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‘Date Your Own Kind’; ‘N-Word’: Black Man’s Racist Graffiti Underscores Tensions

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A recent incident that involved racist graffiti scrawled on a man’s car near Kansas State University was a hoax, police said Monday, that called attention to rising racial tensions at the school. A parked black vehicle in an apartment complex near the university in Manhattan, Kansas was painted with racial slurs including the N-word and “Die,” the Riley County Police Department said after having discovered the car Wednesday. Photos of the car spread on social media and caused a major uproar on the university’s campus. The vehicle’s owner,  Dauntarius Williams , 21, who is Black and lives in the community, confessed to having defaced his own car in a Halloween prank amid the uproar, authorities explained in a news release Monday. JUST IN: Police say man admits he put racist graffiti on his own car, incident stirred tensions at Kansas State University pic.twitter.com/0fYOj0jcv8 — Breaking911 (@Breaking911) November 6, 2017 “I just want to apologize from the bottom of my heart for the pain and news I have brought you all,” Williams said in a statement. Police have declined to file charges against Williams though he filed a false incident report in a rare move, especially given that many Black men are painted as criminals for any perceived wrongdoing. Williams is a “young man who made a mistake” and has “[owned] up to it,”  Brad Schoen , Riley County Department Police Director, explained. The case “created difficulties” in the community, police said. The university’s Black Student Union called an emergency meeting before Williams’ admission. More campus patrols were added, and concerned parents held a Facebook Live event. The FBI opened a civil rights investigation into a possible hate crime, the New York Post reported. “We want to acknowledge that people felt anger and pain as a result of pictures and words that they saw,” said Jeff Morris , a Kansas State University spokesman to the Post Monday. The incident followed previous racially charged events that had already put the campus on edge. An anti-gay slur was found outside the university student union in October. White supremacist fliers were found on campus in September, and a noose was discovered hanging from a campus tree in May. No arrests have been made in any of the previous incidents that put race front and center, they said. Officials will continue with campus patrols and assess concerns for more cameras, they said. More work to combat racist incidents, however, is needed. SOURCE: New York Post SEE ALSO: As Obamacare Enrollment Sets New Record, Here’s How To Save The ACA From Trump 6 Black Candidates Poised To Make History On Election Day 2017 [ione_media_gallery src=”https://newsone.com” id=”3468580″ overlay=”true”]

‘Date Your Own Kind’; ‘N-Word’: Black Man’s Racist Graffiti Underscores Tensions

Drunk Speeding Cop Back @ Work After DWI Homicide, No Charges Filed

His own police department says this detective was drunk and speeding when he killed a man, so why is he still working and still a detective? A victim's family wants to know if a Newark, New Jersey detective received special treatment. For more than a week, we have been trying to set up an interview with Newark's Police Director concerning our investigation. We've been ignored. We caught up with Newark detective Mark Hulse as he headed into work at this precinct on a recent morning. Back to work after six-month suspension. Back to work even though his own police department found him guilty of being drunk and speeding when, off-duty, he struck and killed a man named John Marques on this Newark street in July of 2008. The impact was so violent, some of Marques' limbs were severed. An internal police department memo that we obtained put Hulse's speed at 73 miles an hour in a 25 mile an hour zone and his blood alcohol content at .12. The legal limit is .08 So you're probably wondering, how did someone who is supposed to uphold the law and is found to have broken it by his own department, still on the job? And why wasn't Hulse criminally charged? WALLACE: “Do you think they didn't charge him because he was a cop?” LUCIA PIRES: “Yeah. Yeah. I think that. What other conclusion could I come to?” Pires, the victim's ex-wife, claims she and the couple's two teenage children were largely kept in the dark about the criminal investigation into the accident by the Essex County Prosecutor. “There was no communication with the family,” she said. The family says it was stunned to learn that months after the accident, a grand jury had failed to indict Officer Hulse. “There's no doubt in my mind that had it been anyone else they would currently be in jail for manslaughter. There is no doubt in my mind,” Pires said. “Anyone else would have been charged given those circumstances, but because he was a cop I basically think he got away with it.” Our investigation raises questions about how this case was handled from the very beginning. Police records show Officer Hulse, on his way back from a club at 3:00 a.m., ran from the accident scene to the nearby 3rd precinct allegedly to get help for the victim, but was it also to get protection for himself. He was never given a breathalyzer. “Somebody died, and it was 3 0'clock in the morning, and you're coming from the nightclub and no breathalyzer? If it were me or you, you know we'd have a breathalyzer done immediately,” Pires said. Hulse remained at the precinct for two and a half hours without giving any statement. Later, complaining of dizziness and other minor ailments, he went to the hospital. Blood wasn't drawn until more than four hours after the accident. His blood alcohol level then registered .058, but an alcohol expert consulted by the Prosecutor's office put the intoxication level at the time of the accident at .12, adding that it resulted in significant impairments. “Had it been me, or any normal citizen, I believe there would have been charges and they would have been put in jail,” Marques' son, Matthew, said. “I think it's wrong, I don't believe he should be back at work. I personally believe he should be in jail, serving time.” And why is he back at work? Officer Hulse wouldn't answer that question while we were at the precinct. A police spokesman showed up. He wouldn't answer that question either. We were told to put in a formal request to interview the Police Director. We did. No response. “He was speeding. He was drunk. He killed someone and he still has a job and pension in the state of New Jersey. Don't get it,” said Pires. The Essex County Prosecutor's Office told Eyewitness News it believes the criminal case was handled properly and it respects the grand jury's decision. The office did take a second look at this case after we contacted them. Sources tell us the FBI may be pursuing a civil rights investigation and we've learned there may be witnesses who have not yet come forward who were at the precinct the night of the accident. They may have possible information about a police cover-up. added by: Omnomynous