Negroes Constitute a Clear and Present Danger
http://baltimoretimes-online.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=358&Itemid=31
It's all MY fault
Written by Gregory Kane
That’s what Davon Temple’s lawyer implied in the Maryland District Court on Patapsco Avenue last Friday. His client has had trouble finding work, the mouthpiece said, and that’s why he couldn’t pay the court costs and fees his probation required.
Perhaps I should back up a little before going forward. Nearly three years ago, in April of 2006, Jennifer Morelock and Jason Woycio, a white couple from Carroll County, made the unfortunate and ultimately fatal mistake of venturing into West Baltimore. They were in a car on Arunah Avenue when somebody shot both of them to death.
Later that same day, a Western District police officer, acting “on a tip,” according to police reports, (translation: somebody snitched) stopped Temple in the neighborhood. According to those same police reports, the officer asked Temple if he could search the contents of his cell phone for the numbers of suspected gang members. Police said Temple consented.
In that cell phone was a text message – in the outbox, unfortunately for Temple – that read “I killed 2 white people around my way 2day and 1 of them was a woman.”
It looked like game, set, match for the cops and prosecutors, but then those annoying things like the exclusionary rule and the Fourth Amendment got in the way. Prosecutors said that the arresting officer who searched Temple’s cell phone needed a search warrant, because the text messages weren’t in plain view.
So in June of 2006 the case was nolle prosequi and Temple walked free of first-degree murder charges. I wrote about Temple a couple of times when I was still a columnist with The Baltimore Sun, just so that people would remember that there might be a confessed double murderer walking our streets. More importantly, I wrote about Temple because I was outraged by the lack of outrage our city “leaders” showed that a confessed double murderer might be walking our streets.
And yes, I did mention that the race of the victims and the suspect is a factor. Temple is a young black man, only 17 when he was charged with murder. The reaction of city leaders, the local media and the entire nation would have been radically different if a black couple had been gunned down and a 17-year-old white kid got cut loose after being found with the very incriminating text message in his cell phone that read “I killed 2 black people around my way 2day and 1 of them was a woman.”
This city would still be neck deep in protesters, much as the town of Jena, La., found itself neck deep in protesters nearly a year and a half ago. Thousands descended on Jena to demand justice for the “Jena Six,” black youths charged in the beating of a white schoolmate.
There have been no protesters here demanding justice for Morelock and Woycio, and not nearly the media coverage there was in Jena. But in my final column for The Baltimore Examiner I mentioned that Temple would be in District Court on Feb. 20 and urged readers to show up, in memory of two people who have yet to receive justice and who, no matter what the reason was they were in West Baltimore, certainly didn’t deserve to die the way they did.
Temple’s mouthpiece thought that was dirty pool. He told Judge Charles A. Chiapparelli that his client couldn’t get a fair shake, not with members of the media inviting people into the courtroom.
Silly me, I thought it was a PUBLIC hearing.
Then the mouthpiece dropped his bombshell: those murder charges from 2006 continue to “haunt” his client. Temple can’t get a job because potential employers remember his name from newspaper accounts.
So let me get this straight: Morelock and Woycio aren’t the victims. Davon Temple is the victim?
Let’s not forget who the dead people are here. And let’s not forget the breaks that Temple has received: cut loose on murder charges because of a technicality, given three years probation on a handgun charge last year in District Court.
Temple has had a string of breaks since 2006. It’s not my fault he didn’t make the best of them.
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Perhaps it's time for some pay-back...
Remember - as a white person, you're on your own with respect to negroes. Always assume the worst and prepare for it.