Archive for August, 2009

'Lion of the Senate' Remembered as One of America's Most Effective Legislators

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

He was known as the "Lion of the Senate" and the patriarch of America's most notable family of Democratic politics. Senator Edward Kennedy passed away in his Massachusetts home late Tuesday night after an ongoing battle with brain cancer. Kennedy was 77-years-old.

"We've lost the irreplaceable center of our family and joyous light in our lives, but the inspiration of his faith, optimism and perseverance will live on in our hearts forever," a family statement said. "We thank everyone who gave him care and support over this last year, and everyone who stood with him for so many years in his tireless march for progress toward justice."

According to a senior administration official, President Obama learned of Kennedy's passing around 2a.m. Wednesday and later called his widow to extend his condolences.

"An important chapter in our history has come to an end. Our country has lost a great leader, who picked up the torch of his fallen brothers and became the greatest United States Senator of our time," Obama said in a statement.

Edward, who was nicknamed "Ted," was the younger brother of John F. Kennedy, the 1968 presidential hopeful who was assassinated during his campaign. Ted went on to seek the White House in 1980, however, his campaign was riddled with controversy behind a 1969 auto accident that left a young woman dead. He lost his bid to former president Jimmy Carter.

Although he lost his presidential race, Kennedy maintained a position as one of the most effective legislators in the U.S. The " was extremely instrumental in the passage of the Civil RIghts of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act and the 1993 Family and Medical Leave Act, according to CNN.

"He was probably best known for the ability to work with Republicans," said Adam Clymer, Kennedy's biographer. "The Republican Party raised hundreds of millions of dollars with direct appeal to protect the country from Ted Kennedy, but there was never a piece of legislation that he ever got passed without a major Republican ally."

In May 2008, Kennedy suffered a seizure in his Cape Cod home, and shortly after, doctors found a tumor in his brain - a malignant giloma in his left parietal lobe. The following month, doctors at Duke University Medical Center removed as much of the tumor as possible and considered the procedure a success. In the month to follow, Kennedy underwent chemotherapy and radiation treatments.

Kennedy is survived by his second wife, Victoria Ann Reggie Kennedy, his first wife, Joan Bennett and five children--Patrick, Kara, Edward Jr., Curran and Caroline.

Fabolous To Reconnect With Drama & Clue For "There Is No Competition Pt. 2"

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Still fresh off the release of the album, Loso's Way, Brooklyn bred rapper Fabolous is already back in the studio to bring a sequel to his DJ Drama Mixtape, There Is No Competition, which was released back in February. As with the album having a movie accompany it, the mixtape will do double time as it will be a double disc mixtape.

He has also stretched his arms out to his upbringing with Desert Storm as he will also be bringing (more...)

Crooked I Releasing "Pig Face Weapon Waist"

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Slaughterhouse is still in full effect even though their album has released. On the solo tip, Crooked I is the next to step up as he is preparing his EP titled Pig Face Weapon Waist which is slated to drop September 2 through digital download.

Speaking with Joell Ortiz, HipHopWired was able to gain insight on the movements and the strategic planning behind every solo and group release that they have in store.

“Nothing will be sporadic when dealing with anything Slaughterhouse. It will all be in (more...)

Judge Rules In Favor Of Officers, Boosie Accused Of Bribery

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Lil Boosie is the latest rapper added to a police lineup. A Louisiana judge ruled Monday that Sheriff Deputies used proper protocol when seizing a bag of marijuana, a gun and a cigar filled with marijuana from the rapper. Real name, Torrence Hatch, Boosie is charged with his third offense of marijuana possession and possession of a firearm with a controlled dangerous substance. The first charge is punishable by up to 20 years in prison; the second carries a mandatory minimum sentence of five years.

On top of the possession charges, an officer testified Monday in a pre-trial that the MC tried to (more...)

Senator Edward “Ted” Kennedy Succumbs To Brain Tumor

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Kennedy family patriarch and avid Barack Obama supporter, Edward “Ted” Kennedy lost his battle to brain cancer late Tuesday night. The 77-year old was diagnosed with a malignant tumor in his brain last year but vowed to be present in January to witness Obama's plans for healthcare reform. His family released a statement saying, “We've lost the irreplaceable center of our family and joyous light in our lives, but the inspiration of his faith, optimism, and perseverance will live on in our hearts forever."

“Ted” Kennedy was left to uphold the Kennedy name in politics after his brothers President John F. Kennedy and Senator Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated. His eldest brother Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. was killed during World War II. Kennedy served in the senate for 46 years, and called health care reform “the cause of his life.” President Obama awarded him the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in early August which his daughter, Kara Kennedy, accepted on his behalf. The senator's passing comes just weeks after the death of his sister, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, who died August 11 at the age of 88.

Jena 6 Teen Turns Life Around

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Jesse Ray Beard was a troubled youth who frequently found himself in mounds of trouble. It wasn't until he faced attempted murder of a white classmate in the Deep South to change his life.

Beard, now 18-years-old, is currently interning at a New York law firm before his final year at Canterbury HIgh School, a Connecticut prep school where he is said to be highly revered, reports CNN.

"I didn't change the way I act. I didn't do nothing different. It was just that I was at Canterbury instead of Jena," he said. "It was like Jena was out to get me -- and not just me, but other people, too."
Although the Jena 6 controversy that took place in a small Lousiana town, it was just what needed to happen in order for Beard to have a chance to turn a new leaf.

In January 2008, Alan Howard met Beard, the youngest of the Jena 6 teens, and began defending him a lawsuit filed by a teen who was severely beaten.

The incident took its course in Jena High School of Louisiana inciting a tone of racial divide among the students for months. It escalated when a school arson and nooses hung from a tree on campus.

In September of 2007, thousands of protestors took to the streets backing the accused teens under the notion they ere treated harshly because they were black.

Howard reacalled his first impression of the Beard, he said he had "tremendous character, tremendous resilience and tremendous potential." In fact he was so impressed with the young teen, he invited him to live with his family in New England.

Beard said his toughest adjustment moving form a small town in Louisiana, to a big city just about an hour north of New York City.

"Where I'm from in Jena, I think the only time it snowed is when I was 6, and it was like 1 inch."

Beard is prone to the same gaffes as any teenager, Jessie said, giggling as she recalled a time he replaced a box of snacks in the cabinet after finishing the last one. Her mother, Patti, left the box on his sneakers with a note: "Would you like more of these?"

"He's just another member of the family," Howard's son Jessie said. "Now, when people ask me how many brothers I have, I say three, not two."

Beard said despite his involvement in the Jena 6 case, he believes God put him through the tribulations to get to a healthier environment.

"I'm not glad it happened, but I'm glad I came to a good family," he said.
Beard's mother, Stella, is a "remarkable woman," Howard said, but Beard didn't have much supervision at home. Howard thought to himself in 2008, "It's not just enough to keep the kid out of jail one time because the system is stacked against him."

Five of the Jena Six had already made tracks -- to Texas, to Georgia, to other parts of Louisiana -- but Beard had nowhere to go. That he was on house arrest for another juvenile offense confounded matters.

"I promise you I will get you out of Jena, whatever it takes," Howard told Beard.

"You promise me that you'll hang in there, keep doing what you're doing, going to school and keep out of trouble."

Beard's mother made "the ultimate sacrifice," allowing Howard to pursue guardianship and ferry her son 1,500 miles to New England. She put aside Jena Six donations to help Howard pay Canterbury's $40,000-a-year tuition, he said. She declined to be interviewed.

Beard, however, still defends his hometown.

"No, sir. There's not more racists in Jena," he said. "There's racism everywhere. I just can't blame it on Jena because I did get along with the white folks and they did like me."

Juelz Santana Arrested for “Threatening To Kill His Wife”

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Member of the Diplomats and Leader of the Skull Gang, rapper Juelz Santana was arrested today for domestic abuse.  According to reports, Santana allegedly threatened to kill his wife.

Reports show that a 911 call was placed by his wife early this morning during an altercation between the two in their home in Teaneck, New Jersey.  Whatever was said in the phone call clearly did the trick as the rapper was arrested on domestic battery charges, although she was not in need of any (more...)

Lil Wayne feat. Eminem, Kanye West and Drake Coming Soon?

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

In anticipation for the documentary film More Than A Game, the stakes may have risen to a boiling point as a dream collaboration may be in the works for the soundtrack.

There have been rumors circulating that a song featuring Wayne, Drake, Kanye West and Eminem is in the process and will be featured for the film.  Reports have even taken it as far as stating that the track will be available Friday on iTunes.

For Louisiana bred Lil Wayne, the self proclaimed rapper eater has stated that one of his musical dreams came in the form of actually working alongside the Detroit rapper and even issued a challenge to bring Eminem out of hiding to do a track with him.

The actual film, being disturbed by Lionsgate, surrounds the upbringing of basketball player Lebron James, who was (more...)

Dr. Boyce Watkins and Rev. Al Sharpton Talk Health Care, Henry Louis Gates & Michael Vick

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

HipHopWired contributor and headstrong Black intellect, Dr. Boyce Watkins had a meeting of the minds August 19th with the honorable Reverend Al Sharpton over several topics. The Black figureheads engaged listeners on Sharpton's radio show on 1380 WAOK particularly touching on President Obama's health care reform plan, the president's reaction to the Henry Louis Gates Jr. Case, and the reinstatement of NFL quarterback, Michael Vick. The Reverend posed a question to the intellect asking his opinion on the president's consideration to remove “public option” out of the reform bill. He poses the question saying:

“If public option is out, does that kill reform as a real reform?”

To which Dr. Watkins responds:

I don't think it kills the ability of it to be real reform, I think it's a compromise that I didn't necessarily want to see happen. If you look at what's happened with the president and his ability to do the impossible. I don't know what's more impossible. Him being elected the first Black president or trying to reform a system that is incredibly flawed and filled with so many individual interests. You can't imagine somebody being able to do that, a lot of people's careers have been ruined for trying to take on this system. So I applaud the president for doing that. I think that at this point we have to stick to the guns, keep our eye on the prize and that is that there are millions and millions of Americans who can't get insurance. People who are limited by preexisting conditions that are uninsurable, millions of Americans go bankrupt because of medical bills. So my big question with health insurance has always been, what are the hospitals going to contribute to this? What are the pharmaceutical companies going to contribute this? That's the most profitable industry in America or at one of the top three and it's because they charge a lot of money for drugs that shouldn't cost as much as they actually do cost."

Dr. Watkins continues on to say that people are using the escalating health care reform debates as an excuse to attack the President, actions he calls, “Un-American”.

“l think there are people that are really trying to use healthcare reform as a way to really cripple the president. They don't really hate healthcare reform or the ideas as much as they hate the man that's proposing these ideas. That's just un-American.”

Then two figureheads move on, this time to July's controversial Henry Louis Gates, Jr. case. The incident brought racial profiling to the forefront after the Harvard professor claimed to be arrested for being a Black man and reached a peak when President Obama took to his defense, a move Dr. Watkins disagrees with.

“I feel that he lost a lot of very valuable political capital during the Henry Louis Gates situation. I would have preferred that during that conference he focus on healthcare instead of standing up for his homeboy at Harvard University. Let's be real, people think that Obama was speaking on race when he brought up the Gates case during the healthcare reform press conference but in my opinion it was more about one Harvard person standing up for another. Believe me if Pookie Jones got shot in the back during the healthcare conference, President Obama would've only been willing to say, that Pookie needs affordable doctors and that's why we need healthcare reform. Obama wouldn't have done what he did and you look at the polls, Obama lost a lot of support after that, and I think that was an unnecessary distraction.”

The Reverend agreed with his statement, in particular because of his participation in the Civil Rights movement. To add poignancy to his point, the reverend mentions a debate he had with conservative political commentator, Ann Coulter who tried to relate the 2006 Duke Lacrosse team's rape indictment to Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s incident. According to Coulter, the lacrosse team's case was racial profiling as well.

“A lot of us that fought the racial profiling cases, that made it part of the American lexicon in the 90s, clearly understand the definition because we helped define it. I was debating Ann Coulter on CNN and she said, that Duke University was racial profiling. How was Duke Lacrosse racial profiling? First of all it was whites that were arrested and it was based on a complaint. No cop was riding by and picked somebody out. So it almost has become whatever you want to make it.”


After a few snickers and dismissing her brash claim, the two brought up the controversial reinstatement of Michael Vick to the NFL. Dr. Watkins is known for his support of Vick and made that clear by relating his treatment to that of a lynching.

“People think that I defended Michael Vick because I thought he was innocent. No I think Michael Vick is an absolute knuckle head but I think that the punishment must fit the crime. If I tell you I stabbed my daughter in the chest because she didn't do her homework, the question is not whether or not homework is a good or bad thing. The question is does the punishment fit the crime. We saw this man get absolutely lynched by the public in terms of taking everything away from him. It was really a reminder of what they did to Black men 100 years ago for committing a crime or doing anything that white people found to be offensive. They took away this man's entire life over something that should have had a far night ending to the debt he had to pay to society. “

Listen to Reverend Al Sharpton's Interview of Dr. Boyce Watkins here:

Pregnant Woman and Grandfather Get Tased by Cops in Backyard

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

What was supposed to be a backyard celebration for the baptism of a child quickly turned to chaos for one Virginia family. Prince WIlliam County police were called to the house of 55-year-old Edgar Rodriguez who was hosting a party in his backyard for his granddaughter.

The following events are at the heart of the matter as the stories from the police and family remain foggy.

Family members, including children, who witnessed the incident say police used excessive force for no reason in particular. They made claims that officers tasered Rodriquez three times in his own back yard.

In sharp contrast, however, police say Rodriguez refused to turn his music down and acted "disorderly," which was grounds for the tasering.

An expecting 25-year-old mother of twin boys, Leticia Elias, who was celebrating her sons baptism rushed to the aid of Rodriguez and was also tased, and later charged with assaulting a police officer. Her family made claims that Elias was assaulted by police when she tried to help her father who had fallen to the ground.

After her arrest, Elias was detained by immigration and customs officials.