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*The Michigan Chronicle is discussing violence against youth in Detroit, and why it’s happening, especially after four children were shot...
She was seven years old when she was shot on Appoline Street in Detroit in April.
Her father allegedly pulled the trigger after a heated domestic argument resulting in...
In 2019, residents of Detroit watched James Craig address a multitude of issues, ranging from dangerous freeway incidents to untimely deaths. Today was no...
On Saturday, Detroit Peacemakers celebrated the launch of its conflict resolution center and “Stop the Beef Hotline” with a community meeting and peace march...
The formerly invulnerable and unassailable Bill Cosby is subjected to new levels of scrutiny via a Boston deposition and an Ebony magazine article that performs invasive surgery on the…
Debra Simmons[1], 55, vice-president of the Mississippi Chapter of the National Action Network (NAN), the civil rights organization founded by Rev. Al Sharpton,was violently pushed to the ground, held down and tasered at a civil rights rally in Natchez, Mississippi by deputies of the Adams County Sheriff’s department. Simmons and members of NAN traveled to Natchez to throw full support behind Glennese Smith Scott, 33, a social worker and author of the book, “Surviving A Thousand Deaths[4],” who is in the midst of an uphill court battle against the Sheriff’s Department for abuse — and negligence — she allegedly suffered at their hands that caused her to miscarry twins. “It is truly a disgrace how the Adams County Sheriff’s department turned a peaceful rally into something ugly and utterly violent,” said NAN member, Crystal ...