10 3 2012

Page 1

VOL. 61, No. 39

September 27 - October 3, 2012

National registration push gets local boost Special to the Tri-State Defender

by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell “We are not only registering voters, but we are helping people obtain the photo IDs they need to vote. We will go to the polls. We will vote, and we will send our President back to the White House…” – State Rep. Johnnie Turner, Memphis (D- 85)

Off-duty police homicide morphs into robbery investigation and more Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong was stoic on Tuesday afternoon as Mayor AC Wharton Jr. detailed his resolve to assemble a select group of individuals with knowledge of law enforcement procedures and policies to review the department Armstrong commands. While reaffirming his confidence in Armstrong, Wharton told media gathered in his seventh-floor conference room that, “I’m not passing judgment, but obviously something isn’t working correctly. It’s not a matter of frustration, it’s just an objective statement.” The prompt for the statement and the gathering was the fatal shooting Monday evening of a 15 year old – later identified as Justin Thompson – by an off-duty police officer, later identified as Terrance Shaw, who has been on the force since November 2006. About 24 hours later, Wharton’s office dispatched a release that said Shaw was “the apparent victim of a robbery attempt” that concluded with Thompson dead. It had already been revealed that The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation had been asked to investigate. Wednesday’s announcement went a step further, saying that the TBI also

would be delving into whether there was any prior communications between Shaw and Thompson. By the time We d n e s d a y ’s written announcement from the mayor’s office was sent out, talk Justin already was Thompson spreading about Wharton being dissatisfied with the police department, and in some quarters, that he was unhappy with Armstrong. Wharton’s office sought to put such talk and the rumors to rest. “I have every confidence in Director Toney Armstrong to keep our streets safe, to continue decreasing crime rates in Memphis, and to get the job done,” Wharton said in the release. “With 23 years on the force, he is a proven and exceptional leader and has my full support.” It was a reiteration of sorts of what Wharton actually had said in the Tuesday session. At that time, Wharton pointed out that he had been prompted to action by the behavior of a handful of inappropriately acting officers, adding, “I have full confidence in director Armstrong. That is why he is here. The bringing of the TBI (to investigate Monday’s fatal shooting) oc-

Something happened around the nation on Tuesday that touched millions of Americans in neighborhoods and across college campuses. An estimated 1,100 civil rights organizations, churches, AfricanAmerican fraternities and sororities, civic clubs, elected officials, and private citizens pushed back against what many see as a tide of “voter suppression.” “Tuesday (Sept. 25) was National Voter Registration Day in America,” said Dr. L. LaSimba Gray, pastor of New Sardis Baptist Church. “But we didn’t just start Tuesday. Pastors all across this country held ‘Voter Registration Sunday’ last week. We’re coming out in record numbers to the polls. We are not going to take this new poll tax lying down. We’re pushing back.” Gray has been a prominent figure in the local Pastors United for Obama initiative, in conjunction with Congressman Steve Cohen (DMemphis). A recent press confer-

ence signaled the group’s resolve to counter the effects of a national wave of stricter voter ID laws. It also came as a Memphis-based group of African-American ministers and pastors continued to urge their congregations to be prepared to sit-out the election because of President Obama’s support of same-sex marriages. On Tuesday, Memphians participating in the National Voter Registration Day move, did more than go door-to-door to register voters. They were organizing car pools and signing up volunteers who will transport people to the polls as well as help eligible voters obtain the required identification. “I retired from full-time pasturing, but I’ve had to come out of retirement,” said Dr. James L. Netters, pastor emeritus of Mt. Vernon Baptist Church-Westwood and head of the Pastors United for Obama effort. “It’s as if some people are trying to reverse the tide of progress we made during the ’60s. But we’re going to fight back, and we won’t be stopped. Voting is our constitutional right, and we will be out at the polls in early voting and on Election Day in November.” Since the 2010 mid-term elections, 31 states have passed new, restrictive voting laws sponsored by SEE VOTE ON PAGE 3

Police tape remained at the scene of the shooting of 15year-old Justin Thompson at 4740 Wooddale.

curred without any urging or directive from me.” Armstrong made that move. A day later, Wharton said he was standing by the questions he raised about police department procedures. In raising those questions, he had let it be known that he intended to root out substandard behavior throughout the whole complement of city employees, specifically naming code enforcement SEE REVIEW ON PAGE 6

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

by Wiley Henry

Images such as this one are surfacing as the Owen College History Committee moves forward in its mission to research and write the history of Owen College (1954-68) in anticipation of the 60th anniversary of the historic institutionʼs founding. Here President Charles L. Dinkins and his three sons meet the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at the National Baptist Convention in Denver in 1962. See related story, photos on page 2. (Courtesy photo)

- INSIDE -

• Gambian dissidents freed after Jesse Jackson’s appeal. See Nation, page 5.

Dr. Steven Charles, founder and CEO of the worldʼs foremost Charles Retina Institute, has performed five vitreoretinal surgeries on 8-year-old Gino LaVon Hall Jr.ʼs left eye, the first when he was 16 months old. Gino has lost sight in that eye, but Dr. Charles is examining the right eye to make sure that one hasnʼt started degenerating. (Photo by Wiley Henry)

cific and has nothing to do with stress or any other disease,” said Charles, one of the world’s leading vitreoretinal surgeons, who has performed

No bullies at the polls. See Opinion, page 4.

Remembering Owen College

Blinding disease can’t stop 8 year old’s quest to achieve

When a toddler reaches the age of 16 months, his or her parents expect their little bundle of joy to be playful, mobile, energetic and demanding. But no one would expect that precious moment to be over-shadowed by a blinding disease that would become problematic over time. Such was the case when Alicia Hall discovered that her son Gino LaVon Hall Jr.’s left eye had begun shifting asymmetrically in relation to his right eye. So she took him immediately to see an ophthalmologist at Southern College of Optometry. “They thought he had a parasite in his eye,” she said. Wondering what had infested her son’s eye, Hall was given a referral to take Gino to see the world renowned Dr. Steven Charles, founder and CEO of the Charles Retina Institute, the world’s foremost retinal clinics. Dr. Charles discovered the problem immediately: Juvenile X-Linked Retinoschisis. “The disease only affects males. Half the boys get it in families if the mother is the carrier. It’s gender spe-

75 Cents

Signed up, fired up and ready to vote!

Mayor AC Wharton Jr. on Wednesday said his support for Police Director Toney Armstrong has not wavered. The two appeared together Tuesday at a press conference in which Wharton detailed plans for a review of MPD policies and procedures. (Photo by Karanja A. Ajanaku)

by Karanja A. Ajanaku

www.tsdmemphis.com

more than 30,000 surgeries, operated in 25 countries, lectured in 50, auSEE SIGHT ON PAGE 6

• Nielsen reports on the African-American consumer. See pages 7–9. • Memphis: 2015 & the new Hattiloo Theatre. See Entertainment, page 12. • Geeter pilots first ‘Samsung Smart School’ in the nation. See Community, page 16.

MEMPHIS WEEKEND

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

H -84o - L-63o H-75o - L-56o H-79o - L-56o Scat . T-St orms Scat. T-Storms Partl y Cl ou dy REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS

Friday H-87 L-66 H-81 L-62 H-90 L-66

Saturday H-75 L-60 H-75 L-54 H-83 L-64

Sunday H-80 L-57 H-78 L-57 H-78 L-59


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