Vol. 59 No. 30 Thursday, July 25, 2019

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“People Without a Voice Vol. Vol.57 59No. No.3530 | | Thursday Thursday,August July 25, 31,2019 2017

..

IF YOU’RE POOR IN AMERICA, DEBTOR’S PRISON IS REAL

Cannot be Heard”

Serving San Serving Diego County’s San Diego African County’s & African African American & African Communities American 57 Years Communities 59 Years

DRIVING WHILE BLACK:

POLICE CONTINUE TO PROFILE, STOP AND SEARCH AFRICAN AMERICAN DRIVERS

By Stacy M. Brown

Two new recently published reports show that racial profiling – particularly “Driving While Black” – remains a crisis in America.

NNPA Newswire Correspondent

Despite a centuries-old Supreme Court ruling that outlawed the practice, debtor’s prison remains very much alive in America, experts told NNPA Newswire. Being poor is challenging enough, but some states, like Missouri, have continued to punish those of lesser means.

By Stacy M. Brown

A federal class-action suit claims thousands of those living in Missouri were jailed because they couldn’t pay off fines – essentially, a debtor’s prison and conundrum for the poor. Pro Publica reported that four years after the suit was filed, the plaintiffs are still waiting, and wondering if

Few tools are as coercive or as effective as the threat of incarceration, ACLU report authors said. Photo Credit: NNPA / iStock

NNPA Newswire Correspondent

The Louisville Courier Journal also found that black motorists in Kentucky were searched 12 percent of the time they were stopped, while white motorists were searched just 3.9 percent of the time.

A recent report issued by Missouri’s attorney general Eric Schmitt revealed that black drivers across that state are 91 percent more likely than white motorists to get pulled over by police. What’s more, the profiling usually takes place in the motorists’ own community, according to the attorney general’s report. The Missouri report arrives on the heels of one out of Kentucky where

Photo Credit: NNPA / iStock

See POOR page 2

See PROFILING page 2

CALIFORNIA HEALTH INSURANCE PREMIUMS:

HAMILTON COUNTY

LOWER INCREASES NEXT YEAR

JUVENILE JUDGE

TRACIE

New tax credits for middle-class enrollees

   

  ()   

   

See page 8

See page 9

See page 9

STUDY FINDS

LOCAL PROBATION PROGRAM LOWERS RECIDIVISM

HUNTER DRAGGED OFF TO JAIL — LITERALLY

By Yvette Urrea Moe Newswire Photo Credit: Kaiser Health News

By Barbara Feder Ostrov and Anna B. Ibarra Kaiser Health News

Premiums on California’s health insurance exchange will rise by an average of 0.8 percent next year, the lowest increase in the agency’s history, state officials announced this month. Covered California Executive Director Peter Lee credited two new statewide initiatives for keeping the proposed rate hikes low: Next year, California will be the first state in the country to offer state-funded tax credits to middle-class enrollees, which will be paid for in part by a new tax penalty on Californians who don’t have health insurance. “It shows what happens when a state says, ‘Protect the Affordable Care Act and build on it to make the system work for all Californians,’” Lee said. See INSURANCE page 2

County of San Diego San Diego County Probation youth completing Alternatives to Detention, a program designed to address their underlying needs, have fewer risks of reoffending, according to research recently released by the San Diego Association of Governments. “This study reaffirms San Diego County Probation’s commitment to this approach. Evidence has shown, and the results are clear here, that youth are more successful in rehabilitation when they can stay integrated in their families and communities,” said San Diego County Probation Chief Adolfo Gonzales. “Ninety-one percent of youth participating in Alternatives to Detention successfully completed the program with no new bookings during program participation.”

Photo Credit: Courtesy of

Additionally, Probation saved $10.3 million by significantly reducing the number of days in detention for an Alternatives to Detention youth group who received treatment as compared to a youth group who remained detained. The

Alternatives to Detention group spent 22 days in detention at a cost of $8.3 million as compared to 83 days for the comparison group at a cost of $18.7 million.

Former Hamilton County, Ohio Juvenile Judge Tracie Hunter. Daneil Fishel.

See PROBATION page 2

Photo Credit: NNPA / YouTube

By Stacy M. Brown NNPA Newswire Correspondent

Former Hamilton County, Ohio Juvenile Judge Tracie Hunter appeared overcome with emotion as she was literally dragged from a Cincinnati courtroom by a sheriff ’s deputy on Monday, July 22, after she was sentenced to six months in jail for charges stemming from a controversial conviction in 2014. See HUNTER page 7


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