TheLastRefuge– On June 5th the McKinney Texas pool party mob at the Craig Ranch sub-division was organized by 20-year-old Tatyana Rhodes, and her mother LaShana Burks. The incident erupted in National 24/7 Headlines for several weeks. Story HERE and HERE
We decided to research the real story of what took place, and we discovered how the mob began. In addition our research reflected that Tatyana Rhodes and her mother, LaShana Burks, were facing a very real possibility of civil lawsuits by the Home Owners Association within Craig Ranch.
Tatyana and LaShana brutalized an entire community with their for-profit party business, and the litany of lies trying to cover it up.
Now we discover an eviction lawsuit was filed earlier this week due to non-payment of rent from Ms. Burks. Oh, and as you can imagine, LaShana Burks is claiming the eviction is “retaliation” – not the whole ‘not-paying-rent’ thing. Go figure:
Can’t do that or they will be in violation of Obongo’s new double secret racial equality housing standards and barbecue rules (don’t say watermelon)! They may all be evicted instead and get bused to the Ghetto to live!
I suspect that if she were evicted, there would be one more party….and the house would be condemned due to the severity of the damage.
Call 1-800-Sharpton….race baiters are standing by.
Gee Wally, my new watch has a second hand on it.
Now I can count how long it will take before this is blamed on “racism”!
…..and this is why we can’t have nice things
Let the perps start up yet another failed social justice campaign #blackpoolpartiesmatter
It was a “for profit” paid event at a residential community’s pool? The Obama economy must really be keeping blacks down…
“But it’s raaaaaycisss to make me pay my rent!”
I like the idea that these women are trying to make a buck on their own (party planning and the like) I’m sorry they’re went about it in the wrong way. It started wrong with the event advertised as a pool party, right beside a private pool and went bad from there. She could have helped defuse the situation but instead she and her friend decided to raise the ante.
I hope this family is evicted if only to move them out of a neighborhood that probably despises them now. Damn waste of misguided entrepreneurial spirit.
It’s not the typical “entrepreneurial spirit” that one would admire. More like pole dancing/drug dealing parties. Using teen girls for the spicy bait – THAT kind of party was the type they planned. Then they “managed” the parties, collecting fees, etc.
You mean the people who started this whole thing were actually low-life dirt bags? Wow, sure didn’t see THAT coming.
So under the new “enforced equality in housing” rules, these people are guaranteed a residence in an appropriately non-integrated area. Let’s start with Beverly Hills (lots of pools!).
Just to keep the peace I would have her belongings sent back to “square one” so to speak………..Africa!!!
They’re basically pimps, probably family tradition
What I want to know is, how much $$$ they spent on the party, and what % of their rent arrears they could have paid with it?
#prioritiesmatteryoudumbasses
And furthermore, this trash had moved down from Chicago, and set up their shit there in McKinney.
And obeyme will have the justice dept., aka sharpton come down to investigate racism.
In this story, someone was having an “eviction party” & invited alot of stupid people. What could go wrong?
From Erie, Pa:
IE, Pa. — At least 50 to 75 teenagers gathered around a west Erie residence late Friday night for what police said was an “eviction party.”
Some of them loitered on the lawns, sidewalks and porches near 230 W. 29th St., causing at least one neighbor to call 911.
“There were so many youths it looked like a block party was going on,” said a woman who lives in the neighborhood.
She requested not to give her name because she is fearful of retribution.
“Then things got out of hand and put my family in danger,” she said.
Before Erie police could arrive, at least a dozen shots were fired outside the residence, killing one 16-year-old boy and leaving another one in critical condition at UPMC Hamot.
Elijah Jackson, of Erie, was killed by a single gunshot wound to the head, Erie County Deputy Coroner Korac Timon said. Jackson was pronounced dead at the scene by Timon at 1:05 a.m. Saturday.
Erie County Coroner Lyell Cook ruled Jackson’s death a homicide.
The identity of a 16-year-old boy seriously injured in the shootings has not been released.
“He is clinging to life,” Erie police Chief Randy Bowers said.
Erie resident Deanna Williams, 37, a close friend of Jackson and his family, surveyed the shooting scene Saturday afternoon.
“He was the sweetest kid you could ever meet,” said Williams, whose 18-year-old son and 15-year-old daughters are Jackson’s cousins. “He was very respectful. Every time he would come to my house, he would embrace me and hug me. He was one of those type of kids who put a smile on your face.”
Williams said Jackson always referred to her as “Auntie.”
“He didn’t deserve anything like this,” she said. “This (violence) has to stop. These kids are young. They have their whole lives ahead of them. You play basketball, you go to a football game, then you come to a party and you lose your life. It’s senseless.”
Williams said Jackson, who would have been a junior at East High School, loved playing basketball.
“He was talking about maybe entering in the military,” Williams said. “He and my son hung out on a daily basis.”
Williams said she last saw Jackson last week. He dropped by her house to visit Williams’ son, who recently underwent knee surgery.
“My son was not able to get out and about, and a lot of his close friends and cousins would come over and visit him,” Williams said. “Elijah spent three or four nights at my house playing video games with my son.”
Williams said Jackson was a person who “just made you smile.”
“Sometimes he would get on your nerves,” she said. “Goofy. I’m just going to miss his smile, miss him. He’d make you laugh. If you were in a bad mood, he’d cheer you up.”
Police said five other teenage boys, whose names have not been released, were injured in the incident and taken to Hamot and Saint Vincent Hospital. Their conditions are not life-threatening, Bowers said.
Four of them suffered gunshot wounds to the legs or hip, and an 18-year-old was injured when his Ford Explorer SUV crashed into a utility pole in the 2700 block of Myrtle Street shortly after the shootings.
Police said they believe the driver was leaving the scene. A gun, one of three found near the shootings, was recovered under the crashed vehicle, Bowers said.
“We know who the young man is, where he lives and we have his vehicle impounded,” Bowers said Saturday afternoon. “We think that car is involved. We know the owner of the car was in the car.”
Bowers said the vehicle’s owner is 18.
No suspects had been taken into custody as of Saturday night. Bowers said many witnesses to the shootings have not cooperated with police.
“We know a lot of kids have to have information that could help us with this investigation,” Bowers said. “We urge parents of these children to come forward and give us whatever information they can give us to help arrest the people responsible for this.”
Police said they believe many of the teenagers went to 230 W. 29th St. for a party after attending the Erie Lions Club Save-An-Eye All-Star football game earlier Friday evening at Veterans Stadium.
“We’re hearing one of the tenants in the residence was being evicted and was throwing an eviction party,” Bowers said. “We don’t know if the tenant just turned the place over to teenagers.”
Bowers urged people who have information on the shootings to contact police.
“If this type of behavior of not telling police who’s committing these crimes and not telling the police the truth continues, they are allowing this kind of crime to run rampant,” Bowers said. “The people who committed this murder and who shot the rest of these kids need to be arrested and held accountable.”
At least six Erie police units arrived at the scene after the shootings. So many officers worked the large crime scene that state police from the Lawrence Park Township barracks and Millcreek police were called to standby for additional help, Bowers said.
Summit Street is only one block long and runs east from Myrtle Street to West 29th Street. Nights are usually quiet, except when a neighbor on the next block sets off fireworks, said Rick Evans, who lives about a half block from the shootings.
“My wife and I were in bed when I heard the shots,” Evans said as he sat on his front porch. “It sounded like fireworks at first but she said those were gunshots. I looked outside and saw what looked like 50 kids walking down the middle of the street. I asked if it was serious and they wouldn’t answer me.”
The neighbor who requested not to be named said teenagers were leaning on her fence and sitting on her porch just before the shootings.
She then went to her bedroom when she heard the shots.
“My husband pushed me off our bed and I went to my daughter’s bedroom,” she said. “I looked outside a little bit later and saw a guy lying face down on the ground in front of my house. He wasn’t moving.”
As the woman talked, her mother-in-law packed the woman’s 21/2-year-old daughter into a car to take her to Wattsburg for the day.
“She wants to play outside and I can’t let her out with all this going on,” the woman said. “She keeps asking why the police are here.”