Nov 1, 2021: Northside Sun: STATE OF AFFAIRS: FOOTE POINTS TO ‘WILLINGNESS TO BE CONFRONTATIONAL’ AS ASSET
Foote blames Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba for policies that keep police officers from doing their jobs. “The no pursuit policy is a big part of that,” he said.
Foote blames Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba for policies that keep police officers from doing their jobs. “The no pursuit policy is a big part of that,” he said.
Feb 1, 2021: Adofa Minka: Mississippi Free Press: Project EJECT: It’s Not Only White Racist Republican Politicians Holding Black Toilers In Contempt
The capital city’s self-proclaimed “revolutionary mayor” Chokwe Antar Lumumba was not in Jackson when Hurst announced EJECT’s collaboration with local law enforcement, including JPD. Chief Lee Vance, the first of what would eventually be three police chiefs in Jackson during Lumumba’s tenure, was next to Hurst during the announcement and strongly confirmed JPD’s, and by extension, the City of Jackson’s participation in Project EJECT.
The capital city’s self-proclaimed “revolutionary mayor” Chokwe Antar Lumumba was not in Jackson when Hurst announced EJECT’s collaboration with local law enforcement, including JPD. Chief Lee Vance, the first of what would eventually be three police chiefs in Jackson during Lumumba’s tenure, was next to Hurst during the announcement and strongly confirmed JPD’s, and by extension, the City of Jackson’s participation in Project EJECT.
Jan 9, 2019: Adofa Minka: Jackson Free Press: OPINION: Making Government Surveillance Great Again in America’s ‘Radical City’
In recent months, Mayor Chokwe Lumumba proposed and the Jackson City Council approved a 45-day pilot surveillance program that will enlist tech companies to tap into the Ring surveillance camera footage of 10 homes and businesses who are collaborating with the expansion of Jackson's surveillance state. The Jackson Police Department's, or JPD's, Real Time Crime Center can access the Ring camera footage at all times as everyday citizens casually go about their daily routines.
In recent months, Mayor Chokwe Lumumba proposed and the Jackson City Council approved a 45-day pilot surveillance program that will enlist tech companies to tap into the Ring surveillance camera footage of 10 homes and businesses who are collaborating with the expansion of Jackson's surveillance state. The Jackson Police Department's, or JPD's, Real Time Crime Center can access the Ring camera footage at all times as everyday citizens casually go about their daily routines.