[As stated, like Vaccines, Black Skin is a Leading Cause of Coincidences] Another White Psychopath On Trial For Murdering a Black Man Pretends to Cry in Court. Cop Never Saw a Cameron Lamb w/a Gun

RACISTS FUNCTION AS PSYCHOPATHS IN THEIR RELATIONS WITH BLACK PEOPLE. IN PHOTO WHITE COP SUFFERING FROM PSYCHOPATHIC RACIAL DISORDER CRIED ON DEMAND IN COURT BUT WITHOUT TEARS. JUST LIKE THEY REHEARSED IT AND JUST LIKE OTHER WHITE MEN ON TRIAL FOR MURDERING BLACK MEN; KYLE RITTENHOUSE’S EYES WERE COMPLETELY DRY BUT MUCUS CAME OUT HIS NOSE, CHICAGO COP JASON VAN DYKE (WHO USED A NAPKIN AS AN EFFECTIVE PROP TO WIPE HIS DRY FACE) AND CINCINNATI COP SAM DUBOSE WHO CRIED W/O TEARS (BUT PARTLY COVERED HIS FACE AND PUT HIS HEAD DOWN) IN FRONT OF HIS OVERWHELMING WHITE JURY DURING HIS FAKE TRIAL.

DR. BOBBY WRIGHT EXPLAINED, 'THE PSYCHOPATH IS AN INDIVIDUAL WHO IS CONSTANTLY IN CONFLICT WITH OTHER PERSONS OR GROUPS. HE IS UNABLE TO EXPERIENCE GUILT, IS COMPLETELY SELFISH AND CALLOUS, AND HAS A TOTAL DISREGARD FOR THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS. PSYCHOPATHS SIMPLY IGNORE THE CONCEPT OF RIGHT AND WRONG. BY IGNORING THIS TRAIT IN THE WHITE RACE (THE LACK OF ETHICAL AND MORAL DEVELOPMENT) BLACKS HAVE MADE AND ARE STILL MAKING A TRAGIC MISTAKE IN BASING THE WORLDWIDE BLACK LIBERATION MOVEMENT ON MORAL SUASION. IT IS PATHOLOGICAL FOR BLACKS TO KEEP ATTEMPTING TO USE MORAL SUASION ON A PEOPLE WHO HAVE NO MORALITY WHERE RACE IS THE VARIABLE.' WRIGHT CALLED THIS CONDITION AFFECTING WHITES THE PSYCHOPATHIC RACIAL PERSONALITY [MORE]

From [HERE] and [HERE] It took nine seconds from the time Eric DeValkenaere arrived at the front yard of the house on College Avenue to the moment he pulled the trigger on his handgun, firing four times in rapid succession and fatally wounding Cameron Lamb. DeValkenaere was indicted by a Jackson County grand jury for first-degree involuntary manslaughter and armed criminal action in the Dec. 3, 2019, killing at 4154 College Ave.

Detective Eric DeValkenaere was charged with involuntary manslaughter and armed criminal action for recklessly causing the death of Cameron Lamb, according to prosecutors in Jackson County, Missouri.

DeValkenaere took the witness stand in his own defense on the third day of the criminal bench trial before Circuit Court Judge J. Dale Youngs, who is also white. Like the Rittenhouse and Ahmaud Arbery trials, the white defendants’ fate will be decided by a white fact finder.

DeValkenaere claims he shot Lamb after Lamb pointed a gun at another detective. 

The defendant's reckless behavior began by entering the victim’s property without consent, without a warrant, knocking over the fence to gain entry into that backyard, and firing his weapon, killing Cameron within seconds of entry,’ Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker said.

‘The conscious disregard of a risk, or in this case, a series of risks or assumptions that were dangerous.

‘In this case, what we believe, though, is that his conduct was reckless.

‘It was reckless, and it was in violation of the Fourth Amendment.’

On December 3, police were called to an area near the intersection of the East 35th Street and College Avenue in the Oak Park Northwest section of Kansas City.

Police were asked to respond to a disturbance between two vehicles, one of which was a red truck driven by Lamb at a high rate of speed.

A police helicopter tracked one of the vehicles, which pulled behind a home on the 4100 block of College Avenue, according to The Kansas City Star.

According to police, detectives approached a man in the vehicle and ‘the officer was put in a position where he had to discharge his firearm.’

The two detectives - DeValkenaere and Troy Schwalm - approached Lamb from different sides of the house as Lamb sat in his truck.

Court documents indicate that the officers saw Lamb backing the truck into his garage.

At one point, Schwalm said he could see Lamb’s left hand, and that Lamb was looking at him. At no point did Schwalm see Lamb holding a gun, according to sworn statements.

DeValkenaere told investigators that he saw Lamb’s right hand on the steering wheel and his left hand sliding down his body.

The detective claimed Lamb reached into his waistband and pulled out a gun, which he aimed at Schwalm.

DeValkenaere then fired his weapon, shooting four bullets into the windshield of the pickup truck.

Two of the bullets fatally wounded Lamb, according to an affidavit.


style>.mcclatchy-embed{position:relative;padding:40px 0 56.25%;height:0;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%}.mcclatchy-embed iframe

Investigators at the crime scene said they found a gun on the ground beneath Lamb’s hand where the truck came to a stop.

The police claim Lamb’s body was inside the truck and his left arm was hanging out of the open driver’s side window. But medical records say Lamb is right-handed, and he had limited use of his left hand because of an injury he suffered in 2015.

According to court documents, Lamb made a phone call just moments before he was shot.

The call went to voicemail, which was able to record the immediate aftermath of the shooting.

It took nine seconds from the time Eric DeValkenaere arrived at the front yard of the house on College Avenue to the moment he pulled the trigger on his handgun, firing four times in rapid succession and fatally wounding Cameron Lamb.

DeValkenaere testified that he had no other option than to shoot Lamb who he believed pointed a gun at his partner. “I can’t let this happen. This can’t happen,” DeValkenaere said as he recalled what he was thinking at the time of the shooting. “I can’t let this happen.”

DeValkenaere took the witness stand in his own defense on the third day of the criminal trial before Circuit Court Judge J. Dale Youngs.

Moments before the shooting, DeValkenaere said he saw Lamb reach with his left hand for a handgun from his waistband and point towards Schwalm. He said Lamb kept the handgun between his legs as his hands were positioned on the steering wheel.

“My focus moves from that weapon to the center of his chest,” DeValkenaere said. “I bring my weapon and drive it towards him. And as I acquire the front sight, I discharge a round to his center mass.” DeValkenaere said he then retreated back and to the left of the house for cover and discharged three more shots at Lamb. Two of the bullets struck Lamb in the chest and the leg. He died at the scene.

At that time DeValkenaere said he wasn’t aware if Schwalm had been shot. He also said that he would not have opened fire had Lamb followed commands to keep his hands up and not point his weapon at Schwalm. When asked by his defense attorney, Molly Hastings, if DeValkenaere believed that he saved Schwalm’s life that day, he responded: “Yes.”

Schwalm has previously stated, according to prosecutors, that there was no gun in Lamb’s left hand. During the hour-long testimony on Wednesday, DeValkenaere explained what led up to the shooting but said the situation was potentially dangerous.

DeValkenaere denied planting evidence, having any other officer alter evidence or change their report of the shooting.

Earlier in the trial, Lamb's roommate testified that the gun found near Lamb's body was normally kept on a staircase. Crime scene technicians also testified they conducted a “cursory” examination of the body at the scene, but did not find two bullets in Lamb’s pocket until after his body was taken later to the medical examiner's office. [MORE]

Under cross examination, DeValkenaere acknowledged that he had no prior knowledge that Lamb was armed or had committed a crime.

DeValkenaere told Dollar that he had made no attempt to de-escalate before he confronted Lamb as he backed the pickup into the garage. According to prosecutors, when Lamb pulled into his driveway, DeValkenaere and another detective, Schwalm, arrived at the home to investigate the crash. The detectives walked onto the property, with DeValkenaere knocking over a barbecue grill and a car hood to get to the backyard.

Prosecutors have maintained that neither detective had a legal right to be on the property. They did not a search warrant nor did they have probable cause to be there. Roberta Merritt, who lived with Lamb and his girlfriend and was sitting on the porch, said she did not give the detectives permission to enter — nor did they ask for it, according to court records.

Police investigating the shooting found Lamb inside the vehicle with his left arm and head hanging out of the driver’s side window. On the ground near his left hand was a handgun, according to police. Medical records show that Lamb is right-handed and he did not have full use of his left hand as a result of an injury sustained in 2015, according to prosecutors. Phone records, according to the affidavit, and a voicemail recording recovered by prosecutors showed Lamb made a phone call about the time he was shot.

That call went to voicemail, and a recording of the immediate aftermath of the shooting was created. Dollar then played a video recording where DeValkenaere said: “Nobody at this scene when we arrived here. The lady in the pink was telling us that the Mustang had been over here prior.” DeValkenaere had previously told investigators that he only asked Merritt who was in the truck that was in the backyard when he and Schwalm arrived.