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Messages - Br.IanVonTurpie

#6476
Well she is white, but there is something the matter with her you know. Like the same issues Gay people have, or the same kind of odd problem a sexual deviant may have having a fettish with senior citizens etc.

There is something not quite right with people like that. Why the hell would you want to be a filthy nigger , when you are of 1/2 Czech, 1/2 German linage?That is a delicious mix.

Because of her upbringing around black kids? Because the media makes it cool to be a nigger by having them on all the latest mainstream TV?

You ever seen http://www.wiggaz.com ?that is the bin where this idiot garbage belongs!
#6477

http://www.ntnews.com.au/news/northe...-1227403534641

A 30-YEAR-OLD man has been charged for aggravated assault after he allegedly struck a 19-year-old woman in the face.

Superintendent Daniel Bacon said the man allegedly struck the 19-year-old employee when he was asked to leave a business on Paterson Street in Tennant Creek at about 8pm on Saturday June 13.

"Police allege the offender then stuck the 19-year-old employee to the face before fleeing the scene," Supt Bacon said.

The man was arrested on Wednesday and charged with unlawfully cause serious harm and aggravated assault.

He was remanded in custody and will appear in Alice Springs Magistrates Court on Thursday.


http://www.ntnews.com.au/news/northe...-1227403420554



(see original for pics of this Abbo)
A MAN facing multiple charges in the Northern Territory including break-and-enter, stealing and arson has lost a bid to have his name suppressed.

Ronald Kelly was arrested on Monday, three weeks after he allegedly broke into a Darwin home and stole six guns.

He is facing 29 charges including six counts of stealing, three counts of property damage, five counts of trespassing, four counts of unlawful entry, six driving offences including dangerous driving and driving while unlicensed, aggravated assault, and arson.



His lawyer argued there had been a high and unusual degree of media interest in his case, that reporting of the matter had been inaccurate and irrelevant, and that her client had been vilified on social media, with commentators calling him "scum" and saying "he should be shot".


Laura McDonough said Kelly was entitled to the presumption of innocence and that due to the attention a future jury could find it difficult to remain impartial.

She also said he had been unfairly linked to other high-profile crimes occurring over the same period in Darwin.

But prosecutor Ian Rowbottam told the Darwin Magistrates Court said that conducting the matter in public "is an essential part of Australian justice".

He said Ms McDonough was anticipating that contemporary reporting might prejudice possible future charges.



He said Kelly's own sisters created the publicity when they made pleas to the media for him to turn himself in to police after he escaped a five-hour siege and evaded capture for three weeks. He also said there was no evidence prejudicial information might be published in future, and that a judge could not control "the clamour of social media".


"He's not that famous," he said of Kelly.

Magistrate Elizabeth Morris agreed.

When balancing the principles of open justice against Kelly's right to a fair trial, she found that "the matter's risk is not such that it could not be cured if they did become an issue by a judge at a later date ... there's no actual prejudice ... so I decline to make an order." Kelly will next appear in court in August.
#6479


http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/17/us/rachel-dolezal-nbc-today-show.html?_r=0

SPOKANE, Wash. — When she moved into her uncle's basement in the largely white town of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, in 2004, Rachel A. Dolezal was still blond and pale-skinned and identified herself as a white woman — one who had left a black husband and had a biracial child.

But within a few years, her already deep commitment to black causes and culture intensified. Co-workers and relatives began hearing from her or others that her background was mixed-race — and even that she had called herself black.

So when Ms. Dolezal (pronounced DOLE-uh-zhal) went on national television on Tuesday for the first time since she became the subject of a raging debate about racial identity and fabrication, it was no surprise that while she cannot claim a hint of black ancestry, she refused to concede that she had misled anyone. "I identify as black," she said with a smile.

She would not backpedal, and "I guarantee you she never will," said her uncle, who took her in more than a decade ago as her marriage crumbled. "That's part of her persona, never backing down — always forward, totally sure of herself."

On Tuesday, Matt Lauer of NBC's "Today" show asked her, "When did you start deceiving people?" But Ms. Dolezal, who stepped down on Monday as president of the Spokane N.A.A.C.P. chapter, pushed back.

"I do take exception to that because it's a little more complex than me identifying as black, or answering a question of, 'Are you black or white?' " she said. Over the course of the day, she also described herself as "transracial" and said: "Well, I definitely am not white. Nothing about being white describes who I am."

Her story has set off a national debate about the very meaning of racial identity, with some people applauding her message and goals and others deploring her methods and actions. It was one thing for Ms. Dolezal to identify with, appreciate and even partake in black culture, some critics said, but it was another thing for her to try to become black, going so far as to change her physical appearance.

"It taps into all of these issues around blackface and wearing blackness and that whole cultural legacy, which makes it that much more vile," said Baz Dreisinger, an English professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York and author of the book "Near Black: White-to-Black Passing in American Culture."

The term transracial has long been associated with adoptions of a child by a family of a different race. Angela Tucker, a black woman born in Tennessee and adopted by a white family in Bellingham, Wash., said it was "absolutely maddening" to associate the term with Ms. Dolezal's story.

"It means a lot to those of us who call ourselves transracial adoptees," said Ms. Tucker, 29, a social worker who lives in Seattle. "We have grown up in a culture different than what we physically represent. We've had to seek out our roots. What Rachel has done is misappropriate that."

Some people who have known Ms. Dolezal only as a black woman said they felt hurt and misled.

"The issue for me has been the deception, the lie, portraying herself as someone she isn't," said Dorothy Webster, a longtime member of the Spokane N.A.A.C.P. and former deputy manager for the city of Spokane. "I cannot rationalize it."

Although her advocacy work has admirers, serious questions have been raised about Ms. Dolezal's credibility — and not just about her race. Her public statements about her family and upbringing have been challenged by relatives, including her parents, creating the odd spectacle of dueling interviews, with her making claims on one network, and them denying them on another. Over the years she has reported numerous complaints with the police of racially motivated harassment and intimidation, though the police have said that none have so far proved credible enough for charges to be brought.

She is estranged from her parents, Ruthanne and Lawrence Dolezal, and in Spokane, she has represented a friend, an older African-American man, as her father. When Rachel Dolezal was a teenager, her parents adopted four black children, one of whom now lives with Ms. Dolezal and her son, whom she had with her former husband, Kevin D. Moore, who is black.

She is also estranged from her biological brother, Joshua, who is facing charges in Colorado that when he was 19 years old, he sexually molested one of his adopted brothers, who was 6 or 7 at the time, in their parents' home, which was then in Clear Creek County, Colo. Ruthanne Dolezal told People magazine that the molestation charges are not true and were initiated by Rachel.

Ms. Dolezal's path to this curious point has been unorthodox, beginning with her childhood in a remote corner of northwestern Montana, in and around the little town of Troy. Earlier this year, she told a news organization at Eastern Washington University, where she taught, that she had been born in a tepee, that her mother and stepfather had beaten her and her siblings, that "they would punish us by skin complexion," and that they lived for a time in South Africa.

Family members say none of this is true. All agree that she has no stepfather, that this was one of several attempts she has made to deny the existence of her real father, Lawrence. Her parents moved to South Africa after Rachel was grown and out of the house.

As for the abuse allegations, "that's just false," her father said in an interview on Friday. "That's the most hurtful."

There was a tepee, her uncle, Daniel said, but that was years before Rachel was born, in the early 1970s, when her parents were first married. "Larry and Ruthanne were kind of the quintessential Jesus people, hippies, back to nature, and they set up a tepee and lived in it for a year," Daniel Dolezal said. "Drove my parents crazy, but nobody was born in the tepee."

Ms. Dolezal said Tuesday on "Today" that at age 5, "I was drawing self-portraits with the brown crayon instead of the peach crayon, and the black curly hair, you know." Her parents, appearing later on Fox News, denied that.

Daniel Dolezal said Tuesday that her recollection of her 5-year-old self did not ring true. "She probably wouldn't have known any black people" then, he said. (Efforts to reach Rachel Dolezal, Ruthanne and Lawrence Dolezal, and Joshua Dolezal on Tuesday were not successful.)

There is no hint of childhood racial tension in a memoir that her brother Joshua, an English professor at Central College in Iowa, wrote. The book, "Down From the Mountaintop: From Belief to Belonging," describes a childhood blending religious fervor with a frontier lifestyle.

"My father reads from the book of Jeremiah," he wrote.  "The cover of his Bible is made of tanned elk hide that my mother sewed into the binding after cutting away the commercial hardback."

Rachel was home-schooled for at least part of the time she was in high school, her uncle said. And when she was between the ages of 15 and 17, her parents adopted four black infants.

"She immediately was drawn to them," her father said. "Ever since then she's had a tremendous affinity with African-Americans."

Ms. Dolezal said Tuesday that at the time, she thought of herself as white, but that began to change with the arrival of her new siblings, as she wondered, "Who is going to be the link for the kids in coming to the family?"

She learned of John M. Perkins, a Mississippi minister who preached racial reconciliation and social justice and, along with his son, Spencer, built what he called "intentional Christian communities," including one called Antioch, in Jackson, Miss. Based largely on that connection, she chose to attend Belhaven College, a small Christian school in Jackson, and frequently visited Antioch, a home with about 25 other people near the Belhaven campus.

Black in a 'White Body'

"She adopted us as surrogate parents, and we adopted her as surrogate daughter," said Ronald Potter, a brother-in-law of Spencer Perkins, who lived at Antioch and taught religion at Belhaven. Mr. Potter said, "We got very close with her."

He described Ms. Dolezal as someone who was "extremely" socially conscious, much more so than the other students seemed to be. The first time he met her, he said, she reminded him of "a black girl in a white body," like "hearing a black song by a white artist."

Ms. Dolezal graduated from Belhaven in 2000 and that year married Mr. Moore. They moved to Washington, D.C., where she enrolled as a graduate student in art at Howard University, a historically black school. In 2002, she received a master's degree in fine art, and days later, she gave birth to her son.

At Howard, as at Belhaven, her art focused on the black experience and racial reconciliation, but there was still no question about her own identity; in college and in graduate school, she was known as white.

In fact, Ms. Dolezal sued Howard, claiming that it had discriminated against her, in part for being white. She said she was denied financial help because the university's attitude was, "You probably have white relatives that can afford to help you with your tuition," she said on "Today." Howard declined to comment on the case.

She and her husband, a physical therapist, moved to the tiny town of Bonners Ferry in far northern Idaho, not far from her parents. But in 2004, her uncle said, she left her husband, and moved in with him in Coeur d'Alene, living for several months in the basement.

She found various kinds of work, including selling her art, and teaching art, and she became involved in minority rights causes in Coeur d'Alene and nearby Spokane. Within a few years, family members said, that they began to hear from others that Ms. Dolezal was identifying herself as something other than white. They said her background was European, except for a small fraction that is Native American.

In police reports around the region about complaints she made beginning in 2005, she is identified as white. By 2009, the reports call her a black woman. Former co-workers at the education institute and the N.A.A.C.P. said she told them she was partly black.

In 2008, she was hired as the education coordinator at the North Idaho Human Rights Education Institute and worked there until 2010. "Ms. Dolezal portrayed herself as African-American at that time," the institute said in a statement on Tuesday.

"She was extremely gifted and produced very, very powerful exhibits for the institute" recalled Tony Stewart, a retired North Idaho College professor and longtime civil rights activist. He said he and others who met Dolezal in 2008 were left with the clear impression she was black.

"Yes, we did think she was a person of color," Mr. Stewart said Tuesday.

She taught courses at North Idaho College, and later also at Eastern Washington University, where she worked in the Africana studies program. She became an adviser to black student groups.

About five years ago, she also took guardianship of one of her adoptive siblings, Izaiah, who was then a teenager. "She decided that he was being abused, so she basically showed up and took him, and essentially said if you want him back, you're going to have to sue," her uncle said.

But questions about Ms. Dolezal, if not suspicion that she was not exactly everything she purported to be, were never far away either. In her neighborhood of mostly modest homes south of downtown, one neighbor, Tony Berg, a hydraulics technician who was sitting on his front step with a cigarette on a recent morning across the street from her house, said he saw Ms. Dolezal's appearance change and at first thought someone else had moved in.

"She was blond — dreadlocks down to here and white skin," Mr. Berg said, drawing a line across his waist. "Then a year or two later, I began seeing a darker-skinned woman go into the house. She had changed."

Growing Suspicions

And some of the questions, or doubts, about her racial identity were also being deliberately spread. A columnist at The Spokesman-Review in Spokane, Shawn Vestal, said that he and other people at the paper were approached by a private investigator in early June, more than a week before the first news reports about Ms. Dolezal's racial identity.

"He did have some of the evidence, or said he did, about what her parents would say about her identity," said Mr. Vestal, who said he had agreed with the investigator that his name would not be made public.

In the "Today" interview one Tuesday and one that followed on a sister network, MSNBC, Ms. Dolezal, remarkably composed despite harsh criticism aimed at her, stuck to her insistence that racial heredity does not equal identity, and she would not answer questions about whether she had changed her self-identification to merely gain advantage. Mr. Lauer asked if she could have been as successful an activist if she had portrayed herself as white.

"I don't know," Ms. Dolezal said. "I guess I haven't had the opportunity to experience that in those shoes, so I'm not sure."



Damn! Who'd wanna be a jigaboo and go to the extent this messed up white woman did"?! What is wrong with some of the white women these days?
#6480
http://www.ntnews.com.au/news/northern-territory/year-old-liam-whitehurst-arrested-after-breaking-out-of-don-dale-youth-detention-centre/story-fnk0b1zt-1227401725329


16-YEAR-OLD Liam Whitehurst has been arrested two days after he broke out of Don Dale Youth Detention Centre. 
 
NT police officers found the boy asleep on a trampoline in the backyard of a Moulden property shortly before 7am on Wednesday.

Charges are yet to be laid.

The arrest comes a day after police said Liam may need medical attention as he may have been badly cut during his escape while scaling the barbed wire fences.


"He's found his way out onto the roof, jumped down, and run to the two perimeter fences and using a blanket has managed to climb up one of the poles supporting the razor wire and climb over and has absconded," Detective Senior Sergeant Mark Stringer told reporters on Tuesday.

"We believe the escapee has cut himself quite badly when he scaled the perimeter fences, he probably needs medical attention." He warned family and friends of the teen that harbouring a fugitive is a criminal offence.

It was his second escape from custody in two months, after he kicked his way out of a corrections van in April.



http://www.ntnews.com.au/news/northern-territory/ronald-kelly-24-appeared-in-darwin-magistrates-court-charged-with-24-offences-including-arson/story-fnk0b1zt-1227401857572


RONALD Kelly has appeared in the Darwin Magistrates Court charged with 24 offences including arson. 

A DARWIN magistrate has ordered two youthsDirty boong kids be remanded in adult jail for the next 15 days. 
 
Magistrate Elizabeth Morris said she only agreed to enforce the Crown's application because it was for a "finite period" and a planned schedule of services would be provided to the boys during that time.

Ms Morris said she would be "unlikely to extend the order" unless the youths received the services highlighted in the plan.

The boys — who cannot be named — are yet to be sentenced.

They will return to court on June 30, one day before the order expires.


On Tuesday, the court heard the pair have been in lockdown for upwards of 17 hours a day in the adult jail, since June 2.

Prosecutor Sally Ozolins told Magistrate Elizabeth Morris until critical upgrades to the high security C Block had finished, Don Dale was "not an appropriate environment" for the 16-year-old boys.


Don Dale Acting Superintendent Victor Williams and security adviser Kevin Cooper gave evidence in court that the facility was unsuitable.

They referred to infrastructure problems and the boys' continued attempts to break out as the primary reasons for keeping them at Holtze.

The Youth Justice Court heard the boys were being supervised at the adult jail by three youth justice officers.

Defence lawyer for one of the detainees, Helena Blundell, said it was "absurd that if that level of supervision is available at the prison, it can't be transferred back to Don Dale".

Ms Blundell said the problem with the centre wasn't the infrastructure, it was a lack of human systems, proper training and "really poor" communication.


 
Defence lawyer Laura McDonough said she may apply for bail on behalf of her client but needed more time.

Magistrate Elizabeth Morris asked her to make in the application in the next 30 minutes.

"There's an issue in relation to Mr Kelly in the cells," she said.

"He is under high-risk status."

Ms Morris said there were 26 people already in the court cells, with another 10 on the way.

"It will become very difficult for Mr Kelly and everyone else so we have to get people through the cells," she said.

http://www.ntnews.com.au/news/northern-territory/health-practitioner-working-in-remote-clinic-keeps-job-after-being-caught-at-darwin-airport-with-marijuana/story-fnk0b1zt-1227401648154


A HEALTH practitioner working in a remote clinic who was caught at Darwin airport in possession of marijuana has kept her job. 
 
The woman, who remains employed as an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health practitioner, faced court in April, where she received a fine for cannabis possession.

Criminal charges do not necessarily breach employment conditions of the NT public service – depending on circumstances.

When asked if the health worker was still employed after being convicted on drug charges, Top End Health Service chief executive Michael Kalimnios said the service prided itself on upholding patient safety and quality standards.

"The supervisory arrangements in place for this employee meet AHPRA requirements and the employee's current duties are in line with these requirements," Mr Kalimnios said.


A registered nurse who used to work at the clinic said departmental managers had ignored concerns from staff for years.

"It sends a frightening message to remote health professionals across the Territory," the nurse said.

In March, the NT News reported that ­concerns were raised by numerous colleagues that a lack of supervision of the convicted woman's work practice and alleged drug use were placing ­patients' lives at risk.

At the time Mr Kalimnios said the department had protocols and guidelines it had to follow when any employee had been found to breach employment conditions, and that appropriate action would be taken.

Documents seen by the NT News revealed that a formal complaint about the worker filed with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency this year had raised issues regarding her "health, performance and ­conduct".

The registered nurse who filed the complaint with AHPRA said in it: "I reasonably believe the situation is sufficiently ­serious for immediate action ... to be taken in order to protect patients from Ms (name withheld)."

The document read: "(Name withheld) has frequently been seen at work practising under the influence of drugs, namely marijuana.''
 
 
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