preachjacobs.com: the blog

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Free-Times 'A Familiy's Lost' by Eric Ward & Preach Jacobs

A Family's Loss
Grieving in Aftermath of Unsolved Murder
BY ERIC K. WARD
On Nov. 13, 2006, the Richardson family of Columbia was mournful and broken, a devastated kin dealt a crushing blow with the murder of one of their own, an unsolved slaying that magnifies their pain, and makes closure elusive for them.

Twenty-four hours — that’s all it took for the lives of this model middle-class American family to be turned upside down, forced to shoulder a tragic burden like no other.

Theirs is a story of a family’s loss. It is not a story for the faint or calloused of heart. But in its telling, the human face of a man taken in his prime — then-37-year-old father of four Joe Richardson — comes to life. Likewise do the stories, at least in some ways, of other victims of unanswered killings whose perpetrators punctured holes in the soul of justice.

And maybe, just maybe, the sharing of the Richardsons’ suffering will jog memories or otherwise prompt a surfacing of information that unravels the mystery of who caused it.

The detective who is handling the case, Sgt. Kevin Isenhoward of the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, says he is following a new lead that offers a glimmer of hope. “We’re trying to verify some details of the story that was provided to us,” he says in an interview Feb. 18 at the department headquarters on Two Notch Road.

Isenhoward encourages anyone who might know something about Joe’s murder to contact him.

The crime that sparked the family’s sorrow and upheaval, a cowardly shooting of Joe in the head while he was asleep, occurred in less than a calendar day. Rather, it unfolded in a span of time closer to that of a door sliding closed, or being kicked open.

Indeed, the latter marked the beginning of the darkness in which Joe was slain, according to the prevailing theory of the family members. There are seven of them in their immediate circle: mother Petrona; brothers David, Mark, Jahn and Albert; and sisters Jennifer and April.

On a drizzly and overcast early evening in late January, most of the Richardsons gather at the mother’s home in Forest Acres to share their story.

Inside, the family members sit semicircle in a sizable living room. Resting on a wall shelf in the room: a black, wooden, lettered carving that reads “F A M I L Y”. Playing with arts and crafts under a table in a dining area off of the room: three children.

“Twelve years strong — we’ve been making incense 12 years,” says David, 38.

The second oldest of the five brothers, he was principally responsible for starting Twelve Tribes out of his home on Pendleton Street in the late 1990s. About two years later David moved to Veterans Road and relocated the business to a shed behind his new residence.
The next move was a full-on retail outlet on Shakespeare Road in 2002.

With help mainly from Jahn in the early days, Twelve Tribes grew with each step and other members of the family got more involved in the operation of the hand-dipped incense company along the way. Jahn oversaw distribution; mom handled packaging. Everyone played their part, David says. “We were selling 100,000 packs in six months.”

The enterprise was grounded in the teachings of Malcolm X, Marcus Garvey and other black leaders in how to build community and attain self-sufficiency, he says.

Sealed in signature black pouches, the Twelve Tribes aromas include African Musk, Kush, Cool Water, Wild Jasmin Flowers (an excellent choice) and Honey Rain.

The scents of Twelve Tribes continue to burn via sales at longstanding locations of its products, notably the U.S. 1 Metro Flea Market in Lexington County.

“Oldest sibling Joe was the face and charm of Twelve Tribes at the flea market after David opened a storefront on Shakespeare Road in Columbia,” 25-year-old Preach Jacobs, a Free Times contributor and longtime friend of the family, writes in a sidebar to this story.

But the fortunes of the family business turned on that dark November 2006 night when Joe was murdered. “After that everything just kind of disintegrated,” David says.

Jahn, 33, agrees. “Things were never the same after that,” he says. “A piece of all of us died that day.”

Says 29-year-old April, “It’s definitely a void.”



The Murder

Mark, 35, was there when it happened. His eyes water and his hands tremble as he recalls the events, which unfolded in his one-bedroom apartment at the Austin Woods complex on Garners Ferry Road where Joe spent the night.

“I woke up around 3 o’clock [in the morning],” Mark says. “I went to the bathroom and he was laying there.”

Thinking that Joe was fast asleep, Mark says he returned to bed and got up six or seven hours later at about 9:30 a.m. His older brother was still lying there in the living room, motionless. “You could see his face, kind of swollen and deformed,” Mark says. “You could tell something happened.”

What happened, he theorizes, is that someone kicked in the apartment door and shot Joe in his sleep. A closet and cabinet doors were open and the apartment had been ransacked, Mark says.

Apparently a heavy sleeper, he got dressed, called the Sheriff’s Department and David and went outside and waited in his car for them to arrive.

His brother showed up shortly thereafter as did Sgt. Isenhoward and another investigator from the department, John Ewing, who helped the sergeant work the case until taking a job as police chief in Bishopville, a small town about 50 miles east of Columbia.

Isenhoward says he stays in contact with Ewing about Joe’s unsolved murder.
The detectives inspected the apartment, witnessing damage to the door, and took Mark in for questioning. “More like interrogation,” he recalls, “because they thought I did it, you know. I had to take a lie detector test just to prove my innocence.”

Isenhoward says they drilled Mark pretty hard, questioned dozens of people, including other members of the family, and canvassed the flea market, laboring to get a sense of what Joe was about, what he was into and who he was involved with and had befriended.
But no real suspects emerged, he says, and mystery soon enveloped the investigation. “We don’t have that many cases that go cold that quickly,” Isenhoward says.

This one showed signs of a robbery, but Isenhoward says he was told that nothing was stolen from the apartment. “And I have some concerns about that,” the detective says. “It just seems that something else is going on.”

David says “stuff was shuffled around in the closet” that was open.

Mark says the investigators speculated that the scene had been staged and that Joe’s killing was gang and/or drug related.

Jahn says all leads turned up void and the case produced nothing in terms of a motive. A toxicology test of Joe’s body found no trace of narcotics, he adds.

Similarly, no DNA or fingerprint evidence surfaced, Petrona says. She says she can’t make sense of it. “There was nothing. We don’t know any more today than we did two years and going on three months ago.”

April says she thinks it was somebody in the apartment complex.

As for Austin Woods tenants, they proffered a universal “I don’t know nothing,” Jahn says, adding that there is a lot of gang activity around the place.
Isenhoward describes Austin Woods as problematic.

And, after all of their searching the investigators found themselves with no clue as to the identity of the killer(s). “They said it was like looking for a needle in a haystack,” Petrona says.

The mother offers mixed accounts of the detectives’ work. At one point in the conversation she sizes up their approach as, “It was like, OK, that’s just one more murder in Columbia.” At another point she says they had nothing to go on and, “I think they did the best they could.”

Mark says he thinks the detectives could have found some evidence in the apartment.

Says Isenhoward, “There’s nothing I could have done or anybody could have done or any [law enforcement] department could have done differently.”



Know Something?

Do you have information about the unsolved murder of Columbia resident Joe Richardson?

Richardson was fatally shot at the Austin Woods apartment complex on Garners Ferry Road on the night of Nov. 12, 2006. He was 37 and a father of four.

If you know something about the case, Richardson’s family encourages you to contact Sgt. Kevin Isenhoward of the Richland County Sheriff’s Department at 576-3073 or kisenhoward@rcsd.net.



The Mystery

Typically, he says, people who commit homicide know their victims and the crime stems from a feud that developed in a friendship or romance. “Which may be the case here, but we’re just not getting the right information to connect the dots.”

Part of the difficulty in solving Joe’s murder is that the investigation generated little insight into his character and lifestyle, even from the family, Isenhoward says. “It really seemed to us that he was kind of a loner type,” he says.

One possibility lurks in a man with whom Joe had a physical altercation prior to his death, the sergeant and family members say.

The man lived in Austin Woods and Joe apparently got the better of him in their fight, but to this day who he was remains unknown, Isenhoward says. “We only know the man by the name Roughneck,” he says. “Nobody even heard of that name down there [at the apartments].”

Sometimes, people who might be involved in a case like Joe’s will withhold information because it would incriminate them for minor violations, the investigator says. “Which can devastate a case.”

In that regard, the mother instructed her children to tell the authorities what they need to know “and the stories haven’t changed at all,” Isenhoward says.

A robbery and homicide detective for 11 years, he says that investigations of such crimes usually assemble a mass of information in the first couple of days. And if a case is cracked, it is most often within a relatively short period of time that follows.

However, the window on that clock never closes.

“In fact, we solve a lot of cases years later,” Isenhoward says.

For now at least, this one leaves many questions unanswered: Who was the man Joe had fought with and did he have anything to do with his murder? Why was nothing taken from the apartment? How come Austin Woods tenants were so tight lipped? Why did the case go cold so fast?

For Mark, finding his brother lifeless was a haunting experience that lingers. “I see it every day,” he says. In the aftermath, Mark says, “I had to start all over — spiritually, physically, especially emotionally.”

Jahn was the last person to see Joe alive. They were hanging out at Jahn’s place, in the East Lake subdivision near Austin Woods, watching TV the night of the murder. Joe was unusually quiet, not talking over the TV as he normally would, Jahn says. He wonders if the killer followed Joe from there to the apartment complex.

Jahn says Joe wasn’t perfect and things were going on in his life that he was unable to manage. Joe, he says, had experienced “a couple of failed relationships” and was a heavy drinker.

The siblings say Joe also was immensely protective of his family, had a fondness for cars — body work and detailing — and was skilled in plumbing. “He wanted his own body shop,” April says.

Jahn: “He looked up to his children, because he knew there was potential in them.”

Joe also liked coffee and movies. “Karate flicks,” April says.

He was a reader, too. His interests in that pastime focused on geography and history, especially the African experience, David says.

With a picture of the five brothers perched on a mantle behind Petrona, tears flow from her eyes as she describes the content of the character of her lost son: outgoing and friendly, among other traits. “He had his ways just like all of us do,” she says, “but through it all he was a good person.”

Time softens the sorrow, but it never dissipates completely, the 59-year-old mother says, comparing Joe’s death to losing a limb.

Some days, particularly holidays, are worse than others, Petrona says. “And honestly, I didn’t think I could sit here and go through this interview. But God is good.”

Joe Richardson would have turned 40 on Jan. 31. Since his murder, one of his children has given birth to a grandchild he will never know.

But as he rests in peace, it is safe to say the Richardsons will take care to help that newborn member of their family come to know Joe.

Remembering Joe

Writer Recounts Friendship with Family of Murder Victim

By Preach Jacobs

When I first met the five Richardson brothers in 1999 at age 16, I envied their remarkable love and close affection for each other.

I met David Richardson at the U.S. 1 Metro Flea Market in Lexington County where he was selling his well-known hand-dipped incense named Twelve Tribes. He also sold jewelry, knitted caps and black empowerment books, all of which reflected my personality at the time. David was a 20-something, gentle, soft-spoken man, and I had immediately found a mentor and a friend. In the coming months, other members of his family migrated to Columbia from Connecticut.

The Richardson clan consisted of seven siblings — five brothers and two sisters. I was soon introduced to all of them and quickly became a fixture at their family gatherings. One brother in particular, Albert, became my best friend and musical collaborator with our hip-hop band 7 Moonz (Albert eventually branched off to become lead singer of local hip-hop powerhouse Déjà Voodoo). The relationship among the five brothers inspired awe in me for their strong sense of family and commitment to each other’s well being. I sought to be like them, and often smiled to myself when people thought I was one of them. The family directly influenced my mannerisms, ways of thinking and even my fashion sense.

Family is a big deal to the Richardsons. David launched their business venture, which helped many of his family members get on their feet before venturing on to other things. Oldest sibling Joe was the face and charm of Twelve Tribes at the flea market after David opened a storefront on Shakespeare Road in Columbia.

I remember Joe having a distinctive and hearty laugh that filled a room when you told a dirty joke or confessed a failed attempt at hitting on a young woman. The family described him as loyal and caring and he had a reputation at the market for having a strong work ethic.

When I got a call in November 2006 that Joe had been fatally shot, shock hit me hard, and I saw firsthand just how hard it hit the family.

Joe’s passing also affected me in other ways, including him appearing in my dreams. In one dream, he was where I had last seen him — the market, and he was there without a care in the world. I spoke to him and gave him a hug, and he asked how I was doing. I can’t recall what I told him, but it caused Joe to laugh hysterically. I joined in with the laughing until I realized that Joe is not with us anymore. Then I woke up.

By the time I had this dream, I hadn’t seen the other siblings for a while, and one day decided to visit David’s store and say hello. It was around May 2007 and I came across an empty building where the business once resided.

Twelve Tribes’ storefront on Shakespeare Road had closed. Brothers Mark and Albert moved to different states. Marriages were broken. Morale was broken. In addition to the grief caused by losing their loved one, the family was frustrated by questions left unanswered by the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, which had jurisdiction over the case. And I was left feeling hopeless after mother Petrona Richardson said she didn’t know who was on the case and that the detectives handling it weren’t calling with updates.

The majority of the siblings believed and still believe that Joe’s case was a low priority with the investigators. David said he felt that more could have been done, and that in the eyes of the investigators, Joe had become a statistic and not a person.

Mark, who discovered his brother’s body in the Austin Woods apartment they shared on Garners Ferry Road, spoke about how it affected him.

“I lost everything,” he said. “I had to start over emotionally. I feel everything happens for a reason, and feel that is why I work at a hospital now. I speak to everyone in the waiting room who may have lost somebody. And I believe that they are grateful for me because I know what they’re going through. I hug them and cry with them because I can relate to them. I thank God for being able to do that.”

Because of shows like CSI and The Wire the public might think that murder investigations are solved within an hour including commercial breaks. The Richardsons aren’t so naive. Even though they want the murderer(s) brought to justice, they’d settle with knowing the investigators cared.

Joe, who would have turned 40 in January, will never see his newborn grandchild. He will never share another moment with his mother and siblings; never share another moment with a loyal customer.

But surprisingly, the Richardsons aren’t bitter. Rather, they celebrate the life Joe lived.

Jahn was the last of the siblings to see him alive. “He was at my house that night, watching a movie and playing with my kids. We dozed off, then he woke up to leave and we said we loved each other and he left. He left, and after that, I lost my best friend.”

Let us know what you think: Email news@free-times.com or editor@free-times.com.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Preach mentioned on Loud.com


New York, NY (November 26, 2008) - From the homie, DubMD:
…”Renatus” in old Latin meaning Born Again/Reborn: 44 emcees over 34 handpicked beats! Thirty four tracks of that raw, authentic, no apologises Hip Hop music for the purest, 100% EXCLUSIVE from the emcee to this project, with a classic intro by the genius that is DJ Unexpected. This new mixtape is available for exclusive FREE DOWNLOAD right here, so pass it around, throw it on your iPod or burn it to CD-R, its yours! Thanks to everyone for all the continued support!

01.) The Genesis (Intro By DJ Unexpected)
02.) 6th Sense - Hip Hop Renatus (Produced By Erick Sermon)
03.) Mr. Live feat. Earl Blaize - The Bitch That You Are (Produced By Oddisee)
04.) Sic Osyrus & Donny Goines - Why Lord? (Middle Fingers Up) (Produced By Khrysis)
05.) Karniege - The Kush (Produced By Jake One)
06.) Skyzoo - Bang This (Produced By The Alchemist)
07.) Dominique Larue - Role Play(Produced By 9th Wonder)
08.) Emilio Rojas - E To The M-I-L-I-O (Produced By JDilla)
09.) Access Immortal - Stay Strapped (Produced By DJ Premier)
10.) Melodiq feat. Nikal Fieldz - Bottom Of The 9th (Produced By 4th Disciple)
11.) Diablo Archer feat. Myk Dyaleks (of BrokN.English) - We The New Era (Produced By Domingo)
12.) Sha Stimuli - Today We Living (Produced By Nottz)
13.) Fred Knuxx - Air ‘Em Out (Produced By Hi-Tek)
14.) Laelo Hood - Extra, Extra! (Produced By DJ Khalil)
15.) Supastition - Sound Of Reform School (Produced By Black Milk)
16.) Black ELement - Feel The Hunger (Produced By DJ Scratch)
17.) Droppin’ A Message (Interlude)
18.) Zero Star - On My Backpack Shit (Produced By Large Professor)
19.) Little Vic - Let The Dollar Circulate (Produced By Ayatollah)
20.) Cymarshall Law - This Is The End (Produced By Salaam Remi)
21.) Donnan Linkz - Buzz Kill (Produced By Oh No)
22.) Cy Yung aka Cyrano - OK Corral (Produced By Madlib)
23.) Tislam The Great - Once Again (Produced By Questlove)
24.) Faro - Love Me Or Hate Me (Produced By Scram Jones)
25.) Arsun F!st - I’m In Here (Produced By Marco Polo)
26.) Sense-I - Sense-I’s The Name (Produced By Nicolay)
27.) Wordsmith feat. Kontact & Black Knight - Signing Day (Produced By Pete Rock)
28.) Journalist 103 - Til’ The Trumpets Blow (Produced By Illmind)
29.) Clap Cognac feat. Jedi Knight - Chosen Ones (Produced By Havoc)
30.) City Scholar - The Rebirth (Produced By Evidence)
31.) Detroit Red - Hip Hop Redefined (Produced By Buckwild)
32.) D.V. Alias Khryst feat. Retsam Da Prince - It’s Da Govarmynt (Produced By Marley Marl)
33.) Nametag - Champagne Bottle Flow (Produced By Ski Beatz)
34.) Panama aka Da Spanish Kid - Born Ready (Produced By RZA)
35.) Hi-Coup feat. Spectacula - My Father Told Me (Produced By M-Phazes)
36.) Preach Jacobs feat. N’telligence - Mic Check (Produced By Rockwilder)
37.) The Exodus (Outro By DJ Unexpected)

Scoop Dub MD Presents Hip Hop Renatus (Mixtape) right here.

Mickey Rourke 'Spirit Award' speech


maybe this is why he didn't win the oscar. even though for the record, sean penn was very well deserving.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

New Podcast: Blutopia Podcast 4-Cool Out Music


hope you enjoy it. i did the cover and took the pic. thanks to monique for posing. peep it and other podcasts from Preach's Podcast Page or download HERE. tracklisting is as follows:

1.Glow-Jake One f/ Elzhi & Royce Da 5'9
2.Hiatus-Diamond D
3.MVP-Ludacris
4.Smile-Scarface f/ Tupac
5.Tribute to Dilla-J Rawls
6.I Can't See Nobody-Nina Simone
7.Wild International-One Day As A Lion
8.Because-Beatles
9.Hold On-Blu
10.Nothing Less Than Ill-Showbiz & AG
11.I Just Wanna Emcee-Preach prod. by Katrah Que(http://www.myspace.com/kindablu)
12.I Want To Spend The Night-Bill Withers
13.The Light '08-Common
14.I Don't Like To-Shad K
15.Higher Level-KRS One
16.Us & Them-Pink Floyd

Ballast Trailer



just saw this movie and was pretty blown away. review coming soon.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Perfect Sounds Forever

Preach Jacobs Reminisces Over Sounds Familiar
BY PREACH JACOBS
It's 3:37 a.m. on a Sunday in the summer of 2007. My cell phone rings. There's no logical reason why the name Sounds Familiar should be showing up on my phone this late; this can't be good. The other end of the phone was Charles Hayes — Chuck to whom I and every Parklane location of Sounds Familiar customer has known him for nearly 20 years. He spoke, bleakly.

“Preach: What are you doing?”
“Nothing. What's wrong?”
“Preach ... you just need to come to the store. It's unreal.”

Luckily I lived minutes away, but those five-minutes was enough time for me to wonder about what could have happened. Were we robbed? Was there a shooting? Did someone die? My wondering ceased when I drove past the store and noticed that I could literally see into the store. Some drunk driver — supposedly after too much tequila — drove his pick-up truck directly into our store through the concrete walls. Shattered glass, broken shelves, smashed CDs and not to mention tire marks on the floor had me waiting for Ashton Kutcher to come from out of the bathroom, telling us we were punk'd. The driver, who had been taken into custody by the time I had gotten there, didn't have a scratch on him; he was found sleeping in his truck, minus a windshield, next door at the gas station.

Chuck, Sounds Familiar vet Joey Bull and I were the ones left to clean the store; fittingly we were the last three to tear down the store in the middle of January for Parklane's dreaded closing.

I think I'm one of the only people in my immediate circle that loved his job. I mean, I absolutely loved my job to the point I would be there for hours on my days off. I had pride that we could call ourselves music professionals.

We knew the title of that gospel song you wanted when you didn't know any of the words, but were only able to hum the tune. We knew the artist you were looking for with your vague description. And if you were calling us to find out how to spell an artist so you can download it, good luck looking for Ellvuzz Castelbow.

Every worker had his or her own customers. I had my hip-hop fanatics after turning them onto J. Dilla, Foreign Exchange and my solo album. And we could tell what kind of record you wanted based on how you waltz into the store. Pants sagging with a chain where I can see your name? Gucci Mane. Khakis with deck shoes? Robert Plant's album with Alison Krauss. Tight jeans and purple Nikes? Lupe Fiasco. Walking in with tattered clothing asking for free promos and listen to the music in the players on the wall? You weren't buying shit.

Life just isn't complete without being cursed out by a senior-citizen gospel customer mad at you because the particular artist she's looking for hadn't released his album yet; the idea of explaining release dates and record labels to them is a losing battle. Or cleaning splashback on our private bathroom after rapper Yung Joc, stopping by during his tour, stayed in there for more than 10 minutes. Or watching over the young kids that are trying to be slick, but we knew they wanted to steal the newest DJ Dice mixtape with that hot Lil' Wayne song.

But we had our great customers. Mr. Lee, the businessman that bought nearly $200 worth of gospel records each visit, and one of the nicest human beings you'd meet. Or Norris Dennis, a soft-spoken Southern gentleman who's a truck driver by day but a DJ at night, and one of our most loyal customers. Or the infamous Greater Hits, who got his name by buying nothing but greatest hits by his favorite artist, and if you didn't move fast enough he'd threaten to “body slam you, soldier!”

Besides the free promos, wearing what I want, promoting my own music and meeting exciting people, I actually loved the workers I was blessed enough to be around. Chuck, who's a clean-cut, glasses-wearing, steak-and-potatoes-eating everyman, intimidated me when I first met him. He seemed like the biggest square on the planet. Now, I can't imagine how my life would be without knowing him.

Or DJ Joey Joe a.k.a. The Bull, who has the largest vinyl collection I've seen and seemingly hates all the hip-hop I love (with the exception to Dilla) has become like a brother to me. Our arguments (as well as with other workers) have been legendary and even tempted me to seek other employment, but there is nothing I wouldn't do for him. (He'll probably be pissed that I'm writing about him. Or, as he would say, he’ll “sue me.”)

And, finally, Pete Smolen, the owner of Sounds Familiar, the man whose combustible temper scared the hell out of me when I first met him. Now, I believe I will never work for a better boss.

If I had to say why Sounds Familiar is closing down, it would be for three reasons: (1) The Internet, (2) the economy and (3) loss-leaders. It's easy to bash the Wal-Marts of the world (even though they do kill small businesses), but I do know that times have changed. We're just analog babies in a digital world.

I'm not bitter about leaving. I'm very sad indeed, but I'm not getting angry like people were when Dylan or Miles went electric. I can understand that times are changing; the only problem is now, that if you wanted to get an acoustic Dylan record, where would you go?

This isn't about me losing a job; this is about Columbia losing a cornerstone of the community. About the nation losing the fundamental building blocks of a city: the music store.

I always wondered what Rob Gordon from High Fidelity would be doing if there was a sequel in today's climate? The story would totally be different, as his store Championship Vinyl would have gone under and he would have joined the cast of Office Space, doing computer tech work.

I'm not bitter, honestly. It's just the sign of the times. Nothing is going to be the same for me when the store closes. I guess I'll have to get a real job and have a boss with a stick up his ass. For every co-worker that's become a friend, for every friend that has become family because of this establishment, I am forever grateful. And I hope Columbia will realize what we've lost. But you might not realize it until you're looking for that CD that you can't find anywhere else.

Good luck using the ‘Net.

Preach Jacobs worked at the Parklane Branch of Sounds Familiar from 2005 until it closed in January, and is a contributor to Free Times. Let us know what you think: Email music@free-times.