This man drove onto a sidewalk and killed three innocent children. This is Sean Greer. He mowed down six children in all because he wanted to get around a bus. And then he took off fleeing the scene.
When cops caught up to him, he lied and claimed he hit a pole and ran because he was on probation and didn’t want trouble.
He was just sentenced to 73 years in prison.
His license had been suspended since 2016. He was already on probation when he chose to drive anyway and put those babies in danger.
6-year-old Andrea Fleming, 5-year-old Paris “Kylie” Jones, and 9-year-old Laziyah “Minnie” Stukes, who fought for months on a ventilator before dying from her injuries.
@forumreddit658@FreedmenCulture News flash people kill people they know. Go on YouTube and type on true crime, it’ll be a whole lot of white on white crime there.
Wars are white on white crime. They just package blacks to continue propaganda
These are actual Freedom Riders, now elderly, sitting together decades after risking their lives to challenge segregation in the American South.
he original courageous Freedom Riders movement began in 1961.
The first group, organized by Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), had 13 original Freedom Riders:
• 7 Black riders
• 6 white riders
They left Washington, D.C. on May 4, 1961, riding interstate buses into the Deep South to challenge segregation in bus terminals after Supreme Court rulings had already declared it unconstitutional.
After brutal mob attacks in Alabama, including the firebombing of a bus in Anniston and savage beatings in Birmingham and Montgomery, more activists joined. The movement quickly expanded beyond the original 13.
By the end of 1961, more than 400 Freedom Riders had participated across the South. Many were arrested and sent to Mississippi’s notorious Parchman Prison.
Hezekiah Watkins
At just 13 years old, Watkins became the youngest Freedom Rider ever arrested. His involvement happened almost by accident when he went to the Jackson, Mississippi, Greyhound station to see the riders arrive. In the chaos, he was swept up by police and sent to the notorious Parchman State Penitentiary. Initially placed on death row to intimidate him, he spent several days in the prison before being released. This traumatic experience did not deter him; he went on to become a lifelong activist, dedicated to educating others about the struggle for justice in Mississippi.
Joan Trumpauer Mulholland
A rare figure in the movement, Mulholland was a white woman from a privileged Southern background who turned her back on social expectations to fight for racial equality. By the time she joined the Freedom Rides, she was already a seasoned activist involved in sit-ins. In 1961, she was imprisoned in Parchman for over two months. She later became the first white student to enroll at Tougaloo College, a historically Black institution, and was a primary organizer for the 1963 March on Washington. She famously survived a near-lynching during the Woolworth’s lunch counter sit-in.
Ameen Tuunagane (Willie James)
Known during the movement as Willie James, Tuunagane was a relentless civil rights organizer and Freedom Rider. He was part of the waves of activists who traveled to Jackson, Mississippi, to challenge Jim Crow laws. His work extended far beyond the buses; he was deeply involved in voter registration drives and community organizing, often operating in high-risk areas where the threat of police and vigilante violence was constant. His commitment focused on the intersection of political power and basic human dignity.
Carol Ruth Silver
A recent law school graduate at the time, Silver joined the Freedom Rides to put her legal principles into practice. She was arrested in Jackson and, like many others, served time in Parchman Penitentiary. During her incarceration, she kept a secret diary on scraps of paper, documenting the harrowing conditions and the psychological tactics used by guards. Her later career was defined by this experience; she became a prominent lawyer and politician in San Francisco, continuing her advocacy for civil rights and educational reform for decades.
Kredelle Pettway
Pettway was a dedicated activist who participated in the movement during the height of the 1960s racial tensions. As a young woman, she joined the ranks of those demanding the desegregation of public facilities in Alabama and Mississippi. Her contribution highlights the essential role of local youth and women in maintaining the momentum of the movement. She faced the constant threat of the Ku Klux Klan and state-sanctioned violence, standing firm in the belief that the "separate but equal" doctrine was a moral and legal failure.
Juneteenth Started Without Ty' Rese West
On the day America is supposed to be celebrating Black freedom, a white police officer hunted down an 18-year-old Black boy and killed him in the street, over a bike light.
🚨 6 years ago today, Derek Chauvin knelt on George Floyd’s neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds.
Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker ruled it a homicide caused by law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compression.
He stood by that determination under oath in court.
🚨 A racist white mother in Ohio who was recorded calling her Black son a “N*GGER” has been identified as Marie Juile, who works as a nurse director at the University of Toledo Medical Center.
The video, which has gone viral shows the woman calling her son a “n*gger” multiple time during a heated exchange.
It has now come to light that this woman works as a Nurse Director at the University of Toledo Medical Center and has had multiple complaints for discriminating against Black employees.
🚨 Missing 16-year-old Missouri teen kidnapped, beaten, and shot before being dumped in the woods by 5 white supremacists!
A 16-year-old Black girl from Moberly, Missouri was allegedly kidnapped, severely beaten, and fatally shot before her body was dumped in a wooded area.
Kayla Huff was reported missing on May 6. According to investigators, she was placed in the trunk of a car, driven to a conservation area, dragged out, beaten with an expandable baton, and then shot.
Prosecutors say the group pre-planned parts of the crime, including disabling her vehicle the day before. One suspect allegedly provided the gun used to kill her.
Five people are now facing serious charges, including first-degree murder and kidnapping. Multiple people are being held accountable for her death.