All posts by MuniCourts

American Apartheid: Discrimination Disguised as Law

On Monday, June 20, 2016, the United States moved even closer to a police state when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Utah v. Strieff that evidence of a crime may be used against a defendant even if the police did something wrong or illegal in obtaining it. Black people have been complaining about unconstitutional searches for decades and now the Supreme Court has partially nullified fourth amendment protection for everyone against illegal searches.

The laws of the United States including federal or state statutes and local ordinance have been designed to suppress black people. There have been a number of laws specifically enacted to enslave, control movement, miseducate, and prevent the economic progress of black people. The CIA allowed drugs to be imported into black communities during the 1990s. During the Civil Rights Movement, the FBI had a secret program called COINTELPRO to discredit and disrupt civil rights leaders and protest. See U.S. Government Discrimination

Before the United States became a country, the colonies enacted slave codes to ensure that slaves had no rights and could be treated as property. This country supposedly conceived in liberty, defined black slaves as less than human in the constitution, the Supreme Law of the United States. 

Last month, I became disgusted the day I read a British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) article about how information from the CIA led to Nelson Mandela's arrest and his 27-year imprisonment in 1962. See: Nelson Mandela: CIA tip-off led to 1962 Durban arrest. Even though Nelson Mandela was president of South Africa from 1994 to 1999, he was on a US terror watch list until 2008, the same year Barack Obama was elected president. I felt a similar disgust when I learned of the Supreme Court's decision.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, a former criminal prosecutor, dissented the US Supreme Court's decision and warned that people of color are the subject of particular scrutiny. “This court has given officers an array of instruments to probe and examine you,” she added. “When we condone officers’ use of these devices without adequate cause, we give them reason to target pedestrians in an arbitrary manner. We also risk treating members of our communities as second-class citizens.

Justice Sotomayor specifically cited the St. Louis area when she stated, "In the St. Louis metropolitan area, officers “routinely” stop people—on the street, at bus stops, or even in court—for no reason other than “an officer’s desire to check whether the subject had a municipal arrest warrant pending.”"

Justice Sotomayor's full dissent is published below.


JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG joins as to Parts I, II, and III, dissenting

The Court today holds that the discovery of a warrant for an unpaid parking ticket will forgive a police officer’s violation of your Fourth Amendment rights. Do not be soothed by the opinion’s technical language: This case allows the police to stop you on the street, demand your identification, and check it for outstanding traffic warrants—even if you are doing nothing wrong. If the officer discovers a warrant for a fine you forgot to pay, courts will
now excuse his illegal stop and will admit into evidence anything he happens to find by searching you after arresting you on the warrant. Because the Fourth Amendment should prohibit, not permit, such misconduct, I dissent.

I

Minutes after Edward Strieff walked out of a South Salt Lake City home, an officer stopped him, questioned him, and took his identification to run it through a police database. The officer did not suspect that Strieff had done anything wrong. Strieff just happened to be the first person to leave a house that the officer thought might contain “drug activity.” App. 16–19. As the State of Utah concedes, this stop was illegal. App. 24. The Fourth Amendment protects people from “unreasonable searches and seizures.” An officer breaches that protection when he detains a pedestrian to check his license without any evidence that the person is engaged in a crime. Delaware v. Prouse, 440 U. S. 648, 663 (1979); Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S. 1, 21 (1968). The officer deepens the breach when he prolongs the detention just to fish further for evidence of wrongdoing. Rodriguez v. United States, 575 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2015) (slip op., at 6–7). In his search for lawbreaking, the officer in this case himself broke the law. The officer learned that Strieff had a “small traffic warrant.” App. 19. Pursuant to that warrant, he arrested Strieff and, conducting a search incident to the arrest,
discovered methamphetamine in Strieff ’s pockets. Utah charged Strieff with illegal drug possession. Before trial, Strieff argued that admitting the drugs into evidence would condone the officer’s misbehavior. The methamphetamine, he reasoned, was the product of the officer’s illegal stop. Admitting it would tell officers that unlawfully discovering even a “small traffic warrant” would give them license to search for evidence of unrelated offenses. The Utah Supreme Court unanimously agreed with Strieff. A majority of this Court now reverses.

II

It is tempting in a case like this, where illegal conduct by an officer uncovers illegal conduct by a civilian, to forgive the officer. After all, his instincts, although unconstitutional, were correct. But a basic principle lies at the heart of the Fourth Amendment: Two wrongs don’t make a right. See Weeks v. United States, 232 U. S. 383, 392 (1914). When “lawless police conduct” uncovers evidence of lawless civilian conduct, this Court has long required later criminal trials to exclude the illegally obtained evidence.Terry, 392 U. S., at 12; Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U. S.643, 655 (1961). For example, if an officer breaks into a home and finds a forged check lying around, that check may not be used to prosecute the homeowner for bank fraud. We would describe the check as “‘fruit of the poisonous tree.’” Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U. S. 471, 488 (1963). Fruit that must be cast aside includes not only evidence directly found by an illegal search but also evidence “come at by exploitation of that illegality.” Ibid. This “exclusionary rule” removes an incentive for officers to search us without proper justification. Terry, 392 U. S., at 12. It also keeps courts from being “made party to lawless invasions of the constitutional rights of citizens by permitting unhindered governmental use of the fruits of such invasions.” Id., at 13. When courts admit only lawfully obtained evidence, they encourage “those who formulate law enforcement polices, and the officers who implement them, to incorporate Fourth Amendment ideals into their value system.” Stone v. Powell, 428 U. S. 465, 492 (1976). But when courts admit illegally obtained evidence as well, they reward “manifest neglect if not an open defiance of the prohibitions of the Constitution.” Weeks, 232 U. S., at 394.Applying the exclusionary rule, the Utah Supreme Court correctly decided that Strieff ’s drugs must be excluded because the officer exploited his illegal stop to discover them. The officer found the drugs only after learning of Strieff ’s traffic violation; and he learned of Strieff ’s traffic violation only because he unlawfully stopped Strieff to check his driver’s license. The court also correctly rejected the State’s argument that the officer’s discovery of a traffic warrant unspoiled the poisonous fruit. The State analogizes finding the warrant to one of our earlier decisions, Wong Sun v. United States. There, an officer illegally arrested a person who, days later, voluntarily returned to the station to confess to committing a crime. 371 U. S., at 491. Even though the person would not have confessed “but for the illegal actions of the police,” id., at 488, we noted that the police did not exploit their illegal arrest to obtain the confession, id., at 491. Because the confession was obtained by “means sufficiently distinguishable” from the constitutional violation, we held that it could be admitted into evidence. Id., at 488, 491. The State contends that the search incident to the warrant-arrest here is similarly distinguishable from the illegal stop. But Wong Sun explains why Strieff ’s drugs must be excluded. We reasoned that a Fourth Amendment violation may not color every investigation that follows but it certainly stains the actions of officers who exploit the infraction. We distinguished evidence obtained by innocuous means from evidence obtained by exploiting misconduct after considering a variety of factors: whether a long time passed, whether there were “intervening circumstances,” and whether the purpose or flagrancy of the misconduct was “calculated” to procure the evidence. Brown v. Illinois, 422 U. S. 590, 603–604 (1975). These factors confirm that the officer in this case discovered Strieff ’s drugs by exploiting his own illegal conduct. The officer did not ask Strieff to volunteer his name only to find out, days later, that Strieff had a warrant against him. The officer illegally stopped Strieff and immediately ran a warrant check. The officer’s discovery of a warrant was not some intervening surprise that he could not have anticipated. Utah lists over 180,000 misdemeanor warrants in its database, and at the time of the arrest, Salt Lake County had a “backlog of outstanding warrants” so large that it faced the “potential for civil liability.” See Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Survey of State Criminal History Information Systems, 2014 (2015) (Systems Survey) (Table 5a), online at 

https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bjs/grants/249799.pdf

(all Internet materials as last visited June 16, 2016); Inst.for Law and Policy Planning, Salt Lake County Criminal Justice System Assessment 6.7 (2004), online at

http://www.slco.org/cjac/resources/SaltLakeCJSAfinal.pdf

The officer’s violation was also calculated to procure evidence. His sole reason for stopping Strieff, he acknowledged, was investigative—he wanted to discover whether drug activity was going on in the house Strieff had just exited. App. 17. The warrant check, in other words, was not an “intervening circumstance” separating the stop from the search for drugs. It was part and parcel of the officer’s illegal “expedition for evidence in the hope that something might turn up.” Brown, 422 U.S., at 605. Under our precedents, because the officer found Strieff ’s drugs by exploiting his own constitutional violation, the drugs should be excluded.

III

A

The Court sees things differently. To the Court, the fact that a warrant gives an officer cause to arrest a person severs the connection between illegal policing and the resulting discovery of evidence. Ante, at 7. This is a remarkable proposition: The mere existence of a warrant not only gives an officer legal cause to arrest and search a person, it also forgives an officer who, with no knowledge of the warrant at all, unlawfully stops that person on a whim or hunch.To explain its reasoning, the Court relies on Segura v.United States, 468 U. S. 796 (1984). There, federal agents applied for a warrant to search an apartment but illegally entered the apartment to secure it before the judge issued the warrant. Id., at 800–801. After receiving the warrant, the agents then searched the apartment for drugs. Id., at
801. The question before us was what to do with the evidence the agents then discovered. We declined to suppress it because “[t]he illegal entry into petitioners’ apartment did not contribute in any way to discovery of the evidence seized under the warrant.” Id., at 815. According to the majority, Segura involves facts “similar” to this case and “suggest[s]” that a valid warrant will clean up whatever illegal conduct uncovered it. Ante, at 6–7. It is difficult to understand this interpretation. In Segura, the agents’ illegal conduct in entering the apartment had nothing to do with their procurement of a search warrant. Here, the officer’s illegal conduct in stopping Strieff was essential to his discovery of an arrest warrant.
Segura would be similar only if the agents used information they illegally obtained from the apartment to procure a search warrant or discover an arrest warrant. Precisely because that was not the case, the Court admitted the untainted evidence. 468 U. S., at 814.The majority likewise misses the point when it calls the warrant check here a “‘negligibly burdensome precautio[n]’” taken for the officer’s “safety.” Ante, at 8 (quoting Rodriguez, 575 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 7)). Remember, the officer stopped Strieff without suspecting him of committing any crime. By his own account, the officer did not fear Strieff. Moreover, the safety rationale we discussed in Rodriguez, an opinion about highway patrols, is conspicuously absent here. A warrant check on a highway “ensur[es] that vehicles on the road are operated safely and responsibly.” Id., at ___ (slip op., at 6). We allow such checks during legal traffic stops because the legitimacy of a person’s driver’s license has a “close connection to roadway safety.” Id., at ___ (slip op., at 7). A warrant check of
a pedestrian on a sidewalk, “by contrast, is a measure aimed at ‘detect[ing] evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing.’” Ibid. (quoting Indianapolis v. Edmond, 531 U. S. 32, 40–41 (2000)). Surely we would not allow officers to warrant-check random joggers, dog walkers, and lemonade vendors just to ensure they pose no threat to anyone else. The majority also posits that the officer could not have exploited his illegal conduct because he did not violate the Fourth Amendment on purpose. Rather, he made “good­faith mistakes.” Ante, at 8. Never mind that the officer’s sole purpose was to fish for evidence. The majority casts his unconstitutional actions as “negligent” and therefore incapable of being deterred by the exclusionary rule. Ibid. But the Fourth Amendment does not tolerate an officer’s
unreasonable searches and seizures just because he did not know any better. Even officers prone to negligence can learn from courts that exclude illegally obtained evidence.Stone, 428 U. S., at 492. Indeed, they are perhaps the most in need of the education, whether by the judge’s opinion, the prosecutor’s future guidance, or an updated manual on criminal procedure. If the officers are in doubt about what the law requires, exclusion gives them an “incentive to err on the side of constitutional behavior.” United States v. Johnson, 457 U. S. 537, 561 (1982).

B

Most striking about the Court’s opinion is its insistence that the event here was “isolated,” with “no indication that this unlawful stop was part of any systemic or recurrent police misconduct.” Ante, at 8–9. Respectfully, nothing about this case is isolated. Outstanding warrants are surprisingly common. When a person with a traffic ticket misses a fine payment or court appearance, a court will issue a warrant. See, e.g., Brennan Center for Justice, Criminal Justice Debt 23 (2010), online at

https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/legacy/Fees%20and%20Fines%20FINAL.pdf.

When a person on probation drinks alcohol or breaks curfew, a court will issue a warrant. See, e.g., Human Rights Watch, Profiting from Probation 1, 51 (2014), online at 

https://www.hrw.org/report/2014/02/05/profiting-probation/ americas-offender-funded-probation-industry.

The States and Federal Government maintain databases with over 7.8 million outstanding warrants, the vast majority of which appear to be for minor offenses. See Systems Survey (Table 5a). Even these sources may not track the “staggering” numbers of warrants, “‘drawers and drawers’” full, that many cities issue for traffic violations and ordinance infractions. Dept. of Justice, Civil Rights Div., Investigation of the Ferguson Police Department 47, 55 (2015) (Ferguson Report), online at

https://www.justice.gov/ sites/default/files/opa/press-releases/attachments/2015/03/
04/ferguson_police_department_report.pdf
.

The county in this case has had a “backlog” of such warrants. See supra, at 4. The Department of Justice recently reported that in the town of Ferguson, Missouri, with a population of 21,000, 16,000 people had outstanding warrants against them. Ferguson Report, at 6, 55. Justice Department investigations across the country have illustrated how these astounding numbers of warrants can be used by police to stop people without cause.In a single year in New Orleans, officers “made nearly 60,000 arrests, of which about 20,000 were of people with outstanding traffic or misdemeanor warrants from neighboring parishes for such infractions as unpaid tickets.” Dept. of Justice, Civil Rights Div., Investigation of the New Orleans Police Department 29 (2011), online at 

https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/crt/legacy/2011/03/17/nopd_report.pdf.

In the St. Louis metropolitan area, officers “routinely” stop people—on the street, at bus stops, or even in court—for no reason other than “an officer’s desire to check whether the subject had a municipal arrest warrant pending.” Ferguson Report, at 49, 57. In Newark, New Jersey, officers stopped 52,235 pedestrians within a 4-year period and ran warrant checks on 39,308 of them. Dept. of Justice, Civil Rights Div., Investigation of the Newark Police Department 8, 19, n. 15 (2014), online at

https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/crt/legacy/2014/07/22/newark_findings_7-22-14.pdf

The Justice Department analyzed these warrant-checked stops and reported that “approximately 93% of the stops would have been considered unsupported by articulated reasonable suspicion.” Id., at 9, n. 7. I do not doubt that most officers act in “good faith” and do not set out to break the law. That does not mean these stops are “isolated instance[s] of negligence,” however. Ante, at 8. Many are the product of institutionalized training procedures. The New York City Police Department long trained officers to, in the words of a District Judge, “stop and question first, develop reasonable suspicion later.” Ligon v. New York, 925 F. Supp. 2d 478, 537–538 (SDNY), stay granted on other grounds, 736 F. 3d 118 (CA2 2013). The Utah Supreme Court described as “‘routine procedure’ or ‘common practice’” the decision of Salt Lake City police officers to run warrant checks on pedestrians they detained without reasonable suspicion. State v. Topanotes, 2003 UT 30, ¶2, 76 P. 3d 1159, 1160. In the related context of traffic stops, one widely followed police manual instructs officers looking for drugs to “run at least a warrants check on all drivers you stop. Statistically, narcotics offenders are . . . more likely to fail to appear on simple citations, such as traffic or trespass violations, leading to the issuance of bench warrants. Discovery of an outstanding warrant gives you cause for an immediate custodial arrest and search of the suspect.” C. Remsberg, Tactics for Criminal Patrol 205–206 (1995); C.Epp et al., Pulled Over 23, 33–36 (2014). The majority does not suggest what makes this case “isolated” from these and countless other examples. Nor does it offer guidance for how a defendant can prove that his arrest was the result of “widespread” misconduct. Surely it should not take a federal investigation of Salt Lake County before the Court would protect someone in Strieff ’s position.

IV

Writing only for myself, and drawing on my professional experiences, I would add that unlawful “stops” have severe consequences much greater than the inconvenience suggested by the name. This Court has given officers an array of instruments to probe and examine you. When we condone officers’ use of these devices without adequate cause, we give them reason to target pedestrians in an arbitrary manner. We also risk treating members of our communities as second-class citizens.Although many Americans have been stopped for speeding or jaywalking, few may realize how degrading a stop can be when the officer is looking for more. This Court has allowed an officer to stop you for whatever reason he wants—so long as he can point to a pretextual justification after the fact. Whren v. United States, 517 U. S. 806, 813 (1996). That justification must provide specific reasons why the officer suspected you were breaking the law, Terry, 392 U. S., at 21, but it may factor in your ethnicity, United States v. Brignoni-Ponce, 422 U. S. 873, 886–887 (1975), where you live, Adams v. Williams, 407 U. S. 143, 147 (1972), what you were wearing, United States v. Sokolow, 490 U. S. 1, 4–5 (1989), and how you behaved, Illinois v. Wardlow, 528 U. S. 119, 124–125 (2000). The officer does not even need to know which law you might have broken so long as he can later point to any possible infraction—even one that is minor, unrelated, or ambiguous. Devenpeck v. Alford, 543 U. S. 146, 154–155 (2004); Heien v. North Carolina, 574 U. S. ___ (2014). The indignity of the stop is not limited to an officer telling you that you look like a criminal. See Epp, Pulled Over, at 5. The officer may next ask for your “consent” to inspect your bag or purse without telling you that you can decline. See Florida v. Bostick, 501 U. S. 429, 438 (1991). Regardless of your answer, he may order you to stand “helpless, perhaps facing a wall with [your] hands raised.” Terry, 392 U. S., at 17. If the officer thinks you might be dangerous, he may then “frisk” you for weapons. This involves more than just a pat down. As onlookers pass by, the officer may “‘feel with sensitive fingers every portion of [your] body. A thorough search [may] be made of [your] arms and armpits, waistline and back, the groin and area about the testicles, and entire surface of the legs down to the feet.’” Id., at 17, n. 13. The officer’s control over you does not end with the stop. If the officer chooses, he may handcuff you and take you to jail for doing nothing more than speeding, jaywalking, or “driving [your] pickup truck . . . with [your] 3-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter . . . without [your] seatbelt fastened.” Atwater v. Lago Vista, 532 U. S. 318, 323–324 (2001). At the jail, he can fingerprint you, swab DNA from the inside of your mouth, and force you to “shower with a delousing agent” while you “lift [your] tongue, hold out [your] arms, turn around, and lift [your] genitals.” Florence v. Board of Chosen Freeholders of County of Burlington, 566 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2012) (slip op., at 2–3); Maryland v. King, 569 U. S. ___, ___ (2013) (slip op., at 28). Even if you are innocent, you will now join the 65 million Americans with an arrest record and experience the “civil death” of discrimination by employers, landlords, and whoever else conducts a background check. Chin, The New Civil Death, 160 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1789, 1805 (2012); see J. Jacobs, The Eternal Criminal Record 33–51 (2015); Young & Petersilia, Keeping Track, 129 Harv. L. Rev. 1318, 1341–1357 (2016). And, of course, if you fail to pay bail or appear for court, a judge will issue a warrant to render you “arrestable on sight” in the future. A. Goffman, On the Run 196 (2014). This case involves a suspicionless stop, one in which the officer initiated this chain of events without justification. As the Justice Department notes, supra, at 8, many innocent people are subjected to the humiliations of these unconstitutional searches. The white defendant in this case shows that anyone’s dignity can be violated in this manner. See M. Gottschalk, Caught 119–138 (2015). But it is no secret that people of color are disproportionate victims of this type of scrutiny. See M. Alexander, The New Jim Crow 95–136 (2010). For generations, black and brown parents have given their children “the talk”— instructing them never to run down the street; always keep your hands where they can be seen; do not even think of talking back to a stranger—all out of fear of how an officer with a gun will react to them. See, e.g., W. E. B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk (1903); J. Baldwin, The Fire Next Time (1963); T. Coates, Between the World and Me (2015).

By legitimizing the conduct that produces this double consciousness, this case tells everyone, white and black, guilty and innocent, that an officer can verify your legal status at any time. It says that your body is subject to invasion while courts excuse the violation of your rights. It implies that you are not a citizen of a democracy but the subject of a carceral state, just waiting to be cataloged. We must not pretend that the countless people who are routinely targeted by police are “isolated.” They are the canaries in the coal mine whose deaths, civil and literal, warn us that no one can breathe in this atmosphere. See L. Guinier & G. Torres, The Miner’s Canary 274–283 (2002). They are the ones who recognize that unlawful police stops corrode all our civil liberties and threaten all our lives. Until their voices matter too, our justice system will continue to be anything but.
* * *
 I dissent.

Happy Father’s Day

This will be a short post, as I am about to fire up the grill.

Twenty three years ago, I almost lost my father when he had an aneurysm. At that time 95% of people died from the type of aneurysm he had, so needless to say, I am very greatful.

My wife was pregnant with our first child when my father had his aneursym and my sons almost missed the opportunity to meet their grandfather. My father has had a major influence on my sons' lives and I used to sit in awe whenever I would watch them interact when they were younger, thinking to myself how those moment would never have happened. I never knew my grandparents, they had all passed before I had the chance.

Life is short. If you are blessed to still have a father, make sure you let him know how greatful you are to have him in your life. If you are a father yourself, make sure your children know how much you love them and that you are there for them no matter what. If your relationship with your children or father is damaged, repair it before it's too late. If you are not currently in your children's lives, it's never too late to reach out. Even if you think they'll reject you, reach out anyway.

With violence increasing at alarming rates, more than any other time kids need the father in their lives. If you've been a bad father, start becoming a better one. Unless you're in the grave, it's never too late. If you need help, contact an organization like the Father Support Center or Better Family Life and let them know you want to become a better father, they will help you! To find other help resources, check out the 2016 ST. LOUIS AREA RESOURCE DIRECTORY.

St. Louis County Municipalities, Better Together or Apart?

The non-profit organization, Better Together, recently release a comprehensive report, "The Will to Change", which poses a key St. Louis question: “Why does a region with world-class resources struggle to thrive?” One major reason is racism.

Racism which is perpetuated by public policy and mass media results in racial division and exclusion. Institutional racism affects access and opportunity including outcomes in municipal and other courts. Local news stations disproportionately show photos or videos of black people participating in crime, even minor offenses such as shoplifting. Watching the news, one might easily get the false impression the White people don't regularly shoplift or commit other crimes.  

Between 2013 and 2014 there were 767 mostly white overdose deaths from heroin and prescription painkillers. According to Time magazine, 90% of heroin users are white and therefore the majority of heroin dealers are white. The news rarely talks about the white, thug, drug dealers that sold the drugs which caused their death. In fact, St. Louis County Executive Steve Stinger and St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar wrote letters of support for a money laundering drug dealer. If 767 people overdosed, you can imagine how many drug addicts there are. Certainly many of those drug addicts are committing crimes to fund their habits, but strangely, their faces usually don't appear on the evening news.

Many of the 90 municipalities that comprise St. Louis County were created with an emphasis on keeping black people and others out. Restrictive covenants, misinformation, denial of financing, and racial steering were among the tactics used to maintain white only neighborhoods. In the past, the fact that St. Louis County contained 90+ municipalities was a non-issue. That is until a number of St. Louis County municipalities' population became majority black. 

Fifty-five percent of Black Missourians live in either St. Louis City or County which represents twenty-nine percent of the St. Louis City/County total population. Thirty-one of the ninety St. Louis County municipalities are majority black populated, they include:

St. Louis Municipalities with majority black populations percentage rounded to nearest whole number
Bellefontaine Neighbors 73%

Bel-ridge 83%

Berkley 82% Beverly Hills 93%
Black Jack 81% Cool Valley 85% Country Club Hills 91% Dellwood 79%
Ferguson 52% Flordell Hills 91% Glen Ecko Park 92% Greendale 69%
Hanley Hills 96%  Hillsdale 96% Jennings 90% Kinloch 95%
Moline Acres 92% Normandy 70% Northwoods 94% Norwood Court 94%
Pagedale 93% Pasadena Hills 68% Pasadena Park 61% Pine Lawn 96%
Riverview 70% Uplands Park 96% Velda City 95% Velda Village Hills 99%
Vinta Park 64.9 Vinta Terrace 73% Wellston 95%  

There are other St. Louis County municipalities that have significant black populations such as Hazelwood 31%, Breckenridge Hills, 33%, University City 41% and Belnor 46%. 

Those concentrated numbers if utilized effective can provide Black people living in those communities greater control. Combining resources and eliminating repetitive functions does have its advantages, but do they outweigh the cost of having less self-determination and control?  I'm skeptical. The City of St. Louis has a majority black population, but most of our city leadership is white. Resources are not fairly allocated and more emphasis seems to be put on solving and eradicating minor crime in downtown, the Central West End and other areas more likely to be frequented by whites, while fewer resources seem to be devoted to solving more serious crime in North St. Louis.

Some of the major issues raised in the report include:

Internal Competition – There is competition for resources within various neighborhoods and communities within municipalities. Merging won't end the competition for amenities. Tax dollars in the City of St. Louis are not evenly distributed and have been allocated mostly to white areas. Even the majority of public dollars spent on projects on the Northside have gone to white developers, which will most likely result in black residents being displaced.

TIF – Tax increment financing (TIF), a public financing method that is used as a subsidy for redevelopment, infrastructure, and other community-improvement projects, originally began as a tool to redevelop blighted urban areas, but over time became corrupted as a tool for private developers to fund their projects. The most blighted areas within the Greater St. Louis Area rarely benefit because projects usually occur in locations considered more desirable.

Municipal Court Fines – The Ferguson Protest revealed to the nation what local legal professionals and others already knew. Municipal courts didn't just recently start operating as revenue generators, they have operated this way for decades. Professor T.E. Lauer, a law professor at the University of Missouri published a stinging indictment of the municipal courts in 1966, titled, "Prolegomenon to Municipal Court Reform in Missouri". Judges, the Missouri Courts in general, and local media pretended that they hadn't realized how bad the problem was; of course, they knew.

Many lawyers begin their careers working within the municipal court system, some of those lawyers became municipal court judges and some of those judges became Circuit, Appellate and maybe even Supreme Court judges. Instead of acknowledging that the municipal court system had become flawed, many disingenuously acted as if they were surprised that St. Louis area municipal courts were acting as predatory revenue sources. The predatory municipal court system provided generous income to both legal professionals and municipalities.

Service Disparity – Merging municipalities won't automatically bring services to underserved communities. I regularly pass through two intersections that have non-functioning street lights, MLK & Euclid, and MLK & Sarah. The same municipality that claims it doesn't have money to fix lights is spending millions to raze Kiener Plaza, not because it was in disrepair or non-functioning, someone decided it was time to remodel.

Economic Development – I am 50 years old and was born and raised in North St. Louis. The City of St. Louis restricted economic development and many believe that the "Team Four Plan" was followed in spirit, even if it was never made official policy.


Does a real a problem exist?

Is St. Louis County really that different from other neighboring counties. St. Louis County is bounded by three other counties, Franklin, Jefferson, St. Charles, and the City of St. Louis. Let's compare St. Louis County with the other three bordering counties. 

St. Louis County, is Missouri's largest county, has 90 municipalities and a population of 1,003,362 per the 2015 Census Bureau population estimate, (11,148) average per municipality.

Franklin County has 12 municipalities an additional 11 unincorporated communities and a population of 102,426, (8,536) average per municipality.

Jefferson County has 24 municipalities but has a total of 82 cities, towns and other populated places, and a population of 224,124, (10,188) average per municipality.

St. Charles County has 24 municipalities and a population of 385,590, (16,066) average per municipality

St. Clair County is the largest in Illinois closest to St. Louis County. St. Clair has 32 municipalities, 11 unincorporated and census designated communities and a population of 264,052., (8,252) average per municipality.

When St. Louis County is compared based on the average population per municipality within a county, it doesn't look much different than neighboring counties. In fact, other than St. Charles, it has the largest average population per municipality than the others. The only thing that distinguishes St. Louis County is a large number of majority black municipalities. Merging those communities into others could dilute political power and control. 

Meacham Park  

In 1991, the predominantly white community of Kirkwood annexed Meacham Park, a historic black neighborhood in unincorporated St. Louis County. The merger was approved by large margins in both communities, but problems soon arose.

Not long after the merger, Kirkwood invoked eminent domain to take over large swaths of Meacham Park in order to build a Wal-Mart Supercenter and other commercial developments. Eventually two-thirds of the neighborhood was taken and Meacham Park’s population fell by 30%. The community’s mostly black, mostly poor residents numbered less than 800, and they were swept into a city of more than 27,000, only 7% of whom were black. Many people felt cheated out of their land.

Cookie Thornton was a Meacham Park resident who fired shots during a Kirkwood city council meeting, that killed five because of a dispute with municipal officials.

In its 2013 Annual Report, the city’s official Human Rights Commission wrote that it “continued to monitor the relationship between the City of Kirkwood and the Meacham Park neighborhood. The issues are long standing and deep, they need attention.” A Kirkwood subdivision still had bylaws prohibiting African-Americans from owning homes there in 2013, the unenforceable covenant stated, "African-Americans cannot occupy a building unless they are servants or employees".

In theory, merging municipalities appear to be a good idea, but as the Meacham Park example points out, the stronger community might take advantage and even change the character of the entire community.

Muhammad Ali’s Memorial Service – Tributes of Greatness

Dr. Kevin Cosby set the tone and delivered an outstanding and fitting eulogy to Muhammad Ali.

My brother and uncle attended the Muhammad Ali memorial service in Louisville yesterday. Unfortunately, I was unable to attend, but I was able to watch it thanks to Bounce TV's live coverage. Bounce TV is majority owned and operated by African Americans. We need more stations like Bounce to overcome the racial bias of white media.

World leaders, stars and regular people from all over the world of all faiths and stations in life were inspired and in awe of Mr. Ali's greatness not as a boxing champion, but as a person and humanitarian. Muhammad Ali's memorial included speakers of many religious faiths. Rabbi Michael Lerner's eulogy was a remarkable example of Ali inspired activism.

Lonnie Ali, Muhammad Ali's wife, displayed tremendous poise and strength with her remarkable tribute to her husband.

As I watched Muhammad Ali's memorial service, I couldn't help but be reminded of all the other great inspiring American Black men and women who transcended their circumstances or professions and helped changed the world such as Frederick Douglass, Mary McLeod Bethune, Booker T. Washington, A. Philip Randolph, Ida B. Wells, Dorothy Height, W.E.B. Dubois, Jessie Owens, Jackie Robinson, Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, Maya Angelo, Harry Belafonte, Michael Jackson, Thurgood Marshall, Paul Robeson, Barack Obama, St. Louisans (Annie Malone, Frankie Muse Freeman, my uncle Dick Gregory) and many others. As a people, we are capable of amazing feats and humanity, especially considering the history of our circumstance.

Billy Crystal Eulogy Speech at Muhammad Ali Memorial Funeral:

Bill Clinton Delivers Eulogy at Ali Funeral FULL Speech

Although, President Barack Obama couldn't attend the funeral of Muhammad Ali because his daughter was graduating the day of the funeral, President Obama paid a moving tribute.

Use Ali's example of intelligence, wisdom, courage, humility, and humanity to inspire you to see through the lies of history and stand up for yourself and others.

See our post, "Muhammad Ali: Humanity's Champion

When the enemy is treated better than you

While having Sunday dinner with my parents, we discussed the death of Muhammad Ali. Muhammad Ali had been a guest in my parent's house in the 1970's while participating in a hunger run with my uncle, Dick Gregory. I was supposed to have met Muhammad Ali during that visit, but I missed my opportunity.

Mr. Ali's visit was secret and I was told not to let anyone know he was coming. My best friend at the time live two houses down the street and how many 10 or 11-year-old kids can resist sharing that type of news with their best friend? When I arrived back home with my friend, I was told Muhammad Ali would not be able to make it, so my friend and I left. Ali had come and gone while I was at the park with my friend. 

I embedded a number of videos of  Muhammad Ali that I knew wouldn't be shown by mainstream media. I shared some of those videos with my parents. In one video, Ali stated, "I'm not gonna help nobody get something a negro don't have". My father chimed in on that comment and expressed he knew something was wrong during World War II and felt black men probably shouldn't be fighting.

Six of my father's brothers fought in combat during World War II. Dad explained when he was a teenager, German prisoners of war would be bussed in from Fort Leonard Wood and taken to the Fox Theather to watch movies. He mentioned how Black active duty soldiers home on leave in uniform with a chest full of metals were not allowed to enter the Fox. Even as a child, he knew it was wrong that German prisoners of war had more rights than black men fighting for our country. America was treating our enemies during a time of war better than Black citizens fighting against those same enemies. The majority of those soldiers stayed in the U.S. and became citizens and married American women according to a newspaper article my father read a short time after the war.

In 2016, it's rouge police officers rather than German prisoners of war 

Rouge cops abusing people's rights, committing acts of police brutality and killing unarmed black men, women and children are enemies to our safety and security. Thug prosecutors who help cover up illegal acts committed by rogue cops are also enemies. When cops commit illegal acts, they should be brought to justice just like anyone else. In fact, a police officer breaking the law breaks a sacred trust and should be held to a higher standard. Instead, they pay almost no consequences for their actions, unless a video exists. 

On May 30th and 31st, St. Louis Police Chief Sam Dotson, complained about judges being too lenient and providing bail amounts he considers too low for criminal defendants.  In December, a St. Louis public defender claimed the police chief and prosecutor unfairly influence gun crime bail. However, Dotson is not as vocal when the wrongdoer is from his own police department. 

A Former St. Louis prosecutor admitted helping cover up officer's assault, but did she go to jail? No, her law license suspended. Did Chief Dotson speak out then? A former Texas prosecutor conspired to send an innocent man to death row and disbarment was the only punishment. These sort of prosecutors are enemies to liberty and freedom and should face severe punishments rather than mere slaps on the hand.

The Ferguson Protest brought national attention to how our courts were being used to unfairly penalize black people. The police chief and prosecutor responded by trying to create an even harsher treatment, aimed specifically at black folks, for non-violent unlawful possession of a gun; in a state where the right to keep and bear guns is a constitutional right. 

How long will we continue to simply watch while our enemies are being treated better than we are? We need to learn the law, speak up and act! If you are done wrong by the police, prosecutor or judge file a complaint. After you file your complaint, send us a copy.

Muhammad Ali: Humanity’s Champion, rest in peace

Muhammad Ali, humanitarian, civil rights activist and three-time heavyweight boxing champion, born Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr. died yesterday June 3, 2016.

Muhammad Ali often referred to himself as "The Greatest" and much of the world, including myself, agreed with that proclamation. 

Mr. Ali perfectly exemplified the idea in yesterday's post, "Better to Be Strong". I'm not referring to the physical strength he obviously displayed during his many boxing matches. As brilliant as Muhammad Ali was in the ring, his true greatness was outside the ring when he stood up for his belief and rights and fought the United States government.

His refusal to accept induction into the armed forces on religious grounds cost him millions and his heavyweight title, but in the end, Ali came up victorious in the most significant battle of his life.

Ali became one of the most famous and beloved persons in the world, not because of athletic ability, but because of his integrity, character and refusing to allow others to define who he was.

One of my biggest regrets is missing the opportunity to meet Mr. Ali when he visited my parent's house with my uncle. 

In 1967, three years after winning the heavyweight title, Ali refused to be conscripted into the U.S. military, citing his religious beliefs and opposition to American involvement in the Vietnam War. He was eventually arrested and found guilty on draft evasion charges and stripped of his boxing title. He did not fight again for nearly four years—losing a time of peak performance in an athlete's career. Ali's appeal worked its way up to the U.S. Supreme Court where, in 1971, his conviction was overturned.

Ali's actions as a conscientious objector to the war took tremendous courage and sacrifice and made him an icon for the larger counterculture generation. History proved him right!

Be inspired by Muhammad Ali's example and start fighting back against oppression. Ali risked everything, comfort, wealth, title, and freedom fighting for his beliefs. What's stopping you from standing up for yourself? 

Thank you, Mr. Ali, for sharing your greatness with world, rest in peace.

Better to be strong

Are you weak are strong? When your rights are violated and you give up without a fight, you are mentally weak. Strong people fight for what they want and what they believe they deserve. Weak people lack perseverance and are often unsuccessful because they give up too easily. Regardless, how difficult the task, a person must fight for their goals. 

You must fight for your rights, even those that are guaranteed under the law. The police, corporations, and judges violate people's rights all the time. Most people just accept it, but there are a few who refuse to accept their rights being violated. People in power lie about your ability to fight back in order to make or keep you weak. Slogans such as "you can't beat city hall" and "he who represents himself has a fool for a client" discourages people from even trying. 

"Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed" – Martin Luther King, Jr.

This country was created by people taking power, not by people asking for it. It took a civil war to end slavery. In 1863 black men, half of whom were former slaves, helped turn the tide of war. Those newly freed slaves knew they had to fight for their freedom in order to keep it. Likewise, you must take (envoke) your rights or they will simply be taken away. 

More than a decade before Barack Obama became President of the United States, he wrote the book "Dreams from My Father". Obama mentioned a conversation with his Indonesian stepfather, Lolo, in the book. Young Barack asked Lolo if he had ever seen a man killed?  Lolo replied "yes". Obama asked, "why the man was killed?"  Lolo responded, "because he was weak". Obama replied, "That's all?", to which Lolo responded, "that's usually enough".

Lolo further explained:

"Men take advantage of weakness in other men." …"The strong man takes the weak man's land. He makes the weak man work in his fields. If the weak man's woman is pretty, the strong man will take her." … "which would your rather be?" … "Better to be strong" … "If you can't be strong, be clever and make peace with someone who's strong. But always better to be strong yourself. Always."

Reading that passage reminded me of Jack Nicholas' opening scene in "The Departed" where he says "no one gives it to you, you have to take it". Warning the video clip includes verbalization of  the word "nigger".  

Will you allow others to take what is yours or will you fight to keep it? I choose to fight. If you choose not to fight, don't complain about the consequences. Police brutality, mass incarceration, predatory lending, driving while black, stop and frisk, unequal protection of the law, illegal or unfair laws are all things that have successfully been used against black people in this country. This will be the legacy of your children if you do not fight against injustice. Some people give up their rights because it's quicker and convenient. Some innocent people even accept plea bargains involving jail time, because they fear the consequences of losing and being sentenced to more time. 

Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety – Benjamin Franklin

Lack of understanding about the law is one of the black community's greatest weaknesses. You must educate yourself about the law to increase your strength. You have been purposefully miseducated so that you would remain weak and others could easily control and exploit you.

"Powerful people never teach powerless people how to take their power away from them" … "Powerful people cannot afford to educate the people that they oppress, because once you are truly educated, you will not ask for power. You will take it" – Dr. John Herik Clark

Traits of Mentally Strong People

  • Take responsibility. Strong people take responsibility for getting the results they want. They don't wait around for others to solve their problems. There may be times when other people cause your problems, but rather than complain or feel sorry for yourself, take action. Take responsibility, not for the problem, but for the outcome you want.
  • Don't allow others to take away power. Allowing others to make you feel inferior or that you have no control, especially over your actions and emotions takes away your strength. Allowing others to divide and conquer your group also zaps your power. People in power will often convince oppressed people that others in the oppressed group should not be trusted. You must be strong both individually and collectively within your group or community.
  • Embrace change. Change will happen rather you want it or not. Fortunes are made because of people anticipating change and responding to it. Strong people embrace changes, weak people fear change.
  • Learn from failure. Strong people don't give up after failure, learn from the past and look towards the future. The first time you tried to walk, you fell, just like everyone else. However, you kept trying and unless there was a physical barrier, you learned  not only how to stand, but also to walk and run. Strong people are willing to fail, over and over if necessary to achieve their goals.
  • Become stronger. No matter how good you are something, you can be better. Mentally strong people attempt to become stronger by increasing their knowledge, greater control of their emotions and going outside their comfort zone to take on new challenges. 
  • Don't worry about pleasing others. Some people will like you while others will not, no matter what you do. You can't demand your rights and freedom while trying to please others. The people oppressing you will not be pleased with your attempt to free yourself. Slave owners did not want slaves to be freed.

 

Sometimes The Only Person You Can Rely On Is Yourself

Black people as a group have too long depended on others. By depending solely on others and not trusting yourself you can end up miserable for the rest of your life. There are times when you need others working for you, but there are times when you must help yourself. Court.rchp.com was created to help people help themselves. Historically, access to legal information has been among of our greatest obstacles. The Internet now provides access to the greatest wealth of information in history, but many of us use it primarily for entertainment rather than education.

The more informed you are, the harder it is to control you. Slaves were prohibited from reading to create the illusion of white supremacy. Blacks were systematically banned from the legal profession and useful legal information was restricted. Black people account for only five percent of American lawyers and many of them work against the interest black folks in corporations and help perpetuate mass incarceration in the judiciary. Law controls everything including when a child must attend school, how long a work week should be, the minimum wage to be paid, and who you can marry. If you don't understand the law or how to use it, you cannot control anything! You'll simply become a slave to the law.

Organizations are not always the answer

Don't fall into the trap of assuming some organization or group will help or save you. Organizations are helpful and have their place, but organizations can become ineffective, out of touch, and even corrupt. Historically, some organizational leaders have sold out and been used to mislead followers. Sources of funding can be used as weapons. Once an organization starts accepting large sums from individuals, corporations or government, they eventually become dependent on that funding source. Once an organization becomes dependent on outside funding, they can be controlled by the funder. If the entity providing the funding doesn't like or agree with what the organization is doing, all they have to do is threaten to stop the funding to either make the organization perform as it wishes or actually stop the funding and watch the organization fail. 

ACORN (1970 – 2010) was the nation's largest community organization of low and moderate-income families, working together for social justice, better housing, schools, neighborhood safety, health care, job conditions, voter registration, and stronger communities.

Hannah Giles and James O'Keefe secretly recorded and "heavily edited" videos to create a misleading impression that ACORN was assisting a pimp and a prostitute create a brothel using under aged girls. The videos received major media attention and destroyed ACORN's reputation. When the video scandal erupted, ACORN had over 400,000 members and more than 1,200 neighborhood chapters in over 100 cities across the United States. It maintained 70 offices nationwide and had over 1,300 employees in 2008.

About six months after the videos aired, ACORN's annual budget was reduced from $25 million to $4 million and its staff   reduced to four. The videos led to the U.S. Census Bureau and the IRS to cancel their contracts with ACORN. The U.S. Congress suspended its funding and most private funding dried up which effectively caused the ACORN to close. 

Below is one of the edited videos used to discredit ACORN. The videos were recorded during the summer of 2009 and appeared to show low-level ACORN employees in six cities providing advice to Giles and O'Keefe on how to avoid detection by authorities of tax evasion, human trafficking, and child prostitution. O'Keefe framed the undercover recordings with a preface of him dressed in a "pimp" outfit, which he also wore in TV media interviews. This gave viewers, including the media, the impression that he had dressed that way when speaking to ACORN workers. However, he actually appeared in the ACORN offices (not shown on camera) in conservative street clothes. Furthermore, the ACORN employees involved reported his activities to the police after he left. Racial media bias can be a powerful form of propaganda.

Who is more motivated to help you than yourself?

No one on Earth is more concerned about your success, problems, and issues than you. Will any attorney care as much about your situation as you? Of course not, their interest in your case will be as strong as your ability to pay. I was blessed with an exceptionally supportive family. However, no matter how close your family or how many friends you have, there will be times when the only person you can depend on is yourself.

As I have mentioned before, my wife and I both lost our jobs. I held an executive management position and reported directly to the President of the company. Prior to our job losses, my wife and I contributed to organizations that provide safety nets for people in their hour of need. The safety net I had always assumed would be there was not cast nearly as wide as I had once thought. 

One in three people in America is one paycheck away from homelessness. A job loss, injury or illness can have devastating effects. When I lost my job, my employer owed me weeks of back pay. They eventually made good on the pay, but by then the damage was done and I was even further in the hole. Banks and bogus creditors created phony but realistic documents to use against me in court. Fortunately, I was able to prove to a jury that the documents were unreliable and ten of the twelve jurors ruled in my favor.

We've all heard the saying, “The only person you can depend on is yourself.” I was smacked in the face with that reality by legal issues. There was no legal aid available to me other than what I provided for myself. Various legal aid organizations explained they already had a full case load, didn't handle my type of case, or I didn't qualify for their services. When you need help the most is often when you cannot find it. Those are the moments when it's easy to become depressed and you can literally feel the weight of the world on your back. 

Luckily, I had some prior experience researching the law for traffic tickets and other minor issues. Building upon those experiences, I conducted legal research and won approximately thirteen cases since 2012 and two other cases are in the appeal stage. That experience was very humbling for me. But more importantly, I realized how horrible it would have been had I not been able to defend myself. I witnessed other people who did not possess the same knowledge devasted by the courts.

I wouldn't wish what I went through on anyone else. Unfortunately, my experience was not that uncommon. The justice system is not just. Wealthy individuals and corporations have lobbied legislatures to create biased and unfair laws to enhance their profits at our expense. Had I not been able to defend myself in court, I would most likely have been homeless long ago. 

Don't get stuck on one philosophy, keep an open mind to competing ideas. 

Booker T. Washington and W.E.B Dubois had different ideas, but both of those ideas were valid. Washington's ideas would have led to black industrialization and business ownership, Dubois' ideas would have led to an educated and a politically astute leadership class that would help educate and assist other blacks to achieve success. 

In additional to my uncle, two of my civil rights heroes are Dr. Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. They had different philosophies. Non-violence versus by any means necessary; they were both good concepts and strategies. Governments have both diplomatic and military channels. When non-violence fails, the military steps in. How much more could MLK and Malcolm X have achieved if they had worked together? Just because an idea is different doesn't mean it's wrong.

Some great lessons I have learned came from people I did not like or respect, but I didn't let that stop from absorbing the truth of their ideas. As the saying goes, "I never met a man I couldn't learn something from". For example, many of the "Founding Fathers" were slave owners. Although, history has painted them as great men, to me they were oppressors, rapist, and hypocrites. Those men espoused freedom and spoke of all men being created equal. The expressions of those ideas were thought provoking and timeless and I often quote them even if the men who spoke them did not personally live by those principals. Good ideas spoken by bad men does not condemn the idea. During your research of the law, you'll discover how unfair the rules are. Use the rules to your benefit even if you personally disagree with them, because your opposition certainly will.

Don't give away your power

The Constitution's expressions of freedoms, liberties and rights were not intended to be bestowed upon the Black man in America. Even the abolitionist fighting for the end of slavery did not necessarily believe in equality for Black Folks. However, those ideas did eventually trickle down and Black people today at least theoretically enjoy the same rights and privileges. We must learn how to assert and invoke those rights individually and collectively and convert them into practical rights and privileges. The great irony is that the First Martyr and major symbol of the American Revolution was a Black man named Crispus Attacks, who may have been an escaped slave. 

Fighting for your rights won't guarantee success, but if you don't fight you're guaranteed to lose. When you don't exercise your rights, you give away your power. Once your power is given away, it's extremely difficult to get it back. Start learning about the law today and share court.rchp.com with everyone so we will be even more powerful collectively!

Justice is Broken

Since 2013, I've been involved in litigation with the City of St. Louis over bogus minor building code violations which started in St. Louis Municipal Court where I was found guilty (no surprise there), appealed to St. Louis Circuit Court where I was denied a trial by jury and found guilty by a judge who was a former St. Louis City employee, then Missouri Court of Appeals where my appeal was dismissed because of a technicality and most recently the Missouri Supreme Court where my transfer was denied without an explanation.  

I am currently researching my final option of request a writ of certiorari from the U.S. Supreme Court for violations of my due process right to a trial by jury and other issue connected to my case. Just because a court rules against you, doesn't mean your case is over. When the U.S. Supreme Court overturns a ruling, multiple other courts had already made the wrong decision concerning the merits and or issues of the case. Most people abandon their case because they lost a battle even when the war was winnable. 

However, “the wheels of justice turn slowly" and  "justice remains the tool of a few powerful interests; legal interpretations will continue to be made to suit the convenience of the oppressor powers". At times, it seems as if the legal system doesn't work for anyone except those with the most resources. The costs of our legal system are so high that justice can practically never be done. My major resource was time. If I had not learned how to represent myself in court, I wouldn't have been able to get this far. 

Some people may wonder why I would go through so much trouble. My father and six of his brothers risked their lives, in foreign lands during times of war for this country for the concept of freedom. My uncle, a famous comedian, who became a civil rights icon and was friends with Medgar Evans, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King risked his life and sacrificed millions in earnings to take up the cause of civil rights. I would do dishonor to my family's legacy by simply giving up because the task at hand was difficult. Their struggle was infinitely more difficult than mine.

History teaches us that rights and privileges are seldom taken away swiftly; they are usually taken away slowly almost unnoticed until one day they are gone. To preserve my rights and privileges I fought and continue to fight the City of St. Louis, even though this fight has been a strain financially and emotionally. If we can send men and women across the globe to protect the rights of others, certainly we must stand up for ourselves at home! "If a law is unjust, a man is not only right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so." – Thomas Jefferson. 

Below are my two transfer request with some minor edits; one made to the appellate court and the other to the Missouri Supreme Court. You often learn more from failure than success. Hopefully, others may benefit from my failure.

Request Made to Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District 

Comes now, R. Hill, to request transfer of this case to the Missouri Supreme Court per rules, 30.27 and 83.02 and states the following in support.

"Ignorance of the law is no excuse," a legal principle which states, a person unaware of a law may not escape liability for violating that law. Ignorance, however, has been weaponized by municipalities against citizens, even if they have broken no law.

Justice is broken! Everyone seems to know this, but no one appears to act. Just as no individual raindrop feels responsible for the flood, no individual judge feels responsible for the flood of injustice. Ignorance of the flood is no excuse.

This Court may grant transfer because of the general interest or importance of a question involved in the case, for the purpose of reexamining existing law, or for the reason that the opinion filed is contrary to a previous decision of an appellate court of this state. Rule 83.02. This appeal should be transferred to the Supreme Court of Missouri for resolution of the following issues:

  1. The perception for many citizens is that the law is a private club and justice cannot be received unless a member of the club is utilized.

    1. The St. Louis area has recently garnered national and international attention concerning the unfair treatment of citizens in court.
    2. The Missouri Supreme Court is currently evaluating recommendations for changes to Missouri Municipal Courts and this case may provide that honorable court with additional insight from an actual municipal court litigant struggling to seek justice through the courts.
  2. The Missouri Supreme Court stated in State ex rel. Estill v. Iannone, 687 SW 2d 172, " it is error to deny a jury request in a trial de novo on appeal from a municipal court conviction"

    1. Whether the burden to demonstrate error is met when a written request that is timely made and denied by the court.

      1. What is required to preserve the right to a trial by jury in a trial de novo on appeal of a municipal court conviction?
      2. Does the appeal court simply require proof from the court record that a trial by jury was requested in writing on a timely basis and denied or is a transcript necessary?
      3. Whether both the legal file and transcript are always required to determine plain error? R. Hill specifically posed a question to this honorable court regarding the transcript requirement and on July 7, 2015, this court entered an order in response to that question.
  3. Whether the appellate court should have informed R. Hill of the deficiencies of the court file and instructed him to file the transcript, before dismissing his appeal.
  4. Whether the court rules are excessively rigid, unfair and create predatory conditions; especially when litigants are clearly at a disadvantage. For example:

    1. The quality of St. Louis City public schools has been substandard for decades, resulting in the loss of accreditation for a 15 year period. Is it fair to require residents of a substandard school district to meet the same strict standards of an attorney when they represent themselves pro se? http://www.kmov.com/story/30337783/st-louis-public-schools-accredited-for-first-time-in-15-years.

      1. Should courts be required to disclose that there are rules of court and point out where those rules can be found?
      2. Should there be a set of guidelines for providing information to pro se litigants so basic questions can be answered to ensure fairer proceedings?
      3. Should there be specific rules created when pro se litigants are forced to represent themselves because they can't afford and can't be appointed counsel?
  5. Twenty-eight percent (28%) of the residents of the City of St. Louis live below the poverty line. Should courts be required to create a legal information desk to inform indigent litigants about legal aid, and other resources? http://www.census.gov/quickfacts/table/PST045215/29510
  6. Should elderly, illiterate, mentally disabled and others be allowed to have a family member or friend advocate or speak for them in court?

    1. I witnessed countless examples where people who clearly did not understand the process, ask the court to let a relative or some other person help because they lacked the communication skills to properly explain their situation or position.
    2. Hill's parents, both in their 80's, who are on a fixed income, were summoned to St. Louis Municipal Court for housing violations the same day as his case. Mr. Hill and his father share the same name and Mr. Hill believes his parent's home was targeted because their property was mistaken his. Mr. Hill's father, a Korean War veteran, endured indignity and embarrassment because of the judge's callous comments concerning his disability.
    3. Even the medical profession promotes the practice of CPR and first aid for non-medical personnel to render life-saving assistance to people in need. Isn't it time for the legal profession to allow legal first aid assistance to those most vulnerable?
  7. When pro se litigants express inability to pay for requirements such as the court transcript, should the court inform them of the in forma pauperis application?
  8. When appeals are dismissed because of an error of the court, should litigant's be required to pay a second filing fee? This case was originally dismissed for lack of jurisdiction because of an error made by the Circuit Court which required R. Hill to pay a second $70 filing fee to have the same issues raised before this court.

CONCLUSION

Maybe this honorable court was bound by a set of rules so rigid, it had no choice but to dismiss this case. If so, those rules need to be re-examined.

It's an axiom known by most, especially judges and lawyers; "he who represents himself has a fool for a client". How can an ordinary person who's rights are violated, but can't afford or be appointed an attorney ever receive justice under this current system? He is forced to become a fool! At least by the axiom's standard.

The ability to exercise fundamental rights is crucial, however, if a right can be denied in court by legal gamesmanship and then affirmed based upon a minor technicality on appeal, those rights for all intents and purposes do not exist. The rules, which are supposed to ensure fairness, instead act to oppress.

R. Hill has through independent study, attempted to learn about the law, procedures, and rules of court. Like the countless number of others appearing pro se in courts every day, he had no mentor to guide his way. He simply believed in the concept of justice.

The dictionary at law.com defines justice as:

  1. 1) fairness. 2) moral rightness. 3) a scheme or system of law in which every person receives his/ her/it's due from the system, including all rights, both natural and legal.

Mr. Hill has observed many legal proceedings over the past few years attended by hundreds if not thousands of other defendants. What he has witnessed and experienced cannot be described even as the "appearance of justice" because most of what he witnessed appeared to be unjust.

R. Hill alleged he was targeted for exercising his first amendment right of free speech for publishing information among other things about the City of St. Louis' red light camera program.  The City of St. Louis created an illegal red light camera ordinance that raked in tens of millions in illegal revenue that the city for the most part was allowed to keep even after the Missouri Supreme Court ruled the ordinance unconstitutional.

Corruption in government is nothing new. The two most recent St. Louis examples occurred less than two months ago. A City health inspector pled guilty of accepting bribes (US District Court ED case number 4:15-CR-00467). The Missouri Supreme Court suspended the law license of a St. Louis City Prosecutor after admitting in federal court that she helped cover up a city police detective’s assault on a handcuffed suspect (https://www.courts.mo.gov/page.jsp?id=96534).

R.  Hill was found guilty of not painting a cyclone fence, chipped or missing paint on window seals/wood trim and for a missing handrail on the back porch of an unoccupied property. He denied those claims. His property was later vandalized to match the violations. He filed a trial de novo to have the case heard by a jury in circuit court. The circuit court judge was a former St. Louis City employee, enough of a conflict to have a juror removed for cause.

In Circuit Court, Mr. Hill requested a trial by jury, in writing, in a timely fashion and that request was denied. The "legal file" clearly shows this to be true. Mr. Hill was eventually found guilty during a bench trial and filed an appeal. The central question posed by Mr. Hill was a simple one and involved a plain error issue. Is a person entitled to a jury trial at trial de novo of a municipal court proceeding? According to the Missouri Supreme Court, the answer is yes.

Mr. Hill painstakingly researched the law and followed the rules, however, the merits of his claims were never considered. Instead after two appeals and almost three years, he was denied justice because of a missing transcript and ordinance which were not necessary to determine the central question.

Does it matter which ordinance a person is charged with? Would any particular ordinance change the fact that a person is or isn't entitled to a jury trial upon request, during a trial de novo of a municipal proceeding?

Everyone understands the needs for rules, but rules should be applied fairly with the room for exceptions, especially where strict interpretation of the rules results in manifest injustice. Prior to the voting rights act, rules were used to strip away people's rights. Just because it's being done with rules of court doesn't lessen the effect. Poverty has effectively become a criminal offense.  Gideon v. Wainwright established protections for those charged with crimes, but what protection is available for those who are not criminals, but treated criminally?

Many summoned to court naively expect justice but experience bureaucracy. Holding people accountable to rules of court they don't know exist and are not told about is a prescription for injustice. This practice is reminiscent of The Spanish Requirement of 1513 ("El Requerimiento") which was read in Spanish to Native Americans to inform them of Spain’s alleged rights. Natives who did not understand the language and did not comply were deemed responsible for the consequences of non-compliance. The Spanish must have reasoned ignorance of Spanish is no excuse.

In his wildest dreams, R. Hill, couldn't conceive that a building code violation concerning his unoccupied property could possibly end up in the Missouri Supreme Court.

This issue may seem minor to this honorable court, but for millions, these sort of issues, because of the devastating effects they can have are often life changing. In addition to the expense and lost opportunity, the City's alleged corrupt exercise of power has robbed Mr. Hill of the one commodity he can never replace, time.

R. Hill's father and other relatives risked their lives during times of war to defend rights and freedom. Civil rights protesters in the 50's and 60's risked their livelihood and lives for basic human rights. It is unconscionable that Mr. Hill still has to risk the financial stability of his family and himself trying to preserve those rights basic rights.

R. Hill simply wanted his case tried before an impartial jury, which he believes is his right. He wishes the Missouri Supreme Court receive this case because the central issues, the right to a trial by jury and the ability to exercise that right are of general interest and importance and the existing rules need to be reexamined.

Respectfully submitted,

R. Hill, Pro Se


Request Made Directly to the Missouri Supreme Court

Comes now, R. Hill, to request a transfer to the Missouri Supreme Court. This appeal should be transferred to the Supreme Court of Missouri for resolution of the following issues:

  1. This Court may grant transfer because of the general interest or importance of a question involved in the case, for the purpose of reexamining existing law, or for the reason that the opinion filed is contrary to a previous decision of an appellate court of this state. Rule 84.04; Rule 83.02.

    1. Whether it is an error to deny a jury request in a jury request during a trial de novo on appeal from a municipal court conviction as this honorable court had previously stated in State ex rel. Estill v. Iannone, 687 SW 2d 172
    2. Whether the burden to demonstrate error is met when a written request made timely and denied by the court.

      1. What is required to preserve the right to a trial by jury in a trial de novo on the appeal of a municipal court conviction?
      2. Does the appeal court simply require proof from the court record that a trial by jury was requested in writing on a timely basis and denied or is a transcript necessary?
  2. Whether it matters which ordinance a person is charged with? Would any particular ordinance change the fact that a person is or isn't entitled to a jury trial upon request, during a trial de novo of a municipal proceeding?
  3. Whether both the legal file and transcript are always required to determine plain error? R. Hill specifically posed that question to the Appellate court regarding the transcript requirement and on July 7, 2015, that court entered an order in response to that question. However, the court's opinion seems to indicate a case cannot proceed without the transcript.
  4. Whether the appellate court should have informed R.  Hill of the deficiencies of the court file and instructed him to file the transcript, before dismissing his appeal.
  5. Whether the court rules are excessively rigid, unfair and promote predatory conditions; especially in regards to municipal court pro se litigants and when litigants are clearly at a disadvantage. For example:

    1. R. Hill responded to the Missouri Supreme Court's request for input concerning municipal court practices. Mr. Hill provided examples of his negative experiences within the St. Louis Municipal Court and how the City of St. Louis had used bogus parking tickets and water bills among other things harass and inconvenience. Mr. Hill received another bogus parking ticket as he secured the legal file from St. Louis Circuit Court on 6-30-2015 and another bogus water bill that included a disconnection notice. Fortunately, R. Hill was able to provide proof (attached) in both instances of the City of St. Louis' error. Once is an Accident, Twice is a Coincidence, Three Times is a Pattern of Harassment. Mr. Hill fears continued retaliation if he is not allowed to challenge the City of St. Louis' actions before an impartial jury.
    2. The City of St. Louis' harassment is partially due to my challenge of St. Louis ordinance #68698 and resulting in a hidden $11 monthly tax disguised as a solid waste user fee that was approved by voters as required under the Hancock Amendment. Mr. Hill had requested an injunction of the solid waste fee, however, the Circuit Court Judge, and former St. Louis City employee refused to hear the motion.
    3. The cost burden of trial de novo is unfairly shouldered by defendants even when their rights have been violated. The Circuit Court cost was deducted from Mr. Hill's $70 trial de novo fees even when he prevailed. There is no incentive for the City of St. Louis or any other municipality to change the status quo.

CONCLUSION

The central issue here is a simple one and lies with the right to a trial by jury on trial de novo of a municipal court conviction. A person either has a right or they do not. This issue has been before the St. Louis Municipal Court several times, the St. Louis Circuit Courts twice and the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District twice, however after more than four years and over multiple court decisions Mr. Hill's central question of a right to jury trial has never been answered.

Mr. Hill requested a trial by jury because he believed it was his right and he did not want the bias of a single person, even if that person was a judge, to decide his case. This honorable court made the following statement in State ex rel. Estill v. Iannone, 687 SW 2d 172:

"At the outset, it is necessary to distinguish State ex rel. Cole v. Nigro, 471 S.W.2d 933 (Mo.banc 1971), appeal dismissed, 404 U.S. 804, 92 S.Ct. 122, 30 L.Ed.2d 36 (1971), reh'g denied, 404 U.S. 960, 92 S.Ct. 309, 30 L.Ed.2d 278 (1971), which holds that there is no constitutional right to a jury trial in a municipal ordinance violation proceeding. The present case concerns the relator's right to a jury trial upon appeal, rather than in an initial proceeding. And here no constitutional provisions are addressed. Instead, this Court is satisfied that under the pertinent statute, the rules of procedure and prior decisions, the relator is entitled to a jury trial, and her request for that procedure must be granted."

The court further stated: "We note, however, that municipal ordinance violations are more akin to misdemeanors or infractions as designated by §§ 556.016.2 and 556.021, RSMo 1978, vis-a-vis felonies. Therefore, the proper procedure calls for the appellant to request a jury trial, as delineated in § 543.200, RSMo 1978.[2] In other words, trial by jury is not automatic, and if the appellant does not make written demand for a jury trial, the case may be bench tried.[3] As mentioned, the relator did make a request for a jury.

Our ruling in this case is consistent with prior decisions holding that it is error to deny a jury request in a trial de novo on appeal from a municipal court conviction."

The court record is clear, R. Hill requested a trial by jury at the earliest possible moment in writing. This is not disputed.

St. Louis area municipal courts gained national and international attention during the Ferguson Protest. It is clear to any casual observer of the municipal court system that a problem exist. This case originated in municipal court and Mr. Hill ran into many of the same issues expressed by those in Ferguson and elsewhere.

Justice is broken! Everyone seems to know this, but no one appears to act. Just as no individual raindrop feels responsible for the flood, no individual judge feels responsible for the flood of injustice.

R. Hill is not an attorney, but unlike most self-represented people he observed in court,  Mr. Hill was at least able to figure out basic court procedure, find and understand the rules. If justice is this difficult to receive on such a basic right, how does it exist at all in this system?

R. Hill finds it inconceivable that building code violations concerning his unoccupied property have ended up in the Missouri Supreme Court.

This honorable court should not have to use its valuable time reviewing these issues. Prior to R. Hill's wife losing her job and then Mr. Hill losing his job, Mr. Hill would have been among those that considered this sort of thing minor, but for many, these seemingly minor violations can create cause havoc and disrupt lives, especially when they are not valid.

R. Hill's simple request is that this honorable court declares that either he did or did not have a right to a trial by jury. If Mr. Hill had a right to a trial by jury, he requests this case be remanded back to St. Louis Circuit Court under a different judge to be decided by an impartial jury.

Respectfully submitted,

R. Hill, Pro Se

 

 

When you have nothing, you have nothing to lose

Political leaders, police and news media always seem to be perplexed about violent crime, especially when it happens in unexpected areas. The recent incidents of criminal activity in downtown St. Louis prompted people to ask why some seem to have so little regard for others.

Mayor Slay pledged a crackdown on downtown St. Louis crime, but didn't promise a similar crackdown on crime in other areas. It's as if crime happening in other areas was unimportant or as if suddenly people are now committing illegal acts, but only in areas that matter. Evidently, murders and other crime that occur in some neighborhoods are less urgent than others.

Poverty and crime are related. The United Nations and the World Bank acknowledge poverty, oppression, inequality and lack of economic opportunities results in increased criminal activity. When inequalities are great, crime goes through the roof. When people see vast wealth differences, especially if the wealth disparity is based on injustice, crime becomes even worse. People who have nothing, often feel they have nothing to lose and they aren't that concerned about what others have to lose. 

Before heroin addiction became an epidemic in white middle-class communities, drug addicts, especially black ones were treated as criminals which increased the vicious nature of some crimes. Factor in poverty and drug addiction and increased criminal activity is easy to understand. Common sense tells me that since drug addiction has increased in white communities, crime has already increased or will soon. Those white drug addicts consider their drug of choice a necessity and will do anything to get them. Drug distribution networks that government and law enforcement allowed to flourish during the black crack epidemic are now fully entrenched to supply the white heroin epidemic. Ironically, most of the black heroin addicts that I have learned about recently lived in predominately white communities.

The FBI ranks St. Louis as the top US city for violent crime. St. Louis was ranked as one of the most segregated and the third poorest city with a population over 200,000 in the United States. The City of St. Louis has a legacy of racism and corruption that has contributed to poverty and current crime problems. Ferguson should have been a wake-up call for the region, instead the St. Louis City Police Chief coined the phrase "Ferguson Effect", to indicated increased crime was caused by those complaining about oppression.

The entire St. Louis Region appears to be in denial about racial and economic injustice and oppression. St. Louis has the Delmar Divide, a street that divides communities by race which gained international attention a few years ago. St. Louis has a reputation of being a racist city. In the short documentary film, "Racism in St. Louis", one film creator explained that even a homeless man in New York mentioned how racist St. Louis was.

Many of the U.S. Supreme Court Decisions concerning St. Louis involved racial issues including the Dred Scott Case which was one of the major issues leading the country to Civil War. In fact, in 1847, William W. Brown stated, "no part of our slave-holding country, is more noted for the barbarity of its inhabitants, than St. Louis". Racial restrictive covenants were struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in the St. Louis case of Shelley vs Kraemer.

Even the standard test of racial employment discrimination by the U.S. Supreme Court was created in the St. Louis case of Green vs McDonnell Douglass. Until St. Louis takes steps to correct past injustices, this city and region will continue to decline. 

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs Theory

Just about every college student learns about a motivational theory developed by Abraham Maslow in the 1940's. His theory is taught in a variety of subjects including education, psychology, business management and marketing.

Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs theory proposed that motivation is the result of a person's attempt at fulfilling five basic needs: physiological, safety, social, esteem and self-actualization.

Physiological needs are those needs required for human survival such as air, food, water, shelter, clothing and sleep. A person will do just about anything to meet these needs; including violent crime.This doesn't mean that only poor people commit crimes, but the motivation for committing those crimes are different.  

People of means often commit crimes of greed, so-called "white-collar crime".

White collar crime is usually financially motivated, nonviolent crime committed by business and government professionals such as bribery, kickbacks, corruption, fraud, embezzlement, insider trading and a variety of other crimes. These are not victimless crimes. A single scam can destroy a company, devastate families by wiping out their life savings, or cost investors billions of dollars (or even all three). Today’s fraud schemes are more sophisticated than ever. 

Poor people often commit crimes of need, based on perceived necessity or survival. 

When a person can't feed himself or his family and can't find work what do you think they'll do? Starve? No, depending on their level of desperateness, they will do whatever is necessary. Some will borrow, some will seek public assistance if they qualify or beg, others will steal. Some time ago, the media was reporting how theft of Tide laundry detergent had dramatically increased and most recently, a shoplifter was shot trying to steal steaks and toilet paper. Those people were stealing food and other basic need items.

Many people facing hunger or homelessness believe they have nothing to lose, and nothing is more dangerous to society than a person who has nothing to lose. St. Louis needs to start addressing the causes of crime instead of just reacting to it.