January 28, 2016

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Building a musical dynasty in the Midwest Tony Thompson looks to create ‘Motown of St. Louis’ with TBeats

2015 Newspaper of the Year!

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St. LouiS AmericAn The

CAC Audited JAN. 28 – FEB. 3, 2016

Vol. 86 No. 43 COMPLIMENTARY

stlamerican.com

Sharonica Hardin named UCity super Sharonica Hardin will be the new superintendent for the University City School District beginning July 1.

Leaving assistant superintendent position at Ritenour By Rebecca Rivas Of The St. Louis American Sharonica Hardin has been selected as the next superintendent for the University City School District. Since 2012, Hardin has served as assistant superintendent for human resources and leadership development for the Ritenour School District. “Her history of leadership and community service make her a wonderful next leader for our district,” Lisa Brenner, Board of Education president, said of Hardin.

n “I believe in education equity for all students, regardless of their zip codes.” – Sharonica Hardin

The Board of Education announced Hardin as Pruitt’s replacement on Wednesday, January 27, following an eight-month search process that culminated last week with a Ritenour

site visit. The board extended a contract that is expected to be approved at the next board meeting. Her salary will not be disclosed until the hiring is approved. Hardin will assume her duties July 1. Joylynn Pruitt, who served nine years as superintendent and 16 total years in the district, is retiring at the end of the school year. “It’s a very humbling experience,” Hardin told The St. Louis American. “There were many great candidates. I am looking forward to working with the entire community to make

See HARDIN, A7 Photo by Wiley Price

Flanery charged with DWI STL cop who killed Myers had cocaine and alcohol in system when he fled accident By Rebecca Rivas Of The St. Louis American

Photo by Wiley Price

Tiffany leaving Jennings Jennings Superintendent Tiffany Anderson talked with Mi’El Golden, a student at Jennings Junior High School, and Patricia Golden, a student at Jennings Senior High School, before school on Wednesday, January 27. She has accepted a position as superintendent of Topeka (Kansas) Public Schools, effective July 1, so will be leaving Jennings after this semester.

Jennings moves to impeach mayor Jennings Mayor Yolonda Fountain Henderson presided over a peaceful City Council meeting on Monday, January 25 – until the council voted to contract with attorneys to handle impeachment proceedings against her.

Council contracts with attorneys to investigate Yolonda Fountain Henderson By Chris King Of The St. Louis American “It’s peaceful,” Jennings Councilman Rodney Epps said at the beginning of the City Council meeting on Monday, January 25. “We haven’t been peaceful in a long time.” The council has been riven by controversy since newly elected Mayor Yolonda Fountain Henderson filed suit against every council member and department head last March, in a foiled bid to assume all

hiring and firing power for the city. The public portion of the meeting on Monday stayed peaceful, but only because council members moved behind closed doors into executive session to take up the meeting’s most controversial piece of business: whether or not to move forward with impeachment proceedings against the mayor. They voted 7-1 to do just that, City Clerk Cheryl Balke confirmed on Tuesday. Councilwoman

Jason Flanery – the St. Louis city police officer who killed VonDerrit Myers Jr. – was high on cocaine as well as drunk when he smashed his police vehicle into a parked car at 6:17 a.m. on December 19, according to Missouri State Highway lab results released on January 27. Two days earlier, on January Jason 25, Circuit Attorney Jennifer Flanery’s Joyce charged Flanery with two booking misdemeanors – Driving While photo Intoxicated (DWI) and leaving the scene of an accident – after receiving a lab report on Flanery’s Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC). Though his blood was sampled hours after the accident, he had a BAC reading of .117, See FLANERY, A7

Clemons will be retried for murder Also tried for rape and robbery By Chris King Of The St. Louis American Reginald Clemons will stand trial again for 1991 murders of Julie Kerry and Robin Kerry, and also faces charges of forcible rape and firstdegree robbery in the Chain of Rocks Bridge case, St. Louis Circuit Attorney Jennifer M. Joyce announced on Monday, January 25. The case will remain a death penalty case as originally filed. In a 1993 jury trial, Clemons was convicted of first-degree murder for the deaths of the Kerry sisters. He was charged with rape, and though the rape charges were never tried, they were used See CLEMONS, A6

See JENNINGS, A6 Photo by Wiley Price


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