Posts Tagged ‘Philadelphia’

Rapist ‘Tells Victim “Ha, Ha, I Just Infected You with HIV” After Brutal Beating and Sex Assault’

Thursday, September 13th, 2012

A Philadelphia man mercilessly taunted a barely conscious woman he had raped, telling her that he had just infected her with HIV, according to the family of the female victim.

Philadelphia police are now searching for a suspect they say jumped the victim from behind, pushed her into an alley, beat her unconscious and then repeatedly raped her, in northeast Philly shortly after midnight on August 29.

‘The 24-year-old victim sustained severe head and facial injuries to the point of almost being unrecognizable,’ Philadelphia Police Special Victims Unit Capt. John Darby told WCAU-TV.

The victim was beaten and was barely conscious when she was raped repeatedly over what could have been a period of several hours, police say.

Hours after the vicious attack, that occurred near Griscom & Church Street in Philadelphia, a neighbor saw the woman, bloodied and stumbling down the road.

She was hospitalized for several days and was tested for HIV but the results have not been released.

The victim’s sister told the local news station that the assailant told her sister that he had infected her with HIV.

The victim remains unidentified but she told the local news station that she wants justice to be served.

Police are now turning to the public to help find the suspect, who is described as a thin, black man in his 20s around 5 feet, 9 inches tall.

Surveillance footage showing the suspect walking down the street and approaching the victim was released on YouTube on Tuesday.

The Mayor’s Office is offering a $10,000 reward in the arrest and conviction of the man.

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Couple charged in straw gun purchases

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

Ilya Goldenberg owns at least 17 guns, federal law enforcement officials said. He shouldn’t have any.

The Russian citizen is a convicted felon, which means he cannot own or purchase firearms.

But between 2009 and this year, Goldenberg, 34, who also uses the first name Elliot, had his fiancée and another person buy handguns and semiautomatic rifles for him, a transaction known as a straw purchase, officials said.

Now Goldenberg and his fiancée, Larisa Rudka, 38, both of Feasterville, face multiple charges of illegal gun possession and straw purchases under a federal indictment unsealed Friday in Philadelphia.

The U.S. Attorney General’s Office has charged Goldberg with nine counts of possession of firearms by a convicted felon and six counts of possession of firearms by an unlawful drug user, eight counts of making false statements during a gun purchase and aiding and abetting.

Rudka is charged with six counts of making false statements during the purchase of a firearm. She allegedly bought 13 of the 17 guns for Goldenberg including two AK-47 semi-automatic rifles, three 45-caliber semi-automatic pistols, and three 9mm semi-automatic pistols and falsely listed her address as Richlieu Road in Bensalem during those purchases, the indictment said.

The U.S. attorney general alleges that Goldenberg is a cocaine user and also had a second person identified only as “M.K.” buy him four weapons, including an AR15 5.56 mm semiautomatic rifle in 2009. A U.S. attorney spokeswoman declined to say if “M.K.” also faces charges.

If convicted of all charges, Goldenberg faces a maximum possible sentence of 190 years in prison; Rudka faces a maximum possible sentence of 30 years in prison.

In Pennsylvania, handgun sales must be handled by licensed dealers or at a sheriff’s office. Both the seller and buyer must fill out state and federal forms, including one for a state police criminal background check that determines if the buyer is permitted to own a gun.

An online criminal record check shows that Rudka faces multiple charges of illegal sale or purchase of firearms, tampering with public records, lying to authorities, and conspiracy stemming from a January arrest in Horsham. It’s unclear if those pending charges are part of the federal indictment.

Goldenberg has a lengthy criminal record including charges pending in Bucks and Montgomery counties for illegal sale or purchase of firearms in 2011 and 2012, and illegal possession of firearms and carrying firearms without a license.

Recently Goldenberg pleaded guilty in Bucks County Court to simple assault, recklessly endangering another and harassment and was sentenced to four to 23 months in jail after punching Rudka in the face March 3 and then turning a knife on himself. He wasn’t attempting suicide, police said, but trying to prove to Rudka that he loved her.

He required 13 stitches to close the wound, police said.

At the time of the March assault arrest, Lower Southampton police found “several” handguns and knives in the living room of the couple’s Steam Ridge Lane home. When he pleaded guilty to that assault, he was in Montgomery County prison on illegal weapons possession charges, according to court records.

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Justice for Sabina: Man, 20, Jailed for Life After Dragging Petite Waitress from Bike, Raping Her and Strangling Her to Death with Her Bra

Saturday, May 12th, 2012

Twenty-year-old Donte Johnson has been sentenced to life in prison plus 40-80 years for the 2010 rape and murder of Philadelphia waitress Sabina O’Donnell.

Sabina O’Donnell

Although the jury took under four hours to find Johnson guilty of dragging Miss O’Donnell from her bike, raping her and then strangling her to death with her own bra, the defendant defiantly maintained his innocence throughout.

As the sentence was passed he addressed Judge Glenn Bronson, saying: ‘I understand how the family feel about their loss, but how can you clearly say I did anything?

‘I didn’t do nothing. I understand where they coming from, but I didn’t have nobody die the way they said. I didn’t have no interaction with her.’

Donte Johnson

Judge Bronson replied that he had ‘not one scintilla of doubt’ that Johnson had committed the crimes, saying he had never felt more certain of a defendant’s guilt in 31 years as a lawyer and a judge.

He told Johnson his refusal to accept responsibility was ‘in keeping with your history of a lack of remorse.’

According to The Philadelphia Inquirer, the defendant shook his head and looked down at the table as the verdict was read, while his family burst into tears and one of his siblings fled the courtroom.

Around 30 of Miss O’Donnell’s relatives and friends were present, and her family gave victim impact statements to the court before the sentencing.

The victim’s tearful mother Rachel O’Donnell urged the judge to award the longest possible prison term.

She said of her daughter: ‘She was as good as a person could possibly be. Every minute that he sits there breathing oxygen is a chance she’ll never get…I don’t want anybody to ever have to run into him again.’

Miss O’Donnell’s aunt Heidi O’Donnell added: ‘He [Johnson] has no idea what he did to all of us. He should never ever be able to walk on the same ground that Sabina did. He should never be able to look at trees and walk on the beach.’

CBS Philly reported that Johnson had previously admitted the attack on Miss Johnson, saying he had only meant to steal her bicycle. He allegedly said he killed her because she screamed when he tried to take the bike.

He later retracted the confession, which his lawyers claim he made only because he is mentally challenged.

The prosecution in the case relied on DNA evidence and video surveillance to prove that Johnson dragged his victim to within yards of her apartment building before raping and strangling her.

Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams said in a statement: ‘My heart continues to go out to Sabina’s family and friends. I hope this verdict will give them some sense of justice.’

Standing outside the courtroom for the final time, Miss O’Donnell’s stepfather Mark Rounds tearfully hugged his wife and the jurors.

‘I’m just glad the police did their job as well as they did it and the Assistant District Attorneys did their jobs as well and as thoroughly as they did,’ he said.

According to the Philly Metro, Mr Rounds said he is not a supporter of the death penalty, and that he was satisfied with the sentence.

‘I hope the rest of society is satisfied as well,’ he said.

While they have now received the verdict they had yearned for, the O’Donnell family have waited almost two years to watch their daughter’s killer get life.

A dog walker found the young woman’s body, which was naked apart from a pair of beige socks, on 2 June 2010.

During the first two days of Johnson’s trial, the jury heard how he grabbed his 5’3, 100lb victim when she was riding her pink and grey bike home from a night out.

He grabbed her at the front of her apartment building, before dragging her 120ft to the rear of her home, where he raped and then killed her.

Assistant District Attorney Richard Sax told the court that O’Donnell was: ‘Tiny, small, petite but so vulnerable. Perfect prey.’

He said Johnson’s stalking of her on a bicycle, which was captured on CCTV to be played later on in the trial, happened because: ‘He knew he could dominate, overwhelm and control her.’

He claimed Johnson left his DNA ‘all over her, inside of her’ and said ‘he destroyed her’ during the attack.

Defence attorney Lee Mandell rejected the claims, arguing that even DNA experts were capable of making mistakes.

A forensic psychologist, Gerald Cooke, then testified that Johnson had an IQ of just 73, and had most likely been born with brain damage.

He said he acted like an 11 or 12-year-old and had smoked marijuana and drunk alcohol for many years.

Dog walker Christina Sirochman said the victim was clad only in her socks when she found her dumped body on June 2, 2010.

Ms Sirochman told a jury the victim had a swarm of flies around her mouth, but that she touched her to see if she was alive.

‘It was just like touching a piece of glass,’ she said. ‘That was somebody’s child and I didn’t want her to be alone.’

Other witnesses said they found a man’s dirty t-shirt and Miss O’Donnell’s purse in the hours after the murder.

Assistant Medical Examiner Edwin Lieberman, who performed the autopsy, said the ligature which ended Miss O’Donnell’s life was ‘one of the tightest’ he had seen.

He added that it would have taken 30 seconds for the victim to fall unconscious, and another three to five minutes of ‘continuous pressure to the neck’ to kill her.

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Interracial Rape Statistics

Sunday, January 1st, 2012
When whites do violence — rape, murder, assault — how often do they choose black victims? Shouldn’t a nation of bigots target blacks most of the time? At least half of the time? Of course, it does not. When whites commit violence, they to it to blacks 2.4 percent of the time. Blacks, on the other hand, choose white victims more than half the time. [317]In those cases in which the race of the killer is known, blacks kill twice as many whites as whites kill blacks. Black-on-white robberies and gang assaults are twenty-one times more common than white on black. In the case of gang robbery, blacks victimize whites fifty-two times more often than whites do blacks. [318]

The contrasts are even more stark in the case of interracial rape. Studies from the late 1950s showed that the vast majority of rapes were same-race offenses. Research in Philadelphia carried out in 1958 and 1960 indicated that of all rapes, only 3.2 percent were black-on-white assaults and 3.6 percent were white-on-black. Since that time, the proportion of black-on-white rapes has soared. In a 1974 study in Denver, 40 percent of all rapes were of whites by blacks, and not one case of white-on-black rape was found. In general, through the 1970s, black-on-white rape was at least ten times more common that white-on-black rape. [319]

Because interracial rape is now overwhelmingly black on white, it has become difficult to do research on it or to find relevant statistics. The FBI keeps very detailed national records on crime, but the way it presents rape data obscures the racial element rather than clarifies it. Dr. William Wilbanks, a criminologist at Florida International University, had to sift carefully through the data to find that in 1988 there were 9,406 cases of black-on-white rape and fewer than ten cases of white-on-black rape. [320] Another researcher concludes that in 1989, blacks were three or four times more likely to commit rape than whites, and that black men raped white women thirty times as often as white men raped black women. [321]

Interracial crime figures are even worse than they sound. Since there are more than six times as many whites as blacks in America, it means that any given black person is vastly more likely to commit a crime against a white than vice versa.


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City’s black residents now top all groups

Monday, April 25th, 2011
Official seal of City of Philadelphia

Image via Wikipedia

Their numbers dropped, but other changes put them first. Population rose for the first time in 50 years.

By Michael Matza, Kia Gregory, and John Duchneskie

Inquirer Staff Writers

African descendants have called Philadelphia home for centuries, with the first U.S. Census, in 1790, listing 2,099 “free” blacks and 373 slaves.

Today, the city’s black population is 644,287, according to the latest census, and for the first time it clearly outnumbers all other racial or ethnic groups.

This evolution happened even though the number of African Americans in the city, excluding Hispanics, declined about 1,800 over the last decade and their share of the population remained about the same.

Key to the new black plurality: the continued steep decline in the city’s white population. In 2000, each group accounted for about 42 percent of city residents, but the white share is now 37 percent, after a loss of 82,000 people.

Meanwhile, an influx of Hispanics, Asians, and other groups – now 21 percent of the city’s 1.5 million people – boosted Philadelphia’s total for the first time in 50 years.

The black plurality coincides with another trend: More and more middle- and working-class African Americans are leaving the city for suburbia. Since 2000, the black population of the city’s Pennsylvania suburbs jumped 26 percent – by 47,000.

“You need to look at it not only from a racial-ethnic point of view, but also the distribution of incomes,” said Mark Mather, senior demographer with the Population Reference Bureau, a nonprofit in Washington that interprets census data.

Are relatively “higher-income blacks moving away from the city, leaving behind a poorer population without a lot of prospects?” he asked. “That wouldn’t bode well.”

In the last decade, average income in white households in Philadelphia rose 4 percent to $65,100, adjusted for inflation. But black household income fell 10 percent to $40,200. Overall, the average income in the city fell 1 percent.

Neighborhoods with the highest concentration of African Americans – West Oak Lane, Kingsessing, and Nicetown, among others – were slammed twice.

Many who could move out did. Many who remained experienced a significant drop in income. In Tioga-Nicetown, which is 94 percent black, average household income fell 35 percent in the last decade – the city’s biggest drop – to $26,800. That’s half of the citywide average.

As gentrification gathered speed in some predominantly black parts of the city, superheating property values, several things happened. Some homeowners cashed in and bought again, either in suburbia or other parts of Philadelphia. Some renters got squeezed out or were left stranded in pockets of poverty.

“Yes, Philadelphia has 42 percent blacks,” said Voffee Jabateh, director of the African Cultural Alliance of North America, a Southwest Philadelphia advocacy group for African immigrants, but by and large “these are not blacks that have a strong economic voice.”

U.S. Rep. Chaka Fattah, a Democrat whose district covers parts of North and West Philadelphia and Montgomery County, said he saw the movement of black residents to better neighborhoods as “identical in many ways to patterns of other demographic groups . . . as people make their way into the middle class.”

 

Migrating to the suburbs

Across Bucks, Montgomery, Delaware, and Chester Counties, the proportion of black residents grew in 176 of 238 municipalities, mirroring a national trend, though still fewer than 10 percent of Philadelphia-area suburbanites are black.

In the 1950s, said Norristown municipal administrator David Forrest, mortgages “were more available to whites than blacks,” leading to “primarily white suburbanization.”

Black upward mobility and more available credit, particularly in the last decade, he said, spurred movement to inner-ring suburbs, especially in southeastern Delaware County, where better schools, lower housing density, and public transportation lured people from Southwest Philadelphia, including large numbers of African immigrants.

Sharon Hill and East Lansdowne for the first time became majority-black towns, according to the census. They joined Yeadon, Colwyn, Darby Borough, Chester, and Chester Township – already majority black in 2000 – as new pillars in the inner ring of predominantly African American suburbs.

“It’s the upward mobility of people coming out of the city,” said Mary Bell, manager of demographic and economic analysis for the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission. “The impact is biggest in Delaware County because the houses there are more affordable.”

Unlike Delaware County, where a fifth of the population is black, Bucks and Chester Counties experienced little change. According to the 2010 census, fewer than 6 percent of residents of those counties are black.

In Montgomery County, the number of black residents grew from 55,303 in 2000 to 67,582 in 2010, nudging its percentage of the total population to 8.4 percent.

Suburban diversity also was spurred by the arrival of Latinos, up 105 percent last decade, and Asians, up 72 percent.

 

A tale of two communities

Two swaths of the city that experienced significant population change during the last decade were parts of North Philadelphia – including Tioga-Nicetown, which lost 1,977 people, 10 percent of its population – and the largely white lower Northeast, which grew in numbers and diversity.

Tacony, for instance, was 9 percent minority in 2000; now it is 39 percent minority, including African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians.

Louis Iatarola, president of the Tacony Civic Association, attributes that change to the mid-decade real estate boom, which created new homeowners and investors, who sometimes carved houses into affordable apartments.

On the loss side of the ledger, Majeedah A. Rashid, executive vice president of the Nicetown Community Development Corp., said she saw why the population in her part of town had fallen: “In the last 20, 30 years, there was really nothing going on here.”

Rashid cited the “flight of industry,” including the closing of the Budd and Tastykake factories.

“Those things make a big impact,” she said. “People are moving away from the neighborhood to find better housing conditions and more valuable employment.”

Her group is working to retain and attract residents by brokering such things as the construction of Nicetown Court, a mix of commercial business and 34 new affordable-housing units, and the installation of lights in one of the community’s two-acre parks. “That’s a big deal in Nicetown,” Rashid said.

Michael Burch, 51, who grew up in the Parkside section of West Philadelphia, is among those African Americans who picked up and moved.

After Burch earned a master’s degree in science education from Temple University, he left in 1982 for a more affluent city neighborhood – Wynnefield.

“I was slowly making my way out of the city,” he said, jokingly, of his move to near the Montgomery County border. He counts himself as part of a generation whose education and careers afforded it the means to move up and eventually out.

Burch, director of youth programs at the Franklin Institute, later settled in Upper Darby, then in Drexel Hill.

He said his main reason for leaving “was just the congestion of the city.” But after his mother died five years ago, instead of selling his three-story childhood home in Parkside, he moved back in.

“Growing up in that neighborhood as a child,” Burch said, “I had so many good and fond memories of the house and neighborhood and living near Fairmount Park, which was a big part of my life then. I thought I could add something to the neighborhood now.”

 

In Delaware County

In Collingdale, Pat Reilly of Reilly Real Estate said his business formerly had been based in Southwest Philadelphia, “but the area got pretty much sold out” after West African immigrants, especially from Liberia and Ghana, started snapping up houses a decade ago.

Then some of them, along with African Americans, moved into Collingdale, he said. Census figures show the proportion of black residents jumped from 4 percent in 2000 to 35 percent of the 8,786 residents in 2010.

A typical rowhouse that sold for about $105,000 half a decade ago sells for $80,000 to $85,000 today, Reilly said.

Those buying affordable Collingdale houses, he said, are mostly first-time buyers, often single mothers who work as health-care aides and certified nursing assistants.

Houses come on the market because of estate sales, Reilly said, or when elderly retirees move into nursing homes or to live with family.

The Rev. Michael Fitzpatrick of Collingdale’s Grace Reformed Episcopal Church said the arrivals were helping to resuscitate his congregation.

When he arrived at the parish from Havertown in 2003, he said, the church was down to 27 members, all white except for one Liberian woman. Today, thanks largely to the influx of African Americans and West Africans, there are 160 parishioners, including 30 who are white.

Church members have told Fitzpatrick that they moved to Collingdale for the heightened sense of security, better schools, and backyards.

Jacquelynn Puriefoy-Brinkley, a former president of Yeadon Borough Council, is a retiree in her 70s. She recalled moving to Yeadon with her parents in 1947, along with other “mostly upper-middle-class” black residents who lived in an enclave on one side of town.

Puriefoy-Brinkley’s father owned several businesses and was a salesman for Wyeth Pharmaceuticals.

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Yeadon was about 10 percent black, she said. Over time, a larger cross section of African Americans from the city moved in.

Today Yeadon is 88 percent black. NAACP membership forms are available at the circulation desk of the public library. A shopping strip includes the Mohammad Ali Variety Store across the street from the Harlem Cafe.

Going from virtually all white to virtually all black is certainly no triumph of coexistence, Puriefoy-Brinkley acknowledged, but she feels the pattern of movement has been basically positive.

“Maybe the upside,” she said, “is that people who didn’t have opportunities to live in decent housing or walkable communities have those opportunities now.”

 

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