AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY MONTH See Calendar of Events on Page 14
VOL. 64, No. 5
SPECIAL REPORT
Record-level of criminal exonerations
February 12 - 18, 2015
NNPA News Service
WASHINGTON – African-American criminal defendants accounted for roughly 46 percent of the 125 known exonerations in 2014, the highest annual number of exonerations recorded since 1989, according to a national registry that tracks wrongful convictions. A recent report by The National Registry of Exonerations shows that the next highest total for exonerations was 88 recorded in 2012 and 87 in 2013. Researchers said prosecutors have increasingly taken a harder look at flawed cases, which contributed to the jump in exonerations. The powerful role that prosecutors play in the criminal justice system has increasingly drawn sharp public criticism following grand jury proceedings involving the highly publicized deaths of unarmed African-American men at the hands of white police officers. In the chokehold death of Eric Garner in Staten Island, N.Y. and the shooting deaths of John Crawford in Beavercreek, Ohio and teenager Michael Brown Jr. in Ferguson, Mo., grand juries chose not to indict police officers. Atty. Gen. Eric Holder has called for reform in sentencing practices and urged federal prosecutors to exercise greater discretion in non-violent drug cases. Researchers with the exonerations registry reported 716 exonerations of African-American criminal defendants, compared to 624 whites through February 6, 2015. That includes 330 exonerations for homicides, 167 for sexual assaults and another 179 for other crimes including drug crimes. African Americans accounted for roughly 46 percent of the known exonerations in 2014. The number of African-American criminal defendants exonerated in 2013 accounted for 47 percent of known cases, compared to 40 percent for whites. In a press release about the report, Samuel Gross, a law professor at the University of Michigan and the editor of the National Registry of Exonerations, said that the big story is that more prosecutors are working hard to identify and investigate claims of innocence. The report credited the rise of conviction integrity units (CIU), “longterm operations that work to prevent, to identify and to remedy false convictions” for contributing to an increase in criminal exonerations. “There were 49 CIU exonerations in 2014, including 10 murder exonerations in Brooklyn, and 29 of the 33 Harris County (Texas) drug-crime SEE EXONERATIONS ON PAGE 3
MEMPHIS WEEKEND
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
H-40o - L-24o
Partly Cloudy
REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS
H-55o - L-21o
Mostly Sunny
SUNDAY
H-33o - L-26o
Partly Cloudy
Friday Saturday Sunday H-47 L-26 H-64 L-24 H-36 L-29 H-34 L-20 H-44 L-12 H-29 L-17 H-53 L-35 H-65 L-31 H-49 L-31
75 Cents
Ring the FAFSA alarm
by Bernal E. Smith II besmith@tsdmemphis.com
Are prosecutors working harder on claims of innocence? by Freddie Allen
www.tsdmemphis.com
Bernal E. Smith II
In May of 2014 Gov. Bill Haslam signed into law the TN Promise bill guaranteeing every graduating senior in Tennessee an OPPORTUNITY to receive a free education (two year associate degree programs) at community colleges across
the state. As the Feb. 15, 2015 deadline for high school seniors to complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) swiftly approaches the stakes are significantly higher this year across the state of Tennessee and particularly in Shelby County. As of data published on Feb. 6th, 4,137 Shelby County high school seniors or 64 percent of the 6,463 seniors that completed the TN Promise application in November have not completed their FAFSA application. That means they potentially are for-
A ‘Roots’ journey delayed
$42 million deadline looms
With the Feb. 15 deadline looming for high school seniors to complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), its time to turn thumbs up on an all-out push to drive parents and guardians into action to get applications in under the wire. feiting five semesters of college paid for by the state. According to the Southwest Tennessee Community College website,
the average cost of tuition and fees per semester for a full time in-state student (12 credit hours) is approximately $2,000. Doing the math, five
COMMENTARY
Still on track to hit single digits by the middle of the year by Freddie Allen NNPA News Service
by Kelvin Cowans
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
(“Roots,” the novel written by the late Alex Haley and published in 1976, chronicles the life and family tree of West African Kunta Kinte, who was captured and forced into slavery in America in the late 1700’s. “Roots” the miniseries received 37 Emmy nominations and won 9.)
Staxtacular 2015... The students of Stax Academy put on a noteworthy performance amid the musical heritage of the Stax Museum and the crowd that joined a host of Memphis Grizzlies stars for the annual benefit. Story and more photos on Community, page 15. (Photo: Warren Roseborough)
SEE FAFSA ON PAGE 2
African-American unemployment dips to 10.3 percent
Never too late to learn who you are
When “Roots” debuted on national television in 1977 I was two years old. I recall reruns being featured as I reached the ages of 10, 11 and 12. More so than anything, I can remember my mother turning it off. Back in those days, when a parent said “No,” that was it. And my mother was dead-set against us watching “Roots.” My teenage years unfolded in the late ’80’s and early ’90’s and at that point I considered staying in the house to do anything other than play video games akin to punishment, or even a sin. Flash forward to 2015
semesters at $2,000 each is $10,000 per student. A little more math: 4,137 students times that $10,000 yields a potential real loss to the Memphis and Shelby County class of 2015 of $41,370,000. (The state portion of the tuition is offset by other grants, scholarships and funds students might receive but the net impact is the same – students receive a free education mostly paid for by the State of Tennessee.) Nearly $42 million left on the table never to be retrieved, according to the law, and leaving students with much more costly paths to higher learning. This one opportunity represents a significant multi-faceted initiative with potential positive impact in the areas of workforce development, economic development, and crime reduction. If nearly 6,000 seniors are headed to college next year and each subsequent year, the net impact is significantly larger than even the $42 million. According to the law (HB2491/ SB2471), if the FAFSA application is not completed by the deadline of Feb. 15, 2015, these students will not have a second opportunity to apply. They
A post-“Roots” image of author and freelance journalist Kelvin Cowans. (Courtesy photo). and there I was shopping in Target. On a shelf before me was “Roots” on DVD, the 30-year anniversary collection. I swiped it up like the last piece of cake at a birthday party. No, Momma couldn’t stop me
now! What I didn’t anticipate – and now somewhat shamefully admit – is that when “Roots” got through with me I was more frustrated with myself SEE ROOTS ON PAGE 2
WA S H I N G TON – The African-American unemployment rate fell slightly from 10.4 percent in December to 10.3 percent in January and is still on track to hit single digits by the middle of Valerie R. the year. Wilson Last month, Valerie Wilson, the director of the Program on Race, Ethnicity, and the Economy for the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), a nonpartisan think tank focused on low- and middle-income workers, made the prediction that the African-American jobless rate would fall below 10 percent, adding that the economy is recovering gradually and lawmakers shouldn’t do anything that would stall that progress. Wilson warned that more spending cuts or raising interest rates could slow down the economy. “If there are no signs of inflationary pressures, I don’t see the rush to do it,” said Wilson. Economists attributed the slight uptick in the national unemployment rate, from 5.6 percent in December to 5.7 percent in January, to workers feeling more confident about their job prospects and rejoining the labor force. With revisions to the number of jobs added in November and December, the Labor Department reported that more than 1 million jobs were added to the United States economy over the past three months, the best 3-month average since 1997. Following the national trend, the white unemployment rate rose from 4.8 percent in December to 4.9 percent in January and the labor force participation rate, the share of workers who are employed or currently looking for jobs, also increased from 59.8 percent to 60.1 percent. Even though the African-American labor force participation rate fell from 61.3 in December to 61 percent in January, it still remains SEE UNEMPLOYMENT ON PAGE 3