Her name is Christine Summers. Odds are this is the first time you’ve encountered her name or how she died. Were white privilege real and the systemic racism truly holding up all of American life, you’d know every detail about her life and how she died (and who murdered her).
During the Summer of George Floyd rage, we’ve seen multiple anti-white attacks by blacks all across the USA. There has been virtually zero national media coverage of this events.
Enter another story of anti-white violence from a black individual into the mix. Her name is Christine Summers. The 53-year-old was a wife, a mother, a grandmother, and worked in the vocation of truck driving to provide for her family, as her husband had become disabled.
She was murdered by a black male, who also attacked white cops and displayed vicious anti-white animus according to the police. Her murderer said he “killed a white lady,” and tried to blame it on the president, in my not so humble opinion it’s Obama’s fault, Eric Holder’s fault, Joe Biden’s fault and the fault of racist liar Nikole Hannah Jones, and the NY Times for their 1619 fraud One can only imagine how the constant promotion of the 1619 Project (all of American history is nothing more than the perpetuation of racism against blacks) and a corporate media dedicated to constantly promoting the idea every failure a black individual faces in America is due to the collective power of white racism/structural inequalities/systemic racism/implicit bias/white privilege is motivating these types of attacks from people with obvious mental issues. A law suit on behalf of the families of white victims of the racist hate inculcated and pushed by the Obamas, Biden’s, Holder, Jones and their media hacks for the hate crimes they have created with lies, abuses of power and condoned, the hate crimes of the unconstitutional “protected classes” created by hate crime laws that condone discrimination, and rationalize ignoring the civil rights of white people. Summers
was driving a truck for RTR Transportation in Tennessee. She was a wife, mother, grandmother and had been driving a truck for about 30 years.
Summers was found dead about 3:20 a.m. that Wednesday on the side of Interstate 59/20 near the Valley Road exit. Her dentures had been knocked out of her mouth, and she suffered a fatal head injury. Gipson was taken into custody just over an hour later after callers reported seeing a naked man on Allison Bonnett Memorial Drive.
A preliminary hearing in the case against Gipson was held today before Bessemer Cutoff Circuit Judge David Carpenter. Gipson, however, was not in the courtroom. Carpenter informed the court that the defendant, who also is charged with attacking two police officers and flooding his jail cell, had just recently assaulted a jailer and was too “unstable” and “dangerous” – both to himself and others – to have present in court.
The case is being prosecuted by assistant district attorneys Brent Butler and Jerry Carter. Attorney Victor Revill is representing Gipson. Summer’s disabled husband was watching the proceedings via Zoom from his Tennessee home.
State Bureau of Investigation Agent Vincent Cunningham testified to the chain of events that happened that day. He said he arrived at the I-59/20 scene about 6:15 a.m. to find Summers on her back and covered up near her tractor-trailer with multiple other law enforcement agencies on site, including the Jefferson Count Sheriff’s Office, Alabama State Troopers and Hueytown police. Scrawled in the dirt on the back of the tractor-trailer, Cunningham said, was “Trump 2020.”
The investigation showed that Summers had called 911, telling a dispatcher she had seen a Black male walking on the interstate and thought she may have hit him. In reality, it’s been ascertained that Gipson threw a rock at Summer’s truck which led her to believe she had hit the man. While still on the phone with the dispatcher, Summers got out of the truck to investigate. The dispatcher then heard her began to scream, “Get away from me.”
“She never came back to the phone,” Cunningham testified.
Gipson was taken into custody about 4:30 a.m. by Hueytown police after they had received calls of an unclothed Black male in the roadway. Cunningham testified that arresting officers reported that Gipson was sweating profusely and made “spontaneous” statements about “killing