Saturday, November 22, 2014

WORLD WAITS FERGESON GRAND JURY DECISION-2 BOMB MAKERS ARRESTED FROM THE BLACK PATHERS.

JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER

OTHER IMPORTANT NEWS INSTEAD
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/liberal-loonies-want-to-force-carbon.html

OTHER BROWN-WILSON STORIES
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/fergeson-grand-jury-should-be-decided.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/the-grand-jury-decision-in-mike-brown.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/09/ferguson-announces-changes-to-policing.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/09/us-to-investigate-ferguson-police-report.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/isis-beheads-american-aid-worker-peter.html

I THOUGHT THEY SAID THE GRAND JURY WOULD WARN US OF THE RESULT YESTERDAY. WHAT ARE THE MEDIA DOING PLAYING WITH OUR MINDS.ARE THEY USING PHYCOLOGICAL  WARFARE MIND GAMES ON US.IT SURE SEEMS LIKE IT.THE RESULT WAS TO BE YESTERDAY.THEN SUNDAY EVERYBODY WAS SUPPOSE TO KNOW THE RESULT.I SEE THERE MAY BE ISLAMIC MUSLIMS-ARABS IN FERGESON TO STIR UP THE VIOLENCE.ISLAM IS EXPERTS AT RIOTS-BURNING-KILLING INNOCENT CITIZENS IN THE NAME OF THEIR MOON GOD ALLAH.SO IT WOULD JUST MAKE SENSE ISLAM COMES TO FERGESON TO RILE THE PEACEFUL PROTESTS.

UPDATE NOV 22,14-3;07PM
WELL THE GRAND JURY WILL NOT BE MAKING A DECISION TILL AT LEAST MONDAY.AS THEY ARE TAKING THE WEEKEND OFF.SEE ALL THEIR DOING IS PLAYING MIND GAMES WITH US.DO NOT EVEN EXPECT ANTHING TO HAPPEN TILL AT LEAST DECEMBER.THEY CAN PLAY ALL THE HEAD GAMES THEY WANT THE MEDIA.BUT I WOULD STAND FOR IT.LIFE GOES ON.AND WHEN EVER THE RESULT COMES.IT COMES.


Officials prepare for Ferguson grand jury decision, urge calm-Reuters-By Daniel Wallis-NOV 22,14-YAHOONEWS

FERGUSON Mo. (Reuters) - Police and protest organizers laid the groundwork on Friday for steps to avert street violence once a St. Louis-area grand jury decides whether to indict the white police officer who fatally shot unarmed black teenager Michael Brown in August.Against the backdrop of heightened tension, the FBI arrested two men suspected of buying explosives they intended to detonate during demonstrations in Ferguson, Missouri, a law enforcement official told Reuters.In a sign that a grand jury decision is imminent in the Brown case, prosecutors told media organizations they were making plans for a news conference to announce the outcome, although the date, time and location remained undetermined.A 12-member St. Louis County grand jury has been weighing evidence on the disputed circumstances of the Aug. 9 slaying of Brown by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, a predominantly black suburb of 21,000 people. The panel met behind closed doors again on Friday.Lawyers for Brown's family say the youth was trying to surrender when he was gunned down, and a companion has said Brown, 18, had his hands raised. Wilson's supporters insist he shot Brown in self-defense.The killing instantly became a flashpoint for strained U.S. race relations, triggering weeks of sometimes violent protests in Ferguson calling for the arrest of Wilson. He has instead been placed on administrative leave and gone into seclusion.President Barack Obama added his voice to the chorus of politicians, civic leaders and activists appealing for calm ahead of the grand jury decision and renewed protests that are expected to follow."I think first and foremost, keep protests peaceful," Obama said during an ABC News interview taped for Sunday's "This Week" program."This is a country that allows everybody ... to protest actions that they think are unjust," he said. "But using any event as an excuse for violence is contrary to rule of law, contrary to who we are."

SPECTER OF VIOLENCE

The specter of violence was raised again by news that two reputed members of a militant group called the New Black Panther party were arrested in the St. Louis area in an FBI sting operation.As initially reported by CBS News, the men were suspected of acquiring explosives for pipe bombs they planned to set off during protests in Ferguson, said the law enforcement official, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to publicly discuss the case.The official said the men have been named in a newly unsealed federal indictment returned on Nov. 19, charging Brandon Orlando Baldwin and Olajuwon Davis with buying two pistols from a firearms dealer under false pretenses.Some activists decried the timing of the arrests, suggesting they were aimed at either smearing protest organizers or justifying what was expected to be a heavy law enforcement presence once protests take place. Others welcomed the news."Well, the Feds are protecting us from these crazies," prominent activist Bassem Masri wrote on social media website Twitter.At a news briefing by politicians and law enforcement on preparations for expected demonstrations, St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay said he did not know when a decision would be revealed, "but we expect it will be coming very shortly."The nearby Jennings School District said it would close on Monday and Tuesday, for fear of unrest in Ferguson, although the Ferguson-Florrisant school district planned to keep its schools open.Activists held a news conference at a church in Ferguson on Friday to announce plans to deploy more than 50 volunteers, dubbed "Disciples of Justice," who will mill about protesters to help diffuse tensions on the street."We want the community to know we've got an extra set of eyes and ears in the midst of the demonstrations," said Brown family attorney Anthony Gray.Hundreds of civil rights lawyers were descending on Ferguson to monitor any protests and ABC News reported the FBI had sent 100 agents to the St. Louis area.Mayor Slay said police had orders to exercise restraint, to avoid stoking violence."We have instructed our police officers to protect the protesters' constitutional rights," he said. "We have directed them to use more active tactics only when necessary to keep people safe or to protect property."Missouri Governor Jay Nixon has declared a state of emergency and called in National Guard troops to back up police. Groups across the country have said they would take to the streets again in large numbers if charges are not brought.(Additional reporting by Julia Edwards and Emily Stephenson in Washington, Steve Holland in Las Vegas and David Bailey in Minneapolis; Writing and additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Will Dun

FBI arrests two would-be Ferguson bomb suspects: law enforcement source-Reuters-By Daniel Wallis -NOV 22,14-TAHOONEWS

FERGUSON Mo. (Reuters) - Two men suspected of buying explosives they planned to detonate during protests in Ferguson, Missouri, once a grand jury decides the Michael Brown case, were arrested on Friday and charged with federal firearms offenses, a law enforcement official told Reuters.Word of the arrests, reported by a number of media outlets Friday, came ahead of the grand jury's widely anticipated decision on whether the white police officer who fatally shot Brown, an unarmed black teenager, should be indicted on criminal charges.The Aug. 9 slaying of 18-year-old Brown under disputed circumstances became a flashpoint for U.S. racial tensions, triggering weeks of sometimes violent protests in the St. Louis suburb by demonstrators calling for officer Darren Wilson's arrest.He was instead placed on administrative leave, and Ferguson has been bracing for a new wave of protests, especially if the grand jury chooses not to indict Wilson. An announcement was believed to be imminent.Against this backdrop of heightened tensions, according to a law enforcement source, two men described as reputed members of a militant group called the New Black Panther Party, were arrested in the St. Louis area in an FBI sting operation.As initially reported by CBS News, the men were suspected of acquiring explosives for pipe bombs that they planned to set off during protests in Ferguson, according to the official, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to publicly discuss the case.The official said the two men are the same pair named in a newly unsealed federal indictment returned on Nov. 19 charging Brandon Orlando Baldwin and Olajuwon Davis with purchasing two pistols from a firearms dealer under false pretenses.Both men were arraigned on Friday in federal court, the law enforcement source said.The FBI and other federal agencies were reported to have stepped up their presence in the St. Louis area in recent days in anticipation of renewed protests after the grand jury's decision in the Brown case is made known.An FBI official in St. Louis declined to comment except to say that the two men named in the indictment had been arrested. Officials from the U.S. Attorney's Office for eastern Missouri were not immediately available for comment.(Adds first name of officer Darren Wilson in paragraph 3)(Reporting by Daniel Wallis; Writing and additional reporting by Steve Gorman)

Lawyers descend on Ferguson ahead of grand jury decision-Reuters-By Tim Reid-NOV 22,14-YAHOONEWS

FERGUSON Mo (Reuters) - Hundreds of civil rights lawyers from across America are descending on Ferguson, Missouri as police and protesters prepare for a grand jury decision on whether to charge the officer who killed an unarmed black teenager in August.The attorneys are arriving in Ferguson as talks between protest groups and police have stalled over a refusal by officials to rule out the use of riot gear, tear gas and militarized equipment if demonstrations turn violent should a grand jury decide not to indict police officer Darren Wilson, protest leaders say.Wilson, who is white, shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown in a Ferguson street on August 9. The death sparked weeks of sometimes violent protests, and hundreds of arrests. The grand jury decision on whether to indict Wilson is imminent and police fear another wave of violence if he is not charged. Tensions in Ferguson and the St. Louis area are running high.The lawyers, some from as far afield as New York and California, have responded to calls from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and protest groups in Ferguson to monitor police behavior in the wake of the grand jury decision. They will also take an aggressive legal posture, the attorneys said, filing quick fire lawsuits to fight potentially shoddy jail conditions, onerous bail bonds and civil rights abuses."We will be using the sword as well as the shield," said Justin Hansford, a St. Louis University law professor who is part of the legal team. "We have lawyers from Washington, New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. They won't just be observing. They will be filing lawsuits."Prominent civil rights lawyer Vince Warren, executive director of the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) has been in Ferguson since Monday. Nicole Lee, an international human rights lawyer from Washington, arrived on Wednesday.Warren said 280 lawyers and law students had answered emails and have volunteered to travel to Ferguson. The lawyers are taking instructions from the CCR, the National Lawyers Guild, the Missouri Chapter of the ACLU and the NAACP Legal defense Fund."We are in a crisis situation and we are here to ensure police let people voice their anger and frustration and don't crack down on protesters as hooligans," Warren said.Diane Balogh, of the Missouri ACLU, said the organization had held a dozen training sessions with 100 legal observers in recent weeks. The ACLU is providing them with a mobile phone app allowing them to upload video of police behavior to a secure central database. Ferguson police have been wearing video devices since September.Protest leaders have held meetings, and conference calls, with John Belmar, the St. Louis County Police chief, Captain Ron Johnson of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, and St. Louis City police chief Sam Dotson since mid-October, protest leaders and police say.The focus of the talks has been on 19 "rules of engagement" proposed by the Don't Shoot Coalition, an umbrella group of 50 community and protest groups. The police have agreed to about a dozen of the rules, but have stayed silent on the use of tear gas and riot gear."The area we are most concerned about is the militarized response, and we are still waiting to hear on that," said Denise Lieberman, a lawyer and co-chair of the Don't Shoot Coalition.Tory Russell, a founder of the protest group Hands Up United, said he had only been asked to one meeting with police officials, in late October, which he attended."All they wanted to know was where we are going to be after the grand jury decision," Russell said. "They didn't tell us where they were going to be. It was just a dig for information. We don't trust them at all."The St. Louis County Police, city police, and the Missouri Highway Patrol, did not respond to requests for comment.(Reporting by Tim Reid. Editor: Hank Gilman)

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