Sunday, January 21, 2024

Hotel McFadden Where You Can Check Out Anytime You Like

 But you can never leave....



According to a local new report a convicted felon was taken into custody by Mecklenburg County deputies on Friday night. On Saturday morning, he was found dead in his housing unit.

George Wesley Benfield, 43, was arrested and processed Friday night at 8:17 p.m. for charges of violating parole and stealing a vehicle.

He was moved to the detention center in Uptown around 1:45 a.m.The Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s Office announced he was found unresponsive in his housing unit around 3:09 a.m. on Saturday.

Both MEDIC and Charlotte Fire Department attempted life-saving measures. Benfield was pronounced dead at Atrium Main just after 4 a.m.

“Announcing the news of a resident’s passing is always a challenge and remains a consistently difficult task,” said Sheriff McFadden. “Our hearts go out to Mr. Benfield’s family. May they find strength and comfort during this difficult time.”

The State Bureau of Investigation and the MCSO are conducting in-custody death investigations. The county medical examiner is working to determine the cause of death.

Benfield had a long record criminal record dating back 25 years in Mecklenburg and surrounding counties. Most charges were low level felonies and misdemeanors. 

Cedar's Take: Benfield had the sort of record that just makes you smile and shake your head. Just a nonconformist who clearly looked the part. Pulled the police report from the Iredell County arrest, and I nearly spit my coffee. God just created some of us different or as my grandmother would say "that boy ain't right". RIP George Benfield.

Monday, January 8, 2024

3 Homicides with Week One of 2024

Charlotte's never ending black violence - From CMPD:

Monday January 8th - Detectives with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department’s Homicide Unit are conducting a homicide investigation in 2400 block of North Tryon Street in the Metro Division. 

On Monday, January 8, 2024, at approximately 2:10 a.m., Metro Division officers responded to an assault with a deadly weapon with injury call for service near the 2400 block of North Tryon Street. Upon arrival, officers located a male victim with an apparent gunshot wound.  The Charlotte Fire Department and Medic also responded to the scene.  Medic transported the victim to an area hospital where he was pronounced deceased.A teenager was shot and killed during a party in northwest Charlotte on Sunday morning, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said. An 18-year-old has been charged in the case.

Sunday January 7th - CMPD Officers went to a house on West Trade Street near the Brookshire Freeway just before 5 a.m. Sunday, where they found 17-year-old Avyon Titus Thomas. Thomas had been shot at the home and died at the scene, authorities said.

Myers Park High School FaceBook post read: “We are deeply saddened to share that Avyon Thomas, a senior here at our school, died early this morning while at a gathering. His passing is a tragedy. Avyon was a loyal friend to his peers and a caring and loving child. Our thoughts and prayers go out to Avyon’s mother, grandmother, family, and friends,” the statement reads.

The suspect in this case has been identified as Jamir Easter (DOB: 10/18/2005).  Mr. Easter turned himself in at the Law Enforcement Center in Uptown (601 E. Trade St.).  Mr. Easter was then interviewed by homicide detectives.  At the conclusion of the interview, Mr. Easter was arrested and transferred into the custody of the Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s Office.

Easter was released on bond Sunday and was expected in court on Monday.

Thursday January 4th - The victim in this case has been identified as Ganiyu Ibrahim (DOB: 01/28/1969).  The victim’s next of kin has been notified of his death.

Detectives with the CMPD’s Homicide Unit identified a 16-year-old juvenile suspect in connection to this case.  The suspect turned themselves in at the incident scene and was then transported to the Law Enforcement Center in Uptown (601 E. Trade St.) to be interviewed by detectives.  At the conclusion of the interview, detectives obtained a secure custody order and transported the suspect to a Juvenile Detention Facility in Cabarrus County and charged the juvenile with first degree murder and robbery with a dangerous weapon.

Thursday, January 4, 2024

Tariq Bokhari Charlotte City Council Member OK with Rich / White Violence

Earlier this week Carolina Panther owner David Tepper was fined $300,000.00 by the NFL for his drink toss. His angry violent outburst was apparently directed at a Jacksonville Jaguars fan who was taunting him from in front of his assigned skybox window. 

We have no indication of what the JAX fan was saying but are pretty sure he wasn't quoting Shakespeare. 


The NFL was quick to slap Tepper's
wrist with the modest fine. No doubt pocket change for Tepper and the equivalent of about 3 bucks to most of us regular people. 

Tepper would later release a non-apology statement.


This was followed up by Charlotte City Council member Tariq Bokari taking to "X" and supporting Tepper.

Now it's no real surprise that Council member Tariq Bokari @FinTechInnov8r would approve of the City’s biggest clown David Tepper throwing his drink at a Jacksonville fan. Bokari is a rabid leghumper of anyone with a big income, nice house or greater than six figure net worth.

Bokhari's use of colorful curse words like shitting and crap are beneath the office he holds and is an embarrassment to our once well thought of southern city as much as Tepper's hubris self entitled behavior. 

But his timing is reflective of what a true a narcist he seems to be. 

Hours prior he was grandstanding his condemnation of "street violence" promising to do anything and everything to take on the impotent judges and courts. He was going to single handedly make a firm stand against a lazy justice system to put a stop to the sort of violence we saw during Sunday's New Year's Eve celebrations Uptown.

Apparently in his play book if you are a white team owner with a net worth in the billions its ok to get violent because after all you are just passionate and you are worth billions. But if you are a 16 year old black street thug we are coming for you!


 



So beware street thugs your property crimes like graffitti and larceny from autos will not be tolerated. Best not spill your drink Uptown or heaven forbid urinate on Tryon Street because we will have a task force!

And to the rest of you in South Charlotte who elected this clown, just remember you elected him so don’t cry when he gives millions to Tepper and puts 12 year olds in prison for sidewalk art.


Tuesday, December 26, 2023

The Killing Continues

Happy Boxing Day!

From the local paper:

A homicide reported in northwest Charlotte on Christmas Eve is the second high-profile act of gun violence this year on a residential street that is scarcely two blocks long, investigators say. 

Few details have been released by police about the latest shooting, including the identity of the victim. The killing happened around 11 a.m. Sunday in the 1600 block of Flagler Lane. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police officers responded to reports of an assault with a deadly weapon and found someone with gunshot wounds in a vehicle. The victim died at the scene, police say. 

Details about a suspect, or additional information about the case, have not been released. 

The shooting comes nine months after a 13-year-old boy was wounded when someone sprayed the family’s Flagler Lane home with gunfire, CMPD reported. He survived after being taken to a local hospital with a bullet wound to the leg, officials said. The boy’s mother and two other children were in the home when the shots were fired around 1:30 a.m. on March 24, CMPD said. “At least 10” shots were fired, the paper reported in March. 

Charlotte's year to date homicide number is somewhat disputed with one week until the end of the year the number should remain below 100.

As of Wednesday December 27, 2023 the body count stands at 81 including justified. 

Cedar Note: 

I was actually thinking of mocking "Boxing Day" when I pulled the latest homicide story from the local paper.  

To be clear I've always been a fan of Muhammad Ali. His appearance at the opening ceremony at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta where he refused defeat or pity as a victim of parkinson's to a flight on USAir out of Charlotte a few year's prior.

But it was the March 1971 fight that cast Ail as "the greatest" forever. UK Columnist Frank Keating put it in perspective back in 2011:

After 14 rounds at dead-level even, both warriors were spent. Well almost, for Frazier at the very last bent low at center-stage and came up with, well, the kitchen sink … an exquisitely timed rock-knuckled left hook of bestial accuracy which smashed into Ali's jaw so grievously that the right side of the big man's face was wonkily out of shape even before the back of his burgundy trunks hit the floor and the little flamboyant red tassels on his boots waved limply up at the ring lights.

The Big Mouth had been shut good and proper. Over and out. The passing Ali legend had, surely, now passed.

What happened in the next few moments, however, was, utterly to confound and rout Ali's enemies and, overwhelmingly, to recharge and reward his believers. He got up. He lived. And so did the legend grow.

By miraculously clawing himself to his feet and attempting to mount a counterattack, the stricken Ali – loser, but still champ – had, in fact, won everything. For eternity. Whatever was to come, that finale in New York settled Ali's imperishable place in history.



Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Mecklenburg County DA Drops Bo -Time Resisting Arrest and Weapons Charges

Mecklenburg County District Attorney Spencer Merriweather has dismissed all charges against Anthony Lee, and Christina Pierre, the two Bojangles employees who were arrested recently. Several videos of their arrest have been widely circulated and show Pierre resisting arrest and CMPD Officers going hand on with the suspect to gain compliance.

Mecklenburg County Spencer Merriweather DA noted "After consideration of the body-worn camera evidence and the various recorded accounts of police and civilian witnesses present, based on the totality of the circumstances, the State does not have a reasonable likelihood of success at any potential trial on this matter."The DA has declined to make any comment on the dismissals. He declined to make any additional comment regarding the dismissals.

CMPD Chief Johnny Jennings staff posted the following on X:



Cedar's Take: What does it take to get a conviction for attacking a Police Officer (or in this case several officers) in Mecklenburg County?

It is not that Merriwetter took a dismissal but rather the speed in which this tool of the liberal left did so. His actions will do nothing but embolden thugs and hoodrats to continue to do the same.

Many of Charlotte's new residents have fled crime cesspools of the north due to crime being so prevenant. Yet they come to Charlotte and elect the same sort liberals who destroyed their former hometowns. This is a behavior that most of us, even those not in law enforcement can't understand.

Former Mecklenburg District Attorney Andrew Murray would have at least run the cases up the flag pole, and not just toss CMPD Officers under the bus.



Monday, November 20, 2023

Public Service Announcement Stealing From Cars No Bueno

Some advice: breaking into cars at 2AM might seem like easy money but the cost could be your life! 

According to CMPD detectives with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department’s Homicide Unit were conducting a homicide investigation near the 1500 block of West Arrowood Road in the Steele Creek Division early this morning.



Just after 4 AM 911 received a call for service and but 4:17 AM Steele Creek Division officers responded to the 1500 block of West Arrowood Road. Upon arrival, officers discovered a male victim with apparent gunshot wounds. The victim was pronounced deceased on scene by MEDIC.

CMPD also stated the following: "The CMPD is not looking for any suspects and there is no danger to the public."

Which is normal code speak for we are talking to the victim who used deadly force to defend him/herself or his/her property.


Homicide Unit detectives and Crime Scene Search responded to process the scene and collect physical evidence. Representatives from CMPD’s Operations Command, Victim Services, MEDIC and the Charlotte Fire Department also assisted.

According to news sources the body was not removed until well after sunrise. 


The Water Walk extended stay hotel has seen a number of theft from auto crimes over the past several months. CrimeMapping.com shows 19 calls for service since May 2023. Most were for theft from auto. 

The hotel manager told a local tv news station is a prepared press release: “The safety and security of our guests, residents and team members is our top priority, and we are incredibly saddened by the incident that took place in our parking lot overnight,” the statement reads. “This is an active police investigation and as such, we will not be sharing any specific details at this time. Questions should be referred to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department at 704-336-7600.”

Cedar Update: The victim/crook has not been identified but sources say the deceased male is suspected of breaking into several vehicles and was confronted by one owner in the parking lot. The Mecklenburg County DA will have the final say as to any charges.  

Cedar Update No. 2: The victim/Crook  identified as 32-year-old Travoscia Brown died from his injuries at the scene, police said.

John Joseph Photo Courtesy MCSO


Late Monday CMPD would charge 47-year-old John Joseph with second degree murder in Monday's deadly shooting. Investigators still haven't said if Joseph was the owner of one of the vehicles.

Saturday, November 18, 2023

The Charlotte Observer Chirps About the Bo Time Take Down

CP is posting this editorial from the Charlotte Observer just to add some context to the why CMPD has an ever shrinking number of boots on the street. 

The entire perception is ACAB and George Floyd was a victim. The media WSOC, WBTV, and WCNC quickly added to the victimhood narrative.  Then bring in the Queen City Nerve and you have this insane leftist HAMAS backing Antifa supporting nutbags all piling on. 

But if you're reading this you are smarter than that and while Chief Johnny is already tossing CMPD officers under the bus you at least would like to hear both sides and so here you go.

From the Observer Editorial Staff:

A disturbing video on social media Tuesday showed a Charlotte police officer repeatedly striking a woman who was pinned to the ground outside of a Bojangles in southwest Charlotte. 

Two people — both Bojangles employees — were approached by CMPD officers because they were smoking marijuana in public. 

The woman, according to CMPD, “punched an officer in the face,” and both individuals reportedly refused arrest. In the video, the woman is lying on the ground, restrained by multiple CMPD officers. Another officer repeatedly hits the woman, as witnesses plead with the officers to stop. 

CMPD claimed the woman was “laying on her hands and not allowing officers to arrest her” and the strikes were intended to get the woman to “stop resisting.” 

“After several repeated verbal commands, an officer struck the female subject seven times with knee strikes and 10 closed fist strikes to the peroneal nerve in the thigh to try to gain compliance,” CMPD said in a statement. 

At least seven officers were present when the woman was finally arrested and put inside a CMPD vehicle, according to WCNC Charlotte. The incident was enough to make national headlines in The New York Times. The video invites a number of questions. First, was the use of force in this situation truly warranted? If the woman was already on the ground and restrained by officers, was it necessary to hit her 17 times? What actions, if any, were taken to de-escalate the situation?  

CMPD Chief Johnny Jennings acknowledged in a statement that the video was “not easy to watch,” but said the bodycam footage “tells more of the story than what is circulating on social media.” CMPD has begun the legal process to release the bodycam footage, but that could take a few months. While the bodycam footage may indeed provide additional clarity, it’s troubling to see such aggressive tactics used to subdue an unarmed woman, even if she was resisting arrest. Incidents like these can further damage the already frayed trust between CMPD and the communities it serves — especially the Black community. 

That makes answers to the community’s questions all the more important. At a press conference Wednesday, Jennings said that the individuals were smoking marijuana at a bus stop before officers approached them. If they were merely smoking marijuana, though, why did CMPD see a need to intervene? 

The Mecklenburg County district attorney is no longer prosecuting non-violent simple possession charges. Jennings should explain whether CMPD has a different threshold for smoking marijuana, and why.

“From the very beginning, the police interacting with people over the smell of marijuana, we don’t think that was a big enough issue for the police to interact with,” Robert Dawkins, leader of SAFE Coalition NC, said. “The way to not have issues with the police is to limit the amount of interactions that are handled by police.” SAFE is a police accountability effort that has advised the city on issues like its use of force policy and reforms to the Citizens Review Board. Dawkins said that, from SAFE’s perspective, the police should have used de-escalating tactics and kept restraining the woman until she calmed down, instead of using strikes to get her to comply. 

“They wouldn’t have lost the political and the neighborhood capital that they had to give up just to bring in this one small arrest,” Dawkins said. “Doing the strikes hurt them more than what would have happened if they had waited.” An internal investigation is underway, and the officer involved in the situation has been reassigned. 

According to CMPD policy, officers may use “less-lethal force” when “reasonably necessary” to make an arrest. North Carolina law also permits the use of force in arrest. But CMPD’s policy also says that other factors must be taken into account, such as the number of officers present and whether the person poses an “imminent threat to the public.” “If I look at this entire thing, are there things that we can do better? Absolutely. Are there things that I wish would have never happened? Certainly,” Jennings said at the press conference. 

Going forward, Jennings said the department would consider changes to how officers address people smoking marijuana and whether it is necessary to deliver body strikes if “we have four officers subduing an individual.” 

Good. We’re glad that Jennings is acknowledging that his department may not have handled the situation in the best way, and that he appears to be pursuing why. We urge him to follow through on that willingness to examine and improve, and be equally candid in his final analysis of what happened.