Sunday, November 10, 2024

My REACTION to TRUMP WIN: SAME AS the “BLOC of FOUR” WIN. They WON CONTROL of the CITY of COATESVILLE PA. The FINAL RESULT of THEIR WIN was DESPAIR & SORROW. After our PD FORCE was CUT IN ½ we had YRS. OF STREET MURDERS-13 UNSOLVED, ENDING in ARSON, SLEEPING DOWNSTAIRS AWAY FROM WINDOWS & BULLETS W/FIRE EXTINGUISHER: MY REACTION, was HOW CAN WE PUT THEM ALL IN PRISON?

Monday, February 17, 2014




SHRINKING TRUMP

Top Psychotherapists hold EMERGENCY SESSION after Election

Follow @ReallyAmerican for more Shrinking Trump.




SEARCH Coatesville Dems Blog for more concerning “BLOC OF FOUR.” -  JOE CARROLL - RICHARD LEGREE - HARRY WALKER - RENDELL - TOM HOGAN -REVITALIZATION:






I asked about Richard Legree at the Chester County Courthouse speaking to only 3 people there. 

My home is 25 minutes from the Chester County Courthouse. I came in the back door. A man was knocking on the front door. He said “Don’t go looking into stuff about Richie.”


I had information that I couldn’t take to any person at the Chester County Courthouse or the Chester County District Attorney. It would get back to Coatesville before I got home. The same is true for Coatesville residents who witnessed a murder. DA Joe Carroll moved to a house in Coatesville to collect information. 


I was directed to Tom Hogan then a USA at the United States District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania. I showed Tom my 3 page 11 point document. He read it and fully understood it within 3 minutes. I knew he was my man to bring information to.


I also had the number of the FAX machine inside of Governor Rendell's office. 

AND the cell number of a DOJ intelligence officer in Chester County PA linked to AG Eric Holder



I got information from criminal records search, Deeds & property searches, old newspaper articles on microfilm at libraries, driving & watching and people I trusted in Coatesville PA, BOTH DEMOCRATIC PARTY & REPUBLICAN PARTY OFFICIALS. 



I relied on INGRID W. JONES. She has an encyclopedic memory of people & their complicated genealogy in Chester County PA. 


I once informed Chester County DA Joe Carroll that a person arraigned by a magistrate judge in Chester County who was stopped by PA State police with a sawed off shotgun in his trunk was related to the magistrate judge using information from Ingrid. The judge made up a story that the crime of possessing a sawed off shotgun was Federal & he had no jurisdiction. He was going to let him off. 


Trained in cursive handwriting, diction and public speaking at St. Katharine Drexel Academy Ingrid was the voice you heard when the telephone company began using area codes. 


She researched deeply into Black History in South East Pennsylvania.


Ingrid is A MEMBER OF THE SUTTON FAMILY. Being the first girl in the Sutton family in many years Percy Sutton carried baby Ingrid on his shoulders. 


Ingrid sat in front of Bill & Hillary Clinton at Percy Suttons funeral service at the Riverside Church. 


Remembering Percy Sutton - New York Post:





"The son of a slave, Percy Sutton became a fixture on 125th Street in Harlem after moving to New York City following his service with the famed Tuskegee Airmen in World War II. His Harlem law office, founded in 1953, represented Malcolm X and the slain activist's family for decades.

The consummate politician, Sutton served in the New York State Assembly before taking over as Manhattan borough president in 1966, becoming the highest-ranking black elected official in the state...

Sutton also mounted unsuccessful campaigns for the U.S. Senate and mayor of New York, and served as political mentor for the Rev. Jesse Jackson's two presidential races.

Jackson recalled Sutton talking about electing a black president as early as 1972. Sutton was influential in getting his 1984 campaign going, he said.

"He never stopped building bridges and laying the groundwork," Jackson said Sunday. "We are very glad to be the beneficiaries of his work...

Sutton's father, Samuel, was born into slavery just before the Civil War. The elder Sutton became principal at a segregated San Antonio high school, and he made education a family priority: All 12 of his surviving children attended college.

When he was 13, Percy Sutton endured a traumatic experience that drove him inexorably into the fight for racial equality. A police officer approached Sutton as the teen handed out NAACP pamphlets. "N-----, what are you doing out of your neighborhood?" he asked before beating the youth.

When World War II arrived, Sutton's enlistment attempts were rebuffed by Southern white recruiters. The young man went to New York, where he was accepted and joined the Tuskegee Airmen.

After the war, Sutton earned a law degree in New York while working as a post office clerk and a subway conductor. He served again as an Air Force intelligence officer during the Korean War before returning to Harlem in 1953 and establishing his law office with brother Oliver and a third partner, George Covington...

Sutton's devotion to Harlem and its people was rarely more evident than when he spent $250,000 to purchase the shuttered Apollo Theater in 1981. The Apollo turned 70 in 2004, a milestone that was unthinkable until Sutton stepped in to save the landmark.

Sutton "retired" in 1991, but his work as an adviser, mentor and confidante to politicians and businessmen never abated. He was among a group of American businessmen selected during the Clinton administration to attend meetings with the Group of Seven (G-7) Nations in 1995-96.

"He was a great man,' said Charles Warfield Jr., the president and chief operating officer of ICBC Broadcast Holdings Inc., when reached early Sunday. He declined to comment further out of respect for the wishes of Sutton's family.

The Rev. Al Sharpton said he last visited Sutton in a nursing home Wednesday. He recalled meeting Sutton for the first time at age 12; Four years later, Sutton paid for his trip to a national black political convention because the teenage Sharpton couldn't afford to go.

"He personified the black experience of the 20th century," Sharpton said. "He started the century where blacks were victims. We ended as victors." 

MORE AT:

Percy Sutton Obituary



THE PERSON I MOST RELIED ON FOR STREET INFORMATION IN COATESVILLE WAS ELWOOD DIXON. 


I THINK WHAT WOULD ELWOOD DO? ALL THE TIME.


I MISS HIM EVERY DAY.


Elwood Dixon honored at Coatesville Community Day 2017







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