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Rankin Christian Center celebrates Kwanzaa SEE PAGES A6-7
Pittsburgh Courier NEW
www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 115 No. 1 Two Sections
JANUARY 3-9, 2024
thenewpittsburghcourier Published Weekly $1.00
A GRAND RETIREMENT FOR A TRAILBLAZER
THE HISTORYMAKING, FIRST AFRICAN AMERICAN TO SERVE AS PRESIDENT JUDGE IN ALLEGHENY COUNTY, KIM BERKELEY CLARK, WAS GIVEN A GRAND RETIREMENT CELEBRATION ON DEC. 13, 2023. IT WAS HELD AT THE AUGUST WILSON AFRICAN AMERICAN CULTURAL CENTER. SEE MORE PHOTOS FROM THE EVENT ON PAGES A8-9. (PHOTOS BY J.L. MARTELLO)
Report shows vast racial disparities in criminal justice system 29 percent of Blacks in Allegheny County held for pretrial detention; just 16 percent of Whites by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
Take a look around you. See that African American person over there? In Allegheny County, that person is, in general, five times more likely to be criminally charged than a White person. Oh, there’s more, accord-
ing to a study released in December 2023 by former Allegheny County Chief Executive Rich Fitzgerald and the University of Pittsburgh’s Institute of Politics. When criminal charges are filed against a person in the county, African Americans are convicted of a felony at nearly twice
the rate (9.7 percent to 5.4 percent) as Whites. Overall, the Allegheny County Jail is filled with African Americans, the report, which studied data from 2017 to 2019, found, while the county as a whole is filled with, well, Whites. Blacks comprise just 13 percent of Allegheny County, but comprise
66 percent of the jail. The study, which was conducted by the RAND Corporation and RTI International, showed how African Americans have the odds stacked against them in the early stages of the criminal justice process, which contributes to the disproportionate number of African Americans
actually inside the jail. “Among those charged with a crime, Black individuals are 18 percentage points more likely than White individuals to be arrested versus receiving a summons,” the report, obtained by the New Pittsburgh Courier, read. “This gap reflects the racial disparity in the
decision to arrest versus receiving a summons. An individual who is arrested has to have a preliminary arraignment in front of a Magisterial District Judge or a senior judge to determine their pretrial release conditions, while an individual who receives a SEE CRIMINAL JUSTICE A4
78 of 107 homicides Black lives in 2023 Pittsburgh Police now has special 'Street Crimes Unit' by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
The number of homicides in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County decreased in 2023 from 2022, but to assume that progress is being made in the fight against gun violence in Pittsburgh's Black communities would be inaccurate. There were 107 homicides in Allegheny County in 2023, 22 less than 2022's number. As far as Pittsburgh homicides, there were at least 49 homicides in 2023, as opposed to 71 in 2022 (Pittsburgh safety officials, as of press time, have not confirmed whether the 2023 homicide total was 49 or 50 homicides). Homicides in 2023 could be found in all corners of
the city, from Homewood, to East Hills, to the Hill District, the North Side, Arlington, Beechview, to Elliott. Outside of city limits, homicides stretched from McKeesport, to Clairton, Swissvale, Pitcairn, Tarentum, and Wilkinsburg. Of the 107 homicides in 2023, 78 were Black lives, or nearly 73 percent. And of the 107 homicides, 13 were African Americans under 18. As of Tuesday, Jan. 2, public officials such as Mayor Ed Gainey, Chief of Police Larry Scirotto and Public Safety Director Lee Schmidt have yet to publicly comment on the number of homicides in SEE HOMICIDES A5
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RIMEL WILLIAMSON AND NAZIR PARKER, TWO 17-YEAR-OLDS, WERE KILLED IN BRADDOCK ON AUG. 27, 2023. THEY WERE WOODLAND HILLS HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS.