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Volume 121 No. 39
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May 4, 2013 - May 4, 2013, The Afro-American
MAY 4, 2013 - MAY 10, 2013
Baltimore Detective Charged In Illegal Investigation of Runaway Daughter By Krishana Davis AFRO Staff Writer
17 Jailed During NAACP ‘Pray-In’ Supporters lay their hands on Rev. Dr. William Barber before the April 29 civil disobedience action. By Ben Wrobel Special to the AFRO from the NAACP
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(RALEIGH, N.C.) – Seventeen people, including eight ministers, civil rights leaders, and students, were arrested for a prayerful protest at the state legislature in Raleigh, N.C., on April 29. The activists were
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what the Rev. Dr. William Barber, North Carolina NAACP state president, called “the ideologically driven, extremist, meanspirited agenda” that has captured both legislative Continued on A3
Loch Raven Mother Forces Son to Wear Sign For Disobedience By Krishana Davis AFRO Staff Writer Traffic crawled, backing up for more than a block, as drivers slowed to read a sign slung over the shoulders of 10-year-old Larry Saunders. “I disrespect my parents and everyone who tries to help me!” it read. Sarina Clark, Larry’s mother, said she was fed up with back-talk, lies and insolence from her son and decided to try an alternative method of discipline. So, she hand-lettered the message on two poster-boards and forced him to wear the sandwich sign on the corner of Ellerslie Avenue and 33rd Street for three and a half hours so her
son could suffer the embarrassment that she and her family felt in response to his behavior. “He thinks he can do whatever he wants and disrespect me in front of everyone else and there is no consequence,” she said while sitting in a lawn chair a few feet away looking at her son. “So I want him to know how it feels to be disrespected and to have everyone else looking at me when he does things wrong. I need him to change. He has potential to be whatever he wants to be, but I need him to see that.” Clark said Larry has respectable grades – a 99 average on a 100-point scale as a fifth grader at Waverly Elementary School – but he talks back to teachers, disobeys his mother, his father and Continued on A9
Ten-year-old Larry Saunders Photo by Krishana Davis
Baltimore Program Helps Homeless Vets Return to Society
Army airborne infantry specialist from 1982 to 1986. But he’s homeless. Sean-Christopher Riley, Shuffling from the “Shaka” as he calls himself, couches of friends and may not fit the stereotypical family members to the idea of homelessness. He streets of Washington, D.C. works as a nursing assistant. to Baltimore, Riley has no He has his associate’s permanent residence. At 48, degree from Montgomery he recently found his way Community College. He to the Maryland Center for served his country as a U.S. Veterans Education and Training (MCVET), a non-profit facility providing counseling, education and employment services to homeless veterans. Located in the old Maryland Cup Factory in the 300 block of High St., MCVET was founded in 1993 by four military veterans as a housing facility. Former Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke sold them the building for $1, said Jeffery Kendrick, director of operations of MCVET. “[The founders] realized there were guys who have served their country, come back and have no place to stay,” Photo by Krishana Davis said Kendrick, who is retired from the U.S. Sean-Christopher Riley By Krishana Davis AFRO Staff Writer
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handcuffed and taken to jail while they sang and prayed in front of the locked doors of the North Carolina Senate. The nonviolent civil disobedience was the opening round in a series of protests to focus national attention on
Photo: NAACP
Det. Daniel T. Nicholson IV, the lead investigator in the missing person’s case of honor student Phylicia Barnes, was charged on April 29 with four non-felony criminal violations in what prosecutors said was an illegal search to find his own runaway daughter. Nicholson faces two counts of second-degree assault, one count of fourth-degree burglary and one count of making a false statement to police, the state’s attorney’s office said in a news release. “As these charges demonstrate yet again, I am committed to investigating allegations of police misconduct and prosecuting officers who violate the laws they have sworn to enforce,” said State’s Attorney Gregg L. Bernstein in a statement. Nicholson’s daughter Moriah went missing on April 20, 2012 from their home in the Gywnn Oak community in Baltimore County. The Baltimore City Police public information department posted the flyer of the missing 15-yearold via their social media networks, although the investigation was not in their jurisdiction, said law enforcement officials. According to the state’s attorney’s office, on April 22, 2012 Nicholson, accompanied by persons who were not identified by Continued on A4
Air Force. MCVET officials said the organization has successfully graduated as many as 10,000 residents, like Riley, who now
volunteers as an advocate for the homeless. He went to MCVET seeking financial assistance to return to college. His nursing assistance
certification, which must be renewed periodically, had expired. His background
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Black Jockey Eyes Top Prize at Kentucky Derby
By Zachary Lester AFRO Staff Writer Kevin Krigger always wanted to be a jockey. As a child in the Virgin Islands, he rode the arm of the sofa at his home when he was tiny, later graduating to a horse he was gifted by his grandmother. By the time he was a teenager, he had won his first race at the Randall James Racetrack in his hometown of St. Croix. His heart was set and his ambition clear: he wanted to join the ranks of the great Black jockeys who once dominated the sport of horse racing. Krigger has realized his dream, racing in California and even taking the top spot April 6 at the Santa Anita Derby, the first Black jockey to win there since horse
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Photo courtesy BlackNews.com
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