
@theartofmadeline

Love Begins

#extradirty
YOU ARE THE REASON
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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noise dept.
Three Goblin Art

Kaledo Art
$LAYYYTER

titsay

Janaina Medeiros
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

★
Not today Justin
cherry valley forever
wallacepolsom

Product Placement
we're not kids anymore.
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@velociwriter
this is so pure
I need tha @ for bruh
@KingKeraun
They both could get it
Brown Baptist Memorial Church, Brooklyn. Akai Gurley’s little brother Malachi Palmer is comforted by his stepfather as he reads at Gurley’s funeral today. An unarmed Gurley was killed in November by the NYPD.
Photo credit: John Minchillo/AP
Peter Liang was also sentenced to 800 hours of community service for his conviction in the 2014 killing of Akai Gurley in a housing project stairwell.
In a Brooklyn courtroom packed with the relatives of his victim, Peter Liang, the former New York City police officer who fatally shot Akai Gurley while on patrol in a housing project stairwell, was sentenced on Tuesday to five years of probation, escaping a prison term in the divisive police misconduct case.
The sentencing in State Supreme Court put to rest a politically contentious case that highlighted concerns over police accountability. It began in November 2014 when Mr. Gurley was hit by a ricocheting bullet in a dark stairwell of the Louis H. Pink Houses in the East New York neighborhood, joining a list of other unarmed black men who had been killed by the police around the country.
Though Mr. Liang, a rookie officer, had faced up to 15 years in prison for his conviction in February on manslaughter and official misconduct charges,Justice Danny K. Chun reduced the charge to criminally negligent homicide moments before the sentencing. The decision not to imprison Mr. Liang followed the recommendation of Ken Thompson, the Brooklyn district attorney. Mr. Thompson announced in March that he would not ask for prison time in part because no evidence existed that Mr. Liang had meant to kill or injure Mr. Gurley.
Mr. Liang was also sentenced to 800 hours of community service.
Leaving courtroom Mr. Gurley’s aunt Herntencia Peteresen called out in the hallway: “There is no justice! Akai Gurley’s life didn’t matter!”
At the three-week trial this winter, the jury heard how Mr. Liang and his partner, Officer Shaun Landau, were on patrol in the Pink Houses on Nov. 20, 2014, when, at one point, Mr. Liang opened a door into an unlighted stairwell and his gun went off. The bullet glanced off a wall and struck Mr. Gurley, 28, who was walking down the stairs with his girlfriend, in his heart.
Though the case was quickly caught up in the furor over the death of Eric Garner, who had died just months earlier while being arrested on Staten Island, the Gurley shooting never neatly fit the narrative of other high-profile police killings.
Mr. Thompson recognized that difference in a sentencing memo issued last month, which referred to Mr. Gurley as “a completely innocent man who lost his life for no reason” but also said Mr. Liang had no prior criminal history and posed no threat to public safety and should therefore not face time in prison.
YOOOOOO THIS US TOO FUCKIN REAAAALLL
When you get smacked back in time #retrocomedy
Who gave y'all these editing skills 😭😭
ayyyyye
Aye yung, this caught me all the way off guard
Lmfaoooo