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General Category => Off the Record => Topic started by: jimmy olsen on July 03, 2015, 01:29:52 AM

Title: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: jimmy olsen on July 03, 2015, 01:29:52 AM
Now that's some irony.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/07/03/us-usa-california-lynching-idUSKCN0PD01X20150703

Quote

California removes 'lynching' language from state law

SAN FRANCISCO

California Governor Jerry Brown on Thursday signed a bill striking the word "lynching" from a 1933 law that used the term to describe the crime of trying to take someone from police custody.

The bill, which passed unanimously in the state legislature last week, followed outrage over the arrest of African-American activist Maile Hampton on a charge of felony lynching during a "Black Lives Matter" demonstration in Sacramento in January.

The bill keeps the same punishment for the crime while only removing the term "lynching." It was one of several bills Brown signed on Thursday, his office said.

Hampton's attorney, lawmakers and other supporters rallied behind her at court and on social media, saying it was ironic that she had been charged under a decades-old law originally enacted to protect black detainees from white lynch mobs.

Her supporters also called for the removal of the word lynching from the penal code, saying its application was not appropriate.

Thousands of African-Americans were victims of lynchings, or extrajudicial public execution by hanging, in Southern states in the 19th and 20th centuries.

"It's been said that strong words should be reserved for strong concepts," Senator Holly Mitchell, a Democrat who authored the bill and represents a district including historically African-American communities in Los Angeles, said in a statement.

"And 'lynching' has such a painful history for African Americans that the law should only use it for what it is – murder by mob," she added.

Hampton was detained for allegedly trying to pull a friend from police custody during a January protest over the killings of unarmed black men by police, the Sacramento Bee reported.

Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert has since reduced Hampton's charges to resisting arrest, a misdemeanor.

Trying to remove someone from police custody by means of a riot is a felony punishable by between two and four years behind bars.


(Reporting by Curtis Skinner; Additional reporting by Emmett Berg; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
Title: Re: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: Siege on July 06, 2015, 12:01:07 AM
Plenty of white pipple were lynched.
It was what happened to law breakers back in the day.
Title: Re: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: Martinus on July 06, 2015, 12:08:41 AM
Racist Jews are as dumb as nazi Poles.
Title: Re: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: Razgovory on July 06, 2015, 08:20:36 PM
The kind of websites that Siege was posting here a few years back were the ones that killer in South Carolina were inspired from.
Title: Re: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: LaCroix on July 06, 2015, 09:08:53 PM
it's true, though. white people were lynched in the flyover states for years during the frontier period. kill someone's family? get lynched by the angry mob
Title: Re: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: Valmy on July 07, 2015, 07:31:17 AM
Quote from: LaCroix on July 06, 2015, 09:08:53 PM
it's true, though. white people were lynched in the flyover states for years during the frontier period. kill someone's family? get lynched by the angry mob

Yep. The term might have even come from summary execution of Tories during the Revolution but that is one of many different candidates.

But the race of the victim is not really the point is it? Lynching means murder by a mob, I think Mitchell is accurate here.
Title: Re: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: The Brain on July 07, 2015, 07:33:49 AM
What about murder by the mob?
Title: Re: California removes 'lynching' language from state law
Post by: Valmy on July 07, 2015, 07:38:19 AM
Quote from: The Brain on July 07, 2015, 07:33:49 AM
What about murder by the mob?

That's wacking. 'Vinny got wacked last night'