Blacks Are Being Targeted For Land " 

 

Alabama State University vs Charles S. Conley 

SEE CASE BACKGROUND

Norman Hurst

Black Land Owner killed

Sheriff Sub-station in the Waters

    Crimes against black owners goes unsolved, for over 50 years Paul Ford Lived and farmed land just North of several water front subdivisionin East Montgomery in the small community of Waugh.

        Mr. Ford was found dead alone side his furguson tractor with wounds to his head, similar to wound sustain by  Montomery's former Judge charles S. Conley in his 3103 Mobile Hwy Business. Unlike Ford,  Conley and his family owner large tracts of real estate in the Communities of Bel Arie and Centnnial Hill.  

 

 

 

 

"ACCORDING TO RESEARCH....!  POOR AND SUCCESSFUL BLACK LAND OWNERS ARE BEING TARGETED"

     Tompkins' historical research concluded that economic development and city growth often involve blacks lossing their land or not getting the fare replacement value for their property. Tompkins' reflects on the community of Bel Aire and the proposed development for Centennial Hill

Judge Lucie Mclemore, Evicts 68 year old elderly black land owner from home ??  ( as the hyundia plant attracts suppliers ?)

    During the 1965 Civil Right March from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, black marchers lived in tents in protest of being denied voting rights and their living conditions, marcher's had been killed, beaten,shot at, sprayed with water hoses and eaten by dogs, but to even think that a Montgomery District Court Judge in 2004,  would evict a 68 years eldlery black female living on a fix income of only $500.00 a month, would be force to live in a tent without water, heating or basic health care items,over a failed septic tank and fined $100.00 a month. Where are the non-profit organizations?? this is and should be a public outrage over the treatment of how Montgomery refuses to give equal treatment to blacks.  Lucie is now running for re-election ! (Eviction,Tent life). Click on eviction and tent life to see articles.

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 "Understanding the Conspiracy !"

   Black Millionaire and Businessman Leon Carmichael in 2002 Developed and built the Carmichael Center, Carmichael owned over 370 Acres of land just North of the $1 billion Hyundai plant. South of the Carmichael's Land, according to Former Governor Don Sigelman on a local APT TV show (May 06) the Governor explained that the Kia plant was scheduled to be built on land Carmichael owned. The Governor further explained that he, Rep. Knight and several other Alabama lawmakers visited  Korean to talk with the automakers concerning the Kia plant being built next to the Hyundia plant and that the Kia plant was a go.

    In June of 2006 a federal Jury convicted the former governor and former HealthSouth CEO Richard Scruchy.

***** Reese McKinney et al. VS Don Sigelman et al. Doc.1,Doc2, Doc3, Doc4, Doc5.

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Private Land Deal Goes Bad (Click this link for Article One)Doc. 1, Doc.2, Doc.3, Doc.4, Doc.5.

Entertainment facility planned

By Kelli M. Dugan
Montgomery Advertiser

The Carmichael Center will seat as many as 3,000 people

A Montgomery businessman is building a $1.8 million, state-of-the-art entertainment facility in west Montgomery.

The 35,000-plus-square-foot Carmichael Center on Fleming Road East is slated for completion as early as February, developer Leon Carmichael said.

The one-story entertainment complex, which will seat as many as 3,000 people, is designed primarily as a concert venue to feature gospel, country and western, rhythm and blues, rock ’n’ roll, hip hop and rap artists. The facility also could accommodate stand-up comedy, boxing and wrestling events and even classic movie showings, Carmichael said.

Carmichael, who sees himself as a visionary and a businessman, said his commitment to the community in which he lives and works is driving his latest project.

“I want to do something positive for the west side (of Montgomery) because I’ve got a lot of faith in the west side,” he said.

Douglas Jones, vice president of minority development for the Montgomery Area Chamber of Commerce, said the chamber’s West Side Development Task Force has not worked directly with Carmichael on the project, but they have been monitoring its progress.

“We’re following it, watching it closely, because other businesses in that area could definitely benefit from something of this magnitude,” Jones said. “It looks like Mr. Carmichael is going to have a first-class facility when it’s all said and done.”

Carmichael is a Selma native who has lived in west Montgomery for almost two decades, and said he feels the area is finally ripe for development and revitalization.

The 49-year-old businessman owns Multi-Investments Inc., a trucking company on nearby Fleming Road West, as well as a nightclub on Rosa Parks Avenue, so he is a newcomer to neither business nor entertainment ventures.

Carmichael said the $1 billion Hyundai plant being constructed in south Montgomery will undoubtedly increase traffic through the area and bring with it a much-needed economic boost to the area, but his plans were in the works long before the Korean automaker ever expressed an interest in the site.

“I secured the land and went before the Planning Commission with my plans in 1994, so this has really been a long time coming, because a building of this size takes a lot of planning,” he said.

The facility will begin to take physical shape in early September when the first shipment of steel arrives, he said.

 

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Land Buyout Paves Way for Hyundai Lawsuit

By Mike Linn
and David Irvin
Montgomery Advertiser

An 11th-hour deal to bring Hyundai Motor Co. to Montgomery has turned longtime friends into enemies over allegations that government officials defrauded a group of landowners out of about $8 million.The turmoil arises from a lawsuit alleging the defendants -- including the city, county and former Gov. Don Siegelman -- participated in a ploy that allowed the state to pay one landowner about three times what the city and county paid other landowners for property now owned by Hyundai, a Korean automotive company. City and county officials contend the lawsuit has taken its toll on Montgomery and even muffled efforts to recruit new industry.  Click on link for more details.

Article One, 

 

* "DEVELOPERS STARTS CONSTRUCTION OF THIRD SUBDIVSION NEAR

TOMPKINS ESTATES."

THE LIST

1. Charles S. Conley, Murder attempt

2. Fletcher Cooley, advocate and Centennail Hill Land Onwer (Dead)

3. John Thomas, Bel Aire Land Owner (Dead)

4. Pual Ford, Pike Road (Dead)

5. George Jenkins, Arrested, Lost Business and Land (alive)

6. Leon Carmichael, lossing Land (Jailed)

7. William Boyd, arrested,  Civil Rights leader and Businessman

8. Jessie Tompkins,(out on Bail), Activist, Black land owner Pike Road (alive)

9. Lenny Flowers, Black Businessman (Dead)

10. Tom Wright, Black Businessman (Dead) Lost land and property.

11. Edward Davis & family, Black businessman, Operates the Historic Ben Moore Motel. one of the largest black land owners in the Centennial Hill Community. (alive)

Mont. Adv. Stories

1. Retired Judge Clings to life after assult.
February 28, 2001 •• 565 words •• ID: 43523509
Charles Conley remained in critical condition Tuesday night at Jackson Hospital A pioneer in the Montgomery civil rights movement continued to fight for his life Tuesday night in Jackson Hospital's Intensive Care Unit.. Retired Judge Charles Conley, 79, of Montgomery was listed in critical condition after being assaulted.. "He's holding his own," Conley's wife, Ellen, said Tuesday morning as she and friends waited in the ICU...

4. Lawsuit slows ASU's growth
July 28, 2000 •• 714 words •• ID: 43362421
A local lawyer claims Montgomery County Circuit Judge Gene Reese gave preferential treatment to Alabama State University in a land condemnation case in exchange for support in Reese's bid to win a seat on the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals. Charles Conley, who owns property in the Bel Air neighborhood where ASU has been acquiring land as part of an expansion project, said the Alabama Democratic Conference backed Reese politically in order to help ASU in its condemnation efforts

5. PROBATE JUDGE RULES AGAINST BELAIRE LANDOWNER
March 2, 1999 •• 361 words •• ID: 43062321
PROBATE JUDGE RULES AGAINST BELAIRE LANDOWNER  Montgomery Advertiser. Jussie Carter was only looking for pointers when she showed up Monday morning at a Montgomery County Probate Court hearing.. "We're hoping to learn a few things. Maybe it'll help us when we have to deal with the university," Carter said.. She was among 13 Belaire residents who came to probate court to witness the long-running battle between Alabama State University and….

6. PROPERTY OWNER, UNIVERSITY TAKE LAND FIGHT TO COURT
February 27, 1999 •• 327 words •• ID: 42966814
PROPERTY OWNER, UNIVERSITY TAKE LAND FIGHT TO COURT Montgomery Advertiser. Alabama State University's acquisition of land in the Belaire neighborhood may have hit another snag.. Belaire's biggest landowner will be in Probate Court on Monday to contest the university's offer for his 22 parcels of land.. Real estate investor and retired attorney Charles Conley says
ASU's offer of $148,000 for his property is ridiculous...  (BEL AIRE)

 7. Conley also alleges that Judge Reese refused to ... to the case, Judge Gene Reese, "stymied his effort to prepare for trial" by, among ...
www.ca11.uscourts.gov

 

8.    action in state court against Charles S. Conley seeking to condemn various parcels ... According to Conley, Judge Reese refused to order .......... in State vs Charles S. Conley