Erykah Badu Nu Amerykah Album Cover

cover via: okayplayer.com
1. “Amerykahn Promise”
2. “The Healer / Hip-Hop”
3. “Me”
4. “My People”
5. “Soldier”
6. “The Cell”
7. “Twinkle”
8. “Master Teacher”
9. “That Hump”
10. “Telephone”
11. “Honey” (Bonus)

cover via: okayplayer.com
I Can’t Get Over How Accurate this is!! Thanks Regina!
What Bria Means |
![]() You are full of energy. You are spirited and boisterous.You are bold and daring. You are willing to do some pretty outrageous things.Your high energy sometimes gets you in trouble. You can have a pretty bad temper at times.You are wild, crazy, and a huge rebel. You’re always up to something.You have a ton of energy, and most people can’t handle you. You’re very intense. You definitely are a handful, and you’re likely to get in trouble. But your kind of trouble is a lot of fun. You tend to be pretty tightly wound. It’s easy to get you excited… which can be a good or bad thing. You have a lot of enthusiasm, but it fades rather quickly. You don’t stick with any one thing for very long. You have the drive to accomplish a lot in a short amount of time. Your biggest problem is making sure you finish the projects you start. You are usually the best at everything … you strive for perfection. You are confident, authoritative, and aggressive. You have the classic “Type A” personality. |
Tortured Baby Dies, Sitter Confesses
NEW ORLEANS — Six-week-old Diana Nelson succumbed to her wounds Thursday at 2:22 p.m., according to a hospital spokesman. Nelson had been on life support for days, having been beaten, burned and drugged, according to police.Bogalusa police said they arrested a baby sitter, Amy Leighann Thomas, 22, Wednesday.
Officers said Thomas confessed to abusing the child before she died.
Watch: Baby Sitter Charged
Police said Thursday that Thomas’ charges were going to be upgraded to murder.“I had no idea what was going on,” said Nelson’s uncle Allen Daigle, who was present when EMTs took Nelson. “All I seen was the pale face and the blue lips. I didn’t see the burn marks until I went to the police station.”
Investigators said they examined Nelson at the hospital and found evidence of severe child abuse.Bogalusa Police Department Sgt. Darrell Darden said the child had suffered blunt force trauma and head injuries consistent with being beaten by a fist, and that Nelson had a skull fracture.
He said Nelson had also been burned repeatedly, and had been forced to swallow some kind of antidepressant like Xanax.Investigators said the burn marks were similar to curling iron burns.
“It’s a terrible situation,” Darden said. “What’s best for the baby at this time is to find who done this and make them pay.”
Nelson’s 14-month-old sister was taken into protective custody pending the outcome of an investigation. source
Here’s a sight for sore eyes! I haven’t seen Dick Gregory since he was peddlin’, promoting his weight loss goods! I heard it was a success too. We may not have seen D.G., in recent years but some things never change…including Dick Gregory.
Listen as he tells black americans about themselves, ourselves. Thanks Twin!
SAN LUIS OBISPO, California (CNN) — A respected California transplant doctor faces charges he hastened a comatose man’s death to retrieve his organs — a far-reaching case that could impact the nation’s organ donation industry.

Ruben Navarro had suffered from a debilitating nerve disease since he was 9. He died at the age of 25.
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Dr. Hootan Roozrokh, 34, is accused of ordering excessive doses of drugs to expedite the death of Ruben Navarro, a 25-year-old man who had suffered from a debilitating nerve disease since he was 9, according to the criminal complaint.
On February 3, 2006, Dr. Roozrokh hurried from San Francisco to the Sierra Vista Regional Medical Center with a transplant team after receiving word Navarro would be a donor.
In a pretrial hearing last week, Dr. Laura Lubarsky, a critical-care specialist, testified she would not have ordered morphine or the sedative Ativan as Roozrokh allegedly did. She said she was called into the operating room to monitor Navarro after he was taken off life support and to pronounce him dead.
Lubarsky told the court she heard Roozrokh order a nurse to give Navarro more “candy,” meaning additional drugs.
Prosecutors have charged Roozrokh with three felony counts, including one charge of “dependent adult abuse” for allegedly administering excessive amounts of a drug cocktail that included morphine and Ativan, both of which are used to comfort dying patients. Roozrokh is also accused of injecting Betadine, a topical antiseptic, into Navarro’s feeding tube.
If convicted, Roozrokh — a Stanford-trained doctor — could face up to eight years in prison. He has pleaded not guilty.
“Dr. Roozrokh did not intend to hasten Mr. Navarro’s death and, in fact, did not hasten his death,” defense attorney Gerald Schwartzbach told CNN before a gag order was imposed in the case.
Navarro’s mother, Rosa Navarro, disagrees. Her son, she says, “died without respect and dignity.”
“I loved that boy,” she told CNN. “He was the world to me and nothing can make me happy, except him.”
Some in the transplant profession say Dr. Roozrokh should not have even been in the operating room while the patient was still alive.
“The standard of practice is for the transplant surgeon to be outside the operating room until death has been declared,” said Thomas Mone, president of the Association of Organ Procurement Organization. “The unfortunate error in this case was the transplant surgeon being in the room and that’s highly, highly unusual.”
Organ donation groups are keeping a close eye on the courtroom proceedings. Mone said the case had forced his staff and fellow transplant colleagues to “review the recovery procedures with our transplant programs when we start a case — every single case.”
A written statement from the American Society of Transplant Surgeons said it doesn’t have enough facts about the Roozrokh case, but the group is concerned about its possible effects.
“The sensationalism of this case in the media will unfortunately result in a decrease in organ donation. This, in turn, will deprive patients waiting for life-saving organ transplantation their opportunity for life,” said Goran Klintmalm, the president of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.
“If Dr. Roozrokh is guilty, it would represent a gross aberration in the organ donation process, not the gift of life we are all trying to provide.”
At least one former patient has spoken out in support of Roozrokh.
“He performed surgery on me and literally saved my life,” Joe Quiroz told CNN-affiliate KCOY in an August interview. “I have known Dr. Roozrokh to be a man of great, great compassion.”
The preliminary hearing continues this week. Rosa Navarro has filed lawsuits against the doctor and the hospital. The hospital settled with her, but denied liability. Her suit against Roozrokh is pending.
In a written statement, the hospital said it had “been cooperative with all regulating agencies, law enforcement and legal representatives. We have entered into this settlement with Mrs. Navarro in an effort to put this incident behind us and to hopefully allow her healing process to begin.”
She is just McNasty!!
Boy, oh boy-Do I hear keyboards clacking as writers are working FEVERISHLY to create a manuscript to pass along to LIFETIME MOVIE CHANNEL! This crime is so crazy, it has to be true.
There is:
Shawna Nelson-convicted killer; jealous, delusional & JILTED lover/baby mama
Ignacio Garraus-Shawna’s reported lover; spurned Shawna; baby daddy
Michelle Moore-Shawna’s friend, accessory and ALSO reported lover
Ken Nelson-Shawna’s HUSBAND
and Heather Garraus-Shawna’s object of hate; Ignacio’s WIFE; murdered in cold blood.
****
Life w/out parole.
She shoots two to the head, and yet lives-at taxpayers expense mind you, and Heather, who’s only crime was being married to a two-timing loser, is rotting. Shawna gets 3 hots and a cot…guaranteed. After a while of being incarcerated, she’ll assimilate herself to her environment and she’ll be fine. As a matter of fact, she’ll possibly get “street cred” for being so out cold and shooting Heather-outside (probably in BROAD DAYLIGHT) in plain sight in such a vicious and gangsta manner. I have no other words…what say you, family?
smh
read below:
FORT COLLINS, Colorado (AP) — A woman who donned a black mask, ordered her ex-lover’s wife to her knees and shot her twice in the head was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole Monday.

Shawna Nelson was sentenced to life in prison without parole after being found guilty of first-degree murder.
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“You carried out this plan with great planning and deliberation,” Judge Roger Klein told Shawna Nelson. “You deserve to serve every day of the sentence I will impose.”
Nelson showed little emotion as the verdict was read and declined the judge’s invitation to make a statement before he handed down the sentence. Her attorneys said they will appeal her conviction.
Nelson killed Heather Garraus, 37, on January 23, 2007. A Weld County sheriff’s dispatcher at the time, Nelson had a long affair with Garraus’ husband, Ignacio, who was a Greeley police officer.
They had a son together, but Ignacio Garraus broke off the relationship a month before the shooting.
Witnesses said the masked killer, dressed in black, confronted Garraus in the parking lot of the Greeley credit union where Garraus worked and told her, “You ruined my life. Get on the ground.”
Garraus replied, “OK, OK,” and knelt down, and the woman in black fired two shots from a gun and fled, the witnesses said.
Nelson contended she was on her way to a liquor store at the time.
The trial was moved to nearby Fort Collins in Larimer County because of pretrial publicity and the possibility that jurors might know the witnesses.
Shawna Nelson’s one-time best friend, Michelle Moore, pleaded guilty last week to being an accessory to crime after prosecutors accused her of helping plan the slaying.
Moore testified during Nelson’s trial that she and Nelson had discussed how to kill Heather Garraus.
The defense tried to discredit Moore by portraying her as Shawna Nelson’s lover. Shawna Nelson testified she and Moore had a romantic relationship, but Moore denied it.
Nelson’s husband, Ken Nelson, who was a Weld County sheriff’s deputy at the time of the shooting, has been charged with evidence tampering for allegedly handling the gun that police believe was used to kill Heather Garraus.
Such testimony had become commonplace for West. The dentist considered himself an authority on forensic odontology and had taken the stand at numerous trials as a paid expert for the prosecution.
On the strength of West’s testimony and little else, a jury in 1995 convicted Kennedy Brewer of raping and murdering the 3-year-old girl and sentenced him to death.
Three years earlier, West gave similar testimony in a nearly identical rape-and-murder case involving another 3-year-old girl from the same town. West testified there were bite marks on the victim’s wrist and they were made by Levon Brooks. Brooks, too, was found guilty and was sentenced to life in prison.
Today, more than a decade later, both Brewer and Brooks are out of prison, and prosecutors have all but pronounced them innocent. The reason: A third man confessed to both killings after DNA connected him to one of the rapes, investigators say.
As for West, his analysis of bite marks in the two murders — and in hundreds of other Mississippi criminal cases over the years — is under attack.
A panel of forensic experts that examined the Brewer case says the wounds on the victim were not human bites at all, but were probably caused by crawfish and insects nibbling on the corpse, decomposition, and rough handling when the body was pulled from the pond where it was found. Brooks’ lawyers say West got it wrong in their case, too, by identifying scrapes as bites.
The turn of events has shocked the community, especially the victims’ families, and led to accusations that West deliberately falsified evidence.
“You have people who engaged in misconduct and manufactured evidence and we’ve proved it,” said Peter Neufeld, co-director of the Innocence Project, which has won the exoneration of more than 200 inmates nationwide and assembled the expert panel that examined the Brewer case.
“These two cases are going to be an eye-opener for the people of Mississippi about some of the problems they have in criminal justice and how easy it will be to make it right,” Neufeld added.
West, a 55-year-old in private practice, did not return numerous calls to his Hattiesburg office.
Brewer, now 36, and Brooks, 48, were found guilty in the slayings, respectively, of Christine Jackson and Courtney Smith, who were killed 18 months apart. Both girls were daughters of the men’s girlfriends, and both lived in Brooksville, a poor community of about 1,100 people. Both defendants were poor; Brewer is said to be mildly disabled mentally.
Forensic experts had testified for the defense at the trials of Brooks and Brewer that the marks on the victims were not made by human teeth. But the testimony seemed to make little difference.
Earlier this month, Justin Albert Johnson, a 51-year-old Brooksville man who had been a suspect early on, was arrested and charged in one of the murders. Investigators said he confessed to both killings after DNA analysis proved that his semen was in the victim in the Brewer case.
Brewer, who was released on bail last year, a few years after DNA tests excluded him as the rapist, was finally exonerated by a judge on February 15.
“I ain’t worried about the past. I’m thinking about the future,” Brewer said. But he offered some advice to prosecutors: “They need to get the truth before they lock up the wrong somebody. It doesn’t feel good to be called a rapist and murderer.”
As for Brooks, he has a court date on March 10, when prosecutors are expected to drop the case against him. He is already back home, living with his 83-year-old mother.
In its February 2007 report, the Innocence Project panel of top forensic odontologists from England, Canada and the U.S. concluded that West had misinterpreted the purported bite-mark evidence in the Brewer case.
Panel member Dr. David Senn, a forensic odontologist for the county medical examiner in San Antonio, told the AP that the experts were “scratching their heads to figure out how he could come to the conclusions he came to.”
“Forensic odontology is a very sound science when it’s applied properly. In our opinion, it was not applied properly,” Senn said. Of West’s theory that the purported bite marks were made by two front teeth, Senn said: “To bite someone, you have to bite with both jaws. The story doesn’t make sense.”
According to Senn, West resigned from the American Academy of Forensic Sciences in 1994 and the American Board of Forensic Odontology in 2006 after ethics complaints were brought against him. Senn would not disclose details of the complaints.
The panel’s report contained no suggestion that West acted deliberately. But the Innocence Project has called for a criminal investigation of West and state pathologist Dr. Steven Hayne, who had also concluded the marks on the bodies were bites. The organization is asking for a review of the hundreds of cases in which Hayne and West were involved.
“The truth is, if they’ll do it in one, they’ll do it in a dozen,” Neufeld said.
Hayne said he has done nothing wrong, and he remains on the job. “All I did was present the facts that I saw,” Hayne said. “I did the post-mortem examinations. I didn’t link them or exclude them.”
The district attorney who prosecuted both defendants, Forrest Allgood, disputed any suggestion that his office knowingly sent the wrong men to prison.
“It torments the innocent individual, undermines the public confidence in the justice system, and the bad guy is still running loose,” he said. “Why people would believe that’s something we would want to do is beyond me.”
Allgood said he has not used West as a forensic expert since the mid-1990s. He said West was once considered one of the world’s foremost authorities in his field, lecturing in China and England.
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