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Alabama husband wouldn't answer this question when calling 911 to report wife shot
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Fred Kneck
2023-03-25 04:13:59 UTC
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Rep. Jim Banks Says Nancy Pelosi Was Responsible for Security
Breakdown on January 6
"My wife is shot. I need someone out here, please." It was just after 11
p.m. on May 2, 2017, when 37-year-old Jason Crawford called 911 from
outside his own home in Cullman, Alabama, to report that his wife Tiffiney
had been shot in the head.

In an exclusive interview for this Saturday's "48 Hours" report, "The
Mysterious Death of Tiffiney Crawford," airing Saturday, March 25 at 10/9c
on CBS and streaming on Paramount+, Jason Crawford told "CBS Mornings"
lead correspondent David Begnaud that he remembers that night vividly. "It
felt like it was taking longer and longer for anybody to get there," he
said.

Lead investigator Joseph Parrish told Begnaud that when he first listened
to the recording of that 911 call, Crawford's tone caught his ear. "It was
very cold," said Parrish. "It didn't sound like somebody that was worried
about his wife." But Parrish says he was more concerned about the fact
that Jason refused to answer one question that the 911 operator asked
repeatedly.

"She asked you 'who's she been shot by,' and you didn't respond. Why not?"
Begnaud asked Crawford. "Yeah," Crawford answered, "I just felt like if I
said it into existence, it'd be true." Crawford says he could not bring
himself to tell the 911 operator that his 32-two-year-old wife, Tiffiney
had shot herself.

Body camera footage shows what Cullman County Sheriff's deputies found
when they got to the scene. Tiffiney Crawford was slumped over in the
driver's seat of her van. There was a pink revolver in her left hand.
Jason Crawford says his wife kept the gun in the driver's side door of her
vehicle for protection. A deputy can be heard on the bodycam footage
asking Jason, "What happened tonight?" "Uh, I—We were arguing" Crawford
answers, "I didn't let her in the house … And the last thing I remember …
I was going in the house, and I heard a shot, a scream and then another
shot." Tiffiney had been shot twice in the head. That night, at least one
Sheriff's deputy believed that she had taken her own life.

Cullman County Sheriff Matt Gentry told Begnaud that the morning after the
shooting, he decided to turn the case over to the Alabama State Bureau of
Investigation. Gentry felt there was a potential conflict of interest
because Jason's mother, Ronda Crawford, worked for him as an office
manager. "I could have told our guys to work it," Gentry told Begnaud, but
"I want full transparency." That's when State Investigator Joe Parrish
was assigned to the case and began examining the evidence.

With the gun out for testing, the first thing Parrish wanted to see was
the van in which Tiffiney was shot. But the night of her death, the
vehicle had been photographed and turned over to Jason and his family. The
very next morning--with the Sheriff's permission--the van was scrubbed
clean by two family members. Parrish told Begnaud, "It was odd that they
would clean it up that quick after something like that."

There was something else that struck Parrish as odd. Tiffiney Crawford had
been shot once to the left side of her chin and a second time to her left
temple. The gun was found in her left hand, but Tiffiney was right-handed.
Two shots to the head are rare in suicide attempts says Parrish, but two
shots using a nondominant hand to pull the trigger seemed nearly
impossible to the longtime investigator.

A week after the shooting Parrish brought Jason Crawford in for
questioning. For the first time, Crawford spoke in detail about a
discovery he made the night his wife died. He told Parrish that Tiffiney
had been having an affair, and that's what they were arguing about. "I
said, you've ruined our home. I was like, you're no longer a part of
this," Crawford told Parrish. Crawford says they argued for about an hour,
then he went inside to get Tiffiney her work uniform so she could leave.
According to Crawford, as soon as stepped inside their home he "heard a
shot, a scream and another shot."

When the gun was finally tested for DNA, there were only trace amounts
detected. Two samples were identified as male but could not be matched to
any one individual. A third sample was so small that there was no way to
tell if it belonged to a male or a female. To Parrish, it seemed as if the
gun may have been wiped clean and then placed in Tiffiney's hand.

A backlog in the state's ballistics lab would delay Tiffiney Crawford's
autopsy report for a year, but State Medical Examiner Dr. Valerie Green
told Begnaud that she had her doubts about Jason Crawford's story from the
start. "I think the thing that made me think that there could be something
else going on with this case is that gunshot wound on the left side of Ms.
Crawford's head," she said.

Green says that based on the absence of gunpowder particles and abrasions
around the wound to Tiffiney's left temple, she concluded that the shot
had to have been fired from at least 10 inches away. "That's indicating
that, you know, she's holding her arm outward beyond 10 inches and trying
to shoot herself ... Not saying that it's impossible. But it's not
likely." It was especially unlikely, says Green, because Crawford reported
that when he found Tiffiney in her van, the door was closed. "That was
concerning to me," says Green. "For you to be able to hold up a gun and
shoot yourself in the head … it would be difficult to do, and that's such
a small space."

On March 8, 2018, Green issued her findings and declared Tiffiney's death
a murder. More than two months later, the Cullman County District
Attorney's office presented their case to a grand jury. Jason Crawford was
indicted and charged with his wife's murder. In an interview with Begnaud,
Assistant District Attorney Jeff Roberts said, "I couldn't see who else
did it. He's the only one who had a motive to do it, for one thing."

"We don't believe Jason is guilty of this at all," Crawford's attorney
Robert Tuten told Begnaud. Tuten says that the state's case was completely
circumstantial and that investigators had found no physical evidence that
Crawford killed his wife. "They did not see blood or anything on him. They
found nothing that would indicate he had fired a firearm recently." Tuten
says that to him, it was clear that Tiffiney Crawford took her own life
because her marriage was coming to an end. "I think she gave up … I think
she just fell apart and decided to end it."

Jason Crawford would spend the next four years out on bond, awaiting
trial. He says everyone, including his mother-in-law, supported him. "Of
all my circle of people who, like my family and friends and stuff, they
never questioned it … they never questioned that I wouldn't kill my wife."

The trial began in November 2022. Juror No. 19, Megan Brock, would later
tell Begnaud that when the jury finally got the case, they deliberated for
several hours without a verdict. Then they requested access to that 911
recording.

About 30 minutes later, they announced they had reached a decision. "So,
the 911 call sealed the deal," Begnaud asked Brock. "That was it," she
said emphatically.

<https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tiffiney-crawford-death-jason-crawford-
alabama-husband-wouldnt-answer-question-when-calling-911-to-report-wife-
shot/?intcid=CNI-00-10aaa3b>
Obama racism
2023-03-26 04:56:17 UTC
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Something is wrong with niggers and American law enforcement
By all accounts Jamea Jonae Harris was a star in her own right. Just 23,
she already seemed to have it all: brains, beauty, happiness, humility and
a five-year-old son who was her entire world. She booked off a weekend in
January to spend with her cousin, a student at the University of Alabama.
With her boyfriend, Harris made the hour drive from her Birmingham home to
the college town of Tuscaloosa. After a Saturday night spent clubbing with
friends, Harris headed for home in a black Jeep with her boyfriend and
cousin, stopping for a late-night bite at a greasy spoon in the shadow of
Bama’s football stadium. It was just their bad luck.

According to Harris’s mother and cousin, the trio were waiting on their
food when two men approached, desperate for Harris’s attention. The more
they refused to take no for an answer, the more the tension rose. Attuned
to the vibe shift, Harris’s boyfriend proposed they just forget the food
and leave. But Harris and her companions were reportedly blocked in by two
cars and fired upon by one of the men who had approached her. Harris’s
boyfriend shot back with his own firearm and hit the gunman twice, then
tried to steer the group to safety.

Brandon Miller (24) is a freshman at Alabama
Alabama star Miller delivered gun used in killing of young mother, police
say
Read more
Struck once, Harris was the only person in the exchange not to make it out
alive. Her death probably would have been written off as yet another
inevitable consequence of urban gun violence, if police hadn’t said
members of Alabama’s high-flying basketball team were involved.

The men who couldn’t take no for an answer? Police say one of them was
Darius Miles, a lightly used junior player for Alabama. He was arrested on
capital murder charges and booted from the team, less than a month after
being shut down for the year with an ankle injury. The second man, 20-
year-old Michael Lynn Davis, Miles’s best friend but not an Alabama
player, was likewise arraigned and fingered as the triggerman. Both remain
in jail without bond.

In an attorney statement, Miles professed to being “heartbroken” over
Harris’s slaying. And if those words didn’t ring hollow then, they
certainly did after investigators testified in a Tuesday pretrial hearing
that the gun belonged to Miles and that he had sent word via text to have
it brought to him. Even more stunning: the alleged courier was Brandon
Miller, Bama’s first-year hoops phenom. Police also say freshman guard
Jaden Bradley was also on scene that night. Neither Bradley nor Miller
face criminal charges.

On the vast spectrum of college hoops scandals, this has the frame of an
all-time catastrophe – something on the scale of the murder that rocked
Baylor University’s basketball team in the mid-aughts. So far, the NCAA
and the Southeastern Conference have maintained deafening silence on the
matter. On Wednesday night Miller was in the starting lineup again for
Alabama’s game at South Carolina. In a statement before tipoff, the
athletics department threw its support behind Miller, describing him not
as a suspect but as a “cooperative witness”. Gamecocks fans, on the other
hand, were as forgiving as you’d expect, booing and chanting “lock him up”
whenever Miller touched the ball. (Miller, for his part, responded with a
career-high 41 points including the game-winning basket in overtime.)

You would think that Miller’s alleged involvement in the case would give
the Tide pause for thought about whether to play him until all the details
are clear. After all, they kicked Miles off the team as soon as his name
became associated with the case. The difference, Alabama may argue, is
that Miles has been charged with a crime and Miller has not.

Speaking to ESPN, athletics director Greg Byrnes said that the school’s
faith in Miller was reinforced by information that came to light over the
past 48 hours; not least is the contention that Miller was already on his
way to pick up Miles, who had been asking for a ride for the better part
of an hour before relaying that fateful message about the gun. One of the
attorneys further argues that Miller never even touched the gun, much less
saw it.

Some may point out the manifest difference in Alabama’s (correct)
treatment of Miles, a bit-part player, and how they handled Miller, one of
the most talented young stars in the country on a team in the running for
a national title. This much, however, is clear cut: the Crimson Tide have
treated Miller’s involvement in the case as merely a stumbling block in a
successful season, no worse than Miles’s ankle injury or a 15 February
defeat to Tennessee that dropped Alabama in the AP poll.

That Miller has escaped legal culpability has furnished the program with
an awful lot of cover. Asked why Miller won’t be charged, Tuscaloosa
district attorney Paula Whitley told AL.com “there’s nothing we can charge
him with”. Her office would appear to lack proof that Miller was aware he
was transferring the gun to Miles for an unlawful purpose. As if someone
might ask for their gun late at night for a twilight hunt.

What is not in doubt is Alabama’s handling of a case that saw a young
mother die. When confronted with the initial news of Harris’s death,
Crimson Tide coach Nate Oats was quick to pivot focus to his team’s
forthcoming game against Vanderbilt.

In a Tuesday news conference, Oats said the team closed that day’s
practice with a prayer “for the situation”, calling it “sad”. Jarringly,
on Miller’s involvement, Oats saw it as a case of “wrong spot at the wrong
time”, adding “I’m sure NBA scouts will ask.”

And he must have known how terrible it sounded to reduce a woman’s death
to its effect on a player’s NBA prospects, because he later released a
statement through the university labeling his earlier remarks unfortunate.
“In no way did I intend to downplay the seriousness of this situation or
the tragedy of that night”, the statement read.

The fouled-up public relations job was enough to make me wonder where Oats
was receiving crisis management advice. And when I soon found out that he
had reached out to Ray Lewis, the born-again NFL linebacker who had murder
charges against him dropped on the way to a Hall of Fame career, well,
suddenly everything made sense.

Alabama have so much at stake, after all. College basketball is less than
three weeks away from Selection Sunday, where the Tide hope to lock up
their first ever No 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. Miller could well
become the school’s highest draft choice since low-post leviathan Antonio
McDyess went second overall to the Denver Nuggets in 1995. The payoff
potential is especially enormous for Oats, a one-time small-timer who
could well deliver the very thing predecessors like NBA champion guard
Avery Johnson had promised: bringing Bama’s basketball team level in
prominence with Nick Saban’s formidable football factory.

In the aftermath of her daughter’s passing, Harris’s mother reportedly
agonized for days over how to break the news to Jamea’s five-year-old son
while reckoning with her own sense of devastation. That Alabama seems to
be more worried about results on the court than an actual murder should
tell you everything you need to know about the current state of collegiate
athletics and the power of athletic privilege. It’s just unfortunate that
even after Harris’s tragic killing has exposed the paradox at play here,
we’re still left wondering whether her loss will ultimately count.

<https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2023/feb/23/brandon-miller-alabama-
basketball-murder-jamea-harris>
Dead niggras
2023-03-26 05:06:25 UTC
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Brandon Miller is a criminal and should be in jail
After Alabama’s loss to San Diego State on Friday night, bags had to be
packed. For the last time this season, players took off their jerseys and
laid them in the middle of the room in two neat piles. With the roar of
the other regional semifinal in the background, a team aide noticed at
least one was missing.

Freshman forward Noah Clowney had slinked the white jersey off his 6-foot-
10 frame a few minutes prior. But he threw a towel over his head and
dropped the tank top at his feet as his gaze dropped to the ground.
Eventually, a Tide official plucked it away with his fingers.

A run to the school’s first Final Four was halted by 12-0 second-half run
by the Aztecs, ending the winningest year in UA men’s basketball history
at 31-6. All year, a historic freshmen class was complimented with veteran
pieces. Newcomers scored 75.7% of the team’s points before the Sweet 16
and an overwhelming chunk of that will likely need to be replaced in the
2023-24 season.

Miller was Alabama’s second-ever consensus second-team All-American and is
on multiple watchlists for national awards. He averaged 32.7 minutes a
game, scoring 18.8 points per game while shooting 43% from the field. His
run ended in a slump, though, and was quickly asked in the postgame locker
room scrum about a timeline to declare for June’s draft.

“That’s one I can’t say,” Miller said “I think I’m just really focused on
my guys right now.”

Your black ass needs to pay for killing Jamea Harris, and it's gonna. You
are a dead nigga walking.

<https://www.al.com/alabamabasketball/2023/03/alabama-players-address-
their-futures-after-sweet-16-loss-to-san-diego-state.html>

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