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Sports Sports Feature

901 FC Signs Attacking Midfielder Laurent Kissiedou

Memphis 901 FC added yet another attacking weapon to its roster.

The latest newcomer is Laurent Kissiedou, a native of Divo, Ivory Coast, who plays as an attacking midfielder. And the 22-year-old brings plenty of experience to the squad.

After joining the Atlanta United academy in 2016, he made his first professional appearance during a spell at the USL’s Charleston Battery in 2017. But the bulk of his work has been with Atlanta United 2 since 2018. Over the last two seasons, he made 46 appearances (33 starts) and scored four goals.

“Laurent is a skilled and industrious midfielder with nearly 50 USL Championship appearances at only 22 years of age,” said 901 FC assistant sporting director James Roeling. “He is a fighter on the field, a great human being off it, and will be a valuable addition to the roster and the Memphis 901 FC family.”

Kissiedou will play alongside midfield colleagues Kadeem Dacres, Mitch Guitar, Roland Lamah, and Leston Paul.

In the meantime, check out an example of Kissiedou’s finishing ability here.

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Nomoe” by GIP

Music Video Monday is a labor of love.

It really is. I think music videos never get the respect they deserve. It’s the only exposure most people get to what they call in film fest land “experimental video.” And music videos are more important than ever. For the last decade, YouTube has been the leading way most people discover new music. (I don’t know if anyone has run the numbers lately, but TikTok, which is another, more participatory form of music video, is no doubt gaining in this category.) Ask Lil Nas X about the importance of music videos. So I’m happy to be able to use my voice to bring you the best in Memphis-area music videos.

For brothers Darius and Dezmond Gipson, the music video for “Nomoe” was a labor of love. Darius says the song came from a time of personal turmoil. “I made the song a year ago, in March. And I think around that time when I made the track I was kind of in a dark place with my love life. I had a lot of heartache and heartbreak on my mind. I contemplated on letting some bad habits go in the song.”

Dezmond Gipson is a video editor at Via Productions who loves his brother’s music. “I’ve been editing commercials all day for about a year, and for me, this video was about taking the fast-paced editing nature of my job and turning it into something a whole lot more fun,” he says. “We shot and edited this video in a weekend, in the Sherwood Forest neighborhood — Black boy joy at its finest!”

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

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Opinion The Last Word

Stacking The Deck: Tennessee Legislature Rigs the Game for Constitutional Lawsuits

When courts tell you you’ve violated the Constitution, one response would be to try to do better. Another approach would be to peevishly change the litigation rules of the game, and the refs, so you can do what you want without meaningful judicial scrutiny. This year, the Tennessee General Assembly looks to be taking the latter approach.

A pair of bills about to pass in Nashville would take power away from current judges to insulate the state from judicial review. Key votes, on the floor and in committee, are set for this week. Anyone who cares about a nonpartisan, independent safeguard of our constitutional rights ought to sound the alarm.

Rigging the Game: One pending bill, sponsored by Senator Brian Kelsey, would say that any time a trial judge orders preliminary injunctive relief against the state in a constitutional lawsuit, the state can automatically get a “stay” of the trial court order, pending the final outcome of the whole appellate process. Normally, such “interlocutory appeals” and “stays pending appeal” are left to the trial and appellate judges’ discretion on a case-by-case basis. When matters are time-sensitive, a stay pending appeal can mean that people’s constitutional rights can irrevocably be violated while the appellate wheels slowly grind on. Had this rule been in effect last summer, the order expanding mail voting access for the August election would have been neutralized.

It’s not balanced justice with a finger
on the scales.
(Photo: Alan Crosthwaite | Dreamstime.com)

This bill would also permanently bar any local government from ever challenging the constitutionality of a state statute. This provision was inspired by last year’s successful lawsuit by Shelby County and Nashville against the school voucher law (which targeted Shelby and Davidson Counties only).  

This provision is also very troubling. Sometimes, only a local government entity will have the legal standing to challenge certain types of unconstitutional decisions. Other times, private persons who would have standing lack the resources or expertise to challenge unconstitutional laws. Here, local governments play a vital role.

Judicial Gerrymandering: But perhaps the most troubling bill is one that would create an entirely new court — a three-judge “Super Chancery” trial court with exclusive jurisdiction over any constitutional challenge to any state legislative, executive, or administrative action. Crucially, the “Super Chancellors” would be elected statewide — the only judges so selected in Tennessee.

The bill’s sponsor has admitted on the record this is a nakedly partisan bill, designed to ensure that only Republican judges can ever consider constitutional cases. He laments that under current law, these cases start out in Nashville, which is “the most liberal district in the state,” with overwhelmingly Democratic voters. Statewide elections, he notes, would ensure that the prevailing (Republican) ideology would dictate who could evaluate constitutional claims.

This bill is as unnecessary as a practical matter as it is outrageous in its motivation. Cases starting out at the trial level in Nashville get reviewed on appeal by appellate and State Supreme Court judges who come from all over the state, are selected by the governor and state legislature, and are overwhelmingly Republican. Indeed, that happened in the mail voting case: The Tennessee Supreme Court upheld some of the relief granted by the trial judge, but still substantially watered down her ruling in response to arguments from the state. If you want to ensure Republican judges get to weigh in on constitutional issues in deep-red Tennessee, you don’t need to spend over $1 million a year (the bill’s minimum fiscal note) to create an entire new level of judicial bureaucracy to handle what amounts to only a small fraction of the overall statewide caseload.

Worse, forcing these Super Chancellors to run statewide means that only very wealthy judicial candidates or those financed by deep-pocketed special interests can afford to run the kind of exorbitant statewide campaign that would give them any shot at winning. If you were worried that the Koch Brothers didn’t have enough of a say over our constitutional rights in the Volunteer State, fear not: Help is on the way! 

Fortunately, there is still time (though not much) to stop these travesties. Contact your state legislators and tell them to reject these attempts to stack the deck.

Steve Mulroy is the Bredesen Professor of Law at the University of Memphis and a former Shelby County commissioner. He was lead plaintiffs’ counsel in last year’s lawsuit to expand mail voting access during the pandemic.

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Beyond the Arc Sports Sports Feature

Grizzlies Down Blazers in a Nail-Biter

Close games haven’t been too kind to the Grizzlies this season. Until Friday night, Memphis had lost five straight games decided by five points or less. 

Those losses have been difficult and disappointing, to say the least. It was good for the team to get that monkey off of their backs against Portland. In a pivotal win, the Memphis Grizzlies defeated the Trailblazers 130–128 at the Moda Center. 

With playoff implications, the Grizzlies got the job done behind Ja Morant, Dillon Brooks, and Jaren Jackson, Jr. who was appearing in his second game of the season. It was the Blazers’ fourth straight loss.

With the win, the Grizzlies moved to 30–28 on the season, while the Blazers fell to 32–27. With the loss, the Blazers moved to the seventh spot in the West and fell a half-game behind Dallas, with Memphis 1.5 games behind Portland. 

An Aggressive Morant

Morant finished with 33 points, 13 assists, and five rebounds on 11 of 17 shooting with zero turnovers, and he was aggressive from the start. During the post-game media availability, Morant explained why he has been attacking early: “I just got to be more aggressive”, he said. “Whether it’s attacking downhill to help find my teammates or for me to score. I feel like some of these games when we start out slow is my fault. Since I’m the point guard, I gotta push the pace.”

Morant set another franchise milestone with his performance

Dillon the Menace

Brooks chipped in 25 points and tried his best to make it difficult for Damian Lillard. After the game, Brooks said, “I just try to tire him out and full-court him every time. (I) use a lot of physicality, give him something different a lot of players don’t give to him. Physicality and a little trash-talking making every single shot tough. Obviously, he’s a great player and he’ll score his points, but I just try to make it tough on him.” 

Welcome Back, Jaren Jackson, Jr

“I still have my minute caps so you know it’s going game by game and progressively get back to full form and I’m playing like 28 to 30 minutes a game,” Jackson said.

He added, “But for now I feel pretty good out there. There are times at the end of stretches where you’re a little tired, but I’m feeling pretty good.” 

After only playing 18 minutes in his season debut on Wednesday night against the Clippers, Jackson played 25 minutes against the Blazers and hit clutch free throws to help seal the victory. He finished the game with 23 points on 10 of 14 shooting off the bench. An impressive night for the Michigan State alum. 

Xavier Tillman Sr. was on fire from the start and chipped in 12 points on 6-8 shooting, six rebounds, and two blocks in 23 minutes. Tillman has been huge for Memphis in the absence of starting center Jonas Valanciunas. 

Up Next

The same teams will do it all over again on Sunday afternoon with the same playoff implications. Tip-off at 3:00 pm CST at the Moda Center. 

Categories
Film/TV TV Features

Sasquatch Mixes Hell’s Angels and a Killer Bigfoot Story

Late in the new Hulu documentary miniseries Sasquatch, anthropologist Jeffrey Meldrum puts the cryptid in the context of “wild man in the woods” legends that go back to Gilgamesh. As long as we can remember, there have been humanoid manifestations of our fears of the unknown, and the unknowable hostility of nature, haunting the edges of our vision. 

Sasquatch begins with freelance journalist David Holthouse trying to track down the truth behind a cryptic memory. In October, 1993, Holthouse was a wasted youth working on an illegal pot farm in Northern California’s Emerald Triangle. One night, as the crew was packing it in, he overheard another worker telling his boss that he had seen three bodies in a pot field that had been torn apart by a Bigfoot. The guy was so agitated that Holthouse thought he was absolutely sincere in describing what he believed he had seen. After a career of infiltrating white supremacist cells and investigating Mafia murders, Holthouse decided to return to Humbolt County to see if there was any truth to the memory. 

As it turns out, Humbolt County is prime Sasquatch territory. The most famous footage of a Bigfoot, the infamous Patterson-Gimlin film, was captured there in 1967. Holthouse interviews Bob Gimlin, who assures him that Bigfoot is a peaceful creature. Then he interviews the guy who claims to have hoaxed Gimlin by dressing up in a homemade Bigfoot costume, even producing the costume itself. 

To me, that feels like the biggest scoop in Sasquatch, but Holthouse and director Joshua Rofé have a much bigger story to tell. Humbolt County in the early 1990s was the focus of the Reaganite War on Drugs, and let’s just say there were a lot more likely ways to get killed than by Bigfoot. The Hell’s Angels, for example, controlled the choicest plot of land in what a veteran grower named Ghostdance calls the best climate for growing cannabis in the world. The rural area made famous by back-to-the-land hippies fleeing the harsh vibes of the Bay Area had, by then, descended into an insular, paranoid, and heavily armed community where growers and the California Highway Patrol played high-stakes cat-and-mouse games. 

Rofé puts Holthouse, the investigator, in the center of his story, which normally annoys me. In this case, though, I will have to grudgingly admit that it works. Holthouse has a particular kind of anti-charisma. He says that, for some reason, the criminals and “monsters” he has written about in his career have opened up to him, because they think he’s as crooked as they are. The process of investigating the mystery, in which Holthouse has numerous late-night phone calls and clandestine meetings in the parking lot of a Humbolt sports bar, takes up the bulk of the three episodes. That’s probably inevitable, because Holthouse has very little to go on. He doesn’t even have a body, nor did he ever see a body. None of the murders in the Emerald Triangle he can confirm happened match the facts of his memory. Holthouse is mostly chasing dead ends — right up until he suddenly isn’t. 

Sasquatch definitely suffers from the dreaded Streaming Docuseries Bloat Syndrome (SDBS), but the two-pronged dive into weirdo cryptid obsessives and the California criminal underworld is creepier than your usual true crime eyebrow-raiser. If nothing else, it proves that the nuts and bolts of journalism can make for compelling TV. 

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News Blog News Feature

Active COVID-19 Cases Continue Steady Rise

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

901 FC Signs Former Loanee Rashawn Dally

A familiar face returns to AutoZone Park this season, and he’s got a little bit of 901 FC history in his boots.

The team announced the signing of Rashawn Dally, a forward who played for Memphis on loan from parent club FC Cincinnati during the 2019 season. After linking up with his Memphis teammates, he wrote himself into 901 FC lore by securing the organization’s first-ever win in the USL. During a trip to Chester, Pennsylvania, Dally pounced on a defensive mistake by the Bethlehem Steel to score his first professional goal.

Rashawn Dally’s goal against Bethlehem Steel secured 901 FC’s first USL win

After briefly returning to Cincinnati, he spent another USL season with Las Vegas Lights FC, scoring three goals in 14 appearances.

“We are thrilled to add Rashawn to the attacking corps of our club,” said 901 FC head coach Ben Pirmann. “We were fortunate enough to work with Rashawn in the 2019 season and his development over the past two years has turned him into a very threatening striker in the USL Championship. He is a phenomenal young man, and we can’t wait for him to improve an already daunting front line.”

Memphis now has plenty of attacking riches at its disposal, with Dally just the latest addition to a forward line featuring Roland Lamah, Kadeem Dacres, Kyle Murphy, Michael Salazar, and Francis Atuahene.

Memphis 901 FC opens the 2021 season away at Birmingham Legion on Saturday, May 15th.

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News News Blog News Feature

Report: MEM Busiest Cargo Airport In the World

Memphis International Airport (MEM) is back atop the rankings as the world’s busiest cargo airport. 

More than 4.6 million metric tonnes of cargo came through the airport last year, up 6.7 percent over 2019. It was enough to put MEM back on top of the ranking by Airports Council International (ACI), edging out Hong Kong International Airport, which earned the top slot in 2019. The last time MEM ranked first on the list was 2009.

Airports Council International

The FedEx Express World Hub at MEM is responsible for about 99 percent of the overall cargo handled at MEM. The hub sees about 450 combined arrivals and departures per day.

Global passenger traffic at the world’s airports decreased by 64.6 percent in 2020, according to ACI, as travel was reduced due to COVID-19 concerns. However, air cargo volumes decreased by only 8.9 percent. 

Air cargo volumes in ACI’s top 10 airports grew by 3 percent in 2020. The agency says the gain can be attributed to the increase in demand for online consumer goods, pharmaceutical products, and personal protective equipment. 

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News News Blog News Feature

Gun Crime Rises 30 Percent

Gun crime continues to rise in Memphis, according to the latest data from the Memphis Shelby Crime Commission.

Memphis Shelby Crime Commission

Crimes involving guns were 30 percent higher in the first three months of 2021 compared to the first three months of 2020. From January to March of this year, there were 1,576 reported incidents involving guns, according to data collected by the Memphis Police Department (MPD) and the University of Memphis Public Safety Institute. 

Memphis Shelby Crime Commission

Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) data show 3,546 gun-crime incidents in Memphis for the first quarter. This is up nearly 53 percent from first quarter 2020. 

TBI reports gun crime differently. For that agency, aggravated assault with three victims is one incident involving three offenses. TBI gun-offense figures include nonviolent offenses, like felons in possession of firearms. So, TBI gun data will always be higher than that reported by MPD.  

Memphis Shelby Crime Commission

Police responded to 4,405 reports of shots fired from January to March this year. This is up from 3,891 reports in first-quarter 2020. Police responded to 530 reports of someone hit by gunfire, up from 429 in the same time last year.   

MPD said 357 guns were reported stolen from cars in the first quarter compared to 164 in the same period last year. The commission said if such gun thefts continue at the same pace, about 1,500 guns will be stolen from cars this year.  

Memphis Shelby Crime Commission

“As a community, we must have a sense of urgency about the level of gun crime,” said Crime Commission president Bill Gibbons. “It will take more than law enforcement and prosecutors making it a priority. All of us, including parents, teachers, and faith leaders, must also make it a priority.” 

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Harris Proposes $1.4 Billion Budget Without Tax Hike

One year after presenting a budget proposal that ended up being submitted to seemingly endless wrangling by the Shelby County Commission, County Mayor Lee Harris on Wednesday presented a budget proposal that almost certainly will be more gracefully received as the county’s legislative body prepares to begin its own deliberations.

Last year, facing a possible deficit, Harris proposed an increase in the county wheel tax that was not approved. His budget proposal for 2021-22, the third of his tenure, amounting to $1.4 billion in expenditures, contains no such proposed increase.

As Harris put it on Wednesday, April 21st, his proposal “contains no property tax increases, no cuts, gives a 1.5 percent pay raise to all our employees, and raises the minimum hourly wage for Shelby County government workers to $15.29 per hour.”

On Thursday, the Mayor’s office released a transcript that follows very closely the outlines of his remarks to the commission. It follows below. And, while his proposal seemed to be well received, the commission — both as individual members and as a body — will assuredly make an effort to put their own stamp on it before the beginning of the fiscal year in July. 

As Commissioner Reginald Milton said, serving notice, “This is more of a clarity issue. And I think that’s important we do this. The agenda item here says ‘Discussion of the 2022 budget presentation.’ That is incorrect. It is the 2022 proposed budget presentation. And as a legislative body it is important that we realize our role.  The mayor does not present a budget, he presents a  proposal, and we, as an elected body, will look it over and we will add and subtract from it as we see necessary as well. … We are part of this process. No budget is approved without this body’s inclusion. That’s why we were elected — to ensure that each of our districts are represented in the budget and their concerns are heard. With that said, Mr. Mayor, I am extremely impressed with what you said.”

The mayor promised the commissioners a printed copy of the budget before the commission’s next scheduled public meeting on May 5th, and, in response to their requests on Wednesday, he said he would also prepare an electronic version to be put online.

Meanwhile, here is how the mayor explained his budget proposal:

I’m pleased to say that the $1.4 billion proposed budget contains no property tax increases, no cuts, gives a 1.5 percent pay raise to all our employees and raises the minimum hourly wage for Shelby County Government workers to $15.29 per hour. 

Further, we have found a way to make strategic investments in education, public health, public safety and to make a substantial $19 million contribution to our rainy-day fund.

This budget follows a year like no other in our lifetimes.

We have all lived through one of the most difficult periods in Shelby County history. At the beginning of March 2020, there were virtually no confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus in the entire United States. Almost overnight, this infectious and deadly pathogen spread across the country and invaded our community.

This past year has brought pain to Shelby County. More than 92,000 residents contracted COVID-19. Our unemployment rate peaked at 14.8 percent in July 2020 before retreating to 6.8 percent as of February 2021. Thanks to federal CARES funding, and a lot of work, we are able to blunt some of the negative economic effects of the pandemic.

But, there is still pain throughout our community. Therefore, I don’t believe this is the time to raise taxes. Too many in our county are still on the road to recovery. What’s more, our property tax rate is already one of the highest in the state.

Even without a tax increase, we will invest in education.

The budget continues to build on the historic and unprecedented work we began when we came into office and devoted more than $8 million to early childhood education. This year, like last year, we have allotted $8.5 million to Pre-K and early Pre-K. Over the last three years of my time in office, we have allocated more than $25 million in new dollars to Pre-K education.

Because of that historic investment, every child, regardless of income, has access to Pre-K. This is important.

The academic research and education professionals tell us that a sound education in the earliest years of life is the foundation that each child needs to build a life of success. And if our children succeed, so will our community.

This budget includes the full $427 million for schools in addition to $30 million in school construction funding for this year.

When it comes to public health, this budget ensures that we can continue the COVID response throughout the rest of this year. Although some of the worst aspects of COVID may have receded, we expect we will have to continue the course for just a while longer.

We plan to continue to fund the COVID response unit until this virus is defeated. We will need to maintain the full complement of personnel and assets that form the backbone of the COVID response unit and this budget proposal does that.

Also, in our ongoing commitment to public safety, our current plan invests $32 million over six years in the Shelby County Fire Department. The investment allows the department to hire 41 firefighters and purchase a variety of safety equipment and new technologies. This massive investment in public safety means that the fire department will be in a position to reduce the emergency response time for underserved areas in Shelby County.

There are two new fire stations planned, one is near South Cordova and another in Southeast Shelby County. The construction and equipment costs of $10 million are included in this budget proposal.

This week’s budget presentation only begins the process.

The budget will be reviewed by the County Commission. The other elected officials might request more funding. There could be additions or subtractions.

But for now, we are focused on a road to recovery. This proposed budget is Shelby County’s roadmap to take us into our 203rd year.