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Birmingham City Schools Football Schedule 2015

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Date                         Time                            Event/Opponent                                                              Result

August 21                  7:00PM                        G.W. Carver High @ Randolph High

August 21                  7:00PM                        Huffman High @ Wenonah High

August 21                  7:00 PM                       P. D. Jackson – Olin High @ A. H. Parker High

August 27                  7:00 PM                      Wetumpka High @ Huffman High

August 28                  7:00 PM                      Paul Bryant High @ G. W. Carver High

August 28                  7:00 PM                      Ramsay High @ P. D. Jackson – Olin High

August 28                  7:00 PM                      Wenonah High @ Midfield High

August 28                  7:00 PM                      Woodlawn High @ Tarrant High

September 3              7:00 PM                     Briarwood Christian High @ P. D. Jackson – Olin High

September 3              7:00 PM                     Wenonah High @ A. H. Parker High

September 4              7:00 PM                     Dora High @ G. W. Carver High

September 4              7:00 PM                     Huffman High @ Gardendale High

September 4              7:00 PM                     Ramsay High @ Pleasant Grove High

September 4              7:00 PM                     Pinson Valley @ Woodlawn High

September 11             7:00 PM                     G. W. Carver High @ Corner High

September 11             7:00 PM                     Clay-Chalkville High @ Huffman High

September 11             7:00 PM                     P. D. Jackson – Olin High @ Pelham High

September 11             7:00 PM                     A. H. Parker High @ Pleasant Grove High

September 11             7:00 PM                     Dora High @ Ramsay High

September 11             7:00 PM                     Wenonah High @ Fairfield High

September 11             7:00 PM                     Woodlawn High @ Center Point High

September 17             7:00 PM                    Pleasant Grove High @ G. W. Carver High

September 17             7:00 PM                    Ramsay High @ Wenonah High

September 18             7:00 PM                   Minor High @ P. D. Jackson – Olin High

September 18             7:00 PM                   Fairfield High @ A. H. Parker High

September 18             7:00 PM                   Shades Valley High @ Woodlawn High

September 25             7:00 PM                   G. W. Carver High @ Woodlawn High

September 25             7:00 PM                   Pell City High @ Huffman High

September 25             7:00 PM                   A. H. Parker High @ Center Point High

September 25             7:00 PM                  Ramsay High @ Tarrant High

October 1                     7:00 PM                  A. H. Parker High @ Ramsay High

October 2                     7:00 PM                 G. W. Carver High @ Wenonah High

October 2                     7:00 PM                 Huffman High @ Pinson High

October 2                     7:00 PM                 P. D. Jackson – Olin High @ John Carroll High

October 2                     7:00 PM                 Paul Bryant High @ Woodlawn High

October 9                     7:00 PM                 Ramsay High @ G. W. Carver High

October 9                     7:00 PM                 Center Point High @ Huffman High

October 9                     7:00 PM                 P. D. Jackson – Olin High @ Hueytown High

October 9                     7:00 PM                Corner High @ A. H. Parker High

October 9                     7:00 PM                Wenonah High @ Dora High

October 9                     7:00 PM                Woodlawn High @ Gardendale High

October 15                   7:00 PM                G. W. Carver High @ A. H. Parker High

October 16                   7:00 PM                Wenonah High @ Corner High

October 16                   7:00 PM                Clay-Chalkville High @ Woodlawn High

October 16                   7:00 PM                Fairfield High @ Ramsay High

October 16                   7:00 PM               Huffman High @ Shades Valley High

October 16                   7:00 PM               Walker High @ P. D. Jackson – Olin High

October 22                  7:00 PM               Woodlawn High @ Huffman High

October 22                  7:00 PM               Homewood High @ P. D. Jackson – Olin High

October 22                  7:00 PM               Corner High @ Ramsay High

October 23                  7:00 PM               G. W. Carver High @ Fairfield High

October 23                  7:00 PM               A. H. Parker High @ Dora High

October 23                  7:00 PM               Pleasant Grove High @ Wenonah High

October 29                  7:00 PM               P. D. Jackson – Olin High @ G. W. Carver High

October 29                  7:00 PM              A. H. Parker High @ Central Tuscaloosa High

October 29                  7:00 PM              Ramsay High @ Woodlawn High

October 30                 7:00 PM              Huffman High @ Mountain Brook High

 

Alfonso Johnson,

Athletic Director Kyla Atkins,

Administrative Assistant Dr. Sherri Huff,

 

‘THE WALKAROUND’ GIVES A COMEDIC LOOK AT THE WORLD OF AUTO SHOWS, STARRING JONATHAN BRA

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Mockumentary Now Available at Amazon, Took 12 Years to Make by Bray who Served as Lead Actor, Director, Producer and Writer
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LOS ANGELES, Calif. (June 17, 2015) –  The world of auto shows gets played for laughs in the mockumentary that took 12 years to make, “The Walkaround,” starring, written and produced by Jonathan Bray (“The Young and the Restless”).
Produced by Bray’s Vineland Productions, the movie centers around Johnathon Johnson (Bray), a veteran auto show narrator who takes his job way too seriously and is determined to make it a launching pad for an acting career.  After taking Jason (Jason Jarchow), a seemingly innocent and naive newcomer, under his wing, a friendship develops that leads to obsession as Jason starts acquiring all Johnathon has ever desired, leaving Johnathon grasping for one final shot at glory at the New York International Auto Show.
“My friends and I got jobs working as narrators at auto shows and were introduced to this wild world of the auto show circuit.  I had never even been to an auto show prior to getting the job, so it was eye-opening and something I instantly felt would make for an ideal mockumentary,” Bray said.
“The story evolved over time but it was always essentially about my character taking auto shows way too seriously and thinking he can use them as a launching pad for his acting career.  At the same time he takes a newbie under his wing and watches him attain everything my character had ever sought.”
It was 2003 when Bray and his friend and the film’s co-director Matt Miller began shooting “The Walkaround” as they worked at auto shows around the country, often improvising the dialogue and developing the story as they went along. Bray and his fellow struggling actors would take five minute breaks and shoot whatever scenes they could before going back to work. It was guerrilla moviemaking at its most basic.
“Shooting was done at warp speed since we were often on break from work.  No time for multiple takes.  It took years,” he said. “I spent hundreds of hours in the editing bay with the editor, trying to shape the story from the raw footage, discussing story ideas and then ultimately shooting a new scene at the next auto show.”
With shooting completed in 2009, the film had far more footage than they would ever need, thus the next challenge was to go over the hundreds of hours of footage. But after two years of work, most of Bray’s production team had lost interest and left the project leaving just Bray and his editor Bill Berry to work on the movie.
But the effort finally came together last year when “The Walkaround” was ultimately completed and is now being released.
Bray is known for his work in a variety of television series such as TNT’s “Perception,” as well as the shows “Big Time Rush,” “House of Lies,” “Desperate Housewives,” “Days of Our Lives,” “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,” and many others.
Bray is represented by the FRP Talent Agency in Los Angeles.
“The Walkaround” is produced by Jonathan Bray for Vineland Productions, with Steve Hauck, executive producer;  David Avallone and Matt Miller, associate producers; Elizabeth Luttinger, composer; David Avallone and William Berry, editors. The cast includes Jonathan Bray, Todd Farr, Jason Jarchow, Wayne V. Johnson, Matt Miller, Kisha Palmer, Ricci Pier Reinbold, Jennifer G. Roberts, Peter Tocco, Olivia Tracey and Matthew Troyer.
Title: The Walkaround
Release date: May 1, 2015
Price: DVD $12.99
Studio: Vineland Productions
Running Time: 79 minutes
Format: 1.85:1 widescreen, DVD, NTSC, HD
Rating:   NR

 

BALTIMORE STEPHANIE RAWLINGS-BLAKE SWORN IN AS 73rd PRESIDENT OF THE U.S. CONFERENCE OF MAYORS

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Rawlings-Blake Makes History as the First African-American Female President of Organization 

San Francisco, CA – The presidential gavel was officially handed to Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake today by outgoing U.S. Conference of Mayors (USCM) President Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, appointing her head of the nonpartisan organization during the 83rd Annual Meeting of the USCM Annual Meeting in San Francisco, CA.

There have been four women mayor presidents of the organization – Elizabeth Kautz of Burnsville, MN, Beverly O’Neill of Long Beach, CA, Deedee Corradini of Salt Lake City, UT, Kathryn Whitmire of Houston TX and Helen Boosalis of Lincoln, NE.  Rawlings-Blake is the sixth woman president, but the first African American Female to take the post in the eighty-three year history of the organization.

During the four-day gathering of nearly 300 mayors, city leaders met to discuss a broad range of policy issues impacting America’s cities and their economic health including community policing, federal investment in America’s cities and public-partnerships that drive innovation and efficiency.

As Conference President, Mayor Rawlings-Blake will set the organization’s agenda, appoint committee and task force chairs and serve as the national spokesperson for the June 2015-June 2016 term.  In her inaugural remarks, Mayor Rawlings-Blake spoke to issues of community policing and its direct connection to the lack opportunity in many communities.

“At a time when women and African American women especially, still face many challenges, the honor of being a female President of this organization and the first African American female President is not lost on me.  … We talk a lot about how cities are on the upswing. Articles and books are being written about the new renaissance that's taken place reversing a trend of decades of decline of cities. And it's all great. But as you all saw two months ago there are still very large segments of our cities that feel disenfranchised, disaffected and disgusted. They don’t see the growth and positivity that occurs in other parts of town. It's an issue of opportunity as much as it is an issue of policing. It's as much an issue of jobs as it is policing. It's as much an issue of community development as it is policing. It is as much an issue of education as it is community policing. And we don’t lose sight of that.”

Rawlings-Blake underscored the strength of cities and explained she would ensure urban issues are infused into the 2016 political discussion.

“We will make sure that our priorities are part of the national debate and that commitments are made to our cities and urban America. I want this year to be the year that we make our voices heard and drive the agenda. … Nearly 90 percent of the people and 90 percent of the jobs are in our metro areas. And because of that, Washington needs to step up.”

She also reminded the mayors of power of the bipartisan organization.

“But we’re not waiting for others to help. Every day in every way, each of us are making progress in our cities. And that progress is propelling our country forward. We need to own our power.  …Part of this compact should not be what we are asking others to do for us but we can do for ourselves. We can show the progress and impact we collectively can and do make to create a new normal. That we put our money where our mouths are and so should our State Houses and so should Washington.”

To view Mayor Rawlings-Blake’s entire inaugural speech, please visit www.usmayors.org.

“She’s been elected by her peers said Tom Cochran, USCM CEO and Executive Director. “It’s one of the highest honors you can have as a mayor.  For one year, she’s America’s mayor.  It’s a very powerful position.”

Prior to becoming the President of the Conference of Mayors, Rawlings-Blake served as Vice President over the past year.  Before being elected to serve on the organization’s Executive Committee, she was a member of the Mayors’ Water Council for two years (2010-2012), and then became its co-chair in 2012.  Most recently, Rawlings-Blake served on a special working group of mayors and police chiefs put together by Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson during his Presidency to develop a series of recommendations for local and national actions intended to improve policing in America.  The group presented its final recommendations to President Obama’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing at its Winter Meeting in January in Washington, D.C.

Under her leadership, Baltimore has received numerous awards from the USCM:

• A Community Wins Award in 2015 $300,000 to Civic Works, Inc. for its work with Growing Green Tracks Team — a collaborative effort to address blight and improve the city’s image of Baltimore as is seen by millions of passengers along Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor.

• City Livability Awards in 2011 for the Vacants-to-Value program that utilizes the privvate market to maximize the repair and rehabilitation of vacant properties; and in 2012 for the ‘Power in Dirt’ program, which converts vacant lots around Baltimore into community green space given a limited city budget.

• A GRO1000 Garden and Green Space Award in 2012 for $15,000 to the Parks and People Foundation for a new initiative to create community vegetable gardens that will serve as educational sites where residents can learn about growing and cooking healthy food.

• Dollarwise Grants in 2011 for $4,000, and in 2013 for $15,000 for integrating financial education into Baltimore’s Summer Jobs program.

• An Award of Distinction in 2011 for the Lead-Safe…For Kids Sake Grant Program, which provided $50,000 funding for lead abatement in the Baltimore community.

At the concluding session on Monday, the mayors debated and voted on policy recommendations to present to the Administration.  The group passed resolutions in support of trade, a long-term, locally-focused federal transportation bill, municipal bonds, water conservation, marketplace fairness, education, workforce development and apprenticeship programs for youth, technology and innovation, energy efficiency, income equality, parental paid leave, community policing, human trafficking and more.

The proceedings of Monday’s business session, as well as the entire package of adopted resolutions and policy of the Conference can be viewed at www.usmayors.org.
The group also voted in newly elected leadership during the meeting as follows:  President: Baltimore (MD) Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake; Vice President: Oklahoma City (OK) Mayor Mick Cornett; Second Vice President: New Orleans (LA) Mayor Mitch Landrieu.

New Orleans Mitch Landrieu was elected to the office of USCM Second Vice President, which means he will ascend to the office of USCM President in June of 2017.  Landrieu, however, left the conference early because of the murder of a police officer in his city.

“Congratulations to Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake.  She is an inspiring leader and will undoubtedly serve as an impressive president of USCM,” said New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu.“America’s mayors stand at the forefront of the most pressing issues directly affecting our day-to-day lives.  USCM is a bipartisan organization uniquely positioned to tackle these challenges.  I am honored to join the leadership team as Second Vice Chair and support the hundreds of talented member mayors.  There is no better time for mayors to stand up and lead than right now.”

Newly Elected USCM Trustees are as follows: Rochester Hills (MN) Brian Barnett, Gresham (OR) Mayor Shane Bemis, Clarksville (TN) Mayor Kim McMillian, Dallas (TX) Mike Rawlings, and Tacoma (WA) Mayor Marilyn Strickland; Newly Elected USCM Advisory Board Members are as follows: Birmingham (AL) Mayor William Bell, Albquerque (NM) Mayor Richard Berry, Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser, New York City (NY) Mayor Bill deBlasio, Plano (TX) Harry La Rosiliere, Knoxville (TN) Mayor Madeline Rogero, Boston (MA), Mayor Martin J. Walsh, and Dayton (OH) Mayor Nan Whaley.

The Advisory Board functions in an advisory capacity to the Executive Committee on all matters of policy and program. Trustees of the USCM, along with the top three officers and past presidents make up the Executive Committee of the organization.

BONEY JAMES’ futuresoul SCORES 5th WEEK AT #1 ON BILLBOARD’S CONTEMPORARY JAZZ ALBUMS CHART

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futuresoul Tops 3 Current Charts
#1 On The Billboard Contemporary Jazz Album Chart For 5 Weeks,
#1 On Mediabase Smooth AC Chart For 6 Weeks With Current Single “Drumline” 
And #1 On The Billboard Smooth Jazz Songs Chart For 6 Weeks
Los Angeles, CA – Four-time GRAMMY nominee and multi-platinum selling sax-man Boney James’ NEW dynamic futuresoul  album burst out of the gate as a career high for James. Released on May 4, 2015, futuresoul debuted at  #1 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz & Current Jazz Albums Charts (where it has remained for 5 weeks.) 
This is Boney’s career highest Total Billboard Albums debut, at #41, which is a dramatic achievement for an instrumental artist. The album also debuted at #76 on the Top 200 and is bubbling under the Top 20 on Billboard’s Adult R&B songs chart with the crossover single “Either Way” featuring Stokley. 
James will celebrate this extraordinary chart success with an appearance on The Tavis Smiley Show on PBS and other national television appearances in June and August.

  

The album’s success is being powered by a two-format radio strategy. First instrumental single Drumline is currently #1* for a 6th week at Billboard SJ Songs and Mediabase Smooth AC.  Adult Urban single Either Way ft. Stokley is picking up steam this week on the Billboard Adult R&B chart moving to #22.
His 15th CD, futuresoul contains 10 original songs produced and written or co-written by James. Also featured is rising-star trumpet player Marquis Hill (2014 winner of the prestigious Thelonious Monk International Trumpet Competition) on the plaintive “Far From Home.”  Other notable collabs on the record are title-cut “futuresoul,” co-written and co-produced by neo-soul mainstay Dwele, and “Drumline” and “Watchu Gon’ Do About It?” with co-writer/co-producer Jairus Mozee (Anthony Hamilton, Robin Thicke).
futuresoul is the follow-up to The Beat (2013), nominated for the GRAMMY for Best Pop Instrumental Album, which prompted The New York Times to praise the “relaxed charisma of Mr. James’ tone…”
Review Link to futuresoul (For Review Purposes Only) http://mediakits.concordmusicgroup.com/p/futuresoul/listen-to-the-album.html 
What’s in the future for futuresoul? Boney will hit the road this summer and continue touring throughout 2016.
Boney James Tour Dates

06/24/15      New York, NY                             The Smooth Cruise

07/10/15      Seattle, WA                                 Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley  

07/11/15      Seattle, WA                                 Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley  

07/12/15      Seattle, WA                                 Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley

07/17/15      Chicago, IL                                 Chicago Theater         

07/30/15      Houston, TX                               House Of Blues

07/31/15      Grand Prairie, TX                     Verizon Theater 

08/13/15      Huber Heights, OH                   The Rose Center

08/14/15      Cincinnati, OH                          PNC Pavilion

08/15/15      Cleveland, OH                           Hard Rock Rocksino

08/19/15      Red Bank, NJ                             Count Basie Theatre

08/20/15      Philadelphia, PA                      Dell Music Center

08/21/15      Bethlehem, PA                          Sands Bethlehem Events Center

09/03/15      Cancun, Mexico                        Cancun Jazz Fest

09/05/15      Temecula, CA                            Thornton Winery

09/25/15      Jacksonville, FL                        Florida Theatre

09/26/15      Atlanta, GA                                Wolf Creek Amphitheater

10/17/15      Lewes, DE                                  Cape Henlopen Auditorium 

11/14/15      Hampton, VA                            Hampton Roads Convention Center

01/10/16      Ft Lauderdale, FL                    SJ Cruise I 

02/21/16      Ft Lauderdale, FL                    SJ Cruise II

Why You Can’t Kill the Spirit of Mother Emanuel by Ben Jealous and Jotaka Eaddy

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Ben Jealous
 
 

Jotaka Eady
 
Why You Can’t Kill the Spirit of Mother Emanuel
By Ben Jealous and Jotaka Eaddy

 

You can kill a man, but you can’t kill an idea. Similarly, you can massacre members of a congregation and assassinate the state senator who served as their pastor, but you cannot kill the mission and spirit of the church to which they belong. And the spirit of Emanuel African Methodist Church in Charleston, South Carolina is one worth preserving, and celebrating, in the wake of this Wednesday’s tragic act of domestic terrorism that occurred there.

Emanuel AME Church is the oldest African Methodist Church in the South, and it has long served as a bulwark for organized defiance to white supremacy and discrimination. Founded by freed black slaves, it was affectionately known as “Mother Emanuel,” and the institution’s history of challenge and resistance mirrors the movement toward racial progress that it fostered in the South.

In 1816, Mother Emanuel church was investigated for its role in a planned slave rebellion organized by Denmark Vesey, one of its founders. Vesey was executed. Then, for thirty years beginning in 1834, its parishioners had to worship secretly because of a ban on black churches. Mother Emanuel was burned down only to be rebuilt, and shut down by the state only to continue operating as a symbol of resilience and devotion. Throughout it all, the congregation endured, and the church hosted dignitaries from Booker T. Washington to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in the decades that followed the Civil War.

Mother Emanuel’s pastor, who was slain in the violence Wednesday, was a man that we have both had the honor of knowing. Reverend Clementa Pinckney truly represented the mission and movement of Mother Emanuel. Rev. Pinckney was a pastor at age 18, an elected official at age 23, and a South Carolina state senator at age 27. He was known for his kindness, his commitment to community, and his strong and passionate voice. He fought for police accountability and gun control in a state where both fights were uphill battles, but in the spirit of his church he did not let that defeat him.

There were eight other victims that day: Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, Cythia Hurd, Tywanza Sanders, Myra Thompson, Ethel Lance, Rev. Daniel L. Simmons, Susie Jackson, DePayne Doctor. Three men and six women total, together they represented mothers, grandmothers, pastors, community leaders, coaches and college graduates. In short, they represented a devoted and beloved community in the best black church tradition. Their moment of reflection – each praying alone and in unison at once – tragically cut short.

Wednesday’s attack, which was motivated by racial hatred, will not be the first time that the congregation of Mother Emanuel church faced an outside force that simply could not abide the thought of its continued existence.

Yet, the church still stands, and on Thursday afternoon its congregation and the community joined hands for a powerful rendition of “We Shall Overcome.” In Hebrew, Emanuel means “God is with us”, and there is no doubt that God will remain with the congregation that has seen so much pain, yet so much triumph. Mother Emanuel AME will overcome and her spirit will be stronger still.

Ben Jealous is Partner at Kapor Capital and former President and CEO of the NAACP. Jotaka Eaddy, a native South Carolinian and member of the A.M.E. church, is a political strategist and advocate and former Senior Advisor at the NAACP.
(Originally published on MSNBC.com)

Just for laughs!

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Alright well.. There’s a lot of tragic news going around. I figured maybe today we’d brighten the day with some laughs. Please enjoy this YouTube video.!

Video from YouTube shared by Jessica Lewis.

Update to Kingston Robbery/Shooting

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This is an update to a story that was previously reported:
On Thursday, June 4, 2015, at approximately 2:45 am a female was in her vehicle in the 4600 block of Kingston Avenue when a black male approached her brandishing a firearm.  When the female attempted to drive away, the suspect fired four rounds two of which struck the female.  The vehicle then crashed into a tree.  The suspect fled the scene.  The female was taken to UAB Hospital where she was treated and released.
During the investigation, Mardricus Felder black male 33 years old, was identified as a suspect.  Detectives obtained warrants against Felder and he was arrested by Birmingham Police on Friday, June 19, 2015, at a night club in the 1900 block of 3rd Avenue North.  Felder is charged with Robbery 1st Degree $50,000 bond, Attempted Murder $50,000 bond, Discharging a Firearm into an Occupied Vehicle $15,000 bond.  Felder is currently in the Jefferson County Jail.
raw

 

New Orleans Police Officer Killed, Suspect Arrested

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — After an intense 24-hour manhunt, New Orleans police Sunday arrested a man believed to have shot and killed a police officer while wearing handcuffs as he was being transported to jail.

But questions remain about where the gun he used to kill Officer Daryle Holloway, 45, came from and how he hid from a law enforcement search that included canine, SWAT and helicopter teams.

Travis Boys, 33, was still wearing his broken handcuffs when a rookie officer and his trainer spotted him trying to board a city bus Sunday morning, said Police Superintendent Michael Harrison.

“To my understanding, he got on the bus after spotting the officers. And the officers saw that and then he got off the bus and then was apprehended,” Harrison told reporters, while standing in front of a memorial to the city’s fallen police officers.

Authorities took Boys to a hospital for treatment of apparent dehydration, Harrison said. Video by WDSU-TV showed Boys strapped onto a gurney and being put into an ambulance, his head slumped over.

He will be booked with first-degree murder of a police officer, aggravated escape and illegal possession of a firearm, as well as the aggravated battery charge for which he was originally arrested on Friday night, Harrison said.

Harrison said authorities are investigating how he got the gun that was used to shoot the officer. The officer’s gun was in his holster and not used, Harrison said.

Authorities recovered two weapons in the police vehicle — a .38-caliber revolver that had been used in the initial aggravated battery for which Boys had been arrested and a .40-caliber Smith and Wesson that was used to shoot the officer, Harrison said.

Boys was frisked before being transported, so authorities are trying to figure out where the gun came from, Harrison said.

“We realize that’s an obvious issue. So there are safety concerns, procedural concerns between training and internal investigations we’re going to find out how that happened to ensure that that absolutely never happens again,” Harrison said.

The city was the scene of an intense manhunt Saturday, as rifle-toting police in bullet-proof vests, some with trained canines, searched for Boys, checking backyards and crawl spaces under houses.

Helicopters assisting in the search circled overhead.

At one point, Harrison said, officers Saturday located Boys in a stolen truck and gave chase. When the vehicle crashed into a house in the St. Roch neighborhood, they pursued him on foot but an intense search including police dogs failed to find him, Harrison said.

“We don’t know how he was able to elude us, but we were relentless,” he said, describing Boys as someone who “has become proficient at evading law enforcement.”

Other people are believed to have been with Boys in the vehicle when it crashed, Harrison said. It’s not clear whether he got help breaking his handcuffs.

Holloway, 45, had been a member of the New Orleans Police Department since 1992.

After the shooting Saturday his vehicle careened into an electric pole. Emergency medical personnel called to the scene transported him to the hospital where he later died.

Mayor Mitch Landrieu, who spoke to reporters Sunday along with Harrison, described the officer’s killing as a “despicable and cowardly act.”

“He was more than a great cop. He was a good man. He was a good father. Our hearts break for him and his children on Father’s Day,” he said.

Harrison said Holloway joined the department a year after he himself did so.

“Until yesterday, he was a guy who was full of life. He told jokes … You couldn’t be around him for more than a minute or two and he would become your friend,” said Harrison.

Harrison said Saturday that he met with two of Holloway’s three children and Holloway’s former wife at the hospital after he died. “As a new chief, it was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my life,” said Harrison, who became chief last year.

The last New Orleans Police Department officer killed in the line of duty was Officer Rodney Thomas on July 7, 2013, according to police spokesman Tyler Gamble.

More recently, a Housing Authority police officer, James Bennett Jr., 45, was found shot to death in his patrol car.

First Service After Shootings At Emanuel Church: ‘Through All Of This, God Is Still Our Refuge’ [PHOTOS]

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emanuelameservice-447

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church opened its tall, wooden doors to the world Sunday, embracing strangers who walked in from the street or tuned in from home for the first worship service since a white gunman was accused of killing nine black church members.

It was that same hospitality that allowed the suspected gunman to be welcomed into a Bible study for about an hour before he allegedly stood up, made racially offensive remarks and opened fire in the church known as “Mother Emanuel” because it is one of the oldest black congregations in the South.

“I was so pleased when authorities told us you can go back into ‘Mother Emanuel’ to worship,” said the Rev. Norvel Goff, a presiding elder of the 7th District AME Church in South Carolina, before adding a note of defiance to a service sprinkled with themes of love, recovery and healing.

People pay respects outside Emanuel A.M.E. Church during a worship service, Sunday, June 21, 2015, in Charleston, S.C., four days after a mass shooting at the church claimed the lives of its pastor and eight others. (Paul Zoeller/The Post And Courier via AP)

Charleston Shooting
“Some folks might need some more time in order to walk in. But for those of us who are here this morning … because the doors of Mother Emanuel are open on this Sunday, it sends a message to every demon in hell and on earth.”

 

The church’s air conditioning did little to fight the heat of extra bodies in the sanctuary. There was fervent singing and shouting, so much so that many congregants waved small fans in front of their faces.

Despite the heaviness in the air, many stood — some holding small children — to shout their praises or raise their hands toward the church’s vaulted ceiling. For added security, police officers stood watch over worshippers.

Some congregation members stood to applaud when Goff thanked law enforcement for their response to the shooting.

Goff was appointed to lead the historic Charleston church after Emanuel’s senior pastor, the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, was fatally shot during the massacre. A black sheet was draped over Pinckney’s usual chair, which sat empty. At least one parishioner kneeled down in front of it and prayed.

Pinckney was also a state senator and married father of two children. Goff acknowledged Father’s Day and said: “The only way evil can triumph is for good folks to sit down and do nothing.”

As Emanuel’s congregation belted out a gospel hymn, church bells rang throughout the “Holy City” —nicknamed because of the numerous churches here. Later Sunday, people were expected to gather on the Arthur Ravenel Bridge to join hands in solidarity.

The bridge is named after a former state lawmaker and vocal Confederate flag supporter. The slayings have renewed calls for the flag to be removed from the South Carolina Statehouse grounds, in part because photographs of Roof in a purported manifesto showed him holding Confederate flags. The 2,500-word manifesto also contained hate-filled writings.

Charleston Shooting

Less than 2 miles from the church, someone vandalized a Confederate monument, spray-painting “Black Lives Matter” on the statue. City workers used a tarp to cover up the graffiti, police said.

A statue memorializing the Confederacy is spray-painted with the message “Black Lives Matter” several days after a shooting at a historic black church Sunday, June 21, 2015, in Charleston, S.C. Police spokesman Charles Francis said city workers used a tarp to cover up the graffiti marking the stone pedestal beneath the statue. He said he didn’t know when the graffiti was spray-painted there, but said it would be cleaned off. (AP Photo/WCSC-TV, Philip Weiss)

Photos on local news websites from before the tarp was put up showed the graffiti in bright red paint, along with the message “This is the problem. # RACIST.”

Around the country, pastors asked people to pray for Charleston, and the tragedy resonated far beyond urban areas. Congregants at a small church in rural north-central Pennsylvania signed a condolence card to send to Emanuel. The Rev. Nancy Light Hardy of St. James United Church of Christ said she debated buying the card, which seemed “pitiful and lame” when set against the killings.

“But at least it lets the Charleston church know that Christians across the country are thinking about them,” she said.

The welcoming spirit Roof exploited before the shooting was still alive.

Gail Lincoln said she typically attends another AME church nearby, but felt compelled to visit Emanuel this week.

“Through all of this, God is still our refuge,” Lincoln said. “I’m still heartbroken, but it’s going to get better. I know it’s going to take time, day by day.”

As a further sign of resilience, the church’s Wednesday night Bible study is expected to continue as normal next week, said Emanuel member Harold Washington, 75.

“We didn’t change a thing,” he said.

Associated Press contributors include David Goldman, Emily Masters, Allen Breed, Josh Replogle and John Mone.

How Many Other Dylann Roofs Are Out There?

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Dylann Storm Roof

Dylann Roof callously told police that he murdered nine innocent black people in cold blood inside a Charleston, South Carolina church because he wanted to start a race war.

Roof is racist, sociopathic, and unapologetic –a chilling combination. He is a self-appointed soldier in his own twisted campaign against African-Americans.

While a racist website connected to Roof surfaced over the weekend, white supremacy is an uncomfortable topic that many people don’t want to discuss in polite company. But here’s a painful truth: There are more armed white supremacists roaming the country who think like Roof than we care to admit.

Inside the Emanuel AME Church last week, Roof, 21, told one victim who pleaded for his life: “No, you’ve raped our women, and you are taking over the country … I have to do what I have to do.”

Roof’s roommate told ABC News that Roof was “big into segregation.” And the Berkeley County, South Carolina, government tweeted a picture of him in a jacket with flags from apartheid-era South Africa.

Roof, 21, is demented and has been obsessed with hating black people for years. And he’s not alone.

While some may dismiss Roof’s actions as isolated because he’s a “troubled” young man, the murders beg this question: How many more white supremacists are waiting to follow in Roof’s footsteps? How many gun-wielding “patriots” are privately cheering for Roof? And what can America do to suppress these domestic terrorists?

I’m not an alarmist, but I do pay close attention to research and facts, and here are some truths that I find troubling: The Southern Poverty Law Center, which researches U.S. hate groups, said there are 19 hate groups in South Carolina – 874 nationwide — and says hate groups have increased significantly across the country since President Barack Obama was elected to the White House in 2008.

“While mainstream news outlets rush to explain away the behavior of Dylann Roof, we must not refrain from talking about the obvious racial motivations from a white man who articulated those intentions as he reloaded,” Advancement Project Co-Director Judith Browne Dianis, said in a statement. “We must call racism and White supremacy what it is, and continue the work toward dismantling all forms of discrimination in our society.”

Friends said Roof had complained that “blacks were taking over the world” and Joey Meek, a former friend who reconnected with Roof a few weeks ago, told The Wall Street Journal that while they got drunk on vodka, Roof said that “someone needed to do something about it for the white race.”

While Roof is the current poster child for white supremacy, I was gratified to see a multi-racial gathering of Charleston residents – blacks, whites and Hispanics — coming together inside Emanuel AME Church on Sunday to mourn the deaths of those who were killed and comfort those who were directly impacted.

And even in the midst of unspeakable tragedy, African-Americans are a forgiving people. In court on Friday, during Roof’s arraignment, the families of Roof’s victims continued to embrace their faith.

“I will never be able to hold her again, but I forgive you,” a daughter of victim Ethel Lance said during the arraignment hearing “And have mercy on your soul. You hurt me. You hurt a lot of people but God forgives you, and I forgive you.”

Meanwhile, last week’s church shooting in Charleston has also renewed calls for officials to remove the Confederate battle flag in front of the state Capitol. Today, the flag also symbolizes racial violence. Roof was driving a car with the Confederate flag symbol on the license plate.

“At some point, we as a country will have to reckon with the fact that this type of mass violence does not happen in other advanced countries,” President Obama said last week. “It doesn’t happen in other places with this kind of frequency.  And it is in our power to do something about it.”

Here’s one possible deterrent:  South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley – who finally showed some backbone – said she will seek the death penalty against Roof.

What do you think?