BLM-Backed Fund Plans To Bail Out Quentez Brown, Jewish Mayoral Candidate’s Would-Be Assassin With $100K Cash

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BLM-Backed Fund Plans To Bail Out Mayoral Candidate’s Would-Be Assassin With $100K Cash​


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Sandy Malone2 hours ago

By Sandy Malone and Holly Matkin
Wichita Falls, TX – A Black Lives Matter-backed group has pledged to pay the $100,000 cash bail to free the man who tried to assassinate a candidate for Louisville mayor on Monday.
The attack occurred at the campaign office of Louisville Democratic Mayoral Candidate Craig Greenberg in the Butchertown Market building at approximately 10:15 a.m. on Feb. 14.


Greenberg told reporters afterward that he and four members of his staff were in the middle of a meeting when the suspect, 25-year-old Quintez Brown, barged in, the Courier Journal reported.
He said the suspect suddenly, “pulled out a gun, aimed directly at me and began shooting.”
Greenberg said told reporters at a press conference that at least one round grazed his shirt, according to the Courier Journal.
One of the staff members was able to slam the door on the attacker just before the rest of the group barricaded the door with desks and tables.

Louisville police said they responded to the scene after receiving a report of “an active aggressor,” the Courier Journal reported.
Police announced Monday night that they had arrested Brown in connection with the attack.
Brown, a 21-year-old former intern for The Courier Journal, has been charged with four counts of wanton endangerment and attempted murder.
He was taken into custody outside Greenberg’s campaign office, WDRB reported.


Brown has been charged with attempted murder and four counts of wanton endangerment for the shooting at Greenberg’s campaign office.
He pleaded not guilty to all charges during his arraignment on Tuesday, WFPL reported.
Brown has been active with Black Lives Matter Louisville and spoke to WDRB in 2020 about protesting police.
The Louisville Community Bail Fund, an organization that was co-founded by Black Lives Matter Louisville organizer Chanelle Helm, announced that her group would put up the $100,000 cash bond that was set by District Judge Annette Karem during Brown’s arraignment on Feb. 15, WFPL reported.

Brown would be moved to home incarceration if he posted bond.
Attorneys for Brown have claimed that he suffered from mental issues and should not be incarcerated in the downtown Louisville jail, which has recently been the subject of multiple investigations, WFPL reported.
The Black Lives Matter organizer said it didn’t think the facility had the services that Brown needed.
“[The Louisville Metro Department of Corrections] has seen its sixth death in the last four months and they have not provided adequate resources for those underneath its detention,” Helm said. “We’re extremely concerned for anyone being held there, especially someone like Quintez [Brown] who is having mental health concerns from his family and community members.”


Rob Eggert, Brown’s defense attorney, said he planned to have his client undergo a mental health evaluation as soon as possible, WFPL reported.
Greenberg, who said his ears were still ringing a day after he was shot at, told WAVE that he had empathy for the man who tried to gun down him and his staff on Valentine’s Day.
“I don’t know what led the individual yesterday to shoot – part of me has empathy because my guess is that his experiences were very different from my experiences – and so I am empathic and concerned about that, that there people in our community that ultimately pick up a gun and use it in that fashion,” Greenberg said.
“Yesterday somebody opened fire at me in my office with my teammates,” he continued. “There is no excuse for that, and firing a weapon at someone else has consequences, has to have consequences. We need to do everything in our city’s collective power to work so that no one else decides to use a weapon in that manner. That should be our goal.”

The Police Tribune reached out to Greenberg’s campaign for comment on Brown’s impending release but had not received a response at publication time.
No official word has been released on when the would-be assassin would be bailed out, WAVE reported.
 
https://am1070theanswer.com/news/national/louisville-mayoral-candidate-outraged-by-suspects-release/cbfd4bcf66ccbc5d6c39e9a3a8bef3bd

Louisville mayoral candidate outraged by suspect's release​


National News




Mayoral-Candidate-Shooting
This photo provided by Louisville Metro Department of Corrections shows Quintez Brown. A candidate for Louisville's metro council, Brown stands charged with attempted murder, accused of opening fire on a mayoral candidate whose shirt was grazed by a bullet in his campaign headquarters, police said Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022. Brown, 21, also faces four counts of wanton endangerment, Louisville police spokesman Aaron Ellis said. (Louisville Metro Department of Corrections via AP)

Thu, Feb 17, 2022 7:55 PM​


By PIPER HUDSPETH BLACKBURN and DYLAN LOVAN, Associated Press​


LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A Louisville mayoral candidate said Thursday that he was “traumatized” by the news that the man charged with drawing a gun and firing at him earlier this week had been placed on home incarceration.
Quintez Brown, 21, was arrested and charged with attempted murder shortly after Monday’s shooting in Louisville. The Democratic candidate, Craig Greenberg, was not hit by the gunfire but said a bullet grazed his sweater.
“Our criminal justice system is clearly broken. It is nearly impossible to believe that someone can attempt murder on Monday and walk out of jail on Wednesday," Greenberg said in a statement. “If someone is struggling with a mental illness and is in custody, they should be evaluated and treated in custody. We must work together to fix this system.”
A group called the Louisville Community Bail Fund paid the $100,000 cash bond on Wednesday afternoon. Under the terms of home incarceration, Brown has been fitted with a GPS ankle monitor and is confined to his home.
Brown, a social justice activist running as an independent for Louisville’s metro council, has been charged with attempted murder and four counts of wanton endangerment.
A judge has ordered Brown to have no contact with Greenberg or his campaign staff and said Brown cannot possess firearms. Brown’s lawyer said the man has “serious mental issues” and said he would undergo a psychiatric evaluation.
Chanelle Helm, an organizer with the Louisville Community Bail Fund and member of Black Lives Matter Louisville, said the organization was worried he wouldn’t get the support he needed in jail.
“They do not have the resources to get mental health resources to people. We do that, we set them up with folks in our communities,” Helm explained.
Bail fund donors who disagree with the group's choice to post Brown's bond, Helm added, should learn more about “why we create bail funds in the first place.”
“Not everybody that’s in jail and prison are going to be nonviolent offenders with easy cases or cases that are low bail. We bail out folks because we can provide the resources and support that they need to get those cases handled,” she said.
Jefferson County Attorney Mike O’Connell, the initial prosecutor on the case, called Brown’s release “frustrating.” O’Connell said in a prepared statement that state law calls for bond to be set in cases like Brown’s. He said prosecutors argued for and received a higher bond for Brown, an increase from $75,000 to $100,000 cash, and also requested home incarceration if Brown was released.
“However, the criteria of release should not be the ability to access a certain amount of money,” O’Connell said. “It should be the threat to the community and whether there is a history of non-appearance in court.”
O’Connell said his office has “kept the victim involved throughout the process.”
Sean Delahanty, a former Louisville criminal judge for two decades, said he felt the $100,000 cash bond for Brown was “substantial.”
“I’m sure that the judge who set the bond believed that the bond was going to keep the person in jail,” Delahanty said.
“Because how many people charged with murder have the ability to post $100,000 cash bonds? Before bail projects (existed), I would be willing to bet it was a rare occurrence.”
Delahanty said when there is a question of mental competency, there are tools the court can use to keep the defendant in custody while they undergo mental evaluations and get treatment, including having a defendant involuntarily admitted to a state facility for a period of time ahead of their trial.
Meanwhile, U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell expressed outrage at Brown's release in remarks on the Senate floor. He characterized the shooting as “what appears to be an assassination attempt against a Jewish mayoral candidate."
“Less than 48 hours after this activist tried to literally murder a politician, the radical left bailed their comrade out of jail," he said. “It is just jaw-dropping. The innocent people of Louisville deserve better."
But, pushback against Brown's release crossed the political spectrum.
Charles Booker, a Louisville Democrat running for the U.S. Senate, released a statement opposing Brown's release, insisting that “anyone who has been arrested for attempted murder — and is feared to be a harm to themselves and others — should be in custody.”
“The sad reality of our cash bail system is that it puts a price tag on crime without sufficient considerations for safety. This often keeps innocent people behind bars because they do not have the funds,” Booker said in a statement. “Meanwhile, a person charged with attempted murder can be released in 48 hours if they have access to enough money.”
Brown disappeared for about two weeks last summer. After he was found safe, his parents issued a statement asking for patience and privacy while they attended to his “physical, mental and spiritual needs.”
Louisville police on Thursday declined to comment on questions about security for Greenberg, who is continuing his campaign for mayor. An LMPD spokesman said they “do not discuss operational security matters.”
Brown is confined to his residence and must wear a GPS device, said Louisville Metro Corrections spokesperson Steve Durham. He said Brown acknowledged in writing that he understands he is required to remain inside and that his movement is tracked. If Brown moves outside the authorized area, Durham said, an alert is triggered and corrections officers respond.
A GOP state lawmaker, Rep. Jason Nemes of Louisville, told the Courier Journal on Thursday that he will introduce a bill next week that would allow voters to decide on a constitutional amendment allowing defendants to be detained without bail if they pose a grave danger.
___
Hudspeth Blackburn is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

Associated Press​

 
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Chanelle Helm, an organizer with the Louisville Community Bail Fund and member of Black Lives Matter Louisville, said the organization was worried he wouldn’t get the support he needed in jail.
Infamous black b*tch for her 10 Requests for White People

White people, here are 10 requests from a Black Lives Matter leader​


Aug 16 2017


By Chanelle Helm


[This article is part of a package covering Louisville’s reaction to Charlottesville. Check out the other pieces, including Ricky Jones’ column “Black People Should Arm Themselves Now!” and Erica Rucker’s “America… where are you going?”]
Some things I’m thinking about that should change (in that Southern, black grandmama voice):
1. White people, if you don’t have any descendants, will your property to a black or brown family. Preferably one that lives in generational poverty.
2. White people, if you’re inheriting property you intend to sell upon acceptance, give it to a black or brown family. You’re bound to make that money in some other white privileged way.
3. If you are a developer or realty owner of multi-family housing, build a sustainable complex in a black or brown blighted neighborhood and let black and brown people live in it for free.
4. White people, if you can afford to downsize, give up the home you own to a black or brown family. Preferably a family from generational poverty.
5. White people, if any of the people you intend to leave your property to are racists assholes, change the will, and will your property to a black or brown family. Preferably a family from generational poverty.
6. White people, re-budget your monthly so you can donate to black funds for land purchasing.
7. White people, especially white women (because this is yaw specialty — Nosey Jenny and Meddling Kathy), get a racist fired. Yaw know what the F**k they be saying. You are complicit when you ignore them. Get your boss fired cause they racist too.
8. Backing up No. 7, this should be easy but all those sheetless Klan, Nazi’s and Other lil’ dick-white men will all be returning to work. Get they ass fired. Call the police even: they look suspicious.
9. OK, backing up No. 8, if any white person at your work, or as you enter in spaces and you overhear a white person praising the actions from yesterday, first, get a pic. Get their name and more info. Hell, find out where they work — Get Them Fired. But certainly address them, and, if you need to, you got hands: use them.
10. Commit to two things: Fighting white supremacy where and how you can (this doesn’t mean taking up knitting, unless you’re making scarves for black and brown kids in need), and funding black and brown people and their work.
#RunUsOurLand #Reparations #YouGonLearnToday #RunUsOurMoney •

Chanelle Helm is cofounder and core organizer of Black Lives Matter Louisville.
PayPal: chanellehelm@gmail.com
Venmo: chanellehelm
Cashapp: CBHelm

To contribute to:

BLM Louisville: bit.ly/BLMLou
Louisville Community Bail Fund:
bit.ly/LCBFund
 
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