CHIEF JUDGE SMITH TO RULE ON RECUSAL OF COLOMBO IN FLUKER CASE; MERS FORECLOSURES DECLARED ILLEGAL

Attorney Vanessa Fluker (third from right) with supporters as they file out of courtroom May 13; dozens more were still inside

 By Diane Bukowski

DETROIT – After listening to arguments in front of a packed courtroom supporting “peoples’ attorney” Vanessa Fluker May 13, Wayne County Circuit Court Chief Judge Virgil Smith is to rule this week on the recusal of Judge Robert Colombo from a landlord-tenant case for “the appearance of conflict of interest.”

During the case, Colombo fined Fluker $12,000, calling her lawsuit on behalf of client Asha Tyson “vexacious.” Tyson was being evicted by her mortgage holder, the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) Group.

“Judge Colombo renegotiated his own home mortgage with RBS in very favorable terms while presiding over this case,” Fluker’s attorney Jerome Goldberg argued May 13. “He negotiated a $65,000 reduction in the principal from $200,000 to $135,000 in 2009. That is the the issue. We discovered this fact on March 1, 2011. Judge Colombo’s extreme actions against my client triggered our investigation.” (Click on http://www.waynecountylandrecords.com/RealEstate/SearchDetail.aspx   to view Colombo’s mortgage document.)

Attorney Jerome Goldberg

This was the third mortgage renegotiation Colombo conducted with RBS, Goldberg said, resulting in a mortage discharge in 2009 while he was hearing the Asha Tyson case.

Goldberg said additionally, “Under Michigan Court Rule 2.003 and the Michigan Code of Judicial Conduct, we do not have to prove wrongdoing. He did not make a disclosure. This raises a red flag and indicates the appearance of impropriety. The necessity for confidence in the judiciary is so great that a judge has to abstain from what an ‘objective and reasonable observer,’ not a judge or lawyer, considers the appearance of impropriety. The proper course of action is to disqualify Judge Colombo.”

Click on  MCR 2.003 and Code of Judicial Conduct    to read language in the code.

Chief Judge Virgil Smith

Judge Robert Colombo

Smith repeatedly asked whether someone had paid the $65,000 or that the bank took a loss on Colombo’s implying that Goldberg needed to prove that.

David Wells, the attorney with Simon Galasso & Frantz PLC, which is representing Charter One/RBS, argued chiefly that Goldberg was out of the time limits for filing for recusal, disputing Goldberg’s claim that the limits tolled from the date of the discovery of Colombo’s mortgage renegotiation.

Judge Smith said. “This is a complicated case and we are waiting for transcripts. I will take this under advisement and issue a written opinion within two weeks.

After the hearing, Fluker said, “I think my attorney did a wonderful job, and I just want to believe that God will see to it that justice prevails.”

A highlight of this year’s Barristers’ Ball was the inaugural Golden Gavel Award, which WBA President Brandy Robinson (right) presented to Vanessa Fluker for her commitment to representing distressed homeowners during one of the country’s worst economic downturns.

Goldberg decried Fluker’s treatment at the hands of Judge Colombo, who claimed among other issues that briefs she filed in her client’s case were the worst he had seen.

“My client received the Golden Gavel award as the Outstanding Attorney of the Year from the Wolverine Bar Association,” he said. “She is universally respected for the quality of her work. If a disqualification of Colombo doesn’t happen at this level, it will happen on appeal.”

Colombo has refused comment on the matter because the case is still pending.

Weeks also claimed that a housing discrimination case Fluker cited in defense of her client, filed by the Center for Community Justice and Advocacy, had been dismissed.

Kimberly Boyd-Harris

Kimberly Boyd-Harris, Executive Director for the Center, was at the hearing to support Fluker.

“Our organization filed a federal lawsuit against RBS citing discriminatory lending practices against African-Americans living in the city of Detroit,” Boyd-Harris explained. “It was based on RBS’ unwillingness to rectify the situation. Since the case was dismissed, however, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has taken action against RBS Citizens.”

On May 5, the DOJ issued a release stating that a $3.6 million settlement was reached with Citizens Bank regarding alleged lending discrimination in Detroit.

“Citizens Republic Bankcorp (CRBC) and Citizens Bank of Flint, Mich., will open a loan production office in an African-American neighborhood in Detroit, invest approximately $3.6 million in Wayne County, Mich., and take other steps as part of a settlement to resolve allegations that they engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination on the basis of race and color,” said the DOJ.

Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, said, “Discrimination in the provision of lending services based on race deprives communities of access to credit and leaves the residents of minority neighborhoods vulnerable to predatory lenders. This type of discrimination is part of the web of intolerable practices that stripped vast amounts of wealth from communities of color in the last decade.”

The DOJ said the lawsuit originated from a 2010 referral by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division.

In 2000, the Royal Bank of Scotland was the 10th largest bank in the world. It is 84 percent owned by the government of the United Kingdom, and in Nov. 2009 announced plans to cut 19,700 jobs. The following month, the RBS revolted against its main shareholder, the British Government, threatening to resign unless they were allowed to give bonuses of 1.5 billion pounds, or $2.42 billion, to its investment staff. Their action came in the wake of an 850 billion pound bailout by UK taxpayers.

People Before Banks is holding a fundraiser for Vanessa Fluker’s legal defense fund, as well as its campaign against Chase Bank, on Thurs. June 2, 2011 at 6 p.m. at the UAW Local 600 headquarters, located at 10550 Dix Ave., Dearborn, MI. For more information, click on http://peoplebeforebanks.org/.

MORE NEWS ON THE BATTLE AGAINST FORECLORUES: Michigan Appeals Court rules MERS foreclosures illegal; victims should seek redress

If your house was foreclosed, you may be able to stay in your home and pursue claims under this decision.

(WXYZ) – A ruling by the state Court of Appeals could mean relief for thousands of people facing foreclosure in Michigan.

The ruling applies to foreclosures started under the Mortgage Electronic Registration System, or MERS. …

The court ruled that MERS was not entitled to initiate what is called foreclosure by advertisement. Local lawyers are telling people that if MERS carried out their foreclosures, they should go to court as soon as possible because any eviction involving MERS must be dismissed.

VOD Ed.: Attorney Jerome Goldberg said Vanessa Fluker filed the first case in Michigan challenging the right of MERS to foreclose and evict homeowners.)

Michigan Court Of Appeals Rules MERS Has No Authority To Foreclose

Apr 22, 2011   //   by Steve Dibert   //   Michigan, Mortgage News  //  1 Comment

The Michigan Court of Appeals handed down a ruling yesterday essentially saying MERS has no authority to foreclose in the state of Michigan  The court combined two cases, Residential Funding Co, LLC, f/k/a Residential Funding Corporation v. Gerald Saurman and Bank of New York Trust Company v.  Corey Messner.   The court overruled both a district court ruling and circuit court ruling which found in favor of the plaintiffs in both cases.  In their conclusion, the court (Appeals Court Judges Douglas B. Shapiro and Deborah Servitto) commented, “Defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law because, pursuant to MCL 600.3204(1)(d), MERS did not own the indebtedness, own an interest in the indebtedness secured by the mortgage, or service the mortgage. MERS’ inability to comply with the statutory requirements rendered the foreclosure proceedings in both cases void ab initio. Thus, the circuit courts improperly affirmed the district courts’ decisions to proceed with eviction based upon the foreclosures of defendants’ properties.”

 (Click on COA Residential Funding v. Gerald Sauerman to read case in entirety.)

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CHINESE COME FROM AFRICA, JUST LIKE THE REST OF US

Kenny Snodgrass

 Submitted by Kenny Snodgrass

 CNA , HONG KONG, Taipei Times 

An international study has found that the Chinese people originated not from “Peking Man” in northern China, but from early humans in East Africa who moved through South Asia to China some 100,000 years ago, Hong Kong’s Ming Pao daily reported yesterday in a finding that confirms the “single origin” theory in anthropology.

According to the newspaper, a research team led by Jin Li ( 金力 ) of Fudan University in Shanghai has found that modern humans evolved from a single origin, not multiple origins as some experts believe.

In China, school textbooks teach that the Chinese race evolved from “Peking Man,” based on a theory that humans in Europe and Asia evolved from local species.

Jin Li, Fudan University

But Jin and his fellow researchers found that early humans belonged to different species, of which only the East African species developed into modern humans.

This new finding nullifies the theory that the ancestors of the Chinese people were “Peking Man” who lived in northern China 400,000 years ago.

Based on DNA analyses of 100,000 samples gathered from around the world, a number of human families evolved in East Africa some 150,000 years ago, said Li Hui ( 李輝 ), a member of Jin’s team.

Black Chinese

About 100,000 years ago, some of those humans began to leave Africa, with some people moving to China via South and Southeast Asia, Li said.

According to the newspaper article, it has been proven that the “65 branches of the Chinese race” share similar DNA mutations with the peoples of East and Southeast Asia.

It said that the Shanghai scientists were part of an international team comprised of researchers from Russia, India, Brazil and other nations in a five-year project studying the geographic and genealogical routes related to the spread and settlement of modern humans.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/news/front/archives/2005/05/12/2003254307

(Link details numerous articles confirming that ancestors of Asian people in China migrated from Africa.)

 Kenneth Snodgrass
Author of  “From Victimization to Empowerment
The Challenge Of African American Leadership
The Need of Real Power” website: www.trafford.com/07-0913
eBook available at http://ebookstore.sony.com/search?keyword=Kenneth+Snodgrass

KennySnod – 215 Video’s on YouTube at, www.YouTube.com/KennySnod

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OWENS NEVER SAID AIYANA JONES’ DAD GAVE HIM GUN USED IN TEEN’S KILLING

 

Aiyana Jones’ father Charles Jones and Dominique Simpson grieve in front of window shattered by cop grenade, the morning of her murder

 

Is deal part of cover-up of cop murder of 7-year-old child? 

By Diane Bukowski

May 20, 2011

Detroit–On April 11, headlines in Detroit’s daily media trumpeted, “Guilty plea fingers Aiyana Stanley-Jones’ dad” (Detroit Free Press) and “Suspect promises to testify against Aiyana’s father” (Detroit News). Mildred Gaddis and other local talk show hosts hurried to their mikes to blame Aiyana’s family for the death of the seven-year-old child, killed by Detroit police last year during a military-style police assault.

Chauncey Owens during earlier court hearing

Chauncey Owens, 32, pled guilty that day to second-degree murder in the death of Je’Rean Blake, 17. Police had said they were searching for Owens when they lobbed an incendiary grenade through the living room window of Aiyana’s home in an impoverished east side neighborhood, and shot her to death on May 16, 2010.

The Jones’ family’s attorney Geoffrey Fieger said during a press conference after her death that police surveilling the house saw Owens leave the premises about 6 p.m. May 15, and could have arrested him then. Fieger contends in a lawsuit that police deliberately waited to set up a scene for the A&E program “48 Hours” before entering the home at 12:30 a.m. May 16.

Chauncey Nobles and Lyvonne Cargill, parents of 17-year-old Je'Rean Blake, at his funeral

“There are a lot of young people out there getting killed,” Je’Rean’s mother Lyvonne Cargill told this reporter on July 6 that year. “Both Je’Rean and Aiyana are up there in heaven looking down and asking, ‘Why did this happen?’ We gotta help our kids. They want jobs. They don’t have any recreation centers, nothing to do with their lives. I want to get a foundation set up to build a recreation center in Je’Rean’s name.”

Cargill was being interviewed about a police assault that occurred during a memorial picnic on Je’Rean’s June 17 birthday. She said white officers beat and shot at Black youths who were cleaning up afterwards (click on http://michigancitizen.com/mother-of-slain-teen-claims-police-brutality-p8783-1.htm  to read story).

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy being interviewed by Mildred Gaddis

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy being interviewed by Mildred Gaddis

But on April 11, Gaddis and others featured Cargill on their shows, encouraging her to join in the media-generated hysteria blaming Charles Jones for the death of his child, and essentially exonerating the police.

There is, however, absolutely no documentation indicating that Owens or anyone else said Charles Jones gave him the gun that killed Blake. NONE.

 It does not exist in Owens’ written plea deal, in statements he gave the police, or in interviews court-appointed psychiatrists conducted with him, which VOD reviewed in Owens’ court file. No witnesses included on a police investigator’s list in the file make the claim either.

Roland Lawrence in front of Jones' family's former residence at 4054 Lillibridge, on the first anniversary of Aiyana's death May 16, 2011

“The police and the prosecutor (and others) will go to any length to get rid of the Aiyana Jones story including but not limited to creating fictitious stories and associations,” said Roland Lawrence, chair of the city’s Justice for Aiyana Jones Committees.

 “Unless these entities come out and explain to the public what is really going on, there will be a parade of stories created about them and why they are sitting on the investigation into Aiyana’s death.  Were Worthy, Evans, Bing and others so intimately involved in arranging for the Hollywood film crews to trample through Aiyana’s poverty-stricken neighborhood that they are working overtime to quash the investigation because they do not want to be implicated?  Were there 36th District Court judges involved as it pertains to the signing of arrest warrants?  Were the Detroit and Michigan Film Offices involved in arranging for film permits?  The community should conduct their own investigation, and let the can of worms come running out.”

On May 20, Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Richard Skutt postponed Owens’ sentencing from May 23 to July 29, reportedly because complications have arisen regarding the terms of the plea bargain.

Asst. Prosecutor Robert Moran speaking during court hearing on former Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick's text messages

“Defendant must testify truthfully about who supplied him with the gun to shoot the victim,” Assistant Prosecutor Robert Moran said in the plea document in Owens’ file. “If defendant cooperates and testifies truthfully, then we will ask the sentencing judge to reduce the sentence by two years. He must testify at all hearings requested and must submit to polygraph exams.”

According to his court file, Owens’ statements to police were obtained soon after the police assault on Aiyana’s home, but only after he repeatedly denied any involvement in Blake’s death, and after he discovered Aiyana had died. His attorneys Pamela Szydlak and later David Cripps filed and argued motions to suppress the statements, which Skutt denied.

Je'Rean Blake

In the contested statements, Owens says Charles Jones was with him in a group that went to the store at St. Jean and Mack where Je’Rean was shot to death. However, he names another individual as the one who gave him the gun.

He said he first went to the store with his brother, known as “Chinaman,” and a friend, but his brother could not get into the store to buy a beer because a group of young people outside the store “were talking s—.”

Two witnesses who testified at Owens’ preliminary exam, who knew neither Owens nor Blake, said there were approximately 40 people in the crowd. They said Owens and Blake had a verbal confrontation. Owens said he then drove down Lillibridge on his moped, encountered the group including Charles Jones, and asked them to go to the store with him to “whup some ass.”

Owens said they did so.

Asked whether Charles Jones knew what was going to happen, he said only, “He knew the gun was there.” He said the group had a gun for self-defense because one was wearing diamond Cartier glasses, and the the person who gave him the gun told him to take it for self-defense because “there are a lot of n—-s out there.” He said he fired the gun accidentally.

The preliminary exam witnesses identified Owens as the shooter. On cross-examination, Szydlak obtained an admission from one that he did not pick him out of a photo display immediately after the shooting.

Mike's Motor City Marketplace on St. Jean and Mack, site of Je'Rean Blake's murder

Also in testimony at the exam, Cargill said she drove to the store to pick up her son after he called her. When she got there, her son’s friends were about to put him in their car to take him to the hospital, but Cargill drove him herself. It is unclear why police or 911 had not responded to the scene, either after the shooting, or because of the gathering of such a large crowd before the shooting.

On a website called the National Speed Trap Exchange, a man reported on May 13, 2010: 

“On Mack Avenue between St.Jean and Conner is a railroad bridge. Detroit police in the white traffic cop cars catch speeders coming Westbound on Mack. They sit in the party store parking lot across St.Jean with the laser gun pointed up the bridge and catch speeders coming down the hill.The speed limit on Mack is 30MPH. Usually they are out on the weekends doing this as I have seen them doing it on Sundays.”

Je’Rean was killed at that store on Friday, May 14, 2010. Where were the police then?

Getting Ghost tells of battle to stop Lou Nafso's liquor store at St. Jean and Mack from opening

In 2008, author Luke Bergman published a book, “Getting Ghost: Two Young Lives and the Struggle for the Soul of an American City.” Beginning on p. 61, it details the struggle of Mack Alive, community members and former Councilwoman Alberta Tinsley-Talabi to stop the opening of Lou Nafso’s “Mike’s Motor City Marketplace,” the store where JeRean Blake was killed.

To read an excerpt from the book (p. 61–“Boot dancing with Nafso,”  detailing the battle to stop the store’s opening, click on:

http://books.google.com/books?id=rt S8Xe1S_wC&pg=PA60&lpg=PA60&dq=Motor+City+liquor+store+St.+Jean+and+Mack&source=bl&ots=AEwNpuXzeJ&sig=3-T9v8PPAhhzIM16MgLqO rAqRQ&hl=en&ei=3UvaTantFoyatwf25LToDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&sqi=2&ved=0CBYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false

A quote from the book: “According to their detractors, on the East Side, such merchants sell liquor with impunity to vulnaerable African-Americans in Detroit neighborhoods; they are drug dealers with licenses to do their business–selling ‘liquid crack,’ as one Mack Alive supporter suggested. Moreover. as on on the corner of Mack and Beniteau [where Nafso owns a beer and wine store), such outlets are seen as magnets for other so-called disorderly behavior, including prostitution and street drug-dealing. Indeed, gatherings of Black young men leaning against liquor store walls are archetypal symbols of such markets.”

Alberta Tinsley-Talabi with Kilpatrick appointee Charles Beckham; despite her opposition, the City Council approved liquor license for Mike's Motor City Marketplace

The book, published by the University of Michigan press, also details the devastating effect that such stores, primarly owned by Chaldeans and Arab-Americans who do not live in Detroit and do not have such outlets in their own neighorhodds, have on the impoverished population of Detroit.

In response to defense motions for determination of Owens’ ability to be criminally responsible, waive his Miranda Rights and stand trial, Skutt appointed two psychiatrists from the Center for Forensic Psychiatry to interview him.

Skutt eventually declared Owens fit on all counts, based on the psychiatrists’ reports and on his viewing of a police videotape of Owens giving his second statement.

LaKrystal Sanders consoles her mother Mertilla Jones at press conference on the death of their niece and granddaughter Aiyana Jones

But the interviews, summarized by the psychiatrists in detailed letters, are nonetheless enlightening. They raise questions regarding Owens’ mental condition, both at the time he was interrogated by police, and throughout his life, as well as police tactics used in obtaining his statements.

In one interview, Owens described the night of the police assault, saying he was in bed with his fiancée LaKrystal Sanders, Aiyana’s aunt, when the incident began. Sanders lived in the flat above the home where Charles Jones, his mother Mertilla Jones, Aiyana and several other children lived. The homes had separate entrances.

“We heard a shot, we jumped up, my fiancée went downstairs,” Owens said. “My oldest daughter who is 15 came upstairs because she was scared. I told her to get dressed. I had my boxer shorts on. I came down and the police started screaming at me and handcuffed me.”

Interior of Jones' home after Aiyana was killed; couch cushions on which she was sleeping are on floor, after family moved couch outside to porch

Owens told the psychiatrist the police took him into the Jones’ flat, and sat him down on the couch where Aiyana died.

“Blood was on me and pieces of brain were all over the couch,” he said. Later after he was taken to the police station, he said the police would not give him his clothes, only a paper gown.

“I was freezing,” Owens said. “They put a shower cap on my head and laughed at me.”

Police investigator Theophilus Williams looks at statement signed by Chauncey Owens during preliminary exam in front of Judge Willie Lipscomb, Jr.

According to the psychiatrists’ accounts, as well as accounts of the videotaped statement in the court file, Owens denied any involvement in the Blake killing for over one and a half hours. He kept asking to call his fiancée. One officer told him he would let him call her if he gave him the testimony he wanted. Owens finally agreed, and was allowed to call Sanders.

“The detective wanted to use the phone call he gave him to get him to confess,” the psychiatrist wrote. Szydlak said in her motion to suppress the statement that police knew Sanders would tell him Aiyana was dead, and that he would be “overcome with anguish and grief.”

Sanders did so. Owens began weeping, then composed himself and gave the police the statement on record..

Defense Attorney Pamela Szydlak and Chauncey Owens at preliminary exam

In statements, Owens said he confessed to cover up his brother’s role in the shooting, but the police told him that he would not want to testify against his brother. They also told him, as Szydlak said in her motion, “that his family had suffered enough and he should agree with the interrogator for the sake of his family.”

Owens also told the psychiatrists he had been raised by his grandparents, and that his mother died of cirrhosis of the liver in 2008, after he had cared for her during her declining years. He said an uncle had abused him. He reported that he had “auditory hallucinations” from the age of 13 until the age of 30, and also reported paranoid delusions. He said he had been in special education classes since fourth grade, left school in the seventh grade and could barely read and write. He said the other students made fun of him.

The psychiatrists said those reports did not show Owens was mentally incompetent or unable to waive his Miranda Rights, as he did by signing a statement that the police had him read. They also asked him to read his confession out loud, written out by the police officer. The record shows he started to do, then stopped and just signed it.

One psychiatrist concluded, “It is the examiner’s opinion that available information raises the possibility that Mr. Owens functions below average intellectually, and the reader may wish to consider whether below average intellectual functioning might have impaired his ability to understand that the police meant to use the statements against him and that he was free to stop the questioning and request an attorney.”

That psychiatrist also said that Owens told him he was not sure if he could be tried without an attorney.

Judge Richard Skutt (Facebook photo)

Owens’ plea bargain was reached April 11 as he was about to go to trial. A jury had already been impaneled. Assistant Prosecutor Maria Miller, communications director for Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, issued the following statement regarding the plea bargain.

“Today Owens entered a guilty plea before Judge Richard Skutt to Second Degree Murder which carries a penalty of Life or any term of years. He received a sentence agreement of 28 years in prison.  He also pleaded guilty to Felon in Possession of a Firearm (5 years) and Felony Firearm (2 years mandatory consecutive).  As part of the sentence agreement Owens is required to testify truthfully in any future proceeding about who supplied him with the murder weapon.  After Owens testifies the prosecution can appear before the court to request a sentence reduction on the Second Degree Murder charge to a sentence of 26 years.  He is expected to be sentenced on May 23, 2011.  

“We are very pleased that Owens has admitted his responsibility for the senseless killing of Jerean Blake and that he has agreed to cooperate with our investigation,” said Prosecutor Worthy in the statement.

VOD requested answers to the following questions from Asst. Prosecutor Miller regarding the postponement of Owens’ sentencing:

1) What are the reasons for the delay in Chauncey Owens’ sentencing?
2) Is the prosecutor’s office delaying the sentencing of Chauncey Owens because of the conflicting statements?
3) Is it the aim of the prosecutor’s office to charge Charles Jones in the Je’Rean Blake killing to divert attention away from the police killing of his daughter Aiyana Jones?
4) Although Judge Skutt denied defense motions to suppress Owens’ statements to police, does the prosecutor’s office support the following tactics:

·         Waiting to arrest suspect until a spectacular scene could be set up for a reality TV show?

·         Seating suspect on couch where Aiyana Jones died, covered with her blood and bits of brains, after his arrest?

·         Interrogating him while he was dressed in his boxer shorts and a paper gown, and complained of freezing?

·         Police putting shower cap on his head and laughing at him?

·         Enticing him to confess with promises that he could call his fiancee if he went along with the interrogators’ version of events in his statements?

·         Telling him to confess to save his family further grief?

5) Again, WHY have no charges yet been brought against the police in the death of Aiyana Jones? Your earlier statement regarding the length of time the prosecutor’s investigation is taking belies the fact that Prosecutor Worthy turned over the investigation immediately to the Michigan State Police to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest. WHY would she now have to conduct her own investigation? Couldn’t this be considered obstruction of justice?

Pros. Kym Worthy at school board meeting Oct. 2010

Miller responded, “The Owens sentencing was adjourned at the request of the prosecution because the investigation in the homicide of Je’Rean Blake is ongoing.  This is the reason that was placed on the record in court on May 20, 2011.  We will not be able to answer your other questions as investigations are ongoing in the Blake matter and also regarding the death of Aiyana Jones.”

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WOODIE KING, JR.’S NEW FEDERAL THEATRE 40th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

“Monumental milestone in annals of Black History”

Friday, May 20, 2011

 

Gloria Dulan-Wilson

 

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson

 

Well its 48 hours and counting until the Celebration of New Federal Theatre’s 40th Anniversary Award and Gala!!

This a monumental milestone in the annals of Black History – make no mistake about it! From Ira Aldrich, to Paul Robeson, to Oscar Michaux, to Ossie and Ruby, to Belafonte and Portier, and all those in between, the great, near great, known, lesser known brothers and sisters who have graced the stage, daring to put their all out there to prove the legitimacy of Black theatre, drama, talent – 40 years of continued existence and excellence is no small accomplishment.

Woodie King, Jr.

And yes, it’s time for the applause, the kudos; time to say encore, magnifique, marvelous, and moto bene to Woodie King Jr., for a monumental job well done.

Likewise to the honorees:

Sidney Poitier, Ntozake Shange, Ruby Dee, Alicia Keys, Hon. David Dinkins, Imhotep Gary Byrd, George Faison, Amiri Baraka, Rev. Malcolm Boyd, Elizabeth McCann, Carla Pinza, Terrie Williams and National Black Theatre Festival (Sylvia Spinkle-Hamlin) each an icon in their own right, and totally worthy of praise and accolades for their impact on our lives, our culture, and the multicultural blueprint of the country.
Presenters represent the who’s who of entertainment – stage, screen, television – including: Spike Lee, Whoopi Goldberg, Robert Townsend, Danny Glover, S. Epatha Merkerson, Lamman Rucker, Sonia Sanchez, Dr Mary Schmidt Campbell, Glynn Turman, Ted Lange, Tommy Hicks, Pia Lindstrom, Pamela Portier, Starletta DuPois, Garrett Morris, Susan Taylor, and Oz Scott.

Woodie King, Jr., acknowledged in a recently held interview, that the Black theatre would be nothing without the Black community. So it is likewise to our credit that we have had the cognizance to understand what a vital role they play in telling our story, keeping us entertained, translating our triumphs and tragedies; as well as giving us an opportunity to bask in the fantasy of suspended disbelief while they keep us thoroughly entertained.

New Federal Theatre events

Honorary Chair is none other than the great Maya Angelou; Chairs for the event are Laurence Fishburne, John Morning and Susan Taylor; with the glamorous Emmy Award-Winner Lynn Whitfield & Randall Pinkston (CBS News) serving as hosts of the evenings festivities.

The stars will be coming out on Sunday, May 22, from 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm at the historical Edison Ballroom (240 West 47th Street, between Broadway & 8th Avenue)

Founded by Woodie King, Jr. in 1970, New Federal Theatre (NFT) has gone on to international acclaim for its bold mission to integrate African Americans, minorities and women into the mainstream of American theater by training artists for the profession, and by presenting plays by African Americans, minorities and women to integrated, multicultural audiences – plays which evoke the truth through beautiful, artistic recreations of ourselves.

Alfre Woodard was one of the stars of the NFT's production of "For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf"

Under Woodie King, Jr.’s stewardship, NFT presented over 280 productions in the last four decades including: For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf, What the Winesellers Buy, Reggae, The Taking of Miss Janie and The Dance and The Railroad. His directorial credits are extensive and include work in film as well as in theater. He has directed at the most prominent theaters across the country and has been the recipient of numerous awards from AUDELCO, The NAACP, Drama Critics Circle and an Obie Award for Sustained Achievement

Abrons Arts Center

Specializing in African American and minority drama, New Federal Theatre has brought the joy of the living stage to not only the African American community living on the Lower East Side, near NFT’s home at Henry Street Settlement’s Abrons Arts Center, but to audiences from all over the metropolitan area. NFT has provided emerging playwrights with the opportunity to have their works produced; and catapulted Black actors, directors and designers to national attention and sponsored numerous ethnic theater groups and event.

For information and reservations call or contact: (212) 838-2660 x 14.

We have come so far, got so very far to go, but as we move forward, we must celebrate each and every milestone along the way, and each and every person who stayed the course in spite of and because of the challenges, and the bigger vision that kept them keeping on.
GDW

More information on the New Federal Theatre,  is available at http://www.newfederaltheatre.org/

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ARREST OF IMF HEAD WILL NOT STOP BANKS’ WAR ON WORLD’S PEOPLE

Dominique Strauss-Kahn Sits in Prison While the IMF Keeps Ravaging Entire Economies Every Day

 

The IMF can do far more damage trashing global economic well-being than the man behind the sex abuse scandal.

IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn, in court on rape charges

By Nomi Prins

May 18, 2011  |  

The sex scandal surrounding the head of the International Monetary Fund has thrust the organization into the media’s glare. Yet, the man behind the scandal is far less relevant to trashing global economic well-being than is the institution itself.

Regardless of who takes over for the IMF’s disgraced leader, Dominique Strauss-Kahn (DSK), it’s unlikely he or she will bring about a philosophical shift in the IMF’s MO. For the IMF doesn’t care what caused devastating financial hardship to its current “focus” countries like Ireland, Greece and Portugal, nor what deal is struck in return for its aid. Saving the superpower notion of Europe and the euro as a pan-European currency by bailing out (read: lending money in return for “austerity measures” and holding fire sales of national companies) is a goal bigger than DSK.

This ideal is more important to the IMF than the financial security of ordinary citizens. Thus, the IMF will remain the validating and financing arm of the European Union (EU) and maintain the euro’s cohesiveness, no matter the cost to ordinary people. By doing so, it will continue to create debt to pay for bank screw-ups and extract repayment from innocent local populations.

Indeed, any concerns about the IMF altering its method of swapping loans for austerity measures just because its chief is facing felony charges, were alleviated the day he was denied bail. On Monday, Portugal, the third European country in the past year to get a bailout, was approved for a 78-billion-euro rescue package.

Protest in Portugal against IMF policies

The price? Public spending cuts. The benefactors? The private Portuguese banks that turned around to raise cash backed by bailout-guarantees a moment later.

In Ireland, where a swish of hot money entered the country during the years leading up to the 2008 crisis, the $113 billion IMF/EU bailout did nothing to bring down the 14.7 percent unemployment rate, even as $23 billion of pension money was requested as a condition of the loan.

It’s the same story in Greece. There, the IMF has backed the EU in exacting austerity measures running the gamut from pension and wage cuts to privatization demands. To comply with its bailout agreement, Greece must continue to sell off its functioning and solvent national companies, such as its electric companies, to the highest international bidder. You know, the bidder that will care about what happens to the local cost of power. (Think Enron and California power plants a decade ago.)

Protest in Athens, Greece against IMF last year

But that’s what the IMF has always done. It provides loans at cheaper rates than countries would receive any other way during times of economic distress, in return for forcing them to open their economies to hot money looking for a good deal. This is based on the premise that public infrastructure and social safety nets are the cause of financial woes, and not the over-leveraged banks that funneled in the hot money to begin with. 

As Andy Robinson, a journalist stationed in Athens, who writes for the Spanish paper, La Vanguardia, put it, “The IMF wants the country to sell off its grandmother’s silver to make room for more luxury beachfront hotels.” Continue reading

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JUSTICE FOR AIYANA JONES NOW!

Banner flown over Aiyana's neighborhood and Kym Worthy's office May 16, by Traffic Displays, financed by JAJC Facebook campaign

By Diane Bukowski

Aiyana Jones with young relatives; all were in home when police shot her to death

DETROIT—One year after a Detroit police assault team shot 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones to death in her home while A&E’s “First 48” TV show was filming, neither Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy nor U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder have brought charges against those responsible.

“This was an assassination by video,” said Roland Lawrence as he and others watched a small plane fly a sky banner demanding “Justice for Aiyana Jones” over the east side Detroit neighborhood where Aiyana lived with her family, on the anniversary of her death May 16.

“It is an insult to me as a human being and to the rest of the community that no one has been charged. Aiyana represents all this city’s little children who are already vulnerable. The police actions were absolutely reckless, and showed a total disregard for a poor, Black community.”

Cornell Squires and Roland Lawrence of Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee speak to major media in Detroit May 16, 2011

Lawrence heads the Detroit-based “Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee (JAJC),” which conducted a Facebook campaign to raise funds for the company Traffic Displays to fly the protest banner. The plane repeatedly looped over Aiyana’s neighborhood and east-side Detroit, to the downtown Detroit headquarters of Prosecutor Worthy and the Detroit Police, and back.

“We are demanding that the Detroit Police Department and A & E be criminally charged with the death of Aiyana Jones, and that Detroit Mayor Dave Bing and the Detroit City Council acknowledge that the Detroit Police Department acted in total disregard when they actively participated in the killing of Aiyana Jones,” the JAJC said in a release.

Cornell Squires of the JAJC said he has worked for years against police brutality since he and his family were victimized by Detroit police officers Robert Feld and William Melendez.  He is also a co-founder of the Original Detroit Coalition Against Police Brutality.

“We want charges brought against the police for killing Aiyana,” Squires said. “They are also guilty of many other unjustified homicides, but Kym Worthy has not brought charges in a single one of those cases since taking office. Even Officer Eugene Brown, who killed three people, is still free.”  (See VOD story “Ella Bully-Cummings, Chief of Killer Cops, which details killings from 2003 through 2007 by clicking on http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=1720 .)

In a recent news report, Brown was shown brandishing his gun and boasting that he is still

on the job while his union appeals his recent discharge for overtime fraud.

The family’s attorney Geoffrey Fieger said they were very grateful for and supported the memorial protest. He has filed civil lawsuits, one against the Detroit police, and one against A&E and “The First 48,” on behalf of the family.

Aiyana’s grandmother Mertilla Jones expressed profound grief on the first anniversary of the child’s death, in comments on her Facebook page. 

Mertilla Jones, grandmother of Aiyana, holds her daughter LaKrystal Sanders as both weep during a press conference held by attorney Geoffrey Fieger in May, 2010

“Ohhhh My BABY Ms. AIYANA JONES !!!!,” Jones wrote. “ITS 1 YR. SINCE THAT DAY I WATCHED N HORROR AS THE DIRTY COPS N DETROIT, MI MURDERED U! I’m hurtn so bad everyday all day 4 tha last yr. Livin w/o you. Missin & Lovin You AIYANA!”

The little girl was sleeping with her grandmother on the family’s living room couch at 12:30 a.m. May 16, 2010, when police tossed an incendiary grenade through the window directly above the couch. Fieger commissioned a second autopsy which showed that an officer shot Aiyana through the top of her head from the doorway, as the bomb exploded.

Detroit police identified the officer as Joseph Weekley, a featured star on “The First 48” for several years before Aiyana’s death. He previously shot two dogs to death in front of small children in another home invasion. Aiyana’s cousin said he warned the “Special Response Team” that there were children in the house when they threw him to the ground and handcuffed him prior to the assault.

Killer cop Joseph Weekley

The police said they had a murder warrant for Chauncey Owens, who lived in the upstairs flat above Aiyana and her family. Fieger said later that a police surveillance car saw Owens leave the flat at 6 p.m. the previous day and could easily have arrested him then.

 Owens pled guilty to killing 17-year-old Je’Rean Blake Nobles on April 11, after numerous pre-trial motions filed by his attorney. They included motions to  suppress statements and for a competency hearing.

He is scheduled to be sentenced May 23 in front of Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Richard Skutt. He is allegedly to receive a reduced sentence in exchange for saying that Aiyana’s father Charles Jones gave him the gun he used.

“They said they were out to serve a warrant for a murder suspect,” Lawrence said. “But they wound up murdering a little girl. This would not have happened in Grosse Pointe. They were showing off for the cameras.”

Tracy LaRock and a friend were in the Warren-Conner shopping center parking lot as news cameras gathered to film the sky banner.

Tracy LaRock

“This was heart-breaking,” LaRock said. “I have a five-year-old girl and a 13-year-old myself. But, Kym Worthy, you won’t charge these police officers? There isn’t any way these men are not supposed to be charged. We need to get rid of Worthy. How can she be so focused on Kwame Kilpatrick, but she won’t go after cops who threw a bomb and shot in the house and then lied on Aiyana’s grandmother to cover it up, and they have it on videotape?  Kym Worthy has an adopted daughter. If that was her daughter, these cops would have BEEN charged! Kym, WHAT IS THE PROBLEM?”

Worthy gained national publicity for bringing perjury charges against Detroit’s former mayor because he denied having an affair with his chief of staff during testimony in a civil lawsuit. She recently asked the state parole board not to grant him early release.

Lester Barnett

Lester Barnett, chef at the Detroit Yacht Club and owner of classycaterers.com, said he lives in the neighborhood where the police killed Aiyana.

“I’m glad to see that people have not forgotten this young lady,” he said. “My community is glad. We will keep Aiyana and her family in our prayers, and we want justice, too. If not now, when?”

Worthy immediately turned the investigation of Aiyana’s killing over to the Michigan State Police, saying she wanted to avoid the appearance of a “conflict of interest” because of her ties to the Detroit police.

“I agree that it is most appropriate that this be done independently,” Worthy said then.

But on May 16, Worthy issued the following statement:

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy during TV interview

“The Michigan State Police (MSP) conducted a 9 month investigation into the death of Aiyana Jones and turned it over to my office in March, 2011.  In any police shooting we conduct our own independent investigation.   When MSP turned the matter over to us, we candidly indicated that our investigation would be a lengthy investigation, and that continues to be the case today.  We are more concerned with being thorough than being rushed in this important case.  We can have no further comment at this time in this ongoing investigation.”

U.S. Congressman John Conyers, head of the House Judiciary Committee which oversees the U.S. Justice Department, asked U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to conduct a federal investigation of the killing several weeks later. Detroit Mayor Dave Bing spoke out against a federal investigation, claiming it could be handled locally. Former Police Commission Chair Mohamed Okdie said last year that Bing refused even to meet with community groups about the killing, telling him, “They’ll complain anyway.”

U.S. Attorney McQuade at press conference called by former Detroit Police Chief Warren Evans June 30, 2010

Subsequently, U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade, head of the Justice Department’s office in Detroit, said in a statement, “The shooting death of Aiyana Jones is a tragedy and our condolences go out to family and friends of this little girl. While the Michigan State Police is the lead investigative agency handling this case, the Department of Justice is monitoring the situation.”

Later, McQuade said in published remarks, “The Michigan State Police is investigating and so we are sort of standing by and keeping track of what’s going and to see if that’s resolved satisfactorily. We’ll wait for that process to conclude.”

U.S. Atty. Genl. Eric Holder

McQuade issued the following statement regarding the current situation: “As a parent and member of this community, I can understand the frustration with the amount of time that has gone by since Aiyana’s death without a resolution.  However, I also understand and respect the care that is required in investigations to ensure that justice is served.  We are currently awaiting the conclusion of the state process before we consider federal action.”

McQuade has not yet responded to a request for clarification regarding whether she is including the county prosecutor’s investigation in the “state process.”

In the past, Prosecutor Worthy’s office has informed this reporter that cases were still under investigation, when in fact the investigations and the cases had been closed for some time.

Before press time, the office of U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder had not responded to a request for a statement on whether they will investigate the killing of Aiyana Stanley-Jones in response to community demands for justice.

For more information, email The Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee (JAJC) at justice4aiyana@hotmail.com or call (313) 989-8850.  The Committee is also on Facebook.

Also go to story below to view TV coverage of the aerial protest by reporters Amy Lange (Channel 2) and Val Clark (Channel 7).

The JAJC reports that Traffic Displays did an excellent job making and flying the banner, for a very reasonable price. To contact that company, call  616 225-8865 and speak to Cynthia or Jason. 

Mertilla Jones, Aiyana’s Grandmother, Speaks About Shooting: MyFoxDETROIT.com

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AERIAL PROTEST: JUSTICE FOR 7-YEAR-OLD AIYANA JONES ONE YEAR AFTER HER MURDER BY DETROIT POLICE


                                                                                              

Aiyana Jones: One Year Anniversary of the Death of a 7-Year-Old Detroit Girl: MyFoxDETROIT.com


 Click on http://www.tv20detroit.com/news/local/Community-Remembers-Aiyana-Jones-on-Anniversary-of-Death-121965704.html to watch Channel 20 coverage.

Outraged Community Activists From Around the World  Organize

 Aerial Protest of the One-Year Anniversary of the Death of Aiyana Jones


DETROIT – As of 12:00 a.m., May 16, 2011, the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office in Detroit has not charged Detroit Police Officer Joe Weekley or anyone with the senseless and brutal murder of 7 year old Aiyana Jones.  And despite the numerous complaints, and worldwide outrage, justice for Aiyana Jones in Detroit appears to have gone cold.

Thus, the Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee (JAJC) has arranged for an aerial banner to fly from the house where Aiyana Jones was killed to downtown Detroit beginning at 1 pm, May 16, 2011 which is the one-year anniversary of her demise.  The small plane will pull a banner that will read “Justice for Aiyana Jones” and is scheduled to make 3-4 round trips.

JAJC spokesperson, Roland Lawrence aka Fige Bornu said, “It has been a complete year since little Aiyana was snatched from life as a result of a reckless and/or intentional act by the Detroit Police Department.  To add fire to her demise, local, state and federal authorities have literally ignored the gross and ghastly inhumane actions of the Detroit Police Department that took place in the wee hours of the morning when Aiyana’s push to death was scripted and videotaped by the A & E cable program, The Next 48 Hours.  We are demanding that the Detroit Police Department and A & E be criminally charged with the death of Aiyana Jones, and that Detroit Mayor Dave Bing and the Detroit City Council acknowledge that the Detroit Police Department acted in total disregard when they actively participated in the killing of Aiyana Jones.”

Community activists from London, England, Ohio, Florida, Washington, DC, Los Angeles, New York and Detroit worked with JAJC to create this one-year aerial protest of the death of Aiyana Jones.

Aiyana Stanley-Jones in the arms of her loved ones

For more information, email The Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee (JAJC) at justice4aiyana@hotmail.com or call (313) 989-8850.  The Committee is also on Facebook.

From Aiyana Jones’ grandmother Mertilla Jones on her Facebook page:

“Im hurtn so bad everyday all day 4 tha last u. Livin w/o you. U were my strength n my Proud! Missi & Lovin You AIYANA !

Aiyana, Granma mini-me. What cn I say? I Love u & miss u so much !!!!!! Even tho I watched ur life leave ur body b-4 my eyes Im still havn trouble w/tha way u left Earth. I dnt think I cn do 2day ! Sumbody plz. ! N Jesus name ! Get me 2gether

Ohhhh My BABY Ms. AIYANA JONES !!!! ITS 1 YR. SINCE THAT DAY I WATCHED N HORROR AS THE DIRTY COPS N DETROIT,MI MURDERED U.!”

Jewel Allison with daughter Honesti, 11 at her right lead June 26, 2010 march in downtown Detroit/Photo by Herb Boyd

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PROTEST BANK CONFERENCE IN DETROIT MAY 18!

Information released by the sponsoring organization, NeighborWorks, is available by clicking on Bankers Conference Reimagining Older Industrial Communities 5 18 11 .

Shrink the banks, not Detroit

Some in the community are calling for people to sign up and attend this conference. Its agenda includes various “re-imagining” proposals also endorsed by Mayor Dave Bing’s Detroit Works Project. This appears to be an effort by the banks and billionaires to defuse massive opposition to the war on working and poor people that they and their politician puppets are waging. An analysis of Bing’s Deficit Elimination Plan along with his Detroit Works Project proposals is upcoming on VOD shortly, by Diane Bukowski.

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PAYBACK TIME: UNIONS, ACTIVISTS MARCH ON WALL STREET vs. BILLIONAIRES, BANKERS

Some of 15,000 protesters who marched on Wall Street banks and billionaires May 12

NYC Mayor Bloomberg plans disastrous budget cuts

LABOR NOTES

May 13, 2011

By Mark Brenner

Wall Street protest 2009

Sick of bankers and corporate honchos making out like bandits, 15,000 people marched through the caverns of Wall Street yesterday. Unions and community groups rallied together against staggering layoffs and budget cuts.They aimed much of their fury at Mayor Michael Bloomberg. He plans brutal cuts to education and services for the poor, while millionaires will pay even less tax next year and banks continue to rack up huge tax breaks.Wall Street protest 2009

If Bloomberg’s budget passes, teachers could see 4,100 layoffs. Meal services and housing assistance for low-income people living with HIV could be eliminated. Childcare and senior centers are on the chopping block.

Eight separate marches converged on Wall Street, as unions and community groups rallied together to demand the city end corporate property tax exemptions and renegotiate contracts with big banks that the city pays to manage payments.

Instead of gathering to listen to big-name speakers at a main stage, activists from a broad swath of groups traveled the crowd holding small-scale teach-ins and performing street theater, explaining the services at stake and how taxes really work to each other. Stilt-walkers, drum corps, and musical accompaniment turned interludes into impromptu dance breaks.

Wall Street bail-out protest 2010

“This budget crisis would be over if the banks had used the bailout money to help the people,” said Kevin Scrobola of Communications Workers Local 1103. “Now we’re being asked to pay the price for the rich? I don’t think so!”

Last year corporate profits exploded, jumping 29 percent to $1.65 trillion. CEO salaries saw a similar bounce, and Wall Street executives raked in $21 billion in bonuses, the fifth highest payout ever.

Recent reports from the GAO, the federal auditing agency, show that two out of every three corporations are paying zero federal income taxes, and most of the Fortune 500 pays a lower proportion of their earnings in federal taxes than working folks. Meanwhile, corporate giants like General Electric, Bank of America, and Boeing have gotten away with paying no taxes at all.

And after tossing some of that money to politicians, the wealthy have made sure the lion’s share stays in their pockets. Individual tax collections are lower than at any time since Eisenhower was president, and even the Obama administration is doing its part for the top 1 percent, extending the Bush tax cuts until 2012.

In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, has refused to renew a millionaires’ tax worth $4.6 billion a year—which protesters Thursday demanded legislators reconsider.

But you wouldn’t know that Corporate America is rolling in it. Politicians from city hall to the White House point to their empty coffers and say the only place to find any loose money is in the pockets of firefighters, lunch ladies, and janitors.

That’s why thousands of people swarmed lower Manhattan Thursday.

“We’re here to bring the fight to the banks, and demand an end to the tax breaks for the rich,” said Brunilda Leow, a janitor with Service Employees 32BJ. “Union members or not, we all deserve dignity.”

Eduardo Soriano-Castillo contributed to this article.

http://labornotes.org/2011/05/payback-time-activists-shine-light-billionaires-and-bankers

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BENTON HARBOR BLOSSOM TIME: ‘RECALL RICK!’

  

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder crosses bridge into Benton Harbor May 7: Fascism reborn!

By Diane Bukowski  (more photos and video links still coming)

Snyder passes by Whirlpool HQ (under construction) in Benton Harbor, to jeers of "Recall Rick" and hundreds of sign-waving protesters (Photo by Brett Jelinek)

BENTON HARBOR – Benton Harbor’s showdown with Gov. Rick Snyder, who was Grand Marshal of the region’s Blossom Time parade May 7, was loud and well-attended by hometown people, union and community activists from across the state, and even from Madison, Wisconsin.  All Snyder could hear as he walked across the bridge over the St. Joseph River from wealthy white St. Joseph to poor Black Benton Harbor were chants of “Recall Rick!”

Rev. Edward Pinkney and friend greet Snyder as other protesters turn their backs to him

Hundreds of protesters kept up with Snyder all the way down Main Street, past Whirlpool’s new global headquarters, which is under construction on the Benton Harbor side of the river. Snyder, who appeared taken aback at the anger and strength of the protest, jumped into his black SUV with darkened windows as soon as he got to City Hall, and got out of the city.

“A Michigan governor has never participated in a Blossom-Time Parade before,” nationally-known Benton Harbor activist and NAACP President Rev. Edward Pinkney told VOD.

Snyder has made deep cuts in education funding

Snyder evidently wanted to make the point that he had no apologies for Public Act 4, and no fear of the residents of Benton Harbor, the first Michigan municipality to be subjected to emergency manager rule under the law. (See VOD story on Benton Harbor EM Joe Harris and his order banning the city’s commissioners and mayor from conducting any city business at http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=6939.  

Also read Rev. Jesse Jackson’s statement on Benton Harbor by clicking on   TIME FOR BENTON HARBOR TO RISE UP Jesse Jackson).

Benton Harbor High School Marching Band led the parade

“The people here don’t know yet, they haven’t taken the time to figure out the issues,” Pinkney said as he watched residents enjoy the appearance of the talented Benton Harbor High School Marching Band during the parade.  “But we’ve got to take this battle to a whole other level. It’s for the children. The school district here is in bad shape. I’ve been meeting with the schools superintendent to demand zero tolerance, not just for students, but for teachers, parents and the school board, which is controlled by Whirlpool. You have to follow the money trail, see who’s getting the contracts.”

Terrance Shurn's killing by police gave rise to Benton Harbor rebellion in 2003

Pinkney has campaigned for years against the Benton Harbor judicial system, which funnels the largest percentage of Black youth in the state into the prisons, most of them victims of frame-ups according to their supporters.

Pinkney has also campaigned against rampant police brutality, which resulted in a rebellion by youth in Benton Harbor after police killed Terrance Shurn during a high-speed chase in 2003. He is calling for a city-wide protest on June 18, the eighth anniversary of the uprising.

 “Zero tolerance” policies in the schools are disproportionately enforced against students of color, according to a recent study by the Michigan American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), called “The School-to-Prison Pipeline.” (Click on Michigan ACLU School to Prison Pipeline to read report.)

Benton Harbor became notorious nationally even prior to the 2003 rebellion. In 1991, the body of a 16-year-old Black youth, Eric McGinnis, was pulled out of the river. The last person to see him alive was County Sheriff Stephen Marschke, who has long been suspected in his death. Former Governor John Engler later appointed Marschke to head the state parole board.

McGinnis had gone over to the St. Joseph side for some entertainment. Alex Kotlowicz investigated the teen’s death for five years, and eventually wrote, “The Other Side of the River: A Story of Two Towns, a Death, and America’s Dilemma.”

While some marched in the protest, Benton Harbor residents primarily were out in force with their children to see the Blossom Time parade, which for the first time featured the Benton Harbor High School marching band at the beginning, according to one bystander.

"We're not for Snyder!!"

Several Benton Harborites threw fists and shouted: “We’re not for Snyder!” But others wanted to know what the protest was about, indicating the amount of political education that still needs to be done among the grass roots.

The local newspaper, the Herald-Palladium, published an article the day of the parade headlined “Protesters: we’re anti-EM law, not Whirlpool.” It tried to distinguish the May 7 protest from a tide of earlier demonstrations that led to national news commentator Rachel Maddow’s condemnation of PA 4 and its link to Whirlpool and corporate America.  (Click on:  http://www.heraldpalladium.com/articles/2011/05/07/local_news/4664460.txt.) 

Traverse City and Benton Harbor oppose Whirlpool

Whirlpool was not mentioned from the podium during a brief rally prior to the march, but protesters carried signs condemning its takeover of prime public lakefront property. The speakers did target the nation’s corporations, which, as Maddow noted, are chomping at the bit to profit from privatization and takeovers allowed under P.A. 4.

.“We’re here for our kids and our grandkids,” UAW International President Bob King said. “We are so blessed to be in America, where for hundreds of years there has been a rule of the people. What some extremists are trying to make it today is a rule of money. Let’s be really clear—budgets are moral documents. Those who believe in family values, but want to eliminate the earned income tax credit for low-wage earners, tax pensions, take $460 per pupil away from K-12 education—that is immoral.”

UAW Intl. President Bob King (in blue sweatshirt) confers with Rev. Pinkney on how to conduct march

King said the UAW’s legal department has 30 to 40 attorneys currently researching legal grounds to challenge PA 4 in the courts.  State Rep. Fred Durhal said the state’s Congressional Black Caucus is meeting with Rainbow PUSH, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, and the UAW and AFL-CIO to join in the court battle and coordinate the overall campaign. It was unclear if this is the same coalition meeting every week at the AFSCME Council 25 hall, which is planning a class action lawsuit along with other activities challenging PA 4. (Click on http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=7001.)

“We may win it through the courts, but that’s not the battle,” King said. “We have to be marching, rallying, demanding justice every day of our lives.”

King fell short of recommending that the unions exercise their economic clout through direct action such as a general strike. To date, rallies and protests have not stopped what some has characterized as the onward tide of neo-fascism in Michigan or nationally.

King and his members, in red T-shirts, turned out in relatively large numbers for the Benton Harbor action, although King was not at state-wide rallies in Lansing against P.A. 4 in February, March, and April.

UAW Local 6000 represents 17,000 state employees, according to Ray Holman, the union’s legislative liaison with the Department of Human Services.

“These attacks on collective bargaining and the rights of working families mean people in Michigan as a whole are going to suffer, and it’s going to get worse,” Holman told VOD. “Snyder is trying to privatize a lot of state government, and that’s going to be disastrous.”

He said much of the privatization is illegal because it involves federal funds.

Under Governor Jennifer Granholm, the state had already privatized most of its foster care functions, which led to the Department being placed under a federal consent decree citing massive abuse of children in the system in 2008.

The National Coalition for Child Protection Reform (NCCPR), said a recent report from the federal monitor still “found huge problems at DHS – including illegal budget cuts, understating abuse in foster care and the mass expulsion of children from the homes of relatives.”

Holman said a bill is pending in the legislature (SB 179, section 620) which would also farm out State Emergency Relief (SER), Medicaid eligibility determination, and other work currently done by state employees. He said the number of assistance payment workers has been cut back so drastically that those remaining now carry caseloads of 800 to 1,000 families.

On the St. Joseph side, residents there lined the streets primarily for the parade, although a small group of teachers with the Michigan Education Association carried signs condemning Snyder’s education budget cuts. Snyder raided last year’s $500 million surplus in last year’s education fund to give huge tax breaks to corporations.

Kathy Knight, a first-grade teacher in the Benton Harbor school district, decried the cuts.

“It’s been tough here,” she said. “Benton Harbor is a mini-Detroit. There have been a lot of cutbacks, and the teacher to student ratio is increasing, leaving us less time for each individual student.”

Mary Peterson works as a teacher at the Blossom Land Learning Center in Berrien Springs, a county-wide school for “mentally impaired and significantly multiple-impaired students” from ages 3 to 26.

“Our main concern is the kids,” she said. “They are cutting back funding, and we have to take so much out of our own pockets to provide necessities in the classrooms. We are short-stafffed, so besides teaching, we also take care of feeding, suctioning and diapering the students. They require us to have additional post-graduate education, but they do not pay for it.”

Neither teacher, however, expressed concern about the Benton Harbor EM takeover. According to Benton Harborites, most teachers in the system live in St. Joseph.

Typifying the response of many whites in St. Joseph and even young whites in Benton Harbor running gentrified businesses downtown, one man watching the parade with his family hollered, “Why don’t you take pictures of NORMAL people?”

Expensive yachts and boats lined the St. Joseph side of the river, along with signs touting numerous new luxury residential developments, many on Benton Harbor’s shorelines.  Benton Harbor’s poverty-stricken neighborhoods, however, reminded one young Detroiter who attended a march there two weeks earlier of the rural South, where she was born and raised.

“It’s not any better there now than it was before the 60’s,” she said.

To follow ongoing activities in Benton Harbor by local activists, click on  http://bhbanco.blogspot.com . Rev. Edward Pinkney can be reached at

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