ReportWire

Tag: urban news

  • Feb 2026: A Black History Moment From ClevelandUrbanNews.Com: Barack Obama is the first Black President, and Michelle Obama the country’s first Black first lady..Kamala Harris is the first Black vice president of America…

    [ad_1]

    By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, associate publisher. Coleman is a Black Cleveland activist, community organizer and digital and social media journalist who trained at the Call and Post Newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio for 17 years. Tel: (216) 659-0473 Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com

    CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM-CLEVELAND, Ohio- February 2026 is Black History Month, so let’s talk a little bit about Black history. Do we really know the true history of the plight of African Americans and their African ancestors?

    We know without reservation that former president Barack Obama is the first Black president of the United States of America and Michelle Obama is the first Black first lady. And we know that Former Vice President Kamala Harris is the first Black vice president in the U.S., Loyd Austin is the nation’s first Black secretary of defense and Ketanji Brown Jackson,a Biden appointee, is the first Black female U.S. Supreme Court justice.

    Closer to home, we recognize and remember some of the true greats that have touched the lives of Clevelanders. They include the late Carl B. Stokes, the first Black mayor of a major American city, whom Cleveland voters elected in 1967. Stokes later held the post under former president Bill Clinton of U.S. Ambassador to Seychelles and was a Cleveland Municipal Court judge. His older brother, the late Louis Stokes, was the first Black congressman from Ohio and led the 11th congressional district until his retirement in 1998.

    The late Stephanie Tubbs Jones, of Cleveland, was the first Black Cuyahoga County prosecutor. She followed Stokes to Congress and was the first Black woman in Congress from Ohio. But how much do we really know about Black history, particularly since eurocentric-curricula dominate teaching in elementary and secondary schools across the country, and in our institutions of higher learning?

    History reveals that Black people were enslaved initially by Black people in Africa and then sold to be brought to America for further slavery to work our fields and to perform other subservient measures. But remember that it was White men who brought our ancestors to America in chains.

    The aftermath of those chains still plagues the Black community in various ways, including through high unemployment, disproportionate incarcerations of Black men and women, and underfunded public school districts that serve majority Black and poor children, among other systemic problems.

    Blacks have long contributed to the greatness of America.

    The very first Black killed in a major American war was a Black man named Crispus Attucks, who died in the Revolutionary War. Hundreds of  Black soldiers were among the casualties at Bunker Hill.

    Blacks were at one time, if not even now in some situations, counted as 3/5 of a person. And while the slavery of Blacks is not mentioned in the Constitution, it is implicated under the fourth Amendment, which demands equal protection under the law for members of a protected class like Black people, and women.

    President Abraham Lincoln’s executive order of the Emancipation Proclamation did not start the American Civil War, but it help to end it. President Lincoln was a Republican, as was Civil Rights activist and historian Frederick Douglas.

    Jim Crow laws kept Blacks traditionally enslaved and the Ku Klux Klan was started in part because racist Whites wanted to keep former slaves in line and were angry that slavery had ended in the official sense. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s served to stop the Jim Crow laws. King gave his life to better America, and the national holiday named in his honor, a holiday celebrated on the third Monday in January of each year, is well deserved.

    The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed by Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson, with some saying he did so solely under threat of an override veto. Still, Johnson pushed the federal act  through Congress, with help from Dr. King, and a host of others including Civil Rights advocates and protesters, who were routinely beaten by police and brutally murdered.

    What will children in our schools be taught this month about Black history? Will it be that Michael Jackson was a great man? How do we define greatness? Do we forgive flaws? Yes we can. Pop singer Michael Jackson knew his craft, and was truly a great musician loved worldwide.

    Legendary singer Nat King Cole, boxing legend Muhammad Ali, poet Maya Angelou, Malcolm X, pop icon Michael Jackson, and the Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr. are also among Black notables, as are the following:

    -Native Clevelander Garrett A. Morgan invented the traffic light and gas mask

    -George Crum was the inventor of the potato chip

    -Frederick McKinley Jones invented the refrigeration unit for trucks

    -Dr. Patricia Bath invented laser eye surgery for cataract removal

    -Thomas L. Jennings invented dry-cleaning products

    -Hiram Revels (R-MS) was the first Black in Congress as a U.S. senator

    [ad_2]

    editor@clevelandurbannews.com (Kathy)

    Source link

  • As President Trump and VP JD Vance support ICE agent who murdered Renee Nicole Good, Ohio Congresswoman Emilia Sykes demands accountability and a full scale investigation…Protests are mounting…By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leade

    [ad_1]

    ICE shooting victim Renee Nicole Good

    Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com

    Staff article

     

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Representative Emilia Sykes (OH-13), an Akron Democrat and one of three Black women in Congress from Ohio, released a statement urging a full investigation and accountability after the tragic shooting death by ICE agents of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, MN.

    Good, 37 at her death, was a mother of three and was gunned down by ICE on Jan 7 with ICE claiming she tried to run over the agent with her car, a lie by all standards, sources have said. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance, both Republicans, defended the ICE agent at issue and have told national mainstream media that Good was the alleged perpetrator and not a victim, while Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, expressed outrage. Meanwhile, protests have erupted in Minneapolis and are spreading across the country.

    “The video of the shooting death of Renee Nicole Good is devastating to watch and raises questions about the use of deadly force,” said Rep. Sykes. “This event must be treated professionally and with a full investigation and complete transparency.”

    The congresswoman added that “as ICE agents have been deployed across the country, the administration must ensure they are adequately trained to de-escalate tense situations and maintain the safety of the American people. I will work with my colleagues to ensure accountability and safety.”

     

    Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most-read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former President Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO’S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

    [ad_2]

    editor@clevelandurbannews.com (Kathy)

    Source link

  • Ohio’s Secretary of State urges inactive voters to restore to active status by next month to vote in November….Publishes list of some 160,000 inactive voters registrations that require restoration.

    Ohio’s Secretary of State urges inactive voters to restore to active status by next month to vote in November….Publishes list of some 160,000 inactive voters registrations that require restoration.

    [ad_1]

    COLUMBUS, Ohio- Secretary of State Frank LaRose has announced that his office has published a list of 158,857 inactive voter registrations eligible for removal from the Statewide Voter Registration Database, marking the latest action in a series of election integrity initiatives that he says are being implemented ahead of the November presidential election.

    Ohio voters will also select who will be the U.S. senator in a contest between Republican nominee Bernie Moreno and incumbent Sherrod Brown, a seasoned Cleveland Democrat.

    According to LaRose, a Republican, any inactive registration scheduled for removal may be restored to active status prior to July 22, 2024, if the registrant takes one of the following actions:

    • Confirms or updates their voter registration, either online at VoteOhio.gov, by mail, or in-person; or

    • Engages in voter activity, such as updating or confirming their address with a board of elections or the BMV, submitting an absentee ballot application, or signing a candidate or issue petition that is verified by a board of elections.

    Democratic state lawmakers complain that the effort is nothing more than a scheme to purge voter rolls of possible Democratic voters, minorities and poor people, but LaRose says otherwise and that he is merely following the law.

    “These registrations are eligible for removal under the law because records show they’re no longer residing or active at the registered address for at least the last four consecutive years,” said LaRose in a statement. “This list has been provided to my office by the county boards of elections after meticulous work under bipartisan oversight. We’re at the last stage of the process, where anyone can now check the list and contact their board of elections if they want to reactivate their registration or if they believe their record might be listed in error.”

    During his administration, Secretary LaRose has taken steps to provide greater transparency to the voter registration list maintenance process, becoming the first chief elections officer in the nation to publish inactive registrations eligible for removal from the statewide database. The transparency effort, called Registration Readiness, is part of the office’s overall multi-step election integrity preparedness program being deployed in advance of the high-profile November presidential election, he says. The office previously announced an aggressive effort to identify and remove non-citizen registrations from the rolls, as well as launching routine but enhanced voter list maintenance protocols, including a pilot program designed to assist county boards of elections in better identifying registration discrepancies.

    According to Ohio’s county boards of elections, each of the registrations on the 2024 Registration Readiness List have been identified as either:

    1)     Voters who filled out a National Change of Address (NCOA) form indicating that they have permanently moved and are therefore no longer eligible to vote at their former address, or

    2)     Inactive registrations previously flagged for removal but not yet removed from a county’s voter registration system.

    Additionally, in accordance with state and federal law, each of these registrations has been inactive for a period of at least four years. County boards of elections have been instructed by LaRose to complete the removal process by July 22, 2024.

    Note: Each county board of elections was required to populate and submit this data to the Secretary of State’s Office pursuant to Directive 2024-06. As of May 19, 2024, this list contains data from all county boards of elections. The data is current as of the date it was generated and depicts the inactive registrations submitted to the Ohio Secretary of State’s office. If a registration is canceled due to inactivity and lack of confirmation over a four-year period, an Ohio voter may register again at any time. The Registration Readiness list will not be continuously updated to reflect renewed registrations; however, once a registration has been restored to active status by the county board of elections, the board will ensure it is not removed from the voter rolls.

    Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO’S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

     

     

    [ad_2]

    editor@clevelandurbannews.com (Kathy)

    Source link

  • Ohio Congresswoman Emilia Sykes votes against motion to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson brought by MAGA Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene…It failed as lawmakers booed Greene…By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader

    Ohio Congresswoman Emilia Sykes votes against motion to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson brought by MAGA Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene…It failed as lawmakers booed Greene…By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader

    [ad_1]

    Staff investigative article by Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader CLEVELAND, Ohio-Cuyahoga County juries that decide guilt or innocence in felony cases presided over by common pleas judges at the Justice Center in downtown Cleveland are often tainted against Blacks, according to the county public defender’s office that is now led by Chief Public Defender Cullen Sweeney, a wannabe common pleas judge who lost an election for judge in 2012. Sweeney replaced former chief county public defender Mark Stanton, who was hired  by the county despite representing  police unions in excessive force prosecutions of cops who arbitrarily shoot and kill Black people with impunity. Stanton retired after only a few years in the job with sources saying he tired of the red tape and rampant court and prosecutorial malfeasance. Assistant county public defender Roger Scott Hurley, also a wannabe judge who lost a bid for a municipal court seat, sought a change of venue in one case involving a maliciously prosecuted Black defendant targeted by White cops and then county prosecutor Tim McGinty. He wrote in the motion before Common Pleas Judge Nancy Margaret Russo that he later disregarded that his Black client would be the victim of jury tampering. The motion is telling with Hurley saying that the Cuyahoga County Jury Commission of the Common Pleas Court taints jury pools and victimizes Black defendants, and that its actions and those of county prosecutors “cast a pall on every corner of court proceedings.” Such motion in the case is coupled with a companion motion for a special prosecutor in place of County Prosecutor Mike O’Malley. It says that O’Malley’s office perpetuates retaliation against Blacks targeted by  police and former county prosecutor TIm McGinty, whom he ousted from office via an election in 2016 with the support of activists, Black leaders and the county Democratic party. O’Malley’s office, Hurley says in the unprecedented motion, represents a countervailing concern of impropriety. That motion was also disregarded by Hurley, after questionable activity. Hurley met privately and ex parte with Judge Nancy Russo, which is unethical under the Ohio Lawyer’s Professional Code of Conduct on his part and the Judicial Code of Conduct relative to the judge. He then began colluding with her to disenfranchise his Black client by refusing to do discovery in the case to introduce as evidence for trial, including perjured county grand jury testimony by a corrupt and since retired White cop, Dale Orians. He did this even after Nancy Russo had granted a motion to compel discovery by Hurley filed by the prosecution. She (the judge) then attempted to proceed to trial without any discovery whatsoever done on behalf of the defendant and was adamant about it until she came under community scrutiny and was exposed to the Ohio Supreme Court. Although she has until January 2027 in her current term, last month she lost a bid for the judicial seat left open by the Ohio Supreme Court misconduct suspension of former judge Daniel Gaul to Carl Mazzone. Activists, the Plain Dealer Newspaper and her own county Democratic party panned her candidacy and campaigned against her both publicly and privately by word of mouth. Hurley had been appointed by Judge Nancy Russo as indigent counsel in the case but lacked the guts to go the long haul in representing his Black client. She ultimately removed herself from the case, following a petition for a writ of prohibition filed against her with the Ohio Supreme Court and  protests by community activists. A new judge in the tortured case, Judge Nancy Fuerst, was handpicked to replace her by then chief common pleas judge John Russo. The assignment, no doubt, is in violation of the random draw mandate for assignments of judges in multi-judge trial courts in Ohio under the Ohio Rules of Superintendence. When Hurley entered Fuerst’s courtroom during a pretrial in the case that was filled with activists after she had removed him as indigent counsel for the Black defendant at issue via a journal entry, Judge Fuerst yelled at him, saying “No, get out of my courtroom.” Fuerst went on to harass the Black activist defendant in the case by issuing an unconstitutional gag order in an attempt to silence free speech and activism, and ultimately denying indigent counsel when the case got hot. Her actions also reveal tampering with records to get around the speedy trial mandate, and covering up indictment fixing by the county prosecutor’s office and the county clerk of courts office. Hurley had also said in a motion filed in a case that county prosecutors, with the assistance of common pleas court clerks, are taking original indictments involving White cops and  Black defendants, and illegally upping the criminal charges not supported by the grand jury without going back to the grand jury for an amended indictment. Simply put, they are re-typing and forging aspects of the original indictments, and getting a fake grand jury foreman to sign them as if they were original indictments. Activists, in turn, filed a citizen’s criminal complaint against Judge Fuerst, seeking a criminal prosecution by the city of Cleveland for denying Blacks their Civil Rights, falsification, and tampering with records, a felony crime under Ohio law. It remains pending before the city’s Black chief prosecutor, with county prosecutors bragging that O”Malley has the influence to stop any such prosecution and activists prepared to file a petition for a writ of mandamus with the Ohio Supreme Court that seeks a probable cause prosecution of the seasoned, intemperate judge. The county’s public defender’s office now says that when White common pleas judges deny Blacks indigent counsel, regardless of the reason, it will support them over poor Blacks with support from county officials like county Executive Chris Ronayne and the 11-member county council. Ronayne refuses to intervene, even upon requests from activists and Black victims of the impropriety, Sources say that when some common pleas judges in the county adjourn criminal trials on Friday to recommence on Monday it is sometimes allegedly done to give prosecutors and other culprits the opportunity to attempt to manipulate select jury members over the weekend to vote to convict innocent Black defendants. This, say activists, is the height of public corruption and racism against the Black community. Activists say they select common pleas judges, mainly privileged White judges pushed by White men, are corrupting the offices of the county public defender and county prosecutor and that the malfeasance is out of hand. This, say sources, makes it all the more important that targeted and indigent Blacks are supplied indigent counsel before and during trial. The 6th Amendment gives indigent people the right to indigent counsel and state law in Ohio requires that the county supply indigent defendants, including Blacks, with appointed counsel at all stages of the proceedings following an arrest or summons after an indictment, and certainly at arraignment. Not one legal authority in Ohio, whether applicable case law or a court rule, gives common pleas judges and county public defenders the authority to deny people deemed indigent by the court indigent counsel. Judges, county public defenders, and prosecutors are ruining the lives of Black people without consequences, sources say, and public records research reveals. All of it, say activists, is evidence that common pleas court felony proceedings in the largely White, 34-member general division court are detrimental to the fair administration of justice and the county’s Black community, including Black juveniles tried as adults in mass. For chief county public defender Cullen Sweeney to refuse indigent counsel to Blacks for corrupt and racist White common pleas judges is serious enough to demand that the county fire him, activists say, not to mention the high rate in which poor Blacks that his office represents are routinely convicted in cases and disproportionately imprisoned via ineffective assistance of counsel and corrupt judges and prosecutors. Suspended former judge Daniel Gaul actually forced a Black, male defendant to plead guilty to murder, according to the Ohio Supreme Court’s Office of Disciplinary Counsel. And after a county jury found another Black defendant not guilty of murder he continued to say on record that the man is a murderer. The extent to which some of the judges hate Blacks is astronomical, sources say. Greater Cleveland community activists and other criminal justice reform advocates continue to call for an extensive FBI investigation and a federal-court-monitored consent decree for common pleas court reforms between the county and the Department of Justice (DOJ) under U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland. This is a continuing investigation by Ohio’s Black digital news leader of Cuyahoga County public corruption, racism and genocide against the Black community Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest, and the most read independent digital news in Ohio. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor​@​clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO’S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

    [ad_2]

    editor@clevelandurbannews.com (Kathy)

    Source link

  • First Lady Dr. Jill Biden to host White House event to honor World War I service members and support militarily families and surviving family members of veterans as part of her joining forces initiative….By Clevlandurbannews.com

    First Lady Dr. Jill Biden to host White House event to honor World War I service members and support militarily families and surviving family members of veterans as part of her joining forces initiative….By Clevlandurbannews.com

    [ad_1]


    Staff investigative article by Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader
    CLEVELAND, Ohio-Cuyahoga County juries that decide guilt or innocence in felony cases presided over by common pleas judges at the Justice Center in downtown Cleveland are often tainted against Blacks, according to the county public defender’s office that is now led by Chief Public Defender Cullen Sweeney, a wannabe common pleas judge who lost an election for judge in 2012.
    Sweeney replaced former chief county public defender Mark Stanton, who was hired  by the county despite representing  police unions in excessive force prosecutions of cops who arbitrarily shoot and kill Black people with impunity. Stanton retired after only a few years in the job with sources saying he tired of the red tape and rampant court and prosecutorial malfeasance.
    Assistant county public defender Roger Scott Hurley, also a wannabe judge who lost a bid for a municipal court seat, sought a change of venue in one case involving a maliciously prosecuted Black defendant targeted by White cops and then county prosecutor Tim McGinty. He wrote in the motion before Common Pleas Judge Nancy Margaret Russo that he later disregarded that his Black client would be the victim of jury tampering.
    The motion is telling with Hurley saying that the Cuyahoga County Jury Commission of the Common Pleas Court taints jury pools and victimizes Black defendants, and that its actions and those of county prosecutors “cast a pall on every corner of court proceedings.”
    Such motion in the case is coupled with a companion motion for a special prosecutor in place of County Prosecutor Mike O’Malley. It says that O’Malley’s office perpetuates retaliation against Blacks targeted by  police and former county prosecutor TIm McGinty, whom he ousted from office via an election in 2016 with the support of activists, Black leaders and the county Democratic party.
    O’Malley’s office, Hurley says in the unprecedented motion, represents a countervailing concern of impropriety. That motion was also disregarded by Hurley, after questionable activity.
    Hurley met privately and ex parte with Judge Nancy Russo, which is unethical under the Ohio Lawyer’s Professional Code of Conduct on his part and the Judicial Code of Conduct relative to the judge. He then began colluding with her to disenfranchise his Black client by refusing to do discovery in the case to introduce as evidence for trial, including perjured county grand jury testimony by a corrupt and since retired White cop, Dale Orians.
    He did this even after Nancy Russo had granted a motion to compel discovery by Hurley filed by the prosecution. She (the judge) then attempted to proceed to trial without any discovery whatsoever done on behalf of the defendant and was adamant about it until she came under community scrutiny and was exposed to the Ohio Supreme Court.
    Although she has until January 2027 in her current term, last month she lost a bid for the judicial seat left open by the Ohio Supreme Court misconduct suspension of former judge Daniel Gaul to Carl Mazzone. Activists, the Plain Dealer Newspaper and her own county Democratic party panned her candidacy and campaigned against her both publicly and privately by word of mouth.
    Hurley had been appointed by Judge Nancy Russo as indigent counsel in the case but lacked the guts to go the long haul in representing his Black client. She ultimately removed herself from the case, following a petition for a writ of prohibition filed against her with the Ohio Supreme Court and  protests by community activists.
    A new judge in the tortured case, Judge Nancy Fuerst, was handpicked to replace her by then chief common pleas judge John Russo. The assignment, no doubt, is in violation of the random draw mandate for assignments of judges in multi-judge trial courts in Ohio under the Ohio Rules of Superintendence.
    When Hurley entered Fuerst’s courtroom during a pretrial in the case that was filled with activists after she had removed him as indigent counsel for the Black defendant at issue via a journal entry, Judge Fuerst yelled at him, saying “No, get out of my courtroom.”
    Fuerst went on to harass the Black activist defendant in the case by issuing an unconstitutional gag order in an attempt to silence free speech and activism, and ultimately denying indigent counsel when the case got hot. Her actions also reveal tampering with records to get around the speedy trial mandate, and covering up indictment fixing by the county prosecutor’s office and the county clerk of courts office.
    Hurley had also said in a motion filed in a case that county prosecutors, with the assistance of common pleas court clerks, are taking original indictments involving White cops and  Black defendants, and illegally upping the criminal charges not supported by the grand jury without going back to the grand jury for an amended indictment. Simply put, they are re-typing and forging aspects of the original indictments, and getting a fake grand jury foreman to sign them as if they were original indictments.
    Activists, in turn, filed a citizen’s criminal complaint against Judge Fuerst, seeking a criminal prosecution by the city of Cleveland for denying Blacks their Civil Rights, falsification, and tampering with records, a felony crime under Ohio law.
    It remains pending before the city’s Black chief prosecutor, with county prosecutors bragging that O”Malley has the influence to stop any such prosecution and activists prepared to file a petition for a writ of mandamus with the Ohio Supreme Court that seeks a probable cause prosecution of the seasoned, intemperate judge.
    The county’s public defender’s office now says that when White common pleas judges deny Blacks indigent counsel, regardless of the reason, it will support them over poor Blacks with support from county officials like county Executive Chris Ronayne and the 11-member county council. Ronayne refuses to intervene, even upon requests from activists and Black victims of the impropriety,
    Sources say that when some common pleas judges in the county adjourn criminal trials on Friday to recommence on Monday it is sometimes allegedly done to give prosecutors and other culprits the opportunity to attempt to manipulate select jury members over the weekend to vote to convict innocent Black defendants.
    This, say activists, is the height of public corruption and racism against the Black community.
    Activists say they select common pleas judges, mainly privileged White judges pushed by White men, are corrupting the offices of the county public defender and county prosecutor and that the malfeasance is out of hand.
    This, say sources, makes it all the more important that targeted and indigent Blacks are supplied indigent counsel before and during trial.
    The 6th Amendment gives indigent people the right to indigent counsel and state law in Ohio requires that the county supply indigent defendants, including Blacks, with appointed counsel at all stages of the proceedings following an arrest or summons after an indictment, and certainly at arraignment.
    Not one legal authority in Ohio, whether applicable case law or a court rule, gives common pleas judges and county public defenders the authority to deny people deemed indigent by the court indigent counsel.
    Judges, county public defenders, and prosecutors are ruining the lives of Black people without consequences, sources say, and public records research reveals.
    All of it, say activists, is evidence that common pleas court felony proceedings in the largely White, 34-member general division court are detrimental to the fair administration of justice and the county’s Black community, including Black juveniles tried as adults in mass.
    For chief county public defender Cullen Sweeney to refuse indigent counsel to Blacks for corrupt and racist White common pleas judges is serious enough to demand that the county fire him, activists say, not to mention the high rate in which poor Blacks that his office represents are routinely convicted in cases and disproportionately imprisoned via ineffective assistance of counsel and corrupt judges and prosecutors.
    Suspended former judge Daniel Gaul actually forced a Black, male defendant to plead guilty to murder, according to the Ohio Supreme Court’s Office of Disciplinary Counsel. And after a county jury found another Black defendant not guilty of murder he continued to say on record that the man is a murderer.
    The extent to which some of the judges hate Blacks is astronomical, sources say.
    Greater Cleveland community activists and other criminal justice reform advocates continue to call for an extensive FBI investigation and a federal-court-monitored consent decree for common pleas court reforms between the county and the Department of Justice (DOJ) under U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland.
    This is a continuing investigation by Ohio’s Black digital news leader of Cuyahoga County public corruption, racism and genocide against the Black community
    Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest, and the most read independent digital news in Ohio. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email:

    This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

    . We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO’S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

    [ad_2]

    editor@clevelandurbannews.com (Kathy)

    Source link

  • Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose announces 2024 Grads Vote Program for high school seniors….By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader

    Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose announces 2024 Grads Vote Program for high school seniors….By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader

    [ad_1]

    Staff article

    Staff article: COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose (pictured) has announced the launch of the 2024 Grads Vote program, a civic engagement initiative designed to assist high school seniors with learning how to become active in Ohio’s election process. The initiative also encourages high school juniors and seniors to become election day poll workers as part of the Youth at the Booth program.

    LaRose, a Republican, announced the launch for what he says is part of “a rigorous statewide election integrity initiative aimed at ensuring the accuracy of Ohio’s statewide voter registration database.

    “Beginning this week, the secretary of state’s office will work with Ohio’s 88 county boards of elections to conduct legally required list maintenance on out-of-date registrations from individuals who have permanently moved,” LaRose said in a statement.

    LaRose also directed the county boards of elections to review their records for “past-due removals, data mismatches, and bad addresses to ensure they are complying with state and federal law.”

    Ohio Democratic leaders and the NAACP, however, remain concerned that any efforts by LaRose to purge voter rolls in Ohio serve only to disenfranchise voters, including Black people and poor people. LaRose argues that he is acting within the confines of state and federal law, and is merely doing his job.

    Ohioans will vote this November relative to the 2024 presidential election between former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden, a rematch of the 2020 election that Biden won amid controversy and claims by Trump and his supporters that the election that culminated in a pro-Trump riot on Jan 6, 2021 at the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. was fixed against him.

    Trump won Ohio in 2016 when he was first elected president, and again in 2020 when he was ousted from office by voters.

    He has been indicted in four separate cases, one for which he is currently on trial as to whether he interfered with the 2016 election that he won over Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton by allegedly paying off adult film star Stormy Daniels to be quiet about an alleged affair he denies.

    He has pleaded not guilty in all four cases, including the Stormy Daniels hush money interference prosecution, and says they are all a witch hunt by Democrats and are designed to interfere with his current run for president.

    Prosecutors after him say presidents are no more above the law than anybody else.

    All of it is constant fodder for talented media pundits and political talk show hosts across the country, with some Blacks and others who distrust the nation’s systemically racist legal system looking on for comparisons and analyses.

    Trump has said that Black people should identify with him because they too are routine victims of a criminal justice system that wreaks of impropriety and is weaponized against innocent people the government wants to silence for speaking out on issues of public concern.

    A recent CNN poll found that only 13 percent of Americans nationwide believe that he is being treated like other criminal defendants, though race was not a factor in the poll.

    To the contrary, a similar Pew study has shown that Black and Hispanic individuals are more likely than White people with similar criminal histories and charges to be arrested and held in jail before trial and that they tend to have higher bails set and receive lengthier and more punitive sanctions, such as incarceration rather than probation.

    Ohio is no different, with research showing that Cuyahoga County, the state’s second largest of its 88 counties, has the highest rate of convictions of Blacks, many of them poor, and of binding over Black juveniles to adult court for prosecution where they are regularly convicted and imprisoned. This often occurs with ineffective assistance of counsel, and at the hands of racist and corrupt White common pleas judges, White county prosecutors, and White men who lead the county’s racist public defender’s office.

    Black Cleveland area community activists have called for a consent decree for common pleas court reforms between the county of Cuyahoga, which includes Cleveland, and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) under U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, a Biden appointee.

    LaRose has not announced an endorsement of Trump but has said efforts to keep the former president off the November ballot in various states  are uncalled for as the U.S. Supreme Court is poised to decide Trump’s claim that he has absolute immunity from prosecution charges that accuse him of interfering with the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, and criminal charges against him in general regarding his time as president and thereafter. He says it sets a bad precedent for presidents in the future who come under fire and are persecuted for political reasons.

    Also on the ballot in November in Ohio, among other less prominent races, is a nationally watched contest for the U.S. Senate between Republican nominee Bernie Moreno, who won Ohio’s March 19 primary over LaRose and state Sen. Matt Dolan with Trump’s endorsement, and senior U.S. Sen Sherrod Brown, a popular Cleveland Democrat who is running for reelection.

    Democrats hold a slim majority in the U.S. Senate while Republicans hold the majority in the House of Representatives, with Republicans vying like hell to win the White House and to dominate both chambers of Congress come November. Only time will tell, pundits have said, as Trump aggressively fights for his political survival, his freedom, and a second term as president of the United States of America.

    Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO’S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

    [ad_2]

    editor@clevelandurbannews.com (Kathy)

    Source link