Tag Archives: Sacramento Bee

Protests of Zimmerman verdict mostly peaceful, sporadic violence, vandalism reported

Communities nationwide braced for a day of demonstration, and possibly even dissent, as the public awoke Sunday to learn a six-person Florida jury had acquitted George Zimmerman of second-degree murder, overnight, in the February 2012 killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

Protesters on the West Coast massed, and in some cases marched, in four California cities, beneath the lingering sunshine that had already yielded to twilight and nightfall by the time the decision had been rendered shortly before 10 p.m. on the mostly quiescent East Coast.

Mostly, the California demonstrations proved peaceful, although matters were marred by sporadic reports of stray violence and vandalism, including the halt of a passenger train, the burning of American and California flags, the lighting of small fires in city roadways, shattered storefront windows and the spray painting of a courthouse, as well as the damaging of a police squad car.

In San Francisco, raucous, yet peaceful protesters marched on the city’s Mission District neighborhood; while about 200 in Los Angeles convened for a vigil in Leimart Park, or the city’s historically black neighborhood. City News Service in Los Angeles said, at one point, a smaller group halted an Expo Line train, somewhere within the city, but police could not immediately confirm details of that account.

Los Angeles Police Department Lt. Andy Neiman said another group of 50 to 100 demonstrators marched around midnight.

“There was a period where crowds were running among vehicles, but police dissuaded them,” he reportedly said, although he added that he knew of no arrests.

Meanwhile, in Oakland, police reported about 100 people protested, with some among the crowd breaking windows and starting fires in the streets. As the protest eventually fizzled, the office of police information added that it had no word of any arrests as of 2 a.m., PST.

However, some Oakland marchers reportedly vandalized a police squad car, and police were — at one point – forced to form a line to block the protesters’ path.

The Oakland Tribune reported some downtown office windows had been shattered, and footage from a television helicopter portrayed people starting fires in the street and spray painting anti-police graffiti. Protesters, there, also reportedly burned an American, and California state flag and spray painted Alameda County’s Davidson courthouse.

In Sacramento, more than 40 people gathered at City Hall, and the Sacramento Bee reported protesters riotously chanting: “What do we want? Justice. When do you we want it? Now. For who? Trayvon.” Meanwhile, a banner unfurled behind the speakers read, “No justice, no peace!” as the crowd cried out in unison.

Meanwhile, in Florida, media outlets reported mostly subdued sadness, and no violence or large gatherings.

“I’m sad,” was the only response Miami Gardens barber Steve Bass could muster to the Miami Herald, when asked for his opinion regarding the verdict. Bass had reportedly cut Trayvon Martin’s hair since the teen was a toddler.

Outside the Seminole County courthouse, where the trial took place, the Orlando Sentinel reported that a bewildered crowd of about 150 received the not-guilty verdict with chants of, “No justice, no peace.”

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California high school teacher dies in freak bicycle accident

A California high school teacher and coach has died after a freak accident in which he was impaled by a parking lot gate while riding his bicycle.

Marion Adams, Rio Linda High School‘s multimedia teacher and track and field coach, was heading home from a practice Monday night when the accident occurred, the Sacramento Bee reports. He turned around while riding his bike to say goodbye to a student when he hit into the metal gate.

Adams died early Tuesday, despite surviving two surgeries to treat internal wounds.

“Marion was the most popular and nicest man on campus; just a great guy,” Mike Morris, the school’s varsity football team coach and athletic director, told the Sacramento Bee. “It’s a huge loss, devastating to our community.”

Hundreds attended a vigil held for Adams on Tuesday night, CBS 13 reports.

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Branch Rickey Bible signed by 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates surfaces in California

A California book repairer reportedly knew something was unusual when she opened up an old Bible found last week amid thousands of materials donated to the Friends of the Sacramento Public Library.

But little did she know that the 31 signatures on the Bible’s first page along with “Pirates 1953” written in blue ink were a piece of baseball history. Even though that year’s team from Pittsburgh finished in last place at 54-100, the signatures not only included a future member of baseball’s Hall of Fame, the book itself was once owned by a legendary Cooperstown enshrinee, Branch Rickey.

“The Bible had been sitting in my shop for months waiting to get repaired,” Murphy, 65, told the Sacramento Bee. “No one wanted it.”

The Bible was signed by 30 players and manager Fred Haney from the 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates and was given to general manager Rickey, who was best known for breaking Major League Baseball‘s color barrier by signing Jackie Robinson six years earlier when he ran the Brooklyn Dodgers.

So, how exactly did Rickey’s Bible end up in a donation bin in Sacramento?

Rickey’s grandson, Branch Barrett Rickey, said it’s a mystery to him as well.

“It’s the first I’ve heard of the Bible,” Branch B. Rickey said by phone from Texas.

Branch Rickey, who was posthumously inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame, died in 1965. About a dozen of the 30 Pirates players who signed the Bible, including Hall of Fame member Ralph Kiner and broadcaster Joe Garagiola, are still living. But of the five reached by The Bee, none recalled signing the Bible.

“I don’t remember signing it, but maybe I did,” said Eddy Fitz Gerald, a former catcher who lives in Folsom.

Branch B. Rickey, president of the Pacific Coast League, said a number of his relatives live in California, including a sister in Davis and a cousin in Sacramento. But both said they didn’t know about the Bible.

“Much of the stuff from my grandfather was parceled out among five daughters and a daughter-in-law,” Branch B. Rickey said. “The division of who got what was very informal.”

He said it was possible his grandfather had “given the Bible as a gift to a dear friend,” but acknowledged “there’s any number of speculations.”

Baseball collectors told Murphy the restored Bible could fetch as much as $800, the newspaper reports.

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Children's book of rules returned to young authors

A children’s book of life rules with simple admonitions such as don’t talk back and eat the food you are served has been returned to its young authors after it was found in the parking lot of a California big box store.

The book was discovered by 20-year-old employee Raymond Flores, who met with 10-year-old Isabelle Busath and 8-year-old Isabella Thordsen on Wednesday at a Sacramento-area home.

Flores told the Sacramento Bee the two cousins wrote the 157 numbered rules because they wanted children at school to follow them.

“Don’t get into other people’s business. Don’t call each other names. Clean up your messes. No eating other people’s food. One hundred eighteen is don’t keep saying please if someone says no,” Flores said. “I like that.”

Other rules listed in the book included: “Ware [sic] your seatbelt,” “Resicle [sic],” and “Put your shoes by the front door when you take them off.”

Flores found the book adorable and contacted news stations after discovering it. He learned the identity of the two authors through one of the stations.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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