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Nagin - Guilty of Corruption - to be Sentenced June 11

Feb. 23, 2014

Nagin Sentencing June 11

nagin

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Louisiana Weekly

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Former New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin has made history by becoming the first mayor in New Orleans’ nearly 300-year history to be tried and convicted for a crime committed while in office.

Nagin, a New Orleans businessman and Democrat who famously vowed to root out corruption once elected, was found guilty on 20 of 21 counts in a federal court. He was convicted on one count of conspiracy, five counts of bribery, nine counts of wire fraud, one count of money laundering and four counts of filing a false tax return.

The 57-year-old ex-mayor was found not guilty on one count of bribery, stemming from an alleged bribe involving businessman Rodney Williams.

“I maintain my innocence,” a stoic-faced Ray Nagin said as he left the federal courthouse.

“We did our best,” lead defense attorney Robert Jenkins told reporters. “I’m surprised. I really thought the jury would not find him guilty of any of these counts,” Jenkins said. “We will move on to the appeal process.”
A sentence hearing has been set for June 11.

Under federal sentencing guidelines, Nagin could face 20 years behind bars, and possibly more time plus fines. The former mayor remains free on bond and was not taken into custody.

At times during the trial, a defiant Nagin engaged in heated exchanges with federal prosecutors and denied taking bribes although he did acknowledge that he did whatever he could to support his sons and the family business.

“Like any father, I wanted to help my sons,” Nagin testified.

When his time on the witness stand was finally over, Nagin said, “Thank you Jesus.”

“Our public servants pledge to provide honest services to the people of Southeast Louisiana,” U.S. Attorney Kenneth Polite, a New Orleans native who took over the reins at the U.S. Attorney’s Office after his predecessor was forced to resign amid an online posting scandal, said Wednesday in a written statement. “We are committed to bringing any politician who violates that obligation to justice.”

The 21-count federal indictment charged Nagin with accepting more than $160,000 in bribes and truckloads of free granite for his family business, Stone Age, in exchange for promoting the interests of local businessman Frank Fradella. Nagin, who as a newly installed mayor pointed to the pre-dawn arrest of a cousin who drove a cab as proof of his seriousness about ending public graft, was also charged with accepting at least $60,000 in payoffs from contractor Rodney Williams for his help in securing city contracts.

“The road to former Mayor Ray Nagin’s conviction began with one phone call from a courageous citizen,” Rafael C. Goyeneche III, a former cop and president of the Metropolitan Crime Com­mission, said in a released statement. “That citizen told the MCC about shipments of granite from Florida by the truckload to the Nagin family business in New Orleans. It was only one piece of a corrupt puzzle but when placed in the hands of the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the pieces grew one by one into a sprawling picture of corruption and betrayal.”

From the day he was inaugurated when he jumped out of a horse-drawn carriage in the middle of Faubourg Tremé — to the surprise of his wife, reporters and onlookers — to second-line in the street, to the day he told the federal government to get off its “ass and do something” after Hurri­cane Katrina, Ray Nagin had a knack for keeping things interesting. He will be forever remembered for his infamous “Choco­late City” remark, proposal to reopen the Canal St. hotels as casinos after Katrina, his decision to mask as the Roman general Maximus on Fat Tuesday and his description of himself as “vagina-friendly” during a local celebration of “The Vagina Monolo­gues.”

“Nagin’s legal problems began long before his indictment on 21 counts of corruption,” W.C. Johnson, a member of Com­munity United for Change and host of local cable-access show “Our­Story,” told The Louisiana Weekly. “Nagin first began deceiving the people of New Orleans when he changed his political affiliation from Republican to Democrat. During his tenure as mayor, Nagin displayed Republican values throughout his color of governance. In addition, Nagin ran scared for his reelection bid that caused Nagin to embrace his Black roots and persuade the working poor to reelect him for a second term. The amount of political capital Nagin owed to the working poor should have raised the living standards of the working poor and the economic stability of the Black business community. Unfortunately, neither group benefited from the support in rejecting Mitch Landrieu’s bid to upset the Nagin administration.

“The worst demonstration of Nagin’s rejection of the working poor and Black business community came when public housing residents petitioned the mayor and his administration to reject the demolition of the major housing communities known as projects,” Johnson continued.

“Nagin’s rejection of the very people who saved the Nagin Administration was the beginning of Nagin’s demise. Interestingly enough, many Black politicians in New Orleans are blinded by the illusion of ‘good old boy’ politics being the saving grace when it comes to the relinquishing of political power through the electoral process. Blacks who are allowed to ascend to political positions in New Orleans either lack the vision of empire building or are dissuaded by the images of ‘Strange Fruit’ hanging from the poplar tree. Without regards to historical accounts, Blacks dismiss the notion of, ‘the greater the risk, the greater the rewards.’ Using Atlanta as an example, America has witnessed what Blacks can do once they go all in for the high-stakes game of politics. Regrettably, Blacks in New Orleans would rather risk going to jail as a common thief than risk death for control of the pie. Once again settling for the crumbs from the pie instead of getting the pie.”

In 2006 Nagin defeated challenger Mitch Landrieu in a hotly contested race to win a second term as mayor.

Landrieu, who became Nagin’s successor in 2010, talked about the Nagin conviction Wednesday.

“This is a very sad day for the people of the city of New Orleans,” Landrieu said. “The conviction of former Mayor Nagin is another clear indication that the people of this city will not tolerate public corruption or abuse of power. Four years ago, the people of this city turned the page on that sad chapter for New Orleans and on the old way of doing business. We are moving forward and are restoring the public’s trust in government. Our city’s best days are ahead of us.”

W.C. Johnson said there’s a lesson to be learned from Nagin’s fall from grace.

“Ray Nagin, William Jefferson, Oliver Thomas, and others should pass on to Black political hopefuls the merits of self-determination for the race, instead of individual riches,” Johnson told The Weekly. “The old cliché, ‘a rising tide lifts all ships,’ needs to be the watchwords for Black politicians in New Orleans. There are only a few metropolitan cities that enjoy a Black majority. Fewer still are metropolitan cities that reward the Black population because the Black race is in the majority. European history reveals European conquest. In the vigor that Blacks embrace the European model, why have Blacks overlooked the conquest of empire-building blocks that lead to true political power? Are Black politicians so disconnected and self-absorbed, or are Black politicians so afraid that the obvious eludes them?”

Sounding like a fallen elected official who believes he suffered a knockdown but is not out for the count, Nagin sent the following message via Twitter Thursday: “Praying 4 prosecutors, government witnesses, jurors…God still in control.”

A similarly upbeat Robert Jenkins said he was hopeful about the findings of a report about prosecutorial misconduct in the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

“I promise you that if it’s what we think it is…it’s a bombshell,” Jenkins told FOX 8 News.

According to FOX 8 News, the report is being kept under wraps by U.S. District Judge Kurt Englehardt for now.

A similar investigation by the Feds led to the overturning of a number of convictions in at least one high-profile, post-Katrina murder case involving NOPD officers.

“There are many objections, and those appeals are based on those,” Jenkins said.

For now, Nagin remains in Dallas, Texas on home confinement.

“New Orleans has been damaged in an immeasurable – yet, thankfully not irreparable – way by Ray Nagin’s and Greg Meffert’s campaign of corruption and self-dealing,” former New Orleans Mayor Marc Morial, Nagin’s immediate predecessor, “It is a sad day for all of us when those who are elected and entrusted to protect our citizens demonstrate such little regard for the tremendous duty and responsibility of leading this great city. I hope that this conviction reminds the current generation of New Orleans elected officials, as well as others across the nation, of just how essential personal integrity and commitment are to public service.

“Fortunately, my hometown of New Orleans is strong and resilient and has already begun, under a new administration, to move past the damage directly caused by Nagin and Meffert,” Morial, who currently serves as National Urban League president, added. “Elected office is a sacred public trust, and ineptitude, lack of integrity, and abuse of power have no seat at the table. I hope that everyone who is proud to call New Orleans “home” can now fully put this behind us and move on to the business of continuing to push our city forward.”

Va. House of Delegates Rejects Care for Slave Graves

Feb. 23, 2014

Va. House of Delegates Rejects Care for Slave Graves

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Richmond Free Press

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Virginia pays to care for the graves of soldiers who fought in the Civil War.Shouldn’t the state also care for the graves of the forgotten slaves over whom that terrible conflict was fought 150 yearsago?

“Yes,” is the right answer to Republican Delegate Robert G.“Bob” Marshall.That’s why he proposed a bill to set up an 11-member state commission to identify such graves, with the ultimate goal to provide state assistance to groups or organizations that maintain them.The bill, though, died in a Republican-dominated House committee Feb. 17, which Delegate Marshall called disappointing.

“We honor the memory of those who fought on both sidesand fail to honor the memory of those who occasioned that awfulstruggle,” the Prince William county delegate told the FreePress. “We ought to give those graves legal recognition in deathas we do those who fought.”

Delegate Marshall said the idea for caring for the graves of slaves came from Paul Goldman, a political analyst and a former chairman of the Virginia Democratic Party. Goldman said that the “state treated slaves like property when they were alive. It is important for us to right this wrong as best we can and make sure they get the respect they deserve.”

This would not have cost much, Delegate Marshall said. A former history teacher, he envisioned volunteers from schools, heritage groups and the NAACP combing through archives toidentify slave burial grounds. He said, “This would have brought people together.” 

Dunn Verdict Seen as Another Permit to Kill Black Men by Hazel Trice Edney

Feb. 16, 2014

Dunn Verdict Seen as Another Permit to Kill Black Men
Civil Rights Leaders Say ‘Enough is Enough’

By Hazel Trice Edney

jordon davis
Jordan Davis
michael don
Michael Dunn

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – Civil rights leaders are shaking their heads and demanding justice this week after a jury verdict once again appeared to let the killer of a young Black man off the hook.

Michael Dunn could actually face decades in prison as he was found guilty of three counts of attempted murder and one count of firing into an occupied vehicle. But, because the Jacksonville, Fla. jury did not reach a verdict on a charge of first degree murder of 17-year-old Jordan Davis, prompting a mistrial on that charge, rights leaders across the country are crying foul.

"We are deeply disappointed by the verdict in the case of Michael Dunn. Though he was convicted for attempted murder and shooting into the car, the value of Jordan Davis’ life was not addressed in this verdict,” says the Rev. Al Sharpton, president of the National Action Network. “The mistrial further sends a chilling effect to parents in the 23 states that have the Stand Your Ground law or laws similar.”

The case stems from the 2012 shooting of four Black teens in an SUV after Dunn, who is White, complained they were playing their music too loud outside a Jacksonville convenience store.

After 30 hours of deliberation over the course of four days, the diverse 12-member jury found Dunn guilty on every count, except the first degree murder. Several questions from the jury during deliberations indicated they were split on a decision. They had asked Judge Russell L. Healey whether they can decide a verdict on some counts without deciding on others, As a result, Dunn, 47, was only convicted of attempted murder of Tevin Thompson, Leland Brunson, and Tommy Storns, the three teens in the car with Jordan, but not of the murder of Jordan.

Prosecutors indicate they will retry Dunn on the murder charge, but civil rights leaders say more sweeping action is also needed, such as the abolition or amendment of the so-called “Stand Your Ground” self-defense laws. Dunn used the infamous “Stand Your Ground” defense that became well known in the controversial acquittal of George Zimmerman in the killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin of Sanford, Fla.

 “This is clearly a continuation of the injustice we saw with Trayvon Martin, and it will only stop if we stand up now. We demand a retrial, and strongly urge Attorney General Eric Holder to bring justice in this case and investigate how 'Shoot First' laws shield those who commit hate crimes,” says Rashad Robinson, executive director of ColorOfChange.org. “All too often, young Black men across this country are the targets of violence, a tragic fact fueled by stereotypical media portrayals that create inaccurate perceptions of Black men and boys.”

Dunn, who took the stand in his own defense, claimed that he feared for his life because he thought the four teens had a gun when he opened fire upon them, shooting 10 times and hitting the vehicle nine times. No gun was ever found in association with the teens. The case was racially charged given that Dunn is White and also because his fiancé testified that he commented, “I hate that thug music,” as they pulled into the parking lot where the shooting occurred.

Testimony in the trial harkened back to the initial comment by Zimmerman to a 911 operator that the unarmed Martin, carrying a bag of Skittles and a can of ice tea, was “up to no good”. Zimmerman successfully used the “Stand Your Ground” defense despite the fact that he followed Martin even after the 911 operator cautioned against it.

"This case is a perfect example of how stand your ground laws are illogical and often lead to tragic outcomes, especially to people of color who often end up on the wrong side of the weapon,” stated Dr. Niaz Kasravi, NAACP Criminal justice director in a statement.  “To help prevent future tragedies such as the death of Jordan Davis, we must repeal stand your grounds laws and bring back common sense self-defense policies in every state across this country.”

Over and above the legalities of the case, the battle against the perception that young Black males are fair game for shooting and killing is an uphill one for civil rights leaders. And as long as “Stand Your Ground” laws give shooters an out, this kind of stereotyping will prevail, some contend. Still others see the lesser convictions as a good start for justice.

“Young, Black men are not thugs or suspicious by definition,” said Florida NAACP President Adora Obi Nweze,And this important verdict reconfirms that those who commit crimes based on those misplaced preconceptions will not go unpunished.”

All indications are that the Dunn verdict has sparked the escalation of the fight against “Stand Your Ground” laws. Sharpton indicates protests may be planned.

“It requires the Civil Rights community to head into Florida, which is now ground zero for a National fight to change that law,” he states. “From Trayvon Martin to Jordan Davis enough is enough.”

 

 

U. S. Holds Confab in Nigerian Capital While Attacks Escalate in North

Feb. 23, 2014

U. S. Confab in Nigerian Capital While Attacks Escalate in North


police in nigeria

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Global Information Network


(TriceEdneyWire.com) – As Assistant Secretary of State Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Bureau of African Affairs, makes her third trip to Nigeria since assuming her post in August, a bloodbath is occurring in northern Nigeria where a state of emergency was imposed almost nine months ago.

 

Ms. Thomas Greenfield is leading the U.S. delegation to the U.S.-Nigeria Binational Commission meeting Feb. 17-18 in Abuja.

 

In northern Borno State, meanwhile, suspected Islamist fighters launched an early morning attack on Sunday, Feb. 16, setting off explosions and burning down dozens of homes. In Izghe village, the gunmen reportedly rounded up a group of men and shot them, before going door-to-door and killing anyone they found. The death toll at 90 is mounting.

 

“As I am talking to you now, all the dead bodies of the victims are still lying in the streets,” a resident, Abubakar Usman, told the Reuters news agency by phone. “We fled without burying them, fearing the terrorists were still lurking in the bushes.”

 

Police commissioner of Borno State, Lawal Tanko, confirmed the attack but said he had no details of the casualties.

 

Efforts by President Goodluck Jonathan to crush the insurgents have had little effect. In fact, according to observers, by increasing troop levels Jonathan increased the level of violence. Some of the current crisis, U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power, Permanent Representative to the U.N., suggested a possible link to security forces themselves.

 

Power, speaking to  civil society groups in Abuja last December, said: “The United States is concerned by some of the stories we hear of inhumane detention practices in Nigeria… I have discussed those with officials here.  Security crackdowns that do not discriminate between legitimate targets and innocent civilians are both counterproductive and wrong.

 

“We know how hard it is to fight insurgency and terrorism, but we have also seen how much more effective we are when we put the welfare of the local population at the heart of our efforts.”

 

According to the Nigeria Security Tracker, a project of the NY-based Council on Foreign Affairs Africa project, the number of victims from President Jonathan’s inauguration in May 2011 to January 2014 had reached 6,866.

 

In addition to the much-publicized Boko Haram insurgents who want to carve a breakaway Islamic state in Northern Nigeria, others resorting to violence include ethnic rivals, farmers, herdsmen, a new generation of Niger Delta militants, and government soldiers who kill civilians indiscriminately, according to the Tracker. Police are also notorious for extrajudicial murder.

Family Feuds Could Stall Settlement of Mandela's Estate

Feb. 17, 2014

 

Family Feuds Could Stall Settlement of Mandela's Estate

g. machel and w. mandela

Madiba's ex-wife Winnie Mandela and widow Graca Machel

 

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Global Information Network


(TriceEdneyWire.com) – A last will and testament by former Pres. Nelson Mandela published this week offered some unpleasant surprises for children of the national leader and especially for his second wife, Winnie Madikizela Mandela, who was not listed among the beneficiaries.

 

The family of South Africa's first black president, who died two months ago aged 95, met this week behind closed doors at his foundation in Johannesburg to hear the reading of the will, which divides up an estate estimated at $4.1 million.

 

An executor, Dikgang Moseneke, the deputy chief justice of South Africa's constitutional court, said the reading of the will to the family had been "charged with emotion" but no one had yet contested it. "There were clarifications sought from time to time," he added.

 

Perhaps the most unexpected turn of events, was the omission of Madikizela-Mandela, his wife of 38 years during the struggle against racial apartheid. They divorced in 1996 but became close again towards the end of his life and, along with his third wife, Graça Machel, she was at his bedside when he died.

 

Over 165 comments were posted in the online South Africa paper News24 speculating on the curious testament. "It could still end up in court,” said a News24 source. “The trusts could be dissolved and the funds in them would go to the family members."

 

Mandela married three times and his numerous children and grandchildren have frequently clashed over who leads the family and who should benefit from his lucrative "brand". Last year, two of his daughters went to court to dispute control over the millions contained in one of the trusts but eventually dropped the action.

 

Winnie’s grandchildren and great-grandchildren with Mandela were all left generous sums, although the money for Bambatha, Zondwa, Zwelabo and Zoleka Mandela has to be paid to Graça to be paid out at her discretion.

 

Meanwhile, the third wife, Graça Machel, will inherit their cars, the jewelery in her possession and the works of art of her choosing at the Houghton home she had shared with him. Graca’s children from her former marriage to the late Mozambican president Samora Machel – Josina and Malengane - and six of Samora Machel’s children from his previous marriage are also beneficiaries.

 

 

Madiba also made a bequest to all the schools he had attended in his lifetime, as well as to the Qunu Secondary School and to Orlando West High School for the “role its pupils and teachers played in the struggle for liberation”.

 

The home in Houghton, Johannesburg, where Mandela died on Dec. 5 will be used by children of his late son Makgatho. "It is my wish that it should also serve as a place of gathering of the Mandela family in order to maintain its unity long after my death."

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