Re-posted by Nicholas Stix
Thanks to Prince George’s County Expatriate for this article.
All you need to know about Kendis Gibson is that he is a member in good standing of the segeregationist, National Association of Black Journalists.
Violent crimes up this year in Southeast D.C.
By Kendis Gibson
May 6, 2014 - 06:15 p.m.
WJLA
[Absolutely no comments permitted!]
(WJLA) - It has become an all-too familiar scene in Southeast: a triple shooting featuring the usual players in these parts – teenage victims and teenage suspects.
Phil Hines was 14 years old when he was shot the first time – he has been shot two separate times on the same Southeast street.
[“The usual players in these parts – teenage victims and teenage suspects.” What bull. An honest reporter would have written, ‘The usual players in these parts – black victims and black suspects.’]
"You get shot in the chest and it comes out your neck -- of course you think you're gonna die," he said.
Hines was pronounced dead at the scene and then revived – only to get shot again in April.
[An honest reporter would give Landis’ gang affiliation and criminal history, but Landis is no honest reporter.]
“I got hit right here to my leg, and right here to the back side of my leg," he said.
Southeast has seen a shocking increase in violence in the first four months of this year compared to last year. Murders are up 75-percent [sic], and sexual assaults are up 50-percent [sic]; armed robberies have seen an 18-percent spike.
Now, with such a violent winter and spring, community activists are fearing the summer.
Activist Ron Moten thinks unless more is done to help this community soon, we’ll see a return to the summer of 2006:
[“Unless more is done to help this community”: Translation: Whites must pay ever more extortion to community organizers like Moten, with Landis’ blessing. Actually, whites cannot, and should not “help” the “community” of SE D.C.]
"...Where we had over 60, 70 gang crew beefs in this city, causing gun shots every day to go off. [Gun shots don’t “go off”; people—in D.C., almost exclusively blacks—fire guns.] Made it as though people couldn't have their children to come out and play."
[That last sentence should be declarative, not hypothetical: “Made it so people couldn't let their children come out and play.”]
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