PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 122 No. 49
JULY 12, 2014 - JULY 18, 2014
Former Police Corporal’s Family Seek to get 45-Year Sentence Overturned By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent For the past seven years, Stacey Washington, wife of convicted former Prince George’s County homeland security official Keith Washington, has had to raise their now-14-year-old daughter alone.
Register by Oct. 6 to vote in the Nov. 4 General Election
Photo Courtesy Washington Family
Stacey Washington, 55, and her 14-year-old daughter have launched a campaign to overturn the conviction of their husband and father, respectively, Keith Washington, who was sentenced to 45 years in prison.
Join the 285,953 Facebook fans who follow the AFRO, the Black newspaper with the largest digital reach in the country.
Mr. Washington, also a former police corporal, was sentenced in 2008 to 45 years in prison for the shooting death and injury of two furniture deliverymen. “The most difficult thing for me is seeing her growing up without him‌,â€? the 55year old woman said, pausing while muffled crying could be heard in the background. “She was so close her dad‌. She misses him every single day.â€? The second-hardest part of the family’s separation is believing her husband was locked up without cause, Mrs. Washington said. That’s why the family has launched an online offensive to help overturn his conviction. OneInnocentMan.org is an online compendium of transcript excerpts, toxicology reports, expert analyses and other documents, which the Washingtons hope will clear up some of the
Fourth of July Weekend In Prince George’s County By Courtney Jacobs AFRO Staff Writer The Fourth of July weekend for Prince George’s County wasn’t exactly memorial. Instead it was a day of high law enforcement-related activity. On the morning of July 4, a Bladensburg man was arrested in his home and charged with first and second-degree murder for the July 2 murder of Larry Nathaniel Williams, 22, of Hyattsville. Nathaniel Jamar Johnson, 26, of Tilden Road in Bladensburg has been identified as the suspect by the Prince George’s County Police Department. On July 2, at about 9:15 p.m., officers with the Bladensburg Police Department were called to the 5000 block of 57th Avenue for the report of a shooting. When officers arrived at the scene, they found Williams lying in a parking lot suffering from gunshot wounds. Williams was Continued on A8
Your History • Your Community • Your News
afro.com
Thousands of fans came out to see Jay-Z and BeyoncÊ’s first-ever combined tour. By Ashley D. Diggs Special to the AFRO (Baltimore) On July 7, thousands of fans made their way through traffic and long M&T Bank Stadium lines to witness the highly-anticipated summer concert, “On The Run,â€? starring the dynamic duo Shawn “Jay Zâ€? Carter and his wife BeyoncĂŠ Continued on A8
Dr. Abdulalim A. Shabazz, Noted Math Scholar and Educator, Dies at 87 Trained More Than Half Nation’s Black Mathematician Doctorate Holders By AFRO Staff
AP Photo
Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin leaves federal court with his wife Seletha Nagin after being sentenced in New Orleans.
Join the AFRO on Twitter and Facebook
Fans Flock From All Over
Continued on A4
“Instead it was a day of high law enforcement-related activity.�
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.
Jay and Bey ‘On the Run’
Nagin Gets 10-Year Sentence
Story on A4
Abdulalim Abdullah Shabazz, noted math scholar who trained more than half of the nation’s Black mathematician doctorate holders, and former minister of Masjid Muhammad, once known as Nation of Islam D.C. mosque Temple #4, died June 25 in Grambling, La. where he was professor of mathematics at Grambling State University. He was 87. Born Lonnie Cross in Bessemer, Ala., Shabazz graduated with honors from Dunbar High School in Washington, D.C. in 1945 and earned undergraduate degrees in math and chemistry from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, a Masters degree in mathematics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1951 and a doctorate in mathematics from Cornell University in 1955. He launched what would become an illustrious teaching career in 1956 as an assistant professor Continued on A3
With Silver Line, you’ll have a ride to thousands of great jobs. Look alive, Metro riders. Good times are ahead.
Copyright Š 2014 by the Afro-American Company