Thursday, October 31, 2013

GET INFORMED!- WHAT WILL YOU DO?

All credit to Mr. Brad Franklin on this one.


Frustrated? Saddened that 3 kids were shot a couple days ago?
Angry after hearing about the triple homicide? Fed up? You want to move?


Who ya blaming? Jackson?? JPD?
You want the crime to stop but you dont want the police "all up in your hood". You should have to do NOTHING but sit at home and wait for the police to round up all the bad people?? Some of yall complaining and you KIN to or KNOW some of the folks that are out here creating the chaos you complaining about


Is there a homeowners or neighborhood association where you live? Have you joined it? Do you go to meetings? IS there a neighborhood watch where you live? Do you participate? Is your neighborhood even organized? Do you go to the C.O.P.S mtgs in your precinct? Do you even know about them? But its ALLLLL JPD's fault right? Theyre incompetent right? But YOU know who sells the dope in your hood. Most of us do. You partying with em. You know where they posted. Folks dying cuz its a dope war on the streets but you expect JPD to be everywhere. Your hood is under siege but you waiting for the SWAT team to come in and clean it up? You dont get the idea of "community" I see.


Me? Im ON my neighborhood's board. I GO to C.O.P.S mtgs. I joined my neighborhoods social media group. Im helping organize neighborhood watches. Why? (and this is gonna be harsh to some) cuz these vigils, marches, rides, whatever we keep having ARE NOT WORKING! In fact...they aint doin s***!! No offense. I will support. It feels good at the moment but have produced NO results.


Look...I dont like the police any more than some of you. Im a Black male whos been accosted, profiled, and talked bad to by law enforcement. But Im also not Batman. So with that said we've got to learn to squash the antagonistic nature of the relationship between the hood and the police. And learn how to create VILLAGES again. COMMUNITY again. Not just "hood" but NEIGHBORhood. That is...if you REALLY want to start making things safer.

And to add to that, a fourth body has just been found on Moon Street. We have to wake up. 

How do you feel. 

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

WATKINS ALERT!!!-Secretary of State Investigates David Watkins for Fraud in Money Transfer

Uh OH!
Credit to Jackson free press on this release



Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann is investigating whether developer David Watkins fraudulently financed a Meridian development with bond money allocated for redevelopment in Metrocenter Mall.
Watkins testified Tuesday in proceedings related to his dealings with Retro Metro LLC at the Mississippi Secretary of State’s office. At issue is Watkins' decision to move over half a million dollars directly from Retro Metro LLC’s account on April 12, 2011, into the account of Meridian Law Enforcement Center LLC while he was a manager of both companies.
He denied any wrongdoing in the transaction. "Absolutely not," he said.
The secretary of state is investigating whether the alleged transfer of money between Retro Metro to MLEC is tantamount to securities fraud. The central question seems to be why Watkins moved the money and whether it was an illegal transaction.
Watkins formed Retro Metro LLC in August 2010, along with partners including Socrates Garrett and Leroy Walker, to renovate the former Belk building in Metrocenter Mall. But Walker announced that Watkins had resigned from Retro Metro in 2012 after it surfaced that he was facing lawsuits from subcontractors who he allegedly had not paid for work in Metrocenter. (He is still listed, however, on the secretary of state's website as a director.)
During the same period of time that he was pursuing the Retro Metro project, Watkins formed Meridian Law Enforcement Center LLC, in Meridian in April 2011 to redevelop an old Cowboy Maloney building on 22nd Avenue into a new police station at an estimated cost of $9.2 million. The Meridian Star reported then that the project was being financed through Watkins Development LLC and Citizens National Bank in Meridian.
However, that project fell into controversy after work began in May 2012 but then stalled, with Watkins saying he was waiting for new market tax credits to help pay for the development due to problems with coordination of the various entities involved with the credits. Watkins is the only officer listed on the secretary of state's site for that group.
In June 2012, the Meridian City Council decided to re-examine the lease with Meridian Law Enforcement Center LLC, deciding to hold rental funds for the building, scheduled to be paid to Watkins' group, in escrow until the work was done. Watkins had originally started planning the project in Meridian in 2010, according to The Meridian Star, for a $10,000-a-month consulting fee that would be automatically renewed each year "for a number of years," the agreement stated. But the city council and Watkins agreed in 2012 to reduce the fee to be paid to him to $1—to keep him "on line" with the city, Ward 1 Councilman George Thomas said then.
At the hearing today, Watkins attorney Brad Pigott, a former U.S. attorney, asked Watkins about a $5.1 million bond that the Mississippi Department of Corrections issued to Retro Metro for renovations in Metrocenter.
Watkins denied that he had planned to use money from the bond for the Meridian project. “I had all kinds of ways—getting loans, paying cash from my own reserves,” Watkins said. “There were multiple ways I could have come up with the money.”
During Pigott's questioning, Watkins stressed that he was wearing multiple development hats at the time of the transfer. When he moved the money from Retro Metro to a different company, he said, he was simply settling the debts of Retro Metro as a manager, and he was in a time crunch to deposit money into the MLEC account.
Watkins assured Pigott that entities owed him more money than he needed to send to Meridian. “Retro Metro was one of the entities that owed me a lot more than $587,000,” Watkins said.
During Watkins' testimony, Pigott asked him about the timeline of events in an attempt to show that Watkins could not have foreseen the necessity for money for the Meridian project when he closed on the bond to renovate parts of Metrocenter Mall.
The developer emphasized that he was pulled a lot of directions at the time. “We were very busy,” Watkins said. “We had dozens and dozens of projects we were working on. Meridian was only one of them. We had multiple projects we were working on. We had a housing redevelopment (and) a hotel in the Fondren area called Whitney Place. We were looking at turning the Mississippi Valley Title building into a hotel. We were trying to talk the Jackson Public Schools into relocating all of their public offices to Metrocenter, and w were looking at redeveloping property on State Street near the new federal courthouse.”
The secretary of state's investigation of Watkins is just one more layer in the mounting controversy roiling around him. The Jackson Free Press has reported in recent weeks that the Jackson Redevelopment Authority fired Watkins from the Farish Street Entertainment District project, and that Watkins and the JRA are suing each other over the controvery.
The hearing went to recess at 5:30 p.m., and will resume Wednesday morning at 9 a.m. Watch the JFP website and @tylercleveland and @jxnfreepress for updates.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

The FIGHT for FARISH is ON! Who will win!

VS
David Watkins vs the City of Jackson


You've read about it, and your heard about it for years, but as of about 10 days ago, the war has gotten a little heated. We would like to know how you feel in the FIGHT FOR FARISH. #FFF. Who do you think will win and why or how do you feel about the situation in its entirety. 

hashtag
#FFF

Friday, October 4, 2013

Jack-Asses of the day-Brought to you by the Pearl PD

This is the new trend that is sweeping the south. Take a look.

Five HCC students had a hand in the prank, one of them shooting the incident from the second floor.
Pearl Police Lieutenant Butch Townsend says the "Bass Pro Challenge" is a new trend among college students, and it has happened in other places as well, like San Antonio and Nashville.
Townsend says the boys were charged with misdemeanors. They are John Edwards, William Guion, and John Hicks, all 18, and all from Yazoo City.
Nineteen-year-old Brent Pigg of Yazoo City and 19-year-old Thomas Smith of Clarksdale were also arrested. All five are charged with disorderly conduct and interference with a business
Five HCC students had a hand in the prank, one of them shooting the incident from the second floor.
Pearl Police Lieutenant Butch Townsend says the "Bass Pro Challenge" is a new trend among college students, and it has happened in other places as well, like San Antonio and Nashville.
Townsend says the boys were charged with misdemeanors. They are John Edwards, William Guion, and John Hicks, all 18, and all from Yazoo City.
Nineteen-year-old Brent Pigg of Yazoo City and 19-year-old Thomas Smith of Clarksdale were also arrested. All five are charged with disorderly conduct and interference with a business
 
Here is some more footage of others,.....taking the challenge.