Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Musgrove Seeks Support for School Funding Lawsuit - Jackson Free Press


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — A group of lawyers including former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove is traveling Mississippi trying to get school districts to sign up for a lawsuit against the state seeking repayment of the $1.5 billion that the state had underfunded its K-12 school formula in recent years.


Backers of a separate effort to write a full-funding requirement into the state Constitution are pushing against the proposed suit, saying it could blow a hole in the state's budget, anger lawmakers and give lawyers too much of the money if they won. They argue a constitutional guarantee of future adequate funding is better.


A spokesman for Musgrove, who was lieutenant governor when the funding formula was enacted, declined comment Friday. It appears only a handful of districts have signed up so far for the lawsuit.



Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


DA Plans to Retry Michelle Byrom - Jackson Free Press



It is unclear why it took nearly four months to remove Michelle Byrom from death row in Rankin County. With her conviction overturned, from a legal standpoint, she is innocent and not proven guilty. She remains under arrest, however.




Months after the Mississippi Supreme Court reversed Michelle Byrom's death sentence, Byrom is finally off death row and back in the custody of Tishomingo County.


Accused of masterminding a murder-for-hire plot to kill her abusive husband, Byrom received the death penalty in 2000. Arch Bullard, the prosecutor in the case, alleged that family friend Joey Gillis killed Edward Byrom Sr. and that his son, Edward Jr., helped cover up the crime. At the time of the murder, Michelle Byrom was in the hospital for pneumonia.


It is unclear why it took nearly four months to remove Byrom from death row in Rankin County. With her conviction overturned, from a legal standpoint, she is innocent and not proven guilty. She remains under arrest, however.


Asked this morning whether the district attorney's office plans to retry Byrom on capital-murder charges, Richard Bowen, assistant DA in Tishomingo and six other counties, replied: "Oh, yes. Why wouldn't we?"


Bowen said a status hearing is planned for Aug. 4, at which time a judge could schedule a new trial or dismiss the charges.


Mississippi law states that a judge is not obligated to grant bond to those charged with a capital crime, thus, Byrom may remain behind bars through a second trial, which has not been scheduled. No bond hearing is imminent, either. A circuit judge is not scheduled to appear in Tishomingo County for several months.


Due to the extraordinary circumstances of the case, however, a bond hearing could take place in another county. Bond is not meant to be used as a punishment, but as an incentive for the accused to show up in court. Byrom, who suffers from lupus and other serious health conditions that have her confined to a wheelchair, is an unlikely flight risk.


Among the evidence the original trial judge, Thomas Gardner, suppressed were Junior's multiple confessions that he killed his abusive father after Edward Sr. slapped him around. "I sit in my room for a good 1-1/2 (to) 2 hours, and dad comes in my room, and goes off on me, calling me bastard, no good, mistake, and telling me I'm inconciderate [sic] and just care about my self, and he slaps me, then goes back to his room," Junior wrote in a letter to his mother. "As I sat on my bed, tears of rage flowing, remembering my childhood my anger kept building and building, and I went to my car, got the 9mm, and walked to his room, peeked in, and he was asleep. I walked about 2 steps in the door, and screamed, and shut my eyes, when I heard him move, I started firing."


Junior agreed to a plea deal in return for his testimony against his mother. In March 2001, Gillis also pled guilty to conspiracy to commit capital murder and accessory after the fact. Gillis and Junior are both free men.


Attorney General Jim Hood requested a date for Michelle Byrom's execution by lethal injection after the state Supreme Court denied her third appeal in February. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear her appeals twice before. But national media attention drew intense focus to the case after the Jackson Free Press broke Byrom's story March 19. Outraged citizens began a call-in campaign on the governor's office and volunteered to work on Byrom's behalf.


On Hood's requested execution date, March 27, the court denied the attorney general. On March 31, in a surprising decision, the court reversed Byrom's conviction and ordered a new trial with a new judge. The media scrutiny likely played a role in the court's decision.


Former Mississippi Supreme Court Justice Oliver Diaz, who heard Byrom's previous appeals during his tenure on the bench, emphasized the unusual nature of the reversal at the time.


"The whole decision was surprising, from the fact that it was handed down on a Monday, which is very unusual for the court in a non-emergency manner, to the recusal of the trial judge, which is also fairly unusual, through the relief that they granted," Diaz said. "To reverse the conviction and send it back for a new trial at this stage, the whole scope and breadth of the decision is really surprising at this point. It's not something that's normally done by the court."


Byrom spent 14 years on death row.


News editor R.L. Nave contributed reporting to this story.



10 Local Stories of the Week - Jackson Free Press



Lindsey Horton, a 30-year veteran of law enforcement, stressed professionalism in his one year on the job and expressed his gratitude to the Yarber administration. Photo by Trip Burns.




There's never a slow news week in Jackson, Miss., and last week was no exception. Here are the local stories JFP reporters brought you in case you missed them:



  1. Lindsey Horton, one of Mayor Chokwe Lumumba's first and most popular appointments last year, stepped down from his post as Jackson's police chief Monday.

  2. After stating at a public meeting that he lacked the ability to remove a judge from the municipal bench, Mayor Yarber moved to fire Judge June Hardwick last weekend.

  3. Hospitals & Health Networks Magazine recently named University of Mississippi Medical Center one of its 2014 "Most Wired" health-care facilities. This is the second time UMMC has received the honor.

  4. Civil-liberties advocates and community members met with the Mississippi Department of Human Services to discuss concerns about a controversial law that would require Temporary Assistance for Needy Families recipients to complete a questionnaire and possibly face a drug test if their answers suggested they use illegal drugs.

  5. After years of southern Republicans gerrymandering electoral districts, pressing for voter ID and developing other policies to dilute black voting strength, black Mississippians may have discovered a new way to assert strength.

  6. Bishop Ronnie Crudup says federal law does not require his political action committee to reveal more donor and expenditure information until Oct. 15, 2014. So, he's not going to.

  7. Last week, Mike Peters, the owner of Fondren Corner, told fellow building tenants that he would "be the bad guy" and move anti-abortion signs with graphic images of fetuses on the sidewalk outside the building.

  8. In his first state of the city address since becoming Jackson mayor, Tony Yarber painted a hopeful picture of the capital city's future.

  9. Laurin Stennis, a Jackson native, has no formal artistic training. Her bachelor's degree is in religion from Millsaps College and her master's is in social work from Tulane University in New Orleans. Now 41, she makes art full-time.

  10. So, is it bbq, bar-b-q, barbeque or barbecue? Jim Hatten, founder of the Mississippi BBQ Trail, says that it doesn't matter as long as you're there.


Remember: Check the JFP Events planner for everything to do in the Jackson metro area. You can also add your own events (or send them to events@jacksonfreepress.com)! See JFPEvents.com


Read staff and reader blog posts at jfp.ms/weblogs (yes, you can register on the site and start your own blog!)



State auditors investigating Jackson nonprofit - Modesto Bee


— The state auditor is investigating the nonprofit that promotes and markets Jackson's 66-block core, and Downtown Jackson Partners executive assistant Linda Brune has registered as a whistleblower, according to the Mississippi attorney general's office.


Brune was fired because four boxes of records from 2010 and 2012 are missing, board chairman David Watkins told the Clarion-Ledger (http://on.thec-l.com/1AmuRZJ ). "We can't have people stealing records," he said.


Brune's attorney, John Reeves of Jackson, said, "Ms. Brune is a hero for coming forward to law enforcement with allegations of illegal activity. She has taken nothing from that office. They're looking to find a scapegoat, and it won't work."


Copies of Downtown Jackson Partners documents show the nonprofit bought $18,000 worth of furniture from a company owned by a board member's daughter-in-law and spent $1,230 on a meal for nine, the newspaper said. It said they also show that president Ben Allen transferred a truck belonging to the nonprofit to himself, and got repeated reimbursed purchases on his personal credit card without providing receipts.


Lavish spending sometimes is needed to lure big-league investors, said Allen, who is paid $150,000 a year. The nonprofit's budget comes from taxes paid by businesses in the 66-block downtown area.


Watkins said the lack of records was "bad judgment" but he trusts Allen "to not be stealing." New controls ensure proper documentation, he said.


The agency bought the used Chevy Silverado half-ton pickup in 2007 for landscaping and maintenance. When it tried to renew the license tag in 2011, Hinds County Tax Collector Eddie Fair's office wrote back: "Our record shows you no longer own this 1988 Chevy pickup."


County records obtained by the newspaper showed that the truck became Allen's 11 days after the Partners paid $1,498 to replace the transmission in 2010. Records show the nonprofit continued to pay for his tag, taxes, tires, repairs, insurance and gas.


Allen said the Silverado was worth almost nothing, first saying, "I bought it," and then that the Partners "may have just given it to me."


The board's executive committee, which kept no minutes at the time, authorized giving the truck to him because its insurance cost $2,000 a year. That insurance now costs about $400, he said.


Information from: The Clarion-Ledger, http://ift.tt/GIU16h



Derrick Trimble - Jackson Free Press


On Sunday, July 20, Jackson lost community fixture Derrick Terrell Trimble, who ran for the Ward 4 Jackson City Council seat in the May 2013 election. Trimble died after a long illness.


"Derrick Trimble was an awesome young brother dedicated to his city, his community, his family and his students," Chowke Antar Lumumba, the son of late Mayor Chokwe Lumumba, said in a statement on Facebook. "He served with my father's administration well, and he was always there to encourage me. ... We are praying for you and with you, and while we cannot understand why our brother has gone in the physical sense, we will celebrate and honor his legacy of selflessness with every breath we take. Exhibiting the same passion, dedication, and commitment to Jackson that he exhibited in his lifetime."


Trimble, 32, graduated from Jackson State University with a bachelor's degree in social science education and a master's in social science. He was a social studies teacher at Lanier High School and a coach for the "Mighty Bulldogs" youth baseball team. He also mentored youth in the community and tutored in his spare time. He previously served on the administration of late Mayor Chowke Lumumba.


Ward 4 Councilman De'Keither Stamps posted a photo bearing the caption, "Ward 4 mourns the loss of a great man today. Derrick Trimble will be missed & loved by many. Please keep his family in your prayers."


C. J. Lawrence, who served as the City's director of marketing during the Lumumba administration, said, "We will honor the legacy of Derrick Terrell Trimble through our service to the community and the way we show our love for Jackson and the People of Jackson. He never hesitated to help when he could ... And I think we honor his memory by being committed to selflessness in that same way."


A previous version of this story incorrectly characterized the date that Derrick Trimble passed away as July 25. The Jackson Free Press apologizes for the error.



Monday, July 28, 2014

DA Plans to Retry Michelle Byrom - Jackson Free Press



It is unclear why it took nearly four months to remove Michelle Byrom from death row in Rankin County. With her conviction overturned, from a legal standpoint, she is innocent and not proven guilty. She remains under arrest, however.




Months after the Mississippi Supreme Court reversed Michelle Byrom's death sentence, Byrom is finally off death row and back in the custody of Tishomingo County.


Accused of masterminding a murder-for-hire plot to kill her abusive husband, Byrom received the death penalty in 2000. Arch Bullard, the prosecutor in the case, alleged that family friend Joey Gillis killed Edward Byrom Sr. and that his son, Edward Jr., helped cover up the crime. At the time of the murder, Michelle Byrom was in the hospital for pneumonia.


It is unclear why it took nearly four months to remove Byrom from death row in Rankin County. With her conviction overturned, from a legal standpoint, she is innocent and not proven guilty. She remains under arrest, however.


Asked this morning whether the district attorney's office plans to retry Byrom on capital-murder charges, Richard Bowen, assistant DA in Tishomingo and six other counties, replied: "Oh, yes. Why wouldn't we?"


Bowen said a status hearing is planned for Aug. 4, at which time a judge could schedule a new trial or dismiss the charges.


Mississippi law states that a judge is not obligated to grant bond to those charged with a capital crime, thus, Byrom may remain behind bars through a second trial, which has not been scheduled. No bond hearing is imminent, either. A circuit judge is not scheduled to appear in Tishomingo County for several months.


Due to the extraordinary circumstances of the case, however, a bond hearing could take place in another county. Bond is not meant to be used as a punishment, but as an incentive for the accused to show up in court. Byrom, who suffers from lupus and other serious health conditions that have her confined to a wheelchair, is an unlikely flight risk.


Among the evidence the original trial judge, Thomas Gardner, suppressed were Junior's multiple confessions that he killed his abusive father after Edward Sr. slapped him around. "I sit in my room for a good 1-1/2 (to) 2 hours, and dad comes in my room, and goes off on me, calling me bastard, no good, mistake, and telling me I'm inconciderate [sic] and just care about my self, and he slaps me, then goes back to his room," Junior wrote in a letter to his mother. "As I sat on my bed, tears of rage flowing, remembering my childhood my anger kept building and building, and I went to my car, got the 9mm, and walked to his room, peeked in, and he was asleep. I walked about 2 steps in the door, and screamed, and shut my eyes, when I heard him move, I started firing."


Junior agreed to a plea deal in return for his testimony against his mother. In March 2001, Gillis also pled guilty to conspiracy to commit capital murder and accessory after the fact. Gillis and Junior are both free men.


Attorney General Jim Hood requested a date for Michelle Byrom's execution by lethal injection after the state Supreme Court denied her third appeal in February. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear her appeals twice before. But national media attention drew intense focus to the case after the Jackson Free Press broke Byrom's story March 19. Outraged citizens began a call-in campaign on the governor's office and volunteered to work on Byrom's behalf.


On Hood's requested execution date, March 27, the court denied the attorney general. On March 31, in a surprising decision, the court reversed Byrom's conviction and ordered a new trial with a new judge. The media scrutiny likely played a role in the court's decision.


Former Mississippi Supreme Court Justice Oliver Diaz, who heard Byrom's previous appeals during his tenure on the bench, emphasized the unusual nature of the reversal at the time.


"The whole decision was surprising, from the fact that it was handed down on a Monday, which is very unusual for the court in a non-emergency manner, to the recusal of the trial judge, which is also fairly unusual, through the relief that they granted," Diaz said. "To reverse the conviction and send it back for a new trial at this stage, the whole scope and breadth of the decision is really surprising at this point. It's not something that's normally done by the court."


Byrom spent 14 years on death row.


News editor R.L. Nave contributed reporting to this story.



Derrick Simmons - Jackson Free Press


Mississippi State Sen. Derrick T. Simmons received the 2014 Award for Leadership in Juvenile Justice Reform at the 12th annual forum for the National Juvenile Justice Network, in conjunction with the Southern Poverty Law Center. Rep. John W. Hines, D-Greenville, and Sen. Gray Tollison, R-Oxford, also received the award.


Simmons is a Greenville, Miss., native who graduated at the top of his class at T.L. Weston High School in 1995. Simmons, a Democrat, studied business administration at Jackson State University and got his bachelor's degree in finance from JSU's business school in 2000 and received his MBA in finance at Howard University College of Business in 2002. Simmons graduated from Howard School of Law in 2005. During his time there, he participated in the historic Howard Mock Trial team that defeated Harvard Law School in the American Bar Association International Mock Trial Competition.


In 2007, Mississippi Valley State University welcomed Simmons as an adjunct professor for its college of professional studies. Simmons has also served as the youngest member on the Greenville Public School District Board of Trustees.


Together with his twin brother, Greenville City Councilman Errick Simmons, Simmons formed the Simmons & Simmons law firm in their hometown in 2008. As a municipal court judge, Simmons has served the communities of Sunflower and Moorhead, Miss.


Simmons was elected to the Mississippi State Senate during a special election after District 12 Sen. Johnnie Walls was elected to circuit court in spring 2011. Simmons' platform focused on employment, education and health care. Simmons is also a member of the Labor, Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks, and Insurance committees, and works as chairman of the Enrolled Bills Committee.


The National Bar Association dubbed Simmons one of the Nation's Best Advocates: Top 40 Lawyers Under 40, and the Magnolia Bar Association gave him its Government Service Award in 2012.


He is a sponsor of Simmons & Simmons Little League Sluggers and Armstrong Elementary School's basketball team. He is also a member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., the Greenville Rotary Club and the Washington County United Way, and an advocate for "Keep Greenville Beautiful."


Simmons and his wife, CuWanda Flowers Simmons, have a son named Derrick Jr., also known as "DJ."



State auditors investigating Jackson nonprofit - Modesto Bee


— The state auditor is investigating the nonprofit that promotes and markets Jackson's 66-block core, and Downtown Jackson Partners executive assistant Linda Brune has registered as a whistleblower, according to the Mississippi attorney general's office.


Brune was fired because four boxes of records from 2010 and 2012 are missing, board chairman David Watkins told the Clarion-Ledger (http://on.thec-l.com/1AmuRZJ ). "We can't have people stealing records," he said.


Brune's attorney, John Reeves of Jackson, said, "Ms. Brune is a hero for coming forward to law enforcement with allegations of illegal activity. She has taken nothing from that office. They're looking to find a scapegoat, and it won't work."


Copies of Downtown Jackson Partners documents show the nonprofit bought $18,000 worth of furniture from a company owned by a board member's daughter-in-law and spent $1,230 on a meal for nine, the newspaper said. It said they also show that president Ben Allen transferred a truck belonging to the nonprofit to himself, and got repeated reimbursed purchases on his personal credit card without providing receipts.


Lavish spending sometimes is needed to lure big-league investors, said Allen, who is paid $150,000 a year. The nonprofit's budget comes from taxes paid by businesses in the 66-block downtown area.


Watkins said the lack of records was "bad judgment" but he trusts Allen "to not be stealing." New controls ensure proper documentation, he said.


The agency bought the used Chevy Silverado half-ton pickup in 2007 for landscaping and maintenance. When it tried to renew the license tag in 2011, Hinds County Tax Collector Eddie Fair's office wrote back: "Our record shows you no longer own this 1988 Chevy pickup."


County records obtained by the newspaper showed that the truck became Allen's 11 days after the Partners paid $1,498 to replace the transmission in 2010. Records show the nonprofit continued to pay for his tag, taxes, tires, repairs, insurance and gas.


Allen said the Silverado was worth almost nothing, first saying, "I bought it," and then that the Partners "may have just given it to me."


The board's executive committee, which kept no minutes at the time, authorized giving the truck to him because its insurance cost $2,000 a year. That insurance now costs about $400, he said.


Information from: The Clarion-Ledger, http://ift.tt/GIU16h



Fondren Corner Owner: Anti-Abortion Signs 'Horrible' - Jackson Free Press



The police stood near Jackson Women's Health Organization, the last abortion clinic in Mississippi, on July 17 as Peters picked up each of the large portable signs and took them to his building's basement. Photo by Trip Burns.








Last week, Mike Peters, the owner of Fondren Corner, told fellow building tenants that he would "be the bad guy" and move anti-abortion signs with graphic images of fetuses on the sidewalk outside the building.


The police stood near Jackson Women's Health Organization, the last abortion clinic in Mississippi, on July 17 as Peters picked up each of the large portable signs and took them to his building's basement.


"It was horrible. If they would have had little signs like most of the locals have now ... we probably would have just let it ride, but these were horrible," Peters said. "Every 5 feet there was just another one, another one, another one."


Peters said an officer threatened him with arrest if he continued to take the anti-abortion group's property, but police declined to cuff or charge Peters with a crime as he quietly picked up the signs and put them in his building's basement as the anti-abortions questioned and filmed him.


"I'm not mad at you," Peters told the officer. "I know you've got to do whatever you've got to do. But I've got to do what I've got to do."


Yesterday, July 23, the Life Legal Defense Foundation filed a lawsuit for the anti-abortion activist group, Pro-Life Mississippi, against the Jackson Police Department.


The complaint, which was filed in federal court in Jackson this afternoon, alleges that JPD "has routinely harassed pro-life citizens, who have been peacefully exercising their legal right to oppose abortion in the public square and offer information about life-affirming alternatives to women seeking abortion."


The suit was filed one day after a pro-life group posted a video online of what they say are "Jackson police standing by as an individual stole the group's prolife display"—the protest Peters intervened in.


The group complains that the police did not stop Peters, even though the protesters got their signs back unharmed.


But the anti-abortion group who brought the signs, Created Equal, may have violated a city ordinance that prohibits portable signs like the ones placed on Fondren Corner's sidewalk last Thursday.


Peters told the Jackson Free Press that he believes JPD had orders from city hall not intervene with the illegally positioned signs. A call to Monica Joiner, the city attorney, was not immediately returned this morning.


"I think they knew that, 'Well, why should we arrest him for doing this, and yet we're letting them break the law, too? That's not right,'" Peters said.


Defendants named in the suit include former JPD Chief Lindsey Horton, whose retirement was announced Monday, July 21, Commander James McGowan and several other JPD officers. Shelia Byrd, city hall spokeswoman, declined comment, citing the pending litigation.


Meanwhile, the Created Equal video has gone viral, and Peters is still receiving obscene calls from anti-abortion activists across the nation.



Mississippi Gets 179 Children from Border Surge - Jackson Free Press


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi has received fewer than 200 of the unaccompanied immigrant children who crossed the U.S. border and were released to sponsors so far this year, but the war of words over such children continues within the state.


The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Administration for Children and Families released data Thursday showing that sponsors in Mississippi received 179 of more than 30,000 such children nationwide from January 1 to July 7.


California, Florida, New York and Texas received the most children in the past half year, accounting for 46 percent of the children released to sponsors.


Gov. Phil Bryant, a longtime opponent of illegal immigration, said it was "troubling" that the federal government was sending children to Mississippi without consulting him, calling the moves "covert immigration practices conducted by an overreaching federal government."


Bryant, a Republican, wrote to President Barack Obama on Friday demanding that Obama pre-announce plans to send immigrants to Mississippi and saying Mississippi would block transports.


"To the extent permitted by law, I intend to prohibit the federal government or its agents from housing large numbers of new illegal immigrants in the state of Mississippi," Bryant wrote in the July 18 letter. "Illegal immigration imposes real and substantial costs on the states, and it is unfair to expect the states to bear the costs of a problem created by the federal government's failure to enforce the law."


Bryant, who accused Obama of having "lax immigration policies and flagrant disregard for federal immigration law" noted a 2012 executive order he signed that's meant to bar immigrants living in Mississippi illegally from receiving public benefits. On Thursday, he threatened immediate action against any official who violates that order by giving food stamps, non-emergency medical benefits or welfare payments to the children.


The Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance held a news conference Thursday to decry Bryant's letter, saying Mississippi should welcome children in need and afford them a chance to go through deportation hearings under federal law.


"We're very concerned about the xenophobia in the letter that was put out by the governor," said alliance Executive Director Bill Chandler.


Tuesday, U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., sent his own letter to Obama criticizing Bryant's stance.


"We have a moral obligation as Americans and as decent human beings to do the right by the kids that have, against the odds, reached our border," Thompson wrote. "Many Mississippians agree on this — you can count me among them."


About 57,000 minors, mostly from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, crossed into the U.S. since October, a surge of arrivals stemming from violence in those countries as well as a belief they'll be allowed to stay in the U.S.


Children are placed in shelters, then released to sponsors while going through deportation proceedings. Sponsors are often parents, other relatives, or a family friend. Sponsors are checked for criminal history, but don't have to be in the country legally. Officials make sure children are vaccinated and don't have contagious diseases before being released.


Mississippi has no shelters. Greg Patin, executive director of Catholic Charities for the Diocese of Jackson, said the group had considered offering a former school in Yazoo City as a shelter, but has not moved ahead. He said a lack of Spanish-speaking social workers in the state would make it hard for any shelter to operate over the long term.



Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Derrick Trimble - Jackson Free Press


On Sunday, July 20, Jackson lost community fixture Derrick Terrell Trimble, who ran for the Ward 4 Jackson City Council seat in the May 2013 election. Trimble died after a long illness.


"Derrick Trimble was an awesome young brother dedicated to his city, his community, his family and his students," Chowke Antar Lumumba, the son of late Mayor Chokwe Lumumba, said in a statement on Facebook. "He served with my father's administration well, and he was always there to encourage me. ... We are praying for you and with you, and while we cannot understand why our brother has gone in the physical sense, we will celebrate and honor his legacy of selflessness with every breath we take. Exhibiting the same passion, dedication, and commitment to Jackson that he exhibited in his lifetime."


Trimble, 32, graduated from Jackson State University with a bachelor's degree in social science education and a master's in social science. He was a social studies teacher at Lanier High School and a coach for the "Mighty Bulldogs" youth baseball team. He also mentored youth in the community and tutored in his spare time. He previously served on the administration of late Mayor Chowke Lumumba.


Ward 4 Councilman De'Keither Stamps posted a photo bearing the caption, "Ward 4 mourns the loss of a great man today. Derrick Trimble will be missed & loved by many. Please keep his family in your prayers."


C. J. Lawrence, who served as the City's director of marketing during the Lumumba administration, said, "We will honor the legacy of Derrick Terrell Trimble through our service to the community and the way we show our love for Jackson and the People of Jackson. He never hesitated to help when he could ... And I think we honor his memory by being committed to selflessness in that same way."


A previous version of this story incorrectly characterized the date that Derrick Trimble passed away as July 25. The Jackson Free Press apologizes for the error.



Sunday, July 27, 2014

Fondren Corner Owner: Anti-Abortion Signs 'Horrible' - Jackson Free Press



The police stood near Jackson Women's Health Organization, the last abortion clinic in Mississippi, on July 17 as Peters picked up each of the large portable signs and took them to his building's basement. Photo by Trip Burns.








Last week, Mike Peters, the owner of Fondren Corner, told fellow building tenants that he would "be the bad guy" and move anti-abortion signs with graphic images of fetuses on the sidewalk outside the building.


The police stood near Jackson Women's Health Organization, the last abortion clinic in Mississippi, on July 17 as Peters picked up each of the large portable signs and took them to his building's basement.


"It was horrible. If they would have had little signs like most of the locals have now ... we probably would have just let it ride, but these were horrible," Peters said. "Every 5 feet there was just another one, another one, another one."


Peters said an officer threatened him with arrest if he continued to take the anti-abortion group's property, but police declined to cuff or charge Peters with a crime as he quietly picked up the signs and put them in his building's basement as the anti-abortions questioned and filmed him.


"I'm not mad at you," Peters told the officer. "I know you've got to do whatever you've got to do. But I've got to do what I've got to do."


Yesterday, July 23, the Life Legal Defense Foundation filed a lawsuit for the anti-abortion activist group, Pro-Life Mississippi, against the Jackson Police Department.


The complaint, which was filed in federal court in Jackson this afternoon, alleges that JPD "has routinely harassed pro-life citizens, who have been peacefully exercising their legal right to oppose abortion in the public square and offer information about life-affirming alternatives to women seeking abortion."


The suit was filed one day after a pro-life group posted a video online of what they say are "Jackson police standing by as an individual stole the group's prolife display"—the protest Peters intervened in.


The group complains that the police did not stop Peters, even though the protesters got their signs back unharmed.


But the anti-abortion group who brought the signs, Created Equal, may have violated a city ordinance that prohibits portable signs like the ones placed on Fondren Corner's sidewalk last Thursday.


Peters told the Jackson Free Press that he believes JPD had orders from city hall not intervene with the illegally positioned signs. A call to Monica Joiner, the city attorney, was not immediately returned this morning.


"I think they knew that, 'Well, why should we arrest him for doing this, and yet we're letting them break the law, too? That's not right,'" Peters said.


Defendants named in the suit include former JPD Chief Lindsey Horton, whose retirement was announced Monday, July 21, Commander James McGowan and several other JPD officers. Shelia Byrd, city hall spokeswoman, declined comment, citing the pending litigation.


Meanwhile, the Created Equal video has gone viral, and Peters is still receiving obscene calls from anti-abortion activists across the nation.



Mississippi Gets 179 Children from Border Surge - Jackson Free Press


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi has received fewer than 200 of the unaccompanied immigrant children who crossed the U.S. border and were released to sponsors so far this year, but the war of words over such children continues within the state.


The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Administration for Children and Families released data Thursday showing that sponsors in Mississippi received 179 of more than 30,000 such children nationwide from January 1 to July 7.


California, Florida, New York and Texas received the most children in the past half year, accounting for 46 percent of the children released to sponsors.


Gov. Phil Bryant, a longtime opponent of illegal immigration, said it was "troubling" that the federal government was sending children to Mississippi without consulting him, calling the moves "covert immigration practices conducted by an overreaching federal government."


Bryant, a Republican, wrote to President Barack Obama on Friday demanding that Obama pre-announce plans to send immigrants to Mississippi and saying Mississippi would block transports.


"To the extent permitted by law, I intend to prohibit the federal government or its agents from housing large numbers of new illegal immigrants in the state of Mississippi," Bryant wrote in the July 18 letter. "Illegal immigration imposes real and substantial costs on the states, and it is unfair to expect the states to bear the costs of a problem created by the federal government's failure to enforce the law."


Bryant, who accused Obama of having "lax immigration policies and flagrant disregard for federal immigration law" noted a 2012 executive order he signed that's meant to bar immigrants living in Mississippi illegally from receiving public benefits. On Thursday, he threatened immediate action against any official who violates that order by giving food stamps, non-emergency medical benefits or welfare payments to the children.


The Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance held a news conference Thursday to decry Bryant's letter, saying Mississippi should welcome children in need and afford them a chance to go through deportation hearings under federal law.


"We're very concerned about the xenophobia in the letter that was put out by the governor," said alliance Executive Director Bill Chandler.


Tuesday, U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., sent his own letter to Obama criticizing Bryant's stance.


"We have a moral obligation as Americans and as decent human beings to do the right by the kids that have, against the odds, reached our border," Thompson wrote. "Many Mississippians agree on this — you can count me among them."


About 57,000 minors, mostly from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, crossed into the U.S. since October, a surge of arrivals stemming from violence in those countries as well as a belief they'll be allowed to stay in the U.S.


Children are placed in shelters, then released to sponsors while going through deportation proceedings. Sponsors are often parents, other relatives, or a family friend. Sponsors are checked for criminal history, but don't have to be in the country legally. Officials make sure children are vaccinated and don't have contagious diseases before being released.


Mississippi has no shelters. Greg Patin, executive director of Catholic Charities for the Diocese of Jackson, said the group had considered offering a former school in Yazoo City as a shelter, but has not moved ahead. He said a lack of Spanish-speaking social workers in the state would make it hard for any shelter to operate over the long term.



Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Yarber: Get Ready for Pain, New Initiatives - Jackson Free Press



Mayor Tony Yarber and a member of the JPD Color Guard during the Pledge of Allegiance Photo by R.L. Nave.





In his first state of the city address since becoming Jackson mayor, Tony Yarber painted a hopeful picture of the capital city's future. Addressing a crowd of hundreds at the newly renovated Thalia Mara Hall, Yarber stuck to his adopted mantra of making Jackson a "bold new city" but cautioned that the journey would be "arduous."


"I cannot promise you that this will be easy. I cannot promise you that every decision I make will be popular. I cannot promise you that we won't have short-comings," Yarber said. "There will be growing pains and there will be bruises, but together we can take the necessary steps to make this city what we desire it to be."


Yarber pointed out that the city is facing a $14 million budget shortfall, which may require cutting popular programs that are not good investments for Jackson's taxpayers.


"Sacrifices will have to be made for the greater good of our communities. No longer can we afford to carry out functions that don't lead to the progressive genesis we seek. For example, what does it profit the city to devote $500,000 in support to a venue and only receive $20,000 in return?" Yarber said without mentioning any specific programs.


Soon, city officials will start crafting a budget for the next fiscal year. Ward 4 Councilman De'Keither Stamps called Yarber's speech "positive" and "encouraging," adding that budget makers will have to prioritize city spending to maximize return-on-investment, but he stopped short of naming any specific programs that need to be cut or reviewed.


"We have a lot of issues around the city of Jackson; we have to invest our dollars (wisely)," Stamps told the Jackson Free Press this morning. "We have a lot of work we have to do, but the bottom line is we have to get better at communicating."


Yarber focused on his administration's restructuring of the city's communications department, which has organized his ongoing listening tours around the city, revamped social media accounts and made greater use of video that tells Jackson's stories.


Some of those are positive stories. Yarber cited recent police statistics that show crime in Jackson trending downward even though challenges remain. Yarber alluded to the shooting deaths of 3-year-old Armon Burton in May and 67-year-old Helen Harrion this month.


"Lack of jail space, low bonds and manpower shortages are issues that have plagued our city and limited our police force for too long. However, these are real issues that we must tackle over the course of my administration. We must not only fight crime, but we must be vigilant in ensuring that punishment for crime sends a clear message to law breakers," Yarber told the audience.


Changes within Yarber's administration in recent weeks have come on the heels of several high-profile crimes. On Monday, Jackson Police Chief Lindsey Horton resigned after admitting JPD officers may have failed to follow investigative procedures when Helen Harrion called 911 to report a prowler before her death. Horton's temporary replacement, longtime Assistant Chief Lee Vance, announced yesterday that he plans to apply for JPD's top job. Also recently, Yarber dismissed municipal judge Hardwick after a public dispute over Hardwick's setting of what the mayor believed was a low bond for a murder suspect.


Yarber, a former Jackson Public Schools principal, announced a new partnership with JPS called the "I Need You to Make It" youth initiative that focuses on the areas of education, health, and character building, as well as a program called Super Neighborhoods, the implementation of a new city smartphone app and texting platform, city-health task force and a series of city festivals.


Read the full speech here.



It's Time to Change 'The Game' - Jackson Free Press



After years of friends telling us to watch "The Wire," Todd and I have finally started sitting through the hard-hitting HBO series about crime and corruption—and no small amount of race tension—in Baltimore.


We just started the third season, and I see why everyone thought we should watch it. From empty posturing over crime and the drug war, to corrupt elected officials and elections, parts of the show remind me so much of Jackson, it almost hurts.


The show hasn't been far from my mind as our reporting team has unpacked the shenanigans, finger-pointing and shadowy PAC activity around the GOP primary for the U.S. Senate. In fact, I've taken to calling the dark way elections are traditionally conducted in Mississippi "The Game."


In most every election, we just move around the chess pieces but no one ever really wins, certainly not the voters. I'm actually not trying to be cynical about elected officials; it's the process that's rotten and corrupt to the core. And the way our disgusting election practices rope in good people and twist their thinking on how elections done is perhaps the worst part.


Take Bishop Ronnie Crudup. In an interview with Anna Wolfe (see page 19 and jfp.ms/crudup for the full transcript), the esteemed religious leader said some things that really disturbed me. And I don't even think he gets why they are so disturbing because such beliefs and practices are an ingrained part of our corrupt political system.


If you don't know by now, Crudup—who, if not a Republican, is certainly a backer of powerful ones like Haley Barbour—started a super PAC to help Cochran keep his seat in the U.S. Senate. Whether or not he did this because he believes Cochran is a friend to the black community (which he says) or because he wants to see the Republicans keep the Senate this fall almost doesn't matter. It's how it was done that was the problem.


Crudup claims his super PAC, which apparently missed filing deadlines that would have educated voters on who was funding it, did everything legally and ethically. But where are the 24-hour reports that PACs are required by law to file before the election after booking advertising and other expenditures? He says the PAC didn't have to report such information because they booked them through a (very GOP-friendly) third party, which gave them "credit" until after the runoff. The check wasn't written, so they didn't have to report the advertising they purchased, Crudup maintains.


Anyone else see a problem with this? Done intentionally or not, it is a perfect strategy for ensuring that voters don't know what kinds of advertising a PAC is placing. (Remember Citizens for Decency in this year's mayor's race; it never filed a thing.) "Ethics" is a subjective word, and it's hard to have it in elections without real transparency.


The bishop also said that there were donors, beyond the Barbour-founded Mississippi Conservatives PAC, left off the report. He would not tell Anna who they are, but said he'd list them on the next quarterly report due with the FEC on Oct. 15.


Oct. 15? This kind of answer makes my head spin. I truly believe Bishop Crudup is a good person—but does he have any idea why these kinds of election rules are set up in the first place? They're about transparency and educated voters. People need to know who is funding the candidates and the campaigns, and the kinds of messaging they're putting out there—before they vote. And often that information is very enlightening.


Remember the Better Jackson PAC a few years back? It was only one of many efforts my newspaper made to get a PAC to disclose what it was up to. In this case, I don't believe the PAC ever intended to tell anyone it was out there, much less who was funding it. It was sending scary mailers to white folks in northeast Jackson (picturing a scared white woman, of course). The hint that broke it open for me is that the mailer used the same faulty crime rankings a local lawyer had used in an earlier campaign for district attorney. The post office box number listed led me to his law firm. Voila.


We then started hounding him to file missing reports. It took until the day before the election, and a lot of public haranguing to get that late report into the Jackson City Clerk's office. It was then that we discovered that the PAC was funded by a group of mostly Republican men who wanted to get then-candidate Marshand Crisler elected clearly because he had pledged to support their Two Lakes project.


See what shadowy PACs can hide?


What gets me the most about Bishop Crudup's answers and unwillingness to supply the donors' names now—I mean, why not if you don't want to hide them?—is his apparent acceptance that this is the way elections are done. I'm astounded that people don't get, or follow, the basic premise that the public has the right to know these things.


"Transparency" has become a buzzword promised by every political candidate we interview. And almost every one of them backslides on those promises once he gets into office and seems to forget that the public, whether media or not, get to ask him questions, and as public servants, he's supposed to answer them. Instead, we get elected officials who seem to think that they're corporate CEOs, hiring PR flacks to shield them from the media and tough questions. This is not good. Not good at all.


Here's the thing, though: I almost feel bad about all the attention Bishop Crudup has gotten for the All Citizens for Mississippi PAC. Not because he and the PAC shouldn't report every single donation and expenditure post-haste—they should this very second—but because he's only the latest in a long line of politicians and power brokers over the decades who have just gone along with The Game, instead of challenging it.


I also take issue with his indicating that any political party, or politician, or strategist who use third parties to place ads, conceal information or play word games with election law could actually be working on behalf of the community. Sure, electing a politician through those means might keep some federal funding for important projects in the short term, but what does it do to create an educated, engaged electorate in the long run, not to mention stifle corruption?


Not very much.


Ultimately, it's up to everyday Mississippians to change the rules of the election game. We must demand better transparency, whether from elected officials or PACs; we must out the election trashmen who paper windshields with lies every election; and we must withhold votes from people who are making a joke out of the election process.


It may be the way it has always been done here, but it's hard to argue that our state has exactly benefitted from such practices, even if some individuals do.


Make no mistake: It won't change unless we demand it. Game?



Yarber's City Shakeup Targets JRA, Judge - Jackson Free Press


Mayor Tony Yarber's city shakeup continues as he has moved to terminate a municipal judge and is likely to appoint several new members to the Jackson Redevelopment Authority.


The seven-member Jackson Redevelopment Authority—a quasi-governmental agency that helps secure contracts and financing for economic-development projects—has several members with expired or soon-to-expire terms that Yarber must fill in the coming weeks.


Jennifer Johnson, whom Mayor Chokwe Lumumba appointed along with Kemba Ware and Michael Starks Sr., before his death in February, said in the meantime, JRA business remains at a standstill.


"I've been on the board for eight months and to say that progress is incremental is generous," she said.


Based on conversations with several individuals, it appears that the Yarber administration wants to get its board picks in place before moving ahead with business. That includes resolving a dispute between members of the Farish Street Group LLC, a real-estate management venture charged with luring businesses to Farish Street.


In late 2013, JRA broke ties with FSG and its principal investor, David Watkins, which touched off a mess of lawsuits between Watkins, JRA and other principals in the project. A mediation that had been scheduled for this week was postponed for 60 days because of what Watkins attorney Lance Stevens said were "positive developments" in the Farish saga.


Stevens would not confirm whether those developments included new JRA board members who would be loyal to the Yarber administration. He referred those questions to Jason Goree, a former employee of Watkins who is now the city's economic-development director.


Stevens would also not confirm whether there was a deal on the table for Watkins to step out of the picture, but said that Watkins is open to an agreement whose terms are mutually beneficial.


In addition, after stating at a public meeting that he lacked the ability to remove a judge from the municipal bench, Mayor Yarber moved to fire Judge June Hardwick over the weekend.


Hardwick confirmed to the Jackson Free Press this morning that she received a termination letter at her home the evening of Saturday, July 19. The letter was postmarked July 17 and dated July 16, the day Yarber put forth a pair of judicial nominees to the municipal court.


One nominee, Gerald Mumford, was approved unanimously. The second, former municipal Judge Bob Waller, was stalled on questions about whether the city could afford or had the room to accommodate two positions.


Hanging over that conversation was confusion about Hardwick, whom Yarber had publicly admonished for setting what he considered an insufficiently punitive bond amount in a murder case.


At the June 16 special meeting of the city council, Yarber said, "I don't have the ability to fire anybody," referring to judges, but added that he was expecting a resignation from one judge he did not name.


Speaking to the Jackson Free Press by phone this morning, Hardwick questioned whether Yarber's actions represented a violation of the separation of powers clause in the U.S. Constitution that prevents the concentration of too much power in one branch of government and keeps the various branches from encroaching on the powers of other branches.


"The mayor does not have a J.D. (law degree), never practiced law and never sat on the bench as a judge," Hardwick said. "My concern is for the people."


The disagreement began in May, when Hardwick set a $150,000 bond for 19-year-old Wilber Clay, who was arrested and charged with murder in the Mother's Day shooting death of 29-year-old Ebony Hervey. He has not paid the bond and is still in jail.


"We intend on ensuring that if you sit in a municipal judge seat in this city then the expectation is that you will value the lives and the families of those people who are affected by violent crimes by setting a bond that is appropriate in terms of that crime," Yarber told WJTV, "and $150,000 bond for a life that was taken ... we're not tolerating that."


Despite a Mississippi Supreme Court ruling that outlines nine factors that judges should consider when setting bonds, bond amounts are often ensnared in politics with judges wanting to setting harsher bonds for people accused of more serious crimes. In Mississippi, they have access to a general set of guidelines called a bond schedule, but Hardwick believes following those guidelines could violate a defendant's constitutional rights "because it takes a cookie-cutter approach" when judges should consider defendants' circumstances on a case-by-case basis when setting bonds.


Hardwick said she has not decided whether she would challenge her termination, but said that the Mississippi Bar Association, civil-liberties groups and citizens should have grave concerns about the constitutional issues of a member of the executive branch dictating orders to a sitting judge.


Matt Steffey, who teaches constitutional law at Mississippi College School of Law, says it's an open question. On one hand, municipal courts are "inferior courts" that were established by the Legislature, not the state Constitution. Steffey cites a 1999 Mississippi attorney general's opinion, which is not legally binding, that affirms mayors' authority to remove municipal judges.


At the same time, a higher court might agree that a mayor meddling in the day-to-day affairs of the municipal court represents a separation-of-powers conflict.


"We're in uncharted waters," Steffey said. "It depends on how the court sees the role of municipal judge."


City Hall spokeswoman Shelia Byrd does not allow administration officials to do live interviews. However, she emailed a statement from Yarber today: "Municipal judges serve at the will and pleasure of the Mayor. For this administration, public safety is a priority. As we move forward, we look to appoint judges who share our vision."



Derrick Trimble - Jackson Free Press


On Sunday, July 20, Jackson lost community fixture Derrick Terrell Trimble, who ran for the Ward 4 Jackson City Council seat in the May 2013 election. Trimble died after a long illness.


"Derrick Trimble was an awesome young brother dedicated to his city, his community, his family and his students," Chowke Antar Lumumba, the son of late Mayor Chokwe Lumumba, said in a statement on Facebook. "He served with my father's administration well, and he was always there to encourage me. ... We are praying for you and with you, and while we cannot understand why our brother has gone in the physical sense, we will celebrate and honor his legacy of selflessness with every breath we take. Exhibiting the same passion, dedication, and commitment to Jackson that he exhibited in his lifetime."


Trimble, 32, graduated from Jackson State University with a bachelor's degree in social science education and a master's in social science. He was a social studies teacher at Lanier High School and a coach for the "Mighty Bulldogs" youth baseball team. He also mentored youth in the community and tutored in his spare time. He previously served on the administration of late Mayor Chowke Lumumba.


Ward 4 Councilman De'Keither Stamps posted a photo bearing the caption, "Ward 4 mourns the loss of a great man today. Derrick Trimble will be missed & loved by many. Please keep his family in your prayers."


C. J. Lawrence, who served as the City's director of marketing during the Lumumba administration, said, "We will honor the legacy of Derrick Terrell Trimble through our service to the community and the way we show our love for Jackson and the People of Jackson. He never hesitated to help when he could ... And I think we honor his memory by being committed to selflessness in that same way."


A previous version of this story incorrectly characterized the date that Derrick Trimble passed away as July 25. The Jackson Free Press apologizes for the error.



Fondren Corner Owner: Anti-Abortion Signs 'Horrible' - Jackson Free Press



The police stood near Jackson Women's Health Organization, the last abortion clinic in Mississippi, on July 17 as Peters picked up each of the large portable signs and took them to his building's basement. Photo by Trip Burns.








Last week, Mike Peters, the owner of Fondren Corner, told fellow building tenants that he would "be the bad guy" and move anti-abortion signs with graphic images of fetuses on the sidewalk outside the building.


The police stood near Jackson Women's Health Organization, the last abortion clinic in Mississippi, on July 17 as Peters picked up each of the large portable signs and took them to his building's basement.


"It was horrible. If they would have had little signs like most of the locals have now ... we probably would have just let it ride, but these were horrible," Peters said. "Every 5 feet there was just another one, another one, another one."


Peters said an officer threatened him with arrest if he continued to take the anti-abortion group's property, but police declined to cuff or charge Peters with a crime as he quietly picked up the signs and put them in his building's basement as the anti-abortions questioned and filmed him.


"I'm not mad at you," Peters told the officer. "I know you've got to do whatever you've got to do. But I've got to do what I've got to do."


Yesterday, July 23, the Life Legal Defense Foundation filed a lawsuit for the anti-abortion activist group, Pro-Life Mississippi, against the Jackson Police Department.


The complaint, which was filed in federal court in Jackson this afternoon, alleges that JPD "has routinely harassed pro-life citizens, who have been peacefully exercising their legal right to oppose abortion in the public square and offer information about life-affirming alternatives to women seeking abortion."


The suit was filed one day after a pro-life group posted a video online of what they say are "Jackson police standing by as an individual stole the group's prolife display"—the protest Peters intervened in.


The group complains that the police did not stop Peters, even though the protesters got their signs back unharmed.


But the anti-abortion group who brought the signs, Created Equal, may have violated a city ordinance that prohibits portable signs like the ones placed on Fondren Corner's sidewalk last Thursday.


Peters told the Jackson Free Press that he believes JPD had orders from city hall not intervene with the illegally positioned signs. A call to Monica Joiner, the city attorney, was not immediately returned this morning.


"I think they knew that, 'Well, why should we arrest him for doing this, and yet we're letting them break the law, too? That's not right,'" Peters said.


Defendants named in the suit include former JPD Chief Lindsey Horton, whose retirement was announced Monday, July 21, Commander James McGowan and several other JPD officers. Shelia Byrd, city hall spokeswoman, declined comment, citing the pending litigation.


Meanwhile, the Created Equal video has gone viral, and Peters is still receiving obscene calls from anti-abortion activists across the nation.



Mississippi Gets 179 Children from Border Surge - Jackson Free Press


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi has received fewer than 200 of the unaccompanied immigrant children who crossed the U.S. border and were released to sponsors so far this year, but the war of words over such children continues within the state.


The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Administration for Children and Families released data Thursday showing that sponsors in Mississippi received 179 of more than 30,000 such children nationwide from January 1 to July 7.


California, Florida, New York and Texas received the most children in the past half year, accounting for 46 percent of the children released to sponsors.


Gov. Phil Bryant, a longtime opponent of illegal immigration, said it was "troubling" that the federal government was sending children to Mississippi without consulting him, calling the moves "covert immigration practices conducted by an overreaching federal government."


Bryant, a Republican, wrote to President Barack Obama on Friday demanding that Obama pre-announce plans to send immigrants to Mississippi and saying Mississippi would block transports.


"To the extent permitted by law, I intend to prohibit the federal government or its agents from housing large numbers of new illegal immigrants in the state of Mississippi," Bryant wrote in the July 18 letter. "Illegal immigration imposes real and substantial costs on the states, and it is unfair to expect the states to bear the costs of a problem created by the federal government's failure to enforce the law."


Bryant, who accused Obama of having "lax immigration policies and flagrant disregard for federal immigration law" noted a 2012 executive order he signed that's meant to bar immigrants living in Mississippi illegally from receiving public benefits. On Thursday, he threatened immediate action against any official who violates that order by giving food stamps, non-emergency medical benefits or welfare payments to the children.


The Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance held a news conference Thursday to decry Bryant's letter, saying Mississippi should welcome children in need and afford them a chance to go through deportation hearings under federal law.


"We're very concerned about the xenophobia in the letter that was put out by the governor," said alliance Executive Director Bill Chandler.


Tuesday, U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., sent his own letter to Obama criticizing Bryant's stance.


"We have a moral obligation as Americans and as decent human beings to do the right by the kids that have, against the odds, reached our border," Thompson wrote. "Many Mississippians agree on this — you can count me among them."


About 57,000 minors, mostly from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, crossed into the U.S. since October, a surge of arrivals stemming from violence in those countries as well as a belief they'll be allowed to stay in the U.S.


Children are placed in shelters, then released to sponsors while going through deportation proceedings. Sponsors are often parents, other relatives, or a family friend. Sponsors are checked for criminal history, but don't have to be in the country legally. Officials make sure children are vaccinated and don't have contagious diseases before being released.


Mississippi has no shelters. Greg Patin, executive director of Catholic Charities for the Diocese of Jackson, said the group had considered offering a former school in Yazoo City as a shelter, but has not moved ahead. He said a lack of Spanish-speaking social workers in the state would make it hard for any shelter to operate over the long term.



Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Yarber: Get Ready for Pain, New Initiatives - Jackson Free Press



Mayor Tony Yarber and a member of the JPD Color Guard during the Pledge of Allegiance Photo by R.L. Nave.





In his first state of the city address since becoming Jackson mayor, Tony Yarber painted a hopeful picture of the capital city's future. Addressing a crowd of hundreds at the newly renovated Thalia Mara Hall, Yarber stuck to his adopted mantra of making Jackson a "bold new city" but cautioned that the journey would be "arduous."


"I cannot promise you that this will be easy. I cannot promise you that every decision I make will be popular. I cannot promise you that we won't have short-comings," Yarber said. "There will be growing pains and there will be bruises, but together we can take the necessary steps to make this city what we desire it to be."


Yarber pointed out that the city is facing a $14 million budget shortfall, which may require cutting popular programs that are not good investments for Jackson's taxpayers.


"Sacrifices will have to be made for the greater good of our communities. No longer can we afford to carry out functions that don't lead to the progressive genesis we seek. For example, what does it profit the city to devote $500,000 in support to a venue and only receive $20,000 in return?" Yarber said without mentioning any specific programs.


Soon, city officials will start crafting a budget for the next fiscal year. Ward 4 Councilman De'Keither Stamps called Yarber's speech "positive" and "encouraging," adding that budget makers will have to prioritize city spending to maximize return-on-investment, but he stopped short of naming any specific programs that need to be cut or reviewed.


"We have a lot of issues around the city of Jackson; we have to invest our dollars (wisely)," Stamps told the Jackson Free Press this morning. "We have a lot of work we have to do, but the bottom line is we have to get better at communicating."


Yarber focused on his administration's restructuring of the city's communications department, which has organized his ongoing listening tours around the city, revamped social media accounts and made greater use of video that tells Jackson's stories.


Some of those are positive stories. Yarber cited recent police statistics that show crime in Jackson trending downward even though challenges remain. Yarber alluded to the shooting deaths of 3-year-old Armon Burton in May and 67-year-old Helen Harrion this month.


"Lack of jail space, low bonds and manpower shortages are issues that have plagued our city and limited our police force for too long. However, these are real issues that we must tackle over the course of my administration. We must not only fight crime, but we must be vigilant in ensuring that punishment for crime sends a clear message to law breakers," Yarber told the audience.


Changes within Yarber's administration in recent weeks have come on the heels of several high-profile crimes. On Monday, Jackson Police Chief Lindsey Horton resigned after admitting JPD officers may have failed to follow investigative procedures when Helen Harrion called 911 to report a prowler before her death. Horton's temporary replacement, longtime Assistant Chief Lee Vance, announced yesterday that he plans to apply for JPD's top job. Also recently, Yarber dismissed municipal judge Hardwick after a public dispute over Hardwick's setting of what the mayor believed was a low bond for a murder suspect.


Yarber, a former Jackson Public Schools principal, announced a new partnership with JPS called the "I Need You to Make It" youth initiative that focuses on the areas of education, health, and character building, as well as a program called Super Neighborhoods, the implementation of a new city smartphone app and texting platform, city-health task force and a series of city festivals.


Read the full speech here.



Righting Our Grand Failure - Jackson Free Press



Several years ago, then-Gov. Haley Barbour announced a grand plan to make Mississippi a bulwark of medical professionalism and a haven for Americans looking for top-of-the-line health care. Since his election, Gov. Phil Bryant has taken up that banner, pounding the drum for making our state the standard for excellence in wellness.


As grand plans go, it's admirable. Problem is, our esteemed Republican leaders have ignored the inconvenient fact that Mississippians remain at or near the bottom of every national health standard. No American in her right mind will consider Mississippi for high-quality medical treatment when the state's leadership flatly refuses to improve the well-being of its own citizens.


If you need your roof repaired, you wouldn't go to a contractor who uses leaky buckets to catch the rain pouring through the holes in his own ceiling, would you?


Mississippi's wellness buckets are full of stagnant swamp water. Most of us are familiar with the dismal statistics. Take your pick: teen pregnancy, obesity, diabetes, smoking, heart disease—our rates lead or butt right up against the wrong end of the spectrum, and we've been stuck there for decades. Mississippians have the shortest life expectancy in the nation, along with the worst educational outcomes, lowest median income, and highest rates of poverty and food insecurity.


Look, I am not into bashing Mississippi. I am thrilled to see every iota of progress, and I celebrate the state's beauty and our people's spirit whenever I can. It's far from all gloom and doom. Just look at the fantastic "Happy MS" video for our exuberant expressions of joy, and the "If You're Buying, We're Selling" campaign for our stalwart refusal to succumb to fear and prejudice. But let's not be stupid: Taking third place honors for the most miserable state in the 2013 Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, released in February, is not something to be proud of.


On July 16, Deep South Daily reported that the Trace Regional Hospital in Chickasaw County is closing its emergency room, leaving three counties without any emergency services. The closure—along with hospital bankruptcies, clinic shutdowns and medical personnel layoffs across the state—is a direct result of Mississippi's refusal to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare. Under the law, the trade-off for allocating millions to individuals for health insurance is curtailing the funds to hospitals for treating uninsured patients.


People who understand how the law works predicted this outcome. "Without disproportionate share payments, many rural hospitals and hospitals that treat a disproportionate share of uninsured Mississippians will close," Sen. David Blount, D-Jackson, said during a news conference 16 months ago. "People will lose jobs, and people will lose access to health care, particularly in our rural communities."


Gov. Bryant, it seems, continues to rely on a very broken crystal ball. He spouts unsupportable bravado from one side of his mouth—that the federal government won't allow hospital closures—while spreading (historically inaccurate) mistrust for the feds to follow through on its promises from the other side—in this case, to pick up the tab for health-care expansion. This peculiar bi-polar view demonstrates just how wrong the conservative rhetoric has been about health-insurance reform. Bryant and his cohorts want all the beneficence of the federal government (we receive more than $3 in return for every $1 we contribute to national coffers) without taking any responsibility for their self-inflicted pain.


The federal government is making good on its promises, and Mississippians are paying the price. Despite the ACA's problems and constant right-wing obstructionism, Obamacare is working, dashing every thick-headed conservative argument against the rocks of pessimism. Americans signed up, even healthy young people, exceeding the best estimates. They paid their premiums. The sticker "rate shock" hasn't materialized, and the numbers of uninsured Americans has dramatically declined. Even Republicans, who still don't like the concept of Obamacare, like their coverage, a recent Commonwealth Fund survey found.


Yet, conservative cognitive dissonance continues unabated, and Republicans' crazy conspiracy theories and misinformed attacks on reality spew on.


Mississippi has an opportunity to make a significant impact on its lousy statistics. We can have our health, work and education reflect our best instincts instead of our meanest selfishness. Well-being, all of our well-being, matters. It's incumbent on those of us who embrace that to make our voices heard. Let your political leaders know that health-care expansion makes sense for Mississippi, and when they refuse to listen, make your vote count in November and future elections.


Ronni Mott is an award-winning writer and a yoga teacher, just stumbling and fumbling toward bliss like everyone else.



Yarber's City Shakeup Targets JRA, Judge - Jackson Free Press


Mayor Tony Yarber's city shakeup continues as he has moved to terminate a municipal judge and is likely to appoint several new members to the Jackson Redevelopment Authority.


The seven-member Jackson Redevelopment Authority—a quasi-governmental agency that helps secure contracts and financing for economic-development projects—has several members with expired or soon-to-expire terms that Yarber must fill in the coming weeks.


Jennifer Johnson, whom Mayor Chokwe Lumumba appointed along with Kemba Ware and Michael Starks Sr., before his death in February, said in the meantime, JRA business remains at a standstill.


"I've been on the board for eight months and to say that progress is incremental is generous," she said.


Based on conversations with several individuals, it appears that the Yarber administration wants to get its board picks in place before moving ahead with business. That includes resolving a dispute between members of the Farish Street Group LLC, a real-estate management venture charged with luring businesses to Farish Street.


In late 2013, JRA broke ties with FSG and its principal investor, David Watkins, which touched off a mess of lawsuits between Watkins, JRA and other principals in the project. A mediation that had been scheduled for this week was postponed for 60 days because of what Watkins attorney Lance Stevens said were "positive developments" in the Farish saga.


Stevens would not confirm whether those developments included new JRA board members who would be loyal to the Yarber administration. He referred those questions to Jason Goree, a former employee of Watkins who is now the city's economic-development director.


Stevens would also not confirm whether there was a deal on the table for Watkins to step out of the picture, but said that Watkins is open to an agreement whose terms are mutually beneficial.


In addition, after stating at a public meeting that he lacked the ability to remove a judge from the municipal bench, Mayor Yarber moved to fire Judge June Hardwick over the weekend.


Hardwick confirmed to the Jackson Free Press this morning that she received a termination letter at her home the evening of Saturday, July 19. The letter was postmarked July 17 and dated July 16, the day Yarber put forth a pair of judicial nominees to the municipal court.


One nominee, Gerald Mumford, was approved unanimously. The second, former municipal Judge Bob Waller, was stalled on questions about whether the city could afford or had the room to accommodate two positions.


Hanging over that conversation was confusion about Hardwick, whom Yarber had publicly admonished for setting what he considered an insufficiently punitive bond amount in a murder case.


At the June 16 special meeting of the city council, Yarber said, "I don't have the ability to fire anybody," referring to judges, but added that he was expecting a resignation from one judge he did not name.


Speaking to the Jackson Free Press by phone this morning, Hardwick questioned whether Yarber's actions represented a violation of the separation of powers clause in the U.S. Constitution that prevents the concentration of too much power in one branch of government and keeps the various branches from encroaching on the powers of other branches.


"The mayor does not have a J.D. (law degree), never practiced law and never sat on the bench as a judge," Hardwick said. "My concern is for the people."


The disagreement began in May, when Hardwick set a $150,000 bond for 19-year-old Wilber Clay, who was arrested and charged with murder in the Mother's Day shooting death of 29-year-old Ebony Hervey. He has not paid the bond and is still in jail.


"We intend on ensuring that if you sit in a municipal judge seat in this city then the expectation is that you will value the lives and the families of those people who are affected by violent crimes by setting a bond that is appropriate in terms of that crime," Yarber told WJTV, "and $150,000 bond for a life that was taken ... we're not tolerating that."


Despite a Mississippi Supreme Court ruling that outlines nine factors that judges should consider when setting bonds, bond amounts are often ensnared in politics with judges wanting to setting harsher bonds for people accused of more serious crimes. In Mississippi, they have access to a general set of guidelines called a bond schedule, but Hardwick believes following those guidelines could violate a defendant's constitutional rights "because it takes a cookie-cutter approach" when judges should consider defendants' circumstances on a case-by-case basis when setting bonds.


Hardwick said she has not decided whether she would challenge her termination, but said that the Mississippi Bar Association, civil-liberties groups and citizens should have grave concerns about the constitutional issues of a member of the executive branch dictating orders to a sitting judge.


Matt Steffey, who teaches constitutional law at Mississippi College School of Law, says it's an open question. On one hand, municipal courts are "inferior courts" that were established by the Legislature, not the state Constitution. Steffey cites a 1999 Mississippi attorney general's opinion, which is not legally binding, that affirms mayors' authority to remove municipal judges.


At the same time, a higher court might agree that a mayor meddling in the day-to-day affairs of the municipal court represents a separation-of-powers conflict.


"We're in uncharted waters," Steffey said. "It depends on how the court sees the role of municipal judge."


City Hall spokeswoman Shelia Byrd does not allow administration officials to do live interviews. However, she emailed a statement from Yarber today: "Municipal judges serve at the will and pleasure of the Mayor. For this administration, public safety is a priority. As we move forward, we look to appoint judges who share our vision."