From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
Uhuru House Cult in the news
Uhuru house accuses a guy who defends himself from drug dealers as working for the state. Well where's their evidence. Clowns.
From today's Chronicle:
Meanwhile, the activist group Uhuru House posted flyers in the neighborhood saying, "McCullough must be removed from the African community before he kills."
"Patrick McCullough is a criminal, a common criminal who needs to be put in jail," said Bakari Olatunji, local president of the International Peoples Democratic Uhuru Movement. "He's working in the interests of the state. That's why they let him go."
Several of McCullough's neighbors took down the posters Wednesday and Thursday. The posters allege that "the U.S. government hires sellouts like McCullough to make it look like we're killing ourselves." It goes on to ask "Whose side are you on? The people or the pigs?"
McCullough said he is "treating the posters like a threat."
"If it wasn't a serious threat, I think it would be kind of ludicrous. ... This is totally off the wall. Virtually every fact on that poster is wrong."
Lt. Lawrence Green, who heads police patrols in North Oakland, said he was not worried about the posters but was concerned they could prompt someone to violate the law.
"If something happens to Patrick, and it can be shown that it was inspired by their poster, there could be some liability, certainly civil liability but possibly criminal," Green said.
From today's Chronicle:
Meanwhile, the activist group Uhuru House posted flyers in the neighborhood saying, "McCullough must be removed from the African community before he kills."
"Patrick McCullough is a criminal, a common criminal who needs to be put in jail," said Bakari Olatunji, local president of the International Peoples Democratic Uhuru Movement. "He's working in the interests of the state. That's why they let him go."
Several of McCullough's neighbors took down the posters Wednesday and Thursday. The posters allege that "the U.S. government hires sellouts like McCullough to make it look like we're killing ourselves." It goes on to ask "Whose side are you on? The people or the pigs?"
McCullough said he is "treating the posters like a threat."
"If it wasn't a serious threat, I think it would be kind of ludicrous. ... This is totally off the wall. Virtually every fact on that poster is wrong."
Lt. Lawrence Green, who heads police patrols in North Oakland, said he was not worried about the posters but was concerned they could prompt someone to violate the law.
"If something happens to Patrick, and it can be shown that it was inspired by their poster, there could be some liability, certainly civil liability but possibly criminal," Green said.
Add Your Comments
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!
Get Involved
If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.
Publish
Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.
Topics
More
Search Indybay's Archives
Advanced Search
►
▼
IMC Network