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Volume 76 – Number 43

Mayoral candidate Lisa Howze said there is a need to have someone in the mayor’s office who is financially competent Lisa Howze and who knows how to address the city’s financial situation, and then align that to what emergency manager Kevyn Orr is doing. She believes that she is that person.

Andre Smith photo

Can

WHAT’S INSIDE Civility needed at city hall says Lisa Howze (Page A-3)

July 3-9, 2013

michiganchronicle.com

Detroit be saved?

Kevyn Orr

Largest Simultaneous Swim Lesson (Page B-1) Wayne County’s Family Aquatic Center at Chandler Park established its inaugural year as the Official Host Location for The World’s Largest Swimming Lesson™ (WLSL) in 2013.

Alicia Boler-Davis: GM success factor (Page C-1) Alicia Boles-Davis was recently appointed to the position of General Motors senior vice president of Global Quality and Global Customer. She is the Alicia second Boles-Davis African-American woman in automotive history to report directly to the office of the president.

Charles Pugh

Gary Brown

Benny Napoleon

Mike Duggan

City engulfed in scandals, financial crisis and leadership challenges By Bankole Thompson CHRONICLE SENIOR EDITOR

The leadership challenges facing Detroit are begging for answers that are hard to find in this town. Because failed political leadership, accompanied by an enabling resistant culture, is the order of the day, and people for so long have not demanded much from those who have been guardians of the status quo at city hall, it is difficult to believe that the current crop of candidates running for mayor and city council have answers for a city that is on the brink of bankruptcy and serious financial reform. It’s problematic to even remotely suggest that those who are currently seeking to be en-

trusted with serving in Detroit government will offer anything different from the current political and economic turmoil that the city is faced with as a result of those in government today.

this titillating scandal, still, Pugh, as head of the largest municipal government in this region, owes Detroiters an answer. And running away is not the answer for a man who was elected to serve on the council as well as be its president.

A reorganization is in Bankole order if Detroit is going to make any headway in Thompson When former mayor the public interest. The Kwame Kilpatrick’s scanpresent challenges are crippling dals began to unravel, he too the city politically as well as fi- disappeared from public sight nancially. and later surfaced at a church to Let’s begin with the sweeping render a televised apology for his scandal of Detroit City Council misdeeds. President Charles Pugh disappearing from public sight and now under a police investigation, following allegations of inappropriate relationship with a teen. Without knowing much detail in

and the city, at a time when it is facing tough choices on reform, should not be a victim to the personal choices of its leaders. Added to the Pugh conundrum is the resignation of his deputy president on the council, Gary Brown, who grabbed a $225,000 job on the 11th floor of the Coleman Young Municipal Building working as top deputy for emergency manager Kevyn Orr.

When the going gets tough Detroit expects its leaders to face the difficult choices head-on, not to go into hiding.

In this unexplained and yet to be defined position, Brown will serve as chief compliance officer for the city, leaving a city council that is already in a political transfix, further rendering the legislative body toothless even though it’s mandated to take care of much day-to-day business.

Whatever is driving the scandal is Pugh’s personal issue

See DETROIT page A-4

We should not have a mayor by default and any serious candidate worth his or her salt ❝shouldn’t accept the tag of being a “mayor by default,” because what makes this process healthy and productive is creating a space where there is genuine competition and we raise the stakes in the election.

County prosecutor, AG working to process untested rape kits

John Legend: Here to stay (Page D-1) John Legend is among those recording artists whose skills, track record and tenacity make it clear that they are in this business for the long haul. “I want to move people,” said Legend, whose real name is John Roger Stephens.

By Patrick Keating CHRONICLE STAFF WRITER

Thanks to $4 million provided to the Michigan State Police Crime Lab, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy is better equipped to process thousands of untested rape kits found back in 2009.

Roy S. Roberts – Andre Smith photo

DPS manager Roberts speaks out

By Donald James SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Roy S. Roberts, emergency manager for Detroit Public Schools (DPS) and former high-level executive for General Motors, is not one for theatrics. During a recent editorial meeting at the office of the Michigan Chronicle, Roberts calmly discussed DPS’ strategic plans for the upcoming school year and beyond. “We (DPS’ strategic planning team) firmly believe that we have to make bold moves and make them now,” Roberts said. “We believe that this is the most critical time in the history of Detroit

$1.00

See ROBERTS page A-4

Rape kits cost about $1,550 to analyze.

11,300 rape kits were discovered in August 2009, when Worthy received a communication from one of her assistant prosecutors, who had been on a tour of a Detroit Police property storage facility with the Michigan State Police, which had as- Kym Worthy sumed the duties of the Detroit Police Crime Lab. “That was the first time anyone in my office knew about those untested, ignored, stockpiled rape kits,” Worthy said. Some of the kits date back a quarter century. Asked how likely is it that present or future rape survivors won’t bother to have a rape kit done, in the belief that it’d be a waste of time because these kits sat untouched, Worthy said she’s hoping to show, via various interviews she’s given,

that her office is trying everything it can to correct the problem. She also said most of the funds have been raised to test these rape kits. “We are vigorously prosecuting any of the DNA hits we get as a result of the testing,” she said. “I’m hoping that makes more people come forward.” She added that the prosecutor’s office has been taking the mat­ter seriously from the moment it learned about these untested rape kits. “Rape is already among the lowest reported crimes, the lowest crime where arrests are made, and very hard to proseBill Schuette cute,” Worth said. “So I’m hoping now, with the attention this is getting and the work we’ve been doing on this for the last four years, that will embolden rape victims to come forward, more than before.” Asked how much potential damage there could be in terms of people who’d been wrongly convicted filing lawsuits or other forms of redress, Worthy said it’s a possibility, but added that her office hasn’t come across such cases as yet.

See RAPE

KITS page A-4


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