Paris,Texas, may soon join Bensonhurst, Howard Beach and Jena on the list of communities that are less than cool for black folks.
The U.S. Justice Department held a meeting with local civil rights groups Thursday in the community located 100 miles north of Dallas to quell rising racial tensions since the death of a local man named Brandon McClelland.
This young man's death has called back memories of hate crimes just like the infamous 1998 lynching of James Byrd Jr., in Jasper, Texas.
Others, including law enforcement, say the case is more complicated, and race was not a factor in his dragging death, characterizing the killing as a broken friendship gone horribly wrong. ...
In September, motorists found McClelland's body on a two-lane county road. According to news reports McClelland was walking in front of the pickup driven by Charles Ryan Crostley, 27, and a friend. Both were later arrested for allegedly running McClelland down and then dragged him 40 feet along the road until his mutilated body popped out from beneath the vehicle. It's a sad case.
Hundreds of protesters assembled at the Lamar County Courthouse, just around the corner from the 20-foot Confederate monument dedicated to "Our Heroes."
Some have called it a hate crime just like the infamous 1998 lynching of James Byrd Jr., in Jasper, Texas, 250 miles south of Paris. Others say it was a broken friendship gone horribly wrong and race was not a factor.
The Paris, Texas, situation comes amid reports of an increase in racist activity since the election of President Barack Obama. A Staten Island man, Brian Carranza, 21, admitted attacking three innocent black teens in a racism-fueled Election Day rampage.
Carranza faces 10 years in prison and is free on $200,000 bail, pending his April sentencing.
This month's Justice Department meetings are not the first time a harsh racial light has shined on Paris, Texas.
Two years ago, the Paris school district was investigated over allegations of retaliatory behavior and disparities in discipline against African American students, particularly against those whose parents lodged complaints with the Paris school district.
The matter gained national attention after 14-year-old freshman Shaquanda Cotton was convicted of "assault on a public servant" and sentenced to serve up to seven years at Texas Youth Commission prison.
At a Justice Department meeting earlier this month, community leaders discussed cases involving harsher sentencing for African Americans in the local judicial system, harsher disciplining of African American students by the school district, and inadequate investigations and retaliatory behavior by law enforcement concerning crimes against African Americans.
Two days after the meeting, a disabled African American Paris resident had racial slurs and death threats written on the outside of his apartment. Paris police say the matter is currently under investigation.


Comments: (25)
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By: ray on 2/03/2009 3:21PM
I'm the one that posted the comment about Hillary vs Rice.I also live in ne tx and people are treated differently acording to race in some cases.Mainly positions in schools such as headcoaches in highschool sports and summer league baseball.
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By: MackDiva on 2/03/2009 6:22PM
Look, I grew up in that part of the country, and I know for a fact that Paris and all the towns in that East Texas area are racist. Here's the deal -- when segregation was outlawed, a lot of those counties fought it until the very end. Therefore, you've dealing with people who are only one generation from it. Add to the fact that Jim Crow STILL isn't dead in that area, and YES, you are dealing with racists.
Just to let you know how bad it REALLY is, the high school I went to -- Jefferson High School in Jefferson, TX -- had a White and a Black homecoming court until the 1986-87 school year.
Is this particular incident racist? Probably. I know that racism is an ugly word and one we don't like to banty around, but it's a very real fact of life. And the more we try to deny its existence, the more it will rear its ugly head.
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By: Kitty on 4/27/2009 1:53AM
I think that it is equally racist for someone not to hire a perfectly qualified hair-dresser (who happens to be white) to work in a hair salon that is frequented by certain customers (who happen to be black). It would get said (screamed, perhaps?) most definitely if a salon frequented by white folks refused to hire a qualified black/other race hair dresser. I think that it is unfair that one way (blacks hiring only blacks etc.) is "just the way it is" versus "obviously racist" (whites refusing to hire blacks). That is my analysis of that arrangment. If you are qualified to do the job then a customer is a customer: black/white/purple whatever.
My grandmother was raised in the south. She still gets uncomfortable around people of color. She isn't openly rude, hateful or deny them any service that she gets. She simply chooses to avoid them based on her own life experiences. Is she racist or just a product of her time?
I am a white woman getting ready to marry a man of Taiwanese decent. I am told by his mother that I am somehow "unfit" as wife material because I am not asian. If a white woman said that to a future daughter-in-law of any other race there would be hell to pay.
Hate-crimes are another thing. Murder/rape etc. are inherently hateful. So why attach race/sexual orientation to the charge? Usually someone committing violence to another human being isn't doing it because they want to be friendly. They are doing it out of hatred for the victim or themselves or both. So Hate-crimes seem misdirected.
Anyway, I'm not saying that racism isn't a problem. Simply that it seems to be only white folks who get pegged as racist. I'm here to say that this is the furthest thing from the truth.
Ending this epidemic lack of empathy for our fellow humans isn't just about us white folks giving every other race a chance. Its about all races working together. It seems as though white folks are the only ones chastised for this problem. That needs to change.
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By: Kim Thomas on 8/03/2009 11:39PM
Paris is racist beyond belief. It's like going into a time warp in Lamar, Red River and Bowie counties. All my family comes from Paris to Texarkana. Thank God my mother moved us when I was a child to Dallas. I now work in the South Dallas area serving many minorities. And by the way I'M WHITE!!!
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By: someone who cares on 8/03/2009 10:20PM
I dont care what race you are! No one and I do mean noone has the right to take an innocent life, no matter what race they are! But this has happend in the South for many many Years! And still they that walk in the day, Do evil in the night! But they That do such things will Have to stand before the Creator for all the secret evil things they have done! I look at all mankind as Gods Gift to Men, We are Brothers and Sisters, we all come from One Man and Woman! But Yet we do such evil things to one another! How can you sleep at night Noing that your damnation comes soon! You must remember in this life you shall reap what you sow! and if you spill innocent Blood! and make a dfference of your Fellow Men, You shall reap that which you have sown, God has made a law unto men that if you do evil then you shall reap it! and its coming! to all that do such evil things to there brethern! God I pray Help you!!!!!
Someone who Cares!
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