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Politics Beat Blog

Mulroy Alleges Blacks Under-Represented in Shelby D.A.’s Office

“Racial equity” in the D.A. ‘s office was the subject of a press conference held by Democratic candidate Steve Mulroy outside the Shelby County office building Tuesday afternoon, and he got boosting on the point from three key supporters, two of them African-American notables.

Flanked by the Reverend LaSimba Gray and Memphis City Council members Patrice Robinson and Jeff Warren, Mulroy cited figures which, he said, showed that, under incumbent Republican D.A. Amy Weirich,  “we have a district attorney’s office that is 90 percent white, roughly in attorneys, and 90 percent white in supervising attorneys. This is unacceptable. It has been unacceptable for years, and it needs to change.”

Mulroy added, “African Americans in Shelby County are disproportionately the victims of violent crime. And they’re disproportionately the victims of systemic discrimination in our criminal justice system. Therefore, it’s especially important that we have diversity among the actual prosecutors that make the charging decisions.”

Backing up Mulroy, Robinson said, “It is so important to know that you are represented by your community in a like manner. What he’s saying to us today is that currently, we do not have the representation for African-American people in the district attorney’s office, in that most of the people who are being prosecuted don’t have people to represent them ….”

Said Warren: “ I had no idea those numbers were as dramatic. And I think I am certain that Steve Mulroy will make the changes necessary to make our district attorney office look much more like our city in general, like it should.”

Rev. Gray, who in the past has made a point of backing African Americans in primaries where both blacks and whites were candidates, explained why he was supporting Mulroy against two African-American opponents in the Democratic primary:”Obviously, he’s a better candidate. See, in this race, you’re talking about experience. You got some running with no prosecutorial experience. And they are saying that all around the campaign trail.” 

Asked about an accusation by state Senator Raumesh Akbari, in a TV campaign commercial, that Weirich’s office was practicing “racial profiling,” Mulroy  said, “In a 30-second commercial, that was shorthand for the fact that we have disproportionate charging of African Americans, disproportionate treatment of African Americans with respect to pretrial detention, with respect to adult transfer from juvenile court to criminal court, with respect to sentences that are meted out.”

Mulroy contrasted the amount of blacks participating in the Shelby D.A.’s office with the number of those in the D.A.’s office of Davidson County  (Nashville), which has far fewer African Americans in its population. “I can tell you the raw number of African-American attorneys, not just the percentage, but the raw absolute number is higher in Davidson County, even though their total attorney complement is 75 compared to our 115.” 

Responding to the Mulroy press conference, Weirich issued this statement:

“The data Professor Mulroy provided is not accurate but that’s not surprising since his entire campaign is based on false data and dangerous ideas like releasing more criminals from jail.  The percentage is 31 and I have 223 employees – not 148 as he stated. 

“As the first female District Attorney in Shelby County, I have worked hard to hire people who best reflect the community and I’m proud to have increased the percentage of minorities in the office since I was elected.  More minorities hold supervisory positions than any other time in the history of our office.  It is indeed hypocritical that Professor Mulroy, a white male who chose to run against three women, is  making diversity his platform. Electing him alone sends a disturbing message that women shouldn’t be in leadership roles.”

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Key Races on May 3 Primary Ballot


As of Thursday’s filing deadline, the lineup cards are in for the first major voting of the campaign year: the county Democratic and Republican primaries of May 3, pending withdrawals by next Thursday. Most of the primary races are between Democrats, though a serious showdown in August will come for some of those Democratic winners, as formidable Republican foes will await them on the general election ballot. (Incumbents’ names are in caps.)

DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY

MAYOR: The County’s first-term chief executive, LEE HARRIS, will be favored against city administrator Kenneth Moody and Michael Banks. City Councilman Worth Morgan, a Republican, lies in wait for the August general election.

SHERIFF: FLOYD BONNER, JR., who also has de facto Republican endorsement, is highly favored against challenger Keisha Scott.

ASSESSOR: MELVIN BURGESS, who probably has ambitions down the line, should be secure against this relatively  unknown challenger, Roderick Blount.

CIRCUIT COURT CLERK: Veteran TEMIKA GIPSON will have all she can handle against challenger Jamita E. Swearengen, the current Memphis City Council chair and member of a prominent political clan.

COUNTY CLERK: Activist clerk WANDA HALBERT should be well positioned vs. Arriell Gipson (daughter of Temika Gipson), Mondell Williams, and William Stovall.

JUVENILE COURT CLERK: Retiring County Commissioner Reginald Milton could have brisk challenges from TV reporter Janeen Gordon, former School Board member Stephanie Gatewood, and Marcus Mitchell.

PROBATE COURT CLERK:
BILL MORRISON is opposed by Eddie Chism and retiring County Commissioner Eddie Jones.

REGISTER: SHELANDRA FORD is matched against retiring Commissioner Willie Brooks and Wanda Faulkner.

TRUSTEE: REGINA NEWMAN will be highly favored against frequent candidates Roderic Ford and Marion Alexandria-Williams (aka M. LaTroy Williams). Former GOP County Commissioner Steve Basar will oppose the winner in August.

CRIMINAL COURT CLERK: HEIDI KUHN has won awards and is hustling hard to stave off a repeat primary  opponent, Carla Stotts, and Maeme Bernard.

DISTRICT ATTORNEY GENERAL: The celebrated legal activist Steve Mulroy, a former County Commissioner and University of Memphis law professor, is favored  against two able opponents, Linda Harris and Janika White, for the right to challenge the formidable Republican incumbent AMY WEIRICH in August.

COMMISSION #5: The newly forged Cordova seat on the County Commission has drawn three formidable aspirants, the Commission’s able administrative assistant Quran Folsom, recently retired School Board member Shante Knox-Avant, and Reginald French, a prominent aide to former Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton.

COMMISSION #6: Minister/activist Charlie Caswell is matched against former Young Democrat president Alexander Boulton.

COMMISSION #7: Former legislator and Commissioner Henri Brooks is hazarding a comeback against School Board vice chair Althea Greene, Kathy Temple, and Cartavius Black.

COMMISSION #8: MICKELL LOWERY will run unopposed and will have no Republican opponent in August.

COMMISSION #9: EDMUND FORD, Jr. will defend his turf against contenders Sam Echols and Sean Harris.

COMMISSION #10: Activist Britney Thornton, she of the unofficial homeless shelter, vs. lawyer Kathy Kirk, member of a Memphis political family, and Teri Dockery.

COMMISSION #11: Human Resources specialist Candice Jones vs. School Board member Misaka Clay Bibbs and Eric Winston.

COMMISSION #12: Erika Sugarmon, the well-known activist and member of a legendary political family, has challengers in Reginald Boyce, David Walker, and Jasmes Bacchus.;

COMMISSION #13: MICHAEL WHALEY, running in a new district unopposed, will be challenged in August by Republican businessman Edward Apple.

Other Democratic candidates: Donna McDonald Martin vs. Kerry White in Commission District 1; Lynette Williams in Commission District 2; Britney Chauncey in Commission District 4.

REPUBLICAN PRIMARY

COUNTY COMMISSION # 4: In the only out-and-out Republican primary contest, BRANDON MORRISON is favored against challenger  Jordan Carpenter.

Running unopposed in the GOP primary are: Worth Morgan, Mayor; Stephen Cross, Assessor; Sohelia Kail, Circuit Court Clerk; Jeffrey Jacobs, County Clerk; Steve Basar, Trustee; Paul Houston, Criminal Court Clerk; Rob White, Juvenile Court Clerk; DeWayne Jackson, Probate Court Clerk;  Bryian Edmiston, Register; and District Attorney General AMY WEIRICH.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Financial Reports in DA Race

In the developing and closely watched race for District Attorney General, the state of candidate finances is destined to play a crucial role. The last quarterly financial disclosure, due January 31st, indicates that, of the four declared candidates, Republican incumbent Amy Weirich had a significant lead in money on hand, reporting a balance of $309,442.38

Of her three would-be challengers in the Democratic primary, Steve Mulroy led with a balance of $125,677.80. Janika White had $22,782.02, and Linda Harris reported a balance of $8,564.02.

Harris and Weirich both had active candidacies and reported balances as of the beginning of the quarter. White and Mulroy did not, and their fundraising totals for the quarter are identical to their reported balances. That fact gives Mulroy the lead overall in fundraising for the quarter.

Both Mulroy and Weirich have had significant fundraisers since the reporting period; so their actual balances on hand will doubtless be somewhat larger than their reported totals.

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News News Blog

Alleged Killer of Young Dolph is Indicted

    

District Attorney Amy Weirich’s office has issued the following press release:

Jan. 11, 2022 – A grand jury Tuesday indicted a Memphis man on first-degree murder charges in the shooting death of local rapper Young Dolph in November, said Shelby County Dist. Atty. Gen. Amy Weirich. 

Cornelius Smith, 32, was indicted on additional counts of attempted first-degree murder, convicted felon in possession of a firearm, employment of a firearm in the commission of a dangerous felony, and theft of property over $10,000.

Smith is being held without bond. 

He was arrested on Dec. 9 in Southaven on an auto-theft warrant involving the white Mercedes Benz vehicle used in the killing of Young Dolph, 36, whose given name was Adolph Robert Thornton Jr. 

The white 2014 Mercedes vehicle was taken in a carjacking on Nov. 10, 2021, at a gas station in the 2800 block of Kirby Road. The vehicle was found on Nov. 20 behind a residence in the 1100 block of Bradley in Orange Mound where a tipster said it was abandoned shortly after the homicide on Nov. 17. 

Smith was extradited Tuesday and transferred to the Shelby County Jail from the DeSoto County Jail in Hernando where he had been held since his arrest. 

The victim in the attempted murder count was Young Dolph’s brother who was with him at the time of the shooting.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Memphis Police Department, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, and CrimeStoppers of Memphis announced a reward of up to $15,000 is being offered for Justin Johnson, 23, who they said also is a suspect in the murder of Young Dolph. 

    Johnson, also of Memphis, announced on social media recently that he planned to turn himself in on Monday (Jan. 10), but that did not happen. Johnson, a rapper known as Straight Drop, also has an outstanding warrant for violation of supervised federal release related to a weapons conviction.

The case is being handled by Chief Prosecutor Paul Hagerman and by Asst. Dist. Attys. Austin Scofield and Joey Griffith of the District Attorney’s Crime Strategies & Narcotics Prosecution Unit. 

 The CSNPU handles cases involving gang members and violent crimes, including homicides, aggravated robberies, kidnappings, rapes, and narcotics trafficking.

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Politics Politics Feature

D.A. Weirich Bites the Bullet on Gun Crime

The outlook for a hotly contested 2022 district attorney general’s race was intensified this week by an announcement from former Shelby County Commissioner and University of Memphis law professor Steve Mulroy that he very likely would seek the Democratic nomination to oppose the re-election of incumbent Amy Weirich, a Republican.

Mulroy would thereby become the second Democrat in the race, along with the already declared Linda Harris.

Much of the contest, in either eventuality, would hinge on party-line issues. But in a luncheon address last week to members of the Rotary Club of Memphis, Weirich demonstrated why she is credited with having substantial crossover potential.

She bit the bullet on an issue on which her GOP party-mates in state government can be — and have been — seriously faulted.

“Gun crime is top-of-mind everywhere we go,” said Weirich to the Rotarians. Referring to figures on a PowerPoint slide, she noted, “We are up probably over 21 percent.”

She continued: “Now as we sit here today as compared to when that chart was made, but gun crime is prevalent and of great concern. One of the contributing factors is legislation that was passed in 2014.”

This was the guns-in-cars bill, passed by the General Assembly’s Republican majority and allowed to become law by Republican Governor Bill Haslam. “Back in 2010, we had less than 300 guns stolen from cars,” Weirich said.

Referring again to the slide, she said, “You can see, as of October 20, 2021, we’ve had 1,286. Now that it is November 30, I would imagine that the figures are probably close to 1,400 guns stolen from cars.”

As she reminded her auditors, “When guns-in-cars legislation passed in 2014, it enabled people to travel around with guns in their cars without a special permit. And that meant more guns in cars on the street.

“It’s susceptible to theft. And people that are stealing guns are not doing so to do anything altruistic with it, correct? They’re doing it to continue to victimize citizens in our community, to continue to prey on innocent people. So that’s kind of what the landscape is right now.”

Moments later she dilated further, “One of our senators a few weeks ago made the comment about how far we’ve come economically as a state because everybody in the former governor’s [Haslam’s] administration was focused on turning that economic engine around.

“And it occurred to me just like if we had that same focus for public safety, just think what we could do, if everyone in Nashville and beyond was focused on victims of crime and doing everything we can to respect the victims of crime, to hold offenders accountable, and to treat public safety as the number-one priority that it should be.”

When audience members raised concerns about potential gun massacres occurring in Tennessee, Weirich said, “The answer to everyone’s nightmare is yes, it could very well happen here, particularly since the governor [current GOP Governor Bill Lee] signed into law permitless carry.

“And so now it takes away the ability in law enforcement to come up and ask to see your permit, if you are openly carrying in this restaurant or walking down the street or going into Home Depot. And that is an issue for law enforcement and will continue to be an issue.”

She would add, on the prospect of corrective action by the General Assembly, “I don’t know of any common sense legislation that’s floating around.”

Credit Weirich, on that issue, for some nonpartisan candor.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Mulroy Considering Race Against D.A. Weirich

One of next year’s key political races is beginning to pick up steam. Incumbent District Attorney General Amy Weirich, a Republican, is stepping up her appearances before key audiences — like the Rotary Club of Memphis this past week.

And Weirich, who already has one Democratic opponent, attorney Linda Harris, is about to pick up another, University of Memphis law professor and former County Commissioner Steve Mulroy.

Mulroy announced on Monday that he is “seriously considering” opposing Weirich in the 2022 election. Mulroy said he has been “mulling over” such a race since early October, “when a group of criminal justice reform-minded lawyers approached me and asked me to consider it.”

Among the issues Mulroy said he considered needful of addressing were what he called the “pack ’em in and throw away the key” attitude of the incumbent, her record of judicial citations for misconduct, separation of juvenile from adult offenders, and bail reform.

Mulroy said he didn’t take Weirich lightly as an opponent but said that, if he became the Democratic nominee, he believed he had assurances of substantial backing from all aspects of the community and enough support to prevail.

In addition to his two terms as a County Commissioner, Mulroy, the author of numerous articles and a recent book on issues of judicial and election reform, ran in the Democratic primary for Shelby County Mayor in 2014, finishing a strong second to eventual Democratic nominee Deidre Malone.

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Uncategorized

Former Church Employee Indicted for Child Molestation

A former Memphis church employee has been indicted on two counts of sexual battery by an authority figure, both related to molesting children inside the church. 

A grand jury indicted David L. Hale, formerly employed by Sycamore View Church of Christ, on charges from two separate incidents involving young boys, according to Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich. 

Around January 2016, Hale offered to give a 13-year-old boy a massage in an audio-visual area of the church during a service, investigators said. He rubbed his hand on the boy’s penis. The boy told a youth minister about the incident in 2019, and the case was reported to Child Protective Services (CPS).

In early 2019, Hale allegedly gave a massage to a 17-year-old boy in a bathroom near the church gym. The boy said Hale rubbed his penis during the massage over his gym shorts.

Memphis police and the FBI conducted the investigation.

Hale was at the church from 2011 to 2019, working as a volunteer in sound and lighting. For the last two years Hale was a paid employee, securing doors during church services. He was banned from church property in February 2019 when the incidents came to light.

The case is being handled by ADA Lessie Rainey of the DA’s Special Victims Unit which prosecutes cases of rape, physical and sexual abuse of children, elder abuse, and vulnerable adult abuse.     

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Politics Politics Feature

GOP Won’t Oppose Democrat Bonner for Sheriff

Sheriff Floyd Bonner was the top vote-getter of all Shelby County candidates in 2018, the year he was elected to his first term. Running as a Democrat, he handily defeated Republican Dale Lane, a veteran deputy who has since become police chief of Collierville.

Bonner is certain to do well in 2022, as well. For one thing, he will have no opposition this year from a Republican candidate. The local GOP ICS has petitioned for primaries in all county races except that for sheriff.

Asked why, Cary Vaughn, current chairman of the Shelby County Republican Party, said, “We think he [Bonner] has done an exemplary job and deserves everybody’s support. We believe in leadership, and we think that’s what he’s offered.”

The GOP’s position recaps in a way the enthusiasm of former Sheriff Bill Oldham, Bonner’s predecessor and a Republican, who endorsed Democrat Bonner, rather than Lane, to succeed him in 2018.

Democrats might be entitled to feel pleased that one of their own is apparently guaranteed a conflict-free re-election contest. There is always the chance that a candidate or two will run independent campaigns for sheriff, but, lacking the backing of an organized partisan effort, any such candidate would have little chance of prevailing.

A factor mitigating Democrats’ pleasure in seeing Bonner go unopposed is, no doubt, the well-founded suspicion of an ulterior motive on the part of the Republicans. The “blue wave” county election of 2018, which saw Bonner and other Democratic candidates carried into office, was a confirmation of a demographic fact: The population of Shelby County — majority-Black and working-class — has finally begun to reflect that demographic reality in local elections as well as in presidential ones.

In the two or three county elections leading up to 2018, Republicans had managed to do well, but eventually the statistics began to tell, and GOP success in all-county balloting from now on will depend on (a) such superior organization as the party can manage, and (b) having candidates with clear crossover appeal.

In eschewing to nominate a rival candidate for sheriff, the Republicans simultaneously are hoping thereby to scale down Democrat campaign efforts generally and are husbanding their own resources for such races as that by District Attorney General Amy Weirich, seeking re-election against Democratic competition.

Ironically, there was a modest but unsuccessful effort by a few members last week in a meeting of the Shelby County Democratic Committee to seek a critical vote on Sheriff Bonner’s compliance with a federal decree on Covid protections for jail inmates.

• Like other elected political bodies elsewhere, the Shelby County Commission is working overtime in efforts to agree on a redistricting map for the next round of elections in 2022.

After several rounds of discussion, both with each other and with members of the Shelby County Schools board, also facing an election, commission members are seeking agreement on finished products for both their own election and that of SCS. A preliminary decision could come as early as Wednesday of next week, says Darrick Harris, the commission’s ex-officio assistant in the matter. Final decision is due by November.

So far, at least eight different maps have been chewed over by the participating commissioners (mainly the six incumbents who intend re-election bids: Amber Mills, District 1; David Bradford, District 2; Mick Wright, District 3; Michael Whaley, District 5; Mickell Lowery, District 8; Edmund Ford Jr., District 9; and Brandon Morrison, District 13).

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Politics Politics Feature

Campaign ’22: Legal Fireworks on Tap?

Among the races on next year’s local ballot expected to generate some heat is that for district attorney general, the position held by Republican incumbent Amy Weirich since 2011 via appointment and successfully defended by Weirich in the 2012 and 2014 election seasons.

 Other candidates may yet file for the position, but at this point the race is shaping up as one between Weirich and announced Democratic challenger Linda Nettles Harris, a veteran of both prosecutorial and legal-defense ranks.

At a generously attended fundraiser on South Front Street last week, Harris offered a preview of her campaign, promising to work “the road less traveled” and to heed “the voices of people who have felt that they have been neglected by the criminal justice system … people who have felt marginalized, who have felt ostracized, who have been left out.”

Referring to herself as a “statistical-driven person,” Harris said, “FBI statistics show that crime has gone up and prisons have been built, but crime has steadily increased.”

Harris laid special emphasis on a pledge to maintain “integrity” in the office if elected. “And what does integrity look like? Honestly, it looks like disclosing evidence when it is helpful to people and when it is not. It looks like following the guidelines of the American Bar Association that teaches you how to be ethical prosecutors.”

That would appear to be an indirect allusion to a recommendation by the state Board of Professional Responsibility that Weirich be censured for appearing to withhold potentially exculpatory evidence while prosecuting a murder case. The charges against Weirich were later dismissed.

• The DA’s race will be on the ballot along with a lengthy list of state judicial races that, like it, will be subject to eight-year terms for the winner. Some measure of just how extensive the list of contested races might be was indicated by the turnout last week at a happy-hour affair for Democrats at the Mellow Mushroom pizzeria on Park. Several attendees at the event professed interest in races for General Sessions positions without specifying particular seats.

Jackson Baker
Linda Harris

Jerri Green, who ran a tight race last year as a Democrat for the District 97 state House race won by Republican Mark White, has been hired by Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris as a policy adviser. 

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News News Blog

Parents Indicted After Accidental Shooting

The office of Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich announced today that Latria Johnson, 28, and her boyfriend Lindsey Williams, 27, have been indicted on charges of criminally negligent homicide and reckless endangerment following the accidental shooting death of 9-year-old Xavier Jackson by his 13-year-old cousin, the son of the couple. 

District Attorney Amy Weirich

The shooting occurred in March at the Canterbury Woods Apartments near Cordova while the couple were out shopping.

Inside the apartment, the unnamed 13-year-old picked up his father’s loaded handgun from the master bedroom. The gun discharged accidentally striking Jackson in the face and killing him. The gun had been left unattended and unsecured.

The case is being handled by Stacy McEndree of the District Attorney’s Vertical Team 6, which prosecutes cases in General Sessions Division 15 and in Criminal Court Division 10.