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Pittsburgh Courier NEW

VOL. 107, NO. 33

Police annual report: Total homicides down Published Weekly

Three Sections

AUGUST 17-23, 2016

Holding on to hope Youth dance competition celebrates slain son’s life

Black homicides still dominate by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer

Though the total number of homicides in Pittsburgh dropped by 17 percent from

by Ashley Johnson

SEE DANCE A4

CHIEF CAMERON McLAY

69 to 57 between 2014 and 2015, but with only 24 arrests made in those cases, so did the number solved by police. Such statistics are just part of those making up the bureau’s 2015 annual report, released Aug. 12. Unfortunately, so are the statistics that reinforce that the bulk of these killings were perpetrated on Blacks by Blacks. Of the 57 victims listed in the report, 87 percent were BROKEN HEARTED—Standing at the Penn Hills intersection where her son was shot and later died, Wynona Hawkins-Harper describes the pain of losing her son and how she celebrates his life. (Photo by J.L. Martello)

URA farms out vacant lot maintenance by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer

More than once, the late East End community activist Ora Lee Caroll said of the overgrown lots in Homewood and Larimer that you could dump a body there and no one would ever know. And because many of the properties she complained about were abandoned,

Black. Of the 23 arrested, 83 percent were Black. Despite these numbers, Chief Cameron McLay said during a press conference announcing the report’s re-

“When we had enough resources to stay ahead of the curve, and we can continue to investigate aggressively like each crime requires, we were very successful.”

Courier Staff Writer

With almost two years since her son, Jamar Hawkins, was tragically gunned down at a Penn Hills intersection, and no arrest, conviction or new leads, Wynona Hawkins-Harper continues to hold on to the hope that her son’s killer will be brought to justice while celebrating his love of life. On Saturday, Aug. 20, from 12-4 p.m., Jamar’s Place of Peace, the organization established in her son’s honor, will present the Peanut Butter and Jelly Club’s first Dance off for Daddy Competition at the Penn Hills YMCA, located on Frankstown Road. Hawkins was fatally shot on Nov. 14 while at a stoplight at the intersection of Saltsburg and Leechburg Roads, in Penn Hills, moments after an argument that took place at a nearby grocery store. Hawkins was taken to UPMC East Hospital where he was pronounced dead. Some say that with time, one’s heart heals from the loss of a loved one, but Hawkins-Harper disagrees. She said her heart still very much hurts from the loss of her son.

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maintenance was never performed. Occasionally, a neighbor would just go ahead and take a lawn mower to some, others required heavier equipment. But some of those properties are owned by the city or its Urban Redevelopment Authority—and it’s not just an East End problem. It’s all over the city—and now the city is doing something about it.

In July the URA board awarded contracts totaling $250,000 to seven community based entities to maintain some of the 1,500 such lots it owns. Authority Board Chair Kevin Acklin said the program is a win-win, filling the need for regular maintenance while helping neighborhood residents with employment and supporting community businesses at

the same time. Spokesperson Lisa Moses said it is important to note that every entity, for-profit or nonprofit, that submitted an application received a contract award. They are: •Amani Christian Development Corp. in Oakland; •Ervin Home Beautification in Knoxville; SEE URA A5

Hamlet presents 90-day transition plan by Christian Morrow Courier Staff writer

SUPERINTENDENT ANTHONY HAMLET

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By December, Pittsburgh Superintendent of Schools Anthony Hamlet expects to have completed a top-tobottom evaluation of the district, assembled a transition team of national experts who will assist in that analysis, and met with administrators, staff, students, parents and community stakeholders at all 54 of the district’s schools. Those are the three main components of the 90-day plan he presented to the board and the public Aug. 9 that will serve as the basis for a comprehensive plan to lead the district forward. “This 90-day plan is a necessary first step to develop a five-year strategic plan with transparency, two-way

communication, defined, strategic goals and a clear vision to make the district one of the best in the nation,” he said. The Council of the Great City Schools, a national consortium of large urban school districts, will help find national experts for the superintendent’s transition team and complete an independent evaluation of the district covering everything from staffing, instruction, budgets and discipline to class sizes, curriculum and social services. This board has already approved a $156,545 contract with the council to do so. Hamlet, himself, will also personally evaluate the district’s curriculum as well as SEE HAMLET A5

lease that he is confident personnel changes, analytical enhancements and officer outreach will improve performance and results, and increase public safety. “At the beginning of (2015), our clearance rate was way up,” he said. “When we had enough resources to stay ahead of the curve, and we can continue to investigate aggressively like each crime requires, we SEE REPORT A5

Judge rules Ford’s case can proceed Though she removed the City of Pittsburgh and one of the officers involved from the case, U.S. Magistrate Judge Maureen Kelly has ruled Leon Ford can pursue his civil rights complaint against the officer who shot and paralyzed him, and another who tried to drag him from his car during a 2012 traffic stop. Ford, of Shaler, was pulled over near Stanton Avenue and Farragut Street in Highland Park, Nov. 11, 2012, when officers mistakenly identified him as wanted felon Lamont Ford. Despite his producing all the proper ID, officers did not let him go. Officers David Derbish and Andrew Miller eventually tried to physically pull him from his car. Ford resisted, even after Derbish climbed into the passenger side door and tried to loosen his grip. During the struggle the car shifted into gear. Within seconds Derbish shot Ford five times. Whether that using that level of force—shooting, and assault—was “reasonable,” or whether Derbish and Miller violated Ford’s civil rights, will now be up to a federal jury. Derbish had asked for a summary judgement in his favor, but Kelly

denied it, saying the facts— such as whether Ford posed a threat, whether there was a bulge in his sweatpants that officers thought was a weapon, why Officer Derbish jumped into Ford’s car

LEON FORD in violation of police policy and whether Ford was trying to flee when his car lurched forward—are in dispute. “These should be resolved by a jury, not the court,” she said. Kelly also dismissed Ford’s civil rights claims of unreasonable seizure against Officer Michael Koslo because he didn’t shoot Ford. SEE FORD A5

George Curry says

Baltimore cops routinely violate rights of Blacks Forum A7


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