SDV&V Vol. 62 No. 28 | Thursday, July 14, 2022

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Vol. 62 No. 28

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Thursday, July 14, 2022

www.sdvoice.info

Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 62 Years

Incidents of Hate Crimes Against Blacks Highest in California By Antonio‌ ‌Ray‌ ‌Harvey California‌ ‌Black‌ ‌Media‌ A report released by the California Department of Justice (DOJ) last month revealed that hate crimes targeting Black people in the state “remain the most prevalent” violations regarding a recent increase in violence motivated by race. On June 28, State Attorney General Rob Bonta hosted a press conference announcing the DOJ’s release of the 2021 Hate Crime in California

Photo: Courtesy of CBM

BLUE HEART FOUNDATION CONTINUES TO SERVE WITH

‘A March for Black Boys’

Report (HCCR). The report presents hate crime statistics such as the number of hate crime events, hate crime offenses, hate crimes victims, and hate crimes suspects. California law defines a hate crime as a criminal act committed in whole or in part because of a victim’s actual or perceived disability, gender, nationality, race or ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, or association with someone with one or more of these actual or perceived characteristics.

PUBLIC HEALTH ORDER & COVID-19 UPDATES

Covid-19 12,679

19,304

18,298

92102

92105

92113

21,680

15,975

10,478

92114

92115

92139

SOURCE: County of San Diego a/o 7/7/2022

AMBER THOMAS REALIZES HER DREAM - SEE PAGE 9

PASTOR STEWART’S BOOK SIGNING - SEE PAGE 11

SEEING STARS WITH NASA’S GREG ROBINSON - SEE PAGE 6

SWEARING IN CEREMONY By Voice & Viewpoint Staff

By Voice & Viewpoint Staff The well-known and beloved local organization, The Blue Heart Foundation, put San Diego’s young, at-risk males front and center this past weekend with their “A March for Black Boys”. The event began at 1pm Saturday, July 10 at the Jackie Robinson YMCA and culminated at the foundation’s headquarters on El Cedro Ct., in San Diego. It was designed to bring awareness to the issues affecting young AfricanAmerican males in San Diego County, in collaboration with local organizations that included Paving Great Futures and Hip-Hop 5K.

City Attorney at the City of National City, Charles E. Bell Jr., 40, who was unanimously voted in by City Council as a San Diego Superior Court Judge, was officially sworn in on June 30, 2022. He, along with four other jurists, were appointed by Governor Gavin Newsom to fill the seats of retired judges. Bell fills the vacant seat of Judge Richard E. L. Strauss, due to Strauss retiring.

CALIFORNIANS TO VOTE ON

7 Ballot Measures This November

See BELL page 2

By Adam Beam Associated Press

The well-known and beloved local organization, The Blue Heart Foundation, put San Diego’s young, at-risk males front and center this past weekend with their “A March for Black Boys”. The event began at 1pm Saturday, July 10 at the Jackie Robinson YMCA and culminated at the foundation’s headquarters on El Cedro Ct., in San Diego. It was designed to bring awareness to the issues affecting young AfricanAmerican males in San Diego County, in collaboration with local organizations that included Paving Great Futures and Hip-Hop 5K. See MARCH page 10

See HATE page 2

PUBLISHER’S EDITORIAL - SEE PAGE 3

Charles E. Bell, Jr.

The ‘March for Black Boys’ began on Saturday, July 10, 2022, in front of the Jackie Robinson YMCA. Photos by Mike Norris

“Today’s report undeniably shows that the epidemic of hate we saw spurred on during the pandemic remains a clear and present threat,” Bonta stated. “In fact, reported hate crime has reached a level we haven’t seen in California since the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11.

The Social Crisis, Black Folks and the economy

SEE PAGE 12

cases in southeast

Aggressions toward the Black community increased 12.5% from 456 incidents in 2020 to 513 in 2021.

Photo: Drei Kubik

California voters will weigh in on seven ballot measures this fall, the fewest to appear on a statewide general election ballot since 2014. Thursday, June 30, was the deadline to qualify measures for the November ballot. Secretary of State Shirley Weber confirmed that seven questions will appear in November. Six are ballot initiatives that supporters gathered enough signatures to place before Judge Charles E. Bell poses with family and friends after taking his oath of office Photo: Via Espe Barocio on Facebook.

See BALLOT page 2

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SDV&V Vol. 62 No. 28 | Thursday, July 14, 2022 by SD Voice & Viewpoint - Issuu