December 12, 2015 - December 12, 2015, The Afro-American A1 www.afro.com $1.00 $1.00
Volume Volume 124 123 No. No. 19 20–22
DECEMBER 12, 2015 - DECEMBER 18, 2015
Chicago Chaos
Inside
Washington • How to Find the Best D.C. Public School
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Cops Need More Military Training Not More Weapons
Baltimore
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Reliving the ‘Motown Sound’
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AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato
Protesters blocked the interstate highway traffic coming into downtown Chicago after Mayor Rahm Emanuel apologized for the 2014 shooting of a Black teenager during a special City Council meeting.
Chicago Mayor Apologizes for Laquan 570k McDonald’s Death As City Protests
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By The Associated Press Mayor Rahm Emanuel, known for keeping vise-like control over Chicago and his own political image, finds himself in the weakest position of his long public career as he struggles to respond to a police scandal, claims of cover-ups at City Hall and calls for his resignation. The former White House chief of staff on Dec. 9 used a special meeting of the Chicago City Council to try to calm the firestorm, apologizing for the fatal shooting of a Black teen by a white
officer and promising “complete and total” reform. “I take responsibility for what happened because it happened on my watch. And if we’re going to fix it, I want you to understand it’s my responsibility with you,” Emanuel said during a sometimes-emotional speech that lasted nearly 45 minutes. “But if we’re also going to begin the healing process, the first step in that journey is my step. “And I’m sorry.” The remarks were Emanuel’s lengthiest and seemingly most heartfelt since the public got its first look last
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Bernie Sanders Compares Sandtown to Third World Country By AFRO Staff Ian Duncan/The Baltimore Sun via AP
Jurors inspected the van Freddie Gray was transported in on the day of his arrest.
Officer Testifies in His Own Defense at Freddie Gray Trial By The Associated Press
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month at the squad car video that showed 17-year-old Laquan McDonald veering away from officer Jason Van Dyke before he began shooting, hitting McDonald 16 times. Van Dyke is charged with firstdegree murder. Critics have repeatedly accused him of keeping the footage under wraps until after he won a tougher-than-expected spring election for a second term. The mayor has denied the claim and acknowledged Dec. 9 that he should have pressed for prosecutors to wrap up their investigation more quickly so the video Continued on A3
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Officer William Porter was poised and calm as he testified in his own defense on Dec. 9, telling jurors that he didn’t call an ambulance for Freddie Gray because the man was alert, appeared uninjured and didn’t complain of any pain or wounds in the back of a police van. Instead, Gray only said “yes” when Porter offered to get him medical aid, the officer testified. Porter said he did tell his colleague, the van driver, to take Gray to the hospital after the man said he needed medical attention. Porter, a patrolman, responded to calls for assistance at some of the van stops. During the fourth stop, Porter went inside the back of the van and lifted Gray, who was handcuffed and shackled, from the floor onto the bench. The fourth stop is crucial in Porter’s case because Continued on A4
Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Democratic presidential contender, expressed disbelief on Dec. 9 as he toured a portion of Sandtown and declared that it seemed like a Third World country rather than part of a city so close to the nation’s capital. “Anyone who took the walk that we took around this neighborhood would not think you’re in a wealthy nation, you would think you’re in a third-world country, where unemployment is over 50 percent, a community that does not even have decentquality grocery stores,” Sanders told reporters. “Bottom line is in the last 30 years we have seen a
massive transfer of wealth from working families to the top one-tenth of one percent,” he told reporters. “What this
• ‘Little Melvin’
Williams, Notorious Drug Lord, Dies
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New Doc. Explores Rep. John Lewis’ Civil Rights Struggle By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com U.S. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) is the subject of a new documentary that explores his role in the Civil Rights Movement and his political career. Lewis, who represents the city of Atlanta and some of its suburbs, is featured in a 65-minute film, “Get in the Way: The Journey of John Lewis.” The film debuted on Dec. 3 at the Newseum in Northwest D.C. and the film writer and director, Kathleen Dowdy, said it was a labor of love to work on the project. “Wherever John Lewis would go, people would ask him to tell his life story and he would,” Dowdy
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AP Photo/Patrick Semansky
Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., right, follows the Rev. Jamal Bryant as they begin a tour of the Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood in West Baltimore.
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