Previously on SBPDL: ‘Worst of the Worst’ (All Black People) Removed From the Streets of Chattanooga; Black Community Comes to Their Defense
A few years ago, the newspaper in Chattanooga tried to quantified the cost homicide to the city, though it tried to gloss over the race responsible for the bulk of the homicides.
Hint: blacks.
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March 28, 2018 -- who are the people making 60 percent white Chattanooga a violent place? |
And five years after trying to remove the 'worst of the worst' from the city of Chattanooga, war has been declared on a black gang by the Hamilton County District Attorney office. It's the type of story easily replicated in county after county across not just the southeast, but the entire United States. [54 Chattanooga gang members indicted on racketeering charges, 5 murders linked, News Channel 9, 3-28-18]:
In a groundbreaking development, Hamilton County District Attorney Neal Pinkston announced Wednesday that he is using the state racketeering law to go after a Chattanooga gang for the first time. The indictments include charges related to five separate homicides, including the kidnapping and murder of Bianca Horton.
The law that made today's indictments possible is called the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, also known as RICO. Hamilton County Court Clerk Vince Dean tells us this is the first time he knows of that a 2012 amendment to the law is being applied in Tennessee.
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November 17, 2013... same city, same people behind the misery, vice, and mayhem |
"Before 2012 each individual would have to be charged with an individual crime, and there would have been no way to connect the individuals together to show that they were in fact organized crime," Dean said. "This law allows law enforcement to show that these criminal gangs are organized crime."
Dean hopes this will be an example for others across the state.
"Going through this experience will allow the district attorneys across the state of Tennessee to look at this model and be able to use it in their communities and make their communities safer places."
Most Americans, even those reading SBPDL on a daily basis, are completely unaware of the monopoly black people have on crime in this country.
One municipality, Chattanooga, Tennessee, has been responsible for two incredible stories a mere five years apart, where large numbers of blacks have been arrested for violent crimes and publicly acknowledged by the media as the perpetrators of vice, misery, and mayhem in the community.
Were we in control of the media and able to coordinate such operations with the police, the public perception of black people in the USA would change within one month from the apotheosis state they currently enjoy to one reflecting - befitting - their actual contributions to our nation.