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Volume 123 No. 19
$1.00 Nation’s #1 African American Newspaper 2014 Nielsen-Essence Consumer Report
DECEMBER 13, 2014 - DECEMBER 19, 2014
District Bids Emotional ‘Goodbye’ to Marion Barry By James Wright Special to the AFRO
Ferguson protestors rally at Gallery Place in D.C. Nov. 30.
Photo by Travis Riddick
#CrimingWhileWhite By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent
The deaths of several unarmed Black men at the
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hands of police officers and grand jury decisions to not indict them have set off a spate of protests in cities across the world--and on the Internet. “This activism definitely indicates a palpable concern within a range of communities with these verdicts,” said Darnell Hunt, an expert on race relations and director of the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. “The fragility of Black life...that Black people, especially Black men, can be attacked and the people who perpetrate these killings get away without an indictment speak to the existing racial problems in our society.” Cyberactivsm has defined this new movement. Thousands have taken to Twitter and other social platforms, trending hashtags such as #Can’tBreathe, #HandsUpDontShoot and
#BlackLivesMatters, which speak to the public’s outrage with the blatant injustice of the United State’s justice system. But there’s a new, somewhat different, hashtag on the scene-#CrimingWhileWhite-which draws attention to the inconsistencies and double standards in the system. #CrimingWhileWhite is sort of the flipside to #BlackLivesMatter, said Lester Spence, political analyst, Johns Hopkins University. “If #BlackLivesMatter is an attempt to say Black people are human too and should be treated fairly as citizens, #CrimingWhileWhite is making public the concept of White privilege,” he said. “It enriches the conversation.” And the concept is being publicized by those in the best position to know about White
Thousands of District residents from all walks of life as well as members of Congress, clergymen and leaders of national organizations took time out of their lives to thank Marion Barry for his nearly 40 years of public service to the nation’s capital in three distinct events from Dec. 4-8. Barry, who died at the United Medical Center on Nov. 23 at the age of 78, was remembered as a strong champion of Black businesses, senior citizens and young people. Residents had the chance to celebrate his life at the John A. Wilson Building in Northwest on Dec. 4, the Temple of Praise church on Dec. 5 and at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center on Dec. 6. “There has been no one like him in the District of Columbia and there will likely be no one like him ever again,” Jim Vance, an anchorman for News Channel 4 said on a special edition of “Reporter’s Roundtable” on Dec. 7. Barry’s body was in a casket with a bouquet of red roses and a kente cloth draped over it in the first floor foyer of the Wilson
“There has been no one like him in the District of Columbia and there will likely be no one like him ever again.” –Jim Vance
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Following Garner Grand Jury
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See more photos from the funeral on A4.
By Taylor Carr Howard University News Service
NY Attorney General Stepping into Cop Cases By Gloria Browne-Marshall Special to the AFRO from AANIC
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Building on Dec. 4. The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a two-time presidential candidate, was joined by D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray (D),) present and former D.C. Council members, U.S. Reps. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) and John Lewis (D-Ga.), and members of the Barry family, at a ceremony at the Wilson Building. After the ceremony, people were allowed in the building to greet council members who were available and stand in front of the casket to reflect on Barry in a personal manner. “I am here to share a special moment with Continued on A3
Petworth Residents Learn How to Combat Crime A new family has moved into the house two doors away from yours. Suddenly, there is traffic in and out daily. People gather outside at all hours of the day and night. Profanity, arguments, and loud conversations can be overheard. It appears drug sales might be taking place. What can you and other residents do? A lot, said Asst. Attorney General Michael Aniton and Community Prosecutor Trena Carrington of the Department of Justice. During the recent meeting of the Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC), the pair gave residents of the Petworth neighborhood a list of things they should do to protect themselves and their neighborhood. ANC Commissioner Donna Brockington noted that there were several complaints from residents about the noise in the neighborhood. After acknowledging the concern, Aniton said, “I want to focus more on the drug, gun, and prostitution aspect.” Aniton’s office handles housing code violations, businesses operating without proper licenses or permits, drug, firearm, prostitution, and general nuisances. “A nuisance property uses, sells, or reproduces drugs, keeps or stores firearms that aren’t registered, or engages or practices prostitution in any manner.”
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Photo by JD Howard
The public has lost confidence in District Attorneys to prosecute police shooting cases. This lack of public trust now drives New York’s highest prosecutor, the Attorney General, to take over such cases. It is an unusual request for a police shooting case; but not for civil rights cases. The request in a change of authority came from national protests after the failure of a Staten Island, N.Y. grand jury to indict White police officers involved in the choke-hold death of Eric Garner, an unarmed, Black man. President Barack Obama pledged over $77 million for police body cameras, better police training, and a Federal civil rights investigation by U.S. Attorney
Photo courtesy Howard Univ. News Service
This Saturday
Sharpton’s National March Against Police Violence By Tameka Amado Howard University News Service Civil Rights activist the Rev. Al Sharpton has taken the case of the Ferguson, Mo., and Staten Island, N.Y., grand juries’ decisions not to prosecute police in the deaths of two unarmed Black men into his own hands. Sharpton, head of the National Action Network, said during a press conference that the country is in a “national crisis,” and he is organizing a rally in Washington to call for intervention by the U.S. Department of Justice in both cases. “A week from this Saturday, Dec. 13, we are having a national march in Washington, D.C., where we are calling for the Justice Department to take the shooting in New York and the case in Ferguson and the case in Cleveland,” he said. “It is
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