed an executive order on police reform, in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

By: Jill Colvin, Lisa Mascaro & Zeke Miller

Following weeks of national protests since the death of George Floyd, President Donald Trump signed an executive order Tuesday that he said would encourage better police practices. But he made no mention of the roiling national debate over racism spawned by police killings of black men and women.

Trump met privately with the families of several black Americans killed in interactions with police before his Rose Garden signing ceremony, and said he grieved for the lives lost and families devastated. But then he quickly shifted his tone and devoted most of his public remarks to a need to respect and support “the brave men and women in blue who police our streets and keep us safe.”

President Donald Trump speaks during an event on police reform, in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

He characterized the officers who have used excessive force as a “tiny” number of outliers among “trustworthy” police ranks.

“Reducing crime and raising standards are not opposite goals,” he said before signing the order, flanked by police officials.

Trump and Republicans in Congress have been rushing to respond to the mass demonstrations against police brutality and racial prejudice that have raged for weeks across the country in response to the deaths of Floyd and other black Americans. It’s a sudden shift that underscores how quickly the protests have changed the political conversation and pressured Washington to act.

But Trump, who has faced criticism for failing to acknowledge systemic racial bias and has advocated for rougher police treatment of suspects in the past, has continued to hold his ’law and order.” line. At the signing event, he railed against those who committed violence during the largely peaceful protests while hailing the vast majority of officers as selfless public servants.

Trump’s executive order would establish a database that tracks police officers with excessive use-of-force complaints in their records. Many officers who wind up involved in fatal incidents have long complaint histories, including Derek Chauvin, the white Minneapolis police officer who has been charged with murder in the death of Floyd. Those records are often not made public, making it difficult to know if an officer has such a history.

The order would also give police departments a financial incentive to adopt best practices and encourage co-responder programs, in which social workers join police when they respond to nonviolent calls involving mental health, addiction and homeless issues.

Trump said that, as part of the order, the use of chokeholds, which have become a symbol of police brutality, would be banned “except if an officer’s life is at risk.” Actually, the order instructs the Justice Department to push local police departments to be certified by a “reputable independent credentialing body” with use-of-force policies that prohibit the use of chokeholds, except when the use of deadly force is allowed by law. Chokeholds are already largely banned in police departments nationwide.

While Trump hailed his efforts as “historic,” Democrats and other critics said he didn’t go nearly far enough.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of N.Y., speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said, “One modest inadequate executive order will not make up for his decades of inflammatory rhetoric and his recent policies designed to roll back the progress that we’ve made in previous years.”

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the order “falls sadly and seriously short of what is required to combat the epidemic of racial injustice and police brutality that is murdering hundreds of Black Americans.”

Kristina Roth at Amnesty International USA said the order “amounts to a Band-Aid for a bullet wound.”

But Trump said others want to go to far. He, framed his plan as an alternative to the “defund the police” movement to fully revamp departments that has emerged from the protests and which he slammed as “radical and dangerous.”

“Americans know the truth: Without police there is chaos. Without law there is anarchy and without safety there is catastrophe,” he said.

Trump’s audience included police officials and members of Congress, and came after he met privately at the White House with the families of men and women who have been killed in interactions with police.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters that many tears were shed at the meeting and “the president was devastated.” Trump listed the families’ relatives who died and said: “To all the hurting families, I want you to know that all Americans mourn by your side. Your loved ones will not have died in vain.”

White House adviser Ja’Ron Smith said it was “a mutual decision” for the families not to attend the public signing. “It really wasn’t about doing a photo opportunity,” he said. “We wanted the opportunity to really hear from the families and protect them. I mean I think it’s really unfortunate that some civil rights groups have even attacked them for coming.”

The White House action came as Democrats and Republicans in Congress have been rolling out their own packages of policing changes. Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, the sole African American Republican in the Senate, has been crafting the GOP legislative package, which will include new restrictions on police chokeholds and greater use of police body cameras, among other provisions.

While the emerging GOP package isn’t as extensive as sweeping Democratic proposals, which are headed for a House vote next week, it includes perhaps the most far-reaching proposed changes ever from a party that often echoes Trump’s “law and order” rhetoric.

It remains unclear whether the parties will be able to find common ground. Though their proposals share many similar provisions — both would create a national database so officers cannot transfer from one department to another without public oversight of their records, for instance — differences remain.

The Republican bill does not go as far as the Democrats’ on the issue of eliminating qualified immunity, which would allow those injured by law enforcement personnel to sue for damages. The White House has said that is a step too far. As an alternative, Scott has suggested a “decertification” process for officers involved in misconduct.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., right, accompanied by Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., left, speaks at a news conference on District of Columbia statehood on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Md. will hold a vote on D.C. statehood on July 26. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

During the Obama administration, Attorney General Eric Holder opened a series of civil rights investigations into local law enforcement practices that often ended with court-approved consent decrees that mandated reforms. Those included Ferguson, Missouri, after the killing of Michael Brown and Baltimore following the police custody death of Freddie Gray.

Hours before he resigned as Trump’s first attorney general in November 2018, Jeff Sessions signed a memo that sharply curtailed the use of consent decrees.

In other developments, an Atlanta-area police chief who was criticized for saying on social media that he doesn’t support the Black Lives Matter movement has been placed on leave while his city investigates him, the AP reported on Tuesday.

Johns Creek Police Chief Chris Byers wrote on his personal Facebook page that religious leaders have failed to give enough support to police and that Black Lives Matter as a movement “seems to glorify the killing of my brothers and sisters.”

Since then, Johns Creek City Manager Ed Densmore said he began gathering information from residents, police officers and city employees.

But Densmore said the investigation now focuses on other issues related to the chief. Densmore said he opened an internal investigation into allegations against the chief “unrelated to his social media post.” He did not specify what those allegations are.

In his Facebook post, Byers said he is supportive of demonstrations for justice and that he supports the lives of all people.

“But I do not support the Black Lives Matter as a movement as it seems to glorify the killing of my brothers and sisters,” he wrote. “It is not what you pastors and religious leaders think it is.”

Pleading through tears Monday, the family of a black man killed by Atlanta police outside a drive-thru demanded changes in the criminal justice system and called on protesters to refrain from violence amid heightened tensions across the U.S. three weeks after George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis.

An autopsy found that 27-year-old Rayshard Brooks was shot twice in the back late Friday by a white officer who was trying to arrest him at a fast food restaurant for being intoxicated behind the wheel of his car. Brooks tried to flee after wrestling with officers and grabbing a stun gun from one of them.

“Not only are we hurt, we are angry,” said Chassidy Evans, Brooks’ niece. “When does it stop? We’re not only pleading for justice. We’re pleading for change.”

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced Monday that she was ordering changes to police use-of-force policies, including requiring that officers receive continuous training in how to deescalate situations and use those techniques before taking action that could be fatal. She said she also was requiring officers to intervene if they see a colleague using excessive force.

The mayor said that after Brooks’ shooting, it was clear Atlanta did not have “another day, another minute, another hour to waste” in changing police practices.

Other cities nationwide are taking similar steps, and packages of police reforms have been proposed or are emerging in Congress.

About 20 of Brooks’ children, siblings, cousins and other family members sobbed at a news conference as over 1,000 people gathered not far away at an NAACP-led protest outside the Georgia Capitol.

Floyd’s death May 25 after a white Minneapolis officer pressed his knee into the black man’s neck touched off demonstrations and scattered violence across the U.S., and Brooks’ killing rekindled those protests in Atlanta. The Wendy’s restaurant where Brooks was shot was burned down over the weekend.

Evans said there was no reason for her uncle “to be shot and killed like trash in the street for falling asleep in a drive-thru.”

“Rayshard has a family who loves him who would have gladly come and got him so he would be here with us today,” she said.

Relatives described Brooks as a loving father of three daughters and a stepson who had a bright smile and a big heart and loved to dance. His oldest daughter learned her father was slain while celebrating her eighth birthday with cupcakes and friends, wearing a special dress as she waited for Brooks to take her skating, said Justin Miller, an attorney for the family.

“There’s no justice that can ever make me feel happy about what’s been done,” said Tomika Miller, Brooks’ widow. “I can never get my husband back. … I can never tell my daughter he’s coming to take you skating or for swimming lessons.”

     (AP)

NYC Redesigns Affordable Housing Lottery; New Site Goes Live

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The online system, known as NYC Housing Connect, had been derided as antiquated and rife with technical problems that posed significant impediments to getting affordable housing even as the city has grown more expensive, the NY Times reported. Photo Credit: nakedapartments.com

By: Rusty Brooks

With the coronavirus response by government literally destroying the economy, many New Yorkers are moving as far away from the city as possible, while others who are staying will scramble for more affordable housing,  including the well known lottery for below market apartment rentals

The online system, known as NYC Housing Connect, had been derided as antiquated and rife with technical problems that posed significant impediments to getting affordable housing even as the city has grown more expensive, the NY Times reported.

The new system which has recently gone live, makes the process much easier and fixes all the glitches. The online lottery started in 2013, and the site has not been modernized until now.

The current system, had become outdated and still required applicants to conduct some work in person, such as providing reams of financial statements. On the new site, those documents can be uploaded online.

“This pandemic not only caused a health crisis — it has caused an economic one as well. As stress is mounting on families across the city, we are fighting to ensure all New Yorkers are supported,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said. “The new and improved NYC Housing Connect will make applying for affordable housing easier than ever at a time that we know families need all the help they can get”

The housing lottery is the central clearinghouse for the vast majority of affordable-housing units in the city, including developments financed and subsidized by New York. The redesigned site will go online on Tuesday and the first units will appear in early July, the NY Times reported.

There will be roughly 2,500 apartments offered on the site in the coming months, which will be available mostly for those with household incomes below or slightly above the median income. (The median income in New York City for a family of four is $113,700.)

Mr. de Blasio has pledged to create and preserve at least 300,000 affordable homes by 2026, 200,000 of which the administration says it plans to achieve ahead of schedule in 2022.

About 164,000 affordable homes have been created or preserved since 2014. Over the past year, more than 8,700 units have been advertised in the online lottery system, the most in any fiscal year, the city said, the NY Times explained

After applicants create profiles stating their household size and household income, which together determine a person’s eligibility, they will be shown apartments that they are most likely to qualify for. That is a significant change from the old system, in which applicants typically applied to every building on the lottery site without knowing if they were even eligible.

The new site also improves on technical issues, such as freezing and crashing.

Bklyn’s Orthodox Jews See Double Standard:  City Seals Public Parks in Williamsburg

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Parks Department worker welds a playground gate shut in a heavily Orthodox neighborhood of Brooklyn, June 15, 2020.

By: Jared Evan

Leo Goldman was walking past Middleton Park Monday morning when he saw workers closing the two entrances to a playground in Williamsburg, a heavily Orthodox neighborhood of Brooklyn, JTA reports

They we were not just closing it, but literally welding the gates shut. Goldman contacted the long running Jewish Telegraphic Agency about what he had seen.

In a WhatsApp message, Goldman told the JTA he tried to open the gate himself. “It was welded shut. 100%,” he wrote.

Later, it was unwelded but locked shut to keep families out.

Many in the Jewish community are calling out what they see as a double standard with regards to enforcing social distancing laws.

While NYC was busy keeping parks closed in Jewish areas, a huge rally for Transgender black lives matter was held in Brooklyn, only a few miles away.

Breitbart reported: Aerial views posted on social media show people packed like sardines at the Brooklyn protest.

“Live from the Brooklyn Museum,” the tweet accompanying a video of the crowd said. “Massive protest. Seen Boomers, Millennials, Gen X, Gen Z, etc. Seen Black, White, Asian, Native — you name it.”

“Every type of New Yorker. Gathered to say #BlackTransLivesMatter,” the tweet said. “Power to the people.”

Social media accounts show a giant crowd, packed in near the Brooklyn Museum. CNN reported the event was about violence against TG women.  There was literally no social distancing enforced at the event, as protesters who almost seemed hypnotized repeated ‘black trans lives matter, black trans lives power”, in a robotic like fashion. Thousands stood on top of each other, screaming the mantras on the top of their lungs.

Meanwhile the de Blasio administration is enforcing a strict lock down on most public parks, for what seems like an illogical reason since science has shown next to no children are coming down with coronavirus, and cases continue to plunge in NY.  Children playing in a park, overall would pose much less of a risk than thousands of adults standing next to each other, screaming at a protest.

JTA reported:  Orthodox elected officials say the rules are being enforced differently in various parts of the city. In a tweet last week Kalman Yeger, an Orthodox city councilman from Brooklyn, pointed to playgrounds in other parts of Brooklyn that remained open as proof of unequal enforcement.

The community is seeing a double standard, especially when it comes to protests.  Several weeks ago, as protestors were attacking police in the streets of Atlantic Ave, other cops were cruising up and down 13th Ave enforcing social distancing laws and clamping down on small Jewish shops.

Yossi Gestetner, an Orthodox Jewish political commentator pointed out the favoritism the city holds for activists and their protests over Jewish families.

He Tweeted:Mayor marches with protesters and orders Contact Tracers not to ask people if they were at protests, the City is welding shut a park that is largely used by Hasidim in Williamsburg, Brooklyn”

Contact tracers who will be prying into individuals’ private lives, while trying to prevent the spread of COVID-19, apparently do not need to know if you went to a protest.

“Apparently NYC officials feel the only safe place in the city is at a black lives mater rally. It’s literally the only event you can attend, no concerts, no baseball games., no sitting in a diner, no church, no synagogue, no weddings, no funerals, locking down the parks, but when it comes to a BLM rally, the contact tracers don’t even need to know you attended. BLM rallies are a no corona zone?”, political analyst Justin credible told TJV.

NY to Allow Up to 25 to Gather in Third Phase of Re-Opening

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Up to 25 people can gather in parts of New York that have entered the third phase of re-opening under a revised plan the governor announced Monday. Photo Credit: AP

By: Marina Villeneuve

Up to 25 people can gather in parts of New York that have entered the third phase of re-opening under a revised plan the governor announced Monday.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he relaxed the rules because of signs of a continued decline in hospitalizations and the percentage of new positive cases across the state.

Cuomo’s administration reported 25 deaths of individuals who tested positive for COVID-19 in New York hospitals and nursing homes Sunday. Just over 1,600 patients were hospitalized with COVID-19 Sunday, and a smaller percentage of New Yorkers have been testing positive each day in recent weeks.

New York is on the “right track,” said Cuomo, who has divided the state up into 10 regions that are all in different stages of re-opening.

Previously, only 10 people could gather in the third phase of re-opening, which western New York is set to enter Tuesday.

“We are the exception here in New York,” Cuomo claimed, as he pointed to signs of rise in infections in other states.

The governor spoke during a press conference at a Tarrytown bridge named for his father, the late Gov. Mario Cuomo, as he celebrated the opening of a 3.6-mile path for cyclists and pedestrians.

He said it’s a “great point of irony” that he’s now worried that people from other states could start traveling to New York and bring the virus, though he isn’t planning to take any action at this point.

But Cuomo again urged local governments to enforce social distancing rules as videos of socializing New Yorkers failing to wear masks in public or stay 6 feet apart from others over the weekend in New York City and elsewhere circulate on social media.

“People are violating everything,” said Cuomo, who noted New York has received over 25,000 complaints of reopening violations statewide.

The governor said he “can’t use the state police everywhere in the state” to enforce social-distancing rules.

But he said restaurants and bars could lose their liquor licenses if they don’t enforce masks and distancing. Cuomo called on local governments to enforce the rules.

“To local governments, I say do your job,” Cuomo said.

(AP)

Lawyers: Trump’s Boast of Living in NYC Negates Suit Claims

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Carroll’s lawyers say Trump’s statement about where he lives blunts one of his legal arguments against the case: that it shouldn’t proceed in a New York court because he lives in Washington. Photo Credit: AP

By: Jennifer Peltz

On a recent call to the nation’s governors, President Donald Trump urged them to “ dominate ” streets full of protesters, adding that as a New Yorker he was especially appalled at unrest in his home town.

“I live in Manhattan,” he said.

That declaration is now getting attention from a different audience: lawyers for E. Jean Carroll, a writer suing Trump for denying her allegations that he raped her in a New York department store in the mid-1990s.

Carroll’s lawyers say Trump’s statement about where he lives blunts one of his legal arguments against the case: that it shouldn’t proceed in a New York court because he lives in Washington.

“Trump’s lifelong connection to New York is as strong as ever,” Carroll attorney Roberta Kaplan wrote in a court filing Monday. It seeks a ruling that Trump can’t use the not-a-New Yorker argument, which a judge swatted down in early January but his lawyers later advanced again.

Trump’s lawyers did not return messages seeking comment.

Trump’s lawyers have been focusing since February on a different approach to trying to halt Carroll’s suit, arguing it shouldn’t proceed until New York’s highest court decides — in a separate case — whether an incumbent president is protected from all state-court suits unrelated to his official duties.

It’s unclear how soon a judge may rule on Trump’s request to pause Carroll’s case. The coronavirus has upended New York court operations for months.

Carroll, a former longtime advice columnist for Elle magazine, went public last year with an allegation that Trump raped her in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room. She said it happened after a chance encounter and lighthearted chat about trying on a bodysuit.

Trump said Carroll was “totally lying” to sell a memoir and that he’d never met her, though a 1987 photo showed them and their then-spouses at a social event. He said it just captured a moment when he was standing in a line.

Carroll is seeking a DNA sample from Trump to see whether it matches as-yet-unidentified male genetic material found on a dress that she says she was wearing during the alleged attack and never put on again until a photo shoot last year.

In the suit, Carroll is seeking damages and a retraction of Trump’s statements.

(AP)

DeBlasio Fires Back at Cuomo’s Threat of New Lockdown on Manhattan & the Hamptons

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Gov. Andrew Cuomo, left; Mayor Bill de Blasio, right (Associated Press)

By: Darryl Jackson-Jones

Governor Andrew Cuomo wants space – between New Yorkers – and is threatening those in Manhattan and the Hamptons with a potential new lockdown if they don’t get with the program.

“We’re not going to go back to that dark place because local governments didn’t do their job” and citizens ignore proper precautions during the pandemic, Cuomo said. “Manhattan and the Hamptons are the leading areas in the state with violations.”

Indeed, he told the media that his administration has received in the neighborhood of 25,000 complaints about health-safety violations, which he called “alarming.”

On Sunday, Mayor Bill de Blasio fired back at Cuomo’s threat to shut down Manhattan again if the city didn’t enforce social-distancing better — saying through a rep that “imprisoning people” isn’t the answer.

“We must balance safety with people’s need to reopen their businesses,” a City Hall spokeswoman said in an e-mail.

“We had social distancing ambassadors out all weekend distributing masks and encouraging people to disperse after making their purchases,” the City Hall rep added. “These businesses are allowed to be open per the governor’s guidelines and we don’t believe imprisoning people or taking away their livelihood is the answer.”

“These are not hard-to-spot violations. People send videos of these violations,” Cuomo said. And yet just a couple of days later, no fewer than an estimated 200 partiers were caught on video standing tightly together, without masks near St. Marks Place in the East Village. “They are rampant, and there’s not enough enforcement,” he said. “I’m not going to allow situations to exist, that we know have a high likelihood of causing an increase in the virus. Local governments, do your job.” If they fail to do so, he added, “yes, there is a very real possibility that we would roll back the reopening of those areas.”

Cuomo related that he had contacted bars and restaurants himself after finding photographic evidence of their failure to follow guidelines. He says he warned them, “

You’re playing with your [liquor] license.”

“New York City is currently in Phase One of the state’s four-stage reopening plan, meaning curbside retail is allowed, as well as the restart of general construction and manufacturing,” the New York Post reported. “Mayor Bill de Blasio has said he expects the city to enter Phase Two hopefully by early July, which would permit such things as outdoor seated dining at restaurants.”

Phase two was implemented in the Hamptons on Long Island more than a week ago.

The governor’s office has been proactive in telling New Yorkers exactly what steps they must take to protect themselves from infection. For example, his web site related that New Yorkers should:

Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds, especially before you eat.

Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth with unwashed hands.

Avoid close contact with people; do not shake hands.

Keep a distance of at least 6 feet from others.

Wear a face mask or cloth face covering that covers your nose and mouth when in public and/or when 6 feet of social distancing cannot be maintained.

Cover your cough and sneezes with a tissue and discard it in a closed container.

Clean frequently touched surfaces and objects.

Construction Biz Sees Spike in NYC – Retail Lags, Restaurants Suffer Due to Covid

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Construction jumped across the five boroughs, with 33,556 nonessential work sites breaking ground, Crain’s reported. Photo Credit: AP

By: Rusty Brooks

NYC clearly is not the city it was only 3 months ago. Times Square is deserted, scores of empty store fronts looking for new renters line the city, boarded up store fronts line the entire city from wall street thru Harlem as a result of the riots and anarchy which engulfed the city for several days,  and the city is now into a week of the slow re-opening process.

There is some good news, along with the bad

Construction jumped across the five boroughs, with 33,556 nonessential work sites breaking ground, Crain’s reported.

“The reports I got back are that people are very encouraged,” said Lou Coletti, president of the Building Trades Employers’ Association. “Everyone is being completely cooperative in terms of the protocols that have been established.”

Crain’s reported: Coletti said he has seen his on-site workers participate in social-distancing measures as well as take part in temperature checks and wear personal protective equipment. His union staggered start times throughout the day to keep density down at construction sites.

Many construction projects however are dependent on the largest city public agencies.

Crain’s pointed out:The MTA received $3.8 billion from the federal government in the Cares Act and requested $3.9 billion more, which has yet to be approved. Many projects associated with the authority’s $53 billion 2020–24 capital improvement plan remain in doubt. Furthermore, the Port Authority, which handles the region’s airports and bridges, recently said it will not be able to complete critical upgrades without $3 billion in federal assistance.

The MTA has seen an uptick in ridership since last week’s roll out of the first phase of re-opening. The authority anticipated 400,000 riders per day during week one. Instead, it reported that ridership hit 800,000 Monday, 17% higher than the previous week. There had been a 90% drop-in service during the height of the pandemic in the city.

Retail appears to be severely lagging and can pose the biggest problem to an economic recovery. Crain’s spoke to Brooklyn chamber of commerce to get a feel as to what is going on.

The Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce last week surveyed 161 business owners in manufacturing, retail, restaurants, health care and nonprofits. Forty-five percent said the biggest hurdle they were facing was an inability to afford rent, utilities, licenses and other expenses. A quarter said staff not returning to work is their biggest concern. Thirty-five percent said they did not pay rent in June. Twenty percent said their landlord gave them a concession for rent this month.

The worst news comes out of the restaurant sector. Commercial Observer’s retail forum was recently held and the experts concluded predicted that half of all restaurants will close up shop before the pandemic is over.

“Twenty percent of tenants that we’ve surveyed have handed back their keys thus far,” said Steven Kamali, founder of consulting firm Hospitality House.”We anticipate over 30 percent, in addition to that, handing back their keys, That’s half the population of restaurants, effectively in some shape or form, giving their keys back,” he said

Commercial observer reported:

The key challenges that restaurants will face when they do open, in addition to the reduced occupancy limits, is reduced traffic from tourism and the office crowd, Whitney Arcaro, head of retail leasing at RXR Realty and Julio Bruno, the CEO of Time Out, pointed out. It’s uncertain when those will return to pre-pandemic numbers, they added.

NY’s Hassidic Kids Become Activists as they Rally for Summer Camp

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Orthodox Jewish children took to the streets of Brooklyn Friday to protest -- but in this case, the cause of their ire is summer camp, NBC NY reported. Photo Credit: Screenshot from Twitter

By: Jared Evan

A new protest movement has sprung up and they take their right to petition the government for a redress of grievances as given to them by the first amendment very seriously.

Orthodox Jewish children took to the streets of Brooklyn Friday to protest — but in this case, the cause of their ire is summer camp, NBC NY reported.

JTA described them as blocking traffic much like we have seen city wide at George Floyd protests, but this was a peaceful “movement” with little kids holding signs saying “camp” to be found. JTA reported there were some seeking “racial justice” as well, but mainly their grievances were directed towards de Blasio and Cuomo.

They chanted “We want Camp”

The young Orthodox “activists” want Gov. Andrew Cuomo to allow sleepaway camps to reopen for the summer, even with the risks posed by COVID-19.

Cuomo said June 2 that day camps could reopen June 29 but left the decision on sleepaway camps for another day. He has suggested, strongly and repeatedly, that he would be wary of sending his own children to an overnight camp given the emergence of the pediatric condition known as MIS-C, NBC reported.

A complication of COVID-19 infection, MIS-C strikes kids with symptoms that mirror toxic shock syndrome or Kawasaki disease. The majority of children who develop it end up in intensive care, and at least three have died in New York.

JTA reported: videos posted to Twitter showed young boys on bikes and scooters riding through the streets of Williamsburg and shouting. In a video shared by the Orthodox news site Vos Iz Neias, children gathered on a street in Borough Park after dark. In another video shared by Orthodox journalist Jake Turx, children blocked traffic on a Borough Park street in front of a yeshiva.

The Association of Jewish Camp Operators, whose members run dozens of summer camps, has lobbied local officials for weeks to press Cuomo to allow camps to open this summer, while the Union for Reform Judaism opted out of sleepaway camps this summer, NBC reports.

State Sen. Simcha Felder wrote a letter Thursday to de Blasio saying, “we can no longer tolerate the excessive restriction of closed playgrounds.” Access to many green spaces in the city has been restricted because they contain playgrounds, which are closed to stop the spread of disease, J.T.A reported

During the height of the George Floyd protests over the initial weekend of the sometimes-violent street gatherings, reports circulated from Brooklyn social media that police officers were ticketing Jewish families who were using public playgrounds, enforcing social distancing ordinances. However, as the protests became violent near Barclay’s Center, those rules were not being followed nor enforced.

There have been some tensions among the Orthodox and Hasidic communities and the NYPD mainly over social distancing ordinances which seemingly are being selectively enforced.  DCNF recently reported that Jewish congregants have filed a lawsuit against Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Democratic New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio over double standards on worship and protests.

Upper West Side Shrink Gets Licensed Pulled Due to Bizarre Behavior

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After a series of incredible complaints, an Upper West Side shrink by the name of Dr. Irene G. Gurvits has had her license revoked by the state. Photo Credit: Doximity.com

By: Denis Cyr

In a story that seems like a plot of a comedy movie, a psychiatrist lost her license because of her own mental illness.

After a series of incredible complaints, an Upper West Side shrink by the name of Dr. Irene G. Gurvits has had her license revoked by the state, New York Post reported.

Complaints reportedly began eight years ago, and she has been called out for some pretty insane behavior.

Patients report that she smoked throughout sessions, was “constantly eating pretzels,” left her office door open during private sessions, talked to patients about her personal life and more.

One former patient told The Post that whenever he mentioned his social anxiety, the doctor would reply with “that’s bullsh*t” and “who cares?!”

Another former patient says Gurvits pressed him to help her with her insurance issues, and to help her mother shred documents.

Two other patients report that Gurvits refused to prescribe their medications until they “helped her move.”

Reviews from online services Google and Yelp from actual patients really make it clear, Dr. Gurvits needs to see a psychiatrist herself:

This woman should not have a license to practice medicine. She will tell you more about herself, and her trauma history, than talk about you. Go expecting to give therapy.”

“This doctor is JUST PLAIN NUTS!  She told me that she’s actually a schizophrenic, then denied it, then told me it was true. She started calling me at midnight and asking what I was doing, then sent me bizarre emails talking about drugs that they’d fed her in the hospital to “shut her up.”  Frankly, Dr. Gurvits is not just mean and crazy; she’s also dangerous and frightening.”

“Do not see this doctor she is incredibly rude and unprofessional. Her office is a dump, there’s no receptionist so good luck getting in touch with her, and she lost my medical chart. She also left the door wide open while seeing another patient, so I heard the whole session, including Dr. Gurvitz taking a personal phone call in the middle of it. The other patient walked out and verbatim said to me, ‘she is the WORST.’”

The Post also revealed at one point her own lawyer recommended she seek psychiatric help herself.  Documents reveal that Gurvits was evaluated and diagnosed with major depressive disorder with psychotic features.

The Department of Health website states that “The Hearing Committee sustained the charges finding the physician guilty of committing professional misconduct by failing to comply with an order; practicing while impaired; having a psychiatric condition which impairs the ability to practice medicine; failing to produce records and failing to maintain accurate patient medical records’, I love UWS blog reported.

Aaron Judge’s Girlfriend’s DWI Puts Private Yankee Star in the Spotlight

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New York Yankees star outfielder Aaron Judge iPhoto Credit: AP

By: Rusty Brooks

New York Yankees star outfielder Aaron Judge is having an awful off season. Already hampered with serious injuries from September, his girlfriend making front page news over a DWI has brought his private life into the press.

Yanksgoyard blog reported: suffered his rib injury and punctured lung back in September, but none of it was diagnosed until shortly before the start of spring training. It was expected his season would be delayed months before the COVID-19 outbreak bought him some time to recover, though it seems he’s lagging behind considering he’s yet to swing a bat after over two months since being sidelined.

Back in February, Samantha Bracksieck, the 26-year-old girlfriend was pulled over in Arizona because the headlights of her 2017 Honda HR-V were off, and she was traveling 10 mph over the speed limit.

“I could smell a strong odor of an intoxicating beverage coming from inside the vehicle and from her breath as she spoke,” one cop wrote in the incident report, adding that Bracksieck was slurring her words and had bloodshot eyes. She was charged with “extreme DUI” for an alleged blood -alcohol- concentration level between .15 and .19, The NY Post reported.

Her arrest was kept under wraps until May when a sports gossip site reveled this incident.

“Jeter was private but didn’t mind his name being out there. He was showboat private,” said an insider. “Aaron is the total opposite. He is quiet. The arrest had to be a gut punch to him.”

NY Post reported; Then it got worse. A few days later, police body-cam footage from the arrest was leaked and revealed that the brunette had dropped her famous boyfriend’s name, asking, “Do you know who my boyfriend is ? My boyfriend is in the spotlight in New York media in general. And now here I am handcuffed in Arizona, Like, that is not good.”

Yanksgoyard reported:” it’s also fairly telling that we haven’t heard a peep from Judge this offseason, even in regard to his recovery and outlook for the 2020 season. One can expect the moment he opens himself up to the media, he will be subject to questions about this incident, and it’ll be the last thing he’ll want to address”

But perhaps Judge is feeling a bit better about all of this after Bracksieck’s former college professor and adviser had nothing but good things to say about her to The Post. That’ll no doubt help take the negative edge off this story.

Judge is surely looking forward to the season finally starting so the gossip about his girlfriend will be out of the spotlight.