Zantavia Williams,14, Ladricka James, 14, Javaris Beard, 12, Alphonso Young, Bria Watkins,12, Lamiracle Mackey, 13, Jebria Welch, 15.
One girl allegedly asked students if they wanted to hit the victim, then instructed the teens to form a circle and began hitting and kicking the victim. Several witnesses said they saw the girl fall to the floor and "appear to have a seizure and pass out," according to the arrest report.
The victim, who is not being identified, was taken to the hospital and diagnosed with a concussion, severe bruising on her head and muscle spasms.
Seven teens, ranging in age from 12 to 15, were charged with battery and disorderly conduct. The Associated Press is not identifying the suspects because they are minors.
Even if you didn’t know the names, you’d know the attackers were black, and the raceless victim was white, from the description of the crime alone. No one would let the girl sit down on the bus, and then the racist mob sought to punch and stomp her to death. (The girl’s wounds preclude using the qualifier “allegedly.” The only question is which member of the mob did what.)
As WKMG reader Hasan Mahmood remarked,
I am neither black not white but why is it that when I read this story I thought "they must be black kids". It is not because of the media or anything. It is because where I live, only blacks are involved in this kind of behavior. Loud, obnoxious, and extremely rude. Not every black person is like that but every person who is like that is black.
(An additional reason has since come to my attention confirming the victim is white, but I’m not going into that, at present.)
On top of that, Bessie Coleman, the mother of one of the suspects, unwittingly confessed that her feral, racist daughter is guilty as hell, and that she is the monster who taught her to do what she did: She pulled the race card on the victim, asserting that the victim had made “racial comments.”
WKMG Orlando previously quoted Coleman, but have since pulled her quote, and replaced it with the following, thoroughly misleading claim.
The Ocala Star Banner reports the teens were appointed public defenders and cannot have contact with each other or the victim while on home detention. Their parents declined comment.
Racist blacks pull the race card following such attacks for three reasons:
1. They are so stone stupid that they think someone is going to believe that a white girl on a bus with 70 racist blacks is going to use racial epithets, the way blacks do all of the time;
2. They are so racist as to and think that they can justify anything, up to and including murder, based on such a claim, while denying whites the right to so much as defend themselves against violent attack by blacks; and
3. Because in many localities, the race card also functions as a get-out-of-jail-free card with anti-white criminal justice officials.
We can also be sure that most or all of the attackers did as they had been taught by their families, and possibly even black educators at the school. (I discuss racist black educators’ culpability in such attacks in the chapter on education in The State of White America—2007.)
Note that the suspects were charged merely with “battery” and “disorderly conduct.” Measly misdemeanors. This was attempted murder, lynching, and a hate crime, felonies all. (The traditional legal term for a gang assault was “lynching.”)
Racist black gang attacks are a feature of daily life in America, in rural areas, suburbs, and cities. Most of the time, the police sweep them under the rug or ignore them. Most of the time when the police do make arrests, the media ignore, minimize, or cover up the attacks.
And although the attacks are virtually all felonious, they are almost always undercharged as piddling misdemeanors. That permits leftists and even brain-dead neoconservatives to claim that crime is going down, which the lefties then insist is one of the fruits of “diversity.”
[Thanks to reader OnMainStreet for the articles.]
Posted: 12:20 p.m. Saturday, January 7, 2012
7 Ocala teens accused in school bus beating
WFTV
MARION COUNTY, Fla. —
A judge placed seven Marion County teenagers accused of beating a 13-year-old girl unconscious while on a school bus on home confinement on Saturday.
Marion County Sheriff's deputies said about 75 children were on the bus Friday morning on their way to Liberty Middle School when the fight broke out.
The school's bus driver said he saw the fight and pulled the bus over to intervene.
The fighting [sic; attacks] ceased, so he continued driving, but he told authorities the fight broke out again and he couldn't control it so he drove to a nearby school and called officials.
Deputies told WFTV the victim suffered a concussion and severe bruising and was taken to a local hospital. She allegedly told a deputy it was her first day riding the bus and no one would let her sit down.
Authorities interviewed all the students on the bus. Ten students said they saw the seven "commit battery upon the victim as a group," according to the report.
Investigators said the suspects, 14-year-old Zantavia Williams, 14-year-old Ladricka James, 12-year-old Javaris Beard, 13-year-old Alphonso Young, 12-year-old Bria Watkins, 13-year-old Lamiracle Mackey, and 15-year-old Jebria Welch were arrested and charged with felony battery and disorderly conduct.
School officials said it's unlikely the suspects will be allowed on campus until their cases are resolved.
Seven youths charged with beating girl on school bus
By Austin L. Miller
Ocala Star-Banner
Friday, January 6, 2012 at 8:01 p.m.
Last modified Friday, January 6, 2012 at 8:01 p.m.
Seven juveniles — five girls and two boys ranging in ages 12 through 15 — beat a 13-year-old girl so badly she was left unconscious and had to be taken to a hospital Friday morning while on the school bus on their way to school, according to Sheriff’s Office reports.
The names of the defendants are not being released by the Star-Banner. All eight juveniles, including the victim, attend Liberty Middle School in Marion Oaks.
Deputies said the incident occurred around 7:30 a.m. on the way to school, and that there were approximately 74 children on the bus.
Deputies were dispatched to Marion Oaks Elementary School after receiving a report about a fight on a school bus.
The bus driver told deputies he was driving down the street when he saw an altercation on the bus and stopped. The driver said when the bus stopped, the fighting also stopped, so he continued.
While driving, the driver said the fight started again, so he stopped the bus. This time, he said the fight did not stop, so he drove to the elementary school and called school officials, who called deputies.
The victim, a 13-year-old girl who has not been identified by law enforcement officials, was taken to a local hospital, where it was determined she had suffered a concussion, severe bruising on her head and muscle spasms.
At the hospital, Deputy Larry McArdle interviewed the victim, who told McArdle it was her first day riding the school bus and none of the children would allow her to sit down.
The teenager said someone threw a shoe at her, and she threw the shoe back. Then, the teen said, she was attacked by several people she did not know.
Based on interviews conducted by deputies, the shoe did not hit the victim. And when the victim threw the shoe back, one person alleges it struck a student. [Oh, so the victim was the aggressor? Got it. Blacks can thrown shoes and other objects at whites, but whites may not defend themsleves.]
At the scene, several witnesses told Deputy Pamela Race that when the victim fell down, she appeared to have seizures and passed out.
Another group of students told the same deputy they saw multiple individuals hitting the girl.
One of those arrested, a 13-year-old girl, admitted to throwing the shoe at the victim but denied hitting her. ['So, it doesn't count.']
A 14-year-old girl claimed the victim was arguing with several of them, including her [Oh, so the one white girl they refused to let sit was the aggressor aginst seven black kids]., and that one of the girls reportedly asked the group who wanted to hit the victim. Then, the girl said, the group surrounded the victim and she kicked the victim, but she claims that the kick making contact with the victim was an accident.
[‘I surrounded her with the others, and I kicked her, but it was an accident that my foot hit her’? Is that like, ‘I didn’t shoot him; the gun just went off’?]
A few of the defendants admitted to hitting the girl, while a couple either denied striking the victim or declined comment.
One 14-year-old girl said she punched the victim in the head 10 to 15 times because the girl allegedly called her a name. [She sounds like Bessie Coleman’s daughter.]
Deputy Shannon Wiles, who wrote the arrest reports, noted the defendant said she climbed over four seats and several students to get to the victim.
All seven individuals were arrested by deputies and charged with felony battery and disorderly conduct. They were transported to the Sheriff’s Office juvenile facility, where they were processed.
Marion County Public Schools spokesperson Kevin Christian said the normal procedure calls for expulsion or reassignment to another school, with the final outcome being made by the school board.
As for whether or not the accused students will return to their school, Christian said it’s highly unlikely they will be allowed on campus until their legal issues are resolved.
Students charged in bus attack placed on home detention
Cops: Girl beaten until she was unconscious
January 7, 2012, at 12:02:42 a.m. EST
Updated on January 8, 2012, at 2:34:31 p.m. EST
WKMG Orlando
A judge has placed seven central Fla. teens on home detention after they were charged with punching and kicking a 13-year-old girl until she was unconscious.
During Saturday's hearing, State Attorney John Zaleskie asked the judge to detain the youths until arraignment because of "extreme violence" and injuries suffered by the victim. The teens had no prior arrests.
The Ocala Star Banner reports the teens were appointed public defenders and cannot have contact with each other or the victim while on home detention. Their parents declined comment.
The youths were charged with battery and disorderly conduct Friday after allegedly forming a circle around another girl on the school bus and hitting and kicking her repeatedly. The victim told deputies it was her first day riding the bus and no one would let her sit down. She suffered a concussion.
7 teens charged with beating classmate unconscious
By KELLI KENNEDY | AP – Sat, Jan 7, 2012
Associated Press/Yahoo
MIAMI (AP) — Seven central Florida teenagers were arrested after authorities said they punched and kicked a 13-year-old until she was unconscious while on a school bus.
The victim told authorities that Friday was her first time riding the bus and no one would let her sit down. About 75 children were riding the bus bound for a middle school in Ocala, a rural city north of Orlando. The victim said someone threw a shoe at her and she threw one back, according to an arrest report.
One girl allegedly asked students if they wanted to hit the victim, then instructed the teens to form a circle and began hitting and kicking the victim. Several witnesses said they saw the girl fall to the floor and "appear to have a seizure and pass out," according to the arrest report.
The victim, who is not being identified, was taken to the hospital and diagnosed with a concussion, severe bruising on her head and muscle spasms.
Seven teens, ranging in age from 12 to 15, were charged with battery and disorderly conduct. The Associated Press is not identifying the suspects because they are minors.
The school's bus driver said he saw the fight and pulled the bus over to intervene. The fighting ceased, so he continued driving, but he told authorities the fight broke out again and he couldn't control it so he drove to a nearby school and called officials.
Authorities interviewed all the students on the bus. Ten students said they saw the seven "commit battery upon the victim as a group," according to the report.
One suspect admitted kicking the victim, but said it was an accident. A few claimed they hit her and several others denied it.
Deputy Shannon Wiles wrote in the report that one 14-year-old girl climbed over several seats filled with students to get to the victim and "advised she punched the defendant repeatedly in the head, approximately 10-15 times because the victim called her a name."
School officials said it's unlikely the defendants will be allowed on campus until their cases are resolved.
The Ocala Star-Banner (http://lb.vg/0iLGQ ), which first reported the fight, said school discipline rules call for the students to be expelled or reassigned to another school, according to Marion County Public Schools spokesman Kevin Christian.
___
Information from: Ocala Star-Banner, http://www.starbanner.com/
Poor thing.... Goddamn niggers. Send em back to Africa seriously. I fear if I have kids ( I'm only 21) what the future will be like for them... Honestly I wouldn't wanna deal with it
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