MPD: 2-year-old boy accidentally fatally shot in Walker s Point, one arrested cbs58.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbs58.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Shah says lawmakers have been discussing accountability and use of force measures for a while now. Still, she doesn’t expect the bills to bring the type of fundamental change activists are looking for. I would argue that these are the kinds of bills that, you know, add on to a policing system, and is not requiring that kind of significant shift in how police interact with communities and how they what they see their role is in those spaces, she says.
At the height of racial justice protests last summer, Gov. Tony Evers and Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes put forth several reforms, including a complete ban on chokeholds.
Father punches 5-year-old son to death over cheesecake
Travis Stackhouse (Image source: Milwaukee County [Wisconsin] Jail)A Milwaukee man pleaded guilty to killing his 5-year-old son by punching him to death because he ate his Father’s Day cheesecake in June 2019.
The
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reports that Travis Stackhouse, 30, pleaded to second-degree reckless homicide, child abuse and child neglect in the death of his 5-year-old son, Sir Amer Stackhouse.
Stackhouse seemingly broke and copped to the plea after two days of reliving the excruciating details from witnesses, and then prosecutors reportedly replayed his taped confession after his son died.
The Milwaukee District Attorney’s office said during the trial that the father became enraged that his kids were eating most of his Father’s Day cheesecake. Stackhouse lost it and punched his son and smacked the boy’s face with the back of his hand, which contains metal from surgery, the Wisconsin newspaper repo
Chisholm says It wasn t just Kenosha factoring into timing of release. //end headline wrapper ?>Get a daily rundown of the top stories on Urban Milwaukee
Protesters gather outside of the Milwaukee Safety Building waiting for the Cole family to come out with DA Chisholm’s decision. Photo by Isiah Holmes/Wisconsin Examiner.
On April 8,
Wisconsin Examiner reported on documents indicating that the Milwaukee District Attorney’s announcement of a decision in the shooting of 17-year-old
Alvin Cole by a former Wauwatosa officer was delayed due to the ongoing unrest in Kenosha. The records, obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests with the U.S. Marshals Service, also suggested that law enforcement anticipated a clearance in the case more than a month in advance.