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MON. FEB. 7 BLACK HISTORY IN THE MAKING OVER 100 BROTHERS FOR CORNELL Fundraiser to Elect Cornell Mills City Council – District 7

BLACK HISTORY IN THE MAKING 2/7OVER 100 BROTHERS FOR CORNELLFundraiser to Elect Cornell MillsCity Council – District 7 BROTHERS FOR ROXBURY- BROTHERS FOR CORNELL BREEZEWAY BAR & GRILL MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2011 6:00PM-8:00PM REV. CHRIS WOMACK, CHAIR VICE CHAIRS  WILLIAM DORCENA, K. WAYNE MILLS, JAMARHL CRAWFORD Co-Hosted By Brothers of Roxbury REV. THOMAS CROSS BISHOP SAM HOGAN MIN. RODNEY MUHAMMAD MIN. MARVIN VENAY ELDER GILBERT G. WHITE III ADRIAN NILES GREG ALTENOR MIKE HOPKINS AJIBOLA OSINUBI GREG BERRY MIKE MASSEY ALLAN ARRINGTON GREG FRANCIS NATE GAMBLE ALLEN TURNER GREG HILL NELSON MIRANDA ANDRE NORMAN HUGH JOHNSON OMAR BILAL ANTHONY JENNINGS ISAIAH WILLIAMS OMAR LAWRENCE ANTHONY MEEKS J.D. NELSON OSAMAH ORLEBAR ANTHONY PITTS JALIL HEATH PAUL MARCOTTE, JR ASWAD SMITH          JAMAL GALAWAY QUEON JACKSON AVERY EVANS JAVON TAYLOR RALPH VALENY           BILL SINGLETON JED HRESKO RAMON MADREY BOYCE SLAYMAN, JR JEFF ROSS, ESQ REGGIE BROWN       BOYCE SLAYMAN, SR JERMAINE BLUNT   RICHARD BAKER BRUCE SINCLAIR JEROME WHITE RICHARD EVANS C. DEVONN MILLS, JR JERU BERRY ROB GRIFFIN CARLOS GONZALEZ JESSE WINFREY ROB HENDERSON CARLTON BUFFORD JOHN MOYET ROMERO HOLIDAY CHAD NELSON JOSE MOE RONALD ALSTON CHARLES WHITE JOSHUA JAMES ROYAN MCCLEAN CHRIS MASSEY           KALONJI WILLIAMS RUSSELL PAULDING CHUCK JONES KAREEM TYLER RYAN MCCULLUM COREY LORD KEITH DELOACH SALIH ROWE CORKEY WINSTON KEITH SPADEY SANTONIO GOODEN DANA JONES KENNY WILKERSON SERGIO BRICE DANA ROGERS KEVIN CONNER SHAWN ENNIS DARYLE JACKSON KEVIN ROSS SHYRONE BROWN DAVID ALLEN KEVIN WILKERSON STEVE GAYLE DAVID COX KEVIN WILLIAMS TERRENCE KELLY        DAVID CRAWFORD KHALIF NELSON THADIUS THOMAS DAVID THOMAS KHARI ROULHAC THOMAS REYES DELANO MOE KIM GROSS, SR THOMAS WEST DEMETRI ROBERTSON KION SANTOS             TOM THOMPSON DERRIK STONE KION THOMAS TONI ROSSI, ESQ DON DINGLE              KIRK WOMACK            DONALD OSGOOD LARRY BOGARTY TONY RICHARDS DONNIE POWELL LAZARO DELGARDO TRAMAINE ROTHERS DRE ROBERTS              LEE KINDELL VERNON JACKSON DUANE NELSON LEROY ALEXANDER VICTOR MORALEZ DWAYNE GUMBS MARCUS JACKSON WALTER SORIANO II DWIGHT MORRIS MARK STALLWORTH WES RITCHIE ED COAKLEY MERVIN REESE WILL DUNN ERIK HALL MICHAEL CAMPBELL WILLIAM HOLLIMAN ERNEST BATES MICHAEL JOSEY WILLIE GLOVER          ERNEST MONNELL MICHAEL WARE        WILLIE HICKS, JR GARY BYNOE MIKE CAMPBELL WILLLIE BAKER YVELT VINCENT ***Committee still in formation… Please make checks payable to Committee to Elect Cornell Mills $500 max. for individuals Cash limit- $50. RSVP to Facebook Event HERE DONATE HERE via PAYPAL VOLUNTEER for CORNELL HERE Committee to Elect Cornell Mills Candidate for District 7 City Council email: cornell4district7@gmail.com phone: 617-800-9414 www.cornellmills.com For Campaign Updates & Info: TEXT CORNELL to 41411 For Twitter Updates: TEXT FOLLOW CORNELLMILLS to 40404 JOIN US ON FACEBOOK JOIN US ON TWITTER

News, Politics

Pols, friends saddened by Chuck Turner’s fate

Pols, friends saddened by Chuck Turner’s fate By Margery Eagan  |   Thursday, January 27, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Columnists Much of official black Boston did not want to talk about Chuck Turner yesterday. Not state Reps. Bryon Rushing or Linda Dorcena Forry. Not City Councilors Ayanna Pressley or Charles Yancey. Not leaders of the Bay State Banner, which serves the black community. Not even Michael Curry, president of Boston’s NAACP. Callie Crossley, who does a daily talk show on WGBH radio and is black, said she went through a long list of prospective guests for her Turner discussion yesterday and “nobody wanted to talk.” The notion of a convicted Turner as a much-abused Rosa Parks figure may be unique to Turner and those who packed the courtroom for him Tuesday: mostly graying, white, uber-liberals from Fort Hill still stuck in their Peter, Paul and Mary salad days. Black leaders who were willing to talk about Turner yesterday weren’t buying that line. “But everyone I’ve spoken to is pretty upset that the only two individuals who get slapped with a show-them-a-lesson sentence happen to be black,” said political activist Joyce Ferriabough, referring to Turner and ex-state Sen.Dianne Wilkerson. Then she cited the glaring inequity here. “(Turner’s) offenses pale in contrast to the other folks I won’t mention who’ve had felonious convictions.” Among the many: ex-House Speakers Charles Flaherty (now a lobbyist) and Tom Finneran (now a talk show host). Said longtime activist Mel King, “It’s outrageous. And when you look at the amount of money, there seems something vindictive about it.” The Rev. Bruce Wall blamed both Turner for baiting the judge and Boston’s black community for failing to unite, convincing Turner to step down and the feds to give him a deal. “The white system does it all the time,” Wall said. “I feel so ashamed that the leadership of the black community is so impotent we can’t even get somebody’s (parking) ticket turned around.” When Turner called the bribe “a preacher’s handshake,” said veteran defense lawyer Henry Owens, “that insulted the black community and the clergy. Then he kept talking and talking, proving the government’s case. If you’re going to take the witness stand, you have to come up with something plausible to say.” Said longtime broadcaster Jimmy Myers, “The community of course feels the inadequacy in the justice system. We deal with it every day, and many feel he didn’t do anything wrong. God forbid that could be me. “But when Chuck decided to take the Cesar Chavez approach, he infuriated the judge, so now here’s a 70-year old spending three years behind bars. . . . It’s a very sad day.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1312278

Economy & Business, News, Politics

Coakley pledges crackdown on corruption, fraud

Coakley pledges crackdown on corruption, fraud Posted by Martin Finucane January 26, 2011 09:27 AMBy Milton J. Valencia, Globe Staff Attorney General Martha Coakley says she’s going to crack down on public corruption and white collar crime.Speaking at a Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce breakfast this morning, Coakley said she would expand her overburdened fraud and corruption division and separate it into two units, one to focus on public corruption and the other to focus on financial fraud. FULL STORY HEREhttp://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2011/01/coakley_pledges.html?p1=Local_Links

News, Politics

DiMasi, codefendants to seek dismissal of charges

DiMasi, codefendants to seek dismissal of charges By Andrea EstesGlobe Staff / January 26, 2011 Lawyers for former House speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi and three codefendants will ask a federal judge today to throw out corruption charges against their clients, arguing that prosecutors have no legal basis to move forward with a sweeping fraud and conspiracy case. US District Court Chief Mark Wolf will hear more than a dozen motions brought by DiMasi and three associates, who were accused in a 33-page indictment in June 2009 of conspiring to steer two state contracts to a software firm in exchange for cash payments, including $57,000 allegedly funneled to DiMasi through a former law associate. FOR FULL STORY CLICK HEREhttp://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/01/26/dimasi_codefendants_to_seek_dismissal_of_charges/

News, Politics

The Ballad of Chuck Turner

The Ballad of Chuck Turner EMBATTLED ‘HYMN’: Members of the Raging Grannies serenade Chuck Turner yesterday at an event in Cambridge.By Jessica Fargen / Pols & Politics  |   Sunday, January 23, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local PoliticsPhoto by Christopher Evans Singing activists dubbed “The Raging Grannies’’ yesterday serenaded Chuck Turner, the ex-Roxbury city councilor, as their “hero in a pinch” and vowed to stand by him when he is sentenced Tuesday in his federal corruption case. The rallying song, which was sung to the tune of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” was performed for an adoring Cambridge audience at a United for Justice with Peace conference. “We are singing for Chuck Turner! We are standing with Chuck Turner! He was fighting for the poor until the FBI stepped in. Now he’s off the City Council; we’re all taking it on the chin.” Turner said little about his criminal case, reserving most of his remarks to address the “oligarchic democratic system” born of the U.S. Constitution, which he described as a “business contract” that does not provide “economic rights.” He also discussed the Department of Justice, which he said was established to ferret out “enemies of the state.” “Our Justice Department is the instrument of the oligarchy, I think, to survey and keep control; to identify those who are enemies of the oligarchy and to deal with them,” Turner said. Federal prosecutors want Turner to spend 33 to 41 months in jail for taking a $1,000 bribe from a businessman seeking inside help to get a liquor license. He was voted off the Boston City Council last month and is now suing the councilors who ousted him. Turner declined to speak with the Herald about his criminal case. SEE THE VIDEO HERE

News, Politics

Report on District 7 Candidates Forum Roxbury YMCA 1/20/11

BLACKSTONIAN EXCLUSIVE Report on District 7 Candidates Forum by Jamarhl Crawford, Blackstonian Editor/Publisher The forum was held at the Roxbury YMCA and was hosted by several sponsoring organizations; The New Democracy Coalition in conjunction with The Center for Church and Prison, Union of Minority Neighborhoods, The College for Public and Community Service, VoteCorps and The New Commonwealth Civic Forum. All 6 Candidates who are on the ballot were invited to participate in this forum. The only candidate who did not show for the forum was Althea Garrison. Tito Jackson arrived late as he had another event scheduled at the same time. Haywood Fennell was also allowed to participate in the forum even though he is a write-in candidate and his name will not appear on the Feb. 15th Ballot. From left to right the panel consisted of: Roy Owens, Danielle Renee Williams, Haywood Fennell, Cornell Mills, Natalie Carrithers and Tito Jackson. The forum was well attended with approximately 125 people in attendance from all walks of life and various ages.Officials in attendance were: State Rep. Carlos Henriquez, State Rep. Russell Holmes, Sen. Bill Owens, and Councillor Bruce Bolling. Many in attendance were veteran Roxbury activists and organizers such as; Sarah Ann Shaw, Bruce Bickerstaff, Louis Elisa, Eddie Jenkins, Donovan Walker, Rev. Chris Womack and more. The forum began with each panelist answering a 3 part question, which very early revealed the difficulty of getting folks to stay on message and answer the questions directly, rather than going off on tangents and offering anecdotal illustrations. Rather than doing a blow by blow account, I will provide my own brief review of each candidates performance. Roy Owens – Let me just say, I don’t like this man. I have seen Roy Owens for over 7yrs run each time a seat for City Council has opened. I have heard him spout erroneous statistics and flawed facts. Last night was no different. Roy Owens (NO relation to Sen. Bill Owens) stated that he is the only candidate who believes in God and is Anti-Abortion. That seemed to be his main platform as he referred to it for each subject. Owens spoke in fragmented sentences using broken English and seemed to have several incoherent thoughts. Several times he either misunderstood questions or chose to completely disregard and provide his own answers. The Blackstonian not only does not support Roy Owens, but views him as an example of one of the problems with American Democracy and that is the fact that anybody can run with not so much as a spelling test or for that matter a Rorschach test. Danielle Renee Williams – Ms. Williams started off weakly but then seemed to perk up as the forum went on. Initially she had some difficulty expressing herself and stumbled over a few responses but her sincerity was evident. Overall Ms. Williams did not capture the crowd or present any ideas that inspired a great deal of confidence. She seemed soft-spoken and nervous which eroded her overall presence and made one question her ability. Haywood Fennell – For anyone that knows Haywood, he was his usual self. Mr. Fennell spoke on his years of service to the community, his incarceration and subsequent life change, his military service and his writing of both books and plays to enhance culture in the community for our youth.  Haywood got the crowd fired up on several occasions with impassioned statements using both humor and colloquialisms to make his point. Haywood focused on organizing the community to face issues. As a write-in candidate who did not make the proper deadline for 191 signatures it could cause some to question his organizational capabilities. Cornell Mills – By admission I am an unabashed Cornell Mills supporter. All I will say here is that it was my opinion, and the opinion of many others in the room, that Mills outperformed his counterparts in presentation, experience and in concrete plans for the community. Natalie Carrithers – Ms. Carrithers was very animated and displayed a very outgoing personality. Ms. Carrithers engaged the crowd during several exchanges and at the appropriate times solicited responses from the crowd of laughter, head nodding and I think I even heard an “Amen” and a “You Go Girl” in there. Tito Jackson – I will focus slightly more on Tito Jackson here because I know him and have supported him in the past for his bid at an At-Large Council seat and because he was called the front runner by media and early on dubbed the appointed “successor” by Chuck Turner.Tito did reasonably well. His performance was not the best I have seen from him as he stumbled through a few statements and faced a few tough questions from the audience. Jackson focused on his work with Gov. Deval Patrick and spoke of relationships and sitting at the table. His overall personality as the affable, often self-deprecating “nice guy” was on display throughout the night drawing laughs from the crowd as he spoke of his Jackson 5 Point Plan and talked about not being related to Michael.  The Blackstonian has 2 concerns about Tito 1) Does his personality make it difficult for people to take him seriously? 2) Will the enemies of the community respect and fear him as a champion of the people and does he have a hard side to deal with them? OVERALL ———————————- Rated by performance and crowd response 1. Cornell Mills 2. Natalie Carrithers3. Haywood Fennell4. Tito Jackson 5. Danielle Renee Williams Major themes all candidates spoke on: Crime/Violence, Education, Employment/Job Creation, HousingSecondary Themes: Youth, Elderly, Veterans, Mentoring All candidates were continually asked how they would deal with and confront Mayor Menino on issues where the City comes into conflict with the community. Fact Checks ————————————— Roy Owens stated that he created DSNI in his bedroom – This is a lie that he has been stating for the past several years and no one has finally put this to rest. Owens continually stated that he is the only candidate who “Believes in God

News, Politics

Ex-mayoral aide John Forbes walks Probation in drug case

Ex-mayoral aide John Forbes walksProbation in drug case RELEASED: John Forbes, Mayor Thomas M. Menino’s former East Boston neighborhood coordinator, leaves federal court yesterday after being given five years’ probation on drug charges.By Richard Weir  |   Wednesday, January 19, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local PoliticsPhoto by Nancy Lane An ex-aide to Mayor Thomas M. Menino yesterday walked out of federal court in Boston a free man, spared a lengthy prison sentence for peddling painkillers and cocaine after swaying a judge that he has turned his life around and plans to help other addicts do the same. “For 10 years, I was under the power of addiction,” John M. Forbes, who faced up to 20 years behind bars, told Judge Richard G. Stearns at his U.S. District Court sentencing. “I used to say to my wife, ‘When will this end?’ . . . I had been living this double life for 10 years.” It ended Dec. 16, 2009, when authorities busted Forbes, 31, the former East Boston liaison for City Hall and a rising star in Menino’s cadre of community coordinators, for selling 125 OxyContin pills in his Eastie home and attempting to sell 10 ounces of cocaine in a separate undercover buy. The judge sentenced Forbes to five years’ probation and 1,800 hours of community service. “From the very beginning, I took it as my second chance. … This was the best thing that ever happened in my life,” Forbes said of getting arrested and later being sent to rehab where, according to his counselors, he became sober and a leader to others struggling with addiction. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey M. Cohen asked Stearns to send Forbes to prison for 51 months, the same sentence that his co-defendant, Lawrence R. Taylor, 61, of Swampscott, received. Cohen argued that Forbes violated the public’s trust by pushing OxyContin in his own neighborhood — brazenly selling it from his kitchen, in front of his two kids — and then refused to cooperate with authorities. “This drug is a plague to East Boston,” Cohen said. “His role was to represent City Hall in East Boston, and on the side he was moonlighting as a drug dealer.” But Forbes’s attorney Rosemary Scapicchio argued for probation, saying her client “can be a source of hope for others” after becoming clean and an inspiration at Stepping Stone, the Fall River clinic where he spent 128 days in drug treatment last year. “Mr. Forbes is a success story . . . (that) you can beat this addiction,” Scapiccicho said, adding that he wants to open a substance abuse program in East Boston. “He walked in taking five OxyContin pills a day and he walked out . . .not just a stronger person, but a leader willing to help people.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1310499

News, Politics

Pols: Spare drug-addled former mayoral worker

Pols: Spare drug-addled former mayoral worker By Laurel J. Sweet  |   Tuesday, January 18, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Ex-Senate president Robert Travaglini and City Councilor Sal LaMattina are among dozens of compassionate supporters asking a federal judge to spare the rod on an erstwhile rising star in Mayor Thomas M. Menino’s camp, whose addiction to painkillers poisoned his political career. While serving as Menino’s East Boston neighborhood coordinator, John Forbes was moonlighting as a drug dealer and popping five oxycodone pills a day “just to function,” court documents filed Friday by his attorney reveal. “John Forbes is a classic example of a fine young man who exercised poor judgment,” Travaglini wrote in a letter to U.S. District Court Judge Richard G. Stearns, who could sentence Forbes, 31, to up to 20 years behind bars this afternoon. Forbes, Travaglini’s mercy-seeking missive continued, “has for the better part of his life always done the right thing — helping, coaching and teaching young children how to become respected members of the community driven by what is good in life.” He urged Stearns “to be as lenient as the law would allow.” LaMattina, who has known Forbes since he was born, told Sterns in his letter that Forbes “loved the neighborhood” of East Boston “and the people loved him back.” He noted Forbes had “a connection to the mayor’s office that made people feel better about their city government.” Forbes pleaded guilty in October to conspiracy to distribute Oxycontin and cocaine. Attorney Rosemary Curran Scapicchio is asking that the father of two be placed only on probation. Leah Forbes, Forbes’ wife of six years and mother of his two toddler daughters, told the court she defeated her own demons after her husband’s embarrassing 2009 bust, writing: “Johnny and I have been struggling with drug addiction off and on since before we were married. It was a terrible secret that we had kept from our family and friends. If I have learned anything … it is that second chances are not to be taken lightly.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1310242

News, Politics

Cornell Mills Campaign Kick Off and Official Announcement

BLACKSTONIAN EXCLUSIVE:Cornell Mills Campaign Kick Off and Official Announcement On Sunday, January 16th, one day after the Birthday of Dr. King and one day before the National Holiday in his honor, Cornell Mills held a gathering at his home that served as the official announcement of his campaign for District 7 City Council. The event was well attended drawing approximately 75 people to the Mills Family’s Roxbury Home.  Mills layed out his pitch, describing his family life as a husband, father, brother and son as well as his upbringing dedicated to community service and the many situations along the way which have shaped and prepared him for this campaign.  There was a heavy focus on experience during the presentation, detailing Mills positions as a Business Owner, Home Owner, Foreclosure Prevention specialist, former Homicide Investigator for the DA’s office as well as his over 15 years of political experience having worked on numerous campaigns.Cornell was introduced by his wife Stephanie Soriano-Mills, herself an accomplished Attorney, flanked by several of their children who were well behaved and engaged throughout, helping to collect sign in sheets and pass out literature.  After Cornell spoke, we heard introductions of various team members and then we heard from Mills’ Mother, Senator Dianne Wilkerson.  Senator Wilkerson offered some perspective on what is at stake and what will be required to achieve this goal.  We also heard brief remarks from newly elected State Rep. Carlos Henriquez who recalled his former bids for election in District 7.  The event opened with prayer from Minister Pam and closed with prayer (and an impromptu pep rally) from Rev. Chris Womack. Everyone in attendance had a good time, got better informed about Mills’ Campaign, heard some rousing words and received their marching orders. These next weeks until the Feb. 15th Primary Election will be the true test as all campaigns will have their teams in the field criss-crossing the district. Editor’s Note: The crowd promptly dispersed as many in attendance were anxious to get home to see the much anticipated Patriots game versus the NY Jets. In hindsight I bet people would have stuck around to chit chat more if they knew in advance the outcome of the game. But then again if you knew the outcomes of games in advance you would probably have bigger fish to fry. 😉

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