Racist Suspect Megyn Kelly Can't Name Any Black Staffers On Her Show

Media Matters

In an interview with The Washington Post’s Erik Wemple Blog, Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly -- who is reportedly competing for a new contract among networks -- downplayed her role in pushing the pseudo-scandal that the Department of Justice was covering up voter intimidation by the New Black Panther Party and admitted she could not name any African-American people on her staff.

In 2010, Kelly devoted more than 3.5 hours of her then-show America Live to hyping a contrived scandal about the Justice Department. The claim was that the department engaged in racially charged “corruption” in its handling of voter-intimidation claims about two members of the New Black Panther Party who appeared in a video standing outside a Philadelphia polling station during the 2008 election, one of them holding a nightstick; the other was a registered Democratic poll watcher. No one came forward to say he or she was intimidated by the two men. The story resurfaced during the 2016 election when supporters of Donald Trump used it to defend his false “rigged election” claim.

Kelly was sharply criticized for her sensationalistic coverage of the supposed scandal, with Dave Weigel -- then of The Atlantic -- calling Kelly’s coverage a “minstrel show.” Kelly’s focus on the Black Panthers constitutes just one part of her consistently insensitive and out-of-touch coverage on race issues.

During the interview, Wemple asked Kelly if it was a “fair reading” to use the Black Panthers incident to justify “Trump’s claims of the possibility of a rigged election.” Wemple, linking to Media Matters’ research in the transcript, also asked Kelly if her “pushing” of the incident “is where people draw their memory from,” to which Kelly responded, “next question.” Kelly also conceded that her show The Kelly File may not employee any African-Americans “at the moment.” Kelly’s deflection on her record comes as she is reportedly competing for contracts between networks. From the December 19 article:

[ERIK WEMPLE BLOG]: I was interested to see the photographs in your book. And you have a photograph of your staff and it sprung a question for me: You do all kinds of aggressive coverage, including on race. That staffing picture looked pretty much white, although there could be a couple of minorities in there. Do you think that for as aggressive as you are on racial issues, that you could use more diversity on the staff?

[MEGYN] KELLY: Well, I don’t know about the first part of your question. That’s not the reason. The reason to have more racial diversity on any team is because it’s helpful to have different perspectives on any issue. And I also believe that. It’s easier said than done, unfortunately. At Fox we started — this is one of Roger’s good legacies, the Ailes Apprentice Program, and that’s been pretty good about getting more people of color into the TV news ranks. But we don’t have enough, that’s just a fact. We don’t. And we can do better at that, just like most of the news networks can.

EWB: Do you have anyone who’s African American on the staff at this point?

KELLY: Not at the moment. Don’t hold me to that, Erik, because I’m probably forgetting somebody. Definitely we have some crew who work with me who are African American but . . . to be perfectly honest with you, I have never asked. We . . . have a couple of mixed-race people . . . I don’t know if they identify as mixed race or African American, so I don’t want to guess.

EWB: Obviously you know a lot about the whole New Black Panther issue, Philadelphia; you were famous for that. I didn’t see much mention in the book, but now, eight years later, a couple CNN pro-Trump commentators cited that incident sort of in the context of Trump talking about a rigged election. Do you think that’s a fair reading of the New Black Panther issue, sort of as grist for justifying Trump’s claims of the possibility of a rigged election?

KELLY: What do you mean, that guys like those New Black Panthers [inaudible] at the polls?

EWB: I believe Kayleigh McEnany said something to the effect that Trump “doesn’t want a scenario where there’s New Black Panthers outside with guns, essentially like intimidating people from coming into the polls.”

KELLY: That was not a widespread incident as far as we knew. That was a couple of rabble-rousers who showed up causing a bunch of nonsense at one Philadelphia polling station. I wouldn’t say you could extrapolate that to a general concern, especially because I don’t believe we saw it again in 2012. I believe it was these two guys trying to make a point in 2008; their point was made and I assume they understood the ramifications of it after the Department of Justice got involved.

EWB: Do you think that your pushing that incident is where people draw their memory from?

KELLY: Come on, Erik, next question.

EWB: No? I just wondered. I mean, you did scores of segments on it.

KELLY: You should take those scores of segments numbers with a huge grain of salt because that was some tabulation done by Media Matters that included teases. Teases!

The Suspicious Hanging Death of a Black Teen who Dated a 31 Yr Old White Woman

The Atlantic

This is the first of a three-part series called “The Hanging,” which focuses on the details surrounding the death of Lennon Lacy in Bladenboro, North Carolina. The 17-year-old was found hanging from a swing set in 2014, and while law enforcement and federal investigators ruled it a suicide, his family and the North Carolina NAACP remain unconvinced. They suspect it was murder. You can watch the second and third episodes here and here.

“The Hanging” is the result of a reporting project from Independent Lens on PBS, North Carolina’s UNC-TV, Orlando de Guzman, and WUNC reporter Leoneda Inge. This investigation was inspired by Always in Season, an upcoming documentary about the history of lynching in America, which includes an examination of the Lacy case.

Census Bureau Lists U.S. Metropolitan areas with the largest African American populations

DilemmaX

Census Bureau statistics released today are culled from the annual American Community Survey, which provides in-depth state and regional information based on monthly interviews with individuals.

The survey looks at statistics from all 3,142 counties in the U.S. The numbers released today cover the period from 2011 to 2015.

The American Community Survey helps local officials, community leaders and businesses understand the changes taking place in their communities. It is the premier source for detailed information about the American people and workforce.

The American Community Survey (ACS) is an ongoing survey that provides vital information on a yearly basis about our nation and its people. Information from the survey generates data that help determine how more than $400 billion in federal and state funds are distributed each year.

Through the ACS, we know more about jobs and occupations, educational attainment, veterans, whether people own or rent their home, and other topics. Public officials, planners, and entrepreneurs use this information to assess the past and plan the future. When you respond to the ACS, you are doing your part to help your community plan hospitals and schools, support school lunch programs, improve emergency services, build bridges, and inform businesses looking to add jobs and expand to new markets, and more.

By Population

 

Total Metro Population

Black or African American

New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA CSA

23,723,696

3,813,973

Washington-Baltimore-Arlington, DC-MD-VA-WV-PA CSA

9,625,744

2,416,074

Atlanta–Athens-Clarke County–Sandy Springs, GA CSA

6,362,668

2,020,222

Chicago-Naperville, IL-IN-WI CSA

9,923,466

1,636,919

Philadelphia-Reading-Camden, PA-NJ-DE-MD CSA

7,183,479

1,396,166

Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Port St. Lucie, FL CSA

6,654,313

1,377,806

Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA CSA

18,679,763

1,231,312

Houston-The Woodlands, TX CSA

6,857,660

1,176,398

Dallas-Fort Worth, TX-OK CSA

7,503,731

1,124,617

Detroit-Warren-Ann Arbor, MI CSA

5,319,913

1,096,353

Memphis-Forrest City, TN-MS-AR CSA

1,370,161

641,036

Charlotte-Concord, NC-SC CSA

2,583,956

571,923

Virginia Beach-Norfolk, VA-NC CSA

1,827,009

549,774

Cleveland-Akron-Canton, OH CSA

3,493,596

536,873

Boston-Worcester-Providence, MA-RI-NH-CT CSA

8,152,573

531,732

San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA CSA

8,713,914

522,023

St. Louis-St. Charles-Farmington, MO-IL CSA

2,917,172

516,710

New Orleans-Metairie-Hammond, LA-MS CSA

1,493,205

499,625

Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, NC CSA

2,117,103

488,725

Orlando-Deltona-Daytona Beach, FL CSA

3,129,308

458,892

Richmond, VA Metro Area

1,246,215

373,687

Birmingham-Hoover-Talladega, AL CSA

1,319,422

364,208

Greensboro–Winston-Salem–High Point, NC CSA

1,642,506

349,665

Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL Metro Area

2,888,458

346,574

Columbia-Orangeburg-Newberry, SC CSA

937,794

338,375

Jacksonville-St. Marys-Palatka, FL-GA CSA

1,573,606

335,762

Jackson-Vicksburg-Brookhaven, MS CSA

670,319

326,650

Columbus-Marion-Zanesville, OH CSA

2,424,831

316,623

Indianapolis-Carmel-Muncie, IN CSA

2,371,865

306,969

San Juan-Carolina, PR CSA

2,495,780

296,411

Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN-WI CSA

3,866,768

291,493

Milwaukee-Racine-Waukesha, WI CSA

2,046,692

286,014

Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro, TN CSA

1,951,597

283,660

Kansas City-Overland Park-Kansas City, MO-KS CSA

2,427,532

278,247

Cincinnati-Wilmington-Maysville, OH-KY-IN CSA

2,217,828

263,083

Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson, SC CSA

1,426,066

261,696

Las Vegas-Henderson, NV-AZ CSA

2,362,015

235,481

Seattle-Tacoma, WA CSA

4,602,591

232,852

Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ Metro Area

4,407,915

227,743

Little Rock-North Little Rock, AR CSA

903,900

220,611

Pittsburgh-New Castle-Weirton, PA-OH-WV CSA

2,649,496

198,858

Louisville/Jefferson County–Elizabethtown–Madison, KY-IN CSA

1,504,754

195,973

Fayetteville-Lumberton-Laurinburg, NC CSA

546,215

181,386

Savannah-Hinesville-Statesboro, GA CSA

530,661

177,149

Columbus-Auburn-Opelika, GA-AL CSA

504,052

176,115

Lafayette-Opelousas-Morgan City, LA CSA

627,146

170,718

Mobile-Daphne-Fairhope, AL CSA

619,104

168,205

Montgomery, AL Metro

375,435

166,413

Sacramento-Roseville, CA CSA

2,544,026

166,145

San Diego-Carlsbad, CA Metro Area

3,223,096

163,276

Denver-Aurora, CO CSA

3,418,876

161,462

Macon-Warner Robins, GA CSA

419,401

161,147

Hartford-West Hartford, CT CSA

1,483,187

152,393

San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX Metro Area

2,286,702

151,999

Buffalo-Cheektowaga, NY CSA

1,213,152

142,612

Rocky Mount-Wilson-Roanoke Rapids, NC CSA

302,665

141,022

Tallahassee-Bainbridge, FL-GA CSA

405,612

138,885

Oklahoma City-Shawnee, OK CSA

1,430,327

138,779

Austin-Round Rock, TX Metro Area

1,889,094

138,633

Dayton-Springfield-Sidney, OH CSA

1,076,832

134,184

Rochester-Batavia-Seneca Falls, NY CSA

1,175,724

131,124

Huntsville-Decatur-Albertville, AL CSA

692,157

119,395

Monroe-Ruston-Bastrop, LA CSA

253,407

97,592

Grand Rapids-Wyoming-Muskegon, MI CSA

1,433,288

95,762

Harrisburg-York-Lebanon, PA CSA

1,247,235

89,334

Tulsa-Muskogee-Bartlesville, OK CSA

1,150,961

89,219

Chattanooga-Cleveland-Dalton, TN-GA-AL CSA

949,394

86,971

Cape Coral-Fort Myers-Naples, FL CSA

1,059,287

86,482

Toledo-Port Clinton, OH CSA

646,833

85,600

Greenville-Washington, NC CSA

223,493

75,304

Portland-Vancouver-Salem, OR-WA CSA

3,111,922

73,876

Myrtle Beach-Conway, SC-NC CSA

493,262

73,728

Albany-Schenectady, NY CSA

1,173,891

73,532

Omaha-Council Bluffs-Fremont, NE-IA CSA

952,263

71,834

South Bend-Elkhart-Mishawaka, IN-MI CSA

725,065

70,792

North Port-Sarasota, FL CSA

977,491

68,181

Lexington-Fayette–Richmond–Frankfort, KY CSA

719,949

65,661

Gainesville-Lake City, FL CSA

345,229

65,239

Youngstown-Warren, OH-PA CSA

654,691

62,989

Syracuse-Auburn, NY CSA

738,746

58,319

Knoxville-Morristown-Sevierville, TN CSA

1,109,429

55,515

Dothan-Enterprise-Ozark, AL CSA

248,947

54,907

Longview-Marshall, TX CSA

284,527

54,714

Wichita-Arkansas City-Winfield, KS CSA

680,290

53,990

Fresno-Madera, CA CSA

1,129,859

51,643

Kalamazoo-Battle Creek-Portage, MI CSA

530,672

46,814

Springfield-Greenfield Town, MA CSA

702,583

46,504

Tyler-Jacksonville, TX CSA

274,478

45,970

Rockford-Freeport-Rochelle, IL CSA

438,071

42,850

Fort Wayne-Huntington-Auburn, IN CSA

626,124

42,127

Lansing-East Lansing-Owosso, MI CSA

540,895

39,841

Saginaw-Midland-Bay City, MI CSA

382,598

37,452

Tucson-Nogales, AZ CSA

1,056,486

36,801

Peoria-Canton, IL CSA

412,686

36,764

El Paso-Las Cruces, TX-NM CSA

1,052,314

35,319

Madison-Janesville-Beloit, WI CSA

866,475

34,589

Des Moines-Ames-West Des Moines, IA CSA

782,390

32,970

New Bern-Morehead City, NC CSA

193,945

32,244

Salt Lake City-Provo-Orem, UT CSA

2,468,347

31,150

Ponce-Coamo-Santa Isabel, PR CSA

399,540

30,660

Davenport-Moline, IA-IL CSA

475,363

29,511

Albuquerque-Santa Fe-Las Vegas, NM CSA

1,168,795

28,845

Springfield-Jacksonville-Lincoln, IL CSA

314,958

28,555

Charleston-Huntington-Ashland, WV-OH-KY CSA

692,348

26,952

Hickory-Lenoir, NC CSA

407,499

24,856

Modesto-Merced, CA CSA

806,843

23,644

Asheville-Brevard, NC CSA

480,051

23,318

Erie-Meadville, PA CSA

364,529

22,078

Lubbock-Levelland, TX CSA

335,866

20,528

Columbia-Moberly-Mexico, MO CSA

226,174

19,302

Cedar Rapids-Iowa City, IA CSA

432,538

19,128

Rome-Summerville, GA CSA

122,370

17,659

Corpus Christi-Kingsville-Alice, TX CSA

522,751

17,320

Bloomington-Pontiac, IL CSA

225,396

16,044

Visalia-Porterville-Hanford, CA CSA

610,828

15,911

Jonesboro-Paragould, AR CSA

172,590

15,792

Midland-Odessa, TX CSA

324,863

15,577

Lima-Van Wert-Celina, OH CSA

219,831

14,631

Amarillo-Borger, TX CSA

283,924

14,015

Bowling Green-Glasgow, KY CSA

219,168

13,862

Cape Girardeau-Sikeston, MO-IL CSA

135,550

13,436

Harrisonburg-Staunton-Waynesboro, VA CSA

251,352

13,048

DeRidder-Fort Polk South, LA CSA

87,265

12,763

Lincoln-Beatrice, NE CSA

345,457

12,740

Johnson City-Kingsport-Bristol, TN-VA CSA

506,193

12,614

Paducah-Mayfield, KY-IL CSA

136,018

12,221

Springfield-Branson, MO CSA

540,609

12,156

Hot Springs-Malvern, AR CSA

130,603

11,943

Reno-Carson City-Fernley, NV CSA

605,954

11,309

Manhattan-Junction City, KS CSA

135,575

10,595

Portland-Lewiston-South Portland, ME CSA

633,528

10,296

Lafayette-West Lafayette-Frankfort, IN CSA

247,606

9,500

Rochester-Austin, MN CSA

252,989

9,150

State College-DuBois, PA CSA

241,574

8,919

Fargo-Wahpeton, ND-MN CSA

256,616

8,819

Mansfield-Ashland-Bucyrus, OH CSA

217,226

8,498

Bloomsburg-Berwick-Sunbury, PA CSA

263,873

8,482

Elmira-Corning, NY CSA

184,702

8,362

Spokane-Spokane Valley-Coeur d’Alene, WA-ID CSA

697,153

8,248

Victoria-Port Lavaca, TX CSA

120,935

7,705

Morgantown-Fairmont, WV CSA

195,101

7,232

Kokomo-Peru, IN CSA

118,418

7,170

Martin-Union City, TN-KY CSA

70,211

7,170

Boise City-Mountain Home-Ontario, ID-OR CSA

756,244

7,146

Appleton-Oshkosh-Neenah, WI CSA

402,553

6,598

Williamsport-Lock Haven, PA CSA

155,489

6,443

Johnstown-Somerset, PA CSA

211,933

6,368

Pueblo-Cañon City, CO CSA

210,283

5,959

Green Bay-Shawano, WI CSA

362,457

5,767

McAllen-Edinburg, TX CSA

906,099

5,761

Mayagüez-San Germán, PR CSA

227,075

5,646

Mount Pleasant-Alma, MI CSA

112,238

4,507

Bloomington-Bedford, IN CSA

211,072

4,403

Quincy-Hannibal, IL-MO CSA

116,319

3,985

Clovis-Portales, NM CSA

69,518

3,952

Sioux City-Vermillion, IA-SD-NE CSA

178,572

3,937

Dixon-Sterling, IL CSA

91,663

3,617

Ithaca-Cortland, NY CSA

153,420

3,484

Mankato-New Ulm-North Mankato, MN CSA

124,447

3,380

Findlay-Tiffin, OH CSA

131,183

3,269

Richmond-Connersville, IN CSA

91,100

3,211

Redding-Red Bluff, CA CSA

242,841

2,940

Joplin-Miami, MO-OK CSA

209,192

2,146

Wausau-Stevens Point-Wisconsin Rapids, WI CSA

307,691

2,078

Eau Claire-Menomonie, WI CSA

210,133

1,886

Medford-Grants Pass, OR CSA

297,312

1,884

Brownsville-Harlingen-Raymondville, TX CSA

444,308

1,862

Parkersburg-Marietta-Vienna, WV-OH CSA

153,888

1,836

Pullman-Moscow, WA-ID CSA

86,955

1,328

Rapid City-Spearfish, SD CSA

170,176

1,211

Bend-Redmond-Prineville, OR CSA

198,233

1,128

Edwards-Glenwood Springs, CO CSA

131,661

723

Moses Lake-Othello, WA CSA

112,514

539

Idaho Falls-Rexburg-Blackfoot, ID CSA

236,486

 

 


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Study Finds that 95 % of the Nation’s Elected State and Local Prosecutors are White

NY Times

Sixty-six percent of states that elect prosecutors have no blacks in those offices, a new study has found, highlighting the lack of diversity in the ranks of those entrusted to bring criminal charges and negotiate prison sentences.

About 95 percent of the 2,437 elected state and local prosecutors across the country in 2014 were white, and 79 percent were white men, according to the study, which was to be released on Tuesday by the San-Francisco-based Women Donors Network. By comparison, white men make up 31 percent of the population of the United States.

The numbers are being released as debate continues about racial imbalances in the criminal justice system in the wake of police-related deaths in Ferguson, Mo.; Staten Island; and Baltimore.

While the racial makeup of police forces across the country has been carefully documented, the diversity of prosecutors, who many law enforcement experts say exercise more influence over the legal system, has received little scrutiny. Prosecutors decide in most criminal cases whether to bring charges. And, because so many criminal cases end in plea bargains, they have a direct hand in deciding how long defendants spend behind bars.

“What this shows us is that, in the context of a growing crisis that we all recognize in criminal justice in this country, we have a system where incredible power and discretion is concentrated in the hands of one demographic group,” said Brenda Choresi Carter of the Women Donors Network, who led the study.

The data was compiled and analyzed by the Center for Technology and Civic Life, a nonpartisan group that specializes in aggregating civic data sets. The Women Donors Network, which undertook the project, is composed of about 200 female philanthropists who promote a variety of causes, including diversification of elected officials by race, class and sex.

Researchers looked at all elected city, county and judicial district prosecutors, as well as state attorneys general, in office across the country during the summer of 2014. Kentucky had the most elected prosecutors, 161, and four states — Alaska, Hawaii, New Hampshire and New Jersey — had none that were counted by the study.

Although the study found that 14 states had exclusively white elected prosecutors — Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington and Wyoming — there are only 13 because Connecticut’s attorney general exercises only civil jurisdiction and is not a prosecutor. In Kentucky and Missouri, which also has more than 100 elected prosecutors, all but one was white, according to the analysis.

The study also found that 16 percent of elected prosecutors were white women, 4 percent were minority men and 1 percent were minority women.

“I think most people know that we’ve had a significant problem with lack of diversity in decision-making roles in the criminal justice system for a long time,” said Bryan A. Stevenson, the founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, a group that offers legal representation for poor defendants and prisoners. “I think what these numbers dramatize is that the reality is much worse than most people imagine and that we are making almost no progress.”

Mr. Stevenson said that while African-Americans had increased in number in mayoral positions and police forces in recent decades, the numbers suggested that the prosecutorial field had not kept pace.

Melba V. Pearson, a Miami lawyer and the president of the National Black Prosecutors Association, said a “long stain” caused by the imbalance was responsible for mistrust in the system by African-Americans and other minorities.

“They have to see someone that looks like them,” she said. “When you walk into a courtroom and no one looks like you, do you think you are going to get a fair shake?”

Ms. Pearson said she tried to show African-American lawyers that they needed to be represented in all roles in the criminal justice system, including as prosecutors, a role traditionally stigmatized in the black community, to ensure fair outcomes.

Mr. Stevenson questions whether it is possible to diversify the ranks of prosecutors, given that most of them are elected and incumbents often serve long tenures. With 85 percent of incumbent prosecutors re-elected without opposition, according to a study, sitting prosecutors will either need to start making diversity a priority in vetting their successors or the system will need to be significantly altered to give state bar associations and other legal entities more of a say, he said.

The new study did not look at federal prosecutors, who are appointed, or other state or local appointees. The Women Donors Network planned to make a database of all elected prosecutors available on its website later on Tuesday. [MORE]

Black Women Overrepresented in Solitary Confinement

Sentencing Projcet

A new report co-authored by the Association of State Correctional Administrators and The Arthur Liman Program at Yale Law School reveals significant overrepresentation of black women in solitary confinement across the United States. Among 40 jurisdictions providing data (38 states, the federal system, and the Virgin Islands), black women constituted 24% of the total female incarcerated population but comprised 41% of the female restricted housing population. The report documents smaller but substantial racial disparities in male isolation and estimates the disparities in each jurisdiction. Its authors define restricted housing as “the separation of prisoners from general population and in detention for 22 hours per day or more, for 15 or more continuous days, in single-cells or in double-cells.”

Michigan Moves Closer to Passing Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Bill

Innocence Project

This week, the Michigan House approved a bill— the Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Act—to compensate people who’ve been exonerated of wrongful convictions. Over the past 25 years, 66 people in Michigan have been exonerated of crimes they did not commit. With no compensation law in place, these individuals had to forge ahead with their new lives without the financial means to do so. This legislation would offer Michigan exonerees much needed support, providing them with $50,000 per year of wrongful incarceration.

Last year, a local news station featured a story on Donya Davis, who was exonerated in 2014 in Michigan of a 2007 armed rape and robbery. Davis was asking state lawmakers to strongly consider passing a compensation law. Surviving life post-exoneration with no financial footing was nearly impossibly, he stressed.

At the time of the story, Davis was in dire straits financially. “I couldn’t even feed my children. I’m barely feeding myself. I couldn’t get a job based on their [the state’s] mistake,” Davis told FOX 17 West Michigan.

State Senator Steve Beida (D-Warren), sponsor of the Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Act, has been working for more than a decade to get this legislation passed. The next step and last step to making this bill law is getting Governor Rick Synder’s signature, which advocates are hopeful will happen.

“They’re not going to get rich off this,” said State Senator Steve Beida to WEMU, “but it will give them the chance to do something that’s meaningful and allow them to move forward.  We can’t bring them their time back.  We can’t bring back the time they’ve lost with their families, the ability to establish a career, everyday things we take for granted, we can at least when we release these people onto the street, we can give them the ability to have a decent life.” [MORE]

9/11 Suspect Rudy Giuliani and the Trump Campaign

Non-Aligned Media

The alt-right, a loose rightist coalition of opportunistic clickbait YouTube pundits and organized white nationalists, has been busy glorifying US President-Elect Donald Trump as a “God Emperor,” hailing the incumbent president as a potential “hero” and “saviour” of the declining white population in the United States.

Conveniently ignored and brushed aside by Trump’s sycophants in the alt-right is the troubling fact that many of the billionaire’s closest advisors and supporters are well-known DC establishment criminals who, during the Bush years, facilitated the traitorous cover-up of 9/11 and helped launch the murderous War on Terror, a completely fraudulent scheme to initiate a series of wars planned by Zionist imperialists in Israel decades earlier.

One of Trump’s loudest proponents on the 2016 campaign trail was none other than former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a key player in the 9/11 conspiracy and cover up.

Corbett’s report plays an amateur video showing an endless stream of dump trucks moving into Lower Manhattan to cart away thousands of tons of building debris from the collapsed World Trade Centre, including all of the steel beams which, if tested by experts, could have demonstrated conclusively that explosive charges were used to bring down the buildings.

That key evidence was not only not retained for analysis, but was instead quickly sold and shipped off to Chinese smelters for a profit and destroyed forever. Giuliani himself personally oversaw this process of rapidly removing and extinguishing the evidence which could have indicted the real perpetrators of the attacks and which would have severally undermined the neocons’ pre-planned war agenda.

Corbett also makes the case that Giuliani had foreknowledge that the Twin Towers and Building 7 were going to collapse before anyone could have predicted such a momentous event. In an interview Giuliani gave to the media on 9/11, he admits to receiving a warning by unnamed individuals that the buildings would collapse, a caution that no one else was privy to and which Giuliani failed to pass on to the first responders, many of whom died trying to rescue people trapped in the towers.

Also suspicious, in the late 1990s Giuliani as mayor commissioned the construction of a state-of-the-art command bunker in WTC Building 7, known as the Office of Emergency Management (OEM), containing blast and bullet proof walls, living quarters to accommodate 30 people and back up generators. Yet, amazingly, on 9/11 Giuliani and his team were nowhere near this emergency bunker built specifically for the purpose of housing state officials to coordinate a response to crises. Instead, Giuliani confided that he was in a different command centre located at Pier 92, oddly set-up shortly before 9/11 for the purpose of organizing a bio-terrorism drill involving FEMA as well as federal and state officials, scheduled for September 12. Was this “drill” just a smoke-and-mirrors cover story to provide Giuliani and his New York City administration an excuse to explain away their absence from the OEM in Building 7, which later collapsed in an apparent controlled demolition?

Probed about his semblant foreknowledge and complicity by activists, Giuliani smirked and denied ever receiving the warning or knowing the buildings would collapse. New York firefighters and 9/11 first responders so detest Giuliani for his scandalous actions on and after 9/11, that they have launched several public campaigns exposing his misdeeds. [MORE]

Subverting the will of the voters: Broadcast News Ignores NC GOP's “Unprecedented Power Grab”

Media Matters

Broadcast news completely ignored an unprecedented move by North Carolina Republicans to limit the power of the state’s incoming Democratic governor. A series of measures put forth by the Republican-controlled legislature have been criticized as a way to “subvert the will of the voters,” and an elections law expert noted that they could spur legal challenges.

Republicans in the North Carolina General Assembly held a special session on December 14 in which they proposed a series of laws to strip away power from the state’s incoming Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, including a bill that “removes partisan control of the state and county election boards from the governor,” according to The New York Times. Instead, the Times noted, “a Republican will lead the state board during election years and a Democrat in nonelection years.” A CNN.com report outlined other proposed legislation from the “unprecedented power grab,” including bills to slow the judicial process for the governor to bring legal battles to the state Supreme Court, to block Cooper from appointing members to the state Board of Education and the board of trustees for the University of North Carolina, and to reduce the number of appointments in the Cooper administration from 1,200 to 300.

The special session was a surprise, called suddenly and immediately after the conclusion of another special session to address disaster relief. As The Atlantic noted, “legislators used the same obscure maneuver they did when they passed HB2,” an anti-LGBTQ law that governs access to public bathrooms, “calling themselves back into session with the support of three-fifths of legislators.” Several media figures have pointed out that the backlash against HB 2 -- which invalidated local governments' ability to provide legal protections for LGBTQ people -- was likely a deciding factor in Gov. Pat McCrory’s recent re-election loss. The Atlantic article also explained that Republican House Speaker Tim Moore claimed “the decision to open the second special session had been made only Wednesday,” December 14, which was “a lie that was quickly revealed by the list of signatures from legislators needed to call the session, dated December 12.”

None of these details, however, have been reported on any national broadcast news programs since Wednesday. A review of the December 14 and 15 editions of ABC’s World News Tonight, CBS’ Evening News, NBC’s Nightly News, and of the December 15 and 16 editions of ABC’s Good Morning America, CBS’ CBS This Morning, and NBC’s Today found no mentions of the attempted power grab. Local affiliates of all three networks did cover the story.

Other national and internet media outlets also covered the unprecedented moves. As Slate’s Mark Joseph Stern wrote, “This last-minute power grab marks an alarming departure from basic democratic norms” and is “a blatant attempt to overturn the results of an election by curtailing judicial independence and restructuring the government to seize authority lawfully delegated to the incoming Democratic governor.” The New York Times and Washington Post editorial boards criticized the North Carolina Republicans for “resorting to a novel strategy to subvert the will of the voters” and attempting a “graceless power grab.” CNN and MSNBC have also covered what MSNBC’s Chris Hayes described as a “legislative coup.” New York magazine reported that the bills will get a vote on December 20, but that the new measures may spur a larger battle. As elections law expert Rick Hasen explained, some of the measures would spur “potential Voting Rights Act and federal constitutional challenges.”

Supreme Court declines to review NFL concussion settlement

[JURIST]

The US Supreme Court [official website] denied [order list, PDF] review of two class action lawsuit settlements Monday related to concussion injuries suffered by players in the National Football League [website]. The $1 billion settlement between the NFL and more than 20,000 retired players has been challenged by some of those players in two different suits, Armstrong vs. National Football League and Gilchrist vs. National Football League [dockets]. In their decision [opinion] to let the settlement between the NFL and the retired players stand, the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit [official website] wrote, "It is the nature of a settlement that some will be dissatisfied with the result."

[W]e do not doubt that objectors are well-intentioned in making thoughtful arguments against certification of the class and approval of this settlement. They aim to ensure that the claims of retired players are not given up in exchange for anything less than a generous settlement agreement negotiated by very able representatives. But they risk making the perfect the enemy of the good. This settlement will provide nearly $1 billion in value to the class of retired players. It is a testament to the players, researchers, and advocates who have worked to expose the true human costs of a sport so many love. Though not perfect, it is fair. [MORE]

FL death row population in limbo after Supreme Court ruled that death penalty requires unanimous jury verdict

NPR

The number of men and women currently waiting on Florida's death row is 384. Nearly all of them live just outside a town called Raiford, Fla.

But those men and women — the second largest death row population in the country — remain in limbo nearly a year after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that death penalties require a unanimous jury verdict. What's in question is how that ruling will apply to existing convictions.

Two sets of tall chain link fences with coils of razor wire on the top surround Florida State Prison's whitewashed buildings. Ronald Clark is one of the inmates behind those fences.

"That's me at 21 years old," Clark says, looking at a picture of his younger self.

"Long hair, baby face. Looked about 15," he says with a laugh.

Clark is 48 now — serving a life sentence for one murder and facing the death penalty for another. But the Supreme Court's Hurst v. Florida decision has given him a glimmer of hope.

"Because the jury was not the sentencer — the judge was, which Hurst was found to be unconstitutional, because they say that the jury needs to be the sentencer, not the judge," Clark says. [MORE]

Blacks are three times more likely to die of AIDS-related deaths than whites in prisons

The Marshall Project

New data released Thursday from the Bureau of Justice Statistics shows a stark difference in how white and black inmates are dying in the nation’s prisons and jails.

Deaths of all prisoners rose slightly from 2013 to 2014, the latest year for which the bureau has compiled data. Of the 4,980 people who died in custody of federal and state prison systems and about 2,900 local jails nationwide, most were non-Hispanic whites.

Illness accounted for a vast majority of the deaths — heart disease and cancer were among the most common causes — but a closer examination shows significant racial differences in two causes of death.

Between 2001 and 2014, the percentage of state and federal prisoners who died from AIDS-related illnesses decreased dramatically, from a high of 9.6 percent down to 1.8 percent. Local jails saw a similar drop. At the same time, the number of prisoners living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, also decreased.

Despite the decrease, the rate of AIDS-related deaths differed significantly between white and black people in prisons. White inmates died of AIDS-related illnesses at an average rate of 6 per 100,000 prisoners each year. The rate for black inmates was 17 per 100,000, nearly three times that of whites. In jails, a similar pattern emerged. Hispanic and Latino prisoners had roughly the same mortality rate as whites in prisons and jails.

There are similar disparities for suicide, which overall has increased slightly in prisons since 2001. It is the cause of death for 7 percent of white prison inmates, compared with only 3.5 percent of their black peers.

In 2014 alone, suicides represented 7 percent of all deaths in state and federal prisons — the highest percentage since 2001.

This mirrors the overall increase of suicide among white men between the ages of 45 and 64 in the general population, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But it is also reflective of the problem with mental health treatment in jails and prisons. Michele Deitch, a senior lecturer at the School of Law at the University of Texas at Austin, says there are ways to prevent suicide among the incarcerated.

“Look at facilities that have been sued,” Deitch said. Afterward, “they tend to implement good prevention strategies,” she said.

For people who are already living with mental health challenges, the loss of a family member, a stint in solitary, being the victim of violence or being denied parole can lead to a state of depression, said Deitch, who urged better staff training in all areas of corrections. [MORE]

White Orange County Deputies Coerced Confessions & then lied about their activities while under oath

MORE THAN A year after the initial request for intervention was made, the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division on December 15 announced that it would initiate an investigation of the still unfolding jailhouse snitch scandal that has embroiled Orange County, California.

“A systemic failure to protect the right to counsel and to a fair trial makes criminal proceedings fundamentally unfair and diminishes the public’s faith in the integrity of the justice system,” Deputy Assistant Attorney General Vanita Gupta, head of the Civil Rights Division, said in a press release.

As The Intercept has reported, the Orange County district attorney’s office along with the Orange County sheriff have been at the center of a nearly four-year-old scandal involving the illegal use of jailhouse informants — violating their targets’ Sixth Amendment rights — and allegations that prosecutors withheld evidence about their shenanigans from defense attorneys, violating their clients’ due process rights.

Both District Attorney Tony Rackauckas and Sheriff Sandra Hutchens have been insistent over the years that there is nothing wrong with the county’s criminal justice system — despite still mounting evidence that deputies crafted illegal schemes to coerce confessions out of high-profile inmates and lied about their activities while under oath, and that prosecutors were complicit in and covered up some of the wrongdoing.

Nonetheless, in a statement posted to Facebook, Hutchens welcomed the review: “It is, and has been, our ultimate goal to have a jail system that is exemplary and that upholds its duty to the inmates, our staff and the people of Orange County.”

Although the DOJ credited Rackauckas for requesting the inquiry, he was clearly reluctant and did so only after the handpicked group of lawyers he asked to review the situation issued a scathing report recommending an outside investigation, and several months after a group of 30 distinguished lawyers and interested parties signed on to a letter urging DOJ intervention.

Rackauckas’ statement regarding the review was perfunctory, though he made sure to remind readers that it was he who asked the feds to make their inquiry. The office is “grateful” for the response, reads the press release. And he reiterated the belief that no one in his office did anything wrong — at least not on purpose: “The OCDA believes at the conclusion of USDOJ Civil Rights Division review, they will conclude that the OCDA did not engage in systematic or intentional violation of civil rights of any inmate and no innocent person was wrongfully convicted.”

The Intercept

The DOJ’s planned practice-or-pattern review of the Orange County criminal justice system will seek to ferret out persistent patterns of misconduct and to determine whether systemic deficiencies “contribute to the conduct or enable it to persist.” If misconduct is found, the agency will determine specific remedies needed to fix the issues — usually as part of a negotiated agreement that becomes a federal court order. If the local law enforcement agencies decline to work with the feds to enact the remedies, the DOJ can initiate a civil lawsuit to secure the reforms.

Orange County’s snitch scandal was uncovered by public defender Scott Sanders while working on two high-profile death penalty cases, including one involving Scott Dekraai, responsible for the county’s worst-ever mass shooting. The evidence of misconduct uncovered by Sanders led a local judge, after months of hearings, to conclude that the district attorney’s office should be recused from handling the Dekraai case. The state attorney general sought to overturn that decision, but was shot down in a blistering appellate court opinion delivered in late November.

“The Court of Appeal stated that the ‘magnitude of the systemic problems [in OCDA and OCSD] cannot be overlooked,’” Sanders wrote in an email to The Intercept. “It is hoped that the Justice Department’s probe will help reform the system so that all Orange County residents will receive the constitutional protections to which they are entitled.”

Trump Homeland Security Adviser Helped Contractors Profit Off Harsh Deportation Policies

The Intercept

BEHIND THE CORINTHIAN COLUMNS of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the country’s premiere corporate advocacy association, talk of a crackdown on immigrants takes a clinical tone, far different from the bombastic rhetoric found on talk radio or at a Donald Trump campaign rally.

Lora Ries, speaking at a Chamber conference in 2011 on national security and immigration, spoke calmly about the need for a vast expansion of immigration enforcement. And rather than simply securing the borders, the government should “focus on interior enforcement so that there are those routine consequences,” she said. The government should integrate databases and step up the criminal penalties for those in the country without documentation. After all, she noted, we must “remove the hay to expose the needles.”

Ries, a longtime lobbyist for a variety of homeland security contractors, is one of the latest hires by the Trump transition to remake the Department of Homeland Security.

Her selection is the latest evidence that Trump is preparing to fulfill his pledge to step up deportations.

Ries began her career in government, serving as an official with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and as a Republican counsel to the House Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security. But for much of the last decade, Ries has moved through the revolving door as a lobbyist for the contractors profiting from harsh immigration policies.

Her current employer is CSRA International, a massive federal information technology contractor that, among other things, sells the GangNet software that underpins gang databases maintained by 13 states, ICE, the FBI and ATF. 

Disclosure documents show that in 2008, Ries lobbied on behalf of USIS, a company that provided background checks for the federal government, on its work for the controversial Secure Communities program. Secure Communities, developed in 2008 under President George Bush as a partnership between federal and local law enforcement, compelled local police to share arrestees’ fingerprints with federal immigration officials, a move designed to initiative deportation proceedings.

The program was criticized for its role in deputizing local police as immigration officials, and for driving undocumented communities underground for fear that even reporting a crime to the police could lead to being turned over to ICE. In 2014, President Obama replaced Secure Communities with the Priority Enforcement Program, an effective rebranding strategy that kept many of the same enforcement priorities regarding undocumented migrants with criminal records. The measure was announced alongside the intended carrot of immigration relief in the form of executive action to allow the parents of permanent residents, as well as minors who entered the country, an opportunity to apply for deferred action in order to prevent deportation. The program for parents was blocked this year by a federal court. 

The role of private contractors such as USIS in spearheading the program has received little scrutiny. LinkedIn pages for several former analysts for the firm working on the program provide some clues. One analyst employed by USIS to work on Secure Communities said he “analyzed the immigration status and criminal history of all non-US citizens arrested in the jurisdictions that participated in this program” and “helped prioritize the removal of those individuals who posed the greatest risk to public safety.” [MORE]