Cynthia why have you gone there

THE KOD

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Capitol chief: No racism in McKinney incident

Congresswoman says controversy 'much ado about hairdo'

Associated Press
Published on: 04/05/06
WASHINGTON ? U. S. Capitol Police Chief Terrance Gainer said Wednesday that Rep. Cynthia McKinney turned an officer's failure to recognize her into a criminal matter when she failed to stop at his request, and then struck him.

"He reached out and grabbed her and she turned around and hit him," Gainer said on CNN. "Even the high and the haughty should be able to stop and say, 'I'm a congressman' and then everybody moves on."

For her part, McKinney wasn't backing down from the argument. She charged anew that racism is behind what she said is a pattern of difficulty in clearing Hill security checkpoints.

"This has become much ado about hairdo," she said Wednesday on CBS's "The Early Show." McKinney, a Georgia Democrat, recently dropped her trademark cornrows in favor of a curly brown afro.

"It's much to do about nothing," Gainer told The Washington Times.

Last Wednesday's incident in a House office building has caused a commotion on Capitol Hill, where security in the era of terrorist threat is tighter than ever and where authorities had to order an evacuation just Monday because of a power outage.

McKinney has garnered little support among fellow Democrats in her feud with the Capitol police. No one in her party chose to join her at a news conference last Friday to discuss the situation, and the event was canceled.

As a federal prosecutor considers whether to press assault or other charges against her, Republicans presented a resolution commending Capitol police for professionalism toward members of Congress and visitors ? even though they "endure physical and verbal assaults in some extreme cases."

"I don't think it's fair to attack the Capitol Police and I think it's time that we show our support for them," said Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., a sponsor of the measure. Ignoring a police officer's order to stop, or hitting one, "is never OK," McHenry said.

Some GOP members have said the McKinney incident serves to underscore Democratic insensitivity to security concerns.

Gainer said that racism, however, was not a factor.

"I've seen our officers stop white members and black members, Latinos, male and females," he told CNN. "It's not an issue about what your race or gender is. It's an issue about making sure people who come into our building are recognized if they're not going through the magnetometer, and this officer at that moment didn't recognize her."

"It would have been real easy, as most members of Congress do, to say here's who I am or do you know who I am?" Gainer added.

Police also have said that McKinney was failing to wear a pin that lawmakers are asked to display when entering Capitol facilities.

But she said Wednesday: "Face recognition is the issue .... The pin doesn't have my name on it and it doesn't have my picture on it, and so security should not be based on a pin ... People are focused on my hairdo."

"Something that perhaps the average American just doesn't understand is that there is a heightened sense of a lack of appropriateness being there for members who are elected who happen to be of color," McKinney said, "and until this issue is addressed by the American public in a very substantive way, it won't be the last time."

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wtf does that supposed to mean.

I have voted for this lady in the past, I am beginning to think she is nuts.

Of course Bush cronies could be out to embarress her for coming out like she did when the US first invaded Iraq. White house was pissed back then.

Maybe this is backlash.

But she sure sound like a biggot.
 

toastonastick

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you should see the coverage on the Atlanta news. Shes friggen lost it! I still wonder how she holds her seat.
 

smurphy

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Watching the replay of her interview on CNN. Disgusting. Soledad O'Brien has asked about 10 times now "What happened?", and all she and her lawyer just keep saying are "larger problem of racial profiling...blah blah blah".

Soledad is about to lose it. "All do respect, it's my program - please tell me what exactly happened?" ....nothing.

McKinney has no legitimate backing. She's done. Delay and McKinney gone - that's a good week.
 

THE KOD

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Grand jury to hear McKinney incident

By BOB KEMPER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 04/05/06
WASHINGTON ? The federal prosecutor investigating the confrontation between Rep. Cynthia McKinney of Georgia and a Capitol Hill police officer last week has asked a grand jury to decide whether the six-term congresswoman should be charged with assault, police and legal authorities said Wednesday.

It's not uncommon for a federal prosecutor to refer a case involving a prominent person to a grand jury to help blunt any appearance of political favoritism. Outside legal experts said the move also could indicate that U.S. Attorney Ken Wainstein's office intends to seek felony charges against McKinney.

"As a practical matter, prosecutors don't go to grand juries for a misdemeanor," said Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University.

The prosecutor's office was expected to call at least three eyewitnesses to testify before the grand jury about the scuffle that occurred last Wednesday when a police officer, not recognizing McKinney as a member of Congress, stopped her from skirting a security checkpoint, as congressmen are allowed to do, according to police and legal authorities.

McKinney was in Washington Wednesday with her lawyer, Michael Raffauf, but neither Raffauf nor an office spokesman returned phone calls and emails seeking comment.

Capitol Hill police turned the investigation over to the federal prosecutor on Monday. Wainstein's office said earlier that he could decide by the end of the week whether to press charges against McKinney ? from assaulting a police officer, a felony, down to simple assault, a misdemeanor. Police and legal authorities said a grand jury could still make that deadline.

While the investigation continued, the Democrat from DeKalb County appeared on a series of radio and network television news programs Wednesday to assert that she was the victim of racial profiling.

"I want to categorically deny that I did anything wrong," McKinney said on WETA-FM in suburban Washington.

McKinney, appearing on the shows with one lawyer at her side and another on the phone, refused to say whether she struck the police officer, saying she could not comment while a criminal case is pending.

McKinney's lawyer, Raffauf, suggested that McKinney was acting in self-defense against what another of her lawyers called an "assault" by the Capitol police officer, who is white.

"Whatever response she's had ? a slap, a push, a shove or hit ? is not a criminal matter in these circumstances," Raffauf said.

U.S. Capitol Police Chief Terrance Gainer, appearing on CNN at the same time as McKinney, denied the racial profiling charge and said the police officer involved was only doing his job.

"This is not a racial issue," Gainer said. "People cannot hit policemen when they disagree with what that policeman is doing."

Gainer blamed McKinney for fueling the controversy.

"It could have ended very quickly," he said. "Even the high and the haughty should be able to stop and say, 'I'm a congressman' and then everybody moves on."

Raffauf defended McKinney, saying, "The congresswoman is not the one who has blown this incident out of proportion."

Meanwhile, two members of Georgia's congressional delegation ? one Republican and one Democrat ?weighed in, both taking McKinney to task for striking the officer.

"Thinking an officer is racially motivated does not excuse hitting or pushing past him," said Rep. Jim Marshall, a Democrat from Macon. "Racism hurts people. False accusations of racism hurt all of us."

Rep. Charlie Norwood, a Republican from the Augusta suburb of Evans, also sided with the police.

"When a Capitol Police officer orders you to stop, you stop," Norwood said in a statement. "I've been asked by Capitol Police officers to identify myself on numerous occasions, and I don't mind a bit, since these guys are doing their best to protect me, our staff and all our visitors from around the country.

"To ignore them, keep walking, then punch them when they try to stop you is a criminal act, and we can't tolerate it from anyone," he said.

Norwood joined Republican Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue in chiding Georgia Democrats for keeping their silence on McKinney as state Republicans kept up their efforts to make her an issue for all other state Democrats up for election this fall.

"We have to be accountable for those people we associate with," Perdue said. "And I think the silence is deafening.
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Of course if this was any regular citizen we would have been handcuffed immediately and still in jail pending charges.

She gets to go before a grand jury to decide if she should be charged.

There are definately two sets of laws in the US.
 

THE KOD

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McKinney has had a penchant for making headlines since her election to Congress in 1992. She accused President Bush of having prior knowledge of the Sept. 11 terror attacks and doing nothing to stop them. She has backed the Castro regime in Cuba. And after her 2002 loss to Denise Majette, her father, a former state lawmaker, blamed "J-E-W-S" for her loss.
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what a gal !
 

THE KOD

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mouth-closed.jpg

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How in the world could Cynthia have struck a police officer ?

I dont think she has a mean bone in her body.
 

THE KOD

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State Election Board members said Thursday that electioneering allegations against U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney and her father were a case of "he said, she said" and closed the case without any penalty.

McKinney (D-Ga.) and her father, state Rep. Billy McKinney (D-Atlanta), were accused of violating election law by entering a south DeKalb County polling area on Election Day in November 2000 and urging voters waiting in line to vote for her. Election law forbids campaigning within 150 feet of the polls.

The McKinneys denied the allegations made by Republican poll watchers but signed a consent agreement to avoid a prolonged hearing on the civil charges.

The agreement states: "Without admitting that they have engaged in any conduct violating [election law], they agree that they will refrain from such conduct in the future." Several members of the overflow audience at the hearing at the Capitol in Atlanta chuckled at that.

The evidence "amounts to a swearing contest between Ms. McKinney ... and two members of a different political party,'' Assistant Attorney General Kyle Pearson wrote in a letter to the board. "It is my belief that a violation of this code section would be difficult, if not impossible to prove at an evidentiary hearing."

State Election Board member John Sours, the only one of four members to vote against the consent order, demanded that the matter go to an administrative law hearing where testimony is sworn.

"Let's see who was telling the truth and who was not telling the truth," said Sours, adding that conflicting testimony is common and no reason for dropping a case.

Republicans said the decision was unjust. "This is a disappointing development that undermines respect for our government and law,'' Ralph Reed, chairman of the Georgia Republican Party, said in a statement. "Either in appearance or in fact, partisan considerations are apparently taking precedence over upholding the law.''

Nancy Quan-Sellars, a DeKalb Elections Board official who unsuccessfully pressed charges against Billy McKinney for allegedly grabbing her lapel at the precinct, said state officials backed off for fear of retribution in upcoming elections. Cynthia McKinney has a formidible base of Democratic voters in south DeKalb.

Secretary of State Cathy Cox said the decision to halt the case was prudent.

"We have to separate ourselves from the hullabaloo from both sides," said Cox, who chairs the Election Board but did not vote on the matter. "Both sides have taken very partisan postures."

The precinct at Stoneview Elementary School had suffered from long lines and too few machines all day, and hundreds of voters were still in line when the polls were to close at 7 p.m.

Adrienne Susong, a Republican pollwatcher, said the McKinneys and a large contingent of supporters pushed their way into the closed precinct. She said Billy McKinney urged his daughter to stand on a table and address voters and that the congresswoman said, "Please don't leave, because I need your vote."

Susong said the situation deteriorated into chaos after the McKinneys arrived.

The McKinneys, who did not attend Thursday's hearing or return phone calls seeking comment, denied doing that. They say they were merely urging voters to stick around to vote.
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gardenweasel

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remember the words of a great american.....

"if the b-tch throws a fit,you must acquit"

btw..i finally found some slappy white....god,was he funny...

http://www.nndb.com/people/631/000092355/slappy-sm.jpg

AKA Melvin White

Born: 20-Sep-1921
Birthplace: Baltimore, MD
Died: 7-Nov-1995
Location of death: Brigantine, NJ
Cause of death: Heart Failure


Gender: Male
Ethnicity: Black
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Comic

Nationality: United States
Executive summary: The First Black Vice President


"I was on the bus, and the bus was crowded, and I pushed and shoved. And I was standing be side a white fella, about six foot three, 250 pounds, broad shoulders. He looked down at me and said, "Are you a member of the NAACP?" And I said no. He said, "Do you belong to CORE?" I said no. He said, "Are you a follower of Martin Luther King?" I said no. He said, "Well, do you believe in Black Power?" I said I don't believe in none of that stuff. He said, "Then get the f-ck off my damn foot!"
He and Redd Foxx were partners in the Chitlin' Circuit of stand up comedy during the 50s.

Wife: LaVern Baker


TELEVISION
Sanford and Son Melvin


FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Mr. Saturday Night (12-Sep-1992)
Amazon Women on the Moon (18-Sep-1987) Himself
 

THE KOD

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McKinney made no reference to racial profiling in her statement on the House floor.

But even as McKinney appeared to be trying to put the issue to rest, a bodyguard she hired ? reportedly a former Georgia state trooper ? was raising another furor when he threatened a television reporter trying to interview McKinney outside the Capitol just minutes before she appeared on the House floor.

When the reporter from Cox Broadcasting tried to ask McKinney about the grand jury, the bodyguard told him, "I'm going to put your ass in jail. I'm a police officer," a videotape of the incident shows.

Asked if he worked for Capitol police, the man said, "I work for Miss McKinney."

Word that McKinney had hired a bodyguard roiled the ranks of the Capitol police who were worried that the guard was carrying a weapon. They said they are concerned about what the bodyguard might do if Capitol police challenged McKinney at a security checkpoint.

McKinney's office did not return repeated phone calls seeking comment
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So now anyone that fails to recognize Cynthia Mckinny will be shot in the buttocks by her personal bodyguard.

Why is it that some people in this world always do and say the wrong things at the wrong times.
 

Mjolnir

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Scott,
surprised you voted for her. i've only seen her a few times, but she seemed like a comlete wack job.
 

THE KOD

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MJ

I had a problem one time and I wrote to her for help with it. Not only did she return my email personally but she made some calls
and helped me get it resolved.

It was years ago but it did make me cast my ballot for her.

The whacko
 

ELVIS

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typical - i am sure she is related to the ford family of memphis...... and i just bet that the due to demographics in her district she will be re elected
 
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