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11020652483?profile=original

9 October, 2018 – SUSPECTED ASSAILANT SHOT DEAD AFTER STABBING

 

At 10:00 PM, Officers and EMTs were dispatched to Sperry Street at Goffe Street after an assault with gunfire was reported.

 

Here’s what police know at this time. According to the victims, one, a twenty-seven year old New Haven man was walking on Sperry Street from Whalley Avenue toward Goffe Street, when he was confronted by an adult black man holding a knife. The knife wielding man said “Happy Halloween” and stabbed the victim. The victim’s cousin, a twenty-four year old Hamden, CT man was waiting in his car. He heard the commotion, got out of his car, and was also stabbed by the assailant.

 

The twenty-four year old had a pistol on him and shot his assailant in the chest. The shooter has a valid pistol permit and his gun was lawfully registered to him, according to information obtained in a police records check. The shooter has not been charged – though this investigation is active and remains active.

 

The deceased assailant has not been identified. The stabbing victims’ wounds are not life threatening. The twenty-seven year old was stabbed in the elbow and the twenty-four year old, in his bicep.

 

Officers and detectives from the department’s Major Crimes and Forensics Division remain on the scene and are investigating this crime and collecting evidence for this case.

 

Police are asking for the public’s help. Anyone with information on this crime is urged to phone us at 203-946-6304, the Anonymous Tip Line at 203-946-6296, Text a tip by texting, NHPD plus your message to 274637 (CRIMES) or email at ecic@newhavenct.gov.

 

AN

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New Apartments in New Haven, ct

HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF NEW HAVEN BREAKS GROUND AT FAIR HAVEN, MARKING FIRST PHASE OF FARNAM REDEVELOPMENT NEW HAVEN - Elm City Communities/Housing Authority of the City of New Haven (ECC/HANH) broke ground at the Fair Haven development today, the first phase of the Farnam Redevelopment. The Fair Haven development is the off-site component of the Farnam Redevelopment. The Fair Haven development is comprised of 57 units of affordable Rental Assistance Demonstration program (RAD) family housing, 27 two-bedroom units, 28 three-bedroom units, and 2 four-bedroom units totaling $30 million dollars. When all phases of the Farnam Redevelopment are completed, 228 affordable RAD family units, 5900 sq ft of commercial space, a new community center, and new park will be built. The Fair Haven development component of the Farnam Redevelopment will provide construction jobs, contracting opportunities for local, women, minority, Section 3 and resident owned enterprises as well as employment opportunities for women, minorities, and Section 3 residents in addition to providing quality affordable housing. "Today's groundbreaking ceremony marks a new era in the Fair Haven community and underscores the value of Elm City Communities as an economic engine in New Haven and champion for affordable housing in Connecticut," said Karen DuBois-Walton, Executive Director. "We're all very excited to see this comprehensive redevelopment project get underway - this groundbreaking ceremony signals the start of the next phase of a carefully planned overhaul of ECC/HANH housing stock," Mayor Toni N. Harp said. "We look forward to revitalized Fair Haven and Farnam communities and we're grateful to Karen DuBois-Walton for her steadfast leadership to this end." "We couldn't have accomplished this project without Mayor Toni Harp and her team at City Hall and we're especially pleased to partner with them on Farnam Redevelopment because it showcases what model mixed use housing communities can look like with thoughtful vision, skilled planning, and hard work." - Karen DuBois-Walton, Executive Director. The Farnam Redevelopment - Fair Haven off-site component is funded by ECC/HANH's Moving To Work funds ($6.5 million); The Community Development Trust Construction Loan ($20.5 million); Redstone Equity Partners Tax Credit Equity ($16 million); Chase Bank Permanent Loan ($7.2 million); The Federal Home Loan Bank of New York ($871,000); and the Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development Connecticut Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development ($833,386). And, in addition to countless staff hours, the City of New Haven committed $8 million dollars of capital funds for the Farnam Redevelopment. SPECIAL THANKS: Mayor Toni N. Harp; Honorable Rosa L. DeLauro; Alderman Ernie Santiago; Alderwoman Barbara Constantinople; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) staff: Jennifer Gottlieb, Jeffrey Sussman, Susan Forward; Nancy Richards, and Harry West; Caroline Finger of Chase Bank; Lauren Henry, Rob Vest, and Peggy Bigeck of Redstone Equity Partners; Bob Rice and Desiree Fisher of The Community Development Trust; Tim Sullivan and Cynthia Petruzzello of the Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) Connecticut Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development; The Federal Home Loan Bank of New York (FHLBNY); The Greater New Haven Water Pollution Control Authority; as well as the City of New Haven Economic and Development Administration, especially the following departments; Livable City Initiative, City Plan, Building, Engineering, Public Works, and Transportation, Traffic and Parking. About Elm City Communities / Housing Authority of the City of New Haven (ECC/HANH): We, at Elm City Communities, believe public housing is the foundation from which the American Dream will survive and thrive for generations to come. Our vision is a New Haven where every resident has a safe and decent home that they can afford and opportunities to fulfill their goals. Since becoming a HUD-designated Moving To Work (MTW) agency in 2000, Elm City Communities has become an incubator of innovation and an economic engine in New Haven, Connecticut. As a result, Elm City Communities has increased affordable housing choice, provided an array of self-sufficiency programs, created across the board cost savings measures, and spurred millions of dollars of indirect economic activity through redevelopment projects and job creation. Through the development and operation of affordable communities of choice and by providing opportunities for greater self-sufficiency in New Haven, we offer a lifeline to the American Dream. ###
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11020664075?profile=original

Photo Credit MM

New Haven Police Make Gun and Stolen Car Arrests

 

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Throughout the past year, New Haven has experienced a spike in motor vehicle thefts.  As of November 8th, New Haven Police crime analysts have reported that 570 vehicles have been reported stolen in the city of New Haven, a 1.7% increase from 2019.  This spike in motor vehicle thefts is not exclusive to New Haven as surrounding towns and cities have also experienced an increase.  Many of these motor vehicle thefts are a crime of opportunity; with victims leaving their vehicles unsecure, often with the keys left inside of the vehicle and the engine running. 

On Friday, November 20th, at approximately 9:30 am, the National Insurance Crime Bureau called into the New Haven Police Department and reported that there were several stolen vehicles in the area of Greenwood Street, located in the Hill North Section of the City. 

Officer Christopher Lawrence canvassed the area and located one of these vehicles, a 2015 Black Ford Fusion parked in front of 25-27 Greenwood Street.  Officer Lawrence confirmed that the Ford Fusion had been stolen out of Hamden on November 18th

Officer Lawrence exited his patrol vehicle to address the stolen Ford Fusion and discovered that the vehicle was running, and there were three juveniles asleep in the car.  (It was later discovered that the juveniles were thirteen, fourteen, and fifteen years of age).

Officer Lawrence, along with the responding Officers, exited their patrol vehicles and attempted to open the doors of the stolen Ford Fusion, only to find that the doors were locked.  Officer Lawrence wanted to decrease any chance of the juveniles fleeing the area, so he made the decision to break the driver side window with a window punch that is attached to his pocketknife.  Upon breaking the driver side window, chards of glass penetrated Officer Lawrence’s hand. 

Officer Lawrence reached inside of the stolen Ford Fusion and unlocked the doors.  The operator of the vehicle, a fifteen-year-old juvenile male, was taken out and detained.   

While this was taking place, Officer Lozada observed the backseat passenger, a thirteen-year-old juvenile male, reach into his waistband and pull out a firearm.  Officers drew their department-issued firearms and gave the backseat passenger numerous orders to drop the firearm.  After a brief standoff, the backseat passenger placed the firearm down and was taken out of the vehicle and detained.   

The front seat passenger of the stolen Ford Fusion, a fourteen-year-old juvenile male, was taken out of the vehicle and detained. 

A secondary pat-down of all the occupants of the stolen Ford Fusion revealed that the operator of the vehicle was also in possession of a firearm.  Both recovered firearms were loaded with a round in the chamber. 

Officers later confirmed that the operator of the vehicle, the fifteen-year-old juvenile, had three outstanding warrants, two (2) from the city of New Haven for drug sales and violation of probation and one (1) from the town of Stratford for Burglary.  The fifteen-year-old was additionally charged with Carrying a pistol without a permit, Weapon in a motor vehicle, Larceny in the Second Degree, and Conspiracy to Commit Larceny in the Second Degree 

The rear passenger of the stolen Ford Fusion, the thirteen-year-old juvenile male, had two outstanding warrants, one (1) from the city of New Haven and one (1) from the town of West Haven, both for stolen automobiles.  The thirteen-year-old was additionally with Carrying a pistol without a permit, Weapon in a motor vehicle, Larceny in the Second Degree and Conspiracy to Commit Larceny in the Second Degree. 

The fourteen-year-old juvenile male who was seated on the front passenger side of the stolen Ford Fusion was placed under arrest and charged with Larceny in the Second Degree and Conspiracy to Commit Larceny in the Second Degree. 

All Officers involved resorted to their training and handled a potentially deadly situation with poise and calm.  Apart from Officer Lawrence suffering minor cuts to his hand, no one was harmed, and all three juveniles were taken into custody. 

In addition to the juvenile arrests,  Officers recovered three additional stolen vehicles in the immediate area, a Buick stolen from the town of Hamden, a Nissan stolen from the town of West Haven and a Mitsubishi stolen from the city of New Haven. 

 

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11020600090?profile=original

PR/marketing guru Pam Nikki Baker sat down with Reach Around Radio, where she revealed that she saw solid proof in the form of photos of AP.9 and Coco together reportedly in his bedroom, and AP.9 talked about a video of the two of them together. Pam goes into detail about what AP.9 told her about his time with Coco, including gifts she bought him and why he didn't have to lie about their affair.

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11020661501?profile=original

MAYOR HARP TO PRESENT STANDOUT COMMUNITY SERVANTS WITH ‘KEYS TO THE CITY’ AT CITY HALL CEREMONY MONDAY AFTERNOON

 

New Haven – Mayor Toni N. Harp will recognize ten people for their extraordinary community service at a City Hall ceremony Monday afternoon. Each will receive a ‘key to the city’ at that time.

 

Monday’s presentation ceremony is scheduled to begin at 2:30 p.m. in the second-floor atrium at City Hall – 165 Church Street – in New Haven. Members of the press are invited to attend and encouraged to cover this notable event.

 

Those scheduled to be recognized are:

 

  • Bria Holmes
  • NHPD Captain Anthony Duff
  • Malcolm Welfare
  • Clarence Boyd
  • Veronica Douglas
  • George Mention
  • James Walker
  • Roberta Hoskie
  • Cynthia Beaver
  • Dr. Tamiko Jackson McArthur

##

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chosen few black motorcycle club

Chosen Few Motorcycle Club-- Photography by Gold Mustache Photography, Elliot M. Gold

*

Soak in the retro soil & oil biker shots from the Chosen Few, and East Bay Dragons motorcycle clubs.

In 1959, the Chosen Few MC officially formed out in LA on the cusp of the chaotic 60s.  As they tell it — “The 60s was a hell of a time. With the Civil Rights Movement, The Viet Nam War, Flower Power & Free Love. Sex, Drugs, and  Rock & Roll. Also the Crazy World of the Outlaw Bikers.”

to read more http://theselvedgeyard.wordpress.com/2009/11/04/chosen-few-east-bay-dragons-americas-black-biker-set-revisited/

 

THE FLAMING KNIGHTS MC NEW HAVEN,CT 

Knights of '72

...The Flaming Knights Motorcycle Club started in the garage of Leroy Bolden, aka King Dragon 
(110 Hurlburt st. < 1st Club House> in New Haven, Conn. April 27 1968.)

The founding members are Leroy Bolden aka King Dragon, JJ the Road Ambassdor, Jesse aka Sir Sex, Tony, Sam, Larry, Big Leroy, Big Chaz,Zack, Carl,Bill aka Whiteknight, Alabama, and Vance...

Later came members like Owe, Dog, Bob Perry, Uncle Sam, Virgina Slim, Roller Skate, Disco Lady, Big Kissie, Death Wish, Jay Bird, Tiny (6'10 over 300lb), Miss Elliott, Cadilliac, P, Honda Bill, Jaguar, and Big D.

The Don is currently the President of the New Haven Chapter (Founding Chapter).

The name, Flaming Knights, came from the way the fellows were promiscuous with the ladies. And so, since they thought they were 'Hot', it was suggested that they call them selves Flaming Knights. Other names that were being considered were, the 4 Horseman, and the Royal Knights.

The Flaming Knights began in New Haven, CT on April 27, 1968.

The name Flaming Knights came from the way the fellas were with the ladies.  Since the ladies thought they were hot, it was suggested that they call themselves Flaming Knights. Other names that were considered were the 4 Horseman and the Royal Knights.

The Flaming Knights goal is to become the World's Largest Traveling Motorcycle Club. The Flaming Knight family has now grown to over 40 chapters in various states as well as Mexico.

TO READ MORE CLICK LINK http://www.fknh.com/FK_History.htm

The Black Biker Experience Pt 1of 3

Biker from the pass share there stories, about choppers and riding. The true experiences of the black motorcycles clubs, and there contributions to biking...

part 2

part 3

Black Bike Week Myrtle Beach 2013 

Black Bike Week Myrtle Beach 2013 Episode 

https://www.youtube.com/user/OuterSpacerrrrr?feature=watch

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11020591888?profile=original


11020592857?profile=original

Kim Kardashian looks to have left her underwear at home as she heads out for an early dinner with boyfriend Kanye West in Miami. As Kim checked out her outfit in the reflection of her car, it became apparent that the reality star was not wearing any underwear as she showed off her see-through grey skirt.

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11020660861?profile=original

Breaking News !!!
please Share come out and Support this event
CES Boxing and Bud Mench Media group Boxing Press Conferences Home Coming Kings 
City Hall
June 24, 2019 
1:30pm to 2:00pm

WHO:

Chad Dawson

Former two-time world champion

New Haven, Conn.

34-5, 19 KOs

Tramaine Williams

Featherweight

New Haven, Conn.

17-0, 6 KOs

MARISA MESSER-BELENCHIA

Female flyweight debut

New Haven, Conn.

Pro debut

JOSE RIVERA

Junior middleweight

Hartford, Conn.

7-4, 5 KOs

WHAT:

Official press conference to promote CES Boxing’s upcoming pro-am event scheduled for Saturday, June 29th, 2019 at Foxwoods Resort Casino featuring the long-awaited return of two-time world champion Chad Dawson and unbeaten featherweight prospect Tramaine Williams.

WHERE:

New Haven City Hall

165 Church St.

New Haven, CT 06510

203-946-8200

WHEN:

Monday, June 24th, 2019

1:30 – 2 p.m.

WHY:

Monday’s press conference kicks off a week-long press tour as CES Boxing returns to Foxwoods Resort Casino and the historic Fox Theater on Saturday, June 29th, 2019 with a highly-anticipated pro-am card featuring the former two-time world champion and light heavyweight king, Dawson, and the undefeated featherweight prospect, Williams, both from New Haven.

This event is open to the public. Limited tickets to the June 29th fight card are available at $47, $77 and $157 (VIP) and can be purchased online at www.cesboxing.com or www.foxwoods.com, by phone at 401-724-2253 or 800-200-2882 or at the Fox Theater Box Office. All fights and fighters subject to change. The amateur portion of the card begins at 5:30 p.m. ET, followed by the main card at 7. The latter streams live on Facebook via FIGHTNIGHT LIVE.

Fighting for the first time in more than two years, Dawson faces Charlotte, N.C., southpaw Quinton Rankin (15-5-2, 12 KOs) in the eight-round main event while Williams, nicknamed “The Mighty Midget,” battles Filipino Neil John Tabanao (17-5, 11 KOs) in a 10-round featherweight showdown, a bout presented in association with Roc Nation Sports.

Manchester, Conn., super welterweight Jose Rivera(7-4, 5 KOs) battles Luca Podda (7-3, 3 KOs) of Miami in a six-round bout and Oscar Bonilla (5-3-2, 1 KO) of Bridgeport, Conn., faces Julio Perez (4-3) of Worcester, Mass., in a six-round lightweight bout.

Also featured on the main card, New Haven female flyweight Marisa Belenchia (0-0) makes her professional debut against Delaney Owen (0-2) of Clearwater, Fla., and featherweight Nathan Martinez (3-0, 1 KOs) of Bridgeport puts his unbeaten record on the line against Minnesota’s Jose Homar Rios (2-6-1, 1 KO), both in four-round bouts. Junior welterweight Wilson Mascarenhas (1-1) of New Bedford, Mass., faces Joshua Oxendine (0-0) of Pembroke, N.C., and undefeated featherweight Jacob Marrero (3-0, 2 KOs) returns to Foxwoods for the third time in a separate four-round bout.

– CES

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11020587300?profile=original

11020588262?profile=original11020588861?profile=originalFROM THE 70"S TO PRESENT  TIME NEW HAVEN BALL PLAYERS BEEN DOING IT ON THE COURTS HARDBODY FOR YEARS.!! CROSS- HILLHOUSE-LEE-

Scott Ferrari , Special to the Register 03/20/2004 Earning a reputation in the New Haven area for high school basketball prowess is tough going. When it comes to schoolboy hoops, if you can make it here, you can make it anywhere. So when someone takes the time to hang a moniker like "Super John," "Sly" or "Soup" on you, there’s usually a big-time "game" to match the reputation. Today, the Register looks back on the rich history of New Haven-area basketball and makes an attempt to pick the Super 25, the best 25 players to ever play in the area (see box for eligible towns). We enlisted the valued opinions (and memories) of some of the area’s top coaches and experts. Altogether, the head coaches who attended our informal "jam session" a few weeks back to begin this process accounted for more than 2,000 wins and presided over or saw countless players. As for the criteria, it was a non-scientific combination of reputation, statistics, overall high school prowess and post-high school prowess. Rather than compare the bigger, more athletic modern-day player with those of yesteryear, what we all tried to do was come up with the names of players whose abilities and accomplishments transcended an era. The logic was that if people recognize a name from 50 years ago, that player was or is a legend and deserves to be on the list. The Super 25 are followed by 75 other deserving players, giving us 100 of the best players of all time. No doubt, the names will jog people to remember many more who just as easily could have been chosen. Register’s list of the Top 25 high school basketball players ever in the Greater New Haven area "Super John" Williamson, Wilbur Cross, 1970 Universally accepted as the best player to ever play in New Haven, Super John tops our prestigious list. Averaged almost 40 (38.7) points per game as a senior. Was selected Register All-State in 1969 and 1970 and was a sophomore on the ’68 team that rang up 123 points in the LL title win over Bridgeport Central. ... Later went on to star at New Mexico State, where he was inducted into the Lobos’ Hall of Fame. Also enjoyed a stellar pro career. He averaged 20.1 points in five NBA seasons and 14.1 ppg in three ABA seasons prior to that. Best season may have been 1977-78 when he averaged 23.7 points and 3.0 assists for Indiana. Died in 1996. Dave Hicks, Wilbur Cross, 1961 Two-time Register All-Stater. As a junior, led the Governors to the state Class A and New England championships. Cross repeated as state champ in 1961, when Hicks again was the tourney MVP, but fell in the New England final. The 6-foot-5 Hicks, once called "Wilt Chamberlain with moves," averaged 19.4 points as a senior and had 1,268 points in 74 career games. Eschewed college for a stint with the Harlem Globetrotters. Deceased. Sylvester "Sly" Williams, Lee, 1976 A two-time All-State pick, the 6-7 Williams averaged 22 points and 16 rebounds for his career, scoring more than 1,400 points. As a senior, he led Lee to its first state and District League titles, averaging 31 points and 22 rebounds before going on to star at Rhode Island. Williams later had a successful pro career, averaging 11 points, 4 rebounds and 2 assists in seven NBA seasons, four with the New York Knicks. In 1981-82, he averaged 13.9 points on 56 percent shooting. Earl Kelley, Wilbur Cross, 1982 Averaged an incredible 39 points per game as a senior, including games of 60 (then a city record), 57 (when he shot 22-for-28 from the floor) and 55 (against Camden. N.J., and All-American Billy Thompson). Scored 1,592 points in his college career at UConn, averaging 16.9 for his career on 46 percent shooting. Also shot 82 percent from the free-throw line for his career. Bruce "Soup" Campbell, Wilbur Cross, 1974 The 6-8 Campbell was the man in the middle for the Governors "national championship" team of 1974 (as proclaimed by the Washington Post). Campbell scored 1,737 career points and grabbed more than 1,300 rebounds, including a game of 43 points and 28 rebounds against Weaver-Hartford in 1973. Averaged 26 points and 18 rebounds. Later starred at Providence College. Campbell still resides in New Haven. Salvatore "Chubby" Malinconico, West Haven, 1939 There may be a dearth of statistical information available from Malinconico’s era, but there’s plenty of legend. Malinconico was one of the first truly great shooters, albeit in the "set-shot" era. Malinconico was also considered a top-notch ball-handler and was a stalwart in the old semipro leagues for the Hull’s Brewer Red Devils. Once scored 31 points against Cohoes, N.Y., in a New York summer league game and was voted outstanding player in the that league. The former Chief of Police in West Haven, "Chubby" is retired and residing in Florida. Scott Burrell, Hamden, 1989 The 6-7 Burrell was a Register All-State pick in 1988 and 1989. As a senior, Burrell averaged 23.7 points, 15.8 rebounds, 4.8 assists and 4.8 blocks. He finished with more than 1,300 points and 1,000 rebounds. Later, he scored 1,562 points in four years at UConn, averaging 13.1 points per game. Burrell also played eight seasons in the NBA, averaging 7 points and 3.5 rebounds in 383 games. His best season was 1994-95 with Charlotte, when he averaged 11.5 points and 6 rebounds in 65 games. Was drafted in the first round (20th overall in 1993). Tharon Mayes, Hillhouse, 1986 Played at Lee until it closed in 1985. Mayes was the state’s Gatorade Player of the Year in 1986 after averaging 24.5 points, 6 rebounds and 11 assists. He had 36 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists in a game against Weaver-Hartford and also had a 51-point game against Fitch-Groton. He finished with 1,546 career points. Mayes later played at Florida State, where he had 1,260 points in three seasons, averaging 16 points per game for his career on 49.5 percent shooting. Mayes played 24 NBA games in the 1991-92 season with Philadelphia and the Los Angeles Clippers and also played in the CBA. Now coaches high school basketball in Massachusetts. Billy Evans, Hillhouse, 1965 Guard led the Academics to state title in 1964 as heady playmaker. Averaged 10 points per game as a junior that season. Scored 20 points, including 13 in the second half, in the 1964 win over Hartford Public in the title game. Later went on to star at Boston College, where he started on three consecutive teams that earned postseason bids (two NCAA, 1 NIT). ... Evans played 53 games in the old ABA, averaging 2 points and 2 assists. Now a businessman who splits time between Boston and Florida. Gary Bello, Amity, 1971 One of the best long-range shooters in state history, Bello averaged a state-best 35.2 points in 1971 as a senior for one of the Spartans’ top teams ever. He also averaged 7.5 rebounds, 7 assists and 4 steals that year. He scored 54 points in a game against Seymour and finished his career with 1,206 points, later playing at Providence College, which reached the Final Four in his sophomore season. Alex Scott, Wilbur Cross, 1968 One of the best all-around players in state history, Scott was a two-time Register All-State pick, including ’68 when Cross scored a record 123 points in a Class L title win over Bridgeport Central. As a senior, Scott averaged 25 points and 12.5 assists and had a 43-point game against Hamden. Played at New Mexico State. Works for the State of Connecticut in Children’s Services. Jim "Jiggy" Williamson, Wilbur Cross, 1974 Key figure on the Governors’ 1974 team selected as the nation’s No. 1 team by the Washington Post and later proclaimed the "best high school team in the world" by the New York Post. Williamson averaged 25.6 points per game as a senior and, at the time, was the only Cross player to ever start every game for four years. He scored 1,852 career points and was MVP of the 1973 Class LL tournament. Later played at Rhode Island. Resides in Baltimore. Bob Dulin, Foran, 1976 A two-time Register All-State pick and one of the state’s top scorers as a senior at 29 points per game (and 7 assists). Scored more than 1,600 points, including 49 in a game against St. Joseph-Trumbull. Dulin later went on to play at UConn, where he was captain in 1981. He shot 81.1 percent from the free-throw line in his career, eighth all-time for the Huskies. His 91.5 percent mark in 1981 is the best ever. Now a vice president with Merrill Lynch in New Haven. Doug Wardlaw, Wilbur Cross, 1964 Selected to the Register’s All-State team in 1963 and 1964. Wardlaw, a guard, scored more than 900 points in three seasons, averaging 16.9 ppg as a senior. Earned a scholarship to Loyola of Chicago. Had 24-point efforts against state champ Hillhouse and highly regarded Hartford Public as a senior. Upon his graduation, legendary Cross coach Salvatore "Red" Verderame called Wardlaw the best guard he’d ever coached. Retired from the New Haven Park and Recreation Department. Paul "Topsy" Delgobbo, Wilbur Cross, 1953 One of the great outside shooters of all-time, Delgobbo scored more than 1,500 points at Southern Connecticut and is considered perhaps the best all-around athlete to ever play at Southern, where he also starred in baseball. He eventually played in the Baltimore Orioles minor league system. Played basketball in the famous semipro leagues of the 1950s and fast-pitch softball for the Raybestos Cardinals. Retired from the New Haven school system. Al Carfora, East Haven, 1976 Register All-State pick in 1976, Carfora was also a two-time prep All-America selection. He averaged 26 points and 14 rebounds as a senior and 17 points and 11 rebounds for his career. Had 47 points and 21 rebounds against New Britain in the 1976 state tournament, both school records at the time, and scored more than 1,200 career points. Later went on to star at Quinnipiac. Carfora is a retired firefighter who is now self-employed. Dom Perno, Wilbur Cross, 1959 Two-time Register All-Stater (1958-59). Was part of the infamous 1958 New England championship game (which Cross won) against Somerville, Mass., in which a brawl broke out in the closing seconds. ... Later starred at UConn, making one of the most memorable plays in Huskies history by stealing the ball from Princeton star Bill Bradley in the closing seconds to seal a 52-50 win in the NCAA tournament. Perno later coached the UConn men from 1977 to 1986. He is employed by the Dumont Group of Bristol in insurance sales and marketing. Tony Massari, East Haven, 1954 Earned Register All-State honors in 1953 and 1954, as well as being named to the Coaches’ All-State team three times. As a senior, averaged a then-incredible 22.7 points per game for the Class M state champions and was one of the building blocks for teams that won 77 straight games and 121 of 123. Team earned Class M state and New England titles as a senior. Now retired and residing in Raleigh, N.C. Gene Davins, Hillhouse, 1955 Integral member of the famed Hillhouse "Wonder Five" that went unbeaten through the state regular season and state tournament before bowing to Somerville, Mass., in the New England championship semifinals. Davins was a Register Class A All-State pick. Davins was also a starter and key player at guard on the 1954 team that won the New England title. Ralph Paolillo, East Haven, 1957 Register All-State in 1956 and 1957. Smooth-shooting but tough guard was MVP of the 1957 Class B state tournament, which the Easties won. Averaged 20 ppg as a senior. Scored 6 points in less than 1 minute in his first varsity game. Now director of community development for the city of West Haven. Willie McFarland, Ansonia, 1972 As a senior, led the area in scoring at 31.1 points per game. The 6-4 McFarland ate up Naugatuck Valley League competition, scoring 51 points and grabbing 20 rebounds in a win over Seymour and also having a 36-point, 24-rebound, 7-block effort against Wilby-Waterbury as a senior. Don Perrelli, Hillhouse, 1956 "Wonder Five" member and two-year starter for the Acs, he led the nation’s small colleges in scoring in 1960 while at Southern Connecticut, scoring more than 1,800 points while there. Went on to coach the women’s teams at St. John’s (1979-84), Southern (‘76-79) and Northwestern University (1984-99), winning more than 400 games before his retirement in 1999. Perrelli is retired. Walter Esdaile, Hillhouse, 1965 The 6-8 Esdaile was a Register All-Stater in 1964. He later went on to star for Cornell in the Ivy League, leading the league in rebounding in 1967 and 1968. Elected to the Cornell Hall of Fame. On Dec. 28, 1966, had 18 points and 14 rebounds in a 92-77 win at Kentucky, which was coached by Adolph Rupp and led by Pat Riley and Louie Dampier. Works for the city of New Haven. Larry Kelley, Lee, 1973 Kelley was a two-time captain at Lee and second-team Register All-State pick in 1973 as a senior. He scored more than 1,000 points in his career, including a memorable 16-point effort as a sophomore in a state tourney upset win over powerhouse Bridgeport Central, then coached by Tom Penders. Kelley then lettered three years at Syracuse as a two-year starter and was the NBC "Player of the Week" in a nationally televised win over Tennessee, which featured the "Bernie and Ernie Show" of future NBA stars Bernard King and Ernie Grunfeld. Now works for the New Haven school system. Jim Davins, Hillhouse, 1952 Brother of Gene Davins. Starred for state Class A and New England championship team of 1952 before playing for Arnold College and later semi-professionally for the Columbus Bears. Davins was even more renowned for his baseball prowess, playing minor league ball at the Double-A level.

 

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8 August, 2015 – THE NHPD RECOGNIZES HERO OFFICER

The last time fifty-six year old Albert Sanford was seen was on Tuesday, July 14th. He wouldn’t be reported missing until Friday despite having missed a dialysis appointment on Monday.

At 6:55 PM, Officer Christian Bruckhart was called to the Valley Street home of the missing man by his eighty-seven year old mother, Gloria Washington and his ex-wife, Linda Kendall. They’d filed a missing person report a few hours earlier but had new information for Police.

The women told the Officer they’d spotted his car parked at the upper Whalley Avenue Burger King – a clue that would lead Officer Bruckhart on a mission to find the missing gentleman.

Officer Bruckhart spoke with the manager of the restaurant in hopes of finding out more. She said she remembered seeing Mr. Sanford on Tuesday at about 2:00 PM. She said he left the restaurant on foot because he claimed he’d lost his car keys. He told her he had a spare key at home and was setting off to retrieve it. She said she saw him heading east on Whalley Avenue and “looked sick”.

Officer Michael Valente and Patrick Bengston joined Officer Bruckhart and the three set off to search for the missing man. They headed out on foot from East Ramsdell Street to the Valley Street Townhouses. They searched the wooded area on either side of Emerson Street and from there toward Blake Street.

Night fell and the steep embankments made further searching difficult. A stream that runs the length of the gully in the middle of the wooded area made searching in the dark quite dangerous. Officer Bruckhart contacted area hospitals and was told they would inform him should Mr. Sanford show up. Officer Bruckhart called the dialysis center, but there was no answer. They’d closed for the day.

Officer Bruckhart issued a Silver Alert and should have been finishing his reports before heading in at the end of his shift. He should have been but couldn’t. He knew the missing man was most likely in the woods and knew he’d been without life preserving medical treatments for days. 

Officer Bruckhart started searching again.

At 10:30 PM, Officer Bruckhart found Albert Sanford in a culvert about fifty yards into a wooded area near Dayton Street across from the CVS Drugstore. Thankfully, he was alive and although disoriented, he was physically well. He said he’d been trapped there since Tuesday. Officer Bruckhart summoned the expert assistance of a squad from the NHFD to pull him from the culvert.

Mr. Sanford was taken by ambulance to the hospital for an evaluation. The Silver Alert was cancelled.

Officer Bruckhart drove to the hospital where he spoke a bit more with Mr. Sanford. Now comfortable in a hospital gown and on a soft gurney, Sanford told Officer Bruckhart he had no recollection of being at the Burger King but remembered entering the woods. He said he’d been cutting through there for “eons”, but that the trail was so covered by overgrown foliage, he’d gotten lost. He said as much as he tried, he couldn’t find his way back to the road.

The relieved Officer’s last words in his police report; “I advised him not to use the trails in the woods anymore”.

Officer Christian Bruckhart spent the first five years of his policing career serving the town of Wallingford, CT.

He was hired by New Haven on March 31, 2014. He has recently been assigned to the department’s narcotics Enforcement Unit.

8 August, 2015 – ARMED WOULD-BE ROBBER ARRESTED AFTER CHASE

At 1:14 AM, a twenty-six year old man (who appears and identifies himself as a woman) hailed Officer Hugo Villacres Jr. as he drove down Grand Avenue near Ferry Street. He told him a man with a gun tried robbing him of his cellular telephone but he got away. The man told the Officer that he’d been approached by a heavy-set black man who said to him, “How much do you charge”? He said he was waiting for a friend, at which point the man tried taking his cell phone which was partially tucked into his shirt.

She described the would-be robber to the Officer who in turn broadcast it to colleagues in the area. Officer Jason Santiago was patrolling nearby and spotted a suspect. The suspect spotted him and took off running. The Officer ran after him. The suspect threw down a handgun. The Officer tackled the suspect. The gun was recovered. It was in fact a BB gun.

The victim positively identified Charles Capers (picture attached) (4-24-1986), of Chelsea Street in Stratford, CT, as his attacker.

He was arrested and charged with criminal attempt to commit robbery in the third degree, criminal attempt to commit larceny in the second degree, possession of a facsimile firearm and interfering with Police.

Note: An earlier unrelated report of a minor assault involving Caspers is being investigated. He is accused by someone else, about an hour earlier, of slapping them and that he was armed with “some type of gun” when the incident happened.

8 August, 2015 – COUPLE ARRESTED IN DOMESTIC ASSAULT

At 8:50 AM, Officers were dispatched to 181 Winthrop Avenue after a couple’s heated argument turned violent.

Kenneth Johnson (4-4-1992), of Butler Street in New Haven, and Jamilah Jackson (4-9-1989), of Winthrop Avenue in New Haven, are boyfriend and girlfriend. Jackson told Officer Paul Cavalier that the two started arguing over her presumption Johnson was involved with another woman. The dispute reportedly escalated when, according to Jackson, she was punched and choked by Johnson. She said she armed herself with a kitchen knife and drove it into Johnson’s left leg. She gave the Officer the knife.

Johnson (picture attached) reported it was he that was the victim – that Jackson (picture attached) started the argument over the alleged other woman and that it was she that escalated the argument to violence.

Jackson was treated at the scene by EMTs for injuries to her lips and hands. Johnson was taken by ambulance to Yale – New Haven Hospital to be treated for his leg wound. It is not life-threatening.

Both combatants were arrested. Johnson was charged with assault in the second degree, breach of peace in the second degree and strangulation in the third degree. Jackson was charged with assault in the first degree and breach of peace.

9 August, 2015 – SHOOTING INVESTIGATION

At 12:42 AM, Officers were summoned to the Emergency Department at Yale – New Haven Hospital’s St. Raphael’s campus after a man arrived seeking treatment for a gunshot wound.

The victim, thirty year old Lemar McCullough told Officers he’d walked from his Lexington Avenue home to his girlfriend’s house in Hamden and then to another acquaintance’s home on George Street when along the way he was confronted by a black man who said, “Don’t move” and shot him in his leg.

McCullough said he walked to the hospital. He said the man who shot him stood under six feet tall and was heavy-set.

Officers searched the area. No evidence of the shooting was found – ballistic or otherwise. No reports of gunfire were phoned in and no one in the area reported hearing the shot. There were no ShotSpotter activations.

9 August, 2015 – SHOOTING INVESTIGATION

At 12:45 AM, a woman entered the Woodward Avenue Police Sub-Station and reported a fight and gunfire occurring at that moment at the nearby Fireside Bar, located at 810 Woodward Avenue.

Officers arrived quickly and learned a fight had erupted inside. They reported that staff members pushed the fighters outside and did not phone Police. Moments later, gunfire erupted.

At 2:17 AM, twenty-four year old Kevin Crouch, of Shelton Street in Bridgeport, CT, walked into the Emergency Department at Yale – New Haven Hospital. Hospital staff phoned Police and Detectives responded. The victim said he was at the Fireside Bar when he heard gunshots. He said that as he ran with the crowd, he was shot in the ankle. He drove himself to the hospital. His wound is minor – no more than a graze. He said he didn’t see who’d shot him.

9 August, 2015 – ARMED TEENAGER ARRESTED

At 6:16 PM, Officers responding to a suspicious person complaint encountered three young men lurking about the Advanced Auto Parts store on Rout 80 at Eastern Street. The three young men spotted the Officers. One took off running. An Officer took off after him and caught him a short distance away. The teen fought with the Officer. During his attempt to get away, he grabbed a gun and threw it away.

The teen was arrested and the gun was recovered. It was a loaded Smith & Wesson 9mm handgun. The gun was reported stolen in South Carolina.

The teen was charged with several gun charges.

Note: We are prohibited from releasing the identity of juvenile perpetrators or victims.

9 August, 2015 – GUNFIRE INVESTIGATION

At 10:00 PM, Officers were called to the area of 150 Fairmont Avenue after a resident reported hearing three gunshots. She told the Officers she’d first heard a single shot and then seen two men, clad in dark clothing fire two more shots toward a house.

A nearby house was struck once. The projectile did not appear to fully penetrate the exterior wall and no one was reported to have been injured. Police collected the evidence and photographed the scene. No suspects have been identified.

9 August, 2015 – GUNFIRE INVESTIGATION

At 11:20 PM, Officers were dispatched to Roosevelt’s Bar on State Street at Bradley Street after caller to 911 reported gunfire.

Arriving Officers encountered a large crowd. They were patrons at the bar’s “White Party” (a themed party at which patrons are dressed in all white).

It took officers some time to disperse the crowds and search for evidence. None were very cooperative when questioned about the gunfire. No evidence could be found. Witnesses did report gunfire.

A later report of a person shot at Popeye’s Fried Chicken Restaurant on Whalley Avenue seems to be related.

Note: On May 31, 2015, five people were shot in a single incident at a “White Party” held on the second floor of a downtown New Haven tattoo parlor. Police do not suggest any connection but caution the public that such themed parties do not have a good track record.

10 August, 2015 – SHOOTING INVESTIGATION

Just minutes past midnight, Officers responded to the Popeye’s Fried Chicken Restaurant at Whalley Avenue and Dwight Street after several callers reported gunfire and a person shot.

Arriving Officers found the victim, eighteen year old Jahsean Warren, of Front Street in West Haven. Warren gave Officers a generic description of the black man he said shot him. 5’07”, wearing a black tank-top, shorts and no shoes.

The victim wasn’t cooperative. Officers found evidence of the gunfire at Popeye’s and in nearby on Dwight Street.

Witnesses described a large private “White Party” that broke up after gunfire erupted at Roosevelt’s Restaurant on State Street at Bradley Street just minutes earlier. The witnesses claimed the dispute from the Roosevelt’s incident moved to Popeye’s, where things erupted again..

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Mc Shan and KRS  One Sprite Commercial

This is when the old school came back for a minute - mainly because hip-hop got large and they wanted to remind the new comers what they missed.

 

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MC SHAN AND KRS TOGETHER ON STAGE

The Bridge Wars

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Bridge Wars was a hip hop rivalry during the mid-to-late 1980s and early 1990s, that arose from a dispute over the true birthplace of hip hop music and retaliation over the rejecting of a record for airplay.[1] The Bridge Wars originally involved The South Bronx's Boogie Down Productions, led by KRS-One, and Marley Marl's Juice Crew, hailing from Queensbridge. KRS-One and Marley Marl have since officially retired the feud, with the release of their collaborative 2007 album Hip-Hop Lives.

Contents

  [hide

[edit]The war begins

The feud began with Queensbridge-based producer Marley Marl & MC Shan's track "The Bridge" in late 1985. The track recited the praises of their home borough and some of its earlier rap crews, and was taken to imply that Queensbridge was where hip hop began, even though it doesn't actually say that. The lyrics that apparently raised the issue were:

You love to hear the story, again and again,
Of how it all got started way back when,
The monument is right in your face,
Sit and listen for a while to the name of the place,
The Bridge,
Queensbridge

Though MC Shan states Queensbridge is where his crew got started, and his birth place, he has stated that he never meant the song to say that Queensbridge is the birthplace of Hip Hop at all, "everyone knows that hip hop was started in the Bronx." Statements can be found in the 2003 documentary Beef, which features the original battle footage.[1]

[edit]1986: response

In response, South Bronx based KRS-One and Boogie Down Productions released the track South Bronx, which was similar in terms of content to Shan and Marl's track except singing the praises of the South Bronx rather than Queensbridge, and made the argument for it being the real birthplace of hip hop. The song first premiered at a concert where MC Shan had just performed "The Bridge". The track directly attacks MC Shan with lyrics like:

Party people in the place to be, KRS-One attacks,
Ya got dropped off MCA cause the rhymes you wrote was wack,
So you think that hip-hop had its start out in Queensbridge,
If you popped that junk up in the Bronx you might not live

Before "The Bridge" was released, MC Shan was signed to MCA Records, however he left the label after releasing an almost unheard single entitled "Feed the World". Another line by KRS directly attacking Shan was:

Show all the people in the place that you are wack,
Instead of trying take out LL, you need to take your homeboys off the crack

This referred to the fact that MC Shan had attacked LL Cool J on the A side of "The Bridge" with a song called "Beat Biter", whereby Shan claimed that LL Cool J had stolen beats from Marley Marl. LL Cool J never directly responded to this claim and the impending battle between Shan and BDP drew the attention away from it. Marley Marl later produced most of LL's Mama Said Knock You Outalbum. Slate magazine described it thus: "In 1986, it was a beef that launched the star of KRS-One, when his withering attacks on MC Shan effectively ended his rival's career."[2]

The official story at the time was that KRS-One was defending the reputation of the South Bronx in response to MC Shan and Marley Marl claiming that hip hop started out in Queensbridge. If the first few lines of "The Bridge" are omitted, a case can be made for this interpretation. However, KRS-One has since gone on record in an interview with MTV, saying that his real motivation was the fact that a demo tape he had made was rejected by Magic, and he was angry. He retaliated by dissing the Juice Crew, of which Magic was a member.[citation needed]

DJ Red Alert also gives a similar version of this story on the CD "Beats, Rhymes And battles Part I". In dialog on that CD (track 5), he states that Magic dissed a track by "24/7" which was a group including Scott La Rock and KRS-One. When they heard "The Bridge", they decided to diss back, and this is why "The South Bronx" was released.

[edit]1987: escalation

The Juice Crew soon responded with the track "Kill That Noise" on Shan's album Down by Law which took various shots at KRS-One and mocked his taking offense in the first place. He even denies saying hip hop started in Queens, and suggests BDP is just trying to jump on their bandwagon.

In a more recent interview on THE FOUNDATION (Jayquan), Shan defended and explained the misunderstood line:

JQ : Did you ever say in any song, interview or anywhere that Hip Hop started in Queens ?
Shan : I only said HOW it started in QUEENSBRIDGE, not (all) over the world. The new Source magazine says I still stand on the fact that Hip Hop started in Queens - writers get it twisted. The song the Bridge starts off saying M.C. Shan & Marley Marl in the house tonight - they wanna tell you a story about where THEY come from.[3]

But KRS continued to play upon the "response to the claim that hip hop started in Queens" premise with his next response, "The Bridge Is Over", featuring lyrics such as:

What's the matter with your MC, Marley Marl?
Don't you know that he's out of touch?
What's the matter with your DJ, MC Shan?
On the wheels of steel Marley sucks
You better change what's coming out your speaker
You're better off talking 'bout your wack Puma sneaker
Cause Bronx created hip-hop, Queens will only get dropped
Still tellin' lies to me

Most of KRS's fire was directed specifically at Marley Marl and MC Shan, although he occasionally exchanged insults with other Juice Crew members such as Mr. Magic and Roxanne Shante, who had earlier been at the center of the Roxanne Wars, which were a predecessor to this battle. Shante, mentioned in a very vulgar reference in "the Bridge Is Over", released a rap titled "Have A Nice Day"ghostwritten by Juice Crew colleague Big Daddy Kane (who was not otherwise personally involved in the battle), in which she took a shot at Boogie Down Productions with the line:

KRS One, you should go on vacation,
with a name sounding like a wack radio station.
and MC Scott La Rock, you should be ashamed,
when T La Rock said 'it's yours', he didn't mean his name

As she also demanded that BDP stood for Broken Down Punks.

Mr. Magic himself was the actual cause of the whole war in the first place, as KRS and Scott La Rock had earlier approached him with a 12" single they had recorded entitled "Success is the Word", (under the group name "12:41"). Magic dismissed it as "wack", and then, after forming BDP, they decided to take it out on Mr. Magic and Marley Marl's popular "Juice Crew", using the whole "Queens versus Bronx" issue as a pretense.

Shan continues recounting in the FOUNDATION interview:

Mr. Magic dissed BDP and said some stuff about their record on the radio, and he [KRS] made me the target. I wasn't gonna keep ridin' that Kris/Shan thing...people kept sayin "why aren't you answering back"? I'm like why?...I gave him a career already. [4]

After "Kill That Noise", Shan himself became more passive in the battle, as the above statement indicated. But meanwhile, Two other Queensbridge residents, Rockwell Noel & Poet, joined in the battle, resulting from the inferior responses from MC Shan and the Juice Crew offering the strongest attack against BDP. Their first single was entitled "Beat You Down", in which he reiterates that no one actually said that hip hop started in the Bridge, but then points out that the area was nevertheless very prominent in the early days of rap, and even had superior sound equipment, causing it to surpass the Bronx as the leader of hip hop.

BDP is trying to dis, we know that they're on it
Every time we make a record, they get disappointed
Nobody said hip hop started out in the Bridge;
but now you've dissed all of Queens, so we know how you live
You try to get paid talkin bout my town;
when I battle you punk, I'mo beat - you - DOWN
How could you say the Bridge is over? We've just begun;
you soft sucker MC, KRS-1
Can you believe it, party people? He raps like a rasta!
Boogie Down Productions are full of imposters;
They say things, that are not true
Now the Poet and Noel will break it down to you;
Bronx started hip hop, but couldn't maintain it;
now they're gettin jealous 'cause Queens has made it:
THAT's why those suckers are trying to dis;
'cause we're getting paid, and they're getting pissed!

The line "Rap like a rasta" was aimed at the way "The Bridge Is Over" was recorded, with a reggae flavor, in a Jamaican accent. The track had been one of the first blendings of rap with reggae.

[edit]Ending and aftermath

In 1987, attempting to calm down an unrelated domestic dispute involving BDP colleague D-Nice, BDP's DJ Scott La Rock was shot dead. Even after La Rock's death, the feud still continued.

MC Shan's song "Juice Crew Law" contained several anonymous shots at KRS. At the same time, other rappers joined in making songs dissing Queensbridge, such as Cool C's "Juice Crew Dis" which mocked "Juice Crew Law" and attacks both Shan and Shanté, and MitchSki's "Brooklyn Blew Up the Bridge, South Bronx Helped us out", which made fun of Shan's on-stage appearances. Another rapper named Butchy B stepped in for Queensbrige, with "Go Magic", which was a promotional for Mr. Magic's WBLS radio show that begins

I heard about you suckers with your Juice Crew Dis,
you went and made a record that the people go and miss"

and adds

all you suckers with the lipstick need to get a dress;
Looking like a faggot, jocking Mr. Magic,
acting like a parasite, leach or maggot...

The lipstick reference was aimed at the rival station WRKS-FM ("Kiss-FM"), which used a pair of lips as its logo. He followed up with"Beat Down KRS", in which he among other things, mocks the "didadidadiday" chant of "The Bridge is Over". KRS took minutes to respond. He answered in 1987 on his featured appearance on "Moshitup" with Just-Ice, from the album "Kool & Deadly" . There, he states

They run they run they run they run they run their lyrics through
But when they finish rhymin you have not heard nuttin new
So this one dedicated to the one that run their rhyme-a
Time after time after time after time
I know what you will say before you jump up on the stage
But make sure you don't say "Di-di-di-dah-di-di-di-day"
Or I'll have to look for you and beat you all up
So when you see me in the street just keep your mouth shut

In 1988 DJ Rockwell Noel and the Poet followed up with Taking U Out, which was even stronger than "Beat You Down", and harshly attacked both KRS's then-wife, Ms. Melodie, and rival radio station WRKS's DJ Red Alert, who was on BDP's side of the battle. KRS responded with "Still Number 1, the Numero Uno Mix", where he calls Poet "soft" and uncreative, and accuses him of "sounding like Kane".

Ka-Re-eSe Uno es fresco (Spanish for: KRS is fresh.)
Poet is soft ya know
Do not speak when grown people are speaking
Don't interrupt the class when I'm teaching
Turn your text-books now to BDP
And see
"Criminal Minded" and "By All Means Necessary"
I'm sort of like a bounty hunter,
I search for the best and crush the mother________.

He concludes the song with the lyrics:

Your first mistake was to answer back
to the undefeated master of beating suckers silly
No, I'm not from Philly
My name isn't Magic, Poet, or Billy
It's KRS, especially if it doesn't take you too long
to find out where I shift
And shifted back
To simply say you're wack
Weak, soft and really never posed a threat
In fact, I haven't heard a decent lyric from you yet
I'll bet creativity is something hard to get
As someone does your music and lyrics you slept
So step
Because obviously you haven't heard about my rep
I am undefeated, allow me to go more in depth
Boy you know - I'm still number one ("one" echos)

Although conspicuously absent from this counterattack was any rebuttal to Poet's attack on his wife.

Rockwell Noel & the Poet never seemed to respond to this. Some have suggested that their 1989 single "Massacre" may have been a 'between the lines' response [5], with Poet making anoynymous references like "sucker MC's try to test me...".

In 1988, BDP and KRS-One fuels their feud with the juice crew again with "My Philosophy".

you walk down the street and get jumped
You got to have style, and learn to be original
and everybody's gonna wanna diss you
like me, we stood up for the South Bronx
and every sucka mc had a response
You think we care? I know that they are on the tip
my posse from the Bronx is thick
and we're real live, we walk correctly
a lot of suckas would like to forget me
but they can't, cause like a champ
I have got a record of knocking out the frauds in a second
on the mic, I believe that you should get loose
I haven't come to tell you I have juice

On Shan's album Play it Again, Shan, the track "Time For Us To Defend Ourselves" contains a response to "My Philosophy".

Knowledge ain't nothin but a book on your shelf
With justice in mind think deep to yourself

In 1990, Boogie Down Productions released the concept album Edutainment. It has been praised by critics for its insightfulness and hailed as BDP's most experimental album. KRS-One took on such topics as politics, racism, self identity, slavery, black on black violence, police brutality & corruption and even the meat industry. But, even though KRS-One covered a range of subjects, he couldn't resist a Juice Crew dis. On the second track "Blackman In Effect" he states:

This is the language of the people ready to hear the truth
I've got no juice, 'cause I'm not getting juiced
To have juice means you kiss and lick a lot of booty
To have respect means you simply know or knew me
Heard what I had to say and felt as though you'd say that too
I'm not down with a juice-crew
But anyway I say today the message I create is great
I don't preach hate, I simply get the record straight

[edit]Legacy

During the nineties, the beef was not forgotten by fans or the participants, but rather fondly remembered as a classic hip hop rivalry. It has since been referenced in hip hop lyrics by the likes of CormegaDas EFXNasCunninlynguistsBig PunisherSupernaturalChino XLMars ILL, and 2Pac. MC Shan and KRS-One themselves acknowledged the rivalry's important place in hip hop history when they appeared together in a commercial for the Sprite soft drink in the mid-nineties, in which they exchanged battle rhymes inside a boxing ring. However, the respective fortunes of the pair in the nineties were very different; MC Shan, widely seen by hip hop listeners as the loser of the conflict (should there have been one), never really recovered his reputation and later effectively retired, while KRS forged out a successful solo career and remained an important figure in hip hop.

Meanwhile, Poet had gone on, eventually rechristening himself as "Blaq Poet", later went on to be a part of the groups PHD (Poet + DJ Hot Day), and Screwball; and some of the records released over the years, took numerous pot shots at KRS.

In particular, Screwball's "The Bio" and "You Love To Hear The Stories" (a followup to the original "The Bridge", and which featured MC Shan) recounted the story of him entering the battle, and being basically ignored, and that it thankfully never escalated into physical violence; and the latter pointed to the Nas album Illmatic (1994) as proof that "the Bridge is still live". Key lines from both:

Back when I first laced the wax with rhymes
It was eighty sa'en, I was a crazy sa'en
Niggas tried to diss the Bridge I came bustin'
Even quoted Doug E Fresh sayin we was nothin'
You don't believe that, you know I called his bluffin'
Made 'em go buy a click and put 'em on patrol
You know P-O-E-T stayed in war mode
My gats stayed unlocked ready to unload
Loungin' waitin for the drama to unfold
But luckily we never had to go there

Y'all niggas love to hear the stories again and again
Of how it all got started way back then
See it was Marly, MC Shan, the Juice Crew
Queensbridge, hip-hop land, those niggas blew (up)
Nobody said it started there
But some playa hater tried to end a party there
Niggas didn't care they burned it, put it in the air

In 2001, on the compilation QB's Finest (a showcase of Queensbridge hip hop artists), MC Shan took one last parting shot at KRS-One with the comment:

Hip hop was set out in the dark
The Bridge was never Over, we left our mark

KRS-One and Marley Marl have since officially retired the feud, with the release of their collaborative 2007 album, Hip-Hop Lives. The album features two tracks further exemplifying the end of the feud: "The Victory" (produced by DJ Premier) which sees KRS on the same track as Blaq Poet, and "Rising" (as in "Rising To the Top"), in which KRS recounts the whole story from his perspective (a struggling former group home resident trying to enter the business in a period when "answer records" were popular, sparked off by Shante's "Roxanne's Revenge"). You can see this (and the changed attitude towards the former rivals) in the line:

Answer records were big then;
after Shante did it, everyone was trying to spit them
So we spit on...
To tell you the truth, it was the only way a MC could get on
We answered MC Shan's "Queensbridge";
A dope jam about where he was from and where he lived;
But in the Bronx there was these kids
KRS, Scott La Rock tryin' to live...

He concludes the track acknowledging his indebtedness to Shan and Marley. He also speaks well of them on other tracks in the album, such as "House of Hits". KRS had also contributed a verse to the Symphony 2000 remake of the Marley Marl classic in 1999.

[edit]Relevant records

The following is a chronological list of the records that can be considered to be part of The Bridge Wars:

MC Shan - "The Bridge"

Boogie Down Productions - "South Bronx"

MC Shan - "Kill That Noise"

Boogie Down Productions - "The Bridge Is Over"

Craig G - "Duck Alert"

Roxanne Shanté - "Have A Nice Day"

Rockwell Noel & The Poet - "Beat You Down" and "Taking U Out"

Boogie Down Productions - "Still No. 1 (Numero Uno mix)"

MC Mitchski - "Brooklyn Blew Up The Bridge" (Defending BDP)

MC Shan - "Juice Crew Law"

Cool C - "Juice Crew Diss"

MC Butchy B - "Go Magic" and "Beat Down KRS"

Boogie Down Productions - "Black Man In Effect"

Queensbridge Records - "Bridge Wars

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