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    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow

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    The Last Outlaw
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    PostThe Last Outlaw Sat Oct 20, 2018 2:48 pm

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Em4bX

    From ABC News' Nightline

    Bill Hutchinson of ABC News wrote:


    Numerous episodes have been reported across the nation this year in which white people have called 911 to report black people seemingly going about their normal lives.

    Many of the incidents have been recorded on cellphone videos -- and have exploded on social media and gone viral.

    Most of the callers have garnered nicknames pertaining to the routine activity of African-Americans they found suspicious enough to call authorities, including barbecuing in a park, playing golf, entering an apartment building where they live and even napping in the common area of a college dorm.

    From "Coupon Carl" to "Cornerstone Caroline," here is a list of incidents that have made headlines in 2018:

    Occupying a table at Starbucks

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Starbucks-arrested-interview-abc-ml-180419_hpMain_4x3_992

    On April 12, Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson were arrested at a Starbucks after a manager called 911 to say they were occupying a table without buying anything and refusing to leave. The men said they were waiting to meet with a business associate when police were called on them about three minutes after they sat down.

    Starbucks officials fired the manager and apologized to Nelson and Robinson. The company also closed all 8,000 of its stores for a single day in May to give employees racial-bias training.

    Browsing for prom clothes

    Three young men -- Dirone Taylor, Mekhi Lee and Eric Rogers -- were shopping for prom outfits at a Nordstrom Rack in St. Louis when they were wrongly accused of shoplifting and had the police called on them even though they had made purchases.

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Nordstrom-02-kmov-jrl-180508_hpEmbed_17x12_992

    "Luckily, the police let us explain our story, and they understood that it was totally a misunderstanding and let us go," Lee told ABC News at the time.

    Geevy Thomas, president of Nordstrom Rack, met with the three young men and their parents and apologized to them.

    Returning merchandise

    In May, Brian Spurlock said he was racially profiled and needlessly embarrassed when police confronted him at a Hobby Lobby store in Trussville, Alabama, where he returned merchandise. White employees called 911 because they said he vaguely resembled a suspect in a check-cashing scheme.

    The Birmingham man was with his girlfriend and her children when the incident occurred at the national arts-and-crafts retailer.

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Hobby-lobby-cops-called-01-wbma-jc-180517_hpMain_4x3_992

    "These folks look at me like, 'Oh, he stole something. Oh, he did something wrong.' Y'all embarrassed me and [that] hurt,'" Spurlock said of the incident in the interview with ABC affiliate station WBMA-TV in Birmingham. "That made me feel like I don't need to go in no stores no more because I look like somebody and [police] might arrest me."

    Golfing

    A course manager at a Pennsylvania golf course who was allegedly upset with a group of black female golfers told a 911 dispatcher that one of the women wasn't wielding weapons "other than her mouth."

    Steve Chronister, a manager of the Grandview Golf Course in Dover Township, made the comment on April 21 when he called 911 to complain that the women were playing golf too slowly, disobeying course rules and holding other duffers up.

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Golf-ap-jpo-180531_hpMain_4x3_992

    Chronister was apparently referring to Sandra Thompson, an attorney and president of the York County NAACP.

    "We weren't threatening or being argumentative," Thompson told ABC News at the time. "But what he was most threatened by was the fact that I was willing to speak up."

    Barbecuing in a park

    In April, Jennifer Schulte, a white woman, called the police on a group of black people who were legally barbecuing at a public park in Oakland, California. She was branded "BBQ Becky" and her image was photo-shopped into memes across the internet.

    "It's illegal to have a charcoal grill in the park here," Schulte is heard telling the group barbecuing as she was on her cellphone calling the police.

    Napping

    In May, Yale University graduate student, Lolade Siyonbola, sparked outrage about racial profiling after she posted a video of her extended interaction with campus police officers and the white student who called them.

    Siyonbola had the police called on her after the white student saw her napping in the dormitory's common area at the New Haven, Connecticut, campus.

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Yale-university-police-ht-wtnh-mem-180510_hpMain_4x3_992

    "I deserve to be here. I pay tuition like everybody else," Siyonbola, a 34-year-old graduate student in African studies, said after police asked her for identification and even followed her to her dorm room to watch her unlock the door.

    Redeeming a coupon

    In July, CVS Health Corp. [url=apologized to an African-American woman]apologized to an African-American woman[/url] after a manager of one of its Chicago stores, who was also president of the Illinois Log Cabin Republicans chapter, wrongly accused her of using a counterfeit coupon and called the police on her.

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Coupon-carl-03-as-ht-180715_hpEmbed_25x14_992

    Two employees at the CVS were fired after the customer, Camilla Hudson, 53, posted a cellphone video on Facebook of the store manager, Morry Matson, calling 911 on her and accusing her of using a phony coupon. The chain store also issued an apology to Hudson.

    Matson was dubbed "Coupon Carl" on social media after Hudson's video went viral.

    Selling bottled water

    In July, a white San Francisco woman called police on an 8-year-old girl for selling bottled water without a permit outside an apartment building.

    The story went viral after Erin Austin filmed the exchange with her neighbor, identified as Alison Ettel, because she feared the situation might be racially motivated. Austin's daughter, Jordan, who was selling the bottled water is biracial.



    "Calling the police on any person of color these days is an issue. They come, they shoot first and they ask questions later," Austin told Good Morning America. "Knowing that and knowing everything that's going on in the media, why would you call the police on a child of color?"

    The video received thousands of comments and shares on social media, as users accused the woman, dubbed "Permit Patty," of racism.

    Ettel defended making the call and said she had nothing against the girl.

    "It was all the mother and just about being quiet," she said. "I had been putting up with this for hours, and I just snapped."

    Eating lunch

    Oumou Kanoute, a student at Smith College in Massachusetts working as a teaching assistant and residential adviser, was eating lunch in a dorm common area on July 31 when an officer with the Northampton Police Department approached her. A white college employee called police on Kanoute, who she believed looked "out of place," according to a statement from the school.

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Smith-college-racial-profiling-03wcvb-jc-180803_hpMain_4x3_992



    Babysitting

    On Oct. 7, Corey Lewis was babysitting two white children, ages 6 and 10, when an unidentified white woman approached them in a Walmart parking lot in a suburb of Atlanta.

    "She pulled up to my vehicle and asked if the kids were all right," Lewis told ABC's Good Morning America. "I responded with, 'Why wouldn't they be?'"

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Babysitter-Corey-Lewis5-ABC-ka-181010_hpMain_4x3_992

    Lewis said the woman followed him and the children home and then called 911. Police responded, questioned Lewis, and called the parents of the children to verify he was their babysitter.

    Entering his apartment

    On Oct. 13, D'Arreion Toles posted a video on his Facebook page of a white woman blocking him from entering the St. Louis apartment building where he is a resident. The woman, identified as Hilary Mueller, can be seen standing in the doorway asking what unit Toles lives in, and to see his key fob.

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Woman-blocking-doorway-st-louis-ht-jc-181015_hpMain_4x3_992

    She followed him to his door and watched him enter his unit. Toles told ABC News that 30 minutes later police showed up because Mueller had called 911. Sgt. Keith Barrett of the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department confirmed a 911 call was made, but that no report was written.

    Toles' video was viewed more than 5 million times and won Mueller the moniker "Key Fob Kelly". Mueller was also fired from her job as a property manager.

    Mueller told KTVI-TV, a Fox affiliate in St. Louis, that her "only intent was to follow the direction I had been given by our condo association board members repeatedly. And that is to never allow access to any individual that you do not know."

    Going to a bodega

    On Oct. 10, a 9-year-old New York City boy, Jeremiah Harvey, was wrongly accused of groping a white woman in a corner store in Brooklyn. The woman, Teresa Klein, called the police and claimed the boy had grabbed her butt.

    However, surveillance video from the store showed that Jeremiah's backpack brushed Klein's backside. When Klein was shown the video, she apologized. She was ridiculed on social media and nicknamed "Cornerstone Caroline".

    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow Corner-store-woman-02-ht-jc-181015_hpMain_4x3_992

    During a community meeting days after the ordeal, Jeremiah delivered a simple message: "Friendship is really the key."

    The boy rejected Klein's apology.

    Being a soccer dad

    Gerald Jones claims he was just yelling instructions at his 13-year-old son during a youth soccer game in Ponte Vedra, Florida, when a white soccer official scolded him and then called sheriff's deputies on him even after he volunteered to leave the game.

    Two St. Johns County sheriff's deputies responded to the field marshal's 911 call after she told a dispatcher she felt threatened by Jones, a claim other parents who witnessed the incident disputed.

    The deputies let Jones go, but he has since demanded an apology from the field marshal, who has not been identified.

    A parent, Ginger Williams, took a cellphone video of deputies questioning Jones and the field marshal and posted it on Facebook under the headline: "Soccer while black." She referred to the field marshal as "Golfcart Gail" because she was riding a golf cart.

    There you have it ladies and gentlemen.  Blacks doing ordinary things and police being called for it.   Does that make any sense to you?  It really doesn't to me.  Janice Buerkli on Facebook posted a vent as to what 9-1-1 is actually for vs. what it's not for.

    Janice Buerkli on Facebook wrote:I am a 50 something white woman whose father was a police officer yet...
    I have never called 911 on anyone. Never.
    I have only called 911 when I thought I was having a heart attack, when my mom went to the ER for the last time, and one time when I was working retail and a pregnant customer passed out.
    911 is for life threatening emergencies.
    Not to report little boys accidentally brushing up against you with their book bags.
    Not to report a black student sleeping in her college's lounge.
    Not to report a black man having lunch with 2 white children.
    Not to report a black man walking in my neighborhood.
    Not to report a young black girl selling water.
    Not to report some black folks bbqing in the park
    White folks...If you can't use common sense or just walk up to people and say hello and engage in friendly convo (which will in turn usually inform you if there is "danger") Then just make a note of it in your brain and carry on.
    People are dying out here because you can't determine if something is a life or death emergency or if it's just people who don't look like you living their lives.
    There really need to be repercussions for these BS racially motivated 911 calls. A hefty fine...jail time... something.

    'Nuff said.

    Just saying.
    #LivingWhileBlack
    From 'BBQ Becky' to 'Golfcart Gail,' List of Unnecessary 9-1-1 Calls Made on Blacks Continues To Grow R9Zf

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