Seattle Police Strike Again Attack Another Hip Hop Artist

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CoopDVill

Super Moderator
May 4, 2003
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#1
The following is a statement from Randee Eddins, poet, community activist and leader concerning the case of her son, Rajni. The attached MP3 in the email is a segment of the TWOMP News, audio DJ B-Girl Chillz, Merc, and I captured outside of Seattle Courthouse on the initial day of Rajnii's hearing. Please air this segment on your radio shows, burn it on your mix tapes, and post it on your websites! Please forward widely and voice your support in this continuing battle for justice and lasting change in the criminal justice system~
Julie C (emcee/ activist)

http://odeo.com/audio/11173863/view


powered by BREAKDOWN FM & ODEO


He came armed with a question. Yes, admittedly, he did do that. My
much loved only son, Rajnii Alexander Gibson-Eddins, a well-known
young Arts Educator, Performance Artist and Youth Advocate, approached
a police officer's car armed with a question.

For that, he was frisked, handcuffed, detained, arrested and charged
with obstruction of a public official. My son, who had no criminal
history; had no disrespectful bravado for the police officer who
arrested him, had nothing more in mind than the safety and security of
a young black adolescent who he had been told by one of his students
was being carted off to jail for spitting out gum.

The over the top response of the officer, R. Nelson came about,
reportedly, because he was afraid for his safety and his fellow
officers' safety. Afraid of Rajnii? Afraid of this most gentle
articulate young black man; artist educator, poet, actor, youth
advocate, community activist, and former elder foster brother to more
than 50 youth?

Afraid of his question?

"Let's examine this closely, shall we? Was it the…" excuse me
officer, I'd like to know what this child is being charged with so I
can notify her parents?"

Was it because when they told my son, my Rajnii, to move back from the
vehicle and he promptly complied, not once, not twice but 3 times but
continued to persist with the question, was that what made the officer
feel unsafe?

Was it that some police officers in certain neighborhoods have
forgotten they are paid to serve us and not paid to detain us,
humiliate us, harass us or arrest us? Ironically, my son is the
grandson and nephew of law enforcement officers; my late father was a
retired police officer and my brother is an officer with the sheriff's
department.

My son has served youth in a positive manner from Redmond to Tacoma,
co-founded a spoken word community organization to allow a culturally
diverse group of young people to flex and hone their voices in a
variety of venues.

Rajnii has performed spoken word from the Seattle City Council
chambers to Benaroya Hall, to Seattle Center, to colleges and
universities, libraries, bookstores, cafes, nightclubs, festivals,
theatres, community and cultural arts centers. He was chosen to be
part of Seattle's National Slam team for both 2004 and 2005 and
nominated for Seattle Poet Populist.

Rajnii has worked at many local Seattle area schools as both a
teaching assistant and teaching artist and volunteered thousands of
community service hours to improve the lives of our community's
youth.

Rajnii is only 26 but has already designed and implemented a
curriculum using positive hip-hop and taught a host of teachers how to
engage their disaffected students using it as a tool; has taken
students into the studio out of his own pocket and cheered them on at
their every effort to realize their artistic dreams.

Rajnii is considered a fierce mc in the hip-hop community, he writes
and performs his songs, his style, his way and definitely knows how to
rock the mic and move a crowd. He has been on countless albums to
support his peers with both lyrics and singing. He is known
affectionately by family and friends and the wider youth advocacy
community as the Peace Bringer'.

Further, at 24, Rajnii was invited by two high schools in New York to
be their keynote speaker performing with the great eloquence, passion
and clarity he is known for and receiving standing ovations at both
events.

You see, I am the fiercely proud mother of a great son; the kind of
son, friends used to borrow as an example to their own. A son known
for his respectful demeanor, known for kindness, generosity and
humility, known for brilliant artistic talent and his uncanny ability
to engage and redirect youth toward positive pursuits.

And yet, we are here, standing at this impasse; outraged, stunned,
dismayed, apprehensive, indignant, and determined. Why should my son
have any stain on his impeccable record? Why did this officer decide
in this case that discretion was not the better part of valor?

And most importantly, when have our police gotten so frightened for
their safety that they arrest educators who demonstrate concern for a
student rather than applaud them?

After all, he was only armed with a question.

I guess the lesson the police would have our community learn here is
we must warn other educators do not approach the police armed with a
question, mothers and fathers do not, youth do not, students do not,
concerned community members do not, advocates do not, activists do
not, spoken word artists do not, performance artists do not, elders do
not, ministers do not, business owners do not approach the police
whose salary you pay armed with a question...especially if you are
black.

If you who are reading this in 2007 America are as outraged and
concerned as I am, email our Seattle mayor, our Seattle city
attorney's office, our Seattle chief of police, newspaper editors,
your community organizations, school boards, share it from your
pulpits, discuss this with your friends.

If you are able to offer any support financially please contact me at
[email protected], because as a mother, a former foster mother, a
community activist and advocate for the positive development of all
youth, I recognize the issue is much greater than just my son and will
contribute where ever I can to help see the necessary changes made to
protect other youth from this debilitating experience.

However, we need to make all police departments answer to how being
armed with a simple question in America can throw any fine young man
in jail. We need to refuse to have the Rajnii's of the world
criminalized, humiliated and their positive efforts diminished due to
overzealous punitive response by those sworn to protect and serve.

Let's choose to have this conversation and seek positive resolution
about this ugly issue of racial profiling and find a new way to keep
the Officer Nelsons from overreacting.

Perhaps retraining, perhaps censure, perhaps removal from service in
the heavily populated minority community that he/they, apparently,
fear so much?

We have to remember, need to remember, it was Rajnii today and it
could very well be, you or your loved one, tomorrow.

Any and all efforts of support us in these efforts are very much appreciated.

Peace and Blessings.
Randee Eddins
 
Jan 22, 2007
1,752
20
0
43
www.myspace.com
#2
WOW! Thats crazy fam. Sounds like the same way most of us get treated by the police everywhere! "Mr. Police, please try to see that it's a million muthafuckas' dressin' just like me...ONLY GOD CAN JUDGE ME!" Tupac
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
21,001
86
48
#3
God damn...

Like I been sayin, pigs do NOT serve and protect, they OBSERVE and NEGLECT.

All he was tryin to do was communicate and some fuckin pig freaked out...those type of cops should be fired and have all their possessions taken away, just for being douche bags when they are supposed to help out the citizens.
 
May 4, 2002
2,178
384
83
44
#7
maybe one day all these fake ass rappers will stop fantasizing about the streets and actually start takin matters in they own hands....
i get to go to court on my 2nd police tazing from portlands finest on april 26th...
some quick history: http://www.wweek.com/story.php?story=6083

im goin to trail with a "CAN'T FASE EM, TAZE EM" T-SHIRT ON

THE POLICE AINT SHIT BUT A GANG...WHEN WE START LINKIN UP AND DOIN SHIT....U KNOW WHAT..GO LISTEN TO MY WARPATH SHIT..THEN HOLLA AT ME ;)
 

Jazzo

Master of Debauchery
Aug 18, 2003
2,582
490
83
Off the Grid
#8
100% Agree

SYKO said:
maybe one day all these fake ass rappers will stop fantasizing about the streets and actually start takin matters in they own hands....

THE POLICE AINT SHIT BUT A GANG...WHEN WE START LINKIN UP AND DOIN SHIT....U KNOW WHAT..GO LISTEN TO MY WARPATH SHIT..THEN HOLLA AT ME ;)

Real spit........:angry:
 
May 20, 2002
111
0
0
#9
officers should have nerves of steel, able to handle speaking with a minority, without sweating. but this one, this one got nerves of peanut butter that he probably shitted out, when approached by a black man.
 

Arson

Long live the KING!!!!
May 7, 2002
15,795
10,860
113
#10
COOPDVILL said:
The following is a statement from Randee Eddins, poet, community activist and leader concerning the case of her son, Rajni. The attached MP3 in the email is a segment of the TWOMP News, audio DJ B-Girl Chillz, Merc, and I captured outside of Seattle Courthouse on the initial day of Rajnii's hearing. Please air this segment on your radio shows, burn it on your mix tapes, and post it on your websites! Please forward widely and voice your support in this continuing battle for justice and lasting change in the criminal justice system~
Julie C (emcee/ activist)

http://odeo.com/audio/11173863/view


powered by BREAKDOWN FM & ODEO


He came armed with a question. Yes, admittedly, he did do that. My
much loved only son, Rajnii Alexander Gibson-Eddins, a well-known
young Arts Educator, Performance Artist and Youth Advocate, approached
a police officer's car armed with a question.

For that, he was frisked, handcuffed, detained, arrested and charged
with obstruction of a public official. My son, who had no criminal
history; had no disrespectful bravado for the police officer who
arrested him, had nothing more in mind than the safety and security of
a young black adolescent who he had been told by one of his students
was being carted off to jail for spitting out gum.

The over the top response of the officer, R. Nelson came about,
reportedly, because he was afraid for his safety and his fellow
officers' safety. Afraid of Rajnii? Afraid of this most gentle
articulate young black man; artist educator, poet, actor, youth
advocate, community activist, and former elder foster brother to more
than 50 youth?

Afraid of his question?

"Let's examine this closely, shall we? Was it the…" excuse me
officer, I'd like to know what this child is being charged with so I
can notify her parents?"

Was it because when they told my son, my Rajnii, to move back from the
vehicle and he promptly complied, not once, not twice but 3 times but
continued to persist with the question, was that what made the officer
feel unsafe?

Was it that some police officers in certain neighborhoods have
forgotten they are paid to serve us and not paid to detain us,
humiliate us, harass us or arrest us? Ironically, my son is the
grandson and nephew of law enforcement officers; my late father was a
retired police officer and my brother is an officer with the sheriff's
department.

My son has served youth in a positive manner from Redmond to Tacoma,
co-founded a spoken word community organization to allow a culturally
diverse group of young people to flex and hone their voices in a
variety of venues.

Rajnii has performed spoken word from the Seattle City Council
chambers to Benaroya Hall, to Seattle Center, to colleges and
universities, libraries, bookstores, cafes, nightclubs, festivals,
theatres, community and cultural arts centers. He was chosen to be
part of Seattle's National Slam team for both 2004 and 2005 and
nominated for Seattle Poet Populist.

Rajnii has worked at many local Seattle area schools as both a
teaching assistant and teaching artist and volunteered thousands of
community service hours to improve the lives of our community's
youth.

Rajnii is only 26 but has already designed and implemented a
curriculum using positive hip-hop and taught a host of teachers how to
engage their disaffected students using it as a tool; has taken
students into the studio out of his own pocket and cheered them on at
their every effort to realize their artistic dreams.

Rajnii is considered a fierce mc in the hip-hop community, he writes
and performs his songs, his style, his way and definitely knows how to
rock the mic and move a crowd. He has been on countless albums to
support his peers with both lyrics and singing. He is known
affectionately by family and friends and the wider youth advocacy
community as the Peace Bringer'.

Further, at 24, Rajnii was invited by two high schools in New York to
be their keynote speaker performing with the great eloquence, passion
and clarity he is known for and receiving standing ovations at both
events.

You see, I am the fiercely proud mother of a great son; the kind of
son, friends used to borrow as an example to their own. A son known
for his respectful demeanor, known for kindness, generosity and
humility, known for brilliant artistic talent and his uncanny ability
to engage and redirect youth toward positive pursuits.

And yet, we are here, standing at this impasse; outraged, stunned,
dismayed, apprehensive, indignant, and determined. Why should my son
have any stain on his impeccable record? Why did this officer decide
in this case that discretion was not the better part of valor?

And most importantly, when have our police gotten so frightened for
their safety that they arrest educators who demonstrate concern for a
student rather than applaud them?

After all, he was only armed with a question.

I guess the lesson the police would have our community learn here is
we must warn other educators do not approach the police armed with a
question, mothers and fathers do not, youth do not, students do not,
concerned community members do not, advocates do not, activists do
not, spoken word artists do not, performance artists do not, elders do
not, ministers do not, business owners do not approach the police
whose salary you pay armed with a question...especially if you are
black.

If you who are reading this in 2007 America are as outraged and
concerned as I am, email our Seattle mayor, our Seattle city
attorney's office, our Seattle chief of police, newspaper editors,
your community organizations, school boards, share it from your
pulpits, discuss this with your friends.

If you are able to offer any support financially please contact me at
[email protected], because as a mother, a former foster mother, a
community activist and advocate for the positive development of all
youth, I recognize the issue is much greater than just my son and will
contribute where ever I can to help see the necessary changes made to
protect other youth from this debilitating experience.

However, we need to make all police departments answer to how being
armed with a simple question in America can throw any fine young man
in jail. We need to refuse to have the Rajnii's of the world
criminalized, humiliated and their positive efforts diminished due to
overzealous punitive response by those sworn to protect and serve.

Let's choose to have this conversation and seek positive resolution
about this ugly issue of racial profiling and find a new way to keep
the Officer Nelsons from overreacting.

Perhaps retraining, perhaps censure, perhaps removal from service in
the heavily populated minority community that he/they, apparently,
fear so much?

We have to remember, need to remember, it was Rajnii today and it
could very well be, you or your loved one, tomorrow.

Any and all efforts of support us in these efforts are very much appreciated.

Peace and Blessings.
Randee Eddins
Damn, probley D-sanes dad.
 
Apr 25, 2002
810
0
0
45
#11
COOPDVILL said:
The following is a statement from Randee Eddins, poet, community activist and leader concerning the case of her son, Rajni. The attached MP3 in the email is a segment of the TWOMP News, audio DJ B-Girl Chillz, Merc, and I captured outside of Seattle Courthouse on the initial day of Rajnii's hearing. Please air this segment on your radio shows, burn it on your mix tapes, and post it on your websites! Please forward widely and voice your support in this continuing battle for justice and lasting change in the criminal justice system~
Julie C (emcee/ activist)

http://odeo.com/audio/11173863/view


powered by BREAKDOWN FM & ODEO


He came armed with a question. Yes, admittedly, he did do that. My
much loved only son, Rajnii Alexander Gibson-Eddins, a well-known
young Arts Educator, Performance Artist and Youth Advocate, approached
a police officer's car armed with a question.

For that, he was frisked, handcuffed, detained, arrested and charged
with obstruction of a public official. My son, who had no criminal
history; had no disrespectful bravado for the police officer who
arrested him, had nothing more in mind than the safety and security of
a young black adolescent who he had been told by one of his students
was being carted off to jail for spitting out gum.

The over the top response of the officer, R. Nelson came about,
reportedly, because he was afraid for his safety and his fellow
officers' safety. Afraid of Rajnii? Afraid of this most gentle
articulate young black man; artist educator, poet, actor, youth
advocate, community activist, and former elder foster brother to more
than 50 youth?

Afraid of his question?

"Let's examine this closely, shall we? Was it the…" excuse me
officer, I'd like to know what this child is being charged with so I
can notify her parents?"

Was it because when they told my son, my Rajnii, to move back from the
vehicle and he promptly complied, not once, not twice but 3 times but
continued to persist with the question, was that what made the officer
feel unsafe?

Was it that some police officers in certain neighborhoods have
forgotten they are paid to serve us and not paid to detain us,
humiliate us, harass us or arrest us? Ironically, my son is the
grandson and nephew of law enforcement officers; my late father was a
retired police officer and my brother is an officer with the sheriff's
department.

My son has served youth in a positive manner from Redmond to Tacoma,
co-founded a spoken word community organization to allow a culturally
diverse group of young people to flex and hone their voices in a
variety of venues.

Rajnii has performed spoken word from the Seattle City Council
chambers to Benaroya Hall, to Seattle Center, to colleges and
universities, libraries, bookstores, cafes, nightclubs, festivals,
theatres, community and cultural arts centers. He was chosen to be
part of Seattle's National Slam team for both 2004 and 2005 and
nominated for Seattle Poet Populist.

Rajnii has worked at many local Seattle area schools as both a
teaching assistant and teaching artist and volunteered thousands of
community service hours to improve the lives of our community's
youth.

Rajnii is only 26 but has already designed and implemented a
curriculum using positive hip-hop and taught a host of teachers how to
engage their disaffected students using it as a tool; has taken
students into the studio out of his own pocket and cheered them on at
their every effort to realize their artistic dreams.

Rajnii is considered a fierce mc in the hip-hop community, he writes
and performs his songs, his style, his way and definitely knows how to
rock the mic and move a crowd. He has been on countless albums to
support his peers with both lyrics and singing. He is known
affectionately by family and friends and the wider youth advocacy
community as the Peace Bringer'.

Further, at 24, Rajnii was invited by two high schools in New York to
be their keynote speaker performing with the great eloquence, passion
and clarity he is known for and receiving standing ovations at both
events.

You see, I am the fiercely proud mother of a great son; the kind of
son, friends used to borrow as an example to their own. A son known
for his respectful demeanor, known for kindness, generosity and
humility, known for brilliant artistic talent and his uncanny ability
to engage and redirect youth toward positive pursuits.

And yet, we are here, standing at this impasse; outraged, stunned,
dismayed, apprehensive, indignant, and determined. Why should my son
have any stain on his impeccable record? Why did this officer decide
in this case that discretion was not the better part of valor?

And most importantly, when have our police gotten so frightened for
their safety that they arrest educators who demonstrate concern for a
student rather than applaud them?

After all, he was only armed with a question.

I guess the lesson the police would have our community learn here is
we must warn other educators do not approach the police armed with a
question, mothers and fathers do not, youth do not, students do not,
concerned community members do not, advocates do not, activists do
not, spoken word artists do not, performance artists do not, elders do
not, ministers do not, business owners do not approach the police
whose salary you pay armed with a question...especially if you are
black.

If you who are reading this in 2007 America are as outraged and
concerned as I am, email our Seattle mayor, our Seattle city
attorney's office, our Seattle chief of police, newspaper editors,
your community organizations, school boards, share it from your
pulpits, discuss this with your friends.

If you are able to offer any support financially please contact me at
[email protected], because as a mother, a former foster mother, a
community activist and advocate for the positive development of all
youth, I recognize the issue is much greater than just my son and will
contribute where ever I can to help see the necessary changes made to
protect other youth from this debilitating experience.

However, we need to make all police departments answer to how being
armed with a simple question in America can throw any fine young man
in jail. We need to refuse to have the Rajnii's of the world
criminalized, humiliated and their positive efforts diminished due to
overzealous punitive response by those sworn to protect and serve.

Let's choose to have this conversation and seek positive resolution
about this ugly issue of racial profiling and find a new way to keep
the Officer Nelsons from overreacting.

Perhaps retraining, perhaps censure, perhaps removal from service in
the heavily populated minority community that he/they, apparently,
fear so much?

We have to remember, need to remember, it was Rajnii today and it
could very well be, you or your loved one, tomorrow.

Any and all efforts of support us in these efforts are very much appreciated.

Peace and Blessings.
Randee Eddins
Arresting educators, boo the fuck HOO!