'Everyone of your color hates you!': Leftist militants curse out, berate black Portland cop on camera



Cellphone video captured the moment leftists cursed out and berated a black Portland police officer to his face, even yelling at him that "everyone of your color hates you!"

What are the details?

The barrage of profanity and other verbal attacks came from several people — loudly and often at once — so it was difficult to hear everything that was yelled at the officer. But multiple, rapid-fire "f*** you" exclamations were for sure delivered. One person also called him a "bitch."

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @DrewHLive

At one point the cop told the group to "back off me!"

Another person asked, "Why are you standing with the white man? They enslaved our people! And you're standing with him!"

The cop mentioned "COVID" and waved his hand in front of his face as if to signal that his abusers were way too close — but one of them yelled, "Where's your f***ing mask if you're so worried about COVID?"

Soon the officer said "goodbye" and tried walking away from the mob.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @DrewHLive

But not only did they continue to follow the officer and yell at him — one of his antagonizers went right up to him and walked just inches from him, continuing to berate him.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @DrewHLive

As the officer walked to a patrol vehicle, his antagonists continued to verbally abuse him, lavishing him with F-bombs and calling him a "bitch" some more.

After he entered the car, one of the abusers screamed at the top of her lungs that "your ancestors hate you! Everyone of your color hates you!"

As a vehicle was seen departing the area, the crowd offered some parting shots, including "you put no fear in us!" and "you ain't s**t!"

The clip was posted to Twitter on Thursday, but the date and time of the incident is not clear. The location and context of the profanity-laced barrage against the black officer also is not clear.

Here's the clip. (Content warning: Language):

PORTLAND: Psychopath BLM supporters absolutely BERATE a Black police officer accusing him of “Standing with the Whi… https://t.co/bxh3EiyoRJ

— Drew Hernandez (@DrewHLive) 1625797215.0

Black police officer fired for using N-word wants job back — and bigger question looms: Should race of employee using N-word figure in severity of discipline?



After Delvin White — a black officer with the Tampa Police Department — was fired earlier this month for using the N-word, students at the campus he patrolled were taken aback.

"I was confused and amazed," J'Lyn Green, a 16-year-old Middleton High School sophomore, told the Tampa Bay Times, adding that White is "good people."

"He shouldn't have used it," Green added to the paper, "but the punishment shouldn't have gone that far."

What's the background?

White — an eight-year veteran of the department who served as a school resource officer — used the N-word while on the phone and during a Nov. 30 arrest, the Times reported in a previous story, citing a disposition letter police released.

He was hit with "violations of policy that prohibit discriminatory conduct," the paper said, citing a news release.

The disposition letter said when White was confronted about his actions, he told his superior he didn't use the N-word in a derogatory fashion but rather as it's "commonly used in today's society as a means of shared culture and experiences among the African American community," the Times reported.

But Chief Brian Dugan said that "derogatory statements made by police officers jeopardize the trust that our department works to establish with our community. Tampa Police officers are held to a higher standard, and incidents like this negatively impact the entire law enforcement profession," the paper added.

Now what?

The Times said that White had built a rapport with students and staff at the school during his three years serving there. And while his supporters agree he should have been disciplined, they told paper that firing an "effective, beloved black officer at a school where nearly half the students are black" is "unfair and counterproductive."

The big question, according to the Times: Should there be different penalties depending on the race of the employee using the N-word and the context in which they use it?

The paper said White's supporters are calling for the chief to reinstate him, and White is appealing his termination to the city's Civil Service Board with support from the Tampa Police Benevolent Association. In addition, an online petition created by a Middleton student has attracted nearly 1,300 signatures, the Times noted.

More from the paper:

Yvette Lewis, president of the Hillsborough branch of the NAACP, is among those who say that use of the word should be looked at "holistically" and that White's offense is not as serious as a white person using the slur against a Black person.

Lewis, who said she has received "a ton of calls" in support of White, sees another factor behind the Black community's criticism of Dugan's decision.

"Black folks are looking at this like, white police officers have done us wrong, shot us dead in the street, they have mistreated us and still have their job, so why would you want to fire this man for saying a word?" Lewis said. "That's what I'm hearing."

Lavetta Sexil, J'Lyn Green's mother, told the Times that White cares a lot about the students.

"He treats them like they're his very own kids," she noted to the paper. "When J'Lyn went to high school, we had an issue where we thought he was skipping. Officer White kept a close eye on him and if he wasn't in class, he would let me know. We need officers like Officer White in our community."

Middleton student Anjali Bryant created a petition page at change.org titled, "Get Officer White his job back" — which reflects the opinion earlier noted by J'Lyn Green: White "did make a mistake, but the punishment was too harsh," the Times reported.

The page adds that "we feel that nothing Officer White said jeopardized the trust he has established in our community. The students at Middleton High School love Officer White and we know he feels the same based on his actions," the paper noted.

What else did the police chief have to say?

A complaint review board consisting of five sworn officers unanimously ruled that White violated a department policy on "professional responsibility and responsibility of enforcement" — but only two said he violated a city policy forbidding "discriminatory conduct" presumably in regard to the use of the N-word, the Times said.

The board sent a summary to Chief Dugan that said "no one was insulted, no damage was done to anyone's reputation, and the victim did not feel offended or disrespected," according to the paper.

But Dugan told the Times he still believed he had to fire White.

"People need to understand I can't fire a white officer and not fire a Black officer for saying that," he noted to the paper. "If you're going to go for restorative punishment for him, you have to do it for everyone in the future, no matter what color they are. The policy is pretty clear that unless there are mitigating circumstances, you're going to get terminated if you talk like that."

"My stance has to be color blind," Dugan added to the Times.

Black college professor weighs in

Neal Lester, an English professor at Arizona State University who is black, told the paper some black people say their N-word use culturally re-appropriates the slur and lessens its power — but he doesn't buy that.

Lester — who has designed and taught a course that traces the N-word's history from its origins to its use in pop culture — added to the Times that black people's use of the slur can't be separated from how white people used it for centuries to discriminate and oppress.

"You can't take the power out of that when it's still connected to racism, and if you internalize the racism, then white people don't have to use it because you use it among people who look like you," the professor told the paper, adding that he viewed White's body camera videos. "If [White] is using that with this young man he's upset with, where is the power taken out of that? And if he's talking disparagingly about a group of Black people, where has the power been taken out of that?"

Anything else?

Many Middleton students and some staff members wore white to school Monday to support White, who also was there:

"We're not condoning what I did, but we don't think I should have gotten terminated," White added to the Times. "I'm amazed by the support I've received and really want my job back so I can continue my work in the community."

Tampa police union backs fired Black officer after body-camera video shows him saying N-wordyoutu.be

Black officer to resign after fatally shooting three minorities in five years. Black Lives Matter mob allegedly shot at officer during August protest.



A black officer from the Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, Police Department is resigning after fatally shooting three people — all of them minorities — in five years.

The resignation of Joseph Mensah, who's been suspended since July in the wake of his third fatal shooting, is effective Nov. 30, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.

What's the background?

The Milwaukee County District Attorney's Office ruled all three fatal shootings justified self-defense, including the most recent shooting in February, the paper said.

But Mensah remained suspended after the family of Jay Anderson Jr. — whom Mensah fatally shot in a Wauwatosa park in 2016 — filed a complaint, the Journal Sentinel added.

The paper reported in a previous story that two of the fatally shot individuals were black and the third person shot and killed was Latino/Native American.

Retaliation?

In August, Mensah said protesters chanted "black lives matter" while shooting at him and punching him at his girlfriend's home.

Mensah posted on Facebook that protesters "tried to kill me. I was unarmed and tried to defend my property and the property of my girlfriend. We were both assaulted, punched, and ultimately shot at several times. A shotgun round missed me by inches. Not once did I ever swing back or reciprocate any the hate that was being directed at me. I am all for peaceful protests, even against me, but this was anything but peaceful. They threw toilet paper in her trees, broke her windows, and again, shot at both of us as they were trying to kill me. There are children that live there any the knew that. The irony in all of this is that they chanted Black Lives Matter the entire time, but had zero regard for any of the black children that live there or me, a black man."

Wauwatosa police said between 50 and 60 people gathered at the home to protest Mensah on the night of Aug. 8, where he was physically assaulted and a single shotgun round was fired into the home, the Journal Sentinel noted in another story.

Police added that protesters began to vandalize the home around 8 p.m. and that while Mensah "attempted to establish a dialog," he "was ultimately physically assaulted," the Journal Sentinel said, citing a police department release.

As Mensah went inside, "armed protesters approached the rear door and a single shotgun round was discharged by a member of the group into Officer Mensah's backdoor," the paper added, citing the release.

Former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker called the incident "domestic terrorism" and said officials "must take action":

This is domestic terrorism. Local, county, state, and federal officials must take action. https://t.co/YF3ZhIV0bF
— Scott Walker (@Scott Walker)1596996531.0

Three people have since been charged in that incident, the paper said.

Mensah also told WISN-AM that roughly 100 protesters came to his home on the night of July 27, the Journal Sentinel reported in a separate story.

"To call me a murderer, without any conviction, without any charges, and then to do something like this, again, I'm angry, I'm frustrated, I'm confused," he said during the interview, the paper reported.

Mensah added that "it'd be one thing if there was any kind of cause, whatsoever, for my actions. But I defended myself, several times. Proven that I defended myself several times," the Journal Sentinel said.

He also said he believes he was suspended to appease protesters, WITI-TV reported.

"They knew all about this in 2016," Mensah said, according to the station. "They didn't have an issue with it in 2017. They didn't have an issue with it back in 2018. They didn't have an issue in 2019. Now, it's 2020. Let's just suspend him for no reason."

A GoFundMe for Mensah's legal fees set up in mid-July raised over $78,000.

What's been happening lately?

Before Mensah's resignation was announced Tuesday, a hearing before the police and fire commission was scheduled for Dec. 16 in which Mensah would have had the opportunity to regain his job, the Journal Sentinel said.

More from the paper:

The commission was the only panel that could fire Mensah. But others have weighed in throughout the year.

On the same day that Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm cleared Mensah of any criminal wrongdoing in his third fatal shooting, an independent investigator hired by the commission recommended that Mensah be fired.

Steven Biskupic wrote in his report released Oct. 7 that the potential for a fourth fatal shooting by Mensah "creates an extraordinary, unwarranted and unnecessary risk to the Wauwatosa Police Department and the City of Wauwatosa."

He said there was "just cause" for Mensah to be fired since he made "inconsistent and misleading" public statements about the shootings, which violated a department policy and which could compromise his ability to testify in court.

Three months earlier, the common council passed a resolution calling for the removal of Mensah. The next day, the police and fire commission suspended him.

Mensah later filed a lawsuit in Milwaukee County, contesting there wasn't "just cause" for his suspension. Mensah's attorney, Jonathan Cermele, said in advance of the December hearing that Mensah would have been "completely capable" of performing his duties as an officer and that suspending him violates his due process because "one simply cannot be disciplined for an act that has yet to occur."

The city is asking the commission to meet as soon as possible to dismiss the charges pending against Mensah, the Journal Sentinel added.

"Now is the time for all of us to come together and heal," Wauwatosa Mayor Dennis McBride said, according to the paper.

Officer Mensah to resignyoutu.be

Rioters scream racial slurs at black police officer during Breonna Taylor protests. His stoic response is everything.



A Los Angeles police officer kept his cool even as angry rioters hurled insults and racial epithets at him during Wednesday night protests in the city.

Protests erupted across the country Wednesday night after a grand jury decided against bringing homicide charges against the officers involved in the shooting death of Louisville, Kentucky, resident Breonna Taylor.

You can read more about the indictment here.

What are the details?

According to a report from the Daily Mail, demonstrators converged on an LAPD precinct to demonstrate following the announcement of an indictment of former Louisville police Officer Brett Hankison in the Breonna Taylor case.

Reports say that hundreds of demonstrators marched in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday night to demand Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey leave her position, apparently in response to the grand jury's decision in Kentucky.

Video captures the moment a group of angry agitators scream profanities and slurs at the black police officer. Some demonstrators wave their hands in his face and hold up their middle fingers, while others shine lights, blow smoke, and even mimic shooting a gun at the officer in question.

At least two members of the raucous group can be seen wearing Halloween masks.

Members of the angry group can be heard calling the officer a "b****" and even a "n****" for the police.

The unidentified officer stoically stands by, staring the demonstrators in their faces and refusing to be moved by their anger.

Social media user and self-identified videographer and editor Tomas Morales shared video footage of the incident on Twitter, captioning it, "LOS ANGELES: Agitators yell slurs at black police officer."

At the time of this reporting, the video has been viewed more than 924,000 times.

(Content warning: Rough language):

LOS ANGELES: Agitators yell slurs at black police officer. https://t.co/Eff67JtQk2
— Tomas Morales (@Tomas Morales)1600926764.0

Anything else?

According to the Los Angeles Times, the large group of protesters demonstrated outside the city's Hall of Justice.

Willie Baker, who has shown up to protest each Wednesday for the last several months, told the outlet that many more people came out to demonstrate following the news of the Taylor indictment.

"More should have been indicted," he insisted. "If we do something, we go to jail like that. It's time to start locking up the police, too."

Vincent Irby, identified by the outlet as a criminal defense attorney, told the outlet that the decision didn't surprise him.

"I understood this was going to come down to legalese, and I had a sneaking suspicion it would come down to this," he told the Times.

Kat Pavplek, a friend of Irby, added, "Nothing has reformed, nothing has changed, and [police] keep killing people."

LAPD Officer Mike Chance told the outlet that no arrests were made during the protest.