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News News Blog

Rallies Planned in Memphis, Across Country for Pervis Payne

Rallies are planned Wednesday across the country and in Memphis for Pervis Payne, a Memphis man who has been on death row for 33 years. 

The rallies taking place in New York, Chicago, Dallas, Washington D.C., and here near the intersection of Union and McLean, will mark the one-year anniversary of the weekly #FreePervisPayne rallies in Memphis. 

A year ago, Andre Johnson, pastor of Gifts of Life Ministries, began organizing weekly rallies here to raise awareness about Payne’s case. 

Since then, the Innocence Project, which works to exonerate the wrongfully convicted, has taken on Payne’s case, working to get him off death row. The group started a petition in support of Payne, which has garnered more than 750,000 signatures to date. 

Johnson issued a call to action on Facebook Wednesday, urging people to “come and bear witness.” 

“You really want to be on the right side of history,” Johnson said. “And you really want to be able to say that you were a participant and helped free an innocent man… We believe that Pervis Payne is profoundly and profusely innocent of this crime.”

The rally in Memphis is scheduled for 4 p.m.

Payne was convicted of murdering Charisse Christopher and her two-year-old daughter in 1987. He was set to be executed in December 2020, but was granted a temporary reprieve of execution due to the Covid-19 pandemic. 

In May, Payne’s legal team filed a petition arguing that it would be illegal to execute Payne because he has an intellectual disability. A hearing on this claim is set for December 13. 

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News News Blog

Pro-Choice Advocates Rally to ‘Stop the Ban’

Maya Smith

About 40 people rallied near City Hall, Tuesday, against the recent abortion bans that have been passed in other states.

Chanting “Stop the ban,” participants held pink signs reading “Protect safe, legal abortions.”

Tuesday’s effort was spearheaded by the Tennessee Advocates for Planned Parenthood, in collaboration with Indivisible Memphis, Choices, and other pro-choice advocacy organizations.

Ashley Coffield, president of Planned Parenthood for the Greater Memphis Region said that 73 percent of Americans oppose banning abortion, and “we’re out here today to raise up their voices and tell the nation that we won’t stand for it.”

“In Tennessee we have Planned Parenthood and other organizations that offer abortion, and that’s a great thing,” Coffield said. “But we are under attack from our legislature right now. It’s worse than it’s ever been.”

Sixteen states passed legislation this year either placing greater restrictions on abortion or effectively banning the procedure completely.

Coffield said the Tennessee legislature was close to passing an outright abortion ban this year, but that measure failed in the state Senate. That legislation is slated to be discussed during the legislation’s summer session.

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Tennessee did, however, pass a law that would criminalize abortion in Tennessee if the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision is overturned. That law, the Human Life Protection Act, would ban abortions except “when an abortion is necessary to prevent death” or “substantial and irreversible impairment of major bodily function.”

If Roe v. Wade is overturned, the law would make it a felony offense for doctors to perform abortions. Under the law, women seeking abortions would not be prosecuted.      

“The fight is far from over in Tennessee,” Coffield said. “Our rights are at risk like they’ve never been before and this is a coordinated attack nationwide to get a case to the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade.”

Coffield said abortion is basic health care for women and making abortion illegal won’t stop abortions: “Abortion will just be unsafe and women will die.”

Currently, in Tennessee abortion is legal throughout the first 20 weeks of a woman’s pregnancy. However, the law places restrictions and regulations on clinics who offer abortion and women seeking the procedure, according to Holly Calvasina, director of development and communications for Choices.

One of those regulations is the 48-hour waiting period, Calvasina said. Women seeking an abortion must a woman to see a physician on two different occasions. According to the law, this is to ”reduce coerced abortions and to allow time to carefully consider the information and resources provided by informed consent provisions.”

Calvasina said this makes abortions more expensive, because women must pay for two doctor’s visits.

Diane Duke, executive director of Friends for Life, was also at the rally. She said that abortion is a woman’s right.

“Women are able to make their own decision about the timing and the size of their families,” Duke said. “We are women. We are the ultimate authority and definitive authority of our own body. We know if abortions are illegal, women will die.”

Duke also noted that “because of white privilege, our brown and black sisters will disproportionately bear the burden of an abortion ban.”

“This will further reinforce the institutional racism that is so predominant here in the South,” Duke said.

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Shelby County Commissioner Tami Sawyer, who sits on the Planned Parenthood board here, was also at the rally, speaking against abortion bans.


“It was more important for me to be here with you on the ground to say ‘this won’t fly for us’” Sawyer said. “I know personally what it means to be able to make decisions about your body. No one should be able to tell anyone what they can do what their life and their future.

“When we are talking about stopping the ban, it is important that we show up in Memphis because if you don’t think Tennessee is next, you’re sleeping.”

Tuesday’s rally here was one of more than 400 happening across the country, urging for an end to abortion bans.


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Opinion Viewpoint

The Sound of Change

PITTSBURGH — The three young black men, dressed to the nines, were the first in line to receive media credentials for presidential candidate Barack Obama’s climactic rally at the University of Pittsburgh’s Peterson Events Center Monday night.

Or make that Monday afternoon, since the old military system of hurry-up-and-wait is how it works these days for the seemingly endless — and increasingly tense and dramatic — series of Democratic primary contests between Obama and rival Hillary Clinton.

The day was still bright and balmy when J.C. Gamble, Darnell Drewery, and Cornell Jones, all representing a new media enterprise called blacktieradio.com, showed up at the designated glass door. But it would be getting on to 10 o’clock, with a long line strung out behind the three men, before the building’s doors would finally be unlocked. And even then, all successfully credentialed entrants would have to undergo a screening process that would put the most cautious airline’s procedures to shame.

A similar, though not quite as fastidious, drill had been in effect for attendees at an afternoon rally downtown featuring Hillary Clinton and her husband, the former president. Things have changed since the primary season began and all it took to get to an event featuring one of the dozen or so Democratic and Republican hopefuls was the willingness to shoulder through a modest-sized crowd for the sake of some immodest bloviation.

With only three candidates left — Obama, Clinton, and Republican John McCain — all of them potential and plausible guardians of the Free World, the public attention is keener now, the rhetoric is sharper, and the stakes are higher.

While they waited, Gamble, Drewery, and Jones dilated on every subject under the setting sun — on the relative merits of barbecue served up in the Pittsburgh ‘hood, for example, vis-à-vis the heavily ballyhooed product in Memphis, where the three had just visited during the recent week of Martin Luther King commemorations.

“I gotta tell you, it don’t compare,” said Gamble of the fare offered by one celebrated Memphis eatery. In a more serious vein, Gamble took credit for having started the round of boos that greeted candidate McCain’s admission at the National Civil Rights Museum that he had originally opposed the creation of a national holiday in King’s honor.

Regardless of whether race was an issue in the presidential campaign before it surfaced during the South Carolina primary or whether it was there all along, the subject — along with the associated one of historical justice — was very much on the minds of Gamble and his friends. All of them are keenly aware of social issues, and Jones, who serves as a chaplain in the Pennsylvania penitentiary system, attended the annual April 4th Foundation dinner in Memphis as a representative of the Gathering, an activist organization concerned about issues of juvenile incarceration.

At one point, Drewery gave voice to a thought that increasingly is on people’s minds. And not just Democrats. And not just blacks.

“I honestly don’t know how people are going to react if Obama doesn’t get the nomination,” he said, and everybody was aware that, by “people,” he meant those in the aforesaid ‘hood. The larger one that transcends the geography of Pittsburgh. African Americans as a national group, he meant.

And then each of them described his own vision of what the immediate voter response would be.

“I think most of ’em would just stay home and not worry about voting,” Drewery offered. “I’ll tell you what I’d do! I’d go vote for Ron Paul!” said Gamble, indicating the Republican/libertarian heresiarch who could end up running as an independent.

“Naw,” said Jones, reluctantly and somewhat sadly. “I’d be there for Hillary. I couldn’t just not vote!”

Each of these three amigos spoke to a different likely viewpoint — one that, for that matter, is not limited to a particular ethnic group. The fact is, the rock-star-like celebrity of Barack Obama and the passion of his supporters are only partly related to his charisma, public positions, or oratorical skill. Whether he intended to or not, the Illinois senator has come to symbolize the near-miraculous prospect of resolving America’s antique racial divide, that which some have called its original sin.

That feeling was what caused the deafening roar when, in the course of introducing Obama, Teresa Heinz Kerry later spoke to the large and diversified crowd inside of the hope of electing “the first African-American president.” It was a roar that, like most sounds of that amplitude, is lasting and multidirectional.

Jackson Baker is a Flyer senior editor.


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Obama enthusiasts J.C. Gamble, Darnell Drewery, and Cornell Jones at the University of Pittsburgh

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News

Local Rally for the Jena 6 Thursday

A “wear black” vigil is scheduled for Thursday September 20, from 4:30p.m. to 6:30p.m. on the corner of Central Avenue and East Parkway to show support for the “Jena 6.”

A series of conflicts between black and white residents of Jena, Louisiana began in September 2006 when a group of black students at Jena High School sat beneath a tree on campus that local custom had reserved for white students. The next day, three nooses were seen in the tree.

Fights between students in the aftermath of that event led to the arrest of six African-American students on attempted murder charges. One of the six has already been found guilty of aggravated second-degree battery, and a conspiracy charge.

The case has brought national attention due to the lack of charges against whites who participated equally in the violence following the noose incident. Rallies are planned across the country on Thursday.