Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio's Black digital news leader

Breaking news from Cleveland, Ohio from a Black perspective.©2025

Mon02022026

Last update10:37:51 pm

Font Size

Profile

Menu Style

Cpanel

Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio's Black digital news leader-News from a Black perspective

01234567891011121314

Example of Section Blog layout (FAQ section)

President Joe Biden says Jim Crow is back via racist voting laws like in Georgia that target Black voters, Biden the keynote speaker at a recent conference of the National Action Network, which is led the Rev. Al Sharpton, who is also an MSNBC host

  • PDF
Pictured are President Joe Biden and the Rev Al Sharpton of the National Action Network

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, associate publisher

NEW YORK-President Joe Biden, a longtime former U.S. senator from Delaware who served as vice president under former president Barack Obama for eight years and chose a Black woman in Vice President Kamala Harris as his running mate on his presidential ticket, is blasting Republicans as backsliding into the days of Jim Crow in the wake of laws passed by Republican-dominated state legislatures like in Georgia that critics say are designed to suppress the Black vote and further oppress Black people.

And the president, who has a large Black following as a moderately liberal Democrat, said that those who stand by and do nothing, Democrats and Republicans alike, are also to blame.

"The cry for justice 400 years in the making is ringing out across our nation," Biden  said during a convention event on Zoom sponsored by the New-York based National Action Network, which is led by Civil Rights icon and talented MSNBC  political host and commentator the Rev. Al Sharpton.
The president said the country is "backsliding into the days of Jim Crow, passing laws that harken back to the era of poll taxes when Black people were made to guess how many beans, how many jelly beans, in a jar or count the number of bubbles in a bar of soap before they could cast their ballot."
Jim Crow laws were state and local laws that enforced racial segregation in the Southern United States. These laws were enacted in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by white Southern Democrat-dominated state legislatures to disenfranchise and remove political and economic gains made by black people during the Reconstruction period. Jim Crow laws were enforced until 1965.
President Biden says that both state and federal laws on voting, including Supreme Court rulings that weaken the Voting Rights Act of 1965,  and laws that push gerrymandering against the Black community, are disenfranchising Blacks and compromising the Black vote.
Democrats control the Senate, the House of Representatives  and the White House, giving the president a more useful forum to push for public policy changes more aligned with the Democratic agenda.
CNN reported that last month, Biden called a sweeping Georgia elections bill that imposes new voting restrictions "Jim Crow in the 21st Century" and "an atrocity."
The president says the restrictions disproportionately target Black voters, who were crucial to the recent Democratic victories in Georgia and are a significant voting bloc nationwide.
According to CNN, Georgia's new law imposes new voter identification requirements for absentee ballots, limits the use of ballot drop boxes, makes it a crime for anyone other than poll workers to approach voters in line to give them food and water and gives state officials more power over local elections.

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.

Last Updated on Saturday, 17 April 2021 13:27

White former Minnesota cop who gunned down Daunte Wright charged with manslaughter as protests over Wright's killing continue for a fourth night in the Minneapolis suburb where he was killed

  • PDF
Pictured are former Brooklyn Center police officer Kim Potter and twenty-year-old Daunte Wright

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, associate publisher: BROOKLYN CENTER, Minnesota- A White Minnesota cop who admitted gunning down 20-year old Daute Wright during a traffic stop Sunday afternoon in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center and later quit the force has been charged with second degree manslaughter in the young Black man's death.

Kim Potter, 48 and a 26-year veteran with the Brooklyn Center police department  before she quit the post, appeared in court yesterday in an orange jail jump suit.

She posted 10 percent of a $100,000 bond and is free on bail.

Wright's killing comes as the prosecution rest in the George Floyd murder trial and the defense begins presenting its case in a courtroom in Minneapolis just 10 miles down the road from Brooklyn Center, a small inner-ring suburb with a population of some 30,000 people.

Protesters, young and old alike, have marched  through the city of Brooklyn Center demanding justice for Wright since the killing occurred earlier this week.

The protesting began Sunday night where protesters quarreled with police and broke into some 20 local businesses, and continued through Wednesday night with several protesters arrested Tuesday night for refusing police orders to disassemble.

Police shot off tear gas during a contentious protest on Monday night.

Tuesday night's protest was even more contentious as protesters threw water bottle and rocks at police.

Police shot off rubber bullets, and some of them even shoved protesters.

Wednesday's protest was less confrontational.

A fence has been put up around the Brooklyn Center police building where protesters have been gathering all week.

A nightly curfew is also in order, and the state patrol and Minnesota National Guard remain on guard and  fear potential riots, sources say, like those that erupted locally and nationwide in the aftermath of Floyd's death in May of last year.

Potter and her police chief, Tim Gannon, both resigned on Monday after the then chief said publicly that the dash cam killing  of Wright was in his view an accidental shooting death.

 

The former chief said the officer mistakenly pulled her gun, and not her taser, a statement that angered Black Civil Rights leaders  protesters and Wright family attorneys, who joined with Floyd's family members for a press conference against the police chief.

About 500 protesters, most of them young and many of them White,  confronted police during the height of the four-night racial unrest.

Wright's killing by Brooklyn Center police only exasperated the tensions still brewing between police and the Black community as the defense is now putting on its case in the trial of the former Minneapolis cop who killed Floyd,  a 46-year-old father of two.

A veteran White cop with a personnel file of some 17 complaints  before he was fired, Derek Chauvin, 45, killed Floyd on May 25 following an arrest for alleged forgery, and as bystanders looked on  in dismay, some pleading for him to stop.

He  faces charges of second degree intentional murder, third degree murder, and second degree manslaughter as the country awaits a subsequent jury verdict in the controversial excessive force case.

Three other Minneapolis police officers at the scene who did nothing while Chauvin held his knee on the neck of the handcuffed Floyd for more than nine minutes until he killed him were also fired and await trial on lesser charges

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.

Last Updated on Thursday, 15 April 2021 15:05

Vice President Kamala Harris calls shooting death of Daunte Wright racially unjust and demands police accountability as protesters clash with police during a third night of protesting- Harris is the nation's first Black vice president

  • PDF
Pictured are Vice President Kamala Harris and twenty-year-old police killing victim Daunte Wright Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, associate publisher:
WASHINGTON, D.C.-Vice President Kamala Harris, the nation's first Black and first female vice president whom president Joe Biden tapped to run on his presidential ticket and a former U.S. senator and California attorney general, spoke out on Tuesday against the tragic police shooting death in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center on Sunday afternoon of twenty-one-year-old Daunte Wright as protesters continued to clash with police during the third night of contentious protesting.

The outspoken Harris, who is an Obama ally and an unsuccessful candidate for the 2020 Democratic nomination for president that impressed Joe Biden enough that he wanted her on his team, said that Wright should be alive today and that he died unjustly at the hands of police, and that race played a part in his shooting death.

Harris' remarks came during a White House event on Black maternal mortality where she spoke to Wright's family members indirectly and said that she and President Biden “grieve with you” and “stand with you.”

She also demanded accountability from law enforcement in the matter.

“Our nation needs justice and healing. And law enforcement must be held to the highest standards of accountability,” the vice president said. “We know that folks will keep dying if we don’t fully address racial injustice and inequities in our country from implicit bias to broken systems.”

President Biden called for calm and said Wright's shooting death is tragic.

Tuesday's arrests of protesters during the third night of unrest in the Minneapolis suburb came after they refused to disassemble, the unrest precipitated in response to the police killing on Sunday afternoon of Wright during a traffic stop that went wrong, Wright's killing coming as the prosecution rest in the George Floyd murder trial and the defense begins presenting its case in a courtroom in Minneapolis just 10 miles down the road.

Protesters, young and old alike, have marched through the city of Brooklyn Center demanding justice for Wright since the killing occurred earlier this week.

The protesting began Sunday night where protesters quarreled with police and broke into some 20 local businesses, and continued through Monday and Tuesday night.

By midnight Wednesday morning they had disseminated but vowed to come back night after night.

Police were on edge and held a line after threatening more of them with an arrest late Tuesday amid live coverage from CNN and other top national and international news networks.

Police shot off tear gas during an agitated protest on Monday night.

Tuesday night's protest was even more contentious.

A nightly curfew is in order and the state patrol and Minnesota National Guard remain on guard, fearing potential riots, sources say, like those that erupted locally and nationwide in the aftermath of Floyd's death by police in May of last year.

A strong National Guard contingent stood by early afternoon on Tuesday as protesters chanted, prayed, and sang songs, and some threw debris at police, mainly water bottles.
Kim Potter, a 26-year veteran White female cop who gunned down Wright, and her police chief, Tim Gannon, have resigned after the chief said publicly on Monday that the dash cam killing of the young Black man was, in his view, an accidental shooting death.

The former chief said the officer mistakenly pulled her gun, and not her taser, a statement that angered Black Civil Rights leaders, protesters and Wright family attorneys, who joined with Floyd's family members for a press conference against the police chief.

Manslaughter charges are expected to be filed against Potter, sources said.

About 500 protesters, most of them young and many of them White, confronted police during the height of the three-night racial unrest in Brooklyn Center that is making national news as the Congressional Black Caucus and federal lawmakers like former House minority whip Rep James Clyburn of South Carolina call for policing reforms.

Wright family attorney Benjamin Crump wants an indictment on murder and other criminal charges of the cop who killed Wright as the celebrated case is a reminder of how little the life of Black men mean to anxious cops with little training who often do as they please to Black people under the clothe of qualified immunity.

Rep Clyburn wants laws amended to do away with qualified immunity, a legal defense that essentially protects law enforcement in the line of duty if they act within the scope of their authority.

Wright's shooting death, occurring simultaneously with the George Floyd murder trial a stone's throw away, has made Minneapolis and its metropolitan area, inclusive of the suburban city of Brooklyn Center, the epicenter of excessive force shooting deaths of unarmed Black men like Floyd and Wright.

Activists and Black leaders, including members of Congress, say it is a clear indictment relative to the nation's racist and inept legal system and its negative and oppressive impact on Black people, and their families

That George Floyd murder trial involves a former White cop who has pleaded not guilty in the vicious murder of Floyd, a 46-year-old  father of two.

A veteran cop before he was fired after killing Floyd on May 25 following an arrest for alleged forgery, Chauvin, 45, faces charges of second degree intentional murder, third degree murder, and second degree manslaughter.

A conviction on at least one or potentially all of the charges is likely, legal experts have said.

Three other police officers at the scene who did nothing while Chauvin held his knee on the neck of the handcuffed Floyd for more than nine minutes until he killed him were also fired await trial on lesser charges.

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.


Last Updated on Friday, 16 April 2021 00:28

Minnesota cop who killed Daunte Wright and her police chief resign...Protesters are arrested as they clash with police....The CBC and Black federal lawmakers like Rep James Clyburn call for policing reforms

  • PDF
Pictured is Twenty-year-old Daunte Wright and Brooklyn Center police officer Kin Potter, who has since resigned from her post-Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, associate publisher:BROOKLYN C ENTER, Minnesota-Police  clashed with protesters Tuesday night in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center  and a few were arrested after refusing to disassemble during a third night of protesting in response to the police killing on Sunday afternoon of 20-year-old Daunte Wright during a traffic stop, Wright's killing coming as the prosecution rest in the George Floyd murder trial and the defense begins presenting its case in a courtroom in Minneapolis just 10 miles down the road.

Protesters, young and old alike, have marched  through the city of Brooklyn Center demanding justice for Wright since the killing occurred earlier this week.

The protesting began Sunday night where protesters quarreled with police and broke into some 20 local businesses, and continued through Monday and Tuesday night.

By midnight Wednesday morning protesters had disseminated but vowed to come back night after night.

Police were on edge and held a line after threatening more of them with an arrest amid live coverage from CNN and other top national  and international news networks.

Police shot off tear gas during an agitated protest on Monday night.

Tuesday night's protest was even more contentious.

Police also shot off rubber bullets, and some of them even shoved protesters.

A nightly curfew is in order and the state patrol and Minnesota National Guard remain on guard, fearing potential riots, sources say, like those that erupted locally and nationwide in the aftermath of Floyd's death in May of last year.

A strong National  Guard contingent stood by early afternoon on Tuesday as protesters chanted, prayed, and sang songs, and some threw debris at police, mainly water bottles.

Kim Potter, a 26-year veteran White female cop who gunned down Wright,  and her police chief, Tim Gannon,  have resigned after the chief said publicly on Monday that the dash cam killing of the young Black man was, in his view, an accidental shooting death.

The former chief said the officer mistakenly pulled her gun, and not her taser, a statement that angered Black Civil Rights leaders  protesters and Wright family attorneys, who joined with Floyd's family members for a press conference against the police chief.

Manslaughter charges are expected to be filed against Potter, sources said.

About 500 protesters, most of them young and many of them White,  confronted police during the height of the three-night racial unrest in Brooklyn Center that is making national news as the Congressional Black Caucus and federal lawmakers like House minority whip Rep James Clyburn of South Carolina  call for policing reforms.

President Joe Biden  and Vice President Kamala Harris have said said that Wright's killing is a tragedy, and  called for calm, Harris saying further that wright dies unjustly at the hands of police and race race played a part in his shooting death .

Wright family attorney Benjamin Crump wants an indictment on murder and other criminal charges of the cop who killed Wright as the celebrated case is a reminder of how little the life of Black men mean to anxious cops with little training who often do as they please to Black people under the clothe of qualified immunity and the protection by a racist legal system that oppresses Black people.

Rep Clyburn wants laws amended to do away with qualified immunity, a legal defense that essentially protects law enforcement in the line of duty if they act within the scope of their authority.

Wright's shooting death, occurring simultaneous with the George Floyd murder trial a stone's throw away, has made Minneapolis and its metropolitan area, inclusive of the suburban city of Brooklyn Center, the epicenter of excessive force shooting deaths of unarmed Black men like Floyd and Wright.

A veteran cop before he was fired after killing Floyd on May 25 following an arrest for alleged forgery, Chauvin is White and faces charges of second degree intentional murder, third degree murder, and second degree manslaughter.

Three other police officers at the scene who did nothing while Chauvin held his knee on the  neck of the handcuffed Floyd for more than nine minutes until he killed him were also fired and await trial on lesser charges

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.


Last Updated on Thursday, 15 April 2021 05:29

White cop kills 20-year-old Black man in Minneapolis suburb, sparking racial unrest as the George Floyd murder trial continues

  • PDF

Pictured is Daunte Wright

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, associate publisher


BROOKLYN CENTER, Minnesota-As the prosecution  in the murder trial of fired Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin brings its case to an end, a 20-year-old Black man in Minnesota was shot by a White police officer and died following a traffic stop on Sunday in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center, drawing hundreds of protesters to the streets Sunday night as protesters clashed with police. (Editor's note: Chauvin is White and on trial for killing George Floyd, who was Black, on May 25 following an arrest and faces charges of second degree intentional murder, third degree murder, and second degree manslaughter. Three other police officers at the scene who were also fired await trial on lesser charges).

Sunday's incident  in Brooklyn Center occurred some 10 miles from where Chauvin killed George Floyd, CNN reports, and has ignited outcries regarding excessive force by police against Black people, mainly Black men.

According to CNN, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz identified the man killed in Sunday's incident as Daunte Wright.
"Gwen and I are praying for Daunte Wright's family as our state mourns another life of a Black man taken by law enforcement," Walz tweeted.
A city curfew was quickly enacted.
Protesters threw rocks at the Brooklyn Center police building and the governor activated some 500 members of the Minnesota National Guard to the area .
Some 20 local businesses were also broken into
Police say that the female police officer who shot and killed the young Black man was trying to take him into custody around 2 pm during a traffic stop that also included a police trainee after learning that he had outstanding warrants
Wright's  girlfriend was also in the vehicle.
Wright got out of the vehicle as commanded by the police officer at hand and then got back into his vehicle after he was handcuffed, reports say.
That is when the arresting police officer shot him, dash cam footage released by police reveals.
Wright then drove several blocks before striking another vehicle.
Though police applied CPR, he died at the scene
Moments before he was killed and after he was pulled over, Wright, whose father is Black, called his mother to say he had been pulled over.
Wright's mother, Katie Wright, told CNN that her son was erroneously pulled over by White cops due to racial profiling, though the younger Wright was driving a car with expired tags.
"He said they pulled him over because he had air fresheners hanging from the rear-view mirror," said Wright's mother, who is White.
"A minute later, I called and his girlfriend answered, which was the passenger in the car, and said that he'd been shot."
Katie Wright wept as she thought about her son's final moments.
"He didn't deserve to be shot and killed like this," she told CNN.
About 100 to 200 people marched toward the Brooklyn Center Police Department, Minnesota Department of Public Safety (DPS) commissioner John Harrington said.
After nightfall, a crowd gathered around the police department, CNN crews on scene reported.
Officers held a line outside of the police station as protesters stood their ground and complained that Wright's shooting death was police murder just like that of George Floyd, a 46-year-old father of two whom Chauvin killed by holding his foot on his neck for nine minutes while Floyd was on the ground in handcuffs.
Police higher-ups tried to paint the shooting death Sunday of the 20-year-old Wright as an accident.
"It is my belief that the officer had the intention to deploy their taser but instead shot Mr. Wright with a single bullet," Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon said Monday, angering protesters who say his comments in defense of the killer cop are nothing more than a cover-up.
In nearby Minneapolis, a strike team was deployed to deal with reports of break-ins and shots fired, CNN reported.

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com.


Last Updated on Thursday, 15 April 2021 05:22

Ads

Our Most Popular Articles Of The Last 6 Months At Cleveland Urban News.Com, Ohio's Black Digital News Leader...Click Below

Latest News