Forwarded from The Black Lives Revolution (BLM)
Prisoners are mostly being taken to 1st district it sounds like #forward
Forwarded from The Black Lives Revolution (BLM)
4 Wagons are currently out city wide
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Tonights recap. Some scary things happened. The police shot Walter Wallace 10 times and killed him. They fought protesters with fists. They requested permission to use chemical weapons. They made several arrests. They damaged residential property with rubber bullets apparently. But Police lost control over 52nd street tonight. They were forced to retreat at one point. Several officers are injured. The police abandoned Northeast Philly to have officers available for escalation in West Philly. Several dumpsters and vehicles burned. Tonight we had one of the largest redistributions of wealth in our nations history and it hasn't ended. #forward
When we wake up the nation will be saying Walter Wallace. The lost life of a father, twin, and son. We will mourn tomorrow the lost life of our neighbor. #forward
Forwarded from Philly RUST
Walter Wallace Jr., 27, a twin, father, and son, was shot 10 times by police, said his father, Walter Wallace Sr.
#forward
https://twitter.com/EllieRushing/status/1320864223254241288?s=19
#forward
https://twitter.com/EllieRushing/status/1320864223254241288?s=19
Twitter
Ellie Rushing
Walter Wallace Jr., 27, a twin, father, and son, was shot 10 times by police, said his father, Walter Wallace Sr. A video shows Wallace was at least 10 ft away from the officers when began shooting. His mother begged them not to shoot. https://t.co/vDegRuaW8V
Tonight was bigger than George Floyd in Philly. Looting didn't happen like this in every neighborhood in 1 day when we mourned George Floyd. But our mourning of Walter Wallace lead to decentralized looting city wide in larger and more sporadic effect, and most people in Philly likely haven't even heard the news yet. #forward
JAIL SUPPORT: Arrestees brought to ROUNDHOUSE (8th and Race) and 1st District (24th and Wolf). So many arrestees the phones have been blocked up for hours, and Roundhouse said they wouldn't give names or status until after 8am. If you still have it in you, rides and jail support should be on standby at those locations. The cops weren't shy about using their batons last night, check for injuries.
Militiawatch: Reminder that Proud Boys are mass calling the jail support and bail fund numbers. They are also screenshotting and distributing everything said by our channel and other groups. We know everything the proud boys are doing. They probably make up a fraction of our audiance at the moment. They arent welcome here but there isnt much I can do about that since this is a public channel. The biggest thing we will do is make sure we arent creating a platform for vigilantists to do whatever they want to civilians by not reporting certain things until we know that police have responded and not distributing flyers publicly. #forward
For those asking about jail support here is a Channel someone made https://news.1rj.ru/str/phillyjs
These are the Principles of Solidarity according to itsgoingdown
1. We will not talk to the police about our comrades – this includes all levels of local, state and federal law enforcement, jail staff, Immigration & Custom Enforcement, Customs and Border Protection, Internal Affairs, and the Citizen Police Review Board.
2. We will not post potentially incriminating information, or post incriminating video footage about our comrades on the internet, on social media, via live stream, or in any published articles (This includes any forms of information posted on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Signal, blogs, emails, text messages, etc.)
3. If we are contacted or questioned by federal law enforcement we will immediately report this to the NLG federal hotline at 415-285-1041 to get legal support. If we are contacted by the DA or local law enforcement we will report this to the NLG public hotline at (415) 909-4NLG. We will also inform our community and be transparent about what questions were asked and how we answered so that all those involved can take the necessary precautions and make appropriate safety plans.
4. We will never publicize peoples arrests or other private legal information without their direct consent. For example, if someone we know has been arrested, we won’t spread that information on social media because doing so could expose them to doxxing and other consequences. We will only create crowdsourced bail funds, or reach out to local bail organizations with the consent of the arrestee.
5. We will build a culture of solidarity by being vocal when our community does not live up to the above principles. For example, we will call out movement live-streamers and people who post incriminating footage. We will explain to people using their cameras at protests why their actions are dangerous. We will be careful not to spread unsubstantiated rumors about other activists, but we will call out snitches when we have solid evidence of cooperation with the state.
6. We also enact this principle of solidarity through the support and care we provide for one another in the face of repression. Depending on circumstances, this can look like: showing up in person or online for court support, building a public campaign with the consent of the arrestee, picking comrades up from jail, making jail visits, writing letters to incarcerated people, contributing to commissary and/or bail and helping people take care of their pets or family members.
1. We will not talk to the police about our comrades – this includes all levels of local, state and federal law enforcement, jail staff, Immigration & Custom Enforcement, Customs and Border Protection, Internal Affairs, and the Citizen Police Review Board.
2. We will not post potentially incriminating information, or post incriminating video footage about our comrades on the internet, on social media, via live stream, or in any published articles (This includes any forms of information posted on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Signal, blogs, emails, text messages, etc.)
3. If we are contacted or questioned by federal law enforcement we will immediately report this to the NLG federal hotline at 415-285-1041 to get legal support. If we are contacted by the DA or local law enforcement we will report this to the NLG public hotline at (415) 909-4NLG. We will also inform our community and be transparent about what questions were asked and how we answered so that all those involved can take the necessary precautions and make appropriate safety plans.
4. We will never publicize peoples arrests or other private legal information without their direct consent. For example, if someone we know has been arrested, we won’t spread that information on social media because doing so could expose them to doxxing and other consequences. We will only create crowdsourced bail funds, or reach out to local bail organizations with the consent of the arrestee.
5. We will build a culture of solidarity by being vocal when our community does not live up to the above principles. For example, we will call out movement live-streamers and people who post incriminating footage. We will explain to people using their cameras at protests why their actions are dangerous. We will be careful not to spread unsubstantiated rumors about other activists, but we will call out snitches when we have solid evidence of cooperation with the state.
6. We also enact this principle of solidarity through the support and care we provide for one another in the face of repression. Depending on circumstances, this can look like: showing up in person or online for court support, building a public campaign with the consent of the arrestee, picking comrades up from jail, making jail visits, writing letters to incarcerated people, contributing to commissary and/or bail and helping people take care of their pets or family members.