City Paper: Miles to Go: After more than a year of being the face for police accountability, Jordan Miles is now adding his voice

Chris Young, Pittsburgh City Paper—Since his arrest and beating at the hands of three undercover city police officers last year, Jordan Miles has been the face of efforts to reform the Pittsburgh Police  — whether he wanted to be or not.
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Raw footage: Justice for Jordan Miles Emergency Protest #2, Police HQ, 14 May 2011

Nigel Parry for Pittsburgh Indymedia—Raw Flipcam footage from the second emergency protest for Justice for Jordan Miles, called by the Alliance for Police Accountability. The footage (released as Creative Commons-Non-Commercial-Attribution) was shot near and in front of Police Headquarters in the Northside of Pittsburgh, on May 14th, 2011, from just after 1pm onwards.
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Terez Miles’ statement, read out during the May 6th Emergency Protest in Downtown

Thursday, May 5, 2011—Yesterday’s decision by federal officials not to charge the three police officers who brutally beat Jordan came as a horrible insult, to Jordan, to me as his mother, and to everyone with eyes, a brain and common sense.
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: NAACP seeks meeting on Jordan Miles case

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette—The Pittsburgh branch of the NAACP plans to ask for a meeting with the police chief, mayor and district attorney to create a dialogue about police-community relations.
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AP: NAACP wants to meet with mayor, police chief to discuss police beating of arts student

Associated Press—The Pittsburgh branch of the NAACP wants to meet with the mayor, police chief and district attorney about separate investigations by the Justice Department and the city failed to prove three white officers broke the law or department regulations when they beat a black arts student last year.
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Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: NAACP wants city officers prosecuted for Jordan Miles beating

Tony LaRussa, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review—The head of the Pittsburgh chapter of the NAACP yesterday said the organization is unified with other black organizations that are calling for the firing and prosecution of three Pittsburgh police officers they say beat a Homewood teenager.

“The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is outraged over news of the FBI’s decision not to prosecute the three police officers,” said M. Gayle Moss, the organization’s president, during a news conference in the offices of a Hill District nonprofit organization.

“Emotions of the city would not be so high if this was not such an injustice,” she said. “There should be some level of accountability for the savage beating.”

On Friday, more than 100 people attended a protest outside the City-County Building, Downtown, calling for the termination of officers Richard Ewing, Michael Saldutte and David Sisak, who were accused by Jordan Miles of beating him on Jan. 12, 2010.

The officers, who are white, said the injuries suffered by Miles, who is black, occurred when he ran from them and resisted arrest.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Pittsburgh last week announced that an investigation by the Department of Justice and the FBI yielded insufficient evidence to charge the officers on the federal level.

A civil lawsuit filed by Miles against the city and the officers is in the pretrial stage.

The news conference was aimed at “reinforcing” the message Pittsburgh’s black leadership is trying to send to local political and law enforcement officials, said Tim Stevens, chairman of the Black Political Empowerment Project, or B-PEP.

“The mayor (Luke Ravenstahl) has called for the need for healing to begin in our city,” Stevens said. “But how can we even attempt to begin healing when the incident involving Jordan Miles is such an open wound?”

In a sign of unity, Moss and Stevens were joined at the news conference by Esther Bush, president and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh, and Brandi Fisher, who chairs the Alliance for Police Accountability.

Fisher said that for justice to be served, the three officers would have to be dismissed from the force and Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen A. Zappala Jr. would have to prosecute the officers.

Zappala has said he is continuing to review the case before determining whether criminal charges are warranted.

Read more: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_736245.html#ixzz1M9EVJWUp

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Podcast: Special Rustbelt Radio report on Jordan Miles (extended 24 minute version)

The feature takes a look back at the 15 months since Jordan was beaten, the recent news that the federal government are not going to prosecute the cops for civil rights violations of Miles—which the Mayor and Police Chief are trying to spin as a blanket pardon.

Listen to speakers including Tim Stevens, Paradise Gray, Brandi Fisher, Jordan Miles, Terez Miles, Bria Adams, the city government and police, and a cast of tens of thousands.

Find out what happened on that night of January 12th, 2010, what myths persist in the media reporting, and what’s next for the Justice for Jordan Miles campaign.

Nigel Parry produced this extended 24-minute report about recent updates in the Jordan Miles case, for JusticeforJordanMiles.com, from a shorter piece for Rustbelt Radio‘s 9 May 2011 show.

Listen here:

Download here:

http://justiceforjordanmiles.com/media/audio/20110509-Rustbelt-JFJM-extra.mp3

End of podcast music by Pocket of Resistance: www.pocketofresistance.net

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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Justice Dept.’s decision in Jordan Miles case increases distrust

What will mend rift between police and community?

Paula Reed Ward, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette—The news that the Department of Justice wouldn’t file charges against three Pittsburgh police officers accused of using excessive force against a Homewood teenager was disappointing for the teen and his family.

But for the community affected by it, the decision has served only to exacerbate a feeling of distrust of the police that existed even before the January 2010 incident.
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Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: Protesters want Pittsburgh officers fired

Margaret Harding, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review—The three police officers accused in the beating of a Homewood teen won’t face federal charges and are free to return to work. But the saga isn’t over.
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Raw footage: Speakers at Emergency Protest outside City-County Building

Nigel Parry for Pittsburgh Indymedia—27 minutes of raw footage of speakers at the Justice for Jordan Miles emergency protest held outside the City-County Building in downtown Pittsburgh on 6 May 2011.

Speakers: Tim Stevens (video start), Bria Adams (jump to 1:25), Pete Shell (jump to 4:12), Bob Maddick (jump to 7:13); Paradise Gray (jump to 7:45); Brandi Fisher, (jump to 11:20).

Jordan’s mother Terez Miles’ statement is read out at 20:05

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