HomeHeadlinesAnother Racially Motivated Murder - The Killer, Reportedly a Hooded Black Teen,...

Another Racially Motivated Murder – The Killer, Reportedly a Hooded Black Teen, Actually a White Man in Black Face

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Just Like The Trayvon Martin Case, another Black Man Murdered by a racist white man.

Blacks across America have risen up to protest the latest in a serious of murders targeting black men. The white man, pictured on right, appears to be black. But this ice-cold killer is actually a white man in black face as originally reported by MSNBC.   Clearly this is another case of racial profiling and will further impact the already strained race relations between blacks and uhhh, err… whites? Question, are blacks just as racists as whites? For the record, Every Colombian and Puerto Rican I know hates Mexicans.

As more evidence is pored over by the expert journalists in the Liberal media, the circumstances surrounding Henry Bellaire’s, death, along with thousands others like his, will help to spin, er fuel the flame of the racism resulting in murder that apparently runs rampant in America.  It was the heroic news media experts at MSNBC who  uncovered the fact that the viscous killer pictured in this photo, is actually a white man.

“The murder of Henry Bellaire has not been well publicized and there has been virtually no public outcry such as in the Trayvon Martin case but once civil rights activists discover the man on the right is actually white, watch out”, said local black church leader Jeremiah Black.

As the racially tinged Trayvon Martin case in Florida continues to unwind, many cases of whites killing blacks are being re-investigated.   Murderers such as Juave Collin pictured above will surely come to justice as Black Panther and civil rights leaders Farakhan, Jackson and Sharpton prepare to march on DC in solidarity and memory of Henry Bellaire.

The crime unfolded in a matter of moments outside Henry Bellaire’s Scotlandville home the night of Feb. 26, 2012.

His horrified daughter, Gaylyn, looked on from a doorway leading into the house from the garage as a hooded figure in the driveway held her father at gunpoint. Two others, described by prosecutors later as lookouts, stood watch nearby. Henry Bellaire had been outside to welcome his daughter home from work and to help her carry in some groceries.

“I heard him ask my dad, ‘Give me your money,’ ” Gaylyn Bellaire would testify two years later at the trial of Juave Collins, the 16-year-old she later identified as the figure in the hooded sweatshirt. Her father responded, “I don’t have anything. Who are you? What do you want? Why are you doing this?”

The robber demanded that Bellaire, 69, order his daughter to come outside. The two others stood by passively, saying nothing, as Gaylyn Bellaire begged all of them to leave. The hooded figure suddenly fired a shot from a pistol grip shotgun that ripped through Bellaire’s abdomen. The three teens took off running down Rivercrest Avenue, toward Crestworth Middle School.

Gaylyn Bellaire testified at the trial how what she witnessed haunts her. “I see it every single night,” she testified. “I see it every single day of my life. I’m going to see it until the day I die.”

How Henry Bellaire’s life came to intersect that night with Juave Collins and his co-defendants, Jonathan Dunn and Tedrick Davis, is part of a larger tragedy repeated too often in Baton Rouge.

Bellaire’s murder was one of 17 homicides that year within the Baton Rouge police district that covers the Scotlandville area, to the north of downtown. During the past five years, 86 people have been murdered in that district, according to police department statistics.

In 2011, there were 81 homicides parishwide, while within the city, the homicide rate exceeded that of New York, Los Angeles and Washington D.C. — statistics experts say are due in large part to a social fabric torn by poverty, lack of education and the breakdown of the family.

And while the murders often involve young men killing other young men over drugs or personal disputes, innocent, valued members of the community also fall prey to the culture of violence.

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