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Investigation in NHPD protest

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) - An investigation has been launched to find out whether any laws were broken during the rally surrounding the New Haven Police Department layoffs.

The strong showing of police officers protesting sixteen layoffs within the department continues to capture the attention of many in the city. For New Haven native William Moore, he prays smaller numbers don't cause bigger problems in his problematic section of his West River neighborhood.

Moore says he gets worried when he is walking around town.

"It needs to be a little better," says Moore.

The police war on crime isn't going anywhere, but neither is the controversy that is surrounding.

Union heads haven't gone on camera since the day of the protest. A source within the department told News 8 that on the day of the protest, union leadership went into the office of John DeStefano, closed the door, and the mayor asked them who's in charge of all the people out on the street. The source says that surprised leadership members, because they figured the mayor should know the answer to that question which was, Police Chief Frank Limon. The source says the force is screaming for leadership and begging for some direction.

As far as the protest goes, as soon as police officers were asked to get off of Church Street, they did. Everyone moved to the sidewalk. In addition, the source says the eight to ten officers that were on duty at the time of the protest had their radios on, they could have responded to any call when asked.

Investigation in NHPD protest: wtnh.com

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Decades before Rosa Parks took a determined stance against racism and Black Americans across the nation participated in sit-ins and rallies demanding equality, Lena Baker lived in a world engulfed by hatred, despair and cruelty.
Her story comes to life Jan. 4, 2011, in the feature-length docudrama, The Lena Baker Story, starring actress Tichina Arnold in a breakout dramatic role.

As an uneducated Black woman living in rural Georgia, Baker stood out among her straight-laced peers and families. She works as a prostitute in hopes of breaking away from the grips of poverty, but was sentenced to 10 months hard labor for “laying” with White men.

Years later, now a sober, church-going mother of three young children, she ekes out a living with her mother doing laundry and housekeeping. But just as she seems to have moved beyond the sorrows of her past, Baker is hired to care for Elliot Arthur (Emmy Award-winner Peter Coyote, who has appeared in over 120 films and TV series), who is recovering from a broken leg.

A tyrannical, pistol-packing White man, Arthur is known for his angry disposition and heavy drinking. Over time, the two develop a highly-charged and drunken relationship filled with cruelty and a troubling need for one another. Arthur’s physical and mental abuse continues to escalate and he virtually enslaves her. But one sweltering night, Baker finally attempts to break free … a struggle ensues and a gun goes off, accidentally killing Arthur.

Despite the sympathies of the local sheriff (Michael Rooker, Mallrats, Cliffhanger, Days of Thunder) – who is helpless against the mores of the time – Baker’s attorney is dismissive, her defense inadequate and a jury of 12 Caucasian men find her guilty in a trial and deliberation that, together, last less than four hours. Sentenced to death by electrocution, Baker faces her fate with dignity and strength over the ensuing months, holding onto her belief that the Lord would judge her more fairly.

The only woman to be sentenced to death by electric chair in the state of Georgia, Baker was just 44 years old when she died in 1945. Said Baker before the switch was pulled – a barbaric death requiring several shocks and lasting six minutes –, “What I done, I done in self-defense, or I would have been killed myself. Where I was, I could not overcome it. God has forgiven me. I have nothing against anyone. I picked cotton for Mr. Pritchett and he has been good to me. I am ready to go. I am one in the number. I am ready to meet my God. I have a very strong conscience.”
In 1998, Baker’s unmarked, weed-ridden grave was rediscovered in the cemetery of

Mt. Vernon Baptist Church – where she once worshipped – and the congregation raised $250 to purchase a modest stone, now marking her final resting place. Due to a long clemency campaign led by her family, including in more recent years her grand-nephew Roosevelt Curry, Georgia’s Pardon and Parole Board finally granted a posthumous pardon in 2005 – six decades after her execution – ruling that a “grievous error” occurred when she was denied clemency following her trial. “I believe she's somewhere around God's throne and can look down and smile,” reflects Curry.

Based on the book, The Lena Baker Story by Lela Bond Phillips, the film was written, produced and directed by Ralph Wilcox, CEO of Schusters Cash, a film, television and video production company; owner of Jokara-Micheaux Studio, a 22,000-square-foot movie studio in Colquitt, Ga.; and director of the Southwest Georgia Film Commission. Additionally, Wilcox’s long career as an actor includes roles in dozens of iconic television programs in the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s.

“We tend to forget history and believe that we’ve all moved on,” says Wilcox, now a documentary and film producer. “There has been a lot of progress in our society and race relations, but we need not forget where we have been, lest we repeat our past. And, even though Lena was flawed, this film was an opportunity to give her the voice she was denied 64 years ago … each and everyone one of us deserves that.”

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Time to stock up on your DVD collections. Curtis Jackson has just inked a $200 million 10-movie deal for his film company, Cheetah Vision. Curtis will be funded a budget of $20 million for each film, which will be distributed through Grindstone/Lionsgate. Above is a picture on the set of The Fast and Furious 5 with actor Paul Walker, who is in negotiations to star alongside 50 in his upcoming flick, Set Up. VIA RAPRADAR CENT
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