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Mumia In General Prison Population?

FORMER DEATH row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal has been moved into the general prison population, it has been announced. This is the first time since his arrest for the murder of a Philadelphia police officer in 1982. On Friday (Jan 27), the former Black Panther was moved from a restricted housing unit where he had mostly been in solitary confinement for up to 23 hours a day. "This is a very important moment for him, his family, and all of his supporters. We are all grateful for the roles played by so many in getting him off death row after so very long," said Judith L. Ritter, a law professor, who represented Abu-Jamal in recent appeals, reports the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Abu-Jamal was sentenced to death for the alleged 1981 murder of Officer Daniel Faulkner. Prosecutors agreed to a life term after a federal appeals court ordered a new sentencing hearing, citing flawed jury instructions. In early 2011, a federal appeals court ruled that the original trial judge’s instructions to the jury had been unfairly weighted toward execution and the decision was affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court in October. In December, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams said he would not seek a new death penalty hearing, and agreed to a life term.
Minorities becoming the majority

ETHNIC MINORITIES now make up the majority of the population in eight of America's major cities, it has been reported. Washington, Las Vegas, New York and San Diego are just some of the States which now boast "majority-minority communities," writes the Washington Post The report, based on a recent study released by the Brookings Institution, found that over the last decade, the black population has become the "dominant minority in many metropolitan areas" and also revealed a pattern of African-Americans choosing to move to Southern states The study also showed that overall white population in large metropolitan cities had shrunk, with 100 of the largest cities in the US showing declines from 2000 to 2010. On of the studies researchers, William Fey, called the shift in race majority a "pivitol" change. He said: "Large metropolitan areas will be the laboratories for change. The measures they take to help minorities assimilate and become part of the labor force will be studied by other parts of the country that are whiter and haven't been touched as much by the change."
Local KKK Store Is Black Church's Property

Columbia, SC(January 4, 2012) -- After a lengthy legal battle between a black South Carolina church and members of the Ku Klux Klan, a judge has ruled that the church owns a building where KKK robes and T-shirts are sold. A circuit judge ruled last month that New Beginnings Baptist Church is the rightful owner of the building that houses the Redneck Shop, which operates a so-called Klan museum and sells Klan robes and T-shirts emblazoned with racial slurs. The judge ordered the shop's proprietor to pay the church's legal bills of more than $3,300. Since 1996, the Redneck Shop has operated in an old movie theater in Laurens, a city about 70 miles northwest from Columbia that was named after 18th century slave trader Henry Laurens. Ownership of the building was transferred in 1997 to the Rev. David Kennedy and his church, New Beginnings, by a Klansman fighting with others inside the hate group, according to court records. That man, according to Kennedy, was feuding with store proprietor John Howard over a woman and "developed a spiritual relationship" with Kennedy's church, the judge wrote. But a clause in the deed entitles Howard, formerly KKK grand dragon for the Carolinas, to operate his business in the building until he dies.
After years of trying to have the property inspected, Kennedy and New Beginnings sued Howard and others in 2008. On Dec. 9, a judge ruled in Kennedy's favor. Reached on his cell phone, Howard said he did not know about the judge's decision and deferred comment to his attorney, who did not immediately return a message. It wasn't immediately clear if the judge's ruling would mean Howard must close the shop. Howard hung up on a reporter when asked about the shop's status, but an outgoing message on the shop's answering machine said it's only open one morning a week. Howard has defended his business in the past. "If anything turns people off, they shouldn't come in here," Howard told The Associated Press in 2008. "It's not a thing in here that's against the law." The Redneck Shop has been the target of protests and attacks from the start. A few days after it opened, a Columbia man crashed his van through the front windows and was charged with malicious damage to property. High profile black activists have staged several protests outside the store, and Kennedy has regularly picketed there as well. Kennedy has a long history of fighting racial injustice.
He protested when a South Carolina county refused to observe the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, and he helped lobby to remove the Confederate flag from the Statehouse dome. Kennedy said Tuesday his congregation was elated by the judge's decision, which he said he had already discussed with local police in hopes of being able to visit and inspect the property this week. "It has been a long time coming," said Kennedy, who learned of the ruling this week. "We knew we had done everything right. ... The court knows that we have suffered." Kennedy said his congregation's numbers have decreased in recent years as some of its 200 members became fearful of reprisals from Klan members. Nazi and Confederate symbols have been tacked to the door of the double-wide mobile home where New Beginnings now meets, Kennedy said, and dead animals have been left at the building. "A lot of people became so afraid," Kennedy said. "I just told them that it is part of our faith to endure." Kennedy, who has previously said he would like to close the store and hold his church meetings there, declined Tuesday to detail his plans, saying only that he thought some parishioners would feel uncomfortable worshipping in the structure that once segregated moviegoers and now sells Klan-related materials. "I don't count anything out," Kennedy said. "I think that the church would do good in that building."

If you thought tots with tiaras were bad, how about tots with tattoos? Georgia mom Chuntera Napier says she couldn't tell her 10-year-old son Gaquan no when he asked to get a tattoo honoring his brother who had been killed by a teenage driver two years prior. Authorities called Napier's action illegal, arresting and charging her with misdemeanor cruelty and being a party to a crime, according to ABC NEWS' Atlanta affiliate WSBTV. "My son came to me and said, 'Mom, I want to get a tattoo with Malik on it, rest in peace. What do I say to a child who wants to remember his brother?" Napier said yes and took her son to a tattoo artist in Smyrna where he received a tattoo featuring his brother's name and former basketball jersey number. According to a 2010 law, however, "it shall be unlawful for any person to tattoo the body of any person under the age of 18, except for a physician or osteopath..." Napier says she was unaware of the law, which was shown to her by police. She bonded out of jail on Wednesday but is in disbelief that her consent wasn't enough to let her son get a tattoo.
ABC News
Pepsi To Pay $3.1 Million In Racial Bias Case

Washington, DC(January 12, 2012) - Pepsi Beverages Co. will pay $3.1 million to settle federal charges of race discrimination for using criminal background checks to screen out job applicants - even if they weren’t convicted of a crime. The settlement announced Wednesday with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is part of a national government crackdown on hiring policies that can hurt blacks and Hispanics. EEOC officials said the company’s policy of not hiring workers with arrest records disproportionately excluded more than 300 black applicants. The policy barred applicants who had been arrested, but not convicted of a crime, and denied employment to others who were convicted of minor offenses. Using arrest and conviction records to deny employment can be illegal if it’s irrelevant for the job, according to the EEOC, which enforces the nation’s employment discrimination laws. The agency says such blanket policies can limit job opportunities for minorities with higher arrest and conviction rates than whites. The company has since adopted a new criminal background policy and plans to make jobs available to victims of the old policy if they are still interested in jobs at Pepsi and are qualified for the openings.
“I commend Pepsi’s willingness to reexamine its policy and modify it to ensure that unwarranted roadblocks to employment are removed,” EEOC Chairwoman Jacqueline Berrien said in a statement. Pepsi Beverage spokesman Dave DeCecco said the company’s criminal background check policy has always been neutral and that the EEOC did not find any intentional discrimination. He said after the issue was first raised in 2006, the company worked with the EEOC to revise its background check process “to create a workplace that is as diverse and inclusive as possible.” “We are committed to promoting diversity and inclusion and we have been widely recognized for our efforts for decades,” DeCecco said. He said the new policy would take a more “individualized approach” in considering the applicant’s criminal history against the particular job being sought. Pepsi Beverages is PepsiCo’s beverage manufacturing, sales and distribution operating unit in the United States, Canada and Mexico. Under the settlement, the company will provide the EEOC with regular reports on its hiring practices and offer antidiscrimination training to its hiring personnel and managers. About 73 percent of major employers report that they always check on applicants’ criminal records, while 19 percent do so for select job candidates, according to a 2010 survey by the Society for Human Resource Management.
But increased federal scrutiny of such policies has led some companies to reevaluate their hiring process. Pamela Devata, a Chicago employment lawyer who has represented companies trying to comply with EEOC’s requirements, said there has been an uptick over the past year in EEOC charges over the use of background checks. “The EEOC has taken a very aggressive enforcement posture on the use of criminal background and criminal history,” Devata said. The commission held a special meeting on the topic last summer, and Devata said employers have been expecting the EEOC to issue more specific guidance. EEOC officials have said, for example, that an old drunken driving conviction may not be relevant to a clerical job, but a theft conviction may disqualify someone from working at a bank. Julie Schmid, acting director of the EEOC’s Minneapolis office, said the EEOC recommends that employers consider the nature and gravity of offenses, the time that has passed since conviction or completion of a sentence, and the nature of the job sought. “We hope that employers with unnecessarily broad criminal background check policies take note of this agreement and reassess their policies to ensure compliance” with antidiscrimination laws, Schmid said in a written statement.
MLK: DC Memorial to Broadway

Washington, DC(January 16, 2012) - On the National Mall in Washington, Martin Luther King Jr. is a towering, heroic figure carved in stone. On the Broadway stage, he's a living, breathing man who chain smokes, sips liquor and occasionally curses.
As Americans honor King's memory 44 years after he was assassinated, the image of the slain civil rights leader is evolving.
The Memorial
The new King memorial, which opened in August in the nation's capital, celebrates the ideals King espoused. Quotations from his speeches and writings conjure memories of his message, and a 30-foot-tall sculpture depicts King emerging as a "stone of hope" from a "mountain of despair," a design inspired by a line of his famous "I Have a Dream" speech.
Some gaze upon this figure in silence. Some smile and pull out cell phone cameras. Others chat about how closely the statue resembles King. And some are moved to tears.
"Just all that this man did so that we could do anything and be anything," said Brandolyn Brown, 26, of Cheraw, S.C., who visited the memorial Saturday with her aunt and cousin.
"I know it took a lot more than him to get to where we are, but he was a big part of the movement."
Brown's aunt, Gloria Drake, 60, of Cheraw, S.C., said she remembers King almost as though he was Moses leading his people to the promised land, even when there were so many reasons to doubt things would get better in an era of segregated buses, schools and lunch counters.
"It was really just hostile," she said. "... And then we had a man that comes to tell us things are going to be better."
"Don't be mad, don't be angry," she recalled King's message. "Just come together in peace."
They said King's lasting legacy is the reality of equality and now having a black president. Drake said President Barack Obama reminds her of King with his "calmness" even in the face of anger.
Christine Redman, 37, visited the memorial with her husband, James Redman, 40, and their young son and daughter. She said they also feel a personal connection to King.
"We're a mixed family, and we know that without a lot of the trials that he went through to help end segregation and help the races to become one, we would not be able to have the freedoms to love who we want to love and be accepted in the world," she said.
Her son, 8-year-old Tyler, echoed his mom: "And be who we want to be."
The family tries to celebrate King's birthday by finding a way to serve others, they said. They were thinking about volunteering at a food pantry or donating toys for needy kids.
When he thinks of King, James Redman said he thinks of hope. Still, he said, King's legacy is lost on many.
"Dr. King was about love and about cooperation and compromise and working together," he said. "We don't see a whole lot of that in our leaders. We don't see a whole lot of it in our citizenry."
The Stage
On Broadway, theatergoers are seeing a different version of King - one that is more man than legend.
The realism was refreshing for Donya Fairfax, who marveled after leaving a matinee of "The Mountaintop" that she had never really thought of King cursing, as actor Samuel L. Jackson does while portraying King in the play.
"He was human and not someone who was above fault," said the 48-year-old, visiting from Los Angeles. "He cursed. He did things that people do behind closed doors. He was regular."
For some, such a portrayal would seem to chip away at King's memory. But for Natalie Pertz, who at 20 has come to know King only through the gauzy view of history, it seemed a precious reminder that it is not beyond the reach of the ordinary and the flawed to effect change.
"It's important for people our age to see that he wasn't this saint-like figure," she said. "It's making you see that just because you're not perfect, it doesn't mean you can't do good."
For M.E. Ward, seeing an in-the-flesh incarnation of King brought her back more than 40 years, to when she watched his soaring speeches on the television. No matter how human he seemed on stage, she said, he still carried a godly gift.
"Still charismatic, still an orator, and an individual who was able to move people through his speech," she said, adding that King enlightened the world with a message "to be peaceful, to be patient, to be non-violent."
No matter how distant his presence is now, that legacy is still very relevant, she said, in what she called "a world of turmoil and violence, constant violence."
Do people idealize him too much?
"They don't do it enough!" said 64-year-old Elisabeth Carr, who cried through most of the play, feeling some of the pain she felt when the civil rights leader died. "The younger generation, they don't know anymore. ... They don't understand what they went through."
After traveling more than five hours with three friends - all of them African-American - to see Saturday's matinee, Mariko Tapper Taylor said seeing King in all his flaws did nothing to diminish his legacy.
"It's better to remember him as human," she said. "Who's flawless? It just shows that there's another side of him."
For her, the holiday remains very personal, Taylor said.
One of her friends, Dr. Donnita Scott, chimed in:
"If it wasn't for him we probably wouldn't be doctors," she said, nodding at the group, which includes two ER physicians and a psychiatrist.
Dr. Jan Thomas agreed:
"We're standing on that mountaintop."
70 Year old attacks school Bully
School bus attendant Hattie Yvonne Branch couldn’t wait “until 3 o’clock” to handle what she thought was a bully situation. The 70-year-old yanked and bit a 14-year-old boy she claimed had been harassing her on the bus. Florida prosecutors just released the surveillance video of the incident that occurred on June 2nd of this year. The 14-year-old boy is seen engaging in horseplay and jokingly throwing a 5-year-old over a bus seat while the bus was parked and waiting for other students. The younger boy’s leg swung around and accidentally hit the 4’7″ Branch, who happened to be walking by. After suffering daily taunts from the older boy Branch flipped. Branch was arrested July 8 on child abuse charges and was released the next day from jail on $10,000 bail. Branch has been charged with one count of child abuse but no trial date has been set yet.
Detroit officer charged in 7yr old Aiyana Jone's murder
A Detroit police officer was charged Tuesday in the slaying of a 7-year-old girl who was shot to death during a midnight raid on her home by a special unit that was being shadowed by a reality television show crew.
officer Joseph Weekley, a member of the Detroit Police Special Response Team, was indicted on an involuntary manslaughter charge after a nearly yearlong Michigan State Police investigation into the May 16, 2010, death of Aiyana Stanley-Jones. Aiyana was on a sofa on the first floor of a two-family home when Detroit police tossed a flash grenade through a window and burst through the front door. Detroit police have said Weekley's gun accidentally discharged after he was bumped or jostled by the girl's grandmother. A film crew with the A&E Network's "The First 48" crime reality cable TV show was shadowing Detroit police on the raid. The TV show tracks murder investigations during the first two days after a slaying, and Aiyana's death put a spotlight on the growing number of reality shows focusing on law enforcement. Prosecutors announced Tuesday that the TV show's principal photographer, Allison Howard, also was indicted on perjury and obstruction of justice charges. According to the indictment, Howard, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,is accused of lying to prosecutors about showing or giving video footage of the raid to "third parties." It did not specify who the third party was, but after the raid, an attorney for the family told reporters they had seen a few minutes of the video footage.
Further details about the charges against Howard were not immediately available. Assistant prosecutor Robert Moran told a judge on Tuesday that the investigation into the girl's death was delayed seven months "because of the perjury," but he did not elaborate. All Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy would say was that "impediments" surfaced during the investigation. She declined to provide more details. A judge entered a plea of not guilty for Howard on Tuesday at a court hearing. A message seeking comment was left with her Detroit-area attorney, Robert Harrison. A message seeking comment also was left after business hours Tuesday for an A&Espokeswoman. A judge also entered a plea of not guilty for Weekley at the afternoon court hearing. The involuntary manslaughter charge carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison. He also faces a charge of careless discharge of a firearm causing death. "He knows he was acting as a police officer in a dangerous mission," Weekley's lawyer, Steve Fishman, said of his client. "I don't think anybody realizes how their lives change," Fishman said of police officers involved in shootings. "People think they're androids and robots, and they're wrong."
Soon after Aiyana's slaying, Detroit Mayor Dave Bing banned reality television crews from tagging along with police. He also admonished then-Police Chief Warren Evans for not telling him that he was permitting TV cameras on raids. On May 18, 2010, an attorney representing the girl's family in a civil suit against the city and police department and told reporters that he viewed three to four minutes of video footage of the raid and that it showed a group of black-hooded officers approaching the house before the flash grenade was thrown through the window and the shot being fired. "We know there's only one shot," attorney Geoffrey Fieger said during the press conference last year with Aiyana's family. "It's vividly depicted in the videotape ... right after the throw and the explosion of the bomb. At that point the officers rush into the home." Fieger declined to say what footage he viewed and said he did not retain a copy. A message seeking comment from Fieger was not immediately returned Tuesday. The focus of the raid was Chauncey Owens, the fiance of Aiyana's aunt. Owens was wanted in the May 14, 2010, shooting death of 17-year-old Je'rean Blake outside a nearby convenience store. Owens was found in the separate upstairs apartment.
Owens pleaded guilty in April to second-degree murder in Blake's death. On Tuesday, Worthy also announced that Charles Jones, the girl's father, had been arrested and charged with first-degree murder in Blake's slaying. Jones did not have an attorney on Tuesday and phone number for him and his family could not immediately be found. "It is alleged that after an argument, Jones accompanied Owens to the scene of the shooting and aided, abetted, and encouraged Owens during the murder of Blake," Worthy said in a statement. Charles Jones was expected to be arraigned Wednesday. A pretrial hearing is scheduled Friday for Weekley and Howard. Weekley was released on a $100,000 personal recognizance bond. Howard was required to come up with a $5,000 of a $50,000 bond to be released. "Our condolences remain with all affected by this tragedy. We must use this difficult moment to continue bringing our community and police department together," Bing said in a statement.
Brother of 14-year-old execution victim speaks out
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Charles Stinney said he was never really as social as his older brother George. And he was amazed at how quickly George always finished his school work.
"It was such a short time [we had together]," Stinney told theGrio's Todd Johnson in an interview at his Brooklyn home. Charles is the brother of the youngest person executed in the US,George Junius Stinney, Jr. executed at the age of 14. He was convicted of killing two white girls in Alcolu, South Carolina in 1944. The details surrounding his conviction and subsequent execution aren't pretty: No written confession exists, no witnesses were called on Stinney's behalf and a jury took some ten minutes to convict the young boy and sentence him to die. The two girls, 11-year-old Betty June Binnicker and seven-year-old Mary Emma Thames, had crossed paths with George and his sister Katherine Stinney the day the two girls would eventually go missing. Binnicker and Thames' bodies were later found in a ditch the following morning. "Everybody knew that he done--even before they had the trial they knew he done it," Lorraine Bailey said in a radio interview in June, 2004. (at the date of the interview, she was the only living sibling of Betty June Binnicker, one of the girls George Stinney was convicted of killing.) To this day, Charles Stinney and other members of his family still believe in George's innocence.
Saggy pants gains Georgia city $4,000
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ALBANY, Ga. — Officials in Albany, Ga., say the city's ban on saggy pants has generated nearly $4,000 in fines in less than a year. Officials say the ordinance bans anyone from wearing pants or skirts more than three inches below the top of the hips, exposing the skin or undergarments. First-time offenders face a $25 fine. On further offenses, the fine can rise to $200. The ordinance also allows 40 hours of community service to be completed in lieu of fines. Albany is about 170 miles south of Atlanta.
Michigan State University racial tension
EAST LANSING, Mich. - The campus of Michigan State University has been rocked by recent acts of racial intimidation directed toward black students. The student body at the state's largest university made their voices very loudly heard on Tuesday night that these acts will not be tolerated. "The incident that really jump-started this movement was an incident at Akers Hall where someone wrote 'No Ni**ers, please' on a door of a young lady's room," said Mario Lemons, the president of the MSU Black Student Alliance (BSA). "The residence life staff told us not to talk about. Of course, someone took a picture of it and sent it to one of us." The picture set off a firestorm on campus and online, even starting the hashtag #MSUBlackUnity on Twitter. An estimated crowd of 1,000 MSUstudents of all races filed into Conrad Hall for a town hall meeting on the issue of racial intimidation on Tuesday night. "We put it on Facebook and Twitter and started a dialog about it," said Lemons. "From that came more stories of other people going through things on campus."These incidents included other racist messages being scrawled on doors; outright physical acts of racial intimidation; and the initial incident of a black doll being hung from a beaded noose in a chemistry lab shortly after the school year began in early September.
"There are people overtly saying the n-word," said Lemons, a senior from Detroit, majoring in education. "People telling other students that they don't belong here, saying that they only got here because of Affirmative Action. Very unwelcoming things done to black people on campus." The Akers Hall incident was directed toward Tinisha Sharp. Sharp was leaving her dorm room to go to chemistry class last week when she saw the slur written on the dry-erase board. Since she was the only black student living in the room with three other students, it was very clear the message was directed at her. "I couldn't believe my eyes," said Sharp, a sophomore from Detroit. "It was very surprising to see a message like that. I really thought this type of discrimination had been ceased by this time. But I guess not." Sharp moved that same day from Akers Hall to another dorm across campus. According to the MSU registrar, of the over 47,000 students that were enrolled at MSU in 2010, 3,175 -- or 6.7 percent -- were black. MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon issued a statement, via e-mail, to the MSUstudents and faculty on Tuesday afternoon. It said that the university was investigating the matters and that she is concerned by these actions.
"The University supports free speech including the use of words that are offensive to most in our community," Simon said. "However, given the nature of these incidents, the MSU police were immediately contacted and the matter has been turned over to them to investigate, not only as a form of vandalism, but also as potential ethnic intimidation. I am personally awaiting the outcome of the police investigation." "In my many years at MSU, this rash of incidents at various parts of the campus in such a short timeframe is unmatched, is extraordinarily troubling and creates a legitimate concern that all of us must address." BSA feels that the University administration stood by and let these incidents happen. MSUhas no explicit policy on racial intimidation, and generally handles any incidents internally.
Civil Rights leader dies
Shuttlesworth, a former truck driver who studied religion at night, became pastor of Bethel Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., in 1953 and soon was an outspoken leader in the fight for racial equality. "My church was a beehive," Shuttlesworth once said. "I made the movement. I made the challenge. Birmingham was the citadel of segregation, and the people wanted to march." In his 1963 book "Why We Can't Wait," King called Shuttlesworth "one of the nation's the most courageous freedom fighters ... a wiry, energetic and indomitable man." He survived a 1956 bombing, an assault during a 1957 demonstration, chest injuries when Birmingham authorities turned fire hoses on demonstrators in 1963, and countless arrests. "I went to jail 30 or 40 times, not for fighting or stealing or drugs," Shuttlesworth told grade school students in 1997. "I went to jail for a good thing, trying to make a difference." He visited frequently and remained active in the movement in Alabama even after moving in 1961 to Cincinnati, where he was a pastor for most of the next 47 years. He moved back to Birmingham in February 2008 for rehabilitation after a mild stroke. That summer, the once-segregated city honored him with a four-day tribute and named its airport after him; his statue stands outside the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. And in November 2008, Shuttlesworth watched from a hospital bed as Sen. Barack Obama was elected the nation's first African-American president. The year before, Obama had pushed Shuttlesworth's wheelchair across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma during a commemoration of the Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march. In the early 1960s, Shuttlesworth had invited King back to Birmingham.
Televised scenes of police dogs and fire hoses being turned on black marchers, including children, in spring 1963 helped the rest of the nation grasp the depth of racial animosity in the Deep South. "He marched into the jaws of death every day in Birmingham before we got there," Andrew Young, the former Atlanta mayor and U.N. ambassador who was an aide to King, said Wednesday. Young said it was Shuttlesworth's fearlessness that persuaded King to take the fight for equality to Birmingham. "We shouldn't have been strong enough to take on Birmingham ... But God had a plan that was far better than our plan," Young said. "Fred didn't invite us to come to Birmingham. He told us we had to come." Referring to the city's notoriously racist safety commissioner, Shuttlesworth would tell followers, "We're telling ol' 'Bull' Connor right here tonight that we're on the march and we're not going to stop marching until we get our rights." According to a May 1963 New York Times profile of Shuttlesworth, Connor responded to the word Shuttlesworth had been injured by the spray of fire hoses by saying: "I'm sorry I missed it. ... I wish they'd carried him away in a hearse." Fellow civil rights pioneer the Rev. Joseph Lowery said Shuttlesworth a courageous and determined leader. "When God made Bull Connor, one of the real negative forces in this country, He was sure to make Fred Shuttlesworth." Lowery said Wednesday.
While King went on to international fame, Shuttlesworth was relatively little known outside Alabama. But he was a key figure in Spike Lee's 1997 documentary, "4 Little Girls," about the September 1963 Birmingham church bombing that killed four black children. He also gained attention in Diane McWhorter's book "Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution," which won a Pulitzer Prize in 2002. Shuttlesworth was born March 18, 1922, near Montgomery and grew up in Birmingham. As a child, he knew he would either be a minister or a doctor and by 1943, he decided to enter the ministry. He began taking theological courses at night while working as a truck driver and cement worker during the day. He was licensed to preach in 1944 and ordained in 1948. It was 1954 when King, then a pastor in Montgomery, came to Birmingham to give a speech and asked to stop by Bethel Baptist and meet Shuttlesworth. Shuttlesworth already knew the Rev. Ralph Abernathy, who became a key aide to King, as they both attended Alabama State College, later known as Selma University. Meanwhile, in Montgomery, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a city bus in late 1955, prompting the boycott led by King that gave new life to the civil rights movement.
In January 1956, King's Montgomery home was bombed while he attended a rally. Eleven months later, on Christmas night 1956, 16 sticks of dynamite were detonated outside Shuttlesworth's bedroom as he slept at the Bethel Baptist parsonage. No one was injured in either bombing, although shards of glass and wood pierced Shuttleworth's coat and hat, which were hanging on a hook. The next day, Shuttlesworth led 250 people in a protest of segregation on buses in Birmingham. In 1957, he was beaten by a mob when he tried to enroll two of his children in an all-white school in Birmingham. In Cincinnati, Shuttlesworth left Revelation Baptist Church and became pastor of the Greater New Light Baptist Church in 1966. He also founded a foundation to help low-income people make down payments on homes. In 2004, he was president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference for about three months. The troubled organization's board had suspended Shuttlesworth without giving a reason after he tried to fire a longtime official. He resigned, saying board members tried to micromanage the organization. He was 84 when he retired as the pastor of Greater New Light in 2006. "The best thing we can do is be a servant of God," he said in his final sermon. "It does good to stand up and serve others."
Black Famers settlement

The Court-ordered process of officially notifying African American farmers and their heirs about the 1.25-billion dollar "Pigford II" class action settlement is underway. African American farmers around the country who tried to file a claim in the 1999 Pigford Settlement but were unable to receive a decision on the merits because their claims were late are now receiving information about their legal rights and options under the settlement by postal mail.
The plaintiffs and USDA announced the proposed settlement in late 2010 and President Obama signed the bill authorizing payment. If approved by the Court, the settlement will resolve discrimination claims related to USDA farm loans and other benefits. Class members should visit www.BlackFarmerCase.com or call 1-877-810-8110 for complete information.
Class members eligible for the Settlement are African Americans who farmed or attempted to farm between January 1, 1981 and December 31, 1996; were prevented from applying for or were denied a USDA farm loan during that period or were given a loan with unfair terms; and who filed or attempted to file a late claim between October 13, 1999 and June 18, 2008 in the original Pigford case that was never considered because they tried to submit it after the late claim deadline.
Feds seek to close African-American health gap

Robertson, 52, finds free transportation for women who can't get to a screening or an oncologist. She hands out pamphlets. She comforts. She explains that cancer won't care that they don't have the time or money for treatment. "In the South, it's so different," Robertson says. "My mom didn't believe in going to doctors." As a volunteer for a program organized by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the University of Alabama, Robertson is a diplomat, working to erase nagging health disparities between black Americans and all other Americans. Death rates for black Americans surpass those of Americans overall for heart disease, cancer, diabetes, HIV and homicide, the CDC reports. "Educationally, we're doing better. Economically, we're doing better, so why is it that this gap will not go away?" asks Michelle Gourdine, a pediatrician at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and author of the newly released Reclaiming Our Health: A Guide to African American Wellness. Reasons for the gap, according to Gourdine and other experts: •Poverty. Many black Americans have no health insurance and a trip to the doctor is a major expense, says Mona Fouad, director of the Minority Health and Disparities Center at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. Take Renee Harris of Flomaton, Ala. The 41-year-old wife and mother has diabetes, high blood pressure and a benign breast lump doctors are watching. She has had her gallbladder removed. Harris can't swing her share of the health insurance offered through her security job at a paper mill, especially since her husband was laid off. "I just can't afford it right now," Harris says. •Fatalistic outlook. Leandris Liburd, director of the CDC's Office of Minority Health and Health Equity, says she is taken aback when she visits her hometown of Richmond, Va. "It's not uncommon for me to come upon people I grew up with who are in their early 50s who are double amputees" and who see this as the natural course of aging, Liburd says.
New efforts are attacking the gap. As part of last year's health care law, the Department of Health and Human Services put forth a plan in April to better understand and find solutions to health disparities. One element: expand data collected on hospital admissions to include the race, ethnicity and language of patients. "Health disparities … are often driven by the social conditions in which individuals live, work and play," according to the action plan. In May, the department announced $100 million in community grants for programs that promote healthier lifestyles among groups that experience more chronic illness. Separately, the CDC is targeting health problems that occur more frequently in African Americans, Hispanics and other minorities through a program called REACH (Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health) that steers grants to local organizations. In Alabama's Black Belt, an area named for the color of its fertile soil but also associated with a high black population and poverty, the CDC and UAB are working to get more black women screened and treated for breast and cervical cancer. Staffers and volunteers are picked from community members who know everyone. Judy Compton, a retired second-grade teacher, holds weekly classes for two groups of eight to 10 women at Little Zion Tabernacle Holiness Church in rural Dixons Mills, Ala. She gives advice on transportation and on agencies that can help with low-cost care and screenings. Compton finds women ages 45 to 65 who are not getting regular health screenings by speaking at churches and social functions.
"Insurance is the biggest problem," she says. Jennifer Cole is the Lowndes County, Ala., coordinator. She teaches healthy eating and says she finds her students have limited access to low-cost nutritional foods. In Flint, Mich., the CDC and the Genesee County Health Department have tackled disparities in infant mortality by hosting tours that take new doctors to the poorest parts of Flint so they can see the barriers their patients face. "We forget, for instance, there are no stores in the neighborhood, and that may be why I'm not following your medical regimen for good vegetables," says Bettina Campbell, founder of a social service organization in Flint who works with the program. "If I'm not on time for your appointment, your staff may see it as me being willfully late, but in actuality, I had to take three buses." Robertson, the Montgomery volunteer, says some of the women she visited who were diagnosed with cancer came to rely on her for support. One showed Robertson her mastectomy scar. Another produced a bag of hair that had fallen out during treatment. "One thing I've learned: They don't want sympathy. They just want to get through it," Robertson says. "Sometimes, it's just listening, getting them transportation, getting the utility bills paid so they can begin to recover."
Black AIDS Institute and NAACP Say ’30 Years Is Enuf!’

As America marks a 30-year milestone in the fight against AIDS, communities around the world continue to be altered by the disease, which now knows no color or gender boundaries. A new report issued by the Black AIDS Institute and the NAACP seeks to explore the history of AIDS and how its shaped families, regions and even entire countries in three decades with the report “30 Years Is Enuf.” “No single report can possibly address all the various ramifications of the epidemic’s first 30 years, and this one certainly does not attempt to do so,” the Black AIDS Institute said in a statement posted on blackaids.org. “This report aims to provide a degree of context to our understanding of the epidemic, using the 30th anniversary as an opportunity to reflect on what we have experienced and to understand both the challenges and the opportunities that will face us in the future.” The report includes a historical overview of AIDS’ first 30 years and a report card grading the five most recent U.S. presidents’ response to the epidemic; HIV-themed essays from young people whose lives have been affected by HIV/AIDS in some way; news about scientific advances in the fight against the disease and findings from interviews with long-term survivors.
Citizens Bank Settles Claims of Racial Discrimination

The U.S. Department of Justice has reached a $3.6 million settlement agreement with two financial institutions to resolve allegations that they discriminated against African-Americans based on race by improperly favoring White residents in Michigan. The lawsuit against Citizens Republic Bancorp and its subsidiary Citizens Bank of Flint, Michigan, stemmed from allegations that the banks were expanding branches in White areas while closing them down in Black communities, decreasing access to their services. “There was a red line drawn around the city of Detroit,” Thomas Perez, the assistant attorney general who heads the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, said about the complaints that led to the lawsuit.
The settlement, which is subject to court approval, requires that the banks invest $1.625 million in Detroit in neighborhood stabilization by providing existing homeowners with matching grants of up to $5,000 to fund exterior improvements; $1.5 million in a special financing program to increase the amount of credit the banks extend to majority of African-American areas in Wayne County; and $500,000 for outreach to potential customers, promotion of their products and services and consumer financial education. “I am pleased that Citizens Bank approached us to ensure that their contributions were aligned with our neighborhood stabilization initiatives,” said Detroit Mayor Dave Bing. “We welcome them to the growing number of partners who are working with us on behalf of our city and citizens.” he continued.Citizens Bank president and CEO Cathy Nash denies the allegations of discrimination but said that a court fight would have been too costly.
“We’ve been in negotiations for about two years. To fight in open court is very expensive. If we’re going to settle for millions of dollars, I’d rather actually put the money to good use. It just didn’t make sense for us,” she told The Detroit News. “I’m not too keen that I had to settle with the Department of Justice on allegations that I don’t agree with, but I’m going to make lemonade out of lemons. She concluded, “I don’t like it, but this is the right thing to do for the city.” Joyce Jones is a book author, associate director of Publications at Spelman College, and contributing editor to Heart & Soul magazine.
Police Brutality
PITTSBURGH -- A community group protested Friday outside the City-County Building, asking Allegheny County authorities to do what the Justice Department and the FBI will not -- file charges against Pittsburgh police officers who beat and arrested a high school student. Jordan Miles was an 18-year-old senior at the city's Creative and Performing Arts High School when he was severely injured in a police altercation in Homewood in January 2010 The group said they don't just want the three officers to be taken off the job. "Now that the Justice Department has closed the case, we expect DA Zappala to do his job and prosecute the police to the fullest extent of the law," said Pete Schell, one of the rally organizers. On Wednesday, Hickton released a written statement that said there wasn't enough evidence to show the three officers broke the law or department regulations when they violently detained Miles. The officers have said Miles resisted arrest when they claim he was acting suspiciously and thought he had a gun, which the officers said turned out to be a soda bottle. Miles said he was accosted because he was a young black man in a high-crime area and denies having a bottle, much less a gun. District Judge Oscar Petite dismissed all charges against Miles, including a count of assault, at the preliminary hearing in March 2010. Schell said that even though federal authorities have reached a decision, they hope local officials will move forward. "The city has not released their investigation by OMI [Office of Municipal Investigations]. However, we do think there is plenty of evidence for the DA to go to trial with," Schell said. The APA said they delivered thousands of petition signatures to the DA last fall, calling for action in the case. They said they were revisiting that message on Friday. Now that the lengthy federal investigation has ended, Mayor Luke Ravenstahl said Ewing, Saldutti David Sisak will go back to work, although they won't return to Zone 5. All three officers have been off with pay since February 2010.
Pregnant women African Women discrimination

Pregnant women are being held hostage at the Eastern Regional Hospital at Koforidua, because they were unable to pay for the cost of medication, beamed to our living rooms by E-TV, an Accra-based private television station, in the course of the week, was a disturbing spectacle. Most Ghanaians obviously are of the view that as a nation, Ghana has gone past the spectacle of our women being caged at medical institutions, where they had gone to deliver our future leaders. This is because in the previous administration, a mechanism was put in place under which all pregnant women were to be offered free medical attention. That laudable social intervention policy was implemented because it was de-humanizing for our young mothers to be detained in medical institutions, until some philanthropic individuals and institutions could bail them out. In addition to free medication for our young mothers, the previous administration also conceived the idea of a National Health Insurance Scheme, under which all Ghanaians could access medical care, after paying something minimum into an insurance premium. Both policies served Ghana well.
Unfortunately, the two schemes appear to be collapsing and the dreaded Cash and Carry system, under which customers had to pay before being attended to in our various hospitals and health centres, is gradually creeping back into the body politic. It is certainly not the best means of catering for the welfare of Ghanaians. It could certainly not have been what Ghanaians bargained for when the administration of Professor John Evans Atta Mills took charge of Government House, promising a 'Better Ghana' agenda. The Chronicle is worried by the subtle attempt to dishonour noble plans and programmes bequeathed to this nation by the Kufuor administration, while policy makers grope in the dark for new direction. We are getting sick and tired of looking on in paralysis, as the nation gradually sinks into the abyss, and citizens being subjected to roof-top advertisement of a 'Better Ghana' that no one is able to appreciate. When the former University don went round the country campaigning for votes to lead the country, he entered into some kind of social contract with the people. The contract was simply crafted; Give me your vote and I would take care of your welfare.
The people have delivered on their side of the bargain. The former law lecturer now sits at the Castle as a Constitutional Head of State of this Republic. It is now up to Prof. J.E.A. Mills to deliver on his side of the contract. The Chronicle is inviting the Head of State to read the riot act to all administrators frustrating the implementation of laid down policies. Our pregnant women should no more be held hostages at various medical centres across the country. It is inhuman. It does not speak well of Ghana as a developing nation. Prof. Atta Mills cannot pride himself of leading a nation of proud Ghanaians, if our pregnant women are caged, for the simple reason that they are unable to afford their medical fees. Pregnant women are supposed to have free access to medication. That is not negotiable. The good old Professor is on notice to perform!
Tornado devastation

May 1, 2011) -- It was bad enough that a tornado obliterated Derrick Keef's house. Worse still was the heartbreaking scavenger hunt for his most priceless possessions strewn across the devastated neighborhood. His guns were in the ruins of a neighbor's home. A Christmas heirloom shared space in a ditch with broken glass and jagged nails. And his seven-year-old son's bike - one of the few toys he could salvage - was pinned under a car a block away. I've been going from lot to lot finding stuff," he said as he rifled through debris in Concord, Alabama, in search of a family photo album. "It's like CSI. crews combed the remains of houses and neighborhoods pulverized by the nation's deadliest tornado outbreak in nearly four decades, survivors were left trying to figure out how to put their lives back together. At least 297 were killed across six states in Wednesday's outbreak. President Barack Obama planned a trip to Tuscaloosa on Friday to view storm damage and meet Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley and shattered families. Late Thursday, Obama signed a disaster declaration for the state to provide federal aid to those who seek it. Those who took shelter as the storms descended trickled back to their homes Thursday, ducking police roadblocks and fallen limbs and power lines to reclaim their belongings. They struggled with no electricity and little help from stretched-thin law enforcement. And they were frustrated by the near-constant presence of gawkers who drove by in search of a cellphone camera picture - or worse, a trinket to take home. "It's just devastation. I've never seen this," said Sen. Richard Shelby during a visit to storm-ravaged Tuscaloosa. "This is the worst tornado devastation I've ever seen." The storms did the brunt of their damage in Alabama. More than two-thirds of the victims lived there, and large cities bore the scars of half-mile-wide twisters that rumbled through. The high death toll seems surprising in the era of Doppler radar and precise satellite forecasts. But the storms were just too wide and too powerful to avoid a horrifying body count. As many as a million homes and businesses there were without power, and Bentley said 2,000 National Guard troops had been activated to help. The governors of Mississippi and Georgia also issued emergency declarations for parts of their states.
"We can't control when or where a terrible storm may strike, but we can control how we respond to it," Obama said. "And I want every American who has been affected by this disaster to know that the federal government will do everything we can to help you recover and we will stand with you as you rebuild." The storms seemed to hone in on populated areas by hugging the interstate highways and obliterating neighborhoods and even entire towns from Tuscaloosa to Bristol, Va. Concord, a small town outside Birmingham, was so devastated that authorities closed it down to keep out rubberneckers. Randy Guyton's family, which lived in a stately home at the base of a hill in the center of Concord, rushed to the basement garage, piled into a Honda Ridgeline and listened to the roar as the twister devoured the house in seconds. Afterward, they saw outside through the shards of their home and scrambled out. "The whole house caved in on top of that car," he said. "Other than my boy screaming to the Lord to save us, being in that car is what saved us." Alabama emergency management officials in a news release early Friday said the state had 210 confirmed deaths. There were 33 deaths in Mississippi, 33 in Tennessee, 15 in Georgia, five in Virginia and one in Kentucky. Hundreds if not thousands of people were injured - 800 in Tuscaloosa alone.
The loss of life is the greatest from an outbreak of U.S. tornadoes since April 1974, when the weather service said 315 people were killed by a storm that swept across 13 Southern and Midwestern states. Some of the worst damage was in Tuscaloosa, a city of more than 83,000 that is home to the University of Alabama. The storms destroyed the city's emergency management center, so the school's Bryant-Denny Stadium was turned into a makeshift one. School officials said two students were killed, though they did not say how they died. Finals were canceled and commencement was postponed. Shaylyndrea Jones, 22, had expected to graduate from the University of Alabama this weekend with a degree in sports science. Instead, she spent Thursday moving out of her ruined apartment, where she rode out the storm huddled in a hallway. But graduation suddenly isn't so important - she's just thankful she and her roommates survived the night. "It was the scariest thing I've been through," she said. "We were saying our prayers as it was coming down the street." Police used bullhorns to tell people not to cross the tape to a neighborhood they were searching. On the other side, people were walking over glass, through pools of water, endless piles of debris and smashed cars. The city imposed a 10 p.m. curfew for Thursday and an 8 p.m. limit for Friday.
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