Baltimore Washington 6-29-2018

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Who Killed Det. Sean Suiter? 225 Days and Counting June 30, 2018 - June 30, 2018, The Afro-American

Volume Volume 127 123 No. No.47 20–22

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JUNE 30, 2018 - JULY 6, 2018

Inside

Baltimore

Natalie Gillard Uses Her DIY Talents to Promote Inclusion

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Listen to the Poor and Disenfranchised

DC AFRO High Tea Redefines #MeToo Movement

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The inaugural AFRO High Tea in D.C. on June 24 celebrated and supported women while giving women a platform to rip the covers off domestic violence in their families that goes back several generations. In doing so, they brought the #MeToo campaign back to its original audience — as a campaign focused on

centering African-American women’s stories about pain and violence. At the same time, the 125-yearold newspaper honored three local leaders with its “Women in Excellence Reaching Higher” award for their contributions in the community. The honorees were: Virginia Ali, cofounder, owner and operator of Ben’s Chili Bowl, which turns 60 this year; Dr. Kimberly L. Jeffries Leonard, national vice president of The Links and The

Links Foundation and Andrea Roane, a news anchor and Emmy award-winning journalist at WUSA Channel 9 since 1981. “It’s a pleasure to be here and I’m deeply honored to be recognized by our Washington AFRO ,” Ali told the crowd, pointing out that the newspaper, along with the Industrial Bank and Lee’s Flower Shop, are three Black-owned businesses that have stood the test of

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The Day (and Night) Ben Jealous Won the Democratic Gov. Primary By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO

Photo by J.K. Schmid

Ben Jealous and supporters at the Barack Obama Elementary School in Upper Marlboro, Maryland.

What follows is an intimate account of Ben Jealous’ final day of campaigning before his decisive primary win. Polls are open at Barack Obama Elementary School June 26 at 7 a.m. Ben Jealous’ boosters are already out in force, waving signs, waving to voters, and waving down cars to thank them for voting. The school behind them is a massive campus of brick and steel and glass, its atrium reflects the blue sky and thin clouds of early morning. The candidate arrives

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Say Hello to New AFRO Intern, Ty’rique Sims

By Matthew Ritchie Special to the AFRO

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Washington

Photo by Rob Roberts

AFRO General Manager Edgar Brookins, AFRO Board member Lynn Murphy Michalopoulos, WUSA 9 Anchor Andrea Roane, Co-founder of Ben’s Chili Bowl Virginia Ali, Michelle Bailey, Mistress of Ceremonies and Radio One Senior Correspondent Ebony McMorris, and AFRO Washington, D.C. Editor Micha Green were part of the AFRO’s High Tea in Washington, D.C. supporting the #MeToo movement.

America’s Number 1 Black Newspaper

Veteran Baltimore Senators Fall to Insurgent Challengers

The Baltimore office of the AFRO has a couple of new interns (myself included) who are fully prepared to grow and gain experience at the storied newspaper. This article is a chance to meet the other intern with whom I work with, Ty’rique Sims. Sims is a senior at Morgan State University in Baltimore, in addition to his internship. He has grown accustomed to the city during his

time at Morgan. Baltimore is a stark departure for Sims because he hails from Somers Point, New Jersey, which he describes as “a small shore town.” Somers Point has a population of roughly 10,000 people. He left New Jersey to come to Morgan to pursue a degree in journalism. When asked why he chose this major, Ty’rique said, “My overall goal is to become a sports journalist. My love of sports led me to want to pursue a career in journalism.” Continued on A3

Photo by Matthew Ritchie

Ty’rique Sims is one of the AFRO’s latest interns. He is majoring in journalism at Morgan State University.

Copyright © 2018 by the Afro-American Company

Following Graduation Scandal, Changes Coming in Next School Year

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New Bill Seeks to Help Returning Citizens By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com On May 22, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill, “The Formerly Incarcerated Reenter Society Transformed, Safely Transitioning Every Person Act” (FIRST STEP) by a bipartisan vote, 360-59. The bill was co-sponsored by U.S. Reps. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), a member of the CBC, and Doug Collins (R-Ga.). “The bill will transform lives by providing access to the mental health counseling, education and vocational services, and substance abuse treatment needed to help incarcerated individuals get back on their feet and become productive members of society,” he said. Jeffries said the FIRST STEP Act “is simply the end of the beginning on a journey undertaken to eradicate our mass incarceration epidemic in America.” President Trump supports the bill. Highlights of the bill include provisions that an inmate cannot be incarcerated more than 500 miles from their home, an identification card has to be provided upon release, release conditions relaxed, changing compassion release based on age from 65 to 60 and from 75 percent of sentence served to 66 percent done, more resources put into inmates who have significant mental and emotional challenges and increasing the number of good time credits served. Jeffries had the support of the majority of the CBC including its chairman, U.S. Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.), but some of its House members such as Reps. Anthony Brown (D-Md.) and Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) voted against the bill saying it did nothing to reduce

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