A woman attaches balloons to the tree that authorities say Robert Fuller, a 24-year-old black man, was found hanging dead from near Palmdale City Hall, as people demonstrate on June 13, 2020 in Palmdale, California.David McNew—Getty Images

A 24-year-old black man named Robert Fuller was found hanging from a tree branch in Palmdale, LA. Triggering an FBI investigation into whether his death was coincidental with a string of hanging within a 50-mile radius. Though his death was ruled an "alleged suicide", authorities along with the Department of Justice has launched a probe to identify similarities in the sudden deaths of these individuals.

Social media hasn't yet picked up on the incident as it seems their deaths are being shoved under the rug. Could this be another period of lynching in America?

A mousse was found hanging from a pole in the Marcus Garvey Park in the Bronx, striking outcry from NY, Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

I am disgusted by the recent discovery of a noose – the epitome of hatred and an evil icon of our nation's racist past – in Harlem's Marcus Garvey Park.

The governor shares the plight of the heavily diverse city, one which is home to 2.8 million African Americans, 2.4 million Latin Americans, 1.2 Asian Americans, and many other ethnic groups adding to its melting pot of cultures.

Many are staking the claim that there's no way 5 black men co-incidentally committed suicide. Others are saying its 2020-- nobody commits suicide by hanging themselves from a tree.

There has never been an Anti-lynching bill ever in the history of the United States, A country that disenfranchised its citizens for the use of marijuana. Amid the national outcry of the killing of George Floyd, Americans in need of change have demanded an Anti-lynching bill that was blocked by Us senator Rand Paul (R).

Senator Rand Paul, the lone Republican standing in the way of the anti-lynching bill; an estimated number of about 4,075 African Americans were lynched in over 12 southern states between the period 1877-1950, according to a 2015 report by the Equal Justice Initiative.

Since 1882 Congress has failed the History of America and the African American community, by simply neglecting to pass Anti-Lynching legislations 200 times. However, this time around is much different; Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, and Tim Scott, the only three African American members of the senate led the passage of legislation in 2019. leading to a 410-4 victory in February while renaming the bill Emmett Till, a 14-year-old kid that was lynched in Mississippi, 1955.