January 9, 2016 - January 9, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 124 No. 24
JANUARY 16, 2016 - JANUARY 22, 2016
Inside
Modern Love
Baltimore • Three Arrested for Murder of Cyclist
B1 Remembering the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
Washington
A5
• Obama Fails The Legacy of Alex Haley’s ‘Roots’
C1
590k
That’s how many people have liked the AFRO Facebook page. Join last week’s 4,700 new fans and become part of the family.
afro.com
Your History • Your Community • Your News
The AFROAmerican Newspaper Prince George’s County Edition is Published weekly as an E-edition. Notification is sent to you via email. You can opt-out of receiving this by selecting the unsubscribe option at the bottom of each email notice.
Join the AFRO on Twitter and Facebook
to Speak On D.C. Statehood AP Photo/Suzanne Plunkett, File
Musical legend David Bowie, who died at the age of 69 on Jan. 10, was married to the model, actress and entrepreneur Iman for over 20 years. The secret to their successful marriage? “I think you’ve got to feel hot for each other and respect each other. That’s where it starts,” she told a magazine in 1995. “Also, we are very private so we decided from early on that we will keep the press and editors and everybody out of our house.”
MLK’s Legacy in the Wake of Freddie Gray By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent zprince@afro.com The legacy of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was threaded throughout the 2015 uprising in Baltimore way beyond the parallel between King’s assassination, which sparked the 1968 riots, and the death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray while in police custody, the catalyst to last year’s unrest, local leaders say. “One of Dr. King’s last statements before he died was that he feared he had integrated Black people into a burning house. Well, last year, we found the pack of matches,” said the How the AFRO covered the aftermath of Rev. Dr. Jamal Bryant, pastor the riots in 1968. ofEmpowerment Temple AME
Group Says Supreme Court Decisions Could Pushback Civil Rights their focus to examine how an aging and seemingly racially-insensitive Supreme Court body could adversely impact Black communities. Noting While the nation focuses on the the large number of high-stakes upcoming presidential election, Supreme Court cases, scholars and organizations and think tanks around policymakers are concerned the the country, including the Center Court may be shifting to redefine for American Progress, have shifted “equal justice under law” and how it is achieved and enforced. During the “What’s At Stake in This Supreme Court Term” panel discussion, Debo Adegbile, partner with the law firm WilmerHale; Walter Dellinger, former solicitor general and partner, Courtesy photo O’Melveny & Several decisions expected from the Supreme Court Myers; Cynthia in 2016 could potentially impact Blacks in critical Estlund, professor, ways, including destroying gains made during the Continued on A3 civil rights movement.
Church and a national civil rights and justice leader. In fact, half-a-century ago, the pivotal civil and human rights leader practically predicted the peaceful-turned-violent protests that would spark more than 150 fires and see more than 200 businesses damaged. “Dr. King’s legacy speaks directly to what occurred in April because what he talked about in his last writing, {Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?} is exactly what happened,” said Bishop Douglas Miles, pastor of Koinonia Baptist Church and cochairman emeritus of the advocacy group, Baltimoreans United in Leadership or BUILD. He added, “Recent events show how easily we could
Continued on A3
D1
CBC PAC Looks to Increase Black Congress Members By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com There are 46 Black members in the U.S. Congress. The Congressional Black Caucus Political Action Committee wants to increase it to 50. The Congressional Black Caucus, like many political groups, formed a political action committee (PAC) in 1994 to further its aims of increasing the number of Blacks in both the House and the Senate Continued on A3
Court Sets March Hearing on Freddie Gray Witness Dispute By The Associated Press
By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com
AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, Pool
Caesar R. Goodson Jr., one of six Baltimore city police officers charged in connection to the death of Freddie Gray, was driving the police van in which Gray suffered a fatal neck injury.
Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company
Maryland’s second-highest court has scheduled a March hearing on a dispute that has stalled the murder trial of a Baltimore police officer in the death of Freddie Gray. The Court of Special Appeals said Jan. 12 that it will hear oral arguments March 4 on whether Officer William Porter must testify against Officer Caesar Goodson. Goodson drove the van in which Gray suffered a fatal neck injury. Porter testified at his own trial that he told Goodson that Gray had asked for medical help. Porter’s trial ended in a hung jury. He’s awaiting retrial. The trial judge has ordered Porter to testify against Goodson despite Porter’s assertion that he has a right not to incriminate himself. On Jan. 11, Goodson’s trial was suspended until the matter is resolved.