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Activists picket in Cleveland against heightened crime, President Trump's efforts to bring federal troops into the city....Read the statement here from activist Alfred Porter Jr. of Black on Black Crime Inc that was read at the rally-By Clevelandurbannews

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Pictured are Black on Black Crime activists Art McKoy (wearing red, black and green turban) and Alfred Porter Jr.

 

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.comthe most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.


CLEVELANDURBANNEWS.COM-CLEVELAND, Ohio-Community activists, led by Black on Black Crime Inc, held a protest in downtown Cleveland near City Hall on Monday, July 27 to address heightened violence in the city and efforts by President Trump to bring federal troops down on the city in coming weeks in response to increased inner city crime, and behind the George Floyd riots in the city on May 30.


Speakers included Art McKoy and Alfred Porter Jr of Black on Black Crime Inc, Angela Davis of Black Lives Matter Cleveland, Joe Jones of Fathers Lives Matter, and family members of Cleveland murder victims. Activist Alfred Porter Jr., who said more events on the issue are coming and that City Hall was essentially blocked off from activists, read the following statement at the rally.


MEDIA/COMMUNITY STATEMENT

My name is Alfred Porter Jr and I am a community activist and organizer, and president of  Black on Black Crime Incorporated. I have collaborated with Imperial Avenue Murders leader  and head Women's March Cleveland organizer Kathy Wray Coleman on this statement. Kathy Wray Coleman is also an organizer of this event as well as activist and Black on Black Crime founder Art McKoy, our leader.


We need to remind the establishment that activists are watching cops, judges, prosecutors and others as to any harassment of Ms Coleman in her role as a top Black journalist and a respected and informed community activist and community organizer. We unequivocally support Ms. Coleman. She has done nothing to any of you. Leave her alone or we will picket you, again.


We continue to demand the defunding of police venues across the country and in Cleveland and for affiliated resources, including monies, to be redirected to the community sector. There is too much undercurrent between police and the Black community, and police are not doing their jobs as crime is on the rise, crime against our children, who are getting murdered unnecessarily, most of it at the hands of our own people.  Stop the violence and save our children. Rape and murder of Black women since the Imperial Avenue Murders in 2009 by serial killer and death row inmate Anthony Sowell that police routinely ignore are still prevalent. Let the community hire the police who will serve them.


Community activists call for the heightened violence in this city to immediately cease. We also must denounce efforts by President Donald Trump to bring down federal troops on the Black community and community activists whom he despises and does commercials against. Federal troops are not the answer to this violence as a cop in Texas shot and killed a protester at a rally just last week. These troops, who can harm and kill our Black children with impunity, and innocent activists, are being sent down by our president under the guise of his helping to bring peace to a largely Black major American city facing heightened crime during a coronavirus pandemic that has no mercy on people no matter who they may be.

 

This is all a forest people. And the George Floyd riots that plagued Cleveland following a May 30 protest in downtown Cleveland  have come and gone so that too is no excuse to target Blacks and activists with unorthodox activity such as sending government-supported insurgents down on us without any jurisdiction whatsoever.


Instead of federal troops coming into Cleveland without jurisdiction, a move that U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown of Cleveland and Congresswoman Marcia Fudge, whose congressional district includes Cleveland, say is unconstitutional, we want changes in local, state and federal policies to address gun violence and gun control and for the reallocation of funds at the state and federal levels to assist inner city Black neighborhoods across the country like Cleveland to deal with poverty, racism, gentrification, high unemployment, crime, legal system biases, and mass incarceration. Other public policy concerns include public corruption, educational inequities, housing disparities, violence against women, and urban decay.


Finally, we call for the president and city, state and federal leaders and elected officials to stand up against excessive force by police and other law enforcement entities, and against a criminal justice system that targets Black people, disrespects and illegally prosecutes our women, and sends innocent Black men to prison for decades who are later found innocent. This troubled and racist criminal justice system also maliciously indicts, prosecutes, and sentences Black people, many of whom are poor, and indigent, and  often denied adequate legal counsel.


Spend resources slated for federal troops to come into Cleveland  to  intimidate Blacks and activists on investigating and monitoring the Cuyahoga County Jail in Cleveland. It has been deemed unconstitutional by federal marshals, a jail where more than 10 people have died in the past two years and where the former warden and jail director, and several jail guards, have faced or face prosecution for alleged malfeasance against inmates and a host of other alleged  impropriety.


No Justice. No Peace. We urge Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, Cleveland City Council, Police Chief Calvin Williams, Safety Director Karrie Howard and policy makers across the board, and the community, to join us in this Civil Rights movement and as to our fight for equality relative to the aforementioned.

 

 

 

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.comthe most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

Last Updated on Monday, 27 July 2020 22:11

Horse drawn buggy carries Rep John Lewis' casket across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, the Civil Rights icon to also lie in state in Montgomery, and in repose at the nation's capital in D.C....Funeral services are July 30-By editor Kathy Wray Coleman

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Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com

 

By Kathy Wray Coleman, associate publisher, editor in chief. Coleman trained for 17 years as a reporter with the Call and Post Newspaper and is an investigative and political reporter with a background in legal and scientific reporting. She is also a former 15-year public school biology teacher.

 

SELMA, Alabama –People lined the streets of Selma, Alabama Sunday afternoon to pay tribute to the late Georgia congressman John Lewis, who made his final trip Sunday across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in a horse drawn carriage that held his casket, the same bridge that he first crossed along side of the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr more than 55-years-ago to demand passage of the Voting Rights Act.


When the young 25-year-old Lewis marched across the bridge from Selma to Montgomery with Dr. King decades ago on Sunday, March 7, 1965, he and other Civil Rights advocates were beaten, brutalized, and bloodied.


They would return to cross the bridge year after year to celebrate the anniversary of "Bloody Sunday," a turning point in the Civil Rights movement.


But on Sunday he crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge for his last journey in a horse buggy that carried his casket, one of several activities scheduled to celebrate the life of the revered Black federal legislator.


The series of events, which began July 25 in his home town  of  Troy, Alabama, and will end in Atlanta where he lived for more than 30 years until his death, include the congressman lying in state in Montgomery, the capital city of Alabama.


Lewis will lie in repose inside the U.S. Capitol. on July 27-28, U.S.House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced Thursday, and private funeral services are July 30 at Ebenezer Baptist Church Horizon Sanctuary at 11:00 a.m.


The son of sharecroppers and a community activist who rose to become one of the most respected and distinguished members of Congress, Lewis died July 17 in Atlanta Georgia at 80-years-old, and following a six-month battle with pancreatic cancer.


A former Georgia state legislator out of Atlanta and 17-term Democratic Congressman who represented Georgia's 5th congressional district, Lewis was a fighter by all accounts.


His great grandfather was born into slavery.


He lost his first bid for Congress and later won the seat in 1986 against his Republican challenger, and following a contentious and now infamous fight against Julian Bond during the Democratic primary he later won, Bond a  prominent Black Georgia state senator at the time.

 

One of 10 siblings, he was 16-years-old when he fought to desegregate public libraries in Troy and against Jim Crow Laws.


While in college in Nashville studying theology on a  scholarship he was a member of the activist  student group the Freedom Riders that fought against racial segregation and to desegregate lunch counters in the city and became a symbol of the student movement for racial equality.


He said that that his true activism was  inspired by  the Montgomery Bus Boycotts that took place when he was 18-years-old, and the sermons of Dr King on the radio.


He fought with Dr. King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference that King, a Civil Rights icon assassinated in 1968, led during the height of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and spoke at the March on Washington in 1963 in spite of fears by then president John F. Kennedy that his speech might be too radical.


At 23-years-old he was the youngest speaker at the event in Washington, and gave a dynamic speech, pundits said, a speech  overshadowed by Dr. King's historic "I Have a A Dream Speech."


He was arrested for civil disobedience more that 44 times, 40 of those arrests occurring before he was elected to Congress.

 

A recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011 from former president Barack Obama, the nation's first Black president, and a minster of the gospel whose legacy will remain of an unmatched stature, Lewis never stopped fighting for justice for the underprivileged and the disenfranchised.


One of his last public appearances was a town hall with Obama.


A husband and father, Lewis loved Black people, unequivocally.


He was married to his wife Lillian for nearly 50 years, and until her death in 2012.


Whether fighting for public policy changes for his constituents in particular, or for the country as a whole, overtime he drew the love and respect of his fellow lawmakers.


He was a biblical figure on a mission, and in spite of his stubbornness at times he had friends and enemies across partisan lines.


But he was also a staunch Democrat who despised the policies of President Donald Trump, Trump a Republican who faces former president Joe Biden for a Nov. 3 presidential election showdown.


He was one of the first members of Congress to aggressively stand up against the Trump presidency, and he never backed down.


Considered a hard- core liberal in Congress by some accounts, Lewis opposed the U.S  waging of the 1991 Gulf War, and the Clinton Administration on NAFTA and welfare reform.


The federal lawmaker fought against the reversal of decades of Civil Rights gains and spoke out against the U.S. Supreme Court's 2013 decision in Shelby County vs Holder, a decision in which the high court invalidated key provision of the Voting Rights Act, thereby  lessening  government over watch of state voting rules and making it easier for state officials to make it harder for Black and other racio- ethic minority voters to vote.


During his 30-plus years in Congress  representing  a district in the seep South Lewis opposed the Iraq War and also fought in Congress for public policies in support  of voting rights, reproductive rights for women, affirmative action, gun control, human and Civil Rights, universal healthcare and the gamete of issues embraced by the liberal wing of the Democratic Party.


He backed same sex marriage which became legal across all 50 states and the District of Columbia in 2015.

 

His legacy, however, transcends the Democratic Party that he had no problem challenging on matters he deemed necessary to address.


The National Museum of African American History opened on the National Mall in Washington D.C. in 2016 during Obama's tenure, Lewis the impetus for the congressional bill that led to funding for the historical monument.

 

Lewis ultimately supported Obama for the Democratic primary in 2008 that Obama won over Hillary Clinton, and he backed him again in 2012 for his successful reelection campaign for president.

 

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.comthe most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.


 


Last Updated on Thursday, 30 July 2020 17:04

Cleveland's public schools to reopen online for first 9 weeks of the 2020-2021 academic school year, the school district of which is under mayoral control per state law.....By editor Kathy Wray Coleman of Clevelandurbannews.com

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Pictured are Cleveland schools CEO Dr. Eric Gordon (wearing blue and white patterned shirt), Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson (wearing grey tie)and Ohio Governor Mike DeWine (wearing solid teal tie)


Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, Ohio's most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog Tel: (216) 659-0473 and Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com

 

By Kathy Wray Coleman, associate publisher, editor-in-chief

 

CLEVELANDURBANNEWS.COM, CLEVELAND, Ohio –Cleveland's K-12 schools will open via remote (online) learning the first nine weeks of the 2020-2021 academic school year as the coronavirus pandemic continues to sweep through Ohio and the nation, the virus re-spiking in late June in spite of hopes that the curve would flatten.


Cleveland Schools CEO Dr. Eric Gordon said that school district officials had hoped for a hybrid model of both online and in person classes but opted otherwise, sources saying the decision came following complaints and safety concerns from district parents and the Cleveland Teachers Union.


Gordon said it is not clear when or if the schools will reopen on a regular basis anytime soon.


Poor Cleveland schools families, a disproportionate number of them Black, remain concerned about remote learning after preparing for a school year with onsite free lunch and breakfast, school district officials not saying whether alternative measures will be taken to feed the city's poor school children during a pandemic.


They also say that poor kids and Black kids are being denied adequate remote learning resources, some of them denied individual computers from the school district and other necessary amenities.

 

The largely Black public school district once under a desegregation court order for discriminating against Black children and their families is led by Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson per a state law that took effect in 1998, the year the desegregation of schools ended in Cleveland.


The mayoral control law eliminated an elected school board and handed control of the schools to the city mayor.


Cleveland voters later sanctioned it by way of a referendum.


Jackson, a four-term Black Democratic mayor up for reelection in 2021, also appoints school board members under the applicable state law.


Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine closed all public, private, voucher and charter K-12 schools in Ohio temporarily in March when the pandemic broke and then for the remainder of the academic school year a month later.


At the time the governor said his decision to keep the schools closed followed advice from educators and public health officials and that “we have flattened the curve, but it remains dangerous.”


But the curve never really flattened and DeWine has since said that individual school districts should decide the course of school openings this academic school year using state guidelines and subject to Ohio Department of Education mandates, and other authorities.

 

Ohio has reported more than 81,746 confirmed coronavirus cases and 3,297 deaths since the pandemic broke in the United States more than four months ago.

 

Worldwide there are currently more than 15.6 million confirmed cases and some 636,000 deaths, with the U.S. accounting for some 4 million confirmed cases, and 148,000 deaths.


Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland has reported 11, 404 confirmed cases and 450 deaths.


Cleveland recorded 75 new coronavirus cases on June 28, the highest single day figure since the height of the pandemic in early April, a figure that that day brought the total number of cases since the pandemic broke out in early March to 2,245 cases.


President Trump, a Republican like DeWine, and his political ally, had announced he would withhold federal funds if schools did not open nationwide this year but backed off on that position this week saying it might be dangerous for some school districts to reopen next month and that the decision is a local level decision.


Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, Ohio's most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog Tel: (216) 659-0473 and Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, and who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

Last Updated on Sunday, 26 July 2020 16:49

President Trump to send in military troops to Cleveland and other major cities with Democratic mayors...It follows George Floyd riots, and heightened crime in some of the cities during the coronavirus pandemic...What is Mayor Frank Jackson saying?

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Pictured are United States President Donald Trump (wearing red tie) Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, the city's third Black mayor

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com

By Kathy Wray Coleman, associate publisher, editor-in-chief. Coleman is a longtime Cleveland activist and community organizer who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper as a reporter, and she is also a former 15-year public school biology teacher. She attended the rally and march in Cleveland, Ohio on May 30 for justice for George Floyd, an event that turned violent and erupted into riots, and part of the impetus for President Trump sending military troops down on the largely Black major American city)

CLEVELAND, Ohio-President Trump announced Wednesday that the largely Black city of Cleveland is among 11 cities the federal government will militarize in coming weeks with unidentifiable federal troops toting guns, tear gas and pepper spray, a response to the May 30 George Floyd riots in the city and heightened crime during the coronavirus pandemic, which last month began re-spiking.


Sources said that Cleveland can expect the military patrols in the city's downtown area and mainly on its majority Black east side within the next three weeks.


The president has dubbed the militarization-of-cities  program, “Operation LeGend,” and has said it is designed  to support high crime communities in major cities “to the greatest extent possible.”


LeGend Taliferro was a four-year-old Black boy gunned down in his sleep on June 29 in Kansas City, Missouri.


Operation LeGend comes to Cleveland less than four months before the November 2020 presidential election and on the heels of the militarization by the Republican president of cities this month such as Portland and Chicago in which unidentified military agents rode around in unmarked cars and intimidated, harassed and arrested Civil Rights protesters without probable cause, few, if any of those arrested, charged to date.


Also part of the program is $60 million in federal monies to primarily hire and train more cops as the Black Lives Matter movement continues to demand the de-funding of police across the country and the reallocation of departmental resources to community venues.Sources say

In addition to Cleveland, Portland and Chicago, other cities on the president's list include New York, Albuquerque, Kansas City, Detroit and Milwaukee.


Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, the city's third Black mayor, said he is unaware of Trump's initiative that targets his city with government-supported military insurgents, an indication, said sources, that the president is not even giving local mayors heads-up as he takes over law enforcement in their respective towns.


A four-term Democratic mayor up for re-election next year if he decides to seek a fifth term, Jackson has not spoken out  against the president's newly found militarization efforts, unlike the mayors of Portland and Chicago, who have both publicly opposed the intrusive and possibly unconstitutional measure in their cities.


Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Trump ally, has said that he opposes the federal government intrusion in cities in Ohio for so-called law enforcement purposes, Ohio a pivotal state for presidential elections that Trump won in 2016 over Democrat Hillary Clinton.


But this week DeWine stepped back and straddled the fence, saying it might be a good thing, a posture also taken by Republican U.S. Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio.


Ohio's entire Democratic congressional delegation, including U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown and U.S. Reps Marcia Fudge and Marcy Kaptur, all three of whom's constituents include Cleveland, voiced opposition to the military troops coming onto Cleveland soil.


A former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus whose 11th congressional district is largely Black, Fudge called it "unconstitutional."


Critics say the president is targeting cities led by Democratic mayors.


During Cleveland's riot May 30, one of many nationwide behind Floyd's death by Minneapolis police nearly two-months ago, rioters torched or completely destroyed some five police cars, broke out the windows of multiple businesses, including the downtown Arcade, destroyed some downtown shelters, and threw rocks and boulders at police.


They wrote messages and profanity on some government buildings, and a group of protesters clashed with police.


Police shot off tear gas repeatedly, and in some instances unnecessarily, said activists.


Some 99 protesters, most of them White, and young, were arrested with charges ranging from disorderly conduct to criminal damaging and aggravated rioting.


There were more than 45 felony arrests and practically all of those arrested were from Ohio, mainly Cleveland and its suburbs.


And while there were no casualties, one protester reportedly lost an eye from the debris thrown by a fellow protester.


Given Cleveland's history of excessive force killings against Blacks and a pending consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice for police reforms and the climate nationally relative to police brutality, the upheaval was not at all surprising, sources said, though Cleveland's Black leaders have said for years that Cleveland is a sleepy town when standing up against police brutality.


Cleveland's riot in the downtown area of the city in May proves otherwise.


City officials say that it was a small group of agitators who precipitated the violence.


Activists and Civil Rights advocates say it is deeply rooted in systemic racism and the ongoing undercurrent between police and the Black community and that it cannot be laid at the feet of protesters alone.

Several were arrested and at least  two cops injured following nights of protests over Floyd's death in Columbus, Ohio's state capital.

And seven people were shot in Louisville, Kentucky, one critically, during one of many protests for Breonna Taylor, a 26-year Black woman whom Louisville police shot and killed in March when three cops barged into her home via a no-knock warrant looking for drugs that were never found.

Other incidents with police and protesters have occurred across the country, including during protests in Oakland, Detroit, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Cincinnati, and Chicago.


Also center stage at Cleveland's violent protest were Staten Island police murder victim Eric Garner, whom New York police choked to death in 2014, and 12-year-old Tamir Rice, whom Cleveland police gunned down  in 2012 at a park and recreation center on the city's largely White west side, and the death of Sandra Bland, a 28-year-old community activist who was found hanged in a jail cell in Waller County, Texas in 2015.


Malissa Williams and Timothy Russell, both Black and unarmed but gunned down in a car in 2012 by some 13 non-Black Cleveland cops slinging 137 bullets, were a subject of the protest too.


Floyd, 46, died after since fired White cop Derek Chauvin, the arresting officer who has since been charged with second degree murder and manslaughter and is out on bond awaiting trial, along with three other Minneapolis police officers who were at the scene and later charged, killed him.


Chauvin held his knee on Floyd's neck during an arrest over a forgery charge, and until he killed him.


A  crowd of Black bystanders looked on in shock.


The other three officers at the scene, all of them subsequently fired and charged with aiding and abetting, did nothing as the Black man cried  for his mother and told officers repeatedly that he could not breathe.


Riots in the city immediately erupted and sparked racial unrest nationwide, unrest that shows no sign of deteriorating any time soon.


Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.


Last Updated on Saturday, 25 July 2020 17:39

Rep. Marcy Kaptur comments on arrests of Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, former Ohio GOP chair Matt Borges on charges involving a $60 million bribery and money laundering scheme...."This bodes poorly on Ohio," said Congresswoman Kaptur

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Pictured is Ohio congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, a Toledo Democrat whose 9th congressional district extends to Cleveland

 

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinnewsblog.comthe most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.


By Kathy Wray Coleman, associate publisher, editor in chief. Coleman trained for 17 years as a reporter with the Call and Post Newspaper and is an investigative and political reporter with a background in legal and scientific reporting. She is also a former 15-year public school biology teacher.


Washington, D.C. – Ohio Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (D-OH), a Toledo Democrat whose 9th congressional district extends to Cleveland, says the arrests on federal charges on Tuesday of two of the state's highly influential Republicans, House  of Representatives speaker Larry Householder and former Ohio Republican Party chair Matt Borges "undermines public confidence and underscores the corrosive impact money has on our politics."

Borges, 48, is among a group of prominent fellow Republicans lobbying against President Trump's reelection bid, activity spurred by the Lincoln Project, a political action committee aimed specifically at getting the president out of office.

A Republican political consultant and ally to former Ohio GOP governor John Kasich who managed the 2014 campaign of auditor Dave Yost, Borges was chair of the state GOP party from 2013 until Trump assumed office in January of 2017, the party now led by Jane Timken, the first woman elected to the powerful post.

Kaptur said the situation for Householder and Borges, and a host of other prominent Republicans charged as accomplices, three of them arrested Tuesday in connection with Householder and Borges, is serious, and sad. Also arrested Tuesday were Neil Clark of Grant Street Consultants, Oxley Group co-founder Juan Cespedes, and Jeffrey Longstreth, an adviser to Householder.
“Sadly, this situation appears to be very serious,” said Rep. Kaptur, the longest serving woman in Congress. “It bodes poorly for Ohio."

Described in a damning FBI complaint as a $60 million pay-to-play scheme of widespread public corruption and conspiracy involving FirstEnergy Corp with bribery at the helm, news of the charges and  arrest of the leader of Ohio's Republican-dominated House of Representatives has rocked political circles in Ohio, a pivotal state that awaits a Nov. 3 presidential election between the incumbent Trump and former vice president Joe Biden, the Democratic nominee.

The congresswoman said that "there is much to be learned in the coming days about the latest apparent pay-to-play scheme in the Ohio statehouse."

And the federal lawmaker demanded campaign finance reform.
"Ohioans deserve honest and visionary leadership," Kaptur said.

"While these matters are adjudicated, Ohioans should demand a top to bottom reform of Ohio’s ethics and campaign finance system to put an end to pay-to-play in the Buckeye State.”
News of Householder's arrest was a top story published Tuesday in the New York Times.

At the center of the bribery investigation is Householder's relationship with FirstEnergy Corp officials and a $1 billion financial rescue, legislation dubbed House Bill 6 that added an additional fee to every electricity bill in the state, and that generated some $150 million to the energy company.

FirstEnergy helped finance Householder's election in 2018, the scorching FBI complaint says, coupled with bankrolling a successful effort led by the House speaker to get the Republican-dominated general assembly to pass a bill that allocates $1.3 million for the troubled energy company.

A failed 2019 referendum seeking to repeal the legislation was also financed in part by the energy corporation.

Householder is also accused of using some $100,000 in bribery money, part of $500,000 in illegal monies the FBI confiscated from his personal accounts, for costs on his home in Florida.

His four conspirators, the four also arrested on Tuesday, including Borges, got millions too, the complaint says.

David DeVillers, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio, has called it one of the worst misuses of Ohio tax-payer money in American history, and public corruption and money laundering of mass proportions.

The FBI and Perry County sheriff's office both confirmed through wire reports that Householder, Borges, and the three other alleged accomplices were arrested Tuesday regarding the $60 million public corruption scheme, Householder at  his farm in Glenford in Perry County, home to the Perry Nuclear Power Plant, which, along the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Plant in Oak Harbor and a coal plant, is at the center of an affiliated investigation regarding Householder and kickbacks regarding a $1.5 billion corporate bailout.

That bailout via the statewide electricity bill surcharge under HB 6, which was support by only 10 House Democrats.

Nearly a half dozen others, practically all of them Republican operatives, have been arrested in connection with the now infamous bailout fiasco.

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview. CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.

Last Updated on Friday, 24 July 2020 21:15

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