Get TSD news, online anytime at TSDMemphis.com
September 15 - 21, 2022
VOL. 71, No. 37
www.tsdmemphis.com
$1.00
A view of Ezekiel Kelly as ‘unloved, unhelped, unseen’ Arun Gandhi, grandson of India’s iconic leader of nonviolent resistance, will share effective principles in dialing back gun violence and other aggressions during talks in Memphis. (Courtesy photo)
Arun Gandhi: why is nonviolence so difficult to accept Gandhi’s grandson to give Memphis talks by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library will be the setting for a provocative discussion on promoting nonviolence and civility on Thursday, Sept. 15. The grandson of India’s iconic leader of nonviolent resistance, Mahatma Gandhi, is the featured speaker in two sessions, scheduled at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., which are free and open to the public. Arun Gandhi, founder of the M.K. Gandhi Institute in Rochester, New York, will share effective principles in dialing back gun violence and other aggressions, according to the prominent activist. In a telephone interview Tuesday (Sept. 13), Gandhi said, “Peace is not the absence of war. ‘It is a virtue, a state of mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice,’ Spinoza, the philosopher said centuries ago. “Nonviolence is shaped by principles that guide our action while we work for change. Our challenge is how do we begin to effectively implement those principles.” Gandhi’s appearance comes after Memphis experiences one of the deadliest periods of 2022 with the kidnapping and murder of Eliza Fletcher, the slaying of Rev. Autura Eason-Williams during a carjacking, the random deadly shooting rampage that left three dead and three wounded, and scores of other homicides and shootings in Memphis this year. Gandhi said both activists and ordinary citizens who want to see Memphis take on a new direction in reducing the level of violence and lawlessness are invited to attend. Community leaders and groups come to the institute for workshops and other activities on how to achieve and sustain nonviolence in their communities.
SEE GANDHI ON PAGE 2
Torrey Bates, executive director of For the Kingdom conference center and retreat, has been helping Destine Christian process the murderous rampage for which Ezekiel Kelly, an ex-boyfriend she has known for years, is being held accountable. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender)
Ex-girlfriend, youth advocate add to picture of accused mass murderer by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Was there any way to know that a dam was about to break and that Ezekiel Kelly was about to implode? “Yes,” says an ex-girlfriend and a youth advocate, who is helping her process the resulting shooting and carjacking rampage that left three dead, three others injured, and much of Memphis reeling for several hours on Sept. 7 as police tried to capture the shooter.
“Zeek felt like he had no one,” said ex-girlfriend Destine Christian, who met Kelly at Coleman Elementary School in Raleigh when they were in the fifth grade. They have been romantically linked “on and off” over the years, she said. “He was close to his mother, but other than that, there was no one. Three years of drugs, loneliness, and depression made him feel unloved, unhelped, unseen. “I understand why it happened, but it still made me very sad.” Christian’s voice trailed off into a low,
unsteady whisper. She swallowed as tears streaked her face. Torrey Bates, executive director of For the Kingdom conference center and retreat, said, “Children in Raleigh are raised in a culture of death. …. There was a shootout across from Coleman Elementary School last week, and nobody even called the cops. “I see young boys 13-14, running out the house with AKs almost as big as they are, jumping into cars. It is a culture of death.” Bates slowly shook his head. “I was shot in December 2019, myself,” said Bates. “I was hit in the face, and there is still a bullet in my neck. A total of 16 bullets struck my vehicle.
SEE KELLY ON PAGE 2
Crime concerns weigh heavy on Council’s law enforcement committee agenda by James Coleman
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Capping off a brainstorming session for solutions to violent crime, Memphis City Council members adopted a resolution asking the Tennessee Highway Patrol and Shelby County Sheriff’s Office to direct additional state troopers to supplement the city’s police force. The request, which came during the council’s Tuesday (Sept. 13)
meeting, calls for at least 50 officers for six weeks or more. The additional officers would supplement the local force by taking over intersection patrols, which would allow for increased neighborhood surveillance. It follows a week of violence that left the city searching for answers to a growing violent crime problem, especially youth offenders. The resolution was sponsored by Rhonda Logan, who chairs the council’s Public Safety and Homeland
Security Committee. Council members were joined by Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn “C.J.” Davis, who delivered an update on the city’s crime problem and police force staffing numbers. Council members were told the overall crime rate saw the biggest increases in auto thefts, thefts from autos, aggravated assaults, burglaries, and shoplifting, with many of the vehicle thefts/burglaries committed by teens 15-19 years old.
However, it was the recent spree of killings and unrelated kidnapping and murder that held members’ focus. “Wednesday night (Sept. 7) was nothing short of a terrorist attack and, as I am fond of saying, only the police were chasing this guy, because we’re not professionally trained. “It was you guys (police officers)
SEE CRIME ON PAGE 9
Get TSD News, announcements and special promotions in your email! visit TSDMemphis.com to sign up, or scan the code at right!