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Rochester, New York emcee and New Crack Era boss, Eto, went out to California and came back with a lyrical beast.

Bubu the Prince is the first artist signed to New Crack Era West, and today he unleashes a new project titled "Life of the Rugged, Vol. 1."

Features include Hus Kingpin, Daniel Son, Nems, Vino (B$f) and Eto.

Production credits go to Chup The Producer, Marco Castro, Influence Beats, Syerso, BodyBagBen, Al Divino and Luis Blue.

"Life of the Rugged, Vol. 1" is available for purchase now: https://bubutheprince858.bandcamp.com/album/life-of-the-rugged-vol-1

Artwork by Bruno Divino 22 @brunodivino22
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brunodivino22/

Tracklist:

1. Wannabes (prod by Marco Castro)
2. It's a Stick Up Ft. Hus Kingpin (prod. by Al Divino)
3. Fine Wine Ft. Daniel Son (prod. by Chup)
4. Internal (prod. by Luis Blue)
5. Rilla Music Ft. Nems (prod. by Syerso)
6. Dope Move$ Ft. Vino (prod. by BodyBagBen)
7. Honor Y Gloria (prod. by Influence Beats)
8. Bodegas Finest Ft. Eto (prod. by Syerso)
9. Judgement Day (prod. by Marco Castro)
10. Eat Your Food (prod. by Syerso)

Follow Bubu the Prince @bubutheprince
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bubutheprince/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Bubutheprince

Follow Eto @EtoMusicRoc
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/etomusicroc/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/EtoMusicROC

Follow New Crack Era @newcrackera_
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/newcrackera_/

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San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr speaks to members of the media

Video After The Jump

SAN FRANCISCO (KTVU) - San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr on Friday announced the conclusion of an Internal Affairs investigation into racist and homophobic text messages sent by officers.

Suhr said at least one police sergeant and a captain were involved. "It just makes me sick to even talk about it," said Suhr. "Certainly to have a member as high ranking as a captain was particularly disheartening."

The texts surfaced a couple of weeks ago after former officer Ian Furminger was sentenced on federal corruption charges.

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Former officer Ian Furminger

Fourteen officers in all were the subject of an internal investigation. Suhr says eight - including the captain - sent messages sickening enough to warrant immediate suspension and eventual termination.

Michael Robison - a gay police officer and 23 year veteran - resigned over the texts he shared with Furminger.

On Friday, Officer Michael Celis, a 16 year veteran of the force, announced he'd step down as well - a move that may help the officers keep their pensions.

"Those [texts] don't represent his views, they don't represent how he approached his work and his life," said San Francisco attorney Tony Brass, who represents Celis and Robison. "But he understands that the texts are incompatible with continuing his work as a San Francisco police officer."

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In a statement, San Francisco Police Officers Association President Martin Halloran said, "These officers need to be afforded their due process... If these allegations are proven to be true... there is no place for this type of behavior within the San Francisco Police Officers Association or the SFPD."

The officers will go before the Police Commission, which will have the final say on whether to terminate them or mete out another form of discipline.

Critics on Friday called for reform in the department. "We have to vet officers," said San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi, "so we don't have officers who hold racist views that are going to endanger not only themselves but the public, and also provide training on unconscious bias."

Suhr said the department recently restored a racial profiling class that had lost funding and plans to examine officers' backgrounds for warning signs.

"You have to assume that there could be more," said Suhr. "So we're going to look at their personal history questionnaires to see if there's some commonality that we hired somebody that we should've known that we shouldn't have hired."

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Video After The Jump The day after a video surfaced showing a police officer whacking away at a West Philadelphia man outside a Chinese takeout restaurant, angry neighborhood residents said that the cop has a reputation for terrorizing the community. The bald, stocky officer - dubbed "Mickey Mouse" by some locals - is "ruthless," said a man who works at a bar across the street from where Askira Sabur's dried blood stained the sidewalk. "I heard about his reputation, but I saw him in action that night," the man said yesterday. According to witnesses, Sabur, 29, was waiting for his food outside the takeout spot at Lansdowne Avenue and Allison Street last Friday about 8 p.m. Two officers pulled up in their cruiser and one approached Sabur. Jamil Stroman, 40, who works at a barbershop next to the takeout and was outside with Sabur, said that the officer told Sabur, "Give me my street," meaning "clear the corner." After Sabur told the cop, whose identity is unknown, that he was waiting for food, he was instructed to go inside, Stroman said. Sabur told the officer that it was too hot inside and that he had to tend to his bike. The officer then asked Sabur for identification, and as he reached into his back pocket, witnesses said, the cop grabbed him from behind and the two fell to the ground. Kenneth, who did not want his last name used but saw the confrontation, began recording the incident. The video begins with Sabur and the officer on the ground and shows the cop's partner rushing over to handcuff Sabur. The first cop gets up and strikes Sabur with his baton several times over the next few minutes. Sabur, who is sitting, has his arms extended and one wrist is cuffed. At one point, the cop pulls out his handgun, points it at the crowd, then quickly reholsters it. Sabur was left with a fractured left arm, a gash at the back of his head and a sore back. "It could have been anybody," said Kenneth, a Marine veteran who posted his cell-phone footage on YouTube. "I'm seeing the blood shooting from his head. The blood is all over them and they kept hitting this guy." "He's a nasty cop," said Doris Ginor, who lives in the neighborhood and witnessed the incident. "He harasses everybody." Police spokesman Lt. Frank Vanore would not identify the officer and said that he did not have his history available. Vanore said that Sabur was the one who knocked the officer to the ground and that he bit another officer and tried to take the first officer's gun. The officer who struck Sabur is still on active duty, but Internal Affairs is investigating the incident, Vanore said. Sabur faces charges including aggravated assault and resisting arrest. Evan Hughes, Sabur's attorney, said that Sabur also was charged with robbery, reportedly because of the accusation that Sabur tried to take the officer's gun. "It's ridiculous," Hughes said. "They're throwing anything at the wall to try and justify it. Nothing can justify that. He was pushed on top of the officer and he was sandwiched between them while he was hit with a metal rod." "He didn't deserve this," Sabur's wife, Akisha Holland, 30, said outside of her home on Conestoga Street near Media. Sabur, a West Philly artist with murals around the city, "is the nicest man I have ever met," Holland said. "I fear for the lives of some of our black men, especially my husband. Full Youtube Video

NBC News Coverage Source: Philly.com twitter-5d.gif
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An NYPD cop whose wife called 911 for help against a gang of thugs says he was brutally beaten by baton-wielding fellow officers who stormed his Queens home. Larry Jackson suffered a broken right hand and multiple bruises from kicks and billy-club blows he said he got from the men in blue called to his home when a gunman menaced guests at his daughter's birthday party. "To get my butt beat like that was unnecessary," said the six-year veteran assigned to the 110th Precinct. "We called the police, and this is what happened to me." "I'm shocked, angry and disappointed," said the 6-foot-3, 300-pound Jackson. Prosecutors and the NYPD Internal Affairs Bureau are probing his claims.

His hand in a cast, he met with the Daily News on Wednesday and lifted his shirt to show the scars from Sunday's early morning confrontation. Jackson, who is black, said the excessive force by the cops, who were white, might have been racially motivated. "They didn't treat me like a house-owner calling for help," he said. "Everyone who lives in the 113th Precinct is not a perp." Investigators from IAB took a DNA sample from Jackson on Wednesday and told his lawyer, Eric Sanders, it was for testing against the cops' batons, which have been confiscated. Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Jackson "was injured as a result of a dispute at the party." A spokeswoman did not return a call for further comment. Jackson's wife, Charlene, made a 911 call around 1:15 a.m. Sunday as her unarmed husband faced down thugs armed with a gun and bats who showed up as partygoers started leaving his home in Rochdale. "I told the 911 operator it's my daughter's 21st birthday and my husband is a police officer and there's a young man with a gun," she said. "Who do we call now?" said Charlene Jackson, a city bus driver. "It's very hurtful to know you can't trust the police officers in your neighborhood. I feel like the 113th Precinct is our enemy." Larry Jackson, wearing an apron with the slogan, "I'm the chef and I'm awesome," said he did not identify himself to the street thugs as a cop - but was able to convince them to leave. They were slinking off when the first patrol car from the 113th Precinct roared up and a sergeant got out. Charlene Jackson said she tried to tell the sergeant what happened when her niece yelled from the house that there was a fight inside. The sergeant's driver ran inside and struck a friend of the family with his baton, the Jacksons said. The sergeant then pushed Larry Jackson with his baton, they said, and when Jackson grabbed the sergeant, another cop began choking him from behind. Jackson was knocked down and fell on his 82-year-old mother-in-law who briefly lost consciousness, he said. "I'm covering my face and getting hit everywhere," he said. "Then somebody pepper sprayed me." The couple said cops hit at least six family members and friends with batons. Their stepson, a cousin and a nephew were charged with disorderly conduct. Larry Jackson's gun and badge were taken and he was placed on modified duty. "What's most disturbing is there were supervisors on the scene who did nothing," said lawyer Sanders.

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