Posts Tagged ‘Alabama’

DOJ Establishes Alabama Civil Rights Unit in Wake of Illegal Immigration Crackdown

Wednesday, August 29th, 2012

The Justice Department will establish its first civil rights unit in the southern state of Alabama, the agency said Tuesday—a development that comes in the wake of the state’s crackdown on illegal immigration, which raised concerns about Alabama’s compliance with federal laws.

While the unit wasn’t formed as a direct result of Alabama’s immigration law—parts of which have been blocked by federal courts—officials said it would examine issues related to immigrants and also matters involving fair housing laws, police brutality claims, compliance with federal disability laws and minority protection.

Attorneys from the unit based in Birmingham will be responsible for both criminal prosecutions and civil lawsuits to enforce civil rights laws.

Assistant U.S. Attorney General Tom Perez said the unit will ensure that the federal government has a continuing eye on civil rights issues in Alabama, which was a hotbed of unrest during the civil rights movement half a century ago.

“This is about sustainability . . . of civil rights enforcement,” Perez said during a news conference held at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute.

Birmingham is the eighth U.S. city out of 94 with U.S. attorney offices to have a civil rights unit. The nearest similar unit is in Memphis, Tenn.

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The changing ‘colour’ of American society

Monday, June 4th, 2012

The economic crisis in Europe has brought a new focus to immigration. When the times are tough, people are reluctant to share. In the recent French Presidential elections, the anti-immigrant and far-right National Party candidate, Le Pen, got 18 per cent of the votes in the first round, surprising everyone. France has seen a fair amount of immigration from the Muslim countries of North Africa, transforming even the looks of some of the sections of Marseilles. France’s law against women wearing the veil was an indication of the changing attitude.

The Germans are a pretty homogenous race and they have seen a flood of Turkish workers in the past. Chancellor Ms Angela Merkel recently declared that German efforts at being a multicultural society have utterly failed and she wanted immigrants to make more efforts to integrate with the rest of the people. And, remember that the Germans have been vehemently against Turkey joining the EU.

ARAB SPRING FALLOUT

The Arab Spring and other revolts in many countries of North Africa have caused a big jump in the number of people from Syria, Egypt, Libya and Tunisia reaching European shores, legally and illegally. In the EU, the Common European Asylum System requires that the country where the asylum seeker first lands is where the application is processed. This has meant that the southern countries of Europe, including Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain, have taken the bulk of immigration in the past, and these are also the countries in severe economic trouble now and facing austerity measures. You can be sure immigrants are not feeling particularly welcome there.

An event in the US related to immigration caused a bit of stir recently. The Census Bureau announced mid-May that that more than 50 per cent of newborns in the US are now non-white Caucasians, or as the euphemism goes, “people of colour” and that includes Latinos, Black and Asian. This reflects trends both in fertility rates and immigration. At about the same time, the State of Alabama was passing its harshest anti-immigration law trying to stem the illegal immigration from south of the border. It gives police officers the right to stop and challenge anyone who looked like they may be ‘undocumented’.

People of colour have to watch-out in Alabama. But the changing demographics is an un-stoppable trend — the country is becoming less white. Actually, that is a misnomer, since about 50 per cent of the Hispanics are ‘white’ to look at.

A NATION OF IMMIGRANTS

The US is a nation of immigrants. As waves of immigrants landed on these shores during the early years of settlement, they drove the natives into smaller and smaller territories and finally into reservations to practice their own cultures and lives and left the mass of the land for the newcomers. The black Africans who first came as slaves, after their emancipation, fought hard to avoid discrimination based on colour. Many charge that discrimination is now more covert than overt.The newcomers who came voluntarily from various European countries were largely due to ‘push’ reasons. They were escaping religious and ethnic persecution and saw the US as a new land for them to be free and create a new life. Although they initially tended to stay within their geographic comfort zones where there were others of their ilk, they wanted to integrate. This meant that they slowly began to adopt a common language of English, adjusted their names, and followed various common practices and beliefs.

Slowly, people began to drop their hyphens — to think of themselves not as Italian-American or Irish-American but just American. This was the famous ‘melting pot’ argument that all these different peoples integrated. Some communities stayed closely knit, such as the Chinese, who developed their Chinatowns in all major cities, and maintained their distinct culture.

THE HISPANIC ‘THREAT’

But the last several years has seen a flood of immigrants not just from south of the border — mostly Mexican — but from other Latin American countries, too. This has created the Hispanic ‘threat’ to America, which resulted in many States in the South coming up with various legislations, some even insisting that English be declared as a required language and so on.

But at the same time, something else was happening. The reasons for these new immigrants were pull factors, and not push factors. They were coming to America to take advantage of economic opportunities, not because they were being driven out of their home countries. This meant that they were not very keen on integrating, and preferred to maintain their original cultures and identity, definitely at home, but also outside. They were not embarrassed to speak in their own languages in public.

Another trend emerged — the value of ‘multiculturalism’ — that we are a mix of cultures, and need to understand and appreciate the different cultures. Multiculturalism became a topic in many universities (we have a required course in mine), multiculturalism and was being celebrated with special days in many towns. This encouraged further the environment in which people of recent immigration felt comfortable maintaining their cultures.

And there was, of course, technology which facilitated all this. Immigrants could stay in touch with their families back home through cheaper and cheaper means of communication, and faster and faster speeds till it has now become free and instantaneous. This has changed the theme of ‘melting pot’ to a ‘salad bowl’ where former cultural identities continue to stand out.

The question is how do ‘American values’ get imbibed by every new immigrant? At one time, when people were coming from Ireland, Italy, the UK, Russia, Eastern Europe, there were community centres in major towns such as Boston that had classes to learn English, how to shop, kitchen and bathroom hygiene, and so on! There are few such facilities today to help in the integration.

Thus, the American society which, in the past, dealt with integrating different national origins, and different religions, and different languages, and is now again faced with the prospect of a future where it will have to face dealing with skin colour and race all over again. Now, it is the turn of demographics, as the non-white/non-Caucasian slowly becomes the majority.

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Pet dog found skinned on the brink of death

Friday, June 1st, 2012

 A dog owner in Alabama believes her pet was skinned alive. The dog was found on the brink of death and in such bad shape, it had to be euthanized.

Chilton County authorities are investigating this horrific incident.

Delana Dunnaway cannot remember “Bama” as the sweet little Chinese pug he was.  Instead, there is a disturbing, graphic, and heartbreaking image of her pet etched in her mind.

Dunnaway said, “I hope and pray it goes away but right now every time I think about him. I think about him being nothing but skin, bleeding.”

Dunnaway believes someone used a knife to skin her dog.

She says Bama goes in and out through a doggie door and Friday morning, he went out and never came back.

Dunnaway’s son-in-law searched for him on their property. He found the 2-year-old pup in a wooded area, bleeding and barely alive.

Dunnaway said, “From the neck down there was nothing but raw meat, nerves, no hair on his legs.”

Dennis Potter, a manager at the Calera Animal Hospital, says what happened to the poor dog was not caused by another animal. It was intentional because the cuts were too precise.

Potter says there was nothing that could be done to save his life. Bama was euthanized.

Potter said, “Over 65 to 70 percent of the animal’s skin, plus fur were ripped off by a knife. There’s no way a body could regenerate that over a period of time. The animal was suffering.”

Dunnaway said, “I just don’t believe anybody that did this was sick, they were just evil.”

And Dunnaway says the person needs to be caught, before this happens to someone else’s pet or worse.

Dunnaway adds, “People are thinking it’s just a dog well it may have been, but the next step could be a child.” Dunnaway strongly believes if this person would do this to a little dog, then they’re probably capable of hurting a human being at some point.

The animal’s vet says it had trauma to its head, indicating the person who skinned him also hit the dog on the head with a blunt object.

She wants to know why someone would do this.

The state’s humane society is offering a $5,000 reward to anyone with information that leads to an arrest and conviction of a suspect.

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Nearly 200 Years in Prison for Man Convicted of Sexual Assault of Boy

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

A Corpus Christi man has been sentenced to 171/2 years in prison after admitting that he sexually assaulted a 13-year-old boy at an elementary school and recorded the encounter on cellphone video.

David Hernandez also must serve life on supervised release and pay restitution of $10,000 to the boy and almost $10,000 to the victim’s father. A U.S. attorney’s statement says evidence presented to Senior U.S. District Judge Hayden Head in Corpus Christi on Tuesday showed Hernandez had been exploiting the child for several years.

According to court evidence, police found Hernandez sexually assaulting the boy at the school on March 12, 2011, and was found to have several videos on his cellphone showing several assaults on the boy dating to December 2010.

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Man surrenders after toddlers are struck during Bay Minette hit-and-run

Monday, March 12th, 2012

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BAY MINETTE, Alabama – A 30-year-old man surrendered to Bay Minette police late Saturday night after police said he injured 2 toddlers in strollers in a hit-and-run earlier Saturday night.

Bay Minette Police Chief Mike Rowland identified the suspect as Dewayne Lavon Brown of Bay Minette. Brown was taken to the Baldwin County Corrections Center and was released early today on bail totaling $10,000.

Brown was charged with 2 counts of leaving the scene of an accident with injury, according to jail records.

A 23-month-old was airlifted to University of South Alabama Medical Center with injuries that Rowland said “don’t appear to be life threatening.” An 18-month-old was treated at the scene, he said. The children were not identified.

The incident took place about 7:30 p.m. on Moran Street. Rowland said that the mothers were pushing the strollers across Moran Street when a car turned the corner at a high rate of speed and struck the children.

The driver of the car then left the scene. Rowland said that Brown was identified through tips that came in to police shortly after the incident took place.

The car was found abandoned about an hour later at a trailer park not far from the crash scene.

Rowland said that, once police were able to identify Brown as he driver, they contacted him by phone and convinced him to come in. He surrendered about 11 p.m. and was released on bail this morning, according to jail records.


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Hundreds arrested in Occupy Oakland protests; Alabama groups seek less drastic ways to influence

Monday, January 30th, 2012

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On Saturday some 300 people affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement in Oakland, Calif., were arrested during a chaotic day of protests that saw demonstrators break into City Hall and burn an American flag.

A look today at some of the Facebook pages and websites managed by Alabama groups that identify with the movement indicates more constructive efforts at influencing government are being discussed within the organizations here.

Still, a visitor who posted on theOccupy Birmingham Facebook pageon Sunday cited the California events and urged restraint.

“I am glad to see that Occupy Birmingham is not burning the American flag like your compatriots at Occupy Oakland,” said Johnny Creel, whose own Facebook pages says he is a city resident. “… I am confident that Occupy Birmingham espouses non-violent protest.”

The Occupy Tuscaloosa Facebook page included links to online video from the events in Oakland on Saturday without commentary.

The arrests in Oakland came after police fired tear gas and bean bags to disperse hundreds of people, some of whom threw rocks and bottles and tore down fencing outside a nearby convention center, The Associated Press reported.

It was the most turbulent day of protests there since November, when Oakland police forcefully dismantled an Occupy encampment. An exasperated Mayor Jean Quan, who faced heavy criticism for the police action last fall, called on the Occupy movement to “stop using Oakland as its playground.”

“People in the community and people in the Occupy movement have to stop making excuses for this behavior,” Quan said.

Protesters clashed with police throughout the day, at times throwing rocks, bottles and other objects at officers. Police responded by deploying smoke, tear gas and bean bag rounds, City Administrator Deanna Santanta said.

“These demonstrators stated their intention was to provoke officers and engage in illegal activity and that’s exactly what has occurred today,” Santana said.

Alabama’s Occupy groups in recent months have supplemented their initial launches on Facebook with websites.

The Birmingham group’s website encourages participation in a protest to oppose a proposed coal mine on the Black Warrior River‘s Mulberry Fork in Walker County. The University of Alabama is a major owner of land and mineral rights sought by the mining company Shepherd Bend, LLC. Opponents say the proposed 1,773-acre strip mine would discharge wastewater 800 feet across the river from a Birmingham Water Works Board intake facility providing tap water daily to 200,000 Birmingham-area residents.

Occupy Birmingham wants its members to join other groups opposed to the idea in a protest outside the Feb. 2 UA Board of Trustees’ meeting.

On Sunday, the Occupy Mobile group sponsored a free, “public technology teach-in” at Serda’s coffee shop aimed at recruiting volunteers to help with its website, to promote online learning and internet safety.

University of Alabama economics Professor Gary Hoover predicted recently that while the movement appears to have gone dormant in some larger U.S. cities such as Boston and New York, as protest encampments have been broken up by police, he feels it will re-emerge on the political and economic landscape this year, especially as the presidential race kicks into gear.

Several of the Alabama sites include posters’ commentary related to a disillusion with GOP presidential hopeful Ron Paul.

Earlier this month, a Mobile Municipal Court judge found 16 people associated with the Occupy Mobile movement guilty of minor trespassing charges for remaining in or near a park after police ordered them to disperse.

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States make daily life harder for illegal immigrants

Saturday, January 7th, 2012

State legislators looking to crack down on illegal immigration in 2012 are turning away from the law enforcement laws that dominated state houses this year, and instead are pushing other measures that can make life just as difficult for illegal immigrants.

Much of the international furor over state immigration laws in states such as Arizona and Alabama focused on the portions that granted local police the ability to conduct roadside immigration checks of people stopped for other crimes.

Alabama leaders are now considering revisions after foreign workers at Mercedes-Benz and Honda carmaking plants in the state were detained under the new law. TheU.S. Department of Justice has sued to block four state enforcement laws — Alabama, Arizona, South Carolinaand Utah — and Arizona’s law will be in limbo until at least next summer when the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on its constitutionality.

“(Immigration enforcement) bills in other states that were advancing, you may see them stall until we can get clarification from the Supreme Court,” said South Carolina state Sen. Larry Grooms, a Republican whose enforcement bill passed this year.

That political and legal turmoil has left few legislators in other states pushing new law enforcement laws.

Mississippi state Sen. Joey Fillingane, a Republican whose enforcement bill passed the state Senate and could pass the House with a new Republican majority there this year, said he won’t let potentially-lengthy reviews of Arizona’s enforcement law stop him from pushing a similar measure.

“We understand from being attorneys and dealing with appeals that rulings can take a long, long time,” Fillingane said. “I don’t think that’s any reason … to stop everything in its tracks.”

But Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who has helped Arizona and other state legislators craft laws cracking down on illegal immigrants, sees that as the exception. He said legislators will continue expanding the use of E-Verify, which businesses can use to check the immigration status of job applicants, Secure Communities, which allows police to check the immigration status of people booked into local jails, and laws that restrict illegal immigrants from accessing public benefits.

Yet it’s a new provision in Alabama’s law that has caught the eye of many state legislators. Kobach said Alabama was the first state to invalidate all contracts entered into with illegal immigrants. A strict reading of the law could mean that any contract, including mortgages, apartment leases and basic work agreements, can be ruled null and void.

“That is one that has a much greater effect than some people might expect at first glance,” Kobach said. “Suppose an illegal alien is doing some roofing business and wants to rent some equipment. Some short-term or long-term rental suddenly becomes more difficult to do.”

Another aspect of Alabama’s law forbids illegal immigrants from conducting any “business transaction” with a government agency. An Alabama federal judge ruled that the state must stop using that provision to prohibit illegal immigrants from renewing permits for their mobile homes, but it’s being applied elsewhere.

The combination of those provisions “has led to nothing short of chaos in the state,” said Karen Tumlin, managing attorney for the National Immigration Law Center, which was part of a lawsuit against Alabama’s law. “They’ve been applied to a striking range of activities, from getting tags on your cars to getting public utilities to changing title on your cars.”

Pennsylvania state Rep. Daryl Metcalfe, a Republican and founder of State Legislators for Legal Immigration, which pushes for federal and state laws that restrict illegal immigration, said he will wait for the Supreme Court to rule on the Arizona law before pushing anything similar in his state. But he said the recent success of Alabama banning contracts and business transactions by illegal immigrants has placed them on his “wish list” for the upcoming session.

“That’s a very good way to expand the fight to shut down access to revenue that they get,” he said.

North Carolina state Rep. Harry Warren, co-chairman of the state’s Select Committee on the State’s Role in Immigration Policy, said he is intrigued by the Alabama’s law ability to prevent illegal immigrants from securing utilities such as heat and gas. He said that could be part of a package that the committee recommends to the Legislature some time in 2012.

But he worried about some of the unintended consequences that the contract and business transaction provisions have had in Alabama. Legal residents had to wait for hours in lines to renew their car registrations because they had to prove their citizenship.

“Going to the DMV is a long line already,” Warren said. “The only thing you can do in your state is make it less attractive (for illegal immigrants) to come to, a little harder to live here legally. But the flipside is unforeseen circumstances. We need to really try to see what the ramifications would be of the laws that we would pass to try to accomplish those means.”

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Ohio school cancels anti-racism play because it uses epithet

Friday, May 20th, 2011

McCONNELLSVILLE, Ohio — An Ohio schools superintendent has canceled a performance of To Kill A Mockingbird because the play includes a racial slur.

Students at Morgan High School in southeast Ohio were to see the show this week. But district Superintendent Lori Snyder-Lowe tells the Times Recorder of Zanesville she blocked those plans following calls from concerned parents and after she learned other districts decided the play was not right for school.

The play is based on a classic novel dealing with racism in a fictional Depression-era Alabama town. When a Florida high school production was initially canceled in November, the theater director said the problem was the N-word.

The Zane Trace Players had planned to perform the play at Morgan High School. The theater troupe says the publishing company wouldn’t let them change the word.

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