Cliff Kincaid
Hillary Clinton, black lies, and white lives
By Cliff Kincaid
Another gruesome black-on-white murder is coming to the public's attention. The case involves a habitual offender by the name of Quinton Verdell Tellis, 27, who was charged with capital murder in the death of 19-year-old Jessica Chambers. She was found along a road on December 6, 2014. Her vehicle had been set on fire and she had suffered burns over 98 percent of her body. Chambers died hours later at a hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.
On the same day the arrest of this young black criminal was announced, Hillary Clinton was criticized by a Black Lives Matter (BLM) protester for using the term "super predators" to describe young black criminals. Mrs. Clinton treated the activist with great respect, since she is pandering for black votes – including from the criminal element – in the Democratic presidential campaign.
In his AIM special report "Reds Exploiting Blacks: The Roots of Black Lives Matter," investigative journalist James Simpson notes that BLM has communist roots and appears to be "exercising considerable leverage over the Democratic Party, in part by pressuring and intimidating Democratic candidates such as Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders (VT) into embracing their cause."
The cause is so-called "criminal justice reform," which means releasing drug traffickers and violent criminals from prison. Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR) is leading the opposition to the Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act (S. 2123), which would release thousands of criminals back on the streets during a period of rising crime rates.
Jesse L. Matthew Jr., however, is one black serial criminal predator who is going to prison. He is pleading guilty to the murder of two white women – 18-year-old Hannah Graham, a University of Virginia sophomore, and 20-year-old Morgan Harrington, a Virginia Tech student. He was also convicted in a 2005 sex assault case in Fairfax, Virginia. Prosecutors said Matthew abducted a woman on a path near her Fairfax apartment on September 24, 2005. In that case, "Court documents allege Matthew choked her and sexually assaulted her with his hand," a local TV station reported.
Matthew is pleading guilty to avoid the death penalty. Perhaps he will now become another example of the BLM focus on "mass incarceration."
In the dramatic and horrifying Tellis case, the local paper, the Jackson, Mississippi, Clarion-Ledger, reports the following about this alleged member of the Insane Vice Lords street gang:
Clinton was criticized for a 1996 speech that included the words "They are not just gangs of kids anymore. They are often the kinds of kids that are called 'super predators.' No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel."
A Black Lives Matter activist by the name of Ashley Williams confronted Mrs. Clinton at a fundraiser last week, saying, "I'm not a 'super-predator,' Hillary Clinton," adding, "Can you apologize to black people for mass incarceration?"
"Looking back, I shouldn't have used those words, and I wouldn't use them today," Clinton has since said in a statement. Simpson's prediction of how Clinton would pander to BLM has come to pass.
But the pandering to the criminal element doesn't end there.
When three black students at the State University of New York at Albany, also known as the University at Albany, claimed to have been assaulted "for being black" by white people on a bus on the University at Albany campus, Hillary Clinton tweeted, "There's no excuse for racism and violence on a college campus." She linked to a USA Today story about the alleged incident.
Headlined "Hundreds rally to protest attack on three black women at U. of Albany," USA Today said that hundreds had gathered for a rally to protest the "attack on a city bus of three black female students at the State University of New York in Albany." One of the students who said she was attacked spoke at a rally through tears.
USA Today said that one of the "victims" had said, "We are black women, and no amount of hate will change that."
The attackers were said to be white people who shouted racial slurs.
University President Robert Jones, who is black, released a statement accepting the allegations at face value. He declared that "three of our students were harassed and assaulted while riding on a CDTA [Capital District Transportation Authority] bus on Western Ave. in Albany. The students, who are Black women, stated that racial slurs were used by the perpetrators, whom they described as a group of 10 to 12 white males and females.... I call upon all members of the University at Albany to unite. We must show the world that we stand for inclusiveness and stand against bias, violence and hatred."
Police have since announced that the black students who claimed to be the victims were in fact the perpetrators. The black students have been charged with assault and making up the whole story. Video evidence disproved their claims of a white racist attack.
In a press release, the University at Albany announced that "The charges [against the black students] are supported by evidence gathered during a three-week investigation that included interviewing 35 passengers on the bus, reviewing videotape from 12 security camera videos on the bus, reviewing four videos taken by passengers on their mobile phones, reviewing videotape from the university's surveillance system, examining UAlbany building access records, and reviewing audio recordings."
It went on to say:
© Cliff Kincaid
March 2, 2016
Another gruesome black-on-white murder is coming to the public's attention. The case involves a habitual offender by the name of Quinton Verdell Tellis, 27, who was charged with capital murder in the death of 19-year-old Jessica Chambers. She was found along a road on December 6, 2014. Her vehicle had been set on fire and she had suffered burns over 98 percent of her body. Chambers died hours later at a hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.
On the same day the arrest of this young black criminal was announced, Hillary Clinton was criticized by a Black Lives Matter (BLM) protester for using the term "super predators" to describe young black criminals. Mrs. Clinton treated the activist with great respect, since she is pandering for black votes – including from the criminal element – in the Democratic presidential campaign.
In his AIM special report "Reds Exploiting Blacks: The Roots of Black Lives Matter," investigative journalist James Simpson notes that BLM has communist roots and appears to be "exercising considerable leverage over the Democratic Party, in part by pressuring and intimidating Democratic candidates such as Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders (VT) into embracing their cause."
The cause is so-called "criminal justice reform," which means releasing drug traffickers and violent criminals from prison. Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR) is leading the opposition to the Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act (S. 2123), which would release thousands of criminals back on the streets during a period of rising crime rates.
Jesse L. Matthew Jr., however, is one black serial criminal predator who is going to prison. He is pleading guilty to the murder of two white women – 18-year-old Hannah Graham, a University of Virginia sophomore, and 20-year-old Morgan Harrington, a Virginia Tech student. He was also convicted in a 2005 sex assault case in Fairfax, Virginia. Prosecutors said Matthew abducted a woman on a path near her Fairfax apartment on September 24, 2005. In that case, "Court documents allege Matthew choked her and sexually assaulted her with his hand," a local TV station reported.
Matthew is pleading guilty to avoid the death penalty. Perhaps he will now become another example of the BLM focus on "mass incarceration."
In the dramatic and horrifying Tellis case, the local paper, the Jackson, Mississippi, Clarion-Ledger, reports the following about this alleged member of the Insane Vice Lords street gang:
- He is linked to the stabbing death of Meing-Chen Hsiao, 34, of Taiwan.
- A search at his house turned up a quarter pound of marijuana packaged for sale.
- He had received three years to serve and five years probation for residential burglary, and subsequently absconded supervision in August 2015.
- While incarcerated, he was accused of various violations, including refusing to work and making threatening statements.
Clinton was criticized for a 1996 speech that included the words "They are not just gangs of kids anymore. They are often the kinds of kids that are called 'super predators.' No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel."
A Black Lives Matter activist by the name of Ashley Williams confronted Mrs. Clinton at a fundraiser last week, saying, "I'm not a 'super-predator,' Hillary Clinton," adding, "Can you apologize to black people for mass incarceration?"
"Looking back, I shouldn't have used those words, and I wouldn't use them today," Clinton has since said in a statement. Simpson's prediction of how Clinton would pander to BLM has come to pass.
But the pandering to the criminal element doesn't end there.
When three black students at the State University of New York at Albany, also known as the University at Albany, claimed to have been assaulted "for being black" by white people on a bus on the University at Albany campus, Hillary Clinton tweeted, "There's no excuse for racism and violence on a college campus." She linked to a USA Today story about the alleged incident.
Headlined "Hundreds rally to protest attack on three black women at U. of Albany," USA Today said that hundreds had gathered for a rally to protest the "attack on a city bus of three black female students at the State University of New York in Albany." One of the students who said she was attacked spoke at a rally through tears.
USA Today said that one of the "victims" had said, "We are black women, and no amount of hate will change that."
The attackers were said to be white people who shouted racial slurs.
University President Robert Jones, who is black, released a statement accepting the allegations at face value. He declared that "three of our students were harassed and assaulted while riding on a CDTA [Capital District Transportation Authority] bus on Western Ave. in Albany. The students, who are Black women, stated that racial slurs were used by the perpetrators, whom they described as a group of 10 to 12 white males and females.... I call upon all members of the University at Albany to unite. We must show the world that we stand for inclusiveness and stand against bias, violence and hatred."
Police have since announced that the black students who claimed to be the victims were in fact the perpetrators. The black students have been charged with assault and making up the whole story. Video evidence disproved their claims of a white racist attack.
In a press release, the University at Albany announced that "The charges [against the black students] are supported by evidence gathered during a three-week investigation that included interviewing 35 passengers on the bus, reviewing videotape from 12 security camera videos on the bus, reviewing four videos taken by passengers on their mobile phones, reviewing videotape from the university's surveillance system, examining UAlbany building access records, and reviewing audio recordings."
It went on to say:
-
The video and audio evidence and the statement of every witness demonstrate that no male struck the three women. The evidence indicates they were actually the aggressors in the physical altercation, and that they continued to assault the victim despite the efforts of several passengers to stop them.
Investigators also found no evidence to support the initial allegations that these three women were targeted in any manner due to their race, and no evidence that racial slurs were directed toward them. All of the audio recordings examined by police were enhanced by the New York State Police crime lab to assist in hearing what was said on the bus.
© Cliff Kincaid
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