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I just know Sharpton and Jackson will be all over this race crime....not....




Suspect in killing of Australian Chris Lane tweeted: 'time to st - KYTX CBS 19 Tyler Longview News Weather Sports


 Suspect in killing of Australian Chris Lane tweeted: 'time to start taken life's'


 Posted:  Aug 22, 2013 1:16 PM EST   Updated:  Aug 22, 2013 1:16 PM EST   

 

   

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   (CNN) -- One of the Oklahoma teenagers accused of  killing 23-year-old Australian baseball player Christopher Lane had  previously posted images online showing himself posing with guns and  wads of cash.

 And three days before what police call the indiscriminate shooting, the suspect, 15-year-old James Edwards Jr., tweeted, "With my n****s when it's time to start taken life's."

 Back in April, he tweeted, "90% of white ppl (people) are nasty. #HATE THEM."

 Police in the town of  Duncan have charged Edwards and Chancey Luna, 16, as adults with first  degree felony murder, said Kaylee Chandler, a Stephens County court  clerk.

 

 Michael Jones, their  alleged 17-year-old driver, faces two charges: use of a vehicle in the  discharge of a weapon and accessory after the fact to murder in the  first degree.

 A judge set bond at $1 million for Jones, while no bond was set for Edwards and Luna, Chandler said.

 Police say it was Jones  who ultimately told them, "We were bored and didn't have anything to do,  so we decided to kill somebody."

 The police affidavit lists Edwards and Chancey as black, and Jones as white.

 Case triggers political, racial questions

 The seemingly senseless  killing has left many Americans disgusted. And for some, it triggered a  political question with racial overtones in the wake of the polarizing  Trayvon Martin case, in which an unarmed black teen was killed by a  neighborhood watch volunteer who claimed self-defense. The acquittal of  George Zimmerman, who describes himself as Hispanic, infuriated many  people and triggered protests around the country, as well as remarks  from President Barack Obama.

 Now, some Americans are  asking why this killing, in which the victim was white and the alleged  killers black, has not brought reaction from the president.

 The conservative news  website townhall.com complained Wednesday that the Rev. Al Sharpton, a  prominent civil rights figure, and the president, "who quickly opined on  the George Zimmerman self-defense case against Trayvon Martin, are  silent. Not only should they be publicly condemning the alleged killing,  which is now an international incident, but they should be asking why  the hell these teenagers were 'bored' in the middle of the day. Where  were their parents? Where is Sharpton when it comes to condemning young  black men joining gangs, as these three did?"

 At the White House,  spokesman Josh Earnest said Wednesday he was not familiar with the case.  When asked why the president had not weighed in on it, he noted that  when Obama spoke of the Trayvon Martin case, he also spoke in general  terms "about the impact of violence in communities all across the  country."

 A look at Sharpton's Twitter feed and transcript from his August 21 program did not show any mention of Lane's death.

 On Thursday, the Rev.  Jesse Jackson, another well-known civil rights figure, and his Rainbow  PUSH Coalition issued a statement referring to both the killing of  Christopher Lane and the recent beating of a white 13-year-old boy by  three black teenagers on a school bus in Florida.

 The incidents call "each of us to a collectively resist all forms of violence in our society," he wrote.

 "In particular black on  black violence that disproportionately affects every facet of black life  in America. These horrific episodes that leave all rationally thinking  people appalled and others feeling paralyzed cannot be addressed by our  silence and or abdicating our personal responsibility. We urge all  persons who believe as we do in the (Martin Luther) King principle of  peace all over the globe to rise to the challenge to pursue and promote  peace and its principles. We must learn to live together in peace or we  will most assuredly die apart in our own neglect."

 911 call: 'If you don't hurry, he's gone'

 Lane was a promising young athlete, living his dream of studying in the United States on a baseball scholarship.

 The people of Duncan, an affluent town of less than 25,000 people, welcomed him.

 Lane had gone out for a jog, just at the time the teens had decided to find someone to kill, police say.

 They drove their car behind him and opened fire, hitting him once in the back, authorities say.

 He staggered across the road and fell to his knees, then managed to get up and take a few more steps before collapsing for good.

 A woman who saw him struggling called 911. As she waited for an ambulance, the young man started to turn blue.

 "If you don't hurry, he's gone," the woman warned.

 But it was too late. Paramedics couldn't save Lane. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.

 He was "the most amazing  person I've ever met," his girlfriend, Sarah Harper, told CNN's "AC360"  on Wednesday. "He was the most genuine and kind-hearted guy and would  do anything for anybody at any time and ... made everyone feel special."

 "There is no way to  describe what happened," she said. "It's the hardest thing you could  ever imagine happening. ...There is still a lot of shock and disbelief,  and a lot of anger and sadness."

 "You can't make sense of it," she added. "It's just -- so surreal that anybody could do something like this."

 

 Security camera, call to police aided investigation

 Immediately after the  shooting, witnesses gave police a general description of a black car.  Security footage from a nearby Mexican restaurant showed what could have  been the car. But hours passed with no sign of whether there would be  another killing.

 Then, four hours after  the shooting, a man called police, saying he could see three juveniles  with guns -- and they apparently want to kill someone, said Duncan  police Chief Danny Ford.

 Officers responded to a  home and found the car in a church parking lot across the street from  the caller's house. The suspects were inside, and they provided enough  information to be arrested.

 Two days later, Edwards  offered up details of the case, police said. The teens had been inside a  house when Lane ran by, and the group decided he'd be the target -- to  cure their boredom, Ford says.

 Call for U.S. tourism boycott

 The case has triggered fury among many people in Australia.

 "It is another example  of murder mayhem on Main Street," former Australian Deputy Prime  Minister Tim Fischer told CNN's Piers Morgan.

 "People thinking of  going to the U.S.A. for business or tourist trips should think carefully  about it, given the statistical fact you are 15 times more likely to be  shot dead in the U.S.A. than in Australia, per capita."

 A chart in  the Washington Post, using data from The Organization for Economic  Cooperation and Development, shows Australia to have among the lowest  gun-related killings in the developed world. The United States had the  highest. Former Prime Minister John Howard told CNN's Christiane Amanpour in March that gun control laws instituted after a mass shooting were responsible for the low number.

 One Australian  newspaper, under mug shots of the three suspects, ran the headline:  "Faces of Evil: The teens American police say shot our star."

 A Facebook page set up in Lane's honor, R.I.P Christopher Lane, had more than 67,000 followers by Thursday morning, with posts describing his slaying as senseless and tragic.

 Lane grew up in Oak  Park, a northern suburb of Melbourne in the southern state of Victoria.  He showed sporting talent early on and started playing T-ball, a  children's version of baseball, at age 7, according to Essendon Baseball  Club president Tony Cornish.

 "It's shocked our world.  The baseball community in Australia is a tight-knit group. Most  baseballers know most baseballers, and everyone's shattered," he said.

 Cornish said Lane was a  "very good athlete" who could have played Australian Rules football but  chose baseball because it offered him the chance of a college education  in America.

 "If it didn't work out,  he could have come back to Australia with an education and also been a  much better baseballer. He would have been an elite player in Australia  and at our club. That's the type of kid he is -- he created a 'win-  win,' in a way, for himself," he said.

 Harper said Lane loved to travel and loved the competitiveness of baseball.

 Memorial game in Lane's honor

 Lane's friends and family are being invited to a memorial game in his honor Sunday, and a donation page has been set up to raise money for a memorial fund in his name.

 Harper visited the scene  of Lane's death Tuesday. It's a grassy curb on a suburban street where  flowers have been placed with messages of regret and condolence.

 "I'm going to miss him  forever. But I'm really glad that I got the four years with him," Harper  told reporters. She and her family will travel to Melbourne for Lane's  funeral on a date still to be set.

 Lane's distraught  father, Peter, told the media: "He's left his mark as we know, and you  know there's not going to be any good come out of this, because it was  just so senseless."

 A former student and  classmate at East Central University where Lane was studying described  him as "a charming guy, genuinely good person, with great character and  had a love for life."

 "As cliched as it  sounds, Chris was the kind of guy you want your sons to grow up to be  and that you want your daughters to marry. It just breaks my heart  knowing how much more he could have brought to this world as a husband,  father, son, brother and friend," Sam Malchar said.

 The shooting took place one day before the three suspects were due to return to school.

 Security was tightened around the Duncan School District after anonymous phone threats were made to Duncan High School.

 Schools opened as normal  Wednesday, but students were not allowed to leave for lunch and parents  were being told they could keep their children at home if they wished.


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