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Congressman Cedric Richmond to Lead the Congressional Black Caucus by Frederick H. Lowe

Dec. 4, 2016

Congressman Cedric Richmond to Lead the Congressional Black Caucus
By Frederick Lowe

cedricrichmond
U. S. Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.)

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Louisiana Congressman Cedric Richmond has been elected chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus for the 115th Congress, which begins Jan. 3, 2017.

“I commend Representative Richmond on becoming the new chairman,” said G. K. Butterfield, the outgoing chairman. “We have much work ahead of us during the 115th Congress, and I am confident Representative Richmond will provide strong leadership on issues we champion to ensure all Americans have an equal and equitable opportunity to achieve the American Dream.”

The 43-year-old Richmond represents Louisiana’s 2nd Congressional District, which includes most of New Orleans. He is a native of New Orleans.

Richmond is a member of Committee on the Judiciary and Homeland Security. He has focused on reforming the criminal justice system.

Richmond is a graduate of Morehouse College. He earned a law degree from Tulane University School of Law in New Orleans.  Richmond is also a graduate of the Harvard University Executive Education Program at the John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Since the last election, the Congressional Black Caucus has grown and it now has 49 members. The CBC was founded in 1971.

 

More Blacks and Other Minorities Getting ‘Strapped’ With Guns Since Trump Election By Zenitha Prince

Dec. 4, 2016

More Blacks and Other Minorities Getting ‘Strapped’ With Guns Since Trump Election
By Zenitha Prince 
african-american-gun-carry
Stock Photo/Afro
Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Afro American Newspaper

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - African Americans-and other minorities are arming themselves, fearing a continued surge in hate crimes since the election of Donald Trump in November, according to NBC News.

Four times as many minorities are flocking to gun stores, firearm business owners told NBC News. Additionally, Black gun groups such as the National African American Gun Association say attendance has doubled since the election.

Minorities “feel that racists now feel like they can attack… just because the president is doing it,” Earl Curtis, the African-American owner of Blue Ridge Arsenal in Chantilly, Va., told NBC News.

Racial tension in America had already been brewing: The election of President Obama in 2008 was met by cross burnings, racial epithets hurled at African Americans and scrawled on various surfaces, black figures hung on nooses, effigies of the president and the vitriolic rhetoric of the Tea Party. The racial temperature continued to rise as the unrepentant killing of unarmed Black men and boys by police was answered by nationwide protest and the sparking of the Black Lives Matter movement. Into that maelstrom stepped Trump, whose unabashed disparagement of Mexicans, Muslims, Blacks, women and others seemed to embolden those with bigoted agendas.

Since Trump swept into the White House on a tide of hate Nov. 8, the Southern Poverty Law Center has reported an uptick in hate-related incidents. Of the 701 reported so far, several include school children chanting “Build the Wall” to their Hispanic peers (referencing Trump’s promise to build a wall to prevent Mexicans from illegally entering the U.S.) or “White power;” swastikas emblazoned on minorities’ homes and public surfaces; minorities, LGBT or Muslim Americans being verbally or physically attacked and more. On Nov. 28, the Council on American-Islamic Relations also sent a letter to FBI Director James B. Comey asking for a formal investigation into a series of letters sent to mosques that threaten the genocide of Muslims across the nation and praises the president-elect.

Philip Smith, founder of the 14,000-member National African American Gun Association told NBC News that his members are buying a range of guns, from Glock handguns to AR-15 rifles to AK-47 semi-automatic weapons to 9-millimeter pistols.

“Most folks are pretty nervous about what kind of America we’re going to see over the next 5-10 years,” he said, adding that fears include those of  an “apocalyptic end result where there’s anarchy, jobs are gone, the economy is tipped in the wrong direction and everyone has to fend for themselves.”

The increase in gun purchases among minorities after Trump’s victory reflect an upswing that has been reflected over the past eight years, according to research.

According to a July 2016 research paper by John Lott Jr. of the Crime Prevention Research Center, the number of concealed handgun permits during President Obama’s tenure soared to 14.5 million, a 215 percent increase since 2007. The uptick, he noted, was largely driven by minorities whose permit-holding was increasing about 75 percent more than among Whites.

Alleged Church Killer to Be His Own Lawyer by Frederick Lowe

Nov. 29, 2016

Alleged Church Killer to Be His Own Lawyer
Jury selection began this week in the trial of Dylann Storm Roof

By Frederick H. Lowe

dylannroof2

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - U.S. District Court Judge Richard Mark Gergel ruled on Monday (today) that Dylann Storm Roof, a white supremacist who is charged with murdering nine black parishioners during Bible study last year in a Charleston, S.C., church, can act as his own lawyer in a case that he faces the death penalty.

Judge Gergel issued a verbal order in open court after Roof filed a motion Sunday night asking if could act as his own counsel  in the trial involving the June 17, 2015, massacre at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal, a historic black church in downtown Charleston.

Other lawyers will sit with Roof at the defense table, but he will “call the shots,” said Charles W. Hall, a member of the public affairs office of the Administrative Office of the Courts in Washington D.C., told NorthStar News Today.com./BlackmanStreetToday.com.

Judge Gergel allowed Roof to represent himself after ruling on Friday that he was mentally competent to stand trial.

“The court conducted a competency hearing on November 21-22, 2016, and received testimony and voluminous documents and other information related to the issue of competency. They included the live testimony of Dr. James C. Ballenger, a court-appointed examiner, and four other witnesses and the testimony by sworn affidavits of three additional persons,” Judge Gergel wrote.

Judge Gergel then issued his ruling. “After carefully considering the record before the court, the relevant legal standard, and the arguments of counsel, the court now finds and concludes that the defendant is competent to stand trial.”

495 Potential Jurors

Jury selection also began today, Hall said. There are 495 potential jurors will go through voir dire. The pool will be reduced to 70. From the 70, prosecutors and defense will select 12 jurors and six alternates, Hall said.

Federal prosecutors have charged Roof with the Hate Crimes Act Resulting in Death, the Hate Crimes Act Involving an Attempt to Kill, Obstruction of Exercise of Religion Resulting in Death, Obstruction of Exercise of Religion Involving  an Attempt to Kill and Use of a Dangerous Weapon and Use of a Firearm to Commit Murder During  and in Relation to a Crime of Violence, according to the 15-page indictment. Roof has plead not guilty.

In addition, he faces state murder charges bought by South Carolina, which also is seeking the death penalty. That trial is scheduled to begin in January.

Roof sat for an hour with Emanuel parishioners before firing his gun, a Glock .45-caliber pistol.

Roof, 22, said he killed the churchgoers to incite a race war. The pistol was loaded with eight magazines of hollow-point bullets.

Sharpton Announces D.C. March During MLK Weekend 2017 by Hazel Trice Edney

Nov. 27, 2016

Sharpton Announces D.C. March During MLK Weekend 2017
 Civil Rights Leaders Prepare to Block Trump Attacks on Civil Rights
By Hazel Trice Edney

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President Barack Obama meets with President-elect Donald Trump in the Oval Office, Nov. 10, 2016. During this meeting, Trump appeared humbled, called President Obama a "good man" and said he would seek Obama's advice. PHOTO: Pete Souza/The White House

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – In his victory speech the morning after the Nov. 8 election, President-Elect Donald Trump called for America to come together and promised to be the president of all Americas – even those who did not support him.

Despite his vitriolic, pit bull style of campaigning that won the hearts of the Ku Klux Klan, he continued his new tone and demeanor in his first Oval Office meeting with President Barack Obama. Since the meeting, he has even conceded to keep some parts of the Affordable Health Care Act, known as Obama Care, and said he would not seek prosecution of his Democratic campaign rival Hillary Clinton because “I don’t want to hurt those people.” Even in his Thanksgiving message, he made a special mention of the “inner cities” to double down on his campaign promise to improve Black neighborhoods. Since the election, his staff has said he has spoken several times with President Obama, seeking a smooth transition.

It all sounds like a new and improved Donald Trump – far from the chants of “Lock her up!” But the leaders of the nation’s top seven civil rights organizations are not buying this softened, new and improved version of Trump. They say it will not be his tone, but his actions that will determine what they will now do to guard against and protect any roll backs on civil rights gains.

Shocked and stunned by the results of the election and feel that the election puts at risk hard-fought gains in the area of civil rights and economic opportunity. We have a responsibility that we will not acquit ourselves of to vigorously oppose any policies, any actions, any appointments, any steps which are inconsistent with our very important agenda and which would serve to turn back the clock on hard-fought civil rights gains.

Their first sign that danger is nigh is Trump’s hiring of Stephen K. “Steve” Bannon, a founder of Breitbart news, the voice of the so-called “alt-right” - White supremacists and racists across the nation. Their second sign was Trump’s nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) for U. S. attorney general. Sessions once said the Ku Klux Klan was alright with him until he learned that they smoked pot and was denied a federal judgeship in 1986 for a “slew of racist comments, including calling the work of the NAACP and ACLU ‘Un-American’,” according to the NAACP.

“Whether one whispers or whether one shouts, if the message is the same what does it matter?” National Action Network President Rev. Al Sharpton said of Trump in response to a question during a phone conference between journalists and civil rights leaders. “I think we are mistaking his change in tone with change in content. He has said very loudly that he wants stop and frisk and that he supports the state laws that oppress voters” as well as anti-immigration stances.

Because of these issues – among other indicators that there is trouble ahead – Sharpton has announced a mass march during the Martin Luther King Holiday weekend in January – less than a week before the Trump inauguration, Jan. 20.

“In fact, last night the National Action Network hosted a conference call with 413 ministers planning a January 14 march, kicking off King week six days before the inauguration, kicking off King week around the very theme that we will not be moved,” Sharpton said. “Because some things you can’t vote out with an election. And some things will not change because a president has changed.”

Sharpton was backed on the phone line by six other organizational heads that represents the nation’s largest civil rights organizations: Marc Morial of the National Urban League; Melanie Campbell of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation; Wade Henderson of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights; Cornell William Brooks of the NAACP; Sherrilyn Ifill of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund; and Kristin Clark of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

“We are not being alarmists, we are being realists about the record of the incoming president-elect and what he has said. If people are saying we’re not giving him a chance, we are willing to give him a chance. The problem is we are listening to what he has said,” Sharpton said.

Morial said the group will maintain its posture of readiness to deal with issues and adverse appointments as they come from Trump.

“We are unified today and prepared to move forward. And we do this today in the spirit of understanding that this close election certainly yielded a new president-elect,” Morial said, but that president-elect did not win a majority of the popular vote nor did he win a mandate to act against civil rights.

Brooks said the NAACP is ready to employ every legal strategy necessary to fight against attacks.

He noted how racism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia and misogyny became routine during the campaign. “When we look at the positions Mr. Trump took as a candidate, there is nothing to suggest that he is not fully committed to those positions as president. And his appointments indicate that he is doubling down on his campaign promises.”

Morial declined to say whether the civil rights groups – which met several times with President Obama – would seek a meeting with President Trump, once he is in office. But outside of meeting face to face, Brooks listed grass roots mobilization, legislative advocacy as well as legal redress as among the strategies that could be used to fight against roll backs of civil rights. “And I think we can certainly expect the nation’s leading civil rights organizations to move in a concerted, coordinated and united fashion.”

Ifill said much of their action will be contingent upon the actions of Trump. “The ball is in Mr. Trump’s court and our job is to develop our strategy and to deal with what is likely to come to ensure that we are not only protecting civil rights but finding ways, even in this hostile climate, to advance civil rights,” she said.

Henderson and Clark made note of attacks that are already in full force against voting rights.

Clark said voter suppression efforts “put in place in the three years preceding the 2016 presidential election” by the Shelby County vs. Holder case, “opened up the flood gates.” The results of Shelby v. Holder was the gutting of the Pre-clearance Clause of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, which required certain states and territories to get approval from the Justice Department before making any changes in voting policies.

During the Nov. 8 election Clark noted that African-American, Latino and others were blocked from voting at certain polls. She described depressed voter turnout and voter suppression in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Florida, and North Carolina. “Voter suppression had an impact on election day,” she said.

Henderson pointed out that states covered by Section 5 “have closed at least 868 polling places” since the Shelby decision in 2013, causing long lines to ensue.

In addition to public stances against roll backs, Campbell stressed the importance for the groups to also have conversations with the general public about how and why certain coalitions supporting Trump, including 52 percent of White women.

“Conversations must be had about what happened and about the issues that face us moving forward,” Campbell said. “This generation is saying something went wrong and resistance is very much a part of the strategy.”

Sharpton concluded, “In terms of his movement to the right and the flavor of White nationalism, we may have lost an election, but we have not lost our minds nor have we lost our ability to mobilize…We are going to keep street heat up.”

Children Say Goodbye to First Lady Michelle at One of Her Final White House Events By Ayanna Alexander

Nov. 28, 2016

Children Say Goodbye to First Lady Michelle at One of Her Final White House Events
She Says Program Reflected Her Effort to Be Inclusive
By Ayanna Alexander
first lady-childrensaygoodbye
Michelle Obama hugs Noemi Negron at the National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Awards ceremony at the White House.  Children from across the nation laughed, hugged and cried as they said goodbye to the first lady, who leaves office with her husband in January. PHOTO: Cheriss May/HUNS
firstlady-being seranaded
Youth from the Sphinx Organization in Flint, Mich., perform for awards ceremony in the East Room of the White House. PHOTO: Cheriss May/Howard University News Service

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Howard University News Service

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Children from all over the nation, some who had never ventured past their street corners and others who had never traveled outside their cities, stood in the White House and cried, the tears streaming down their face.

They also laughed and giggled and hugged.

They were a diverse group, black, Hispanic, Native American and gay, ages 12 to 18,  They had traveled to Washington from as far away as Alaska and San Francisco to receive awards for their special arts organizations.

They also got a chance to say goodbye to the first lady, Michelle Obama, a woman who they said made them feel like they too are a part of America.

“I’m more than happy,” said Noemi Negron, 15, after giving Obama a huge hug and mugging for the cameras.  “As a woman of color, it just makes me so happy to see Michelle up there fighting for everybody’s rights. She thinks everyone should be equal and that’s how it should be and. I think she’s so amazing.”

Ian Aquino, an autistic 9-year-old, hugged Obama four times and wore an ear-to-ear smile throughout the hour-long program.

The children and their programs were there to receive awards from the National Arts and Humanities Youth Program, which uses the arts to address the needs of youth with special needs.


 

Aquino, for example, is with Subway Sleuths, a New York City program for autistic children.  Negron is part of Inquilinos Boricuas En Accion’s Youth Development Program in Boston, which helps low-income youth prepare them for college and careers.

The program included speeches, a special appearance from Cuban Ambassador Jose Ramon Cabanas Rodriguez, and music.

A string quartet of young men smartly dressed in black performed as part of the event.   They represented the Sphinx Overture, a program that provides free music education, violin lessons and instruments to students in underserved communities in Flint, Mich.

Traeshayona Weekes told the audience that she “had been waiting to wrap her arms around Mrs. Obama all day.” Weekes is with True Colors: OUT Youth Theater, a Boston theater group for lesbian, gay, transgender and bi-sexual children.

It was not only children who were excited.

“Oh my God, it’s like an explosion in my heart,” said Lizt Alfonso, who was honored as founder of the Lizt Alfonso Dance Cuba School in Havana. “It’s such a delight. I was a little nervous because -- you see between two countries you have a lot of differences, but no, we’re the same. We’re at the same point, with the same things and it feels so good to me.”

Obama embraced, thanked and took photos with each child.   The presentation was one of her last official duties as first lady.

“So many lasts we’re having, but this one was the best yet,” she said. “I am proud of you guys. You make this job worth doing, but if we don’t invest in our youth as a nation, we lose.”

Obama said the tenor of the day’s program reflected an effort on her part to make the White House inclusive.

“We made it a priority to open up this house for as many young people, because we wanted them to understand that this is their house too,” she said.

“There are kids all over this country and the world that think that places like this aren’t for them, so they’re intimidated by it. We worked to change that. They should always feel at home within these walls and so many important institutions all over the world.”

“These kids represent the very best of America. We’re a country that believes in our young people -- all of them. We believe that every single child has boundless promise, no matter who they are, where they’ve come from or how much money their parents have.

We believe that each of these young people is a vital part of the great American story. It is important to our continued greatness to see these kids as ours, not as them, not as other, but as ours.  So, don’t ever feel fear, because you belong here.”

The programs awarded for their work also included: AileyCamp Miami, a Miami summer camp that uses dance to increase self esteem discipline before entering high school; Baranov Museum Youth History & Film Summer Intensive, a documentary film making in Kodiak, AK.; Next Gen, a San Francisco organization that  help teens tell their stories via video, music and film; Screen It!,  an Austin, Texas program  that exposes to art that promotes socio-cultural awareness and development; St. Louis ArtWorks, which provides jobs, art, and workforce development training for primarily for  African-American teens; Teen Arts + Tech Program, a free Michigan program that offers urban high school students  a chance to develop critical thinking skills in arts and technology; The Reading Road Show - Gus Bus in Harrisonburg, Va., which brings literature to low-income children via two buses  free  books in various communities; and Tribal Youth Ambassadors in Santa Rosa, Calif., which engages Native American youth to educate others about their culture.

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