Prince Georges Afro-American Newspaper February 6 2016

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February 6, 2016 - February 6, 2016, The Afro-American

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PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION

Volume 124 No. 27

FEBRUARY 6, 2016 - FEBRUARY 12, 2016

Inside AFRO OpEd: Ben Carson Should Drop Out

The New Face of Football

Washington

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• Proposed Bill Set to Make Ex-Cons Entrepreneurs

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Baltimore AFRO Celebrates Black History Month

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AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton (1) answers questions during a press conference on Feb. 3 in San Jose, Calif. Newton will be only the 4th Black Quarterback to start in a Super Bowl when Carolina plays the Denver Broncos in the NFL Super Bowl 50 football game on Feb. 7 in Santa Clara, Calif. See story on page C1.

• Morgan State Student Killed

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602k Jurors Award $23.1 Million to Florida

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Unarmed Black Man Shot by Deputy By The Associated Press A federal jury awarded $23.1 million on Feb. 3 to a 22-year-old Black man who was unarmed when he was shot and paralyzed by a sheriff’s deputy, but Florida lawmakers will have to approve any award above $200,000. The six-woman, two-man jury ruled after 3½ hours of deliberation that Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Sgt. Adams Lin violated Dontrell Stephens’ civil rights when he shot him in September 2013.

Lin, who had stopped Stephens for riding his bicycle into traffic, testified that he shot him four times because he reached for his waistband with his left hand and then flashed a dark object that he thought was a small handgun. Stephens testified that he was raising his hands when Lin opened fire for no reason. Video from the dashboard camera in Lin’s patrol car showed Stephens’ left hand was empty and a cellphone was in his right hand. An appeal is expected.

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Joe Cavaretta/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP

Dontrell Stephens was left paralyzed after a Florida sheriff’s deputy shot him in 2013.

Angela Davis: Prison Report Finds Issues in State’s Reform Now Response to Baltimore Unrest

By Akira Kyles Special to the AFRO

By The Associated Press

Angela Davis, noted activist and scholar, took the stage at Johns Hopkins University on Feb. 2 to deliver a lecture that touched on the war on drugs, race, gender and the prison population. Davis, who currently teaches humanities at the University of California, Santa Cruz and has lectured across America and internationally, was a staunch advocate for the oppressed. Junior and neuroscience major, Kinaya Hardie was excited

Weaknesses in Maryland’s response to last year’s civil unrest in Baltimore after the death of Freddie Gray included the inexperience of some emergency management staff and reliance on inaccurate information, according to a new state report. The Maryland Emergency Management Agency report said the rioting last spring

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“presented unique public safety challenges” and “many opportunities for improvement.” The report also said it found that the State Emergency Operations Center was relying on inaccurate information from media coverage during the riots because it received few details from official channels. It also discovered that there was a general “lack of understanding” about the various Continued on A3

Judge Refuses to Throw Out Sex Assault Case Against Cosby By The Associated Press

Photo courtesy of Johns Hopkins University

Angela Davis spoke at Johns Hopkins University on the war on drugs, race, gender and the prison population.

A judge refused to throw out the sexual assault case against Bill Cosby on Feb. 3, sweeping aside claims that a previous district attorney had granted the comedian immunity from prosecution a decade ago. Common Pleas Judge Steven O’Neill issued the ruling after a hard-fought two-day hearing. The case now moves Continued on A3

AP Photo/Mel Evans

Actor and comedian Bill Cosby, center right, is assisted as he arrives for a court appearance on Feb. 3 in Norristown, Pa.

Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company


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