Woman, 92, dies in shootout with police

Lenny

Lovin' being Texican
C-Murda said:
After they planted them there. If ther was some old ass white lady in there, nothin would have come of dis. Pigs prolly didn even say who they was, jus busted down her dor. Ov course she had a gun, wouldn you in dat neighborhood.


CNN said:
"...in a high-crime neighborhood."

Some "old ass white lady in there" would have been taken down by the cops if she showed up with a piece. http://www.givethemback.com/pages/disarmed
 

Lenny

Lovin' being Texican
juggy4805 said:
I didn't see that anywhere.

It was posted over the weekend. All the links in this thread are older than Wednesday the 22nd.

Sorry, looks like the original CNN web site is updated today and says "Investigators also said they found drugs in the home after Johnston was killed. "
 
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Gwydion

New Member
C-Murda said:
After they planted them there. If ther was some old ass white lady in there, nothin would have come of dis. Pigs prolly didn even say who they was, jus busted down her dor. Ov course she had a gun, wouldn you in dat neighborhood.

Step 1: Turn on bath water
Step 2: Bring computer next to bath
Step 3: Plug computer into socket and turn on
Step 4: Submerge yourself in bath water
Step 5: Call anybody on this forum and tell us to stop on by.
 

Redskinsmama

New Member
ridiculous....more racial comments. if you were a cop, and someone was shooting at you, i doubt that you care what color their skin was. you would care about your wife/husband at home, your kids, etc. I hate that everyone asserts racial motives when they do not know otherwise. Civil rights leaders are so eager to jump down the "racially motivated" path. Civil rights leaders are part of the problem. NOT EVERYTHING IS RACIALLY MOTIVATED!!!! When you constantly hear people saying that "it's because they are black" all they're doing is continiung the racist thread. There were drugs in the house, she shot first. she deseved to die. And you know what? If a white woman shot that gun, she deserved to die. and you wouldn't hear white people saying that she was shot because of her race. If a black cop shoots a white person, you don't see if all over the headlines with every white lawyer on the news screaming foul play. ugh. take responsibility FOR YOURSELF, NOT THE COLOR OF YOUR SKIN!
 

Qurious

Im On 1.
ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- An informant cited in a search warrant as having purchased narcotics at an elderly Atlanta woman's house denies buying drugs there, authorities say.

Undercover officers raiding the 88-year-old woman's house shot her to death last week after she fired on them while they broke down her door in a high-crime neighborhood.

Federal prosecutors will investigate the case, Atlanta police Chief Richard Pennington announced Monday.

Pennington said the eight-member narcotics squad that took part in the raid has been placed on paid leave while investigators look into the informant's story and the circumstances surrounding the November 21 death of Kathryn Johnston.

The informant also told investigators from the Atlanta police internal affairs bureau that he was told to lie about the matter, the chief said.

"The FBI will investigate his statements, along with the police officers' statements as well," Pennington said.

Authorities said Johnston opened fire on police who tried to enter her home, prying off burglar bars and forcing open her door, during a "no-knock" drug raid. Officers returned fire, killing her.

Relatives put Johnston's age at 92, but Fulton County medical examiners said she was 88.

Neighbors and relatives said the raid had to have been a mistake. They said Johnston lived alone and was so afraid of crime in her neighborhood west of downtown Atlanta that she wouldn't let neighbors who delivered groceries for her come into her home.
Atlanta police reviews 'no-knock' policy

In an affidavit used to obtain the search warrant, narcotics officers said an informant had purchased two bags of crack cocaine from a man identified only as "Sam" in the home earlier that day.

Pennington said he called in federal prosecutors and the FBI after internal affairs investigators questioned the informant during the weekend.

"After we brought the informant in and interviewed that informant, he told us that he had no knowledge of going into that house to purchase drugs," he said. "That's what he told us. I don't know if he went in or not. We don't know if he's telling the truth."

In an interview with Atlanta's WAGA-TV, the informant said he had never been to Johnston's house.

"I'm telling them, I never went to the house," the informant told the station. "The police can't say I ever went to the house."

The informant then said police called him and told him "you need to cover our ass."

"It's all on you -- have to tell them about this Sam dude," the informant said police told him.

Pennington said the man was being "put away in a secure place" until the FBI could question him. The chief also promised to make "every document, every witness and piece of evidence" available to investigators.

Meanwhile, the seven narcotics officers and a sergeant were put on administrative leave with pay, and the department is reviewing its use of "no-knock" raids after the shootout, he said. The warrants are common in narcotics cases when officers fear suspects may try to dispose of drugs or evidence in the time it takes authorities to gain access to the home.

In addition to the FBI and Justice Department, the Fulton County district attorney's office and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation are taking part in the probe.

Pennington made his reputation cleaning up a corrupt New Orleans, Louisiana, Police Department in the 1990s. He said the "intense speculation and suspicion" surrounding Johnston's death spurred him to call in outside agencies.

"There are many unanswered questions. I promise each and every citizen that the complete truth will be eventually known, whatever that might be," he said. "But we must all exercise patience while we examine and re-examine every single aspect of these tragic events."

A spokesman for Johnston's family, the Rev. Markel Hutchins, went to Washington to request a federal investigation Monday. Hutchins said he had received assurances that agents would conduct a "swift and thorough" investigation into the woman's death.

Hutchins said the three midlevel officials with whom he met also promised "all resources at our disposal" to help counter the fallout in the African-American community from the shooting. He said he urged Justice Department officials to press for strong federal guidance to local police departments against the use of no-knock warrants.

DAMN SHAME!!! She was only trying to protect herself.... :mad:
 

Lenny

Lovin' being Texican
The informant also told investigators from the Atlanta police internal affairs bureau that he was told to lie about the matter, the chief said.

That's what I would say after the fact of causing a national-interest, racially-charged incident. Even if I did tell the truth the first time.
 

Redskinsmama

New Member
Lenny said:
That's what I would say after the fact of causing a national-interest, racially-charged incident. Even if I did tell the truth the first time.

not racially charged. they were shot at. granted their tactics were not the smartest, but that's how Atlanta's narcotics officers were told to approach the situation. I seriously doubt cops said, "hey, let's go shoot an elderly black woman and blame it on drugs"
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
I thought they found drugs inside the home???

I hate stories like this. I wish the media would STHU until all the facts are known, THEN tell us about it.

If this new development is true and those cops raided a house and shot that old woman without any cause, #### will rightfully hit the fan.
 
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