Connect with us

Midwest

Illinois woman allegedly fights elementary school principal after dropping baggies of cocaine: report

Published

on

Illinois woman allegedly fights elementary school principal after dropping baggies of cocaine: report

A woman has been arrested in Illinois after allegedly fighting with the principal of an elementary school who had told her during a meeting that police would be called because she dropped baggies of cocaine, reports say. 

The incident involving Shakeda Barfield happened on Wednesday morning at Welsh Elementary School in Rockford, according to WIFR.  

The station, citing police, says Barfield was at the school for a meeting with the principal when she allegedly dropped baggies of suspected cocaine. When the principal picked the baggies up, Barfield reportedly became upset when she was told that police would be called to the scene. 

The 33-year-old is accused of punching the principal several times in the face, scratching his face and arms, biting him and using his tie to strangle him, WIFR reports. 

UNIVERSITIES OF WISCONSIN INTRODUCE POLICY REQUIRING COLLEGE LEADERS TO STAY NEUTRAL ON CONTROVERSIAL ISSUES 

Advertisement

Shakeda Barfield has been arrested following the alleged fight at Welsh Elementary School on Wednesday, Sept. 11. (Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office)

She is now facing charges including possession of a controlled substance, aggravated battery to a school employee and disorderly conduct, according to media reports.  

As of Saturday, Barfield is being held without bond at the Winnebago County Jail, records show. 

NEBRASKA MAN WHO POSED AS HIGH SCHOOLER AND COMMITTED SEX CRIMES IS DESCRIBED AS ‘PREDATOR OF THE WORST KIND’ 

Welsh Elementary School in Illinois

Welsh Elementary School is located in Rockford, Ill., a city west of Chicago. (Google Maps)

It’s not immediately clear what the meeting was about. 

Advertisement

As the brawl was unfolding, the school was temporarily placed on lockdown, according to WIFR. 

The principal reportedly suffered non-life-threatening injuries during the incident. 

Winnebago County Sheriff's Office vehicle

Barfield is being held at the Winnebago County Jail. (Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office)

 

The Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Saturday by Fox News Digital. 

Advertisement

Read the full article from Here

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Detroit, MI

Steve Yzerman on contract talks with Detroit Red Wings’ Moritz Seider: ‘Not far apart’

Published

on

Steve Yzerman on contract talks with Detroit Red Wings’ Moritz Seider: ‘Not far apart’


play

Now that he has locked up Lucas Raymond for eight years, will Moritz Seider be far behind?

“We continue to talk,” Detroit Red Wings general manager Steve Yzerman said Tuesday. “I’m hopeful we can get a deal done at some point – sooner than later would be better for both parties. I don’t think we’re terribly far apart but we’ll hopefully we can progress to get him here as soon as possible.”

Advertisement

The “here” would be ideally be Traverse City, where the Wings are slated to begin training camp Thursday. It’s not the biggest deal if Seider misses that – but the longer it drags out, the more disruptive it will be.

MORE: Detroit Red Wings sign Lucas Raymond to 8-year extension worth more than $8M per year

After signing Raymond for years with an average annual value of $8,075,000 Monday, shortly after signing Jonatan Berggren for one year at $825,000, the Wings have about $8.7 million left in their coffer. It would be huge for them if Seider, 23, agrees to a deal with such a cap hit – the same as that carried by captain Dylan Larkin – since fellow hotshot young defenseman Rasmus Dahlin is getting $11 million annually from the Buffalo Sabres.

Raymond, who signed an eight-year, $64.6 million deal Monday, spent part of his off season training with Seider in Seider’s native Germany.

Advertisement

“Both me and Mo first of all are really, really good friends,” Raymond said. “We’ve kind of gone through this journey together, almost every step of the way. We came into the league together. We’re in the same situation this summer. Of course we talk. I think for us it’s more just nice to get your mind of things, hang out as friends. You talk enough about the contract with agents and people asking. For both of us, it’s just nice to hang out as buddies and work out together. I had a great time in Germany and it was really fun seeing him.”

Contact Helene St. James at hstjames@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter @helenestjames. Read more on the Detroit Red Wings and sign up for our Red Wings newsletter. Her latest book, “The Franchise: Detroit Red Wings: A Curated History of the Red Wings,” will be available October 2024. Her books, “On the Clock: Behind the Scenes with the Detroit Red Wings at the NHL Draft,” and “The Big 50: The Men and Moments that made the Detroit Red Wings” are available from  Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Triumph Books. Personalized copies available via her e-mail.





Source link

Continue Reading

Milwaukee, WI

Milwaukee's King Center: More than a center, more than neighborhood trauma

Published

on

Milwaukee's King Center: More than a center, more than neighborhood trauma


Symphony Swan-Zawadi has lots of fond summer memories in Milwaukee. Thinking back on her childhood, most of them happened at the King Center on Milwaukee’s near north side. While she had fun all over the center, from the gym, to the outdoor theater, it was room 214 that was her favorite, Ms. Ramona’s art room.

That was where I learned how to draw portraits and still life,” Swan-Zawadi says. “And to this day, I still model how I draw portraits off of what I learned in Ms. Ramona’s art room.”

That practice paid off. Today, Swan-Zawadi is a practicing artist who works for a national arts foundation. She’s also been an art teacher and a community artist and was named Shepherd Express’s “Milwaukeean of the Year” in 2023.

“It is in my blood and I had opportunities here at the King Center to express that and explore that,” she says.

Advertisement

The King Center opened up almost 50 years ago in 1976 and since then has been a place of gathering and programming for the city. The center isn’t just a building but an undeniable part of Black Milwaukee’s history. But the narrative for what this place is changed locally, and nationally, a few months ago when five Columbus police in town for the Republican National Convention, shot and killed Milwaukee resident, Samuel Sharpe Jr.

Since then, the neighborhood has been portrayed as a place of homelessness, despair and trauma. And while there are issues that folks in the neighborhood and center are working hard to counter this — this isn’t the story they’re familiar with.

Change is coming

The King Center is currently in the middle of a multi-million dollar renovation, which includes a new roof, knocking down a few interior walls to add space and lots of high-gloss white paint. Dee McCollum is the director of the center and she says the goal is to make the center bright, exactly how she wants people to feel when they walk inside.

“This was a long time coming and I can’t wait for folks to see us when we reopen,” McCollum says.

Advertisement

McCollum, or Ms. Dee, as everyone calls her, says parts of the center are still open, but many of the community partners aren’t here while construction is ongoing. Some partners include Fathers Making Progress and Summit, which works with youth programming, incoming partners that will help people transition out of foster care, and a basketball and literacy program, which will be led by Milwaukee hoops legend Mike Taylor.

King Center's Back to School event in 2015

Provided by the King Center

/

WUWM

Advertisement
King Center’s Back to School event in 2015

Ms. Dee says the center’s busiest days are still their fourth of July, Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations. A time when she shares all the services and programming offered by the center to community members. The center also provides a number of community spaces, which includes meeting rooms for rent and other recreational spaces, like the full workout gym.

“I waited until the ripe age of 60 to start bodybuilding and I’m focusing on creating the image I have within [and] making it real,” Enrique says, who’s been coming to the center since it opened. “I must have been about 11 or 12, I played pool, I used to practice piano … Mr Pitts was the director and I would come and I would do arts and crafts … This was the place to be.”

If you’re from Milwaukee, you might not have known about this gym, but you probably heard of the other one here – Al Moreland’s legendary boxing gym.

Al Moreland

Provided by the King Center

Advertisement

/

WUWM

Al Moreland

On a Tuesday night in the middle of summer the gym has a few elementary-aged kids swinging wildly in the ring. Moms are on the benches a few feet away watching and shouting instructions, “keep your guard up!” There are a couple of heavy bags and lockers lining the outside of the room. And in the back of gym is a smaller space with some free weights and treadmills. It may look modest, but this is where some of Milwaukee’s baddest champs have come from.

“This is giving me an outlet and giving me … a family with the same goals [because] everybody is coming from not the best situations,” David Powell says, who started boxing about a year ago. “We help each other, we motivate each other. Every day you’re not motivated but when you got like-minded people around you they help you get back up even when it’s hard for you to get yourself back up.”

Coach Moreland passed in 2009, that’s when his brother Tom took over. But for the past few years, Ernie Haines has run this space.

Advertisement

Haines is trim with quick hands and mirrored lens glasses, he looks like he would be trouble for anyone inside the ropes. He’s trained professional boxers, loves training pros he says. But his calling was to train kids, specifically kids being bullied. He’s talked about this with his own son’s experience. After exploring all options, it was time to teach him how to defend himself. Now he offers this to all kids who enter the center’s boxing gym.

“This is where my wealth lies,” Haines says. “Wealth has nothing to do with the money, it has everything to do with what you leave behind, your legacy. So that’s where I’m at right now.”

Boxing exhibition at the center's opening in 1976

Provided by the King Center

/

Advertisement

WUWM

Boxing exhibition at the center’s opening in 1976

While Al Moreland’s gym has shaped and molded pro fighters, there’s another gym that pros have historically come to here: the basketball gym.

“There were great players coming through here like Marquette players, they had some of the Bucks [here too],” says Charles Dupree. “A lot of great pickup games.”

Dupree has been a member of the center since it opened and says he just shoots around now, no more pickup games for him. He also says the trash talking here was legendary, it’s what made the games so competitive. He says he was more of a silent killer than a talker.

“I just kinda let the game speak for itself,” Dupree says.

Advertisement

The other community by the center

The center is close to multiple outreach programs and organizations for the unhoused, including Repairers of the Breach. Therefore, a number of the city’s houseless population lives close, including in a pocket park just down the block, which is filled with tents. The center, and it’s park, by proximity end up as a place for many of the city’s unsheltered population.

Ms. Dee says they used to open the center for some of the guys to shower and eat, but there were real safety concerns due to untreated mental health issues. She says she finds quiet times, times when kids aren’t in the building, to let folks in and clean up. But she says she wasn’t always this way. Certain events changed her, softened her, like one winter morning when she was coming into work and saw a man behind the building.

“He had his little blanket and he was laying on a vent,” McCollum says. “So I went over to him, I was like, ‘You really can’t lay there.’ He knew my name and he was like, ‘Well, Ms. Dee, this is the safest place for me to be because it’s the warmest place.’”

Ms. Dee and the man talked more and she was surprised to learn he had a college degree. She called him ‘extremely intelligent.” She also says his mental health issues were evident. And since no one was in the building yet, she let him in to freshen up. After that interaction, she was a mess the rest of the day.

“I was so emotional, and I’m trying not to get the way again, but I was so emotional taken back because we all have prejudgments of people,” McCollum says. “We assume that because somebody is homeless they’re uneducated or they don’t wanna do better or they chose to be in that position that they’re in. And if you have a conversation with someone you’ll find out that’s not the case.”

Advertisement

Dee McCollum

Provided by the King Center

/

WUWM

Dee McCollum

A lot of people jumped to prejudgments a few months ago when five Columbus police shot and killed Samuel Sharpe Jr. Ms. Dee knew Sharpe, and his loyal dog, Ices. She says he was nothing like he’s been portrayed.

Advertisement

“He was like a gentle warrior,” McCollum says. “He was always talking about the ‘better man.’ He would not talk about what he was experiencing that day, or that he lived in a tent. He never talked about any [of those] things. He always talked about the betterment of men … he always talked about what we could do to [be] better men.”

“The King Center is the heartbeat of the community,” boxing director Ernie Haines says. “Anything that’s needed, even if families come in here indigent, there is a program here that will help them or refer them to someone that can help them immediately.”

While the King Center still provides so many services and a sense of community like it once did, many people talked about how the center changed. How kids don’t show up like they used to. How the park isn’t activated like it once was. Back then there were more sports teams, more staff and more kids playing outside.

Symphony Swan-Zawadi says it’s not that the neighborhood changed, although it has, but the center.

An all-around systems failure

“When you know this area, oh the kids are here, they just don’t feel the same agency and ownership of this place that maybe like my generation did,” Swan-Zawadi says. “It is an all around systems failure that we are experiencing across the city.”

Advertisement

Swan-Zawadi says that parents are working harder than ever before, more people are just trying to survive, and most importantly, local and state funding to places like the King Center has slowed. Do more with less is what they’ve heard.

“We know that the communities that have the least crime are the ones that have the most resources,” says Swan-Zawadi. “When we begin to consider the dignity of Black folks in this city, then we won’t have to fight for, to eliminate food deserts.”

Or struggle to provide safe and affordable housing, or properly fund our schools and community centers, she says.

“There are always these conversations about Kia boys and violence and … it’s like we’re not making any investments,” Swan-Zawadi says. “There’s an African proverb that says, ‘Young people will burn the village down in order to feel it’s warmth’ [and] because we are not being intentional about creating spaces and opportunities and just wrapping our arms around the young people, the oppressed people, you get what you get.”

“I’m 67, I’m ready to not do anything,” says McCollum. “But I can’t because I always think about Sam Sharpe, I always think about that young man on my vent, I always think about the least man that we’re supposed to be thinking of. And if I can’t be assured that somebody’s gonna pick up that ball [keeping the center open], then I’m gonna keep doing it.”

Advertisement

The King Center isn’t what it once was, but that doesn’t mean it’s not critical to the city and Black Milwaukee. And it sure doesn’t mean that connections still don’t happen here organically every day.

As Swan-Zawadi was leaving the center she ran into an old friend, one she went to summer camp with back in the day. He’s here to get some shots up in the basketball gym.

“Shane! How are you?” she yells. “Oh, I ain’t seen you in forever. You don’t never post on Facebook.”

Charles Dupree, who came in to meet with Ms. Dee walks over. He knows Shane from the court, he says they’re both shooters. Pretty soon all three are talking about how the center used to be and why that version of the center might be more important than ever before.

“We have to teach people how to be in spaces with each other and I think the pandemic only exacerbated what was already brewing,” says Swan-Zawadi to the others. “Once we can get kids in here and say, ‘No, no, that’s not how you engage. That’s not how you have a conflict, go run these laps or go make some art,’ but that requires money and people who care and policy to support it.”

Advertisement

Dupree holds out his hand and introduces himself. With a smile he tells her he agrees and hopes to see the center back to what he grew up with, too. He asks her name.

“I’m Symphony, symphony like the orchestra,” Swan-Zawadi says.

“It’s nice to meet you,” he tells her before going down to the court.





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Minneapolis, MN

Minneapolis police chief fired officer who left his post to seek sex act during overnight shift

Published

on

Minneapolis police chief fired officer who left his post to seek sex act during overnight shift


When the woman responds with a suggestive photo of their own, Alonzo writes, “Okay, give me a sec, let’s see if I can leave this call.” Ten minutes later, Alonzo writes that he has arrived at her apartment and is provided instructions to be buzzed upstairs.

Time stamps indicate that the messages were exchanged over a 2½-hour period during the normal working hours of his shift. The overnight shift, known as “dogwatch,” typically runs until about 6:30 a.m.

The civilian later told investigators that she communicated with Alonzo via Grindr and confirmed that he had arrived at her home, in full uniform, multiple times in August 2022. Automatic location tracking data inside his city-issued squad car proved that the vehicle was parked near her residence on two dates — outside the Fifth Precinct area, to which he was assigned. There were no known calls for service there.

Under questioning from Internal Affairs, Alonzo admitted that he met with a woman in her home and “had oral sex performed on him” while on duty. He acknowledged how that behavior might be concerning to the public.

Advertisement

“I could see where people would believe that I’m intentionally leaving an emergency call,” Alonzo said, according to disciplinary records. “It also devalues like the trust of police and community.”

An audit of Alonzo’s search history within the city’s Police Information Management System (PIMS) also revealed that he had used the database to obtain private data on the woman unrelated to his official work duties. He contacted a phone number obtained through an address search, believing it to be the woman from the dating app; it turned out to be her roommate’s.



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending