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Bootlips Always Need More Taxpayer (WHITE) Money To Prevent Their Own Violence

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Sep 29, 2003, 4:38:54 PM9/29/03
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What an inferior race.

On the plus side, one nigger mentioned in this story was murdered by a
mob of nigger youths.

I saw a picture of the victim and one of the killers somewhere--I just
can't remember where.

Bunch of filthy niggers. Of course, the niggers have to beg for more
"community grant" money to help prevent their own savagery.

These niggers need to be gotten rid of once and for all.

http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/6885563.htm

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Little has changed in killing's aftermath
'We still have a tremendous amount of work to do.'
RALPH HOLLMON, MILWAUKEE URBAN LEAGUE BY KEVIN ORLAND
Associated Press Writer

MILWAUKEE — One year ago, a mob of more than a dozen people, mostly young
boys, chased a man through the streets and beat him to death on a porch
with weapons including shovel handles, rakes and tree limbs.

Charlie Young Jr.'s brutal death shocked even the bruised inner-city
neighborhood where the beating happened and sent a flood of elected
officials to the area, promising to do whatever they could to turn things
around.

A year later, officials and community workers said increased attention
from the government, a heightened police presence and a falling crime
rate are signs the city's Midtown neighborhood is improving.

On the street where Young died, the few residents willing to be
interviewed said the only changes they've seen are that many of its
children are in jail and a frequent visitor to the area is dead.

Debra Ford said the neighborhood can still be dangerous, and she doesn't
feel safe when certain groups of young people are around. Still, she
doesn't think the neighborhood was a horrible place before the beating.

"You remember those Columbine kids? It's just like that," Ford said.
"Those particular kids went crazy that particular day. That's all it was.
It could happen anywhere."

Police Capt. Glenn Frankovis agreed that Young's death was an aberration.
Frankovis, whose district includes the area where Young died, said the
incident didn't change the department's strategy toward fighting crime.

"Until we don't have any more homicides, I don't think any of us can be
satisfied," he said.

Fannie Young still mourns her 36-year-old son, Charlie.

"My child's gone and ain't coming back," she said. "There ain't nothing
anyone can do about that."

On Sept. 29, 2002, Charlie Young was visiting some friends in the
neighborhood four miles from his home when a boy hanging out with his
friends hit him with an egg, police said. Young retaliated by punching
another boy in the mouth, knocking out a tooth.

The boy and his friends, one as young as 10, chased Young. The group
eventually grew to 16 people. They picked up shovels, rakes, baseball
bats, a folding chair and tree limbs to beat him with along the way,
eventually cornering Young on a nearby porch. Young scrambled into the
house, but the boys swarmed in through the windows and pulled him out.

They left him unconscious on the porch, its ceiling and walls spattered
with blood. The whole incident happened around 11 p.m., an hour after the
city's 10 p.m. curfew for juveniles. Young died two days later.

Prosecutors charged 12 children, ages 10 to 17, and three adults in
Young's death. All but the 10-year-old and a 15-year-old were charged as
adults. The 10-year-old was found incompetent to stand trial. The 15-
year-old was acquitted.

One boy's case is still open. The rest were convicted of either reckless
homicide or aggravated battery and received sentences ranging from 18
months to 18 years.

Fannie Young won a $1 million judgment in civil court, but her attorney
acknowledged it was unlikely she would receive the money because the
boys' families are poor.

Young's death sent a vivid message that the city needed to work harder to
help the neighborhood, said Alderman Fred Gordon, whose district includes
the site of the beating.

The Midtown area has some newer housing developments, a Boys & Girls Club
and a YMCA, but the streets where the boys lived are somewhat isolated
and severely deteriorated.

The cracked sidewalks and brown lawns are still sprinkled with litter,
and many of the houses have boarded-up windows. The house where Charlie
Young was beaten looks the same as it did last year, minus the dots of
blood.

Many of the boys came from single-parent families, few attended school
regularly and some had parents who were in jail or dead.

"When you look at the biographies of how these kids grew up, you'll see a
pattern there, and that pattern is immersed in poverty," Gordon said.

Ralph Hollmon, president and chief executive officer of the Milwaukee
Urban League, a service organization active in the area, said city
leaders kept their promises to help the neighborhood.

The city gave neighborhood service organizations an extra $150,000 in
community block grant funding for 2003. The Forest County Potawatomi
tribe donated another $50,000 to an organization in Midtown. The
organizations plan to use the money for substance abuse counseling,
education and job training.

The Midtown neighborhood is to receive part of $2.5 million the city was
rewarded as part of a national program to fight gang violence and youth
crime.

Hollmon said the last year has been a good start to an unending process.

"We still have a tremendous amount of work to do," he said. "There's
still too much crime and violence, still too much poverty and too many
young people are still not going to school."

Mayor John Norquist said police increased their presence in the area even
before Young's death. And crime in the area is down.

Sexual assaults were down almost 53 percent in Midtown in the first six
months of 2003 compared with the same period last year, according to
police figures. Robbery dropped 20 percent, and aggravated assault was
down almost 21 percent in that period. Homicides stayed at the same level
— three.

Milwaukee County District Attorney E. Michael McCann said nothing
positive that has happened in Midtown since the beating makes up for
Young's death.

The future of the boys involved in the attack is not exactly promising,
he said.

McCann said incarcerating the children removes a danger from the public
and sends a message that there are consequences to committing crime.

"Whether it will lead to their personal improvement, you hope, but I
won't make any unrealistic, optimistic predictions," he said.

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Inferior niggers.

Who's yer daddy, boy?!

King of SCAA

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