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August 31 - September 6, 2023
VOL. 72, No. 35
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Tennessee lawmakers adjourn tumultuous session spurred by school shooting by Kimberlee Kruesi and Jonathan Mattise
Varied rules restrict public voices in statehouses Perspective Page 4
NASHVILLE –Tennessee lawmakers on Tuesday abruptly ended a special session initially touted to improve public safety in the wake of a deadly elementary school shooting, but it quickly unraveled into chaos over the past week as the GOP-dominant Statehouse refused to take up
gun control measures and instead spent most of the time ensnared in political infighting. In a particularly heated moment, Republican House Speaker Cameron Sexton and Democratic Rep. Justin Pearson appeared to have a brief physical interaction where both ac-
Associated Press
cused each other of shoving moments after the House adjourned. Ultimately, lawmakers could only agree to pass four bills, which encourage but don’t require using safe gun storage devices; require an annual human trafficking report; add the governor’s existing order on background checks into state law; and increase funding for mental health and higher education safety initiatives. Only a few gun control measures fell within the session’s narrow parameters, and
Democratic Reps. Justin Jones of Nashville and Justin Pearson of Memphis speak with supporters and reporters after adjournment. (Photo: Marta W. Aldrich / Chalkbeat) those were rejected without debate. Tuesday’s dustup was captured on video by reporters, showing Sexton departing as Pearson approached the
speaker’s dais holding a sign calling for gun control. The two made con-
SEE SESSION ON PAGE 9
County Commissioners give first-reading approval to measures to curb over-policing by James Coleman
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
WLOK Radio President Art Gilliam said it is “vitally important to our community for Black businesses to be able to have continuity over the years.” (Photo: Tyrone P. Easley/The New Tri-State Defender Archives)
WLOK’s Art Gilliam shares the journey that led to the Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame by Karanja A. Ajanaku kajanaku@tsdmemphis.com
In July, Art Gilliam was inducted into the Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame … just outside of Nashville in Columbia, Tenn. He was excited, yet he took it in matter-of-factly. “In the sense that anything that I can do that actually helps project the image of what we do as far as WLOK is concerned, is always good,” Gilliam said in an interview with The New Tri-State Defender before the awards ceremony. “And of course from the
standpoint of we put in a lot of years in radio, so it’s nice to be recognized…. “The fact is though, that no one person is really getting into a hall of fame by themselves. … I’m happy for our whole organization more so than just for me personally. It’s remembrance time for Gilliam, 80, and WLOK. The 2023 WLOK Stone Soul Picnic will be Saturday, September 2, from noon to 7 p.m. at the Memphis Music Room. It is a free event with a significant lineup of national and regional artists. Gilliam agreed to travel memory lane during a conversation in WLOK’s Down-
town office. His first remembrance of radio was “me, mom and dad, grandma sitting around the radio. … This was before there was television. … It was one of those old-fashioned radios … and we were listening to Joe Lewis fight.” He was about nine. The family lived in Nashville. Radio was a family magnet. Gilliam’s mother was a school teacher from Nashville and had attended Tennessee State University before Columbia University in New York. She graduated and returned to
SEE GILLIAM ON PAGE 2
Under pressure from on-hand activists, Shelby County Commissioners on Monday approved three work-in-progress ordinances in their first reading to curb over-policing by Shelby County Sheriff Office’s deputies. However, the ordinances to ban specialized units, end pretextual traffic stops and create a data collection system on police interactions following traffic stops all fell short of the seven votes that will be needed to pass in their third and final reading. A ban on task forces and specialized units – such as the Memphis Police Department unit that stopped motorist Tyre Nichols on the night of his death – has been the most difficult to navigate. “I echo the sentiments of those who have come down to speak today. I just ask that we open our minds to this particular ordinance, which I know probably has the most opposition,” said sponsor Britney Thornton. “I think that whenever we get the opportunity to contemplate a better use of our operation, then it’s incumbent upon us to do so.” The ordinance would also end participation in multi-jurisdictional and multi-agency task forces. The SCSO currently cooperates with the MPD in several ongoing operations. Conversations with Shelby County Sheriff Floyd Bonner are ongoing. A follow up meeting has been scheduled before the second reading. One commissioner warned the resolution could also make it impossible for some deputies – such as undercover narcotics officers – to perform their jobs. “I’m 74-years old. I have experienced all of this. I have experienced walking while Black; talking while Black; driving while Black; living and breathing while Black. I have
SEE COUNTY ON PAGE 2
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