Mike Brown’s parents went on a whirlwind tour of liberal morning TV shows this morning, trying to drum up more violence.
These delusional people say that they don’t believe any of the evidence that was used in the Grand Jury, and says that her son “would never provoke anyone”, and “wouldn’t do anything to anybody”.
“I don’t believe a word of it. I know my son far too well, he would never do anything like that. He would never provoke anyone to do anything to him and he wouldn’t do anything to anybody. I don’t believe a word of it.”
Lesley McSpadden is living in a fantasy world, and if she believes that her son was the angel she says, she must also be mentally challenged, because I can show her a video of her son acting like a hardened criminal as he robs the liquor store.
The truth is that Mike Brown was killed because he tried to strong-arm attack one too many people that day, and the last person he attacked was a police officer with a gun. He was also killed because he had thugs and terrible people as parents, and must not have had any decent role models in his life to tell him that doing certain things will get him in trouble, or worse.
We feel that Mike Brown’s parents are most likely the people responsible for turning their son into the criminal thug that he looked like in the video of him and Dorian Johnson strong-arm robbing a liquor store.
Maybe if the liquor store employee has a gun available to him, Michael Brown would have been shot and killed minutes before, but the man that Mike Brown roughed up seemed to be unarmed.
Honestly, I feel bad for any parent that has lost their child to violence, or for any reason, but Michael Brown’s parents should be ashamed of themselves. They should be ashamed for how they raised their son, and they should be ashamed for how they have acted since the death of their son, and they should be ashamed and arrested for inciting the violence and arson that destroyed the city of Ferguson on November 24th.
The parents of Michael Brown don’t believe Ferguson officer Darren Wilson’s story that their son was the aggressor in the Aug. 9 deadly shooting that sparked months of protests in Ferguson.
Speaking to “CBS This Morning” on Wednesday, Michael Brown Sr. and Lesley McSpadden said they believe Wilson was lying on what occurred during his confrontation with Michael Brown.
“I don’t believe a word of it. I know my son far too well, he would never do anything like that,” McSpadden said. “He would never provoke anyone to do anything to him and he wouldn’t do anything to anybody. I don’t believe a word of it.”
Wilson told ABC in an interview that all he wanted to do was live.
During his grand jury testimony, Wilson told jurors that he initially encountered Brown and a friend walking in a street and, when he told them to move to a sidewalk, Brown responded with an expletive.
Wilson then noticed that Brown had a handful of cigars, “and that’s when it clicked for me,” he said, referring to a radio report minutes earlier of a robbery at a nearby convenience store. A video allegedly shows Brown shoving the store clerk while stealing cigars.
Wilson said he asked a dispatcher to send additional police, then backed his vehicle up in front of Brown and his friend. As he tried to open the door, Wilson said Brown slammed it back shut.
The officer said he then pushed Brown with the door and Brown hit him in the face. Wilson told grand jurors he was thinking: “What do I do not to get beaten inside my car.”
McSpadden said that image of her son on video shouldn’t define him.
“My son doesn’t have a history of violence. One image does not paint a person’s entire life or their entire past on how they were,” she said. “We all do have a past. … If something happened in that store, and that’s a big if, that could’ve been dealt with. But you didn’t have to do what you did. He didn’t do what he had to do, he did what he wanted to do.”
Michael Brown Sr. claims that Wilson was known for falsifying his police reports.
“We’ve just been disrespected all the way around,” he told “CBS This Morning.”
During his interview with ABC, Wilson said that nothing could’ve been done differently in the altercation and that he has a clear conscience because “I know I did my job right.”
“How can your conscience been clear after killing somebody, even if it was an accidental death?” McSpadden questioned. She added, “I don’t think he wanted to kill my son, but he wanted to kill someone.”
Wilson being cleared of any charges in Brown’s shooting death touched off more violent protests in Ferguson, and other cities across the U.S. More than 120 people have been arrested over two nights of protests in Ferguson and St. Louis. During Monday’s protests, dozens of businesses and buildings were looted and set on fire.
The Justice Department has also launched a broad probe into the Ferguson Police Department, looking for patterns of discrimination.
Attorney General Eric Holder said the department aims to complete those investigations as quickly as possible “to restore trust, to rebuild understanding and to foster cooperation between law enforcement and community members.”
Regardless of the outcome of the federal investigations, Brown’s family also could file a wrongful-death lawsuit against Wilson.
Speaking in Chicago, President Barack Obama said “the frustrations that we’ve seen are not just about a particular incident. They have deep roots in many communities of color who have a sense that our laws are not always being enforced uniformly or fairly.”
Stand Up To Government Corruption and Hypocrisy – usbacklash.org