Keystone Change Alliance - JusticeforChello Coalition

Keystone Change Alliance - JusticeforChello Coalition The Keystone Change Alliance is committed to challenging injustice, uplifting our community, and demanding real, lasting change.

Together, we are breaking chains, exposing truth, and building a future rooted in equity and dignity for all.

Tonight at 7:30pm, I will have a great discussion with the VP of Black Lives Matter Grassroots Buffalo, Sarah Jacobs on ...
03/01/2026

Tonight at 7:30pm, I will have a great discussion with the VP of Black Lives Matter Grassroots Buffalo, Sarah Jacobs on Episode 67 of Etcetera With the Woodards.

You can catch it right here Live on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube as we wrapped up another Black History Month.

Find out why she got involved in fighting for justice and much much more.

Craig Woodard Sr.
Etcetera With the Woodards
Host🎧🎤

On January 11, 2013 Kendrick Johnson was found deceased in a rolled up wrestling mat in his high school gym in Atlanta, ...
02/21/2026

On January 11, 2013 Kendrick Johnson was found deceased in a rolled up wrestling mat in his high school gym in Atlanta, GA.

What happened to him? Tune into Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast Episode 65 Sunday night at 7:30pm.

I will have a conversation with National Activist Leah Ficklin and she will shed some light on this major case.

You don't want to miss this Podcast. Watch it live on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

Craig Woodard Sr.
Etcetera With the Woodards
Host 🎧🎤

Episode 65 of Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast will be live on Sunday night at 7:30 right here on Facebook, Instagram ...
02/20/2026

Episode 65 of Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast will be live on Sunday night at 7:30 right here on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

We will be bringing you live interviews of nationally known cases that you don't want to miss.

Make time this Sunday night at 7:30pm. Until then, check out Episode 64 Part II.

https://youtube.com/live/qIZDToTsmoM?feature=share

Craig Woodard Sr.
Etcetera With the Woodards
Host🎧🎤

02/19/2026

If you missed Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast Episode 64 Part II last night, you really need to check it out. I interviewed Jennifer Baxtron who is Terron Evans, Jr's Mom and she shared her story with us about what happened to her son.

Click on the link below.

https://youtube.com/live/qIZDToTsmoM?feature=share

Craig Woodard Sr.
Etcetera With the Woodards
Host🎧🎤

02/19/2026

Name change!

We are now the Keystone Change Alliance. Continuing our fight throughout the state of Pennsylvania.
02/18/2026

We are now the Keystone Change Alliance. Continuing our fight throughout the state of Pennsylvania.


Erie County needs Transparency
Erie County needs Safety
Erie County needs Equality
Erie County needs Trust between citizens and officers and places where both can feel valued.
Erie County needs change for our BIPOC community.
Erie County needs ANSWERS.
You DESERVE this.
We all do!
until Justice is Served

I'm super excited to bring you this interview tonight on Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast Episode 64.My guest tonight ...
02/18/2026

I'm super excited to bring you this interview tonight on Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast Episode 64.

My guest tonight is Jennifer Baxtron. She founded BLM Potsdam, NY and is the mother of Terron Evans, Jr.

He died back on January 8th, 2021 and wait until you hear her national story. Tap in tonight at 7:30pm on Etcetera. You can catch it Live right here on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

Craig Woodard Sr.
Etcetera With the Woodards
Host🎧🎤

Please take some time to read this very important story We are sharing this story today to highlight the power of its ef...
02/18/2026

Please take some time to read this very important story
We are sharing this story today to highlight the power of its effect on systemic racism that still exists in our world and here at home. Tomorrow, we will become part of a bigger fight with a bigger mission, focused on a better more unified and inclusive community.
Stay Tuned for our news tomorrow.

We remember and honor the life of Jimmie Lee Jackson, a young black man whose life was taken in 1965 while he was peacefully protesting in the struggle for civil rights in Alabama. On the night he was killed, February 18, 1965, he was participating in a peaceful voting-rights protest that left Zion United Methodist Church in Marion and attempted a peaceful walk to the Perry County jail, about a half a block away, where young civil-rights worker James Orange was being held. The marchers planned to sing hymns and return to the church. Police later said that they believed the crowd was planning a jailbreak.
When state troopers and police violently attacked the demonstrators, Jimmie ran into a nearby café with his mother, sister, and grandfather to escape the assault. Inside the café, he was beaten and then shot while trying to shield his mother, Viola Jackson and grandfather, 82-year-old Cager Lee, from harm.
Police clubbed Lee to the floor in the kitchen; when Viola attempted to pull the police off, she was also beaten. When Jackson tried to protect his mother, one trooper threw him against a cigarette machine. A second trooper shot Jackson twice in the abdomen.
The wounded Jackson left the café, suffering additional blows by the police, and collapsed in front of the bus station. He was taken to the hospital.
In the presence of FBI officials at the hospital, Jackson told lawyer Oscar Adams, of Birmingham, that he was "clubbed down" by state troopers after he was shot and had escaped from the café. Before his death, Jackson was served with an arrest warrant by Col. Al Lingo, head of the Alabama State Police. The Alabama State Senate responded to national criticism and "formally denounced charges of dereliction by Lingo's Troopers in Marion."
Jimmie Lee Jackson’s murder was not an isolated incident – it was a reflection of a system that used violence to silence Black voices demanding dignity, safety, and equal treatment under the law. His death became a turning point in the Civil Rights Movement and helped to spark the Selma to Montgomery marches, which pushed the nation to confront its deep and embedded injustices.
The March 7th march is now known as "Bloody Sunday" because of the violent response of state troopers and the county sheriff's posse who attacked and beat the protesters after they walked over the Edmund Pettus Bridge while leaving the city of Selma and entering the county. The events were widely covered and attracted international attention, raising widespread support for the voting rights campaign.
In the third march to Montgomery, which began on March 21, protesters were protected by federal troops and Alabama National Guard forces under federal command. They traveled the entire way, gathering more marchers along the route. A total of 25,000 people peacefully entered the city, the largest civil rights event in the city.
Jimmie Lee Jacksons death was also the catalyst for a major event in the civil rights movement that helped gain congressional passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. In March 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced his federal bill to support voting rights by authorizing federal oversight of local practices and enforcement by the federal government; it was passed by Congress as the Voting Rights Act of 1965. After the act was passed, Jimmie Lee Jackson's grandfather Cager Lee, who had marched with him in February 1965 in Marion, registered and voted for the first time at the age of 84.
Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke at Mr. Jacksons memorial service saying,
“Jimmie Lee Jackson’s death says to us that we must work passionately and unrelentingly to make the American dream a reality. His death must prove that unmerited suffering does not go unredeemed. We must not be bitter and we must not harbor ideas of retaliating with violence. We must not lose faith in our white brothers.”

In 2005, former Alabama State Trooper James Bonard Fowler admitted to having shot Jackson, in what he said was self-defense soon after street lights had gone out and a melee had broken out. He was indicted in 2007 and in 2010, he plead guilty to manslaughter. He was sentenced to six months in prison.
In 2015 the Marion to Selma Connecting Trail was designated to connect the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail with the site of Jackson's death.
Nearly sixty years later, the pain and pattern feel heartbreakingly familiar. Black lives are still too often lost to violence and families are still left without answers, accountability, or justice.
Remembering Jimmie Lee Jackson is not just about honoring history, it is about recognizing how unfinished this work still is.
We say his name today because his life mattered.
We say his name because silence allows injustice to continue.
We say his name because justice delayed is justice denied.
May his memory strengthen our commitment to fight for truth, accountability, and a world where no one is killed for demanding basic human rights.

We will talk about today's Arraignment on Episode 64 of Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast tomorrow night at 7:30pm.I wi...
02/17/2026

We will talk about today's Arraignment on Episode 64 of Etcetera With the Woodards Podcast tomorrow night at 7:30pm.

I will also have a special guest, Jennifer Baxtron, who is Terron Evans' Mom. She will share her story about her son and what he went through with us tomorrow night.

You don't want to miss this episode.

Craig Woodard Sr.
Etcetera With the Woodards
Host🎧🎤

02/17/2026

Criminal Homicide
1st Degree Murder
All charges bound over for trial.
No Bail

Address

Erie, PA
16504

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