920 N Water Street, Milwaukee – 5 P.M.
April 30, 2014 Dontre Hamilton was murdered by a cop in Red Arrow Park and every year since then the family has resiliently shown up with community by their side to remember and celebrate Dontre and this year will be no different.
Join the Hamilton family, friends, and The Peoples Revolution on the 7th anniversary of his death. We are asking everyone to wear masks and be prepared to socially distance as much as possible while celebrating with us.
The family will provide updates to things they’ve been working on.
spotlight detail - Politique Internationale
politiqueinternationale.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from politiqueinternationale.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Quyết tâm thực hiện thành công sự nghiệp công nghiệp hóa - hiện đại hóa, xây dựng Hà Tĩnh văn minh, giàu mạnh
baohatinh.vn - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from baohatinh.vn Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Milwaukee s National Lawyers Guild hosts Kimberley Motley s presentation on Wauwatosa police
MILWAUKEE (CBSS58) The Milwaukee National Lawyers Guild hosted attorney Kimberley Motley in a virtual presentation Thursday, April 1. Motley shared her research, experiences, and court filings against the Wauwatosa Police Department. The police I believe overstepped their boundaries in dealing with the protestors and I believe they violated a lot of constitution rights, Kimberley Motley said.
Motley says the Wauwatosa Police Department should be investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice. She says protestors were targeted. She mentioned an unlawful curfew that she claims was put in place last October. This comes after the Milwaukee County DA did not charge former Wauwatosa police officer Joseph Mensah in the shooting death of Alvin Cole.
Before Breonna Taylor was killed one year ago in Louisville, she had been asleep in her home an apartment that didn’t have any of the contraband police had come looking for.
Her death has led to marches and protests against police brutality and racism across the country. In Milwaukee on Saturday, dozens gathered in a small art studio on the city’s near south side for a celebration of Taylor’s life and to push harder for a statewide ban on no-knock warrants, which began the chain of events that ended in six bullets hitting Taylor.
“Being a Black person working in a system that isn’t designed to operate for me – how do I maneuver through that?” Tiffany Henry, the president of the Milwaukee Urban League Young Professionals, asked the crowd. “How do I teach people that this policy has to reflect me? Because it could be me. I sleep at night.”