U.S.:KU KLUX KLAN LINKED TO JUSTICE ABDULSALAAM'S MURDER
,
The recent murder of a New York City Judge ,Justice Sheilla
Abdulsalaam ,whose body was found in the Hudson River just within the
cosmopolitan city of New York after been reported missing by her husband is
being blamed on an increasing influence of white supremacist group,the Ku Klux
Klan .
Checks by The News office Desk of Paedia Express Multimedia
Group in Lagos,Nigeris suggests that in the period before and after the
electoral victory of Mr Donald Trump as President elected of the United states
of America and his subsequent
swearing-in,the group which had long being known for operating underground had
become even more emboldened in its
activities with its members even appearing in state sponsored activities
without being reprimanded by the law enforcement agencies ,
A source explained to
this reporter that since the woman was an African American and a muslin ,it
will not be out of place to say that she
was a victim of a growing wave of hate crimes in the United states of
America perpetrated on account of
sex,color ,religion among other forms of prejudice thus making the nation no
longer secure.
The source lamented
the fact that the United states of America ,which was seen as the global
barometer for measuring democracies was
fastly losing out in the values that sold it out globally previously as the
world’s super power in all ramifications.
It was gathered that the female judges body was found in the river after an
endless search with no signs of trauma
thus fueling suggestions that her assailants had already killed her silently
via suffocation before throwing her lifeless body into She was the first
African-American woman to sit on New York State's highest court. She was also
widely hailed as the nation's first female Muslim judge — or at least one of
the first judges with a Muslim surname. And now the New York Police Department is trying to determine whether Judge Sheila Abdus-Salaam, whose body was found floating off Manhattan in the Hudson River, took her own life.
the cold waters of River Hudson.
"It's too early to tell right
now," NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce said Thursday. "We've
spoken to many people in her family about her history. We don't believe she was
on any drugs at all. It was a surprise to everyone."
The 65-year-old judge, who lived in
nearby Harlem, had spent the weekend in New Jersey with her husband, the Rev.
Gregory Jacobs, and spoke with her assistant on Tuesday morning, Boyce said.
Abdus-Salaam was discovered on
Wednesday afternoon in the water near West 132nd Street. She had a MetroCard in
her pocket and there were no obvious signs of trauma on her clothed body.
"We don't believe she was in
the water for a long time," Boyce said.
The New York City Medical Examiner
said it too was "unable to confirm the cause and manner of death at this
time," a spokesperson told NBC News.
Meanwhile, tributes poured in for
the respected jurist who Attorney General Eric Schneiderman called a
"trailblazer."
"During her time on the bench,
Justice Abdus-Salaam earned the respect of all who appeared before her as a
thoughtful, thorough, and fair jurist," he said in a statement "I
join all those who knew Justice Abdus-Salaam in mourning this terrible
loss."
“She was a force for good whose
legacy will be felt for years to come.”
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio called
her a "humble pioneer." And Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Abdus-Salaam
possessed an "unshakable moral compass."
"She was a force for good whose
legacy will be felt for years to come," Cuomo said.
Asked what makes her a good judge,
Abdus-Salaam said in a 2012 profile for Columbia Law School Magazine, "I
think people consider me to be a judge who listens and gives them a fair
shot."
Born Sheila Turner in Washington on
March 14, 1952, Abdus-Salaam was the great-granddaughter of a slave. She took
her first husband's last name and continued to use it professionally after that
marriage ended, according to the Encyclopedia of Muslim-American History.
Despite being widely hailed by that
encyclopedia and several published reports as "the first female Muslim
U.S. judge," it was unclear if she was been a practitioner of Islam. A
spokesman for the Court of Appeals told the New York Times she was not Muslim.
One of six children raised by
working class parents, Abdus-Salaam attended public schools and first became
interested in the law by watching the TV show "Perry Mason." But she
found her calling when Frankie Muse Freeman, a civil rights attorney and the
first woman to be appointed to the United States Commission on Civil Rights,
visited her high school.
"She was riveting,"
Abdus-Salaam recalled in the profile. "She was doing what I wanted to do:
using the law to help people."
The judge also gave her mother
credit for pushing her to succeed.
"If my mother wasn't such a
smart and resourceful woman, I might have ended up in foster care or
worse," Abdus-Salaam recalled in 2015 at a Black History
Month celebration. "Although she dropped out of school, my mother realized
that a good education would help us escape the poverty that we were trapped
in."
Abdus-Salaam earned her bachelor's
degree at Barnard College in 1974 and graduated three years later from Columbia
Law School where she was classmates with future U.S. Attorney Eric Holder, who
remembered as serious but fun-loving.
“Sheila could boogie, but there was
a seriousness about her, a strong sense of purpose at a relatively young age.
She never forgot where she came from.”
"Sheila could boogie, but there
was a seriousness about her, a strong sense of purpose at a relatively young
age," he said. "She never forgot where she came from."
Her first job out of college was as
a public defender in Brooklyn where she often represented poor defendants and
immigrants in landlord versus tenant disputes.
"The job was not just legal,
but also part social work, and some part education," she said in the
profile.
Later, she was an assistant attorney
general in the New York State Department of Law's civil rights where she won an
anti-discrimination suit on behalf of 30 female city bus drivers who had been
wrongly passed over for promotions.
In 1994, Abdus-Salaam started
serving on the New York Supreme Court. Then in 2009, Gov. David Paterson
appointed her associate justice to the New York Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court.
In 2013, Cuomo nominated
Abdus-Salaam to fill a vacancy on the New York Court of Appeals and praised her
"deep understanding of the everyday issues facing New Yorkers." And
after the state Senate confirmed her nomination, Abdus-Salaam received a standing ovation.
She quickly distinguished herself as
a champion of the poor and downtrodden and as a hedge against the powerful and
politically-connected corporations. She also wrote a landmark decision that
gave the non-biological parent in a same sex couple visitation rights after a
breakup.
Abdus-Salaam was married three
times. Her second husband was James Hatcher. And she is survived by Jacobs,
whom she married in 2016 and who is a minister at the Episcopal Diocese of
Newark.
Editor's Note: An earlier version of
this story described Abdus-Salaam as the nation's first female Muslim judge but it appears that she never converted to
Islam.
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