Friday, January 04, 2019

Houston Texans player will donate $29,000 for Jazmine Barnes funeral

Texans wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins has dedicated Saturday's game to Jazmine Barnes, a 7-year-old girl who was killed Sunday in a drive-by shooting in Houston.

The girl was killed when a man in a pickup truck pulled up next to Barnes' mother's car and started firing. Jazmine's mother and three sisters were injured in the seemingly random attack.

"On Saturday, I will be playing in your honor, Jazmine," the three-time Pro Bowler tweeted Thursday.

Hopkins said he will donate his $29,000 playoff check to help pay for funeral costs and said he would join in the effort to bring Barnes' killer to justice.

[SOURCE: ESPN]

Congressional Black Caucus Swears In Largest Member Group In History

On Thursday, the day of the official swearing-in of the 116th Congress, the Congressional Black Caucus swore in its own group of members, a total of 55 ― its largest number in history.

This year’s CBC surpasses its previous record of 49 House and Senate members in the 115th Congress.

“With the largest caucus in history... the CBC is poised to play a leading role in standing up to the Trump Administration and pressing forward on key issues like protecting voting rights and the Affordable Care Act,” executive director Kevin Harris said by email.

Established in 1971, the Congressional Black Caucus states as its mission “to ensure African Americans... have the opportunity to achieve the American Dream.” Its legislative priorities include reforming the criminal justice system and combating voter suppression.

[SOUCE: HUFFPOST]

Thursday, January 03, 2019

First African American District Attorney in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina is sworn in

Mecklenburg County, North Carolina has a new District Attorney.

Spencer Merriweather was sworn in Wednesday along with about 80 Assistant District Attorneys. Merriweather is Mecklenburg County’s first elected African American District Attorney. He won the election in November.

The Democratic ran unopposed. In this historic election Merriweather wants to have impact on a judicial system that some often find hard to trust.

"You cannot come from the type of legacy that I come from," Mecklenburg County District Attorney Spencer Merriweather said. "You cannot live the type of life I believe I lived in this world and not take issue of justice and fairness and safety extremely seriously."

Merriweather shared his priorities after getting sworn in. He wants to take a look at the bail system.

He doesn’t want violent suspects to be released from jail because they have money in their account.

The DA also wants to help create a Family Justice Center. The hope is the center would be a one stop shop for victims of sexual or domestic violence.

Merriweather says the center would provide all the resources a victim needs. City and county leaders are discussing how to make the Center a reality. The DA says safety and fairness cannot be an afterthought.

[SOURCE: WBTV]

Kimberly Mutcherson Named Co-Dean of Rutgers Law School

Rutgers University–Camden Chancellor Phoebe A. Haddon announces the appointment of Kimberly Mutcherson, a noted bioethics and health law scholar and higher education leader, as co-dean of the Rutgers Law School in Camden.

When her appointment took effect on Jan. 1, 2019, Mutcherson became the first woman, the first African American, and the first LGBT law dean at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.

She currently is vice dean and a professor of law at Rutgers Law School in Camden. Her scholarship addresses issues related to reproductive justice, with a particular focus on assisted reproduction and its relationship to how the law understands and constructs the meaning of family, maternal-fetal decision-making, and healthcare decisions for minors.

Haddon lauds Mutcherson as a proven and capable administrator with an energetic vision of the role of the law in building careers, advancing research, and serving communities.

“Kim Mutcherson is a collaborative leader who is positioned to build upon the momentum and energy of Rutgers Law,” says Haddon, chancellor of Rutgers University–Camden. “She is passionate about the value of a legal education that prepares creative thinkers who are ready to be leaders in virtually every aspect of our society. She sees with clarity the role of the law in protecting individual rights.

“Under Co-Dean Mutcherson’s leadership, Rutgers Law in Camden will expand its focus on providing equal access to opportunity for our students and for the citizens of New Jersey, the Delaware Valley, and the nation.”

As one of the largest law schools in the nation, Rutgers Law School is committed to scholarly distinction and engagement with the major legal issues and concerns facing our region, country, and world. With locations in Camden and Newark, Rutgers Law has a geographic presence in the Philadelphia and New York metropolitan regions, two of the largest legal markets in the United States and a supportive alumni network of more than 20,000 nationwide.

Mutcherson will serve as Rutgers Law co-dean in Camden and will work collaboratively with Co-Dean David Lopez at Rutgers in Newark.

“I am thrilled to be able to continue my service to Rutgers Law as co-dean. Working with David Lopez, I know that our institution has a very bright future and will continue to provide a high-quality legal education and produce lawyers who change the profession and the world for the better,” says Mutcherson.

A Collingswood resident, Mutcherson joined Rutgers University–Camden as an assistant professor in 2002. She was promoted to associate professor in 2005 and to professor in 2013. She has served as vice dean since 2015.

At Rutgers Law, she teaches Bioethics, Babies and Babymaking, Family Law, South African Constitutional Law, and Torts, among other courses. She spearheaded an effort to increase the availability of academic support for Rutgers Law students and has served as a member of the Loan Repayment Assistance Program Advisory Board and as faculty advisor for the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender student organization (OUTLaws) and Black Law Students Association.

A noted scholar on issues related to reproductive justice, assisted reproduction, and abortion, she is the author of numerous articles on the topics in publications including the Columbia Journal of Gender And Law, the Cornell Journal of Law & Public Policy, Indiana Law Journal, the Hastings Center Report, and the Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics. She is the co-author of the forthcoming book Assisted Reproductive Justice (University of California Press) and the editor of the book Rewriting Reproductive Justice: Feminist Judgments and Reproductive Justice (Cambridge University Press).

She has served as a visiting scholar at the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics and a Senior Fellow at the Center for Gender and Sexuality Law at Columbia Law School. In 2013, she received the Center for Reproductive Rights Innovation in Scholarship Award.

Prior to joining Rutgers Law School, Mutcherson was a consulting attorney with the Center for Reproductive Rights and a Fellow and then staff attorney with the HIV Law Project, both in New York.

She serves on the advisory boards of the Lawyering Project and the What We Know Project and has served on the Women’s Law Project board.

In 1997, Mutcherson earned her juris doctor from Columbia Law School, where she was a Stone Scholar and received the Rosemann Prize for her commitment to public interest law. She also earned the Kirkland & Ellis public interest fellowship and co-founded the Women of Color Coalition. She received her bachelor’s degree in history from the University of Pennsylvania in 1994.

She resides in Collingswood with her son Max (13) and her daughter Josephine (10). She grew up in Silver Spring, Md., where her father, James Mutcherson, still resides.

NJ Police looking for 16-year-old girl missing for 3 weeks

Authorities are trying to find a 16-year-old Perth Amboy NJ girl who has been missing for three weeks.

Sigrid Beltre was last seen at her home in the city on Dec. 12, Perth Amboy police said in a statement.

She is thought to be with her boyfriend in Camden, but police don’t know his name.

The 5-foot-7, 110-pound teen has black hair and brown eyes. She was wearing a white sweater with a hood, blue jeans and red sneakers. Police didn’t immediately provide a photo of Beltre.

Anyone with information about Beltre’s whereabouts is asked to call police at Perth Amboy police at 732-442-4400 or call 911.

[SOURCE: NJ.COM]