Anti-White blood libel at center of 'BIPOC'-oriented AMBER Alert debate, ignores 'BIPOC' truancy
ROC Cops restrict discussion on BIPOC teen's killing while a politician (et al) w/ Israeli familial ties distorts the case to push race-based AMBER alerts, blaming Whites for the child's death.
ROCHESTER, NY - Proposed changes to the AMBER Alert system standards in New York are sparking both support and skepticism. Approximately 70 local signatories collaborated to write a letter imploring Governor Kathy Hochul to create a BIPOC (Black and Indigenous People of Color) task force for the recovery of missing non-White citizens.
This state-level task force would directly issue AMBER alerts for missing NY children.
Since its establishment in 1996, the Amber Alert system has played a crucial role in expediting responses to child abductions. Advocates of the proposed changes, driven by a commitment to protecting Black and Brown children, argue that the current criteria may lead to delays in issuing alerts, potentially jeopardizing the safety of those abducted.
Rochester and WNY-based critics of the current system, including Rochester City Councilwoman Mary Lupien, highlight the swift and extensive response to the disappearance of a 9-year-old White girl in Central NY who, thankfully, was found alive.
The signatories have stated they perceive the system as de facto anti-BIPOC regarding missing child alerts. Implying that their children are classified as “runaways” rather than missing children due to alleged, implicit systemic bias.
After Mary Lupien drew attention to the comparatively prompt rescue of the aforementioned White kidnapping victim, it was alleged that Craig Ross Jr. sexually assaulted the girl.
The very same compares to a recent case where a Rochester-based BIPOC teenager was marked “[a] runaway” by Monroe County for at least the second time in her very short life.
In this most recent instance, Lopez-Moore was called “a runaway” in early September. As Lopez-Moore did not legally merit an AMBER Alert and had a history of voluntarily leaving home, fewer resources were dedicated to finding her.
Video footage exists of her leaving her White grandmother, Tracy McDaniels’ home, apparently while not under duress. Carla Rogner of 13WHAM states that McDaniels allegedly allowed her grandchild to drive to an undisclosed location. This reportedly occurred after midnight and before 2 AM on 27 AUG 2023. McDaniels said that “nothing looked unusual.”
Tragically, the teenager was later found dead in a suspected homicide. The whereabouts of Lopez-Moore’s vehicle are currently unknown to the public. Rochester police (RPD) have not commented on the vehicle either.
It is legally impossible for a 16-year-old to hold anything above a junior driver’s license as a resident of NYS. A junior driver’s license is one step below a fully privileged, senior NYS license. A person with a junior driver’s license may not drive after 9 PM except while conducting work, school-related business, or accompanied by a legal guardian.
Lopez-Moore was alleged to have departed McDaniels’ home unaccompanied and was presumed to have been on a social outing. Her remains were estimated to be over a month old, per the Rochester Police Department, a time frame very close to her reported disappearance.
Additionally, Jakarah Lopez-Moore was believed to have been on probation for an unknown reason. Captain Frank Umbrino of the RPD tried to influence the discussion by suggesting that any mention of Lopez-Moore's legal issues or inferences about Lopez-Moore’s home life are done so with ill intentions:
“I know there was other information out there that she was on probation and this and that, that’s all fine and dandy.
But it’s still a 16-year-old girl who was murdered and that’s not acceptable and there will be a time and a place to evaluate everything that occurred in Jakarah’s life and how this maybe could have been prevented, this is not the time or the place.
That is a conversation that needs to take place and hard truths need to be answered. Uncomfortable questions need to be asked and uncomfortable answers need to be given this is just not the time or place yet.”
Captain Frank Umbrino RPD Source
Umbrino’s psychoanalysis aside, Lopez-Moore’s life should naturally lead one to question those who may have failed her. For example, Lopez-Moore’s obituary features an undated image of the child appearing to exhibit a tattoo adorning her left forearm and hand.
Lopez-Moore never reached her 17th birthday and died as a minor.
Tattooing a minor in New York is a Class B misdemeanor. According to the New York Senate’s Web site, the law has read the same since 2014 regarding “indelible ink.”
To add further fuel to the fire, Jakarah Lopez-Moore once expressed she was “bisexual” via her X/Twitter bio and elsewhere. The social media account had not posted an update since 2019 when Lopez-Moore would not have exceeded 13 years of age.
Lopez-Moore would double down on her alleged ‘bisexuality’ in November of 2022 via a TikTok that sampled the extremely vulgar song “Bisexual anthem” by Domo Wilson.
“…I realized there ain’t no rules to this sh*t
ain’t a crime to like p***y, ain’t a crime to like d**k…”
- Domo Wilson in 2019
Inherent Anti-Whiteness
The dismissal of White concerns is presuppositional to the argument favoring an exclusionary missing BIPOC task force. It is intimated that Whites contributed to the deaths of BIPOC children such as Lopez-Moore.
The phenomenon of collectively blaming White people for the killing of racial outsiders is defined by Jewish authorities like the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) as “blood libel" but only when Jews are the accused.
Given New York's densely populated urban areas and high crime rates, law enforcement agencies already face significant challenges. Suggested changes could compound these challenges, affecting resource allocation, potentially leading to public fatigue, and increasing the investigative overhead for law enforcement agencies.
Additionally, there are concerns about the system's credibility in the event of false alarms, potentially leaving non-runaway cases of missing White children buried in an overabundance of information and squandering of community resources.
While some media personalities (Todd Hallidy of WHAM 1180 above) have meekly pointed out these potential issues, they deliberately avoid the concerns of the White majority of New York.
Another factor hindering open dialogue is the reluctance of corporate-backed conservative media personalities (Bob Lonsberry, Shannon Joy, etc.) in Rochester to address the hypocrisy of the non-White population.
Namely, they fail to ask:
“If BIPOC parents are doing all that they can to keep tabs on their children, then why are they so frequently truant?”
According to NYSED, Black students in New York were twice as likely to be chronically absent as their White counterparts in the 2021-2022 school year in both categories (elementary/middle 21.3% vs. 42.4% and high school 27.6% vs. 52.8%).
Chronic absenteeism occurs when a student misses more than 10% of instruction, or 18 days in one school year.
Hispanic students did not fare much better than their Black counterparts. For example, secondary students of Hispanic origin were more than twice as likely to be chronically absent than Whites.
[There is absolutely zero evidence to suggest that Jakarah Lopez-Moore struggled with truancy, this is merely an analysis of the minority community writ large.]
Chronic absenteeism bears significant societal consequences, extending beyond individual setbacks. High rates of absenteeism correlate with increased economic challenges, as a less educated and skilled workforce can impede a nation's competitiveness and economic growth. Moreover, communities grappling with chronic absenteeism often experience elevated crime rates, placing additional strain on law enforcement and public safety resources.
Perhaps most essential to mention, and also most glaring, is that if one is truant, their location is not officially known.
According to the letter written by various Rochester-area stakeholders, 63 of the missing persons cases in Rochester are children who are mainly BIPOCs, how many struggle with truancy?
BIBOCs want the benefits of the type of society White people create, but can't or won't acknowledge the habits and norms that come together to make the society. It would be better for everyone if we could separate.