Month: October 2022

  • Newswire: Imam Jamil Al-Amin, the former H. Rap Brown, turns 79 in prison, as movement to free him continues

    H. Rap Brown / Imam Jamil Al-Amin

    By: Heather Gray, Justice Initiative

    Last week on October 4th, Imam Abdulla Al-Amin (formerly H. Rap Brown) had his 79th birthday in the United States Penitentiary in Tucson, Arizona, far from his home and family in Atlanta, Georgia.

    Born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in 1943, he was was given the name of Hubert Giroir Brown. He was eventually known as H. Rap Brown that changed, in 1971, to Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin when he became Muslim. He attended Southern University but left school to join and participate in the civil rights movement.

    In 1966 he became the field director of the and was chosen as Minister of Justice for the Black Panther Party, when the two groups joined forces.

    Brown was a major spokesperson for the movement as it changed its focus from civil rights to human rights to Black Power! Brown was hounded by the police and wound up serving prison time at Attica Prison in New York. In prison, he became a Muslim and chose the name Jamil Al-Amin.

    When he was paroled in 1976, he went to live in the Atlanta West End Muslim community and soon became Imam of the mosque. He worked with the community to rid it of crime and drugs, while building a religious community on faith, good works and collective prayer. Many national and international visitors came to meet with him and learn his perspectives on life, community, and movement.

    After 24 years in Atlanta, however, he was arrested on March 20, 2000, and charged with the death of Fulton County Georgia Sherriff’s Deputy, Ricky Kinchen. However, all the indications are that he was not the killer. In fact, Otis Jackson confessed to being the shooter on the evening of March 16, 2000 in Atlanta, Georgia yet this was never introduced at trial by the prosecution or defense. Otis Jackson, is now in a Florida jail for unrelated charges, continues to maintain that he was the assailant.

    Although charged for a Georgia state crime, Jamil Al-Amin was transferred to Florence, Colorado’s ADX SuperMax prison, where he languished over a decade, much of it in solitary confinement. He is presently imprisoned at the United States Penitentiary in Tucson, Arizona, site of a 2021 rally to protest for his freedom.
    “ This has been a personal fight for me for 21 years, because this is my father,” attorney Kairi Al-Amin said at the Aug. 15 gathering. “I’m tired, this thing is weighing on me and it’s heavy. Hopefully the weight will be lifted soon and he’ll walk out those doors and spend the rest of his life on this side of the wall.”
    Supporters want him relocated to Georgia where he’ll be close to his loved ones, lawyers, and receive adequate medical attention. They’re also pushing to have him exonerated if they’re permitted to present previously withheld evidence, in a new trial. On June 29, 2000, parolee Otis Jackson confessed to the crime in sworn affidavits, providing detailed accounts of the shootout. He matched eyewitness’ descriptions of the shooter.
    However, his confession was ignored, along with other supporting evidence during Al-Amin’s trial, which was conducted, “In the midst of government surveillance on civil-rights leaders and post 9/11 Islamophobia. It is also important to note that Al-Amin went to trial in March 2002, less than six months after 9/11. At a time when hatred against Muslims in the U.S. was at an all-time high,” assessed investigative reporter, Hamzah Raza.
    Deputy English testified that he shot two men who “had grey eyes” in the incident. Jamil’s are brown, and he was uninjured when arrested four days afterwards, and neither his DNA nor fingerprints were on the alleged murder weapon.
    The movement to free Imam Jamil Al-Amin continues and his friends, family and community supporters are working for his humanitarian release from prison despite the state’s desire and power to keep him locked up and isolated. He is one of many aging political prisoners from the 1960’s and 1970’s, who should be released.

     

  • Newswire: Biden issuing full pardons for Federal Marijuana Possession Convictions

    By Stacy M. Brown,NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent


    President Joe Biden has issued a pardon to all prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession, fulfilling a campaign promise of getting rid of possession convictions and loosening the drug’s federal classification.
    
“Sending people to prison for possessing marijuana has upended too many lives and incarcerated people for conduct that many states no longer prohibit,” Biden said in a statement.
    
“Criminal records for marijuana possession have also imposed needless barriers to employment, housing, and educational opportunities,” the president continued.
“And while white and Black and Brown people use marijuana at similar rates, Black and Brown people have been arrested, prosecuted, and convicted at disproportionate rates.”
    
Biden vowed to encourage governors to take similar steps to pardon state simple marijuana possession charges.
    
According to a Pew Research survey, wide majorities of Black adults support legalizing marijuana at least for medical use (85%). The survey found that most favor reforms to the criminal justice system, such as releasing people from prison who are being held only for marijuana-related charges and expunging marijuana-related offenses from the criminal records of individuals convicted of such crimes (74% each).
    
According to FBI data, Black adults are disproportionately likely to be arrested for marijuana-related offenses. Researchers at Pew noted that, although non-Hispanic, single-race Black and White Americans used marijuana at roughly comparable rates in 2020, Black people accounted for 39% of all marijuana possession arrests in the U.S. despite being only 12% of the U.S. population.
    
Further, in a separate study, Pew noted that police officers made about 663,000 arrests for marijuana-related offenses in the 50 states and the District of Columbia in 2018, amounting to 40% of the 1.65 million total drug arrests in the U.S. that year (the most recent for which data is available).
    
The second-largest category of drug arrests involved “other” drugs (29%), followed by heroin, cocaine, or their derivatives (25%), and synthetic or manufactured drugs (6%).
    
The District counts among the growing number of places where marijuana use is legal.
    
Biden’s actions grant full, complete, and unconditional pardons to U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents who have committed or been convicted of simple possession violating the Controlled Substances Act.
    
The U.S. Justice Department praised Biden’s announcement. “The Justice Department will expeditiously administer the President’s proclamation, which pardons individuals who engaged in simple possession of marijuana, restoring political, civil, and other rights to those convicted of that offense,” department officials wrote in a statement.
    
“In the coming days, the Office of the Pardon Attorney will begin implementing a process to provide impacted individuals with certificates of pardon. “Also, in accordance with the president’s directive, Justice Department officials will work with our colleagues at the Department of Health and Human Services as they launch a scientific review of how marijuana is scheduled under federal law.”

  • COVID-19

    As of October 6, 2022, at 10:00 AM
    (According to Alabama Political Reporter)

    Alabama had 1,525,724 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (7,820) more than last report, with 20,473 deaths (78) more
    than last report.

    Greene County had 2,140 confirmed cases, 5 more cases than last report), with 52 deaths

    Sumter Co. had 2,977 cases with 55 deaths

    Hale Co. had 5,376 cases with 109 deaths

    Note: Greene County Physicians Clinic has testing and vaccination for COVID-19;
    Call for appointments at 205/372-3388, Ext. 142; ages 5 and up.

  • Bingo distribution for August totals $616,999

    The  Greene County Sheriff Department issued a listing of the bingo distributions for August, totaling $616,999.32 from four of the five licensed bingo gaming facilities.  The August distribution reported by the sheriff includes $24,000 from Greenetrack, Inc. and $51,000 from the Sheriff’s Supplemental Fund distributed to the Greene County Commission.  
      The bingo facilities regularly distributing through the sheriff include Frontier, River’s Edge, Palace and Bama Bingo.  The recipients of the August distributions from bingo gaming include Greene County Sheriff’s Department, the cities of Eutaw, Forkland, Union, and Boligee, the Greene County Board of Education and the Greene County Hospital (Health System).    
      Sub charities include Children’s Policy Council, Guadalupan Multicultural Services, Greene County Golf Course, Housing Authority of Greene County (Branch Heights), Department of Human Resources, the Greene County Library, Eutaw Housing Authority, Historical Society, REACH, Inc., Headstart  Community Service and This Belong To US. 
    Bama Bingo gave a total of $117,157.87 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500, and the Greene County Health System,  $12,500. Sub Charities, each received $1,034.22 including REACH,Inc. Community Service received $470.10 and This Belong to Us received $94.02.  
    Frontier (Dream, Inc.) gave a total of $114,995.01 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each received $870.53, including the Historical Society and REACH, Inc.  Community Service received $395.69 and This Belong to Us received $79.14.
      River’s Edge (Next Level Leaders and Tishabee Community Center Tutorial Program) gave a total of  $118,288 to the following:  Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $12,543; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee  each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each, $1,027,, including the Historical Society and REACH, Inc.  Community Service received $467 and This Belong to Us received $92.
     Palace (TS Police Support League) gave a total of $266,558.44 to the following:  Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $111,426.26; City of Eutaw, $21,441.50; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $8,982.25; Greene County Board of Education, $24,339, and the Greene County Health System, $28,975. Sub Charities received $2,017.89, including the Historical Society and REACH, Inc. Community Service received $917.22 and This Belong to Us received $183.44. The sheriff’s supplement for August from four bingo facilities totaled $47,929.93.

  • Eutaw City Council considers financial matters

    The Eutaw City Council held its regular meeting on September 27, 2022 and considered a number of financial issues. The Council members received several financial reports, as informational materials.

    The City is approaching the end of the 2021-22 fiscal year on September 30, 2022 and had reports through the end of August. The Council set a date of October 4th for a work session on the budget for next fiscal year. This session was postponed to a later date.

    City Fiscal Advisor, Ralph Liverman, is working on a budget for the fiscal year, which begins October 1, 2022, and plans to review its contents and decisions on which infrastructure projects the city can undertake, based on available funds.
    The Council approved the 2023 Severe Weather Preparedness Sales Tax Holiday for February 24-26, 2023, where people will be able to buy supplies, like batteries, radios, and other items without paying sales tax on that weekend next year.

    The Council approved an agreement with Regions Commercial Credit division for credit cards for staff and council members. Mayor Latasha Johnson will control this account and can place money on the cards of City employees traveling to training meetings and to purchase supplies needed by the city. Some Council members voiced concerns about the problems associated with unauthorized use of credit cards. Mayor Johnson said she would closely supervise the use of these cards but that this system would give flexibility and emergency help to staff and Council members involved in city business.

    The Council approved a request from Corey Martin, City Water Operator to secure bids in advance for mechanical services, such as pump repairs, motor rebuilding and other parts and services need by the water and sewer system. “Having a list of suppliers and service providers, at an agreed upon price in advance, would allow our city to better manage resources for repairs when they are needed, instead of facing these decisions on an emergency basis,” said Martin.

    Mayor Latasha Johnson reported that the City of Eutaw and the Town of Boligee had both signed the agreement to consolidate their water and sewer systems. The Cassady Engineering firm of Northport, Alabama is working on comprehensive plans for the improvement of the water and sewer systems of Eutaw and Boligee for submission to ADEM for funding under the American Recovery Act, Infrastructure Act, and the Inflation Recovery Act. The preliminary plans and cost estimates are due by the end of October and will spell out a multi-million-dollar plan for phasing in the full repair and improvement of the Eutaw/Boligee water and sewer systems.

    The Greene County Water and Sewer Authority has been approved for improvements to its water and sewer system. The funds will provide for a new water well on the northern end of the county and improvements to the sewage lagoon near Greenetrack.

    In other business, the Eutaw City Council:

    • Approved travel and per diem for Corey Martin to attend training in utility management and technology in late October.
    • Approve use of the R. H. Young Community Center for the funeral and repast for the Austin family on October 1, 2022, for a charge of $50 per hour.
    •Tabled consideration of an agreement for operation and maintenance of traffic control signals and lighting in the city; and a Memorandum of Agreement with City and Greene County EMA.
    • Payment of bills and claims.

  • Grand Jury returns 28 true bills with 27 felonies and five misdemeanors

    The  Grand Jury of Greene County went into session on September 26, 2022 and ended the session on September 27, 2022. The Grand Jury was instructed by the Court regarding its duties and responsibilities.
    The Grand Jury considered various criminal charges against various defendants and returned herewith 28  true bills, some of which were multiple counts indictments, resulting in 27 felonies and 5 misdemeanors. There were 19 cases continued, all being drug cases continued because there were no Certificates of Analysis from the Department of Forensic Sciences.  There were 5 no bills returned. No further recommendations were offered.
    Pursuant to Alabama Code 14-6-42, the Greene County Sheriff Office has provided the Grand Jury which documentation verifying that a Prisoner Feeding Fund has been set up and is being maintained for the purpose of feeding the prisoners in the custody of the Greene County Sheriff’s Department.
    The Grand Jury asked Circuit Court Judge Eddie Hardaway, Jr. to accept its report and the indictments returned and recess it subject to the Court’s call.
    Indictments Returned
    – James Curtis Ratliff was indicted for impersonating a Peace Officer.
    – Osmar Barnard Harris was indicted for Theft of Property I.
    -Donald Wade Jones was indicted for Capital Murder – Two or more persons.
    -Daquavion Kyrique Brown was indicted for Discharging Firearm into an Occupied Building, Two Counts of Criminal Mischief II.
    -Charles Anthony King was indicted for Possession of a Forged Instrument III.
    -Quayonte Davis was indicted for Attempted Murder, Discharging a Firearm into an Occupied Vehicle and Reckless Endangerment.
    -Quinton McElroy was indicted for Certain Persons Forbidden to Possess Firearm.
    -Richard Harris Moore was indicted for Unlawful Possession of Controlled Substance.
    -Fredrick Douglas Williams was indicted for Unlawful Possession of Controlled Substance.
    – Jondarryous Davis was indicted for Discharging a Firearm into an Occupied Building.
    -Quadri Deontae Lavender was indicted for Assault II on a Police Officer, Reckless Endangerment and Attempt to Elude.
    -Pierre Warren was indicted for Burglary 3rd Degree, Criminal Mischief III, Assault II and Resisting Arrests.
    – Christopher Gordon Tingle was indicted for Receiving Stolen Property I.
    – Javoris Walker was indicted for Robbery I.
    – Johnny Bolden was indicted for Robbery I.
    -Orlando Atmore was indicted for Theft of Property I.
    -Andrew Bell was indicted for Discharging Firearm into an Occupied Vehicle.
    -Andrew Deon Davis was indicted for Rape II.
    -Joseph Harris was indicted for Rape II, Sodomy II and Escape III.

  • Newswire : Church of England bars Tutu’s Daughter from funeral

    Archbishop Tutu and his daughter, the Rev. Mpho Tutu van Furth

     

     
    (TriceEdneyWire.com/GIN) – The daughter of the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu said she was “stunned” by the Church of England when they denied her the right to officiate at her godfather’s funeral because she is married to a woman.
     
    According to the Rev. Mpho Tutu van Furth, an Anglican priest in the Diocese of Washington, DC, the Church barred her from officiating despite her late godfather’s personal wish that she lead the ceremony at his funeral. Her godfather, Martin Kenyon, died in England last week. He was 92.
     
    “You can’t speak a message of welcome and love and live a message of exclusion,” the Rev. Tutu van Furth said. “It’s incredibly sad,” she told BBC News. “It feels like a bureaucratic response with maybe a lack of compassion.”
     
    Martin Kenyon and Desmond Tutu became friends when they were both students at Kings College. Tutu would become a voice for LGBT equality, speaking in a video released by the Free & Equal campaign.
     
    “I cannot keep quiet when people are penalized for something about which they can do nothing,” Tutu declared. “First, when women are excluded just simply and solely because they are women. But more pernicious, more ghastly is the fact that people are penalized, killed, all sorts of ghastly things happen to them simply because of their sexual orientation. “I oppose such injustice with the same passion that I opposed apartheid.”
     
    Mr. Kenyon, a powerful force in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa, was also an early, outspoken critic of the Anglican Communion’s stance on gay rights.
     
    However, its sister Anglican church in the US, The Episcopal Church, does allow clergy to enter into gay marriages.
     
    Marceline Tutu van Furth, a Dutch academic who is married to the Archbishop Tutu’s daughter, said the church told them it accepts priests in same-sex relationships but not if they are married.

     
    The Church of England and the Episcopal Church are tied together in the global Anglican Communion, which represents about 85 million worshipers around the world. The Episcopal Church has taken a stance in favor of acceptance of gay clergy and members, starting with the consecration of Bishop Gene Robinson, an openly gay priest, in New Hampshire in 2003.
     
    The Church of England, however, has said that under its religious laws, while it permits same-sex civil partnerships, it does not support same-sex marriage because it would go against its teachings. Gay clergy are expected to remain celibate, and those in same-sex marriages are not permitted to be ordained.
     
    Tutu remarked in 2013: “I would refuse to go to a homophobic heaven. No, I would say sorry, I mean I would much rather go to the other place. I would not worship a God who is homophobic and that is how deeply I feel about this.”
     
    He added: “I am as passionate about this campaign as I ever was about apartheid. For me, it is at the same level.”
     
    In the end, Tutu was able to fulfill her godfather’s wish as the service was moved from a church and was instead held in her godfather’s garden in Shropshire.
     
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  • Newswire : Hip Hop Icon Coolio Dies at 59

    Coolio

    By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent


    Coolio, whose signature song “Gangsta’s Paradise” played a vital role in securing hip-hop as the popular music of choice, has died at age 59. Born on Aug. 1, 1963, in Compton, Coolio’s real name was Artis Leon Ivey, Jr.
    The artist reportedly died on the bathroom floor of a friend’s house. While paramedics suspect Coolio succumbed to cardiac arrest, the medical examiner hasn’t released an official cause of death.
    He enjoyed six top Billboard hits, including 1995’s Gangsta’s Paradise, which reached 1 billion streams on Spotify earlier this year. Spending three weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 and 11 straight weeks on the Hot Rap Songs list, Gangsta’s Paradise earned Coolio a Grammy and a Billboard Music Award.
    The hit single earned rankings among Billboard’s 100 Greatest of All Time Hot 100 Songs.
    In addition to music, Coolio enjoyed a successful television career. He appeared on shows like “Black Jesus,” “All That,” “The Nanny,” and “Fear Factor.”
    “Peaceful Journey, Brother,” Questlove tweeted in tribute following news of Coolio’s death.
    “Heartbroken to hear of the passing of the gifted artist Coolio,” actress Michelle Pfeiffer wrote on Instagram while sharing a clip from the famous music video, where she sits across the table from Coolio. “A life cut entirely too short. I remember him being nothing but gracious,” Pfeiffer stated.
    Tributes also poured in from stars like Snoop Dogg, who posted a picture of him and Coolio from an earlier music video. MC Hammer called Coolio one of the nicest individuals he’d known while sharing a photo of himself, Snoop, and the late Tupac Shakur.“This is sad news,” Ice Cube shared. “I witnessed firsthand this man’s grind to the top of the industry.”
    Los Angeles-based artist Teddi Gold, who worked with Coolio, also mourned the icon. “I have an immense amount of gratitude and love for Coolio,” Gold wrote in a statement. “His musicianship, big heart, sense of humor, and loyalty to his friends and family were the light he shared with the world.”
    He continued: “As somebody whose music I grew up listening to, the opportunity Coolio gave me to record and perform with him was a life-changing experience I will carry with me forever. I send every ounce of love I have to his family and friends at this time.”

  • Newswire: Study finds Community College System fails to produce equitable outcomes for Black students

    Black Community College students

    By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent


    More than one in three Black community college students are in poverty, and widespread inequality in community colleges deepened throughout the pandemic for Black students facing basic needs insecurity.
    According to a new report from the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies on the state of Black students at community colleges, an alarming 70 percent of Black students experienced food or housing insecurity or homelessness during the COVID-19 pandemic.
    The report highlighted that while Black students remain disproportionately represented in community colleges, policy barriers prevent the system from producing equitable outcomes.
    “Black workers are struggling to make ends meet during this health and economic crisis. Community colleges provide a path forward to ensure workforce readiness for all, but there are barriers holding back Black students from reaching their full potential,” Dr. Alex Camardelle, the director of workforce policy at the Joint Center, said in a news release.
    “On average, Black students at community colleges experience lower graduation rates and earn tens of thousands of dollars less after graduation while having to take on more debt than their peers to pay for school,” Camardelle stated.
    He noted that things should be different. “With targeted basic needs support, child care, improved transfer pathway policies, and better evaluations of community college outcomes by race, our policymakers can do right by Black community college students,” Camardelle added.
    “And the biggest takeaway of all — making community colleges tuition-free will benefit Black students the most.”
    Joint Center researchers said basic needs insecurity is also closely associated with enrollment declines. “While COVID-19 emergency funds authorized by Congress pushed community colleges to introduce more support for meeting students’ basic needs, barriers to accessing those supports remain,” study authors found.
    For example, 68 percent of Black male students at community colleges experience basic needs insecurity. Still, only 31 percent of those with need accessed on campus resources meant to connect students with aid because too few knew they were available or do not know how to apply, the researchers discovered.
    Meanwhile, the authors concluded that Black student enrollment at community colleges has steadily declined over time and has dropped during the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Among the chief findings:
    From fall 2019 to fall 2021, enrollment fell 18 percent for all Black students and 23.5 percent and 15 percent for Black men and Black women, respectively.
    Black community college students experience the lowest graduation rates when compared to their peers of other races and ethnicities.
    The gap between Black and white graduation rates more than doubled from a four-percentage point gap in 2007 to an 11-percentage point divide in 2020.
    The typical Black community college graduate earns $20,000 less per year than their classmates.
    White households with workers who hold a high school diploma earn $2,000 more than Black community college graduates.
    Over two-thirds (67 percent) of Black students borrowed money to pay for community college compared to 51, 36, and 30 percent of white, Hispanic, and Asian students, respectively.

    Further, researchers found that Black community college graduates owe 123 percent of the original amount they borrowed 12 years after beginning their community college journey.

  • Newswire: Supreme Court to hear Alabama voting rights case that could impact Black voters everywhere

    By: Ray Marcano, The Grio.

    The U.S. Supreme Court, on October 4, 2022, will hear a case that could upend voting rights and dilute the power of the Black vote in Alabama but potentially across the country.
    The maps as drawn “are purposeful attempts to reduce the impact of Black voters and the preference and will of minority voters in Alabama,” Tish Gotell Faulks, the legal director of the Alabama ACLU, told theGrio.
    Alabama’s legislature passed its redistricting maps in 2020, but a coalition of voters, including Milligan, sued the state, claiming the maps violated the Voting Rights Act. A federal court ruled in the plaintiffs’ favor and enjoined the state from implementing the maps for the 2022 midterm election.
    In Merrill v. Milligan, the court will determine whether Alabama’s redistricting plan violates the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Plaintiffs argue that Alabama’s congressional map for its seven districts unfairly weakens the votes and influence of Black people, who make up nearly 27% of the state population.
    The maps, as currently drawn, contain one majority-Black district, represented by Congresswoman Terri Sewell. However, opponents of the plan argue that there should be two such districts based on the state’s Black population.
    Evan Milligan, the lead plaintiff, told theGrio, “This case will be a defining moment for voting rights as traditional civic engagement in our country.” The maps as drawn “are purposeful attempts to reduce the impact of Black voters and the preference and will of minority voters in Alabama,” Tish Gotell Faulks, the legal director of the Alabama ACLU, told theGrio.
    Alabama’s legislature passed its redistricting maps in 2020, but a coalition of voters, including Milligan, sued the state, claiming the maps violated the Voting Rights Act. A federal court ruled in the plaintiffs’ favor and enjoined the state from implementing the maps for the 2022 midterm election.
    “We conclude that the Milligan plaintiffs are substantially likely to establish that the plan violates Section Two of the Voting Rights Act,” the United States District Court in Northern Alabama wrote in its preliminary injunction.  The court also concluded that, based on several factors, “Black voters have less opportunity than other Alabamians to elect candidates of their choice to Congress.”

    Secretary of State John H. Merrill appealed the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, in which the high court overturned the lower court ruling by a 5-4 vote and allowed Alabama to implement the maps in the November election. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the three liberal judges in the minority dissent.
    Yurij Rudensky, senior counsel at the Brennan Institute, said Alabama’s legal argument comes down to a desire to weaken the Voting Rights Act, which would further disenfranchise voters who already have difficulty getting fair representation.
    Alabama isn’t arguing against the merits of the lower court’s ruling, Rudensky said. Instead, the state wants the Supreme Court to “rewrite the Voting Rights Act to weaken it, to change decades of precedent (and) safeguards that have protected communities of color around the country … against discriminatory redistricting and other election schemes,” he explained.
    Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act prohibits any voting “practice or procedure” that discriminates based on race and reinforces the 15th Amendment, which in 1870 granted Black men the right to vote.
    The plaintiffs argue the state should have a second majority Black district to ensure fair representation for a demographic that grew faster than any other between 2010 and 2020, adding nearly 88,000 residents.
    “Now, (Alabama) is saying that despite the growth of the Black community over the last 10 years, their population should be denied Congressional representation,” Milligan, the executive director of the coalition-building group Alabama Forward, said.
    Alabama’s 1.3 million Black residents account for 27% of the state’s population. Currently, 16% of the districts (one in seven) have a majority Black population. Two of seven districts would increase the figure to nearly 29 percent.
    But the state, among its arguments, says it drew race-neutral districts and called race-based districts unconstitutional. “Requiring racial preferences in single-member districts exceeds any remedial measure the Fifteenth Amendment could authorize,” Alabama said in its brief.
    Rudensky referred to the race-neutral argument as “audacious” and flips the purpose of the voting rights act “on its head.” Alabama’s thinking “fails from a logical standpoint, that you could have a law that targets discriminatory schemes but can’t take race into account when undoing the discriminatory harm,” he added.
    Another plaintiff, Letetia Jackson, lives in a Republican area of Alabama and remains frustrated by the lack of representation.  “I have not had a congressional member come to our community, talk to us about resources, and who even care what our issues are,” Jackson told theGrio. She said after the lawsuit, she did get an invitation to town hall events that weren’t in her community.
    “The stake, in this case, is huge, greater than just the state of Alabama,” Jackson said. “The outcome of this case will determine whether the language of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act will be upheld. Because if it isn’t, democracy, as we know it, the ability to vote and have elected representation as we know it, will be forever changed