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Community activist James Box to be sentenced today, Monday, August 18, 9:00 am, courtroom 23 at Cuyahoga County Justice Center, Cleveland NAACP commissioned study found that Blacks get harsher sentences than Whites by largely White Cuyahoga County judges

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james box.jpg - 26.43 KbFrom the Metro Desk of Cleveland Urban News. Com and The Cleveland Urban News.Com Blog, Ohio's Most Read Online Black Newspaper and Newspaper Blog, Ohio's leaders in Black digital news, Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com and phone us at (216) 659-0473

(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

CLEVELAND, Ohio- Community activist James Box (pictured) will be sentenced before Common Pleas Judge John Sutula on Monday, August 18 at 9:00 am in courtroom 23 at the Cuyahoga County Justice Center in downtown Cleveland relative to a plea deal he took in a pending criminal case involving two women. He had originally pleaded not guilty.

Community activists, including Black on Black Crime Founder Art McKoy, will attend to witness if the proceedings are fair since a Cleveland NAACP commissioned study found conclusively that Blacks, and Black men in particular, get harsher sentences than their similarly situated White counterparts by the largely White judges of the 34-member Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas.

"I will be there," McKoy told Cleveland Urban News.Com Sunday evening before he began a weekly two-hour radio on Cleveland WERE 1490 radio  show dubbed "The Art McKoy University of Common Sense Show."

"While we do not support violence against women in any shape or form and have no problem with men that do it pleading guilty, we object to excessive prosecutions and unnecessary charges that carry a life sentence against Blacks, particularly strong Black men that have been participants in the struggle for equal opportunity and equally justice for Black and other people," said community activist and Imperial Women Coalition leader Kathy Wray Coleman. "Many of our largely White greater Cleveland judges are racist and corrupt, and so is the office of Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty, data show."

Among a host of other charges, Box, 53, is accused of allegedly attempting to rape and abduct two women participants in a now defunct Cleveland Municipal Court diversion program run by NFL football great Jim Brown, who was his supervisor.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 20 August 2014 00:26

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Greater Clevelanders rally for slain Black unarmed Missouri teen Michael Brown, Cleveland NAACP breaks its silence on the 137 shots killing of two unarmed Blacks in Cleveland by police, Cleveland NAACP President Hilton Smith says something must be done

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Pictured are slain Missouri teen Michael Brown,  Cleveland NAACP President The Rev. Hilton Smith and Cleveland NAACP Executive Director Sheila  Wright

By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief. Coleman is a community activist and 20-year investigative and legal  journalist who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio. Reach Cleveland Urban News.Com by email at editor@cleveland urban news.com and by phone at (216) 659-0473

(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

CLEVELAND, Ohio-In two separate protests held Thursday evening in Cleveland, Ohio, one of the staged outside of City Hall and the other in front of the Cleveland Public Library in downtown Cleveland, a couple hundred people, led by young activists leaders and the Cleveland NAACP, rallied against police brutality and for justice for slain Black Missouri teen Michael Brown.

The rallies were part of a national movement across the country to show universal solidarity in support of Brown, 18, the unarmed Black teen slain Saturday by officer Darren Wilson in the majority Black suburb of Ferguson, Missouri.

Wilson, who is White, is on paid administrative leave and has not been formally charged. Witnesses say he shot Brown when Brown had allegedly surrendered with his hands up.

Only four of Ferguson's 58 police officers are Black.

At both rallies, which mirrored gatherings in some 50 cities nationally, including New York and Washington D.C., protesters called off the names of a plethora of young Black men gunned down unnecessarily by police from cities nationally like New York City to Cleveland itself, a largely Black major American city of some 400,000 people where the crime rate continues to escalate and Black men are getting killed by police and each other in droves.

The Rev Al Sharpton, an MSNBC cable television political host and president of the New York-based National Action Network, organized the national protests.

Brown was headed to college before police gunned him down last weekend saying later that he allegedly assault officer Warren following a traffic stop after the convenient store alleged theft by Brown, though police now say that the traffic stop and store incidents are unrelated.

Nonetheless, the tragedy has angered Sharpton, also a Civil Rights activist, and protesters, particularly in Ferguson, a city of some 21,000 people now under a governor- directed curfew following days of violent protests.

Police say that Brown allegedly stole a couple of pack of cigars at a local convenient store, an alleged petty theft that Brown's supporters say, if true, does not merit a death sentence. A purported video of the alleged store, initially published by CNN, incident does not show one way or another whether Brown paid for the cigars.

Rioting  broke out and has continued for four days and nights since the killing, and has resulted in fallout between residents and police.

Dozens have been arrested, including reporters, some claiming the arrests of some protesters was done with excessive force.

Protesters in Ferguson were more calm in the last couple of days, and after the city police that had appeared in swat gear and threatened protester were replaced to patrol the protests by the Missouri State Police per a directive of Gov Jay Nixon.

The racial unrest has prompted President Obama and the governor of Missouri to call for calm.

Both the FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice are investigating the Michael Brown case and excessive force allegations against Ferguson police.

In Cleveland, college kids and groups such as the Cleveland Chapter NAACP, the Guardian Angels and the Imperial Women Coalition were adamant that excessive force by police in Ferguson and throughout the nation, including in Cleveland where two unarmed Blacks, Malissa Williams, 30, and Timothy Russell, 43, were gunned down in November 2012 by 13-non Black police officers slinging 137 bullets, must cease.

"We want justice," said Cleveland NAACP Executive Director Sheila Wright at Thursday's rally and vigil for Brown and other victims of what the protesters say is an epidemic of police brutality.

Asked if she wants the 13 cops that killed Williams and Russell charged and fired , Wright said that "all I can say is we want justice."

Wright said also that Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, the city's third Black mayor, must step to the plate to adress tension between police and the community, and the high incidences of excessive force claims.

"It must resonate with the people downtown," said Wright.

The Rev. Hilton Smith, president of the Cleveland NAACP, took it further saying that his local chapter Civil Rights organization will be out front if something is not done as to the 137 shots Cleveland police killing.

"We're waiting to see if they do something," Smith told Cleveland Urban News.Com at the rally for Brown and on the subject of the 137 shots Cleveland police shooting. "If they do not do something, we will."

A Cuyahoga County Grand Jury in June handed down an indictment on two counts of voluntary manslaughter against one of 13 non- Black Cleveland police officers that gunned down Williams and  Russell , Michael Brelo, but freed the other 12 officers from an indictment after Cuyahoga County prosecutor, who is White, lobbied the grand jury on their behalf. Activists last month called for McGinty to resign around the unprecedented controversy, and they want both state and federal charges against all 13 of the cops as well as their immediate firing.

One of the organizers of the rally at the public library who is associated with the Cleveland NAACP tried to stick to the pat answer of we want justice, an answer in response to the question of whether she wants the Cleveland cops fired and prosecuted. But she broke her silence when Cleveland Urban News.Com probed further and asked if criminal charges and the firing of the Cleveland officers at issue would represent justice.

"Yes," said rally organizer Briana Oldham, 25, before leading protesters through the streets of downtown Cleveland to demand justice for Brown, and all like him subject to police brutality and possible murder.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 20 August 2014 01:38

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Retired Cuyahoga County judge Ronald Suster is assigned to hear civil and criminal cases of former colleague and accused wife beater Judge Lance Mason, Suster is a corrupt $500-a-day rent-a-judge handpicked by Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice O'Connor

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By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief

Kathy Wray Coleman is  a community activist and 20 year investigative journalist who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio. (www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

CLEVELAND, Ohio- Retired Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Judge Ronald Suster has been assigned by the court's chief judge, John Russo, to handle the civil and criminal cases of Judge Lance Mason, his former colleague accused of beating his wife last weekend.

Last Updated on Monday, 17 August 2015 02:02

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LeBron James' free welcoming back celebration is tonight in Akron, Cleveland Urban News.Com welcomes James and his family home too

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By Editor Kathy Wray Coleman, a community activist and 20-year investigative reporter who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio

(www.clevelandurbannews.com) /(www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

CLEVELAND, Ohio- Cleveland's favorite son, NBA mega star LeBron James (pictured), who is returning to the majority Black major American city to again play for the Cavaliers, a team he left  in 2010 to join the Miami Heat, will be saluted this evening, August 8, in his native city of Akron at a free welcoming home celebration at the 30,000- seat stadium at the University of Akron.

Akron is a city some 30 miles south of Cleveland, and has a population of some 200,000 people. It is roughly 29 percent Black.

Last Updated on Sunday, 10 August 2014 13:22

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Judge Mason leaves Shaker Heights jail after posting bond,case now goes to county prosecutor, judge hires Fernando Mack as his attorney, Shaker Heights was accused of racial discrimination against Blacks, the Call and Post Newspaper once reported

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Pictured are Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Judge Lance Mason and Shaker Heights Municipal Court Judge K.J. Montgomery

By Editor Kathy Wray Coleman, a community activist and 20-year investigative reporter who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio

(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio- Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Judge Lance Mason posted bond on Wednesday and was released from Shaker Heights jail after a mental examination ordered by Shaker Heights Municipal Court Judge K.J. Montgomery determined that the former state senator poses no serious harm to either himself or others.

Shaker Heights is an affluent Cleveland suburb also routinely accused of housing discrimination against Blacks, the Call and Post Newspaper, a Black Cleveland weekly also with distributions in Columbus and Cincinnati, Ohio, once reported.

One of only three Black judges on the 34-member Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas General Division bench, Mason, 46, left jail with his lawyer, Fernando Mack, who is also Black.

He was arrested by police at his Cleveland home on Saturday afternoon following a 9-1-1 call nearly three hours earlier from his estranged wife, Aisha Mason, 41. She told police, according to the dispatch audiotape, that the judge allegedly hit her in the face, choked her, and put her out of their car at noon on Saturday at the intersection of Ashbury Road and Van Aken Boulevard in Shaker Heights.

After dumping his wife since 2005 on the streets, Mason then  drove off with their two young children, two girls, ages four and six -years- old, still in the car, Aiesha Mason told police. The couple has been separated since March, public court records reveal.

Aiesha  Mason, who filed for divorce on Monday,  was treated at South Point Hospital and later released. She reportedly suffered a bruised jaw, among other injuries.

The Black community is split on the Masons' domestic violence ordeal, some wanting blood against the purportedly violent judge, whom critics said should be held to a higher standard, and others seeing it as a Black family in crisis in need of support.

The judge, who lived in Shaker Heights as a state lawmaker and was an attorney for the Cleveland based law firm of  Baker, Hostler before becoming a judge, appeared before Montgomery by video conference Monday morning.

Montgomery set bond at $65,000, applicably paid by a surety bond or 10 percent, on a second degree felonious assault charge filed at the behest or recommendation of city prosecutor C. Randolph Keller, who is Black and the husband of former Plain Dealer Newspaper columnist Margaret Bernstein.

Montgomery also ordered a mental examination, saying Mason was suicidal, though he posted bond two days later with the help of his sister, who co-signed on the bond.

Since municipal court judges have no authority to hear felony cases under state law, the case was bounded over to the court of common pleas for a possible grand jury assessment on potential criminal charges.

Judge Mason has not been formally indicted by a county grand jury, a necessity under state law for the felony charge to stick and for Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty to prosecute him on behalf of the state of Ohio. Hence, the case is now under the auspice of  the controversial McGinty, a former common pleas judge himself and a Democrat like both Mason, and Montgomery.

Cuyahoga County, a county of some 59 municipalities, villages and townships, including the cities of Cleveland and Shaker Heights, which is about 37 percent Black, is a Democratic stronghold and is roughly 29 percent Black.

A special prosecutor could be assigned since Mason and McGinty were on the bench together, Mason since 2008, and McGinty, 19 years before he retired in 2011 to run for county prosecutor.

Mason's common pleas courtroom at the Cuyahoga County Justice Center in downtown Cleveland has been temporarily shut down as administrative officials prepare to shuffle his case docket load until and if he returns to the bench.

Guns were found in the Mason home when police showed up unannounced to arrest the judge without a warrant.

Police  said that they confiscated smoke grenades, semi-automatic rifles, more than 2500 rounds of ammunition, and a bullet proof vest.

Whether the warrant-less search will hold up in court or before a county grand jury remains to be seen.

 

Last Updated on Friday, 22 August 2014 00:44

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