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Public Corruption in Chester County, PA

I believe an unlikely mix of alleged drug trafficking related politicos and alleged white nationalist related politicos united to elect the infamous “Bloc of Four” in the abysmal voter turnout election of 2005. During their four year term the drug business was good again and white nationalists used Coatesville as an example on white supremacist websites like “Stormfront”. Strong community organization and support from law enforcement, in particular Chester County District Attorney Joseph W. Carroll has begun to turn our community around. The Chester County drug trafficking that I believe centers on Coatesville continues and I believe we still have public officials in place that profit from the drug sales. But the people here are amazing and continue to work against the odds to make Coatesville a good place to live.

Monday, April 19, 2021

Coatesville PA, our PD officers were needed to control PA State Troopers who did not know our community & were turning a demonstration into a riot. Our local pastors kept citizens calm. The demonstration escalated when Fox News presented a fake story as real.

There was a near riot in Coatesville. More than 50 police officers, including PA State Troopers came to Coatesville, PA. 


It didn’t help that Fox News put a frantic women on TV video who claimed the police deliberately overturned the SUV on Rasheem Butcher.




Friday, May 7, 2010

Ten minutes

That's how long it took for several of Coatesville's community leaders to get to the crash scene on Wednesday night. They stayed past midnight. Cool heads prevailed.



Our community has been tested by violence. We responded with grace


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In thousands of communities across the world people and police are bracing for the verdict in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the white former police officer charged with murder in the death of Mr. Floyd.




“Last week, thousands of Minnesota National Guard troops began deploying throughout the city, taking up armed positions along commercial corridors and in residential neighborhoods alongside police officers as part of what city and state officials describe as a deterrent to potential looting and violence in response to the Chauvin verdict.


The unprecedented level of security includes more than 3,000 National Guard troops and at least 1,100 officers from public safety agencies across the state as part of a joint effort known as Operation Safety Net. The massive show of force, officials say, is aimed at preventing a repeat of the violence that erupted across the city last summer, including the burning of a police station and an estimated $350 million in damage to buildings and businesses.


But the wartime posture has alarmed some residents and elected officials who have repeatedly complained in recent weeks that the heavily militarized approach ignores the community’s trauma over the events of last summer, when mostly peaceful protesters were tear-gassed and injured by police action. Many elected officials think that aggressive response resulted in the subsequent violence and destruction, lessons that some believe were ignored in Brooklyn Center.


Last week, Brooklyn Center Mayor Mike Elliott and the city council called on law enforcement to dial back their response, including their use of chemical irritants.


‘We have to approach policing in a different way, in a more humane way,’ Elliott said. He and others also criticized the mass arrests of mostly peaceful protesters, including 136 people on Friday night.”


MORE AT:

Washington Post

Minneapolis braces for unrest as Derek Chauvin trial enters final phase

Holly Bailey



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MY POST FROM 2016 LOOKING BACK:



Thursday, July 14, 2016

Our community has been tested by violence. We responded with grace

Three Days of Violence: Baton Rouge, St. Paul, and Dallas

At Monday's Coatesville City Council meeting a man asked if Coatesville has a contingency plan if something happens in Coatesville.

Do you remember this:

Kid, 13, Dies in Crash After Police Pursuit Over Stolen SUV 
THURSDAY MAY 6, 2010 
Police began following the truck after seeing its headlights were off 
 13-year-old Rasheem Butcher was killed after the stolen SUV he was driving rolled over, pinning him late Wednesday, police say. 
 By Vince Lattanzio


There was a near riot in Coatesville. More than 50 police officers, including PA State Troopers came to Coatesville, PA. 



Friday, May 7, 2010
That's how long it took for several of Coatesville's community leaders to get to the crash scene on Wednesday night. They stayed past midnight. Cool heads prevailed.

Thanks 


I recorded this at the Community Information Meeting on Saturday May 8, 2010 at the Second Baptist Church in Coatesville. The occasion was an open discussion between the City of Coatesville community, law enforcement officers, community leaders and church leaders concerning the accidental death of a 13 year old Coatesville youth driving a stolen vehicle and pursued by Coatesville Police the previous Wednesday.

It contains his speech on made at the dedication ceremony of Zachariah Walker Memorial in 2006 on prejudice. 
Tuesday, July 10, 2012 
Joseph Carroll-"I firmly believe that men of good will speak every language, belong to all races and worship all Gods. We need to replace fear of one another with trust. Hate with understanding. And I believe that the need that precedes that understanding is planted in our souls."


Pastor, Harris, “Well, I’ll answer, I’ll try to answer. I’ll try to answer your question. There are some of us who are out on the streets. There are some of us who are involved in the community. There are some of us who are really concerned about the welfare of our community and our children.

One of the things that I do find out is that I have to throw some things back on you. You ask to us where we are. Where were you? You send your children to us for maybe two, three hours a day. We only have the time to mentor them while we are in the confines of this district. We try to teach them morally. We try to reach them spiritually. We even teach them on a level of being brothers and sisters. 

We know we can’t reach everybody. But the ones that we can reach we do. Some of us are in the trenches trying to save our children, your children. And when they hurt we hurt. Some of you don’t know that up on Coates Street; I have many children that come to me for community service. And I teach every last one of them, whether they’re black children or white children. I tell them it takes 10 seconds to make a better choice. But I can’t be mom and dad to them 24 hours a day. That’s not my job. That’s our job. That’s your job. They’re your children too. So we can’t start blaming the church for everything that goes on in the community.


MORE AT:

Sunday, May 16, 2010

“Are you going to answer that last question? ”Saturday, May 8, 2010 Second Baptist Church, Coatesville, PA; Community Information Meeting




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This meeting was about a year ago. Some of the same people who spoke up at the Caln Township meeting in April of 2001 concerning the tactical police squad raid on the wrong house helped to organize this meeting:

The message was well received. More meetings are planned.

Friday, June 19, 2015 
On Thursday June 18, 2015 we had the 1st Community - Police Forum for the Coatesville Area at the New Life in Fellowship Church in Coatesville, PA.

I don't know of a meeting quite like this one in Chester County or anywhere. If anyone does put it in the comments below.
THE PANEL MEMBERS WERE:
Chief John Laufer  -  Coatesville
Chief Joseph Elias -  Caln Township
Chief Lew Wilson -    South Coatesville
Chief Joseph Friel -  Valley Township
The Community Manifesto was read by Rev. and former Coatesville Magistrate Judge Robert Davis.

State Senator Andrew Dinniman was in attendance 


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