“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Preparedness is a Daily Event. Not just One Month A Year. I care! October 1, 2025

                                            It’s never too late to start preparing... until it is. 
 
Join the Black Emergency Managers Association International in their ongoing 'I CARE..' campaign, and taking an active role in caring about health, family, and our communities.

Preparedness Habits
  1. Notice: 
  • Build a habit of noticing exits in public places.
  • Staying in a hotel for the first time, take the stairs down at least once so you know where they lead.
  1. Learn: 
  • Take a class in CPR or learn how to use an automated external defibrillator (AED). When bystanders do CPR or use an AED, they can keep someone alive until emergency responders arrive. We need to help people feel more willing to do CPR, which will help more people survive. That willingness and confidence will come from training and practice.
  1. Give:
  • There is always a need for blood. If you’ve never donated before, visit the Red Cross website and learn what it takes to donate. For most people, it’s a relatively quick process and it saves lives. If you haven’t donated for some time, take a minute and make an appointment now.

 

 
 
Preparedness TIPS for families, communities, businesses, and schools.
  • Consider the basics:
    • Make a plan, get a kit, be informed, and get involved.
  • Make a plan
    • Know what kinds of disasters and emergencies might happen where you are.
    • Consider how you might respond to a wildfire, a flood, or an earthquake.
  • Get a kit
    • Store the essentials, like water, food, flashlight, first aid, meds, and pet supplies.
    • Make sure you have a kit in your car.
  • Stay informed
    • Sign up for local alerts and keep a portable charger handy.
  • Get involved

Consider joining your city’s CERT program or volunteering with other emergency preparedness groups in your community.

 

After you do any of these activities, it’s important to share what you’re doing.
  
Just pick one person and let them know you’re sharing because you care about them.
  
The more we prepare, the more resilient we’ll be when an emergency happens.

 
 
 

Monday, September 29, 2025

Community Engagement: Compton, LA. Bone with Friends Podcast. Community Preparedness Panel. Sunday 9/28/2025

Compton, LA is more than what’s in the movies or stereotypes portrayed. 

Compton Community coming together for National Preparedness Month at the community level.

Recording:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4DQLTfAmTo 

 

Host:  Ronald Monk
Panelist:
  Ms. SilkyD Williams                 Mr. Mike Hollins  
  Mr. Michael J. Netherly, Sr.      Rev Frederick Shaw.



 

 

Saturday, September 27, 2025

ACTION RESPONSE: Forensic Pathology. Science linking the past to the present and the cause. 1800's Maryland Cemetery to 2025 Mississippi Hangings.

Response from member.  Our members are about 'ACTIONS'.

Action Plan — “Maryland Secret Cemeteries” & “2025 Mississippi Hangings”

1) Spin up a proper case file (today)

·        Create two folders: MD Secret Cemeteries (19th–20th c.) and MS Hangings (2025).

·        In each, keep a chain-of-custody log, contact list, and an evidence index (who has what, when collected, where stored). Use standard death-investigation scene practices to preserve admissibility later. American Academy of Forensic Sciences

2) Lock to accepted autopsy & death-investigation standards

·        Ask if a forensic autopsy was done by a NAME-accredited office (or equivalent). If yes, request the report; if not, document why and consider a second autopsy by an independent forensic pathologist per NAME guidance. The Name+2The Name+2

·        Ensure all requests reference Forensic Autopsy Performance Standards (NAME) and scene-to-lab evidence handling best practices (NIJ/OSAC). The Name+1

3) Mississippi “hangings” — what to verify (facts > narratives)

Key questions a pathologist investigates in suspected hangings/strangulation:

·        Ligature pattern & position (knot, direction of the furrow), petechiae, facial/neck injuries, internal neck structures (hyoid, thyroid cartilage), and nonspecific findings of asphyxia.
• Note: Hyoid fractures are not required to diagnose strangulation/hanging and are age-dependent; their absence does not exclude homicidal violence. Pak J Med Health Sci+3PMC+3ScienceDirect+3

·        Scene consistency: anchor point height/strength, reachable objects, slip marks, footwear/soil transfers, and any post-mortem manipulation indicators. Follow standardized scene protocols to reduce ambiguity. American Academy of Forensic Sciences

What to request, in writing:

·        Full autopsy (external + internal) report, all toxicology, histology, and photographs/video.

·        Scene photographs, body diagrams, investigator notes, and 911/CAD logs.

·        Surveillance/body-cam within the time window; ask for an export hash and metadata.

·        Cell tower records and device location history (if appropriate) via counsel.

4) Maryland “secret cemeteries” — treat as forensic archaeology

For possible unmarked/“secret” burial sites tied to foster/boarding institutions:

·        Use forensic archaeology/anthropology standards for survey, controlled excavation, recovery, and anthropological analysis (don’t disturb sites without a plan, permits, and community consent). American Academy of Forensic Sciences+1

·        Build a non-invasive first pass: archives, ground-level interviews, historical plats, aerials/time-series imagery, ground-penetrating radar (where permitted), and GIS overlays before any spade hits soil. eaaf.org

5) Leverage Mississippi GIS & satellite imagery (properly)

·        Pull parcels, aerials, and historic basemaps from Mississippi GIS/MARIS for the 2025 sites; export layer lists and data sources for your evidentiary appendix. MS.gov+3gis.ms.gov+3maris.mississippi.edu+3

·        Satellite imagery and GIS can be admissible when authenticated and presented by a qualified expert under Daubert; treat it like photographic evidence (foundation, method reliability, and chain). Keep originals, processing steps, and analyst CVs. zellelaw.com+3OnGeo Intelligence+3Opinio Juris+3

6) Use AI the right way (assistive, transparent, audit-ready)

·        Video triage: AI to detect persons of interest, time-stamps, vehicle plates—then a human reviews and certifies.

·        GIS/imagery change-detection: AI flags disturbances or new overhead features; preserve the raw tiles, model version, and parameters used.

·        Document control: run an evidence-locker index that hashes every file and logs every access. (AI outputs are leads, not conclusions; the expert renders opinions.)

7) Community & family engagement

·        Offer a family liaison protocol: regular updates, access to public records, and clarity about what science can/cannot say at each step.

·        For historical/Native burial work, include tribal/First Nation consultation and consent processes in the plan (prior to any ground disturbance).

8) Quick request templates (you can paste these)

A. Records to Medical Examiner/Coroner

We respectfully request the complete medicolegal file for [Decedent, DOB, Case #], including autopsy report (external/internal), histology, toxicology, photo/video documentation, and all investigator notes. Please also provide scene documentation and chain-of-custody logs per NAME standards and NIJ/OSAC guidance.

B. Law-enforcement/video

Please provide original-format body-worn camera, dash, and fixed-camera footage for [location/time window], exported with associated hashes and metadata logs, plus CAD/911 and supplemental narratives.

C. GIS/Imagery

We request access to original-resolution aerial/satellite tiles and associated metadata for [coordinates/time window], along with any available WMS/WFS service descriptors from MARIS/Mississippi GIS.

9) What “answers” should the science deliver?

·        Cause of death (e.g., hanging/asphyxia), manner of death (suicide, accident, homicide, undetermined), with specific support (ligature analysis, internal neck exam, tox, scene). The Name

·        For the historical cemetery work: presence/absence of human remains, minimum number of individuals, context (burial practices, disturbance), and—only if ethical/approved—identification pathways.

 --------------------


 


 

 

On Sat, Sep 27, 2025 at 11:16AM Charles D Sharp <cdsharp@blackemergmanagersassociation.org> wrote:

Trust in Science, Investigating, trust in Forensic Pathology

Forensic Pathology. Science linking the past to the present and the cause. 1800's Maryland Cemetery to 2025 Mississippi Hangings.

Trust in Science, Investigating, trust in Forensic Pathology

Forensic Pathology (Click on preceding underlined link for AI and other searches) 

When did my search for truth, meaning, and interest in the science begin?  Was it in my studies at colleges and universities or during my adolescent and youth.  I always had a curiosity for things I didn’t know.  So, I’d say my interest in the sciences and investigating started before attending first grade in elementary school.  Staring out the window watching birds, animals, even airplanes flying in the sky.

Interest in technology, computer sciences in high school working at the National Science Foundation reading civil defense and other plans for nuclear attacks and recovery from that and other events.  Graduating from high school, registering as a pre-med student as my major.  Sitting in on my first autopsy at 19-years old at the old Washington, D.C. General Hospital.  Working in the pathology department at a local hospital in Maryland, understanding all the chemical and other tests performed on human specimens and taking that data and inputting into computer systems.  Understanding the process & procedures of human specimen collection, retention, and monitoring. 

Meeting and talking with the Chief Pathologist, Chief of Chemistry,  vendors of testing equipment, and understanding standards and standard organizations (national and international).  Confirming my trust in the sciences, in human sciences

In 2025, I can say there is one forensic pathologist that I have trust in that will remain nameless.

Investigating (Click on preceding underlined link for AI and other searches)

That interest and trust in the sciences led to other interest in the humanities and more readings in philosophies and literature for the truth. 

In reading all the Arthur Canon Doyle Sherlock Holmes series novels, and even all the PBS (Public Broadcasting Systems) television series.

Walter Mosely brought even more interest in the search for the truth and investigation with his Easy Rawlins series closer to home of a Black private investigator living in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.

More to a lifelong interest in trust in the sciences and seeking the truth by investigating.

1800-1900’s Maryland Foster Care and 2025 Mississippi Hangings

Forensic pathology and investigating plays an important role in sorting thru facts and causes of death.

Archaeologist study the human past and make summations on even causes of death from human remains.  Forensic Pathologist and Archaeologist are linked in their investigative abilities to determine causes of death until a new method of determination of causes is evaluated and confirmed.

In the cases of the 1800-1900’s Secret Cemetery in Maryland (see photo and link below), and other ‘secret’ cemetery’s with First Nation\Native American foster care and youth facilities the truth must be told and the facts published.  Is this a call for the sciences, for forensic sciences to step-up and provide the truth?  YES

In the cases of the 2025 Mississippi hangings.  Historically hanging brings visions of the Wild West in America, criminal executions, and within the Black and other communities of color ‘lynching.   Hanging or Lynchings are not a one, two, three immediate process but involves being suspended and choking to death if the neck is not immediately broken.

There are questions in each of the cases that must be answered.  

  1. 1800-1900’s. A Secret Cemetery in Maryland.  https://www.facebook.com/reel/788404004060464
  2. 2025 Mississippi Hanging.  Trey Reed.  On campus at Delta State University
  3. 2025 Mississippi Hanging.  Cory Zukatis.  Vicksburg, Mississippi.

 

Forensic Pathology is the science needed to answer the questions that many of our members, members of the community, and the family in each case are awaiting. 

Respectful examination of the deceased, analysis of fluid and blood samples.  In 2025 those samples should be available.

Review of any and all camera footage, even examination of camera imaging AI of satellite imaging recorded (Mississippi GIS, https://www.gis.ms.gov/).Our search for the truth, the cause never ends. 

Our search for the truth, the cause never ends.

Sincerely

CDS

 

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