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  • 17Aug

    This article at least does the subject enough justice to prominently mention the fact that without long-term employment options the truce was precarious, but it still doesn’t give this issue enough importance.  There can be no lasting truce between street organizations without legal economic opportunity for these youths!!  It is truly that simple.  Or a different way of saying that is, this all boils down to economics.

    Celebrated gang truce disintegrates

    Jahmol Norfleet was a youth leader who helped organize the peace treaty. The peace lasted beyond Jahmol's murder a year later, but is believed to have fallen apart recently.

    http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/08/16/bostons_06_gang_truce_disintegrates/

    The shooting death in May of a 14-year-old honors student has done more than shock the city; it has also unraveled the final remnants of a 2006 gang truce once hailed as a historic success.

    During the recent arraignments of Jaewon Martin’s alleged assailants, prosecutors said Martin, who had no gang ties, was apparently targeted by members of the H-Block gang because he was hanging out on a basketball court frequented by their Heath Street foes.

    Martin was the third shooting victim connected to the gang feud since high-profile peace negotiations four years ago put a temporary end to deadly warfare between H-Block and Heath Street.

    While the two previous shootings had frayed the peace, community leaders and law enforcement officials agree that Martin’s death and the resulting investigation are a sign that the pact has disintegrated.

    “It’s a shame it didn’t last,’’ said Bob Francis, cochairman of the Academy/Bromley/Egleston Safety Task Force, who did not participate in the truce but witnessed the drop in shootings that followed. “You could see the results when the peace initiative was in place. You could see it in the crime reports. You could see it in the community.’’

    More details of the truce’s deterioration could emerge this fall, when a purported H-Block member is scheduled to stand trial for allegedly killing a Heath Street rival in 2009.

    Law enforcement officials and community leaders cited several reasons for the crumbling of the much-heralded truce, including insufficient resources like long-term jobs for participants, the release of gang members from prison who want to retaliate against old foes, changing membership within the groups, and the overwhelming challenge of tamping down tensions between rivals who have feuded for decades.

    Police Commissioner Edward F. Davis acknowledged the fragility of truces but said if they result in even a few months without violence it means success.

    “If we can get a season, and what I mean by that is a summer or a fall, we consider that a major victory,’’ Davis said. “I don’t think we’re looking at long-term commitments to nonviolence among this cohort of people. We’re looking at the short-term and trying to get them to rethink their retaliatory ways.’’

    Police said shootings in the two districts where the gangs are based are still lower than they were in 2006. There have been 51 shootings in the districts between Jan. 1 and Aug. 10, 2010, compared with 92 shootings during the same time period four years ago.

    The truce was struck in July 2006, following months of shootings between H-Block, a group of about two dozen individuals from Roxbury around Humboldt Avenue, and Heath Street, whose 20 to 30 members live in or near Jamaica Plain’s Bromley-Heath housing complex.

    The FBI had attributed 20 shootings to the feud between January 2005 and June 2006. That summer, a 17-year-old man was shot several times on the basketball court near Bromley-Heath. A month later 18-year-old Herman Taylor 3d, who police believe was an innocent bystander, was fatally shot standing on Humboldt Avenue next to an H-Block leader.

    The violence spurred ministers and neighborhood leaders at the Bromley-Heath housing complex to collaborate with probation officers, school and city police, and gang unit officers to broker an agreement between the two groups.

    Organizers met separately with each gang to pitch the truce, persuading them to put down their guns. Gang members, tired of the fighting, agreed to the cease-fire, said Mark Prisco, chief of West Roxbury District Court and one of the truce organizers.

    “They wanted safety and they wanted a job,’’ he said.

    Eventually, the two gangs met at a peace summit held at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, where they pledged to stay away from each other’s territory for the rest of the summer, not shoot on sight, and call a minister before retaliating for any disputes.

    Truce organizers met weekly with gang leaders to maintain the peace and offered summer jobs through the city and GED classes. Many participants walked away from gang life altogether.

    For four months, there was not a single shooting between the two groups.

    Then, in November 2006, one of the truce’s principal participants, Jahmol Norfleet, an H-Block gang leader, was fatally shot. No one was arrested and community leaders feared retaliation. But ministers managed to keep both gangs peaceful, and for a year the groups stayed away from each other.

    But in January 2009, police say, H-Block member Chris Jamison gunned down Heath Street rival Anthony Perry on a busy Jamaica Plain street. His trial is expected to begin Oct. 12. Both men had been part of the summit. No motive has been given for the killing.

    “A truce is so difficult because all it takes is one kid,’’ Prisco said. “I think it’s just such a difficult task to get a young man whose had someone in his family shot or someone he loves shot and for him to say, ‘OK, I’m going to shake hands with someone from that group and try to quash things.’ ’’

    Another challenge truce organizers faced was obtaining long-term jobs for many gang members, whose criminal records were impediments to employment, said the Rev. Jeffrey Brown, executive director of the Boston TenPoint Coalition and a truce organizer.

    While publicly there was praise for the truce, privately some community leaders and even police criticized the benefits that were given to gang members. Truce organizers, for instance, took some gang members to a Patriots game and gave them tickets to a Boston College football game.

    Within the department, some officers derided the truce process as a “hug-a-thug’’ program, according to law enforcement officials. That kind of skepticism made it difficult to secure more funding and jobs to help keep participants away from crime, Brown said.

    “In 2010, getting resources for what we were trying to do is a no-brainer, but in 2006 it was a new idea,’’ he said. “Any pressure that came, any criticism that came effectively killed the effort.’’

    Davis said the truce process remains one of the department’s anticrime strategies. Law enforcement officials, with the help of ministers, are now trying to negotiate peace between two large gangs, Davis said, declining to provide details because it could jeopardize the effort.

    Francis said he hopes there will be another effort to strike a truce between H-Block and Heath Street.

    “It’s something that actually worked,’’ he said. “The likelihood of failure is high, but you don’t give up on it.’

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  • 03Aug

    Supa Nova Slom, a Brooklyn rapper… said both Bloods and Crips originated as groups for social justice.  He reminded the crowd what both gangs stand for, Bloods, Brotherly Love Overpowering Oppressive Destruction; and Crips, Community Revolution In Progress, and said that regardless of affiliation, both groups should have the same purpose: “If you ain’t reppin’ for black power than you forgot what should be reppin’ for.”

    Denver Bloods, Crips unite in peace march

    http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_15650439

    Red and blue, Blood and Crip, active gang members and ex-gang members stood side-by-side Saturday at the Heal the Hood Peace March in a display of solidarity and commitment to stopping the violence.

    Community activists marched alongside gang members and residents from Five Points, the heart of Crips territory, and from the Holly Shopping Center in Park Hill, the heart of Bloods territory. They met in the middle at Colorado and East Martin Luther King boulevards to rally for peace, change and a cease-fire.

    Brother Jeff Fard, of Brother Jeff’s Cultural Center in Five Points and an event organizer, said the march is in response to what he called a hot summer with a number of unreported killings in east and northeast Denver.

    “We’re bringing the community together in its fullness. That’s saying, together we can stop the violence and peace is possible,” Fard said.

    Terrance Roberts, an former Blood who is now executive director of The Prodigal Son Initiative, said the violence needs to be removed for the neighborhoods to heal.

    Members of The Prodigal Son Initiative were dressed in camouflage as a symbol of unity.

    “Take a guess, I bet you can’t tell who’s Crip and who’s Blood in this crowd,” Roberts said.

    A Crip who goes by the name Lotto reminded people to think about their beginnings. He said he grew up a nerd, in a good home with his grandparents, going to church.

    “But my focus was lost because I had hate in my heart. I lost focus, but I was still a schoolboy with church values,” Lotto said. “We all know where we really come from because we all grew up together.”

    Lotto turned to the man to his right and said, “This man pulled a gun on me, but now I can look him in the eyes and say, ‘I forgive you.’ “

    Supa Nova Slom, a Brooklyn rapper, wore blue and red beads in his hair as a reminder to people that different gangs can come together for a common goal. He said both Bloods and Crips originated as groups for social justice.

    He reminded the crowd what both gangs stand for, Bloods, Brotherly Love Overpowering Oppressive Destruction; and Crips, Community Revolution In Progress, and said that regardless of affiliation, both groups should have the same purpose: “If you ain’t reppin’ for black power than you forgot what should be reppin’ for.”

    Matthew Ricks, president of Four Corners Coalition said he credits organizations that bring members from both groups together for reducing violence.

    “The violence won’t be there when you recognize each other,” he said. “It’s hard to kill someone you know.”

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  • 25Aug

    Jorge Cornell for Greensboro

    City Council

    Since Malcolm-Che’s founding we have followed the peace process initiated by Jorge Cornell of the North Carolina Latin Kings with much pleasure.  We only wish that more leaders of street organizations would follow his example – and the example of others – by seeking peace among oppressed people.  He has been shot, been shot at repeatedly, harassed by police and dealt with a whole lotta BS.  So it is with great pleasure that we bring this story to you:  King J is running for city council:


    Jorge Cornell is running for Greensboro City Council at large. That means if you live inside city limits and are registered to vote here, you can vote for Jorge! Check out “Election Details” for more information on the process, and make sure to come out and vote October 6, 2009.

    I am hopeful.  I know that a better world is possible but that we all need to be heard in order to create it.  I have proved my leadership abilities as the Inca –or leader- of the Almighty Latin King & Queen Nation for the state of North Carolina, and more recently joined the School Safety Committee for the Board of Education.  I will prove the same dedication on City Council, and I will make sure that we are heard. Without us, the future is not possible. Together, we can achieve anything!

    Jorge with his daughters

    Jorge with his daughters


    http://cornellforcouncil.wordpress.com/


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  • 29Jun

    Police & City Councilman Harass And Slander Latin Kings

    King J (in white shirt) and fellow members of the Latin Kings.

    King J (in white shirt) and fellow members of the Latin Kings.

     

     

    We have been following the peace process that was initiated by King J AKA Jorge Cornell and the North Carolina Latin Kings since the beginning, through all of its trials (literally many trials) and tribulations.

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    We at Malcolm-Che have payed a lot of attention to this process because we feel it is one of the most important developments in the streets in all of America.  It is not every day that a member of a street organization initiates a peace process between street organizations, but more than that this process has endured many attempts by the establishment to shut it down and has even branched out into important activist fields like pro-immigration  and anti-racism work.

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    We knew King J was serious about peace when he reiterated his commitment to the peace process even after being shot.  So it is with a great deal of solidarity that we report these two most recent developments:

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    Greensboro councilman embroiled in conflict with gang

    http://www.yesweekly.com/article-6523-news.html

    Old wounds transfer into new grievances, while new controversies supplant old ones along familiar battle lines in Greensboro.
    The 1979 Klan-Nazi killings and the black police officers’ discrimination claims against the city have steamrolled into a new conflict between District 4 Councilman Mike Barber and the street organization known as the Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation, or the Latin Kings.

    Barber had ended up on the losing side of a vote to issue a statement of regret about the Klan-Nazi killings at a recent Greensboro City Council meeting on June 16, and one of those speaking in favor of the motion was the Rev. Cardes Brown. The pastor had recently hosted a press conference for Officer AJ Blake, one of the plaintiffs in the discrimination lawsuit and a former member of the gang unit assigned to investigate the Latin Kings. Blake is currently suspended while he appeals two convictions for assault on a female. The Rev. Brown has alleged that Barber offered to help Blake get his criminal charges dropped in exchange for withdrawing from the discrimination suit. It was not quite midnight near the end of the council meeting when Barber made public remarks about a house on Keeler Street behind Sedgefield Elementary where neighbors have reportedly complained about gunfire. The house lies in District 5, which is represented by Barber’s colleague, Councilwoman Trudy Wade. “There is an 18-year-old and a 21-yearold that lives in this home, and they are members of the gang the Latin Kings,” Barber said, reading from notes. “They have discharged a firearm in the neighborhood.

     

    They have been investigated by the sheriff’s department — the Guilford County Sheriff’s Department — for internet prostitution, pornography and have committed other bad behavior in the community.”
    For good measure, Barber added, “This is the same organization, I’ll just mention, that Cardes Brown is defending currently.”

    He continued, “We’ve got our three 18carat gold ministers that are calling press conferences to defend these wonderful citizens of our community that are discharging weapons around children.”

    Jorge Cornell, leader of the Latin Kings in North Carolina, responded that he kicked out four Latin Kings who are currently residents at 2809 Keeler St. in late April for doing things “that were not fitting for a king or queen.” As to whether his organization was

     

    involved in prostitution and pornography, Cornell said, “None whatsoever; that’s not even our style.”
    Col. Randy Powers, the Guilford County’s Sheriff’s Office’s second in command, contradicted Barber’s statement. “Apparently he must be talking about some other sheriff’s office. It wasn’t ours. I don’t think we’ve got anything going, and we’ve checked pretty deep.” Barber did not return phone calls requesting clarification about the source of his allegations.

     

    Cornell said the neighbors’ complaints about firearms being discharged at the address might be related to shots fired at the house rather than from it. The Latin King leader, who now lives on Kirkman Street, said he had been shot at twice at the Keeler Street house before he moved in February 2008. Greensboro police have made one service call to 2809 Kirkman St. in the past six months. At 2:39 a.m. on June 8, Guilford Metro 911 received a call from a woman saying four or five shots had been fired and her daughter, 21-year-old Ashley Lazo, had received a gunshot wound. The dispatcher summarized the mother’s comments as “This happened now…. The assailant is gone: drive-by shooting. There is serious bleeding.” A police press release later reported that Lazo “sustained nonlife-threatening injuries from the shots fired into the residence.”
    The Rev. Johnson, Jorge Cornell and other members of the Latin Kings held a press conference at Faith Community Church on June 18, two days after the councilman’s comments, to decry what they describe as a pattern of harassment by the gang unit and to call on the city council and the police department to dismantle that unit. “I feel the chief is weak,” said Cornell.

    “I feel he has no power over any member of his police department. I challenge any city council member to prove that the Latin Kings have any involvement in internet prostitution or internet pornography. We’re not about that. And I challenge any member of the city council to prove to me that I got any member of the ALKQN living on Keeler Street.”

     

    Johnson said he was saddened by the contentious nature of the current council, and asked Barber to consider meeting with them. “If there’s a view that there is violence going on and that we as a group of ministers

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    Latin Kings claim harassment, police deny

    http://www.carolinapeacemaker.com/news/Article/Article.asp?NewsID=97300&sID=4

     

    The Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation of Greensboro is accusing the Greensboro Police Department Gang Squad of harassment and calling for the squad to be dismantled. “If we have peace, then there’s no need for a gang unit. They’ve done everything they could to slander our name,” said ALKQN leader Jorge Cornell, also known as King J, during a press conference held last week at the Beloved Community Center in Greensboro.
    In June 2008, ALKQN proposed and signed an agreement to promote peace and unity among the area’s street gangs. However, during the past year, the members of the ALKQN stated that they have been wrongly jailed numerous times, kept under constant surveillance and harassed at their homes and jobs by the gang unit. Greensboro’s gang unit has been formally in operation since September 2008.
    Assistant Chief of Police Dwight Crotts said that the gang unit is not targeting the ALKQN and that they have received numerous calls requesting service at a residence where the group frequents. “I have not seen or heard what is being alleged by the group, but the only thing I can say is that there is not a targeting. The gang unit deals with many criminals and many street gangs,” he added, “The next important factor is helping people who want to get out of gangs.”
    Cornell stated at the press conference, “They (gang unit) have been attempting to destroy the peace process which I announced back in June of 2008…The gang unit has also attacked us personally.” Cornell believes there are many racist attitudes within the gang unit.
    In response to the gang unit trying to stop the peace and unity work which ALKQN is trying to accomplish, Crotts says, “That’s ludicrous. I think the opposite would be true. The gang unit has been very effective to date and the difference between the Latin Kings and other street gangs is that the Latin Kings try to draw attention to themselves, whereas others do not.”
    During the press conference, Cornell recounted an incident in June 2008, in which he was informed there was a warrant out for his arrest, however after going to the police station to turn himself in, no arrest warrant could be found on file. Days later, there was a warrant issued for Cornell’s arrest. He was charged with knowingly allowing a minor (16-year-old) drive his car without a license. According to Cornell, ALKQN has been charged more than 80 times by the police department, yet none of the charges were upheld in court.
    Reverend Nelson Johnson of Beloved Community Center said, “If there are over 20 felony charges on one person, and none of them are upheld in court, then on what basis are these charges made? The main question is ‘what do we need a gang squad for?”’ Johnson is one person that has been very supportive of the gang’s peace attempts and believes it is in the community’s hands to stop the gang unit from abusing their power. “I think we need discussions all over town to get to the bottom of this.”
    Reverend Gregory Headen, president of the Pulpit Forum of Clergy of Greensboro added, “So much of the power rests with the people. This is not just the Latin Kings’ problem; this is all of our problem. It’s going to take the whole community to say this is not acceptable.”
    Press conference holders also stated their displeasure at remarks made by Greensboro City Councilman Mike Barber to the public, accusing the ALKQN members of internet prostitution, pornography and discharging firearms in the neighborhood. “I challenge any council member to find any of my members involved with those things,” said Cornell.
    Phone calls made to Barber by the Peacemaker were not returned.
    The ALKQN said they are going to continue their promotion of safe communities by trying to bring the street gangs together for unity.
    Peace and unity is also what the police department claims to want. Crotts said, “Absent criminal activity, the gang unit wouldn’t be paying attention to this group. The focuses of the gang unit’s efforts are criminal activity related to street gangs.”

     

     

     

     

    are aiding and abetting that violence, instead of helping to get it out, then that should be stated clearly and some kind of way of stating what that is,” Johnson said. “And I’d love to meet with Mr. Barber, and anybody else on the council to discuss that out. What’s sad is when that becomes a political platform to play to the historically accumulated prejudices and fears of people. And it has nothing to do with the reality. Nobody ever talked to you about it. Nobody wants to meet with you about it.” Johnson added that he understood Barber’s statement about “our three 18-carat gold ministers” to be a reference to himself, Rev. Brown and Rev. Gregory Headen, and dismissed the councilman’s slight as an attempt to shift attention away from his own troubles.
    “At a press conference held two weeks ago, the brother of AJ Blake accused Councilman Barber of saying that he could get [AJ Blake] off if he would drop out of the suit of 39 African-American and people-of-color officers against the city,” Johnson said. “And Mr. Barber vehemently denies that. We actually believe it and know it’s true. And proper time will probably demonstrate that it’s true. I think Mr. Barber’s statement was more about deflecting that improper conduct that could result in his losing his [law] license than it was any truth related to what he said.” Johnson said the pastors’ condemnation of the gang squad should not be interpreted as an effort to detract from the police department’s legitimate mandate to protect public safety.

    “We need good law enforcement,” the pastor said. “We need a good strong police department, but those parts of the police department whose behavior can be documented — and just arresting people and having it be thrown out of court — they have forfeited their right to exist as a contributing part of the community. And in no way should that be related to a relaxation or any lack of appreciation for safety in the community.”

    The pastors presented a written proposal to then-City Manager Mitchell Johnson, Mayor Yvonne Johnson and the city’s human relations commission earlier this year that “asked the police for a space for this group to work with other groups and to hold meetings that are not surrounded by the police and people are afraid to come to the meeting,” the pastor said, adding that the city manager “took an interest in it,” but was fired (for unrelated reasons) before he could take action on it. The pastors have also met on several occasions with Chief Bellamy. The Rev. Johnson said the chief told them gang violence was falling in Greensboro.

    The call to disband the gang unit and to open new dialogue has been met mostly with rejection. Mayor Pro Tem Sandra Anderson Groat said the Latin Kings were pursuing the proper course by filing complaints with the city’s human relations commission, and that she was not interested in meeting with the pastors or the street organization “at this time.” She conceded that “the talk and probably the presence of gangs was more active and more prominent before,” but argued that perceived trend made a case for the gang unit’s effectiveness.

    “At some point we may have to make a decision,” Groat said, “but not right now.” At-large Councilman Robbie Perkins said, “We aren’t negotiating with the head of the

     

    Latin Kings,” adding that they were welcome like any other residents to speak from the floor during council meetings.
    “We formed a gang unit for a reason, and I’m not sure the reason we formed it has disappeared,” he said. “Certainly we welcome dialogue with anybody to make Greensboro a safer place.”

    District 3 Councilman Zack Matheny said there was “not a chance in hell” that he would support disbanding the gang unit. “Our police gang unit is doing a great job,” he said. “This is just another typical Cardes Brown and Nelson Johnson deal. They won something on Tuesday night, and they’re trying to throw stones and rile feathers. No, I have absolutely no desire to take down a police gang unit that is being successful.”

     

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  • 11Jun

    Another article on the ongoing saga surrounding the Northa Carolina Latin Kings’ attempts to seek peace among street organizations and social justice.  We have been following this story for over a year, make sure to check our tags below.  These cops were so racist and corrupt that ONE OF THEIR OWN is calling them out!!  But if he wasn’t, would you believe the cops or the Latin Kings?  Just because they’re wearing the uniform doesn’t mean they’re honest or fair.  We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again:  the police are the most powerful ‘gang’ on the streets!

    Suspended gang unit officer corroborates abuse allegations

    Officer AJ Blake (center) said the GPD gang unit has focused almost exclusively on the Latin Kings despite the fact that other gangs have been shooting against each other. Also pictured are the Rev. Cardes Brown and Blake’s fiancee, Sandra Sanchez

    http://www.yesweekly.com/article-6428-news.html

    Officer AJ Blake (center) said the GPD gang unit has focused almost exclusively on the Latin Kings despite the fact that other gangs have been shooting against each other. Also pictured are the Rev. Cardes Brown and Blake’s fiancee, Sandra Sanchez. (photo by Jordan Green)
    The Latin Kings, a provocative Latino street organization labeled a gang by the Greensboro Police Department, found perhaps the most unlikely of allies earlier this month a former member of the department’s gang unit. Officer AJ Blake, who is currently suspended without pay as he appeals a conviction for two counts of assault on a female, told reporters at New Light Missionary Baptist Church on June 2 that the gang unit has almost exclusively focused on the Latin Kings, even to the exclusion of investigating gangs that were shooting at each other.

    “The Latin Kings have been specifically the focus, given to me by my supervisor, Sergeant [Ronald] Sizemore that he referred to as being directed by Captain [John] Wolfe,” Blake said. “The gang unit was instructed to charge the Latin Kings with any possible violations that we could.” Blake said certain investigative tools used against the Latin Kings qualified as abuses of police authority.

    “For example, we’re investigating an attempted murder on, I believe it was, Maplewood Lane, and we were having difficulty locating one of the Latin King members that was involved allegedly in the incident as the driver of the vehicle,” he said. “Her parents were not cooperating, so the strategy of my sergeant was to order several officers to stay outside her house waiting for the mother and father to leave because they did not have a license, to wait for them to get a certain distance away from the house, to then arrest them for driving without a license, and tow the car. Which to me is outrageous.”

    Blake said he approached Sizemore last year with a concern that the squad was focusing exclusively on the Latin Kings while two street gangs on Martin Luther King Drive were actively shooting at each other.

    “To me, preservation of life is more important than going after what we think [the Latin Kings] might be doing,” he said. “When I approached my sergeant, and said, ‘We need to stop this incident before someone gets killed,’ he still wanted to focus on the Latin Kings.” Chief Tim Bellamy dismissed Blake’s allegations.

    “If someone has given you a directive you don’t agree with, our directives allow you to file a complaint,” he said. “He filed two complaints before. Why didn’t he file a complaint about this? I talked to his chain of command and no one recalls him bringing this forward.”

    Blake said the gang unit’s obsession with the Latin Kings dates back to 2006, when arrested members of the Latin Kings refused to cooperate with police officers who were trying to book them and, as Blake described

    it, “attempted to assault the arresting officers,” requiring them “to call the deputies to assist them.” Blake himself was the subject of complaint by the Latin Kings.

    Cornell said after he was arrested in December 2007 and charged with assaulting a police officer, Blake asked him which hand he wrote with. Cornell responded that he wrote with his left hand, and said that subsequently a warrant was drawn up alleging that he struck Officer Robert C. Finch with his left arm. A year later, Cornell was acquitted of the charge.

    Blake responded at the press conference that he “told Jorge I only asked questions relevant to the investigation.” The suspended officer, who played the “good cop” with the Latin Kings, described an attitude of hostility among his colleagues.

    “Once when I was interviewing Cesar Herrera, a member of the Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation, I was interrupted by Officer Sizemore, who took over the interview,” Blake said in his prepared statement. “Officer Sizemore began shouting at Cesar and said that he wished Jorge Cornell, the leader of the ALKQN who had been recently shot, had been killed. It was not said in a joking manner.”

    During the same episode, in which Latin Kings
    were accused of carrying out a retaliatory attack against someone who turned out to be completely uninvolved, Jason Yates said Sizemore made the same statement to him. “I made an off-hand joke,” Sizemore told YES! Weekly when asked about the allegation last November. “Probably it was in bad taste. He was laughing. I was laughing.”

    Despite his acquittal last December for the charge of assaulting a police officer, Cornell said the gang unit has continued to harass the Latin Kings, and his organization has filed five or six formal complaints with the human relations department. They have also been using digital video to document their interactions with the police.

    “We’ve actually got an officer on tape laughing at us,” Cornell said, “saying, ‘You can go ahead and file all the complaints you want with human relations; it’s not going to help.”

     

    Racism alleged to be widespread on force

    Blake, who is a black officer of Honduran descent, suggested the abuses of the Latin Kings that he has described are tied in to a larger culture of racism within the department. He said that when he “indicated that there was other more serious gang activity than the harassment activities in which we were engaged, Sergeant Sizemore said that his image of a gang member is a Latino male.” Blake said he filed two complaints against fellow officers for making racist statements, and the department took no action to correct problems.

    Then a member of a street narcotics squad, Blake said he filed a complaint in 2006 against a Sgt. Hafekaneyer for describing Latinos as “wet-backs” and saying during surveillance of a Latino club “that all the members there looked like illegal immigrants and he was disgusted that a blond-haired, blue-eyed woman would degrade herself with illegal immigrants.”

    Blake said he filed a complaint with the sergeant’s supervisor, who investigated it and told the complainant that the offending sergeant “admitted making the ‘wet-back’ comment, but [said] that he did not realize I was Latino.”

    Blake said he also filed a complaint against Officer Ashley Brown, who “said because I am from Honduras I must be a gang member and that he considers everyone from Honduras to be gang members.” The response from Lt. Whisnant and Capt. Dwight Crotts, who is now an assistant chief, Blake said, was that he could not substantiate his complaint and “I was claimed to be hyper-sensitive towards jokes about Latinos, that I can’t take a joke.”

    Asked to respond to Blake’s account, Chief Bellamy said the complaints “were investigated by supervisors and appropriate actions were taken.” The chief said he could not discuss the outcomes of the complaints, but questioned Blake’s credibility, stating, “Everybody he’s talked to he’s done changed lines about what he’s said.” Blake acknowledged that his motivation for coming forward is his unhappiness with the city’s decision to suspend him without pay after he was criminally charged. That policy has been applied selectively, he said.

    During the press conference, Blake apologized to the city, to the police department and to his fiance, Sandra Sanchez, for his behavior at a drunken police party to celebrate the birthday of Michael Caudle at the Police Club on Jan. 16. Blake acknowledged that he and Sanchez became engaged in an argument but denied attacking either her or Lorraine Galloway, another guest at the party. A warrant against Blake alleges that he grabbed Galloway around the neck and shoved her backwards; Blake maintains that put his hands in Galloway’s chest area and pushed her back in response to the woman shouting and raising her hands at him. Blake was suspended without pay the following day.

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  • 03Jun

    In a suprising twist concerning the ongoing developments of the gang peace treaty and activism pursued by the Almighty Latin King & Queen Nation in North Carolina headed by King Jay, a gang unit police officer has come forward with allegations that confirm what King Jay had been saying all along:  racism is rampant in the Greenboro police department and the Latin Kings were unfairly targeted due to this racism.  Read the officer’s original statement here.  Check out our coverage of the gang peace treaty in North Carolina here and the Latin Kings’ activism defending immigrants’ rights here.  Here are some gems from the statement and interview with Officer Blake:

    The department’s gang unit targeted the Latino community and officers were ordered to “charge the Latin Kings with any possible violations that we could,” and “certain tactics used to investigate the gang were abusive.”

    “Sergeant Sizemore said that his image of a gang member is a Latino male.”

    “Sergeant Hafekaneyer [described] Latinos as wet-backs.”

    “Officer Sizemore began shouting… that he wished that Jorge Cornell, the leader of the ALKQN who had been recently shot, had been killed.”

    We at Malcolm-Che stand in solidarity with King Jay and the ALKQN of North Carolina while they attempt to unify oppressed people.  To quote King Jay himself, “The black and the brown, that’s who’s enduring this.  We have to stand together. We can’t let the government divide us any more.”

    City councilman denies offering police officer a deal

    Greensboro Police Officer A.J. Blake read a statement at a news conference Tuesday afternoon at New Light Missionary Baptist Church.

    Greensboro Police Officer A.J. Blake read a statement at a news conference Tuesday afternoon at New Light Missionary Baptist Church.

    http://www.news-record.com/content/2009/06/02/article/officers_brother_claims_councilman_offered_deal_to_suspended_officer

    GREENSBORO — The brother of police Officer A.J. Blake and the leader of the local chapter of the NAACP said Tuesday that Councilman Mike Barber made Blake an implied offer to get assault charges against him dismissed in exchange for removing his name from a lawsuit against the city.

    Barber denied making the offer. He was interviewed at a City Council meeting Tuesday night.

    He said he has no relationship with the Guilford County District Attorney’s Office that would allow him to get Blake a deal.

    A.J. Blake was found guilty of two counts of assault on a female in March, stemming from an incident at a private party at the Greensboro Police Club on Jan. 17.

    He has been suspended without pay and has been recommended for termination from the police department.

    He is appealing the conviction and the recommendation for termination.

    At a Tuesday news conference, Blake admitted making bad decisions at the party, which involved a night of heavy drinking.
    However, he denied the assault charges.

     He said the charges and an investigation into the incident were tainted by racist sentiments within the department.

    Blake’s brother, Amili Blake, and the Rev. Cardes Brown, leader of the local NAACP, also said that Officer Blake met with Barber regarding his suspension.

    Amili Blake said Barber implied at that meeting that he could get charges against Officer Blake dismissed in exchange for removing his name from a the federal lawsuit filed against the city in January by about 40 black officers alleging racial discrimination within the police department.

    Amili Blake said Barber implied the city had wronged Officer Blake “due to the black book incident,” and said that “we have something here (the assault suspension) that is hurting you, go ahead and do this (leave the lawsuit) and they’ll cancel each other out.”

    Officer Blake said he would not comment on his meeting with Barber on the advice of his attorney.

    Other than Amili Blake’s recollection of the meeting with Barber, no one at the news conference could present proof that Barber offered a deal.

    At the City Council meeting Tuesday night, Barber said he had met with Officer Blake on several occasions, but said at no time did they discuss Blake’s EEOC claim.

    Barber said Monday night he spoke to Officer Blake’s attorney, who offered an apology from Blake.

    Barber also denied ever meeting Amili Blake.

    Among other claims Officer Blake made:

    — The department’s gang unit targeted the Latino community and officers were ordered to “charge the Latin Kings with any possible violations that we could,” and “certain tactics used to investigate the gang were abusive.”

    Officer Blake said he reported his concerns to supervisors, but the information fell on deaf ears.

    In reaction, police Chief Tim Bellamy said no reports from Officer Blake were made to internal affairs or through any department supervisors.

    He denied the department targets anyone because of race or nationality.

    — Officer Blake expressed concerns that he was suspended without pay, when other officers accused of similar crimes got paid suspension in the past. 

    Bellamy said the case in question, which involved Officer E.N. Tate, happened years ago. He said it was handled under prior department policy.

     That policy allowed for paid suspension.

    That policy was changed last year because of a recommendation from the city Human Resources Department, which requires all suspended city employees be unpaid, Bellamy said.

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  • 20Apr

    I was recently at an immigrants’ rights forum and the point was touched on again and again about how the government (and right wing) tries to frame their anti-immigrant rhetoric in terms of respecting the rule of law, opposing identity theft or cracking down on violent gangs. But the bottom line regardless of the rhetoric they use is that they are anti-immigrant and want to racially profile latinos. Our solidarity and respect goes out to this community – including King Jay and the ALKQN – for defending immigrants’ rights!

    Marching against racial profiling

    http://www.carolinapeacemaker.com/news/Article/Article.asp?NewsID=95842&sID=4

    http://www.elon.edu/pendulum/Story.aspx?id=2050

    http://www.myfox8.com/news/wghp-guilford-287g-protest-090409,0,4195424.story

    Members of he Pilgrimage for Justice and Peace held their 22nd annual journey last week, where they walked across North Carolina seeking justice for workers here and in Latin America. When the pilgrimage passed through Greensboro it focused on issues of peace and justice, immigrant access to higher education and the latest controversial 287(g) program which under the Immigration and Nationality Act, will allow local law enforcement to perform the duties of an International Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer and legally detain anyone who is in the country illegally.

    -
    Gail Phares, director of the Carolina Interfaith Task Force on Central America and coordinator of the Pilgrimage for Justice and Peace said, “We need immigration reform as soon as possible. We need to change our immigration and free trade laws rather than punishing them (the workers). All they’re trying to do is feed their families; they shouldn’t be treated like bad people.”

    -
    Although the pilgrimage focused on several issues, it was the 287(g) program that has sparked recent community discussions. “It is an unjust program that has been misrepresented to help (protect) people, when in fact it targets people based on racial profiling,” said Eric Jonas, immigrant assistance center director at FaithAction International House. He explained how the whole program depends on how local law enforcement wants to implement the law. A person’s legal status can be checked from a minor traffic violation all the way to serious offenses.
    One of the destinations led marchers to the Guilford County Sheriff’s Department. “I think the sheriff needs to know there is a large group of the community that does not support this,” said Jonas. Protestors of the 287(g) program believe it will add to the Latino community’s fear of the police as well as increase racial profiling tactics.

    -
    Jorge Cornell, leader of the Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation, has been very vocal in his stance against 287(g) as well. “When I stepped up in 2006 to call for peace between gangs, they were using Latino gangs as a way to push for the implementation of 287(g). There will be no safety for Latinos, so now we’re speaking up for those who cannot.”

    -
    According to Guilford County Sheriff B.J. Barnes, law enforcement will only check people within the jail system and currently only 45 inmates have been ordered by (ICE) to be detained. “Most are drug trafficking, sexual assault or crimes that are against and harmful to other people. ICE isn’t holding people for minor violations, but if they are committing crimes, ICE is putting detainers on them,” Barnes explained.

    -
    Barnes also said that if anyone is pulled over by the police, and they do not have a drivers license or proper documentation stating who they are, lawa enforcement can legally check in the system, which will take minutes with the ICE software versus two weeks with the current method.

    -
    “I don’t have any options here,” said Barnes, “I am obligated by law to check who is legal and who is illegal.”

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  • 05Dec

    In a victory for the peace process going on in North Carolina we have this article for you.  Police pulled over 2 cars for basically DWLK (driving while latin kings) just to ask some questions supposedly and then escalated the situation until King Jay AKA Jorge Cornell gets hit with a few charges, the most serious of which he was just found not guilty of.  In the article King Jay speaks of the constant police harassment and intimidation (which is a form of police brutality), which is something anyone in the streets can relate to, but specifically for someone that is seeking peace and unity among the people this is significant. 

    The police are deadset against the peace process and will be looking to end the process by locking King Jay up, as they did to King Tone of the Latin Kings in New York state.  King Jay dodged it this time, but although he won this battle the war is not over.  There is no trick that is too dirty for police officers when they’re on a mission, and they are not above planting evidence or lying under oath (as former posts on Malcolm-Che have pointed out).  We at Malcolm-Che give our absolute solidarity to the peace process down in North Carolina and hope that it continues despite the police’s best efforts to squash it.

    King Jay Of North Carolina Latin Kings Is Acquitted Of Assaulting Police Officer

     http://www.yesweekly.com/article-5283-politics-updates-trends-and-other-vital-information.html

    By Jordan Green

    A Guilford County district court judge acquitted Jorge Cornell of assaulting a police officer on Monday. The Almighty Latin King & Queen Nation leader pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, and Judge Pete Hunter found him guilty of resisting and obstructing arrest.

    The charges were consolidated for a suspended sentence, and Cornell was ordered to pay $121 in court costs. The three charges had been hanging over Cornell for exactly a year, and had clouded his reputation when he later made a public call for peace among Greensboro gangs, or “nations” as the Latin Kings prefer to call them. While Cornell readily admitted to cursing the police after an officer pulled up behind two carloads of Latin Kings as they stopped to pick up a young woman for a party on Dec. 1, he denied allegations that he resisted arrest and struck a police officer. Testimony over two hours on Monday afternoon pitted the credibility of testimony from police officers against that of Cornell and a fellow Latin King member.

    “I do appreciate the system,” said Cornell, who had faced 260 days in jail, following the trial. “Hopefully this judgment will put [the gang enforcement unit] back, and cause them to stop the harassment. Because they’re the ones who look like fools.

    We’ll just continue this chess game.” Members of the gang enforcement unit and other police officers, who conferred in a hallway after the verdicts were rendered, gave no comment.

    “These individuals were stopped for no other reason than the police wanted to talk to them,” said Cornell’s lawyer, Georgia Nixon, in her closing argument. “How did they try to talk to them? They put on the blue light. They approached them with guns drawn, and they started shouting commands.

    There’s longstanding law that you don’t have to talk to the police if you don’t want to. You heard testimony that Mr. Cornell escalated the situation by cursing the police. I think the Greensboro Police Department escalated the situation. They got a call. I think the only credible evidence is a future fight. There was no credible criminal activity afoot.”

    Patrol Officer Douglas Strader testified that he pulled the two carloads of Latin Kings over for an investigative stop, but acknowledged that he did not put on his blue light until the cars had already stopped at the residence of the young woman, who the group planned to take back to a party at Cornell’s place. Strader said that based on the fact that each car was filled with six occupants who known gang members, he called for backup, and detained them in the two vehicles at gunpoint.

    “Jorge came out of the front passenger seat and I had to break cover to get him back into the car,” Strader said. “All the while he was cursing and using profanity. Because I had my gun drawn, he said, ‘You can’t shoot me, you can’t shoot me.’” Cornell testified, “Once we pulled up to Monique’s house I got out of the car, and started walking towards Monique.

    They told her to go back inside, and she went back inside. They told me to get back in the car, and I got back in the car.” Cornell said that later Officer Robert Finch, who appeared on the scene to assist Strader, walked up to his window and pointed his gun at the Latin King leader.
    “Me and my friends, we go through this all the time,” Cornell said. “They’re harassing us. It gets aggravating.” Cornell admitted to cursing the police while being detained in the car, but said he complied with orders to place his hands on the dashboard.

    Cornell and his brother and fellow Latin King, Russell Kilfoil, said they were not told why they were being detained before Cornell was placed under arrest for disorderly conduct.

    Finch testified that when he arrived on the scene he found a baseball bat and what appeared to be a knife wrapped in duct tape in the back of the station wagon of which Cornell was a passenger and Kilfoil was the driver.

    Cornell later testified that he keeps the baseball equipment in the car for games in the park. Finch testified that Cornell cursed the police and told them: “You cops ain’t shit. You can’t shoot me.” The police officer said the other Latin King members were ordered to keep their hands on the ceiling because the sky was dark, the street was poorly lit and the police had trouble seeing what the occupants were doing. He acknowledged that several officers were shouting, and that Cornell kept his hands on the dashboard, which was considered in compliance with police orders. But Finch alleged that Cornell raised his voice and at one time told the other occupants, “We should get out of this car right now,” with the result that some of his friends began to lower their hands, and the police feared they might lose control of the situation.

    Finch acknowledged that Cornell complied when asked to step out of the car, but said he refused to lie down on the lawn on his stomach to be arrested. Finch said he grabbed the Latin King leader by his right hand, pulled it behind his back and “escorted Mr. Cornell to the ground” by pushing down on his shoulder, following proper department procedures. Cornell testified, in contradiction to the police, that he willingly lay on the ground.

    Finch said he was able to handcuff Cornell’s right hand, but he “flailed about” with his free left arm, and managed to roll onto his side and throw a punch with a closed fist from his left arm that struck Finch’s shoulder and grazed his neck, before the patrol officer stopped it from landing on his face and handcuffed Cornell’s left hand. The police officer said he required no medical attention from the alleged altercation.

    After the time when Cornell was on the ground, the two sides’ accounts wildly diverge. “He threw his knee into my back, put my left arm behind my back,” Cornell said. “He tried to slam my face into the ground. I stiffened my neck. I turned to my side and tried to put up my hands in defense.”

    Cornell maintains he did not strike Finch, or even attempt to hit him. “Several officers were punching me and kicking me,” he said. The defense submitted as evidence a photo of Cornell with bruises on his head that was taken after the defendant was released on bond; the state submitted a booking photo that Finch testified showed no markings or other evidence of an assault.

    [clip]

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  • 13Nov

    When the “gang” tries to make a peace treaty between all other gangs, the police step up their harrassment and intimidation tactics.  To quote eminent sociologist Mike Davis:  “There is nothing police fear more than an end to gang violence.”  After all, without the scary spector of “gangs,” how would they get all their funding?

    A group of Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation led by Jorge Cornell (left) attend Thursday's press conference.

    Pulpit Forum denounces gang leader’s arrest, allege harassment

    http://www.news-record.com/content/2008/11/06/article/pulpit_forum_denounces_gang_leaders_arrest_allege_harassment

    GREENSBORO – Members of the Pulpit Forum and the Beloved Community Center renounced the account police gave of the arrest of four members of the Almighty Latin Kings and Queens Nation on Saturday.

    According to police, Jorge Cornell, the group’s leader, and three other members kidnapped a 15-year-old girl on Friday. The men were charged with felonies in connection with the alleged kidnapping.

    But the girl was not a runaway or a kidnapping victim, said Gregory Headen, president of the Pulpit Forum, and Nelson Johnson, executive director of the Beloved Community Center at a press conference Thursday.

    In addition, none of the men charged with crimes were present when the girl had an argument with her family that led them to contact police, Headen said.

    Headen and Johnson also objected to the circumstances of the men’s arrest. Police officers in plain clothes arrested the men in Center City Park where several families were playing touch football.

    Headen and Nelson said the arrests are the most recent example of a pattern of harassment Cornell and other members of the group have endured since coming forward in June, asking for peace among gangs.

    “It is interesting that when he stepped forward and began to talk about peace, his struggles really began,” Headen said.

    Capt. John Wolfe, who commands the police department’s gang unit, said the charges were based on statements the girl’s family made to police, and they used appropriate tactics for making an arrest.

    “As many times as we’ve arrested (members of the group) we’ve never had a use of force,” Wolfe said.

    “If they were unhappy about the way they were treated, they can lodge a complaint just like everyone else.”

    The Pulpit Forum and the Beloved Community Center are holding a “Post Election Peace, Unity and Community Justice March” on Saturday.

    Participants will assemble at Saint Philip AME Zion Church at 1330 Ashe St., Greensboro at 10:30 a.m. and march to the Governmental Plaza downtown.

    Latin Kings refute kidnapping charge

    http://www.carolinapeacemaker.com/News/article/article.asp?NewsID=92498&sID=4

    Members of the Greensboro Pulpit Forum held a press conference Thursday, Nov. 6 at Beloved Community Center to present a different side to a story printed by the local press.
    According to Gregory Headen, president of the Pulpit Forum, “The core of the News and Record story was essentially false.”
    Headen said, reports state that four men, who police say are members of the Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation (ALKQN), were charged with the abduction of a 15- year-old girl. Reverend Nelson Johnson of Beloved Community Center told those assembled that he spoke with the young girl’s mother and she gave her daughter permission to be in a relationship with one of the young men with whom she was with on Oct.31.
    The alleged kidnapping occurred on Halloween (Oct. 31) and the Greensboro police proceeded to make arrests the following day at Center City Park in downtown Greensboro.
    According to police, the mother reported the 15-year-old girl missing that same day. “When a citizen calls the police for help, it is our duty and responsibility to do all that we can,” said Sergeant G.G. Young of the Greensboro Gang Squad.
    Johnson, who was present in the park during the arrests, referred to the actions of the Greensboro Gang Unit as “mean-spirited.”
    A press release provided by the Pulpit Forum states, “The manner in which these arrests were carried out resulted in a tense situation that put in danger all who were present.” Detective W.C. Tyndall of the Gang Squad stated, “Standard procedure was used to make arrests. There was no physical force, pepper spray or tasers used. There were no injuries.” Young added, “If we don’t have a reason to arrest someone, then we don’t go after them.”
    Members of the Pulpit Forum are concerned about the negative attention that has fallen on the ALKQN. “We’ve come to a different appreciation of what the word ‘gang’ means. We want to educate our community about what these groups are about,” said Headen.
    Pulpit spokesmen also said they believe that community involvement is important in helping the ALKQN not feel victimized. “We have to stand up and say this will not happen in our community,” said Headen. “The community plays a big part in making these groups feel more comfortable in coming forward.”
    Johnson said, “The members don’t feel safe in the park or walking down the street.” He added, “If this was the only time something like this happened, we probably wouldn’t be here. But this is a pattern. The ALKQN get projected as a group that is dangerous and should be feared. We’re saying what’s happened with this case is terribly wrong.”
    Despite the negative attention his group has received, ALKQN leader Jorge Cornell still stands behind his call for gang peace and unity. “We’re not going to stop. Things are hard, but nothing’s going to stop us with the peace treaty. It’s a shame that it’s the police and government that are trying to hold us back.”

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  • 10Nov

    Groups unite in rally seeking peace, justice

    King J – Inca of North Carolina Latin Kings

    http://www.news-record.com/content/2008/11/09/article/groups_unite_in_rally_seeking_peace_justice_0

    Sunday, November 9
    (updated 7:39 am)

    GREENSBORO – Groups representing a variety of causes united under the banner of unity, peace and justice for a march and rally on Saturday.

    About 250 people gathered at St. Philip AME Zion Church and marched up Elm Street to the Phill G. McDonald Plaza downtown.

    The Greensboro Pulpit Forum sponsored the march and rally, along with the Beloved Community Center, the October 22nd Coalition to Stop Police Brutality, Repression and the Criminalization of a Generation, the N.C. A&T Black History Club and Cop Watch.

    A dozen members of the Almighty Latin Kings and Queens Nation , wearing black or gold T-shirts and bandannas, participated.

    When Jorge Cornell , the leader of local Latin Kings, took the stage to speak, he asked everyone in the crowd who had lost a family member to police brutality to join him.

    “That’s the only way I can do this speech,” Cornell said.

    Cornell repeated his request to African Americans and Latinos to work together to fight racism.

    “The black and the brown, that’s who’s enduring this,” Cornell said. “We have to stand together. We can’t let the government divide us any more.”

    Cornell and three other men were charged with felonies on Nov. 1 in connection with what police have called the abduction of a 15-year-old girl. Cornell has said police began unfairly targeting him after he publicly called for peace among gangs in June.

    Nelson Johnson , director of the Beloved Community Center , has supported Cornell and spoke out strongly against the Greensboro Police Department’s gang squad at the rally Saturday.

    “The gang squad’s actions have created a dangerous situation,” Nelson said. “I’m persuaded that the gang squad’s actions are calculated to get a reaction … that will lead to the killing of King J (Cornell).”

    Later Saturday, police Sgt. R.L. Sizemore denied the gang squad was trying to provoke the Latin Kings.

    “Our job is to investigate crime, and when these guys get involved with crime, we investigate them,” he said.

    “We have laws and policies and procedures, the same as the rest of the department,” Sizemore said. “All the times we’ve made an arrest, we’ve gone through a magistrate and showed probable cause.”
    Contact Sonja Elmquist at 373-7090 or sonja.elmquist@news-record.com

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