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MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-ABOUT Jerry Mitchell is an investigative reporter with the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting. Formerly a reporter for the Clarion-Ledger, his journalism exposes dark deeds, pulling back the curtain on the spending of taxpayer money and providing workable solutions for the public.YITZHAK RABIN
Support MCIR. The Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization which relies on donations to inform, educate, and empower Mississippians.DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
The Violence Against Women Act, first passed in 1994, makes possible local advocates’ ability to prevent and respond to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Stacey Riley is CEO of the Gulf Coast Center for NonViolence Inc. The nonprofit center is the largest program forvictims of
FACING SLASHED BUDGETS, DESPERATE PRISON OFFICIALS LOOK TO Facing slashed budgets, desperate prison officials look to religious volunteers for programs that states refuse to fund, expert says MISSING OR MURDERED IN INDIAN COUNTRY, GONE WITHOUT Nevertheless, statistics remain shocking. According to the Indian Law Resource Center in Helena, Montana, more than four in five American Indian and Alaskan indigenous women have suffered some form of violence. For more than 51 percent, the violence has been sexual, and in more than 90 percent of these cases, the perpetrator was not Nativeor indigenous.
GEORGE FLOYD WASN’T THE ONLY ONE TO DIE AFTER AN OFFICER Mississippi now has its own George Floyd case. A video obtained by the Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting shows Robert Loggins rolling when officers and jailers get on top of him inside the Grenada County Jail, with one officer appearing to kneel on his neck or head. ‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
MISSISSIPPI MAN’S CASE COULD AFFECT FATE OF HUNDREDS OF Hope for a second chance quickly crushed. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Miller v.Alabama that mandatory sentences of life without parole for juvenile homicide offenders are unconstitutional, because they violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishments.”. Justice Elena Kagan, who wrote the majority opinion, said: “Mandatory life without MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTINGNEWSPERSPECTIVEABOUTOUR TEAMOUR MEDIA PARTNERSMCIR LIVE Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization that empowers citizens in their communities by holding public officials accountable. We report on the criminal justice system, public education funding, prisons, public corruption, political cronyism, generational povert MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-NEWS Expanding Medicaid in Mississippi will create roughly three times the number of jobs as the Nissan plant in Canton and the Toyota Motors Manufacturing plant in Blue Springs did combined, according to a national report released Thursday. In Mississippi, of the 21,700 new jobs possibly created with Medicaid expansion, 12,500 of the jobs willbe
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-ABOUT Jerry Mitchell is an investigative reporter with the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting. Formerly a reporter for the Clarion-Ledger, his journalism exposes dark deeds, pulling back the curtain on the spending of taxpayer money and providing workable solutions for the public.YITZHAK RABIN
Support MCIR. The Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization which relies on donations to inform, educate, and empower Mississippians.DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
The Violence Against Women Act, first passed in 1994, makes possible local advocates’ ability to prevent and respond to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Stacey Riley is CEO of the Gulf Coast Center for NonViolence Inc. The nonprofit center is the largest program forvictims of
FACING SLASHED BUDGETS, DESPERATE PRISON OFFICIALS LOOK TO Facing slashed budgets, desperate prison officials look to religious volunteers for programs that states refuse to fund, expert says MISSING OR MURDERED IN INDIAN COUNTRY, GONE WITHOUT Nevertheless, statistics remain shocking. According to the Indian Law Resource Center in Helena, Montana, more than four in five American Indian and Alaskan indigenous women have suffered some form of violence. For more than 51 percent, the violence has been sexual, and in more than 90 percent of these cases, the perpetrator was not Nativeor indigenous.
GEORGE FLOYD WASN’T THE ONLY ONE TO DIE AFTER AN OFFICER Mississippi now has its own George Floyd case. A video obtained by the Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting shows Robert Loggins rolling when officers and jailers get on top of him inside the Grenada County Jail, with one officer appearing to kneel on his neck or head. ‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
MISSISSIPPI MAN’S CASE COULD AFFECT FATE OF HUNDREDS OF Hope for a second chance quickly crushed. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Miller v.Alabama that mandatory sentences of life without parole for juvenile homicide offenders are unconstitutional, because they violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishments.”. Justice Elena Kagan, who wrote the majority opinion, said: “Mandatory life without MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-NEWS Expanding Medicaid in Mississippi will create roughly three times the number of jobs as the Nissan plant in Canton and the Toyota Motors Manufacturing plant in Blue Springs did combined, according to a national report released Thursday. In Mississippi, of the 21,700 new jobs possibly created with Medicaid expansion, 12,500 of the jobs willbe
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-ABOUT Jerry Mitchell is an investigative reporter with the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting. Formerly a reporter for the Clarion-Ledger, his journalism exposes dark deeds, pulling back the curtain on the spending of taxpayer money and providing workable solutions for the public. MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-OUR TEAM Debbie Skipper Editor. Debbie Skipper, a New Mexico native and longtime Mississippi resident, is a 42-year journalism veteran. She was an award-winning reporter, feature writer and editor at The Anniston Star in Anniston, Ala. Before joining the Clarion Ledger in Jackson, Miss., in December 1982, she spent a month in Japan on a Hibakusha Travel Grant from the Hiroshima International Cultural WHERE DO ISRAEL AND HAMAS GO FROM HERE? LET’S HOPE THEIR Like the play, the film recreates the secret meetings in Oslo, Norway, in 1993 between representatives of the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israelis who favored dialogue with the PLO — even though it was illegal at the time for any Israeli to speak with any PLO member. For some delegates in Oslo, it was the first time they had ever met anyone from the opposite camp. PLO — MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING Support MCIR. The Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization which relies on donations to inform, educate, and empower Mississippians.YITZHAK RABIN
Support MCIR. The Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization which relies on donations to inform, educate, and empower Mississippians. ‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MEANS CLEAN WATER AND SAFETY FROM Before I left New York City to work at MCIR for six months, a documentarian told me about visiting a festival in Clarksdale , in the Mississippi Delta, some years ago. The organizers had advised her not to drink the water, and she wasn’t surprised when she saw it wasbright yellow.
TARGETING GUN VIOLENCE PROJECT Gun Violence Katherine Mitchell August 29, 2019 targeting gun violence project, mentoring, gangs, gang violence, Chicago, mississippi. Scarred By Chicago Gun Violence, Student Finds Refuge, Purpose in Mississippi. “I don't know how to tell you this, but your brotherwas
IN FERRIDAY, LA., AN ‘OUTLAW TOWN,’ THE DEACONS TOOK A ‘Rifles on our shoulders’ Ferriday’s population of more than 4,500 residents was roughly half black and half white in the mid-1960s, a time when black citizens quietly celebrated civil rights wins and white supremacists desperately tried to halt legislative andsocial change.
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTINGNEWSPERSPECTIVEABOUTOUR TEAMOUR MEDIA PARTNERSMCIR LIVE Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization that empowers citizens in their communities by holding public officials accountable. We report on the criminal justice system, public education funding, prisons, public corruption, political cronyism, generational povert MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-OUR TEAM Debbie Skipper Editor. Debbie Skipper, a New Mexico native and longtime Mississippi resident, is a 42-year journalism veteran. She was an award-winning reporter, feature writer and editor at The Anniston Star in Anniston, Ala. Before joining the Clarion Ledger in Jackson, Miss., in December 1982, she spent a month in Japan on a Hibakusha Travel Grant from the Hiroshima International CulturalDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
The Violence Against Women Act, first passed in 1994, makes possible local advocates’ ability to prevent and respond to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Stacey Riley is CEO of the Gulf Coast Center for NonViolence Inc. The nonprofit center is the largest program forvictims of
PRISON GANGS
Confronted by horrific conditions and in the wake of recent uprisings inside Mississippi’s prisons that have left five dead, the Justice Department, in coordination with state authorities, has launched criminal and civil investigations with a look at possible charges, GEORGE FLOYD WASN’T THE ONLY ONE TO DIE AFTER AN OFFICER Mississippi now has its own George Floyd case. A video obtained by the Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting shows Robert Loggins rolling when officers and jailers get on top of him inside the Grenada County Jail, with one officer appearing to kneel on his neck or head. FACING SLASHED BUDGETS, DESPERATE PRISON OFFICIALS LOOK TO Facing slashed budgets, desperate prison officials look to religious volunteers for programs that states refuse to fund, expert says ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MEANS CLEAN WATER AND SAFETY FROM Before I left New York City to work at MCIR for six months, a documentarian told me about visiting a festival in Clarksdale , in the Mississippi Delta, some years ago. The organizers had advised her not to drink the water, and she wasn’t surprised when she saw it wasbright yellow.
MISSISSIPPI MAN’S CASE COULD AFFECT FATE OF HUNDREDS OF Hope for a second chance quickly crushed. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Miller v.Alabama that mandatory sentences of life without parole for juvenile homicide offenders are unconstitutional, because they violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishments.”. Justice Elena Kagan, who wrote the majority opinion, said: “Mandatory life without TARGETING GUN VIOLENCE PROJECT Gun Violence Katherine Mitchell August 29, 2019 targeting gun violence project, mentoring, gangs, gang violence, Chicago, mississippi. Scarred By Chicago Gun Violence, Student Finds Refuge, Purpose in Mississippi. “I don't know how to tell you this, but your brotherwas
‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTINGNEWSPERSPECTIVEABOUTOUR TEAMOUR MEDIA PARTNERSMCIR LIVE Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization that empowers citizens in their communities by holding public officials accountable. We report on the criminal justice system, public education funding, prisons, public corruption, political cronyism, generational povert MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-OUR TEAM Debbie Skipper Editor. Debbie Skipper, a New Mexico native and longtime Mississippi resident, is a 42-year journalism veteran. She was an award-winning reporter, feature writer and editor at The Anniston Star in Anniston, Ala. Before joining the Clarion Ledger in Jackson, Miss., in December 1982, she spent a month in Japan on a Hibakusha Travel Grant from the Hiroshima International CulturalDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
The Violence Against Women Act, first passed in 1994, makes possible local advocates’ ability to prevent and respond to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Stacey Riley is CEO of the Gulf Coast Center for NonViolence Inc. The nonprofit center is the largest program forvictims of
PRISON GANGS
Confronted by horrific conditions and in the wake of recent uprisings inside Mississippi’s prisons that have left five dead, the Justice Department, in coordination with state authorities, has launched criminal and civil investigations with a look at possible charges, GEORGE FLOYD WASN’T THE ONLY ONE TO DIE AFTER AN OFFICER Mississippi now has its own George Floyd case. A video obtained by the Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting shows Robert Loggins rolling when officers and jailers get on top of him inside the Grenada County Jail, with one officer appearing to kneel on his neck or head. FACING SLASHED BUDGETS, DESPERATE PRISON OFFICIALS LOOK TO Facing slashed budgets, desperate prison officials look to religious volunteers for programs that states refuse to fund, expert says ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MEANS CLEAN WATER AND SAFETY FROM Before I left New York City to work at MCIR for six months, a documentarian told me about visiting a festival in Clarksdale , in the Mississippi Delta, some years ago. The organizers had advised her not to drink the water, and she wasn’t surprised when she saw it wasbright yellow.
MISSISSIPPI MAN’S CASE COULD AFFECT FATE OF HUNDREDS OF Hope for a second chance quickly crushed. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Miller v.Alabama that mandatory sentences of life without parole for juvenile homicide offenders are unconstitutional, because they violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishments.”. Justice Elena Kagan, who wrote the majority opinion, said: “Mandatory life without TARGETING GUN VIOLENCE PROJECT Gun Violence Katherine Mitchell August 29, 2019 targeting gun violence project, mentoring, gangs, gang violence, Chicago, mississippi. Scarred By Chicago Gun Violence, Student Finds Refuge, Purpose in Mississippi. “I don't know how to tell you this, but your brotherwas
‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-NEWS Expanding Medicaid in Mississippi will create roughly three times the number of jobs as the Nissan plant in Canton and the Toyota Motors Manufacturing plant in Blue Springs did combined, according to a national report released Thursday. In Mississippi, of the 21,700 new jobs possibly created with Medicaid expansion, 12,500 of the jobs willbe
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-OUR TEAM Debbie Skipper Editor. Debbie Skipper, a New Mexico native and longtime Mississippi resident, is a 42-year journalism veteran. She was an award-winning reporter, feature writer and editor at The Anniston Star in Anniston, Ala. Before joining the Clarion Ledger in Jackson, Miss., in December 1982, she spent a month in Japan on a Hibakusha Travel Grant from the Hiroshima International Cultural WHERE DO ISRAEL AND HAMAS GO FROM HERE? LET’S HOPE THEIR Like the play, the film recreates the secret meetings in Oslo, Norway, in 1993 between representatives of the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israelis who favored dialogue with the PLO — even though it was illegal at the time for any Israeli to speak with any PLO member. For some delegates in Oslo, it was the first time they had ever met anyone from the opposite camp. ISRAEL — MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING Support MCIR. The Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization which relies on donations to inform, educate, and empower Mississippians. FCC GRANTS — MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE Mississippi could see more than $700 million in federal funding for broadband over the next few years, thanks to the CARES Act, FCC grants and a possible infrastructure bill. Read More. Mississippi News, News Katherine Mitchell May 18, 2021 Mississippi Business, digital desert, Mississippi broadband, fiber optic, federal funding, CARES act, FCC INSURANCE COMMISSIONER DISCUSSES MEDICAID AND EXPANSION The federal pandemic relief bill contains a big incentive for states that haven’t expanded Medicaid. Mississippi is one of 12 states holding out on the expansion. TARGETING GUN VIOLENCE PROJECT Gun Violence Katherine Mitchell August 29, 2019 targeting gun violence project, mentoring, gangs, gang violence, Chicago, mississippi. Scarred By Chicago Gun Violence, Student Finds Refuge, Purpose in Mississippi. “I don't know how to tell you this, but your brotherwas
CONGRESS POISED TO OFFER MISSISSIPPI MORE MONEY TO EXPAND President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package poised to be approved by Congress offers a sizable financial incentive for Mississippi to expand Medicaid to provide health care coverage to primarily the working poor. MISSISSIPPI: MAGIC, MYSTERY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM For any writer, Mississippi is magic. Starting with William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, and Tennessee Williams and moving forward to Richard Wright, Donna Tartt and Richard Ford, among so many others, Mississippi has produced an exceptional number of exceptional writers. IN FERRIDAY, LA., AN ‘OUTLAW TOWN,’ THE DEACONS TOOK A ‘Rifles on our shoulders’ Ferriday’s population of more than 4,500 residents was roughly half black and half white in the mid-1960s, a time when black citizens quietly celebrated civil rights wins and white supremacists desperately tried to halt legislative andsocial change.
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTINGNEWSPERSPECTIVEABOUTOUR TEAMOUR MEDIA PARTNERSMCIR LIVE Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization that empowers citizens in their communities by holding public officials accountable. We report on the criminal justice system, public education funding, prisons, public corruption, political cronyism, generational povert MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-NEWSCENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING REVEALCENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING WEBSITECENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING WEBSITECENTER OF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING Mississippi News, News, Civil RIghts Katherine Mitchell April 21, 2021 George Floyd, George Floyd murder, Robert Loggins, Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting, Grenada County Jail, kneel on neck, Dr. Michael Baden, Black Caucus, Justice department, investigatiion. These teens escaped life without parole. But they will still die in prison. MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-ABOUTJERRY MITCHELL MISSISSIPPIJERRY MITCHELL MISSISSIPPI BURNING Jerry Mitchell is an investigative reporter with the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting. Formerly a reporter for the Clarion-Ledger, his journalism exposes dark deeds, pulling back the curtain on the spending of taxpayer money and providing workable solutions for the public.DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
The Violence Against Women Act, first passed in 1994, makes possible local advocates’ ability to prevent and respond to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Stacey Riley is CEO of the Gulf Coast Center for NonViolence Inc. The nonprofit center is the largest program forvictims of
FACING SLASHED BUDGETS, DESPERATE PRISON OFFICIALS LOOK TO Facing slashed budgets, desperate prison officials look to religious volunteers for programs that states refuse to fund, expert says GEORGE FLOYD WASN’T THE ONLY ONE TO DIE AFTER AN OFFICER Mississippi now has its own George Floyd case. A video obtained by the Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting shows Robert Loggins rolling when officers and jailers get on top of him inside the Grenada County Jail, with one officer appearing to kneel on his neck or head. MISSISSIPPI MAN’S CASE COULD AFFECT FATE OF HUNDREDS OF Hope for a second chance quickly crushed. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Miller v.Alabama that mandatory sentences of life without parole for juvenile homicide offenders are unconstitutional, because they violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishments.”. Justice Elena Kagan, who wrote the majority opinion, said: “Mandatory life without TARGETING GUN VIOLENCE PROJECT Gun Violence Katherine Mitchell August 29, 2019 targeting gun violence project, mentoring, gangs, gang violence, Chicago, mississippi. Scarred By Chicago Gun Violence, Student Finds Refuge, Purpose in Mississippi. “I don't know how to tell you this, but your brotherwas
‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
IN FERRIDAY, LA., AN ‘OUTLAW TOWN,’ THE DEACONS TOOK A ‘Rifles on our shoulders’ Ferriday’s population of more than 4,500 residents was roughly half black and half white in the mid-1960s, a time when black citizens quietly celebrated civil rights wins and white supremacists desperately tried to halt legislative andsocial change.
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTINGNEWSPERSPECTIVEABOUTOUR TEAMOUR MEDIA PARTNERSMCIR LIVE Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization that empowers citizens in their communities by holding public officials accountable. We report on the criminal justice system, public education funding, prisons, public corruption, political cronyism, generational povert MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-NEWSCENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING REVEALCENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING WEBSITECENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING WEBSITECENTER OF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING Mississippi News, News, Civil RIghts Katherine Mitchell April 21, 2021 George Floyd, George Floyd murder, Robert Loggins, Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting, Grenada County Jail, kneel on neck, Dr. Michael Baden, Black Caucus, Justice department, investigatiion. These teens escaped life without parole. But they will still die in prison. MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-ABOUTJERRY MITCHELL MISSISSIPPIJERRY MITCHELL MISSISSIPPI BURNING Jerry Mitchell is an investigative reporter with the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting. Formerly a reporter for the Clarion-Ledger, his journalism exposes dark deeds, pulling back the curtain on the spending of taxpayer money and providing workable solutions for the public.DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
The Violence Against Women Act, first passed in 1994, makes possible local advocates’ ability to prevent and respond to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Stacey Riley is CEO of the Gulf Coast Center for NonViolence Inc. The nonprofit center is the largest program forvictims of
FACING SLASHED BUDGETS, DESPERATE PRISON OFFICIALS LOOK TO Facing slashed budgets, desperate prison officials look to religious volunteers for programs that states refuse to fund, expert says GEORGE FLOYD WASN’T THE ONLY ONE TO DIE AFTER AN OFFICER Mississippi now has its own George Floyd case. A video obtained by the Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting shows Robert Loggins rolling when officers and jailers get on top of him inside the Grenada County Jail, with one officer appearing to kneel on his neck or head. MISSISSIPPI MAN’S CASE COULD AFFECT FATE OF HUNDREDS OF Hope for a second chance quickly crushed. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Miller v.Alabama that mandatory sentences of life without parole for juvenile homicide offenders are unconstitutional, because they violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishments.”. Justice Elena Kagan, who wrote the majority opinion, said: “Mandatory life without TARGETING GUN VIOLENCE PROJECT Gun Violence Katherine Mitchell August 29, 2019 targeting gun violence project, mentoring, gangs, gang violence, Chicago, mississippi. Scarred By Chicago Gun Violence, Student Finds Refuge, Purpose in Mississippi. “I don't know how to tell you this, but your brotherwas
‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
IN FERRIDAY, LA., AN ‘OUTLAW TOWN,’ THE DEACONS TOOK A ‘Rifles on our shoulders’ Ferriday’s population of more than 4,500 residents was roughly half black and half white in the mid-1960s, a time when black citizens quietly celebrated civil rights wins and white supremacists desperately tried to halt legislative andsocial change.
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-OUR TEAM Debbie Skipper Editor. Debbie Skipper, a New Mexico native and longtime Mississippi resident, is a 42-year journalism veteran. She was an award-winning reporter, feature writer and editor at The Anniston Star in Anniston, Ala. Before joining the Clarion Ledger in Jackson, Miss., in December 1982, she spent a month in Japan on a Hibakusha Travel Grant from the Hiroshima International Cultural MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-SIGN UP Every Wednesday, a quick-read from Jerry Mitchell and MCIR. First Name. Last Name. Email Address. Sign Up For Our Newsletter. We will never share your personal information with third parties. Thank you for signing up! Check your inbox for a preview of what to expect. If you’re a Gmail user and don’t see it, check your “Promotions”tab
MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-CONTACT Support MCIR. The Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting is a nonprofit news organization which relies on donations to inform, educate, and empower Mississippians. MISSISSIPPI CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING-RACE Race Against Time is an astonishing, courageous story capturing a historic race for justice, as the past is uncovered, clue by clue, and long-ignored evils are brought into the light. This is a landmark book and essential reading for all Americans. BUY THE BOOK. Book Jerry Fora Speech.
GEORGE FLOYD WASN’T THE ONLY ONE TO DIE AFTER AN OFFICER Mississippi now has its own George Floyd case. A video obtained by the Mississippi Center of Investigative Reporting shows Robert Loggins rolling when officers and jailers get on top of him inside the Grenada County Jail, with one officer appearing to kneel on his neck or head. ‘THEY BASICALLY STARVED HIM TO DEATH’ Former Army National Guard officer Edward Stafford Knight went away for life in prison in August 2001. His widow and others believe it turned into a death sentence. “They basically starved him to death,” says his widow, Betty Biggers Knight. Although technically eligible for parole in 15 years, Knight, a former first lieutenantwith the
PRISON GANGS
Confronted by horrific conditions and in the wake of recent uprisings inside Mississippi’s prisons that have left five dead, the Justice Department, in coordination with state authorities, has launched criminal and civil investigations with a look at possible charges, the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting IN MISSISSIPPI’S FRACTURED MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM, IT’S THE By Shirley L. Smith Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting . Mississippi’s poorly constructed mental health system gives mental health providers insufficient funds to provide court-ordered, community-based services, and a poorly conceived Medicaid system cuts into their revenue stream, said Richard Duggin, chief executive officer of Region 7 Community Counseling Services INSIDE THE PRISON WHERE INMATES SET EACH OTHER ON FIRE AND But on the ground, the reality is starkly different. The number of inmates is now growing, as the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting and ProPublica reported in May.Though violence and gangs have been well-known problems for years, the problems are worse than they’ve ever been, according to interviews, documents and data reviewed by the news organizations. TIGER KING JOE EXOTIC’S FORMER PARK NOW CALLED ‘ZOO OF The zoo once run by Tiger King Joe Exotic is now a “zoo of horrors” because of animal abuse and neglect, a complaint filed with Oklahoma authorities alleges.. Photographs and videos obtained by the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting show neglect at the Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Memorial Park in Oklahoma. News About Journalism Lab Race Against TimeSubscribe Donate
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A PISTOL BOUGHT IN MISSISSIPPI KILLED A TEEN IN CHICAGO Malcolm Stuckey was pulling up in a burgundy Pontiac Grand Prix to his friend’s birthday party in Chicago’s once-prosperous Englewood neighborhood when a bullet fired from a gun, bought 840 miles away in Mississippi, tore into his brain.Read More →
U.S. SUPREME COURT TAKES AIM AT ROE V. WADE BY DECIDING TO HEARMISSISSIPPI CASE
By considering Mississippi’s 2018 law banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, the U.S. Supreme Court is tipping off its plans to chip away at the right to abortion, experts says.Read More →
MISSISSIPPI WOMAN WAS A HOMELESS, COUCH-SURFING ALCOHOLIC. NOW SHE’S A LYCEUM SCHOLAR AWARD WINNER WITH A FULL RIDE TO OLE MISS. After a series of traumatic pregnancies, Stacey Spiehler began a descent into alcoholism during a bout of mania.Read More →
FACING SLASHED BUDGETS, DESPERATE PRISON OFFICIALS LOOK TO RELIGIOUS VOLUNTEERS FOR PROGRAMS THAT STATES REFUSE TO FUND, EXPERT SAYS Ruth Graham among those teaching at Mississippi’s seminariesRead More →
MISSISSIPPI COULD GAIN 21,700 JOBS UNDER MEDICAID EXPANSION Expanding Medicaid in Mississippi will create roughly three times the number of jobs as the Nissan plant in Canton and the Toyota Motors Manufacturing plant in Blue Springs did combined, according to a national report released Thursday. In Mississippi, of the 21,700 new jobs possibly created with Medicaid expansion, 12,500 of the jobs will be created in healthcare, 1,400 in construction, 2,600 in retail, 400 in finance and insurance and 4,900in other sectors…
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