https://www.sreb.org/what-teachers-say A MATH TEACHER’S REFLECTION By Brandi PopeBrandi PopeBrandi Pope teaches sixth grade math a Muller Road Middle School in Blythewood, SC. When I was asked to participate in the Mathematics Design Collaborative training, I did not know what to expect. I didn’t know if I was ready or how MDC would fit into how I currently teach math. I showed up with an open mind, and within 30 minutes, I was pleased to realize that MDC is a best teaching practice. MDC focuses on formative assessment through higher order questioning. It provides students with engaging tasks incorporating rigor while providing individualized support. For the teachers, the lessons help guide you through not only how to administer high-quality formative assessment in real classrooms, but more importantly, how to utilize the results you get from the formative assessment task. This is my seventh year teaching in our district. What I loved about the training was how easily the connections were made between my work in the elementary classroom and the concepts driving an MDC classroom. In elementary school, we focus heavily on incorporating levels of questioning, mathematical reasoning and the ability to apply mathematics in real-world situations through AVID training, as well as training provided by Carol Sample and Elizabeth Waters feel like MDC takes that training a step further by showing teachers how to use formative assessment to drive instruction, increase student engagement and individualize lessons, all while not increasing our prep time, but instead teaching us how to use our teaching time more efficiently. “Aha” MomentsMy big “aha” moments: 1. It is what happens after the formative assessment that is most important. 2. There is a distinction between re-teaching a student and the re-engagement of a student. 3. Enrichment activities are a must. 4. Identifying when to re-teach and when to re-engage is key to ensuring the success of our kids. DESIGNED FOR SUSTAINABILITYBy Sheri BlankenshipSheri BlankenshipSREB’s training model is designed for sustainability, building LDC collaboration tools and teacher-leadership development into Year 2 workshops. Teachers trained during Year 1 are considered experts, moving into a teacher-leader role in Year 2. These teachers collaborated with common content teachers during their first year, which meant they were prepared to share what they learned with new teachers in their departments. During that same time period, SREB was developing a local trainer to champion and coordinate the spread of LDC to more teachers across the district. Sheri Blankenship is an instructional coach with Rankin County School District, in Brandon, Mississippi Students Step Up When Teachers and Leaders Transform Classrooms Literacy Design Collaborative and Mathematics Design Collaborative
0 Comments
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2014/jun/10/10-things-teachers-want-to-say-parents-cant The long school year is coming to an end and one primary teacher has a few things to share
• 10 things parents want to say to teachersAnonymous Tue 10 Jun 2014 02.20 EDTFirst published on Tue 10 Jun 2014 02.20 EDT
1 Your kids are not your mates Something I'm starting to hear with worrying frequency within the primary school setting is "my daughter's my best friend". Often, this rings alarm bells. Your kids aren't your mates. You're their parent, and your responsibility is to provide them with guidance and boundaries, not to drag them into your own disputes. Your nine-year-old doesn't need to know about your bitter feud with his friend's mother, or which dad you've got the hots for at the school gate. In the years to come he or she may realise that some of their own problems (social alienation, in its various forms, being a prime example) might have something to do with exposure to that sort of talk at an early age. Continue at your own risk. Advertisement2 Data levels aren't everything Here's one to think about for the start of next term. At the autumn parents' evening my agenda tends to look something like this: "How is <insert name> settling in to her new class? Is she happy?" And so on. All being well, our conversation will move on to your child's preferences about this subject or that activity and the sorts of things we might work on together to ensure a successful academic year. Except you were told your child was a level 3a writer in her school report in summer and you're now demanding to know why she's not a level 4 yet. Naturally, it's a similar story for reading and maths. Before I respond, can I just ask if you settled down and were on an even keel in no time whatsoever after every major event in your life? Give everybody some time to settle in – new children and new teachers can be just as daunting for each other at the start of an academic year. It will take time to establish positive relationships, let alone pinpoint progress levels. 3 Let them go a little bit It's always tricky to bring up, as it's the child who dictates when this needs to happen. And that could be at any moment, regardless of year group or academic ability. And I empathise, as both a teacher and a parent. Our children are, of course, the most precious things in our lives and we will naturally fight to protect and provide for them. Independence, and the desire for it, however, comes to us all sooner or later and you would do well to recognise the signs. Is your child suddenly starting to produce independent pieces of writing or artwork, and then look to you for acknowledgement/praise? Or maybe following recipe or model-making instructions to a tee? Try setting a few tasks. Left to his own devices, you'd be surprised how well your 10-year-old can remember to pack his homework or get his own breakfast. Even seemingly basic routine chores will help foster his sense of worth and help him cope with life at senior school. In the years to come, he'll probably be more grateful than if you were still spoon-feeding everything to him at this age. 4 Video games carry certificates for a reason I'm sure that XBox keeps your nine-year-old nice and quiet at home. But his last piece of writing featured SAS operations against Colombian drug cartels and was slightly disturbing. So too was the report from the four six-year-olds who were worried about being the bait in a make-believe drive-by shooting in the playground. I appreciate I can't control what you let your kid see at home, but until they can tell the difference between CGI and reality, would you mind if I just forwarded the complaints from the parents of those six-year-olds on to you? Advertisement5 John Terry is no role model Ticking off a child for low-level disruption occurs at least daily for most teachers; it's part of the job. Irritating as it is, it does actually help to establish or regularly reinforce boundaries and it rarely leads to escalation. That is, until your son goes into what I call "John Terry-mode" following said ticking-off: arguing back, gesticulating, rolling eyes, huffing and puffing, and so on. That's why he ended up getting the "hairdryer" treatment, and losing his lunchtime. The media might hold the likes of Terry up as heroes and let them get away with such histrionics every Saturday afternoon, but it's painful to watch eight-year-olds mimicking that sort of behaviour even in the playground. I'm not going to tolerate it in my classroom. Unfortunately, the odd lost playtime at school isn't going to go far in making this problem go away, so if there's any chance of you handing out a few red cards or match bans at home it'd probably enforce the point a lot more clearly. 6 Boyfriends can wait "My daughter's really sad these days," isn't an uncommon thing to hear from a parent from time to time. I will then anticipate having to explain that, in my experience, girls' friendship issues do tend to drag on a bit whereas their male counterparts will just have a straightforward shouting match (or worse) and then get on with things. But when said mother then goes on to explain that her eight-year-old daughter's misery is due to the fact that she hasn't got a boyfriend, my klaxon goes off. Kiss-chase is all good fun, but it really is about as serious as playground romances tend to get at this age. Children are under enough pressure at primary school these days as it is, without having to worry about whether they're impressing Johnny SuperDry, or Billy Twelve-Mates. Let your child be a child. 7 Yes, I would like help in the classroom – but not from you To a primary school teacher, the offer of an extra pair of hands in the classroom is a truly wonderful thing, and 90% of the time any teacher would pull your arm off, so to speak. Helping with art and craft afternoons, listening to readers, making classroom decorations, putting up displays and being a friendly face on school trips are all an essential part of classroom karma, and the children love it. However, teachers do talk to each other, and if you've got a track record of snooping through children's writing folders, checking maths corrections or questioning styles of delivery to senior management behind closed doors, I'll be keeping you very much at arm's length. Could your motive be to do some undercover snooping? You're not welcome. 8 Sorry – your kid's just lazy When it comes to progress, every teacher wants the best for every child in their class – and not just for the sake of their own performance review meeting. It is actually why most of us do what we do. But there sometimes comes a point where we start to think we are pushing an immovable object. If your 10-year-old isn't making the progress that he could be, and it's not because he's tired – it might be because he's, well, lazy. It's not just the flopped-across-the-table body language that tells me this. Compared to others of a similarly high ability, he's moving backwards – making frequent, basic errors. AdvertisementIt's difficult to teach someone who doesn't want to learn, but it's near impossible to teach someone who thinks they know it all already. Conversations about effort and attitude aside, it would be worth reminding them that they'll soon have senior school expectations to cope with. If any of this sounds familiar, could you maybe think about what you might do to help deal with it? 9 Fine. Don't do the homework Homework is – and always will be – a tug-of-war between parents and teachers in primary school. A lot of parents complain when there's too much of it. Or when there's not enough of it. Or when it's too easy. Or hard. You complain when parents are expected to help with it and you complain when it's designed to be completed independently and your child struggles with this. You complain when your kid has "mislaid" it and it hasn't miraculously reappeared in her book-bag, the night before it is due. I will be sure to forward all these complaints to the school governing body, which wrote the homework policy in the first place. In the meantime, I'll just get on with all of the piles of marking. 10 PE is a compulsory subject There has been a big rise in children saying they can't do PE, or bringing a note from home, and some excuses are dubious to say the least (for example, an ankle problem that seems to go on for months, or a cold that only afflicts the child on one particular day of the week). Just like maths and literacy, PE (swimming included) is part of the national curriculum and I'm afraid your child doesn't have a choice about whether he or she takes part in it or not. Regularly "forgotten" kits aren't a problem. Once we give up sending "forgotten kit" letters home each week we can always dip into the lost property bin, where there are countless substitute items ready and waiting for a good airing. Please don't forget: PE is good for them, after all, and doing it is in their best interests. As is homework, and most of the above. Thank you for reading and see you in school. Since you’re here …… we have a small favour to ask. More people are reading the Guardian than ever but advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. And unlike many news organisations, we haven’t put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as open as we can. So you can see why we need to ask for your help. The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe our perspective matters – because it might well be your perspective, too. I appreciate there not being a paywall: it is more democratic for the media to be available for all and not a commodity to be purchased by a few. I’m happy to make a contribution so others with less means still have access to information.Thomasine F-R.If everyone who reads our reporting, who likes it, helps fund it, our future would per Alonzo P, I am asked to send you email , TO GET SOME KIND OF ANTI-CORRUPTION PUNISHMENT AT LAPD INTERNAL AFFAIRSteve Noh <[email protected]>11:13 AM (0 minutes ago)
to jose.a.rodrigu., info HI MY NAME IS DR.STEVE HEEYOUNG NOH(62Y OLD, MED DOCTOR) who was jailed wrongfully for 1.5y in 2014 due to DILIGENT RETALIATION PLAN made by Olympic Div of LAPD who has been jailing me and arresting me and removing me from my computer lab under 5150/5152 over last 11years on jan 26,2014: one day after I warned Olympic div's watch commander sgt clark who has been committing crimes on me( I built a website called FuckLAPD.com at that time with its chronology,and I TOLD HIM I WOULD PUT HIM THRU LAC GRAND JURY on jan 26, I was assaulted by my neighbor who was in dispute , he runs AA house. I called 911, Officer Coco was dispatched, officer coco has been going after me, I even took his pic to put on FuckLAPD.com I jumped into Paramedic Van, who wanted to take me to other than Cedar Sinai, I insisted I have been experiencing unexplanable weight loss and short of breaths, SO I WANTED TO GO TO CEDAR SINAI ER WHERE THEY HAVE MY EKG DATA, they refused, so I ASKED THEM TO DROP ME OFF, SO THAT I COULD TAKE A TAXI TO GET THERE. within a sec, I was handcuffed by Officer Coco, citing I assaulted Paramedic and Wounded. I also heard I wounded Officer Oh,too POLICE REPORT WAS 100% FABRICATED, EVEN SAID I WAS HOMELESS ! office Coco has been to my home more than 5 times. One Day, Sgt Clark refused to dispatch LAPD when I called 911, so 911 center supervisor ms Miller and supervisor Reeve got into FIGHT WITH SGT CLARK WHEY OLYMPIC DIV WON'T SEND A DISPATCH. Finally Sgt Sparksman took police report over the phone, now HE is gone from Olympic div. Sep2014, I was sent to MetroPolitan Mental Hospital, after 6 months' long WAIT-LIST, I called LAPD internal affair and filed MY WRONGFUL JAILING by Officer CoCo and Sgt Clark, as of Jan 2018, LAPD Police Chief is NOT releasing his Investigative Result while LAFD Professional Standard Captain(Kenneth Knighten) investigated and got approval from HIS SUPERVISOR THAT I WAS INNOCENT, which means ONLY CRIME EVIDENCE OF 'WOUNDED' FACE PIC OF PARAMEDIC WAS PHOTO-SHOPPED !!! Many of Sworn-in Officers( Paramedics, Arresting Officers, Authorizing Sgt Clark, Internal Affair Sgt Ward,Sgt Wilde,Sgt Rosenkilde,Detective Jackson.....) and All Olympic Div's HIgh Ranks( Sgt Dominic, fox, brown,menesis,Thaimas,Pedrosa,Dolan,Arnold,RUBIN..............) are to be INDICTED BY LAC DA & ATTY GENERAL & FBI Wolf in Sheep Coat NO INTEGRITY AT ALL, OLYMPIC CORRUPTION IS OUT OF CONTROL
15 men exonerated in one day -- and 7 Chicago cops taken off the streetBy Ryan Young, CNN
Updated 12:37 PM ET, Sat November 18, 2017 Jail officers punch, knee inmates Video shows cop shoot teen Video appears to show man getting shot Chicago: The 'false confession capital' 15 wrongly convicted get charges dropped Now PlayingDOJ: Chicago police use excessive force Chicago releases trove of police case documents Jail officers punch, knee inmates Video shows cop shoot teen Video appears to show man getting shot Chicago: The 'false confession capital' 15 wrongly convicted get charges dropped DOJ: Chicago police use excessive force Chicago releases trove of police case documents Jail officers punch, knee inmatesStory highlights
The dismissal of charges against the men, who together had 18 convictions, is believed to the first-ever mass exoneration in Cook County, the nation's second most populous county. "In these cases, we concluded, unfortunately, the police were not being truthful, and we couldn't have confidence in the integrity of their reports and their testimony, and so, in good conscience, we could not see these convictions stand," Mark Rotert of the Cook County Conviction Integrity Unit said in a news conference.Seven other officers have been placed on desk duty pending an internal review of more incidents, the Chicago Police Department told CNN. Those officers all worked under Watts, CNN affiliate WBBM reported. Rotert, of the state's attorney's office, said his team is now reviewing additional cases connected to drug convictions spanning several years.'They would frame them' The men whose charges were tossed alleged that Watts and his team of officers planted drugs on them during arrests between 2003 and 2008, then falsified police reports, leading to their convictions, according to the Exoneration Project, a free legal clinic at the University of Chicago Law School that presented the cases to county prosecutors. A Cook County judge on Thursday approved prosecutors' decision to drop the charges. All the men had served their sentences for the crimes in question, according to the Exoneration Project: 14 are free, and one remains incarcerated on unrelated charges. Illinois AG sues Chicago over police reforms One of the men, Leonard Gipson, said he was framed by Watts on drug charges and went to jail twice because of the officer. "If you're not gonna pay Watts, you were going to jail," Gipson recalled. "I went to jail and did 2 years and 24 months for Watts. I came home, and he put another case on me." Gipson's attorney, Joshua Tepfer of the Exoneration Project, said officers took money from and charged dozens of people for crimes they did not commit. "They were skimming off people, and anyone who would get in their way, they would frame them," he told CNN. "And anyone who tried to report them, they would frame them." Watts and then-Officer Kallatt Mohammed pleaded guilty in federal court in 2013 and 2012, respectively, in connection with stealing money from a drug suspect who turned out to be an FBI informant. Watts was sentenced to 22 months in prison; Mohammed got 18 months. CNN could not immediately reach Watts or Mohammed, who both have served their sentences.'Ongoing, systemic, day-to-day corruption' It wasn't until the summer of 2015, though, that Tepfer, the law clinic attorney, learned of the case of Ben Baker and started investigating. "What I learned is what Ben Baker said happened to him -- that he was framed by this officer who was named Sgt. Ronald Watts, and what I learned right away was that Ronald Watts had been convicted federally of exactly what Ben said had happened to him: being shaken down and framing someone for putting drugs on someone." Activists push to force Chicago police reform, left in limbo in Trump era "I started to look into it, and what we slowly realized this was ongoing, systemic, day-to-day corruption by not just Sgt. Watts and not just by his federally convicted co-defendant, Officer Kallatt Mohammed, but by a whole crew of officers that went on with impunity for over a decade on the south side Chicago housing projects." Baker was freed last year after nearly 10 years in prison when the state's attorney dropped drug charges that Baker claimed were concocted by Watts and his crew, CNN affiliate WLS reported. "It was torture," Baker told CNN of his jail time. "You're thinking in your head: How did this happen? How did I go from laying next to my wife and going out with my kids every day to being in this cell every day?" Baker last year filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city of Chicago and 17 officers for framing him and covering it up for the decade he sat in prison. The suit also alleges that a "code of silence" within the Chicago Police Department allowed Watts to run an extortion ring with impunity. ------------------------*--------------------------------------------*---------------------------------------------------------*----------- Feds Confirm: Chicago Police Department Is as Corrupt as You Thought It Was Stephen A. Crockett Jr. CBS screenshotThe Chicago Police Department has always had a violent history plagued by corruption. On Friday a yearlong investigation by the U.S. Justice Department confirms that the CPD has continued to build on its bankrupt legacy. According to DOJ findings, the Chicago police “have violated the constitutional rights of residents for years, permitting racial bias against blacks, using excessive force and shooting people who did not pose immediate threats,” the New York Times reports. The report concluded that police tactics have endangered civilians and officers, caused avoidable injuries and deaths, and helped complicate an already contentious relationship between officers and the community. The findings also noted that the pattern was attributable to “systemic deficiencies,” including insufficient training and bad officers remaining unaccountable for their actions. Many are concerned that the findings come too little, too late, since the current administration has just days in office before President-elect Donald Trump’s regime takes over. Trump’s position on corruption within the police force and senseless killings of unarmed African Americans remains to be seen. The DOJ investigation began after the release of dashcam footage that captured the shooting of black teen Laquan McDonald by Chicago officers. The video showed the 17-year-old walking down the street holding a small pocketknife before he was shot some 16 times. Although the shooting happened in 2014, the footage was not released until December 2015, after the McDonald family demanded that the video be made public. Out of the 409 police shootings in the last five years, that were reviewed by the Justice Dept., only two were deemed unjustified. The report found that witnesses were often never interviewed, and officers colluded to make sure shooting stories had the same narrative. “The procedures surrounding investigations allow for ample opportunity for collusion among officers and are devoid of any rules prohibiting such coordination,” the report said, according to the Associated Press. U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said that the report lays “the groundwork for the difficult but necessary work of building a stronger, safer, and more united Chicago for all who call it home,” AP reports. Read more at the New York Times and the Associated Press. http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-sheriff-deputy-drug-conspiracy-20180116-story.html Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy has been charged with operating a large-scale drug trafficking operation in which he boasted that he hired other law enforcement officers to provide security to drug dealers and could assault people for his clients, according to court records. Kenneth Collins, a deputy assigned to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and two other men were arrested by FBI agents Tuesday morning in a sting operation when they arrived to what they thought was a drug deal, according to records unsealed following the arrest. Court documents outlining the case show Collins, 50, has been under investigation for months. He was recorded by agents discussing “his extensive drug trafficking network, past criminal conduct, and willingness to accept bribes to use his law enforcement status for criminal purposes,” according to a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court. “I fix problems,” Collins was recorded saying to an undercover agent, court records show. “I make a lot of things go away.” I took my own polygraph and results are as follows:
1. I was the one who called 911 after being assaulted but LAPD never asked what happened on that day 2.I have known office coco(v tall black LAPD,5y) beforehand 3.I was charged with assault & wounding Paramedic Face ...crime evidence was 'Photo-shopped" 4.LAFD professional standard captain Kenneth Knighten (who has known me beforehand) did his own investigation...DECLARED I WAS INNOCENT many of Sworn-in Officers were involved to cook this story ,so sophiscated, my attorney coulnt' crack now LAC DA Just Integrity is on fire ! FBI as well !!! Dr.Noh has lived as adopted-out when v young to mom's parents( got to meet most of my Honorable Relatives from mom's side. My mom was a HERO mom! \
Father was ill with liver problem ,unable to work. I raised myself to enter "Seoul National Univ" with Univ's President Award, and scholarship. Otherwise It would be impossible to pay for Seoul style living, entered Master Degree ,finished Military Service Obligation for 6m as Army Officer,got Full Scholarship at USA-Medical School. I have been suffering Depression all my life ! gone thru homeless,unemployment,med issues,wrongful imprisonment,mental hospitals believe I would be z good person to REPRESENT UNDERDOG ! ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2006, I moved to LA, 1. rampart area, Female LAPD chained me in the station for several hours until Korean LAPD(asian narcotic init , skinny and bonny),then he inteviewed me briefly, got released next day. Sgt Lopez(short handsome,acting in integrity) said " I HEARD ABOUT THAT".. my landlady assaulted, she is very muscular, I filed TRO on her, while waiting she kept violating my TRO trying to put Hot Water on me pretending accident. I showed at Police Commision Meeting and OIG Ms Hudson grabbed me & said " I heard about that, I would be the one,but it will take long) 2.I moved into 601 Crenshaw(mr Yoon), one of roommate said " I saw you on city TV" within 2 days, 4 gangsters broke my door down(2 white hunk, one korean 20's tweeking on meth who broke my cell ph, in a half(collapsible) when trying to call 911 2nd older korean guy showed me a kind of "LAPD badge",but his body langue was korean low class style...When I got kicked out of that house, I was stepping out only noticing a LAPD car was sitting there,and that young korean guy said " Here is POLICE you want to call". Office Kim stepped out of car, and one black LAPD.....I REPORTED TO COUNCIL MEMBER'S FEMALE STAFF WHO SAID I KNOW HIM WELL, he is not that kind of guy.... 3.I moved into 347 Kingsley korean house, one day , Police broke my room door.......... HERE WE GO ~! LAPD KIM + 601 crenshaw landlord mr YOON) + muscle boys ,I hided into my bathroom, but my landlady found a key for it, so LAPD opened my bathroom. one night, Sgt Hwang visited and threatened me for no good reason ,requested I shall do this and that, I called Hollywood div and spoke with Lieut (female, miller?) told her that SGT HWANG CAME OVER HERE AND GAVE ME HIS BIZ CARD, IT SAYS HE IS WITH HOLLYWOOD, BUT 347 kingsley falls into Wilshire div...She sent another Sgt(tall white guy) to try to silence me --------------------------------------------I went into Cedar Sinai ER due to "too weak" and in ER room, there one High Rank LAPD who was threatening saying "5152"( I did not know what 5152 meant) , soon after I was escorted to Mental Unit(top roof ) where its director alex wong(?) released me on v next day... All nurses were showing "too sad" type faces !!!!!! 4.then I moved into korean house located near pico /crenshaw, one night Sgt Kim(he has Bowed Legs, easy to spot)came over on my complaint, Sgt Kim examed rental contract (which says Steve Noh, my DL is hee noh), Sgt Kim arrested me for ID THEFT, forced me to go thru whole body scanning, even 1-2 years later, he called to speak with "My girl friend" , I dont know why 5.then i moved to Irolo x olympic k house, I got a threat phone call from detective Chu(?). I called FBI, supervisor carlos narro got connected with me 6.I moved into Oxford (160?) where LAPD MEDINA cooked a crime story and arrested me and jaled me under ASSAULT. before this, several LAPD broke my door down ,ransaked thru my belongings and even closet. one big white muscle guy ,,,i remember ..recently Sgt Bedart introduced me as " Sgt Candidate" , I filed a grievance on him citing HE BROKE MY DOOR DOWN BEFORE, ------------------------------- 6.so when i got released, I stayed in homeless shelter, weather was unbearable, so I took Grey Hound Bus(by pawing my gold ring) to Seattle where I filed Political Asylum based on LAPD"s Corruptions , but it was granted I visited Korean Consular office insisting it is your due duty to protect Korean citizens not be prosecuted unreasonably 7.lived as Homeless,but opened Web Post Office(dba), worked as Dish Washer briefly still so depressed, weather-sensitive, so psychiatric advised to move to Sunny Ares 8.also I had 2 Bench Warrantst at MENTAL COURT 9.moved into 2916 8th st?),Jun Young Bae called 911 and arriving LAPD korean Yah(?) jailed me under Assault with Deadly Weapon when he was 2.5 times bigger and HE PUNCHED ME DOWN SINCE I POSTED ON WALL HIS UNCLE SEXUALL MOLESTED ME WHILE IN BED, by opening my door with Manager Keys, I built a website as UglyKorean.net where Jun Bae's dad had a Garnish doc ,although he said he owns both bld,it was enlisted Kim's Trust 9. when I got released from Jail and Immigration Camp, 1 year after, mentally & emotionally took that long, I SPOKE WITH OLYMPIC DETECTIVE denice?) who recommanded I shall talk with DA, Jun Bae said he hired a criminal attorney to Prosecute me DURING restitusion court hearing, instead, I told my PD phil buche who got retired on me and Jeff Levy got asigned ,he never interviewed me Susan Kim vs Andrew Kang(feloney,jailed) |