Baltimore Afro-American Newspaper October 25 2014

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www.afro.comOctober 25, 2014 - October 25, 2014,

Volume 123 No. 12

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The Afro-American

Nation’s #1 African American Newspaper 2014 Nielsen-Essence Consumer Report

Special Breast Cancer Section • B1 OCTOBER 25, 2014 - OCTOBER 31, 2014

Hogan Claims Blacks Have Been Left Behind Election 2014

MARYLAND CONGRESSIONAL RACES House of Representatives

By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent

3rd District, Maryland John Sarbanes

The Larry Hogan campaign has a message for Black voters in Maryland: If they keep voting the same way—read, Democrat—they will keep getting the same thing—nothing. “Our overwhelming message is that if you take a look at how things have gone for the state in the past eight years and if you look at communities in Baltimore City and Prince George’s County (Black enclaves) for the past 30 years, things are still moving in the wrong direction,” said campaign spokesman Adam Dubitsky. Boyd Rutherford, Hogan’s running mate, said as they campaign all over Maryland, a recurring theme among Black voters is that “they feel forgotten.” “African-American communities, particularly in certain jurisdictions, are being

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7th District, Maryland Elijah Cummings MARYLAND STATEWIDE

Democrat Governor Anthony Brown

Attorney General

Sheriff John Anderson

Peter Franchot Brian Frosh

Baltimore City

State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby

Maryland Senate 43rd District Joan Carter Conway

Continued on A3

Almost Half A Million Texas Voters May Be Turned Away from Polls By Gloria J. BrowneMarshall AANIC Supreme Court Correspondent In an emergency action, the Texas NAACP, and other civil rights groups, asked the U.S. Supreme Court to stop Texas from enforcing Senate Bill 14. But, the conservativeled Court sided with the state, and upheld the strictest voter photo identification law in America, giving the civil rights community yet another defeat. S.B. 14 requires a person to present one of a limited number of governmentissued photo identification documents. There were challenges to S.B. 14 from the beginning. Lawsuits followed this legislation from its inception. Gov. Rick

Perry (R-Texas), a possible presidential contender in 2016, signed S.B.14 on May 27, 2011, a few months prior to announcing his first presidential bid. Under S.B. 14, the only acceptable forms of identification are driver’s license, non-driver ID, and concealed handgun license, all of which can only be obtained through the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS), or one may use a passport, citizenship certificate, or military identification card containing photo. This ID must be

presented at the polling place in order to vote. Rep. Marc Veasey (D-Texas), along with AfricanAmerican and Latino voters, sued Perry. They argued S.B. 14 violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 as well as the first amendment, fourteenth amendment, and fifteenth amendment. Their first amendment claim is based on voting as an act of expression or free speech. The Veasey plaintiffs proved over 400,000 poor people, African-Americans, Hispanics, and those with disabilities will be prevented from voting due to their inability to obtain the required photo identification. The plaintiffs stated DPS offices providing required identification have limited hours that conflict with most

45th District, Baltimore City Talmadge Branch Cheryl Glenn Cory McCray Register of Wills Ramona Moore-Baker

Larry Hogan is running for Governor of Maryland. Hogan told a chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity at Bowie State University in September. “But too many people on the other side feel that they can ignore you and just take your vote for granted, year after year after year, and that bothers me, too,” he added. “It should bother

44A District, Baltimore City Keith Haynes

Comptroller

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left behind,” he said. The campaign said both parties have failed African Americans. “Look, I’ll be the first to admit that many people in my party are unwilling to reach out to the Black community about our ideas, about the promise of empowerment, economic freedom and opportunity. And that bothers me,”

43rd District, Baltimore City Curt Anderson Maggie McIntosh Mary Washington

45th District Nathaniel McFadden Maryland House of Delegates 40th District Antonio Hayes Barbara A. Robinson 41st District, Baltimore City Jill P. Carter Nathaniel T. Oaks Samuel I. “Sandy” Rosenberg

work schedules and are located in remote locations far from public transportation. At trial, Veasey plaintiffs argued that the law was intentionally enacted to undermine the votes of poor and minority communities. Federal Judge Nelva Gonzales Ramos agreed. After a nine day trial, with witnesses testifying about the law’s many burdens, based on an extensive factual record,

Baltimore City Sitting Judges Melissa K. Copeland Jeffrey M. Geller Phillip S. Jackson Alfred Nance Christopher L. Panos Melissa M. Phinn Julie R. Rubin Baltimore County Maryland Senate 10th District Delores G. Kelley Maryland House of Delegates 10th District, Benjamin Brooks Jay Jalisa Adrienne A. Jones 11th District Shelly Hettleman Dan Morhaim Dana Stein Ramos ruled that S.B. 14 violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 because it was enacted with a racially discriminatory purpose. However, Texas won on appeal, which prompted civil rights groups to go to the Supreme Court hoping to convince the court to block S.B. 14. They failed. In a 6-3 decision, the court ignored Continued on A3

Mayor Announces New Mentor-Protege Program

Police Brutality Victims’ Loved Ones Call for Action

Minority Enterprise Development Week

By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO

By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO

Anthony Anderson, Tyrone West, George King. In Baltimore, these are our “Mike Browns.” Now, at a time of focused national attention on incidents of police brutality in other parts of the country, a group of mothers and relatives of Black men lost to police violence called for a rally to focus attention on police brutality here in Baltimore. Darlene Cain lost her son Dale Graham in 2008 at the hands of the Baltimore Police Department (BPD). After years working to overcome her grief, she founded Mothers on the Move, a support group for women who, like her, have lost children to police brutality or have had loved ones suffer abuse at the hands of police. At a time when police brutality is a primary topic of conversation in Baltimore as well as nationally, Cain had planned to hold a rally

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings Blake recently announced a three-tiered mentoring program designed to help minority and women-owned businesses overcome structural obstacles to their long-term success and viability. Named the Mayor’s Mentor/Protege Program (MMPP), the initiative was presented, Oct. 20, the first day of Baltimore’s Minority Enterprise Development Week (MEDW) that highlighted minority and women-owned businesses as well as providing networking opportunities for these entrepreneurs. “I’m excited about the mentorprotege program. That’s very essential in helping to create the foundation for success for businesses,” said Mayor Continued on A5

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings Blake

Copyright © 2014 by the Afro-American Company

on the issue when she heard from similar organizations in San Diego and Texas that they would be holding rallies on Oct. 22, in order to preserve attention on police brutality in their communities. “I was told that it was going to be a national day, and because Baltimore is always supporting other states, I said why don’t we support us, where we live?” said Cain about her decision to organize a rally here in Baltimore on the same day as part of the National Mothers Against Police Brutality Day. “We’re having police brutality here in Baltimore so it would be good if [people] show up for their own city.” For Cain, this rally in front of City Hall is ultimately about accountability to the families of police brutality victims. “Lawyers are telling us things like they can’t take the case to court. You keep hearing the same old lines over and over again, ‘we thought he had Continued on A3


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