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HAWAII POLICE ◄—— MURDER — SOUTH AFRICA AMBASSADOR WANTS ANSWERS !!

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Ras Tafarian

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May 13, 2021, 6:05:12 PM5/13/21
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HAWAII POLICE ◄—— MURDER — SOUTH AFRICA AMBASSADOR WANTS ANSWERS !

————————————————————————————————————

PREFACE:

THANK YOU SOUTH AFRICA
FOR GETTING INVOLVED IN THIS CASE.

A YOUNG LADY, WAHINE, TERI MAXWELL,
FROM NEW ZEALAND,
(Te Aotearoa) WAS KILLED ON THE ISLAND
OF MOLOKA`I, HAWAI`I. A SINISTER SAMOAN
WOMAN WHO IS DIRECTLY CONNECTED WITH
THE LEAD POLICE ON MOLOKA`I, AND DIRECTLY
INVOLVED IN THE KILLING OF THE MAAORI
WAHINE ---- WHERE THE MOTHER OF THE DECEASED
IS HIGHLY UPSET OF THE THEFT OF POSSESSIONS,
THE MURDER OF HER DAUGHTER.
I CALLED THE MOTHER, ON THE PHONE, IN NEW ZEALAND,
AND SHE HAS ONLY DISTRUST AND DEEP HATRED FOR
THE SAMOAN WOMAN !
THIS SAME PIECE OF SHIT DEMON SAMOAN WOMAN
HAS BEEN GIVEN A POSITION IN THE HAWAIIAN
HOMELANDS HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS OFFICE.
SHE WAS AN EMPLOYEE AT ACE HARDWARE -- SHE
IS A DEMON !

SAMOANS ARE NOT EVIL PEOPLE,
BUT THIS CUNT IS !

EXACTLY LIKE THE BELOW STORY,
THE POSSESSIONS OF THE MAAORI WAHINE
WAS ALSO STOLEN AND NOT RETURNED.

——> THE POLICE SMEAR PLOT GETS 'THICKER',
LIKE OLD ROTTEN KAVA LIQUID FROM SAMOA.

(story below)

————————————————————————————————————

SOUTH AFRICAN AMBASSADOR WANTS PUBLIC DISCLOSURE
IN SHOOTING OF LINDANI MYENI

https://www.staradvertiser.com/2021/05/13/hawaii-news/ambassador-wants-public-disclosure-in-shooting-of-lindani-myeni/?HSA=ed77251d03066a66a2024f63f3edc1c16663c5ca


Ambassador wants public disclosure in shooting of Lindani Myeni

South Africa’s ambassador to the United States requested the return of her
deceased citizen’s wedding ring, clothes and mobile phone and called on
Honolulu, U.S. officials and departments across the country to be more
transparent about police shootings and how race relations affect law
enforcement practices.

In an interview with the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, Ambassador Nomaindiya
Cathleen Mfeketo said South Africans are outraged by the death of
29-year-old Lindani Myeni, who was shot and killed during a fight with three
Honolulu Police officers responding to a 911 call of an unarmed man
wandering into and then out of a home on Coelho Way in Nuuanu.

“There is no information that will bring closure for Lindsay, his wife, and
the family. It’s even worse that the personal belongings of Mr. Myeni are
still in the custody of Honolulu police, including his clothes, marital ring
and mobile phone,” Mfeketo said. “And just the information. The family needs
to communicate with relatives about what happened … so they may have that
feeling … of now you know what happened. The marital ring, the cellphone,
those are sensitive things to Lindsay and his family. So how do they bring
closure?”

Lindani Myeni’s death and the lack of information released by authorities
investigating the shooting sparked protests in front of every U.S. mission
in South Africa, she said.

The incident raised the specter of South Africa’s apartheid past, when white
police officers played off legislated segregation and racist policies to
brutalize and kill Black suspects with few, if any, public consequences.

“I’m sure that anger is also linked to what is happening in this country
where there are lots of Black people being shot and you don’t get the
information,” said Mfeketo, speaking from South Africa’s embassy in
Washington, D.C. “They (Honolulu police) are not talking to anybody. They
are busy with their own investigation. But we sent a note saying please,
explain to us.”

No additional information in the case is being released at this time,
according to Honolulu police.

“The Honolulu Police Department is continuing this investigation and will be
turning over the findings to the Office of the Prosecuting Attorney and the
Hawaii Law Enforcement Officer Independent Review Board,” said Michelle Yu,
an HPD spokeswoman.

The U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Department of State’s mission to
South Africa did not answer questions or respond to requests for comment.
Mayor Rick Blangiardi declined to comment.

Mfeketo’s office and South Africa’s consulate in Los Angeles also have not
received information from the city prosecuting attorney or the office of the
city Corporation Counsel, which is defending the city in a wrongful death
lawsuit brought by Lindsay Myeni.

During an April 29 press conference, in response to questions about whether
he would ask HPD not to release any information in the case before the
internal investigations were complete, city Prosecuting Attorney Steven S.
Alm said it’s not his responsibility to tell other agencies or departments
what they can or cannot make public.
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“Each agency has their own criteria, interest and I’ve seen it in other
places where the mayor may want to release it,” he said during the news
conference. “That’s not my kuleana.”

Alm said as prosecutors, his office would not release information before its
own investigation concludes.

Since that news conference, Alm reversed course and asked the city
Corporation Counsel’s office to file a motion to stop the disclosure of any
information during the proceedings of the wrongful death suit brought
against the three officers and the city until the city prosecutor’s
investigations are complete. First Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Tom Brady
signed a declaration in support that will be attached to the Corporation
Counsel’s motion.

“It’s going to be hard to argue with my more cynical colleagues who say the
fix is in,” Jim Bickerton, who represents the Myeni family, told the
Star-Advertiser. “It is clearly at odds with what he told me and the press
two weeks ago. If the goal was to restore public trust in the process, the
City just made the climb a lot steeper.”

The motion seeks to stop the depositions of the woman who called 911,
Shiying “Sabine” Wang; her husband, Da Ju “Dexter” Wang; and the registered
owner of the home, James H. Hall and more than 20 other categories of
disclosure, including police dispatch transcripts, footage from cameras on
and near the home, and the text messages of neighbors.

It is important that the prosecuting attorney’s criminal investigation be
allowed to proceed before discovery takes place in the civil lawsuit, Alm
told the Star-Advertiser.

“This is so that this office’s investigation can be as productive and
objective as possible. To be clear, we do not intend to forestall discovery
in the civil matter for a prolonged period of time. We are committed to
conducting an independent and thorough, yet expedited, investigation into
this matter,” Alm said. “And in keeping with the independent nature of this
investigation, the department has not transmitted any investigative material
to the Corporation Counsel’s office.”

When asked whether it represented a conflict if city attorneys, defending
the civil case, filed a motion to prevent disclosures until city prosecutors
are done investigating Honolulu police, Deputy Corporation Counsel Krishna
F. Jayaram said it did not.

“There is no conflict of interest. The motion was submitted to protect the
integrity of the investigations that are currently ongoing. We are simply
requesting time to allow the investigations to conclude before discovery and
depositions in the civil matter commence,” Jayaram said. “The investigations
are independent of our department.”

Ambassador Mfeketo said the U.S. should take a chapter from South Africa’s
history and establish systems and government structures that make
investigations into police shootings public from the start.

“In 1994 when we had our first president of a democratic country things were
put in the open. In South Africa whether you are white or Black, you do
something wrong, you have to tell everybody what you did. And everyone gets
to know what happened,” she said. “We don’t have this police reform debate,
not because there are not naughty police men and women, but once you put
everything out in the open, then they are dealt with by the structures the
government has in place. You don’t need to be a killer when you are the
police. There are certain things you can do to stop people you think are
doing wrong, rather than killing them.”


--------------------------------------------------------------------

When Teri Maxwell was asked by her Hawaiian classmates what her dream
was, she replied: "To live my life through the Maori language and to
share the gift of kapa haka to the world".

Following her sudden death last week in an accident, her Hawaiian
teacher Manuwai Peters said the young Rotorua woman did just that.

"We believe that in her short 17 years, she accomplished this goal."

Miss Maxwell, who was known to friends as Waimarie, was killed in a car
accident in Hawaii on Wednesday.

She was the back seat passenger in a car that was reportedly speeding
before striking a power pole on the island of Molokai.

News of the teenager's death has shocked her former classmates and
teachers at Te Kura Kaupapa O Te Koutu in Rotorua where she gained most
of her education.

Principal Uenuku Fairhall described Miss Maxwell as a friendly, positive
and well-liked young woman.

"She was almost always in a good mood. Generally she was a very positive
kid. Very friendly and happy-go-lucky."

Art teacher Mereana Ngatai said Miss Maxwell had a quirky sense of
humour and loved clothes and fashion.

"She showed real promise in art with interesting concepts and designs."

Mr Fairhall said Miss Maxwell also enjoyed Spanish and had a passion for
kapa haka. "She wanted to be in the front role."

In January, Miss Maxwell took that love of kapa haka to Hawaii where she
attended Molokai High School on a three-month indigenous language exchange.

After returning home briefly in March, Miss Maxwell went back to Hawaii
with her mother looking to further her education.
Mr Peters said Miss Maxwell's classmates were shocked by her death.

"She was well loved by her Hawaiian classmates, who accepted her as one
of their own ... all students are grieving at this great loss of a dear
classmate."

During her time in Hawaii, Miss Maxwell had taught her classmates the
haka and offered a song in Maori as a gift during a special ceremony.

"She excelled in the teaching of kapa haka to her Hawaiian peers and
inspired them with several songs."

As a tribute, students sung those songs and performed the haka at a
special service for Miss Maxwell on Friday.

It is understood Miss Maxwell's mother remains in Hawaii and the rest of
her family flew to be with her late last week.

It is not known when they will return to New Zealand with her body, but
staff at Te Kura Kaupapa O Te Koutu hope the school will have a chance
to say their own goodbye.

Ras Tafarian

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May 13, 2021, 6:06:16 PM5/13/21
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