Their mission, as delivered by a purposefully prototypical
Angry Black Police Captain (Ice Cube): Contain the spread of a dangerous new drug that has shown up at a local high school.
Not exact matches
If my grandparents had been beaten or lynched for the colour of their skin, if my parents had suffered under oppressive segregation, if I had a friend or relative who had been shot down in cold blood by a
police department because that is just way more likely if you're
Black in America, I'd have been
angry, too.
Take a look instead at The Hard Stop (Metrodome, 15), George Amponsah's urgent,
angry investigation of the 2011 London riots in the wake of Mark Duggan's fatal shooting by
police, which — not least in the age of
Black Lives Matter — seems sharply of the moment in 2016.
The first to be loaded by
angry,
black - uniformed
police are an Egyptian - American journalist for the AP and the freelance photographer working with him.
After this she moved to the Minneapolis Tribune as the first woman
police reporter and later as the reporter responsible for covering social change during which she wrote about «militant
blacks,
angry Indians, radical students, uppity women and a motley assortment of other misfits and troublemakers.»