Archive for the ‘Al Sharpton’ Category

Al Sharpton to lead GOTV rally ahead of Chicago mayoral election – NBC News

CHICAGO The Rev. Al Sharpton is coming here Sunday to lead whats expected to be a massive get-out-the-vote rally less than 10 days before a heated mayors election, making him the latest high-profile figure to get involved in a contest thats increasingly becoming nationalized.

Sharpton told NBC News he was not endorsing a candidate in the race where crime has become the central issue in a city facing a public safety crisis.

The two candidates competing in the April 4 runoff are Chicago Teachers Union-backed Brandon Johnson and former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas.

Im doing a GOTV rally on Sunday in Chicago. Both candidates are invited, said Sharpton, who is also an MSNBC host. Sharpton said some thought Vallas wouldnt come to the rally, which is being held at New Mount Pilgrim Baptist Church.

He should come. Im interested in turnout, Sharpton said of Vallas.

A spokesperson for Vallas said the campaign wasnt aware of any invitation involving a Sharpton event. A member of Johnsons campaign team indicated Johnson would attend.

While Sharpton has said hes not endorsing in the race, his mere presence at a church where the pastor has backed Johnson is tantamount to an endorsement and rally for Johnson.

We are very excited to have the reverend come to Chicago to help boost GOTV efforts, said Bill Neidhardt, a Johnson campaign adviser. We have had many insightful and inspirational conversations with the reverend in the last few months.

Johnson has the backing of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. No members of Congress have endorsed Vallas.

Natasha Korecki is a senior national political reporter for NBC News.

Jonathan Allen contributed.

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Al Sharpton to lead GOTV rally ahead of Chicago mayoral election - NBC News

Look Back … to a tornado in Coldwater, 1948 | Features … – The Anniston Star

March 23, 1948, in The Star: Three persons were treated at Anniston Memorial Hospital and one was hospitalized following a freak tornado that dipped down onto Coldwater last night around 7:20. Arnold Rollins suffered a fractured vertebrae when the home of W. B. Mason was picked up, turned around and set down in the nearby garden. The Rollinses had gone to the Masons home at the approach of the storm. Four of the 12 in the house at that time were injured.

March 23, 1998, in The Star: The Rev. Al Sharpton was in Anniston last night speaking at Mount Olive Baptist Church at an observance service marking the Rev. John S. Nettles 30th year as pastor of the south Anniston congregation. I dont know anyone who has served more unselfishly and who has served more consistently than your pastor and our leader, the Rev. John Nettles, Sharpton said. Also this date: With two new motels and another on the way, the lodging construction boom that has swept the country is making noise in Oxford. The Jameson Inn and Wingate Inn, with 120 rooms between them, are the two newest entrants, and soon to join them off Interstate 20s exit 188 is the Sleep Inn.

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Look Back ... to a tornado in Coldwater, 1948 | Features ... - The Anniston Star

Tyre Nichols Funeral Sparks Emotions about Police of All Colors – The Peoples Vanguard of Davis

pc: BBC News

By Kaylee Pearlman

MEMPHIS TN Following the funeral of Tyre Nichols, 29, five Black Memphis officers were fired and charged with the murder, sparking talk about the color of police involved in the violence.

William Jones told NBC News that, when he was a teenager, the police routinely used violence to break up their pickup football gamesit was the Black officers who beat us worse.

According to NBC, when Jones, heard the identity of the officers charged in Nichols murderhe was not surprised at all.

If it doesnt surprise us that a gang of officers would beat a Black man to death, then it shouldnt surprise us that the gang of officers who did so were Black, Jones said.

Police are trained the same way no matter their raceand no matter their race, they belong to an increasingly militarized profession that engages the American public like enemy combatants, he added, noting we make it near impossible to hold them personally liable for any constitutional violations they unleash while in uniform.

During the funeral, Rev. Al Sharpton stated there is nothing more insulting and offensive to those of us who worked to open doorsthat you walk through those doors and act like the folks we had to fight to get you through them doors.

He added, You didnt get to the police department by yourselfPeople had to march and go to jail, and some lost their lives to open the doors for you, and how dare you act like that sacrifice was for nothing.

Police Chief in Memphis, Cerelyn Davis, created the Scorpion Unit (Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods), and, according to NBC News, [it] appears to have falsely accused Nichols of reckless driving to justify its officers pulling him over.

Davis, according to NBC, has come under fire for creating the Scorpion Unit. And, after Nichols was mercilessly beaten, footage captures Scorpion officers trying to justify their brutality.

According to the New York Times, a police report attempts to do the same.

However, NBC News said the claims that Nichols started fighting them and reached for one of the officers gunsarent supported by any video evidence.

Maq Claxton of the Black Law Enforcement Alliance, stated that it is unprecedented.(not) that you would have the victim be Blackbut the multiple perpetrator officers are Black, and the police chief, the commander of the police force, is Black.

NBC News concludes, Whether its Peter Liang, the Chinese-American police officer convicted of manslaughter in the 2014 shooting death of Akai Gurley.or the Black and Hmong-American officers on the scene of George Floydweve seen a disturbing rainbow coalition of police officers involved in killing innocent Black people.

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Tyre Nichols Funeral Sparks Emotions about Police of All Colors - The Peoples Vanguard of Davis

Dinwiddie judge denies defense motion to hold body of mental patient – Progress Index

DINWIDDIE A Circuit Court judge has denied a defense request to hold the body of the man who died earlier this month at Central State Hospital while in custody of Henrico County deputies, saying that a corpse is not a T-shirt" or something else that can be easily stored.

The request came Wednesday morning during a bond hearing for Kaiyel Dajour Sanders, who was in charge of the detail that transported Irvo Otieno to Central State on March 6 and who the prosecution called the most culpable of the 10 people facing second-degree murder charges. Otieno died shortly after arrival at CSH after seven deputies and three CSH security guards held down, and in some instances, lay across Otieno on the floor of the hospital administration area. The prosecution says Otieno was smothered under the weight of the people holding him down.

Otieno, a 28-year-old Kenya native living with his mother in Henrico County, was an aspiring writer, musician and singer who also had been dealing with mental-health issues for several years. At the time he was taken into custody over possible involvement in a neighborhood burglary until his death at the hospital three days later, Otieno was in a mental crisis and appeared in videos to be very lethargic and out of touch with reality. Deputies said they had to restrain him after becoming combative at the hospital, a claim the prosecution and his family refute.

Circuit Judge Joseph Teefey seemed somewhat perplexed after co-counsel Torrey Williams asked for a motion to preserve the evidence in the commonwealths case, which essentially was Otienos body. His remains currently are at the state medical examiners office in Richmond, and the ME has said it could be 10-12 weeks before a final report is issued.

Williams asked for the body to remain in the ME custody until they could get their own certified medical examiner to do an independent autopsy. Teefey repeatedly asked Williams what evidence he had to warrant such a motion, and Williams said it was concern driving the motion that not all of the commonwealths evidence was going to be available this early in the case process.

When you start with concern, youre heading down the road to speculation, the judge said. What evidence do you have?

None, Williams said.

Teefey was not finished. He asked if Williams had reached out to anyone yet to perform the independent autopsy, to which Williams replied he had not.

Teefey suggested that the defense quickly get someone with similar credentials as the states coroner to observe the autopsy process. He was, however, not going to order Otienos body not be released to his family for burial just because of speculation.

Quite frankly, were not talking about a T-shirt or a vial of blood, Teefey said. Were talking about the dignity of the human body. Im going to deny your motion.

The preservation motion was made after Teefey set Sanders bond at $25,000 when Commonwealths Attorney Ann Cabell Baskervill called him the most culpable, the most responsible defendant in Otienos death because not only was he in charge of the detail at CSH but he also was the one who restrained Otieno the most of any of the deputies there, and spent most of the 12-minute restraining period holding Otienos head and upper body down. He also was the deputy seen in CSH surveillance footage feeling Otienos neck for a pulse once the deputies removed themselves from him.

More:Surveillance video shows deputies, hospital workers pinning Irvo Otieno to the ground

The most emotional moments in all of the bond hearings came during Tabitha Renee Leveres appearance right after Sanders time in court. One of the three witnesses was a retired Henrico sheriffs employee who worked with Levere for 10 years and tearfully called her the kindest person I ever met.

Levere could be seen wiping her eyes during the hearing and on a couple of instances was given tissues by Baskervill.

One of Leveres neighbors called her our rock at their apartment community because she always looked after the elderly residents. Juliana Hester recalled how Levere dropped everything she was doing and rushed a neighbor to the hospital after he apparently had a stroke.

We all feel so much safer with her in the building, Hester said.

Baskervill contended that Levere was the least hands-on of the suspects. She can be seen in the surveillance video assisting a nurse in rolling Otieno over for an injection after everyone got off of him.

However, Baskervill said, Levere's lack of action in persuading her colleagues to stop the restraint contributed to the final outcome.

If any one person had shown emotional care or common sense for Mr. Otieno, hed still be here today, Baskervill said.

Baskervill said Levere had tried to speak to Otieno while he was at the jail, but she claimed he called her a bitch.

[Levere] realized he was not going to deal with females, either, the prosecutor said.

Teefey set Leveres bail at $5,000, the lowest amount of all 10 suspects in the case.

By Wednesday afternoon, all 10 of the defendants had been granted bond. With the exception of Sanders and Levere, all of them were either $10,000 or $15,000, and all came with the stipulation that no one attempted to contact a co-defendant or have anything to do with anyone in the case for the duration.

Other defendants in the case are deputies Jermaine Lavar Branch, 45; Bradley Thomas Disse, 43; Randy Joseph Boyer, 57; Dwayne Alan Bramble, 37; and Brandon Edward Rodgers, 48; and CSH security guards Darian M. Blackwell, 23, of Petersburg, Wavie L. Jones, 34, of Chesterfield, and Sadarius D. Williams, 27, of North Dinwiddie.

All 10 were indicted Tuesday by a Dinwiddie grand jury on the charges.

More:Mother of Irvo Otieno 'happy' with indictments of deputies, hospital staff charged in his death

Otienos family attorneys announced Wednesday that Rev. Al Sharpton will deliver the eulogy at Otienos as-yet unscheduled memorial service. While the exact date and time are unknown, the location will be in First Baptist Church of South Richmonds Chesterfield annex.

Sharpton is founder and president of the New York-based National Action Network, a civil-rights advocacy organization. Sharpton has been a prominent figure in recent high-profile cases involving the deaths of Black men and women across the nation.

Family co-counsel Ben Crump said the time and date of the service should be announced within the next few days.

More:Civil rights leader Al Sharpton to deliver eulogy for Irvo Otieno who died at mental health hospital

Meanwhile, the Dinwiddie County chapter of the Virginia NAACP has become the latest to weigh in on the events of March 6 at Central State.

Chapter president Betty Brown said in a statement that the group stands in solidarity with the Otieno family in seeking justice for those responsible for his death.

It is imperative that law enforcement officers are trained in crisis intervention when they encounter an individual with mental health issues until certified Behavioral Health personnel arrive on the scene, Brown wrote.

Earlier Wednesday, the chair of the Dinwiddie Board of Supervisors, Mark Moore, issued a statement also condemning the actions at the hospital and waited to reiterate that no one in the Dinwiddie County sheriffs office was involved in Otienos death.

More:Dinwiddie judge denies defense motion for gag order in Irvo Otieno murder case

More:Commonwealth's attorney Baskervill on charges against deputies: To refrain from acting would be a breach of duty

Bill Atkinson (he/him/his) is an award-winning journalist who covers breaking news, government and politics. Reach him at batkinson@progress-index.com or on Twitter at @BAtkinson_PI.

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Dinwiddie judge denies defense motion to hold body of mental patient - Progress Index

Long-friendly neighbor states are in a bitter battle over the next FBI HQ – POLITICO

Leading the push for a Virginia-based FBI are the states two Democratic senators, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine. Warner, in discussing the ferocious debate, referred to Hoyer in the practiced and professional tones of a heavyweight rival in a boxing match with thousands of jobs on the line.

Ive got great respect for Mr. Hoyer, and Im anxious that the process proceed, Warner said. Weve got criteria, we made our last and best final offers last week and I feel good about where Virginia stands.

Rep. Steny Hoyers (D-Md.) home-state passion is being put to use in the battle over the location of the next FBI headquarters.|Jose Luis Magana/AP Photo

The FBI headquarters face-off has stoked fierce divisions among two congressional delegations that interact more than nearly every other pair of states, excepting the Dakotas or Carolinas. Yet its not the only fresh fault line between Virginia and Maryland, whose Democratic senators split over disapproving a progressive D.C. crime law, with the former duo backing the rollback and the latter backing the D.C. Council.

Then, of course, there are the standard tension points: bragging rights over the Chesapeakes famous blue crab and football (the Virginia Cavaliers are set to take on the Maryland Terrapins this fall).

The FBI battle has dramatically intensified recently, ever since Marylanders learned that Virginia would have at least one leg up in the process. Thats because the agency leading the headquarters hunt, the General Services Administration, plans to weigh the two sites proximity to the FBI academy in Quantico, Va., as a larger part of its overall decision.

This goes beyond a rivalry, said Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.). This is about the mission of the FBI and getting the taxpayers the best deal. But Van Hollen made one point clear: The oyster wars, that was part of our longstanding rivalry. Just for the record, Maryland won the oyster wars.

Members of the two Senate delegations, all of them Democrats, insist though that they agree on more than they disagree, highlighting their work together on WMATA funding, H-2B visas and their support for federal employees.

Generally, were together more than not, said Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.). I have the utmost respect for my two colleagues from Virginia.

Still, the competition is stiff for the FBI building. Hoyer, the former House majority leader, is perhaps the most fervent FBI-to-Maryland booster of all. He recently drove to Virginias proposed headquarters site in Springfield, snapping cell phone photos to help make his case.

More than a decade after then-FBI director Robert Mueller first walked into his office to discuss the subject, Hoyer estimated in an interview that he spends about one-fifth of his time per week on the new headquarters. Hes worked with Wes Moore, Marylands rising-star governor, to deploy every possible resource on their states behalf, including personal pleas to Biden and the new White House chief of staff, Marylander Jeff Zients.

The Free States pitch is bolstered by the NAACP as well as civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton, centered on a push for equity that Black community advocates say is critical for Prince Georges County and for Bidens own reelection.

And that pressure campaign has infuriated many Virginians, some of whom have quietly gone to the White House themselves with an entreaty to ignore it.

Things could soon get even nastier. Hoyer did not rule out flexing some of his power over the federal purse this fall if Marylands bid is rejected. He and Van Hollen are both the top Democrats on a spending panel that oversees funding for the very agency in charge of the headquarters search, the GSA.

I dont think wed go quietly into that dark night, Hoyer said when asked if he would try to influence the selection through his Appropriations Committee perch if Virginia wins. Van Hollen and I will still be where well be.

Virginians, though, insist they wouldnt let the FBI building clash derail another spending bill. The headquarters was one of the final hangups delaying passage of Decembers government funding deal, with Hoyer in particular refusing to yield until he secured new language that helped keep Marylands bid alive.

Marylands stance shocked the Virginians, including Warner, who ultimately went to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to help end the standoff. Schumer eventually reached a deal with the two delegations.

Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.), who represents the Springfield site, responded coolly to Hoyers suggestion that another spending bill could hang in the balance: Threats to retaliate against a professional decision made on the merits, I think, are unworthy of any senior member of Congress, and I hope will not work.

Connolly himself has plenty of experience with Beltway-state squabbling that, as he put it, goes back to King Charles. As a top official in Fairfax County, he once got embroiled in a lawsuit between the two states over the location of a drinking water pipe that went all the way to the Supreme Court which ultimately ruled for the Old Dominion.

He added that hes disappointed by the element of desperation in Marylands jockeying during the last few months, particularly its case for diversity and equity he pointed to the more than 100 languages spoken in Springfield.

Kaine, meanwhile, insisted that the fight for the FBI building is not an anomaly for the two states and described it as a friendly competition.

I dont view this as different than other instances where Maryland and Virginia have squared off, Kaine said. Virginia would love to have NIH. Virginia would love to have some of the intel agencies, the NSA in Maryland. Im sure Maryland would love to have some of the things that are in Virginia.

Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) insisted that the fight for the FBI building is not an anomaly for the two states and described it as a friendly competition.|John C. Clark/AP Photo

This time, however, the Hill is paying even more attention to the two states because theyre also home to two national political players in their respective parties: Moore and Glenn Youngkin, Virginias Republican governor.

Moore and Youngkin have been planning to sit down together after they both won in November, according to a person familiar with the discussions. In the meantime, Moore challenged Youngkin to a one-on-one pickup basketball game to determine the FBIs future hub. Youngkin did not formally respond, according to a person close to Moores office, though the Republican governor did tweet back: Game on! (Moore also accurately picked UVA to lose in the first upset of March Madness in his bracket. The Terps won the same day.)

While Virginia Democrats acknowledge its a bit awkward to root for handing Youngkin a big political win in the FBI building as he eyes a potential 2024 bid, they say a bipartisan approach is also critical. Kaine, Warner and Youngkin wrote a joint Washington Post op-ed on Thursday that made the case again for their state. And if Maryland makes any maneuvers in year-end spending bills, for instance, Youngkin could call on House GOP leaders to stop them.

Hoyer predicted Youngkin wouldnt hesitate to use a potential FBI win on the campaign trail, whether hes seeking his partys presidential nod or a different prize. Im sure he would, he said.

Meanwhile, lawmakers are already looking ahead to what could be the next fight. The White House announced last week that Bidens new disease-fighting agency, ARPA-H, will house its headquarters in the D.C. metro area.

Its location will be chosen by GSA.

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Long-friendly neighbor states are in a bitter battle over the next FBI HQ - POLITICO