10:18 pm By la Macha · Bolivia| Latin America| Politics · Comments Off
1 Jul 2009
Remember how I’ve been talking about my confusion over what role the U.S. is playing in the Honduran coup?
Well, this latest from Bolivia just makes me more confused.
President Evo Morales on Wednesday accused Barack Obama of lying by pledging to change America’s historically heavy-handed relationship with Latin America and then halting $25 million in annual trade benefits for Bolivia.
The U.S. on Tuesday said it is ending the import duty waivers because world’s No. 3 cocaine-producing country is not doing enough to reduce “unconstrained” cultivation of coca.
Morales said the move contradicts Obama’s promise at the Summit of the Americas in April to be a peer rather than an overseer of countries in the region. “President Obama lied to Latin America when he told us in Trinidad and Tobago that there are not senior and junior partners,” he told reporters.
I think that Morales’s words (peer and overseer), really exemplifies what I’ve been struggling with in relation to Honduras. The U.S. has acted as the “overseer” of Latin America very aggressively since the 70’s–but really, even longer than that: since the time of colonization really.
So did the U.S. *really* just give up its overseer position in Honduras? Even as it continues with the whip in Bolivia?
8:22 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration| Obama| Ohio| Politics| Violence| crime| media justice| pennsylvania| race · 7 Comments
18 Jun 2009This morning in my inbox I received another email telling me, and whoever else was on this advocacy org’s coveted mailing list, that I should be vigilant about the rising tide of hate crimes and yet again the point of reference was the Holocaust Museum shooting.
Do I really need a reminder? Do I need to hear the frenzied 911 call of a mother after seeing her husband and daughter shot and killed? I know that audio is going around some blogs and media sites and I have refused to listen for my own personal sanity as a Latina mother but also as a statement against the exploitation of the pain of Latinas for the sake of “the story”
Would Hate Crimes legislation made a difference? Would it have prevented a Latino young man from having a noose placed around his neck and dragged around a parking lot in Ohio? Maybe if the young man would have died his lie would have been worth more than the paltry sentence his horror was met with.
MOUNT VERNON, Ohio – A central Ohio teenager accused of putting a noose around a Hispanic boy’s neck and dragging him in a parking lot has been sentenced to 10 days in jail.
The 18-year-old was sentenced Wednesday in juvenile court in Mount Vernon, a city of 15,000 residents an hour’s drive northeast of Columbus. He dropped his original plea of not guilty and pleaded no contest to ethnic intimidation.
A charge of aggravated menacing was dropped.
8:38 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism| Immigration| Justice| Politics| Violence| crime| media justice| pennsylvania| race · 1 Comment
13 May 2009
Seems like every org and their mother want to take the recent injustice in the Luis Ramirez murder case and use it for toned down cries for justice separated from the multiple places that breed the kind of hate and disrespect that led to the crossroads we as a community find ourselves at now. This is why The Sanctuary (of which I am a proud member) hoy draws a line in the sand.
The process of defining a subhuman class and institutionalizing discrimination and violence against that group is not new. How quickly and conveniently some of us allow our collective memory to cover its own tracks. Parasite, diseased, leeching, dangerous, over-breeding, vermin. These terms and this imagery have been deployed for ages, on various groups of people, on various pieces of land, in the service of various endeavors; and always to bring about the same ends. To demonize and dehumanize a group of people so that other people come to understand that the social compact with the demonized group is broken; that discrimination and violence against the dehumanized class now carries no moral consequence. That is the meaning of this latest ruling by an all-white jury in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania. Racial murder of a Mexican carries the same consequence as walking up to a white person and punching them in the belly: simple assault.
Are you down to make the commitment to radical cambio for our lives? Then read the entire post here.
4:21 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colorado| GLBT| Justice| crime| society · Comments Off
22 Apr 2009The trial of transgender murder victim Angie Zapata goes to the jury today in Colorado, and marks the first time the state will try a case in which gender identity — recognized as a protected class by Colorado and 11 other states — gets hate crime status.
The killer, one Allen Andrade, claims he lost control upon learning Angie’s gender but prosecutors say the killing — by blunt force trauma with a fire extinguisher — was premeditated:
But prosecutor Brandi Nieto argued that Andrade learned the truth about Zapata’s gender 36 hours before he killed her. Andrade had accompanied Zapata to traffic court, where clerks called her Justin Zapata, Nieto said.“This was not a snap decision,” she said.
Last month, a judge threw out Andrade’s confession to police, saying it came after the suspect told them he was through answering questions. Prosecutors say they intend to use statements he made to others, including, “It’s not like I . . . killed a straight, law-abiding citizen.”
Wow, what a heartless individual.
The L.A. Times reports that controversy has erupted in the courtroom as the defense attorney insisted on referring to Angie as “Justin” or “he”, while the prosecution referred to her as “she”.
The video above shows coverage of the trial from earlier this week. The question that remains is what Andrade will be charged with. Since his defense concedes he is guilty, it’s now up to jurors to decide whether he will be charged with 1st degree murder — which will mean life in prison without parole — or a lesser charge.
Via / L.A. Times
11:04 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia| Justice| Latin America| Peru| Politics| crime · 1 Comment
7 Apr 2009Breaking news: justice has once again caught up with ex-president of Perú Alberto Fujimori. And this time he’s paying the price for his infamous human rights violations. The video above is of the judge declaring Fujimori “guilty beyond a reasonable doubt” of charges related to the deaths of 25 people during his administration.
According to the prosecutor, Fujimori backed the massacre of nine students and a professor from the state university La Cantuta in 1992 and the death of 15 people, among them a child, during a party in the Barrios Altos area in 1991.
In addition he is accused of the kidnapping of a businessman and an opposition journalist, the latter one day after Fujimori closed the Congress and the judicial branch after a self-coup with the help of the army in 1992.
12:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities| Chismes| Controversia| Justice| Media · Comments Off
9 Mar 2009Do you guys remember this little piece of chisme history?
This incident came to be known as “el carterazo”, because PauPau hit a papparazzi, one Luz Amanda Orozco, with her cartera when the star was approached by Orozco at Miami International Airport in 2006. What came out of that incident, in addition to embarassment, was a lawsuit, filed by Orozco who demanded half a million dollars from La Chica Dorada.
There’s no telling what’s been going on behind closed doors, but it seems that Pau’s legal nightmares are over, as the pair seems to have reached a settlement. People en Español reports that the legal secretary handling the case was informed by attorneys today that there will be no suit, as some kind of agreement (mum’s the word) has been reached.
Via / People en Español
10:47 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities| Controversia| Justice| crime · Comments Off
6 Mar 2009
Rihanna may have forgiven boyfriend Chris Brown for allegedly physically abusing her — indeed, some reports are emerging that the couple has even married — but justice has not. U.S. Today reports that Brown will face two felony assault charges for the beating he gave the pop star:
After being charged by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office with two felonies, R&B singer Chris Brown, 19, did not enter a plea at his arraignment hearing Thursday. His attorney, Mark Geragos, asked for and was granted a continuance until April 6.
The charges, one count each of assault with force likely to produce great bodily injury and making criminal threats, could result in a sentence ranging from probation to four years and eight months in state prison, district attorney’s spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons said.
Mark Geragos? Guilty!
Brown did not enter a plea at his arraignment.
With these charges, the message sent by all of Brown’s supporters that physical abuse can somehow be justified is — at least a little — countered by the fact that the state of California says you can’t get away with beating your girlfriend up, even if she refuses to press charges.
TMZ reports (take it at face value) that Chris went out partying last night after court.
Update: CNN reports:
Singer Rihanna, through her lawyer, asked a judge Thursday not to prohibit her boyfriend, singer Chris Brown, from having contact with her while he faces felony charges of assaulting her.
The request was granted.
Via / USA Today
12:22 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| California| Cities| GLBT| Justice| Politics| San Francisco| States| society · 1 Comment
5 Mar 2009
“When all else fails, pray!” is what comes to mind upon reading about the multiple candlelight vigils that were held throughout my state on the eve of the hearing that will make or break California’s most discriminatory law against LGBT citizens. Last night San Franciscans, like Californians in other cities big and small, held vigils and marched. What else can you do at this point? The San Francisco Chronicle reports:
The crowd, bundled against the chill, carried signs reading, “We All Deserve the Freedom To Marry,” and “Down with Prop. 8!” as they marched along Market Street. The peaceful protest stretched for two city blocks past stopped Muni street cars while police held back traffic at the intersections.The group made their way to City Hall, where a pianist and singer entertained the crowd with love songs. Some of the participants planned to camp out in the Civic Center Plaza to be there for the hearing.
It will be shown on a JumboTron for those who don’t have access to viewing rooms set up in the San Francisco Public Library.
Will the great State of California overturn what has been called “the will of the people”? Or will it let thousands of gay families remain together? I am pessimistic, but we’ll just have to wait and see. In the meantime, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom is reportedly all booked up…the media is just clamoring to get his take. Check out an interview with Mayor Newsom and hear his thoughts after the jump.
Read more…
12:49 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia| Florida| Justice · 3 Comments
15 Dec 2006
Death by lethal injection is supposed to be one of most “painless” methods of execution of prisoners condemned to this fate. But this apparently was not the case in the execution of Ángel Nieves Díaz, a Latino prisoner in Florida. It took two injections to kill him and witnesses claim that his death was anything but painless:
The execution yesterday of Puerto Rican Angel Nieves Díaz has revived controversy over the use of lethal injection as a method of execution for prisoners in the state of Florida, as the the prisoner needed two doses of the lethal cocktail, which prolonged his agony for a full 34 minutes.Nieves Díaz, sentenced to death for a 1979 murder, took 34 minutes to die because, according to the state’s prison department, he suffered a kidney condition that impeded his body from metabolizing chemical subtances quickly.
6:58 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Justice| Texas| race · Comments Off
12 Dec 2006
Last month we told you about a hate crime in Houston in which a Latino youth was brutally beaten and sexually abused by a white youth because he tried to kiss white girl. Now, one of the accused in the case, Keith Turner, faces 90 years in prison.
A jury gave a 17-year-old Texan a 90-year jail sentence on Monday for his part in a brutal and racially motivated assault on a Hispanic youth.“The jury has recommended 90 years for Keith Turner,” a clerk at the 209 Criminal District Court in Houston told Reuters.
The clerk said Turner had 30 days to appeal the sentence and if it remained in place he would not be eligible for parole for at least 30 years.
Turner was convicted on Friday of aggravated sexual assault for the April incident in which the victim was sodomized by a plastic pipe, stomped and burned during an attack at a house party.
His friend, David Tuck, 18 was sentenced to life last month.
Via / Alertnet.org
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