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#Newsbreak
Phoenixx Fyre Dean

58‑Year‑Old Killed By Evansville Police. Officer Remains Anonymous… Until Now. On November 22, 2025, the Evansville Police Department killed 58‑year‑old Everett Nunn, a man holding a fake gun. It was a marijuana pipe molded to look like a firearm. Officers claimed it “appeared to be a gun,” barked commands, and fired when Nunn did not drop it. He was rushed to Deaconess Midtown Hospital, where he died. The department released bodycam footage but refuses to name the officer. They will show you the victim’s last moments, but not the face behind the trigger. That silence is their shield. The roster tells the story. In November 2021, EPD swore in 11 new officers. Two of them, Justin Miller and Gregory Hardin, came directly from the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office jail division. One of them pulled the trigger. The department will not say which. But it is one of the two. This is not speculation. It is subtraction. Everett Nunn is dead. The officer is alive. The department hides his name. Evansville’s system recycles jailhouse authority into street‑level lethality, then buries accountability under “appeared to be” and “under investigation.” The EPD will not talk about it. I will. Silence does not protect the public. Silence protects the shooter. And in Evansville, that silence has already buried too many citizens. Disclaimer: This article is based on public records, media reports, and editorial analysis. The Evansville Police Department has not disclosed the officer’s name. The identification of Justin Miller or Gregory Hardin as possible shooters reflects the narrowed roster of sworn officers, not a confirmed attribution. #Evansville #PoliceShooting #JusticeForEverettNunn #Accountability #Transparency #PoliceReform #IndianaNews #BreakingNews #CommunityJustice #FakeGunRealDeath #EPD #PublicTrust #InvestigativeReporting #Newsbreak #SWUSA #PhoenixxFyreDean Images from 44 News.

LataraSpeaksTruth

December 9, 1952 marked a turning point in American history, even though most people at the time didn’t realize how much the moment would reshape the nation. On this day, the U.S. Supreme Court began hearing arguments in Brown v. Board of Education and several related cases challenging school segregation. Families from Kansas, South Carolina, Virginia, Delaware, and the District of Columbia all stepped forward, insisting that separate classrooms created unequal futures for their children. Their voices carried a message that had been ignored for decades, and this was the first time the highest court in the country had to confront it head-on. The arguments unfolded over several days, exposing a truth that had long been clear to the families living it. Segregated schools were not just separate, they were deeply unequal in funding, safety, resources, and opportunity. Attorneys including Thurgood Marshall pushed the Court to acknowledge the harm being done to children who were told, by law, that they were worth less. It challenged the very idea of fairness in public education and forced the nation to face its contradictions. Though the Court would not reach a final decision until 1954, December 9 was the spark that set everything in motion. The justices’ willingness to reopen arguments multiple times showed how heavy the moment truly was. They knew the outcome would transform every district, every classroom, and every child’s understanding of what equality should look like in America. The eventual ruling, declaring school segregation unconstitutional, did more than change policy, it changed the nation’s direction. And it all began with the courage of families who refused to let inequality be the last word. #LataraSpeaksTruth #NewsBreak #HistoryMatters #AskLemon8 #BlackHistory #AmericanHistory #BrownvBoard #OnThisDay #CivilRightsHistory

LataraSpeaksTruth

December 8, 2014 marked a moment when the halls of Congress finally felt the weight of a nation’s grief. Dozens of Black congressional staffers silently walked out of their offices and stood on the Capitol steps with their hands raised. It was the kind of peaceful protest that does not shout yet still shakes the room. Their message was simple. America needed to look at itself. The deaths of Eric Garner in New York and Michael Brown in Ferguson were not isolated events. They were signs of a deeper wound the country had carried for decades. These staffers knew that change is never just a result of speeches. Change comes from pressure and presence and refusal to act like nothing has happened. They stood there as professionals who worked inside the very system they were calling to account. That contrast landed hard. They represented a new wave of young Black voices in government who demanded fairness while still serving the public with discipline and purpose. Their walkout was not about politics. It was about humanity and accountability and a reminder that America has been wrestling with this struggle in every generation. Moments like this one show us that silence has never saved us. Even a quiet stand can move the ground beneath our feet. #NewsBreak #CommunityFeed #LataraSpeaksTruth #HistoryInMotion #AccountabilityMatters #SayTheTruth #KeepPushing

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Tag: Newsbreak - Page 2 | LocalHood