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Cuyahoga County Executive Ed FitzGerald to hold meeting at 2 pm today with county council committee on voting to push the need to pass the Cuyahoga County Voting Rights Law he introduced in response to 3 voter suppression bills signed into law this year

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By Kathy Wray Coleman, Publisher, Editor-n-Chief,

Cleveland Urban News. Com and The Cleveland Urban News.Com Blog,

Ohio's Most Read Online Black Newspaper and Newspaper Blog

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

CLEVELAND – Cuyahoga County Executive Ed FitzGerald (pictured), the Democratic candidate for Ohio governor, will address County Council Committee of the Whole meeting today at 2 pm at the Cuyahoga County Justice Center in Cleveland on the importance of passing the Cuyahoga County Voting Rights Law, legislation he has introduced so that Cuyahoga County is able to exercise its home rule authority to mail absentee ballot applications to registered voters.

 

FitzGerald introduced the Cuyahoga County Voting Rights Law last Tuesday after the Ohio General Assembly and Republican Gov. John Kasich enacted three bills to curtail absentee, early, and provisional voting. Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted has also issued a directive limiting early voting in the 2014 general election.


Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 March 2014 21:50

Cleveland Chief Judge Ron Adrine had no authority to remove Judge Angela Stokes from hearing criminal cases, a Cleveland Urban News.Com investigation reveals, Stokes called the action warrant-less

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Pictured are Cleveland Municipal Court Presiding and Administrative Judge Ron Adrine (in robe), Cleveland Municipal Court Judge Angela Stokes (in robe), Cleveland Ward 6 Councilwoman Mamie Mitchell (Black woman wearing necklace), Ohio State Representative Bill Patmon (D-10) (in red tie), a former city councilman, Stokes Attorney Richard Alkire (in stripped tie), and Cuyahoga Country Court of Common Pleas Presiding and Administrative Judge Nancy Fuerst (Caucasian woman in blue attire and necklace)

By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief.

Coleman is a 20-year investigative journalist who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper, Ohio's Black press.

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

CLEVELAND, Ohio- A Cleveland Urban News.Com investigation reveals that Cleveland Municipal Court Presiding and Administrative Judge Ron Adrine had no authority whatsoever to involuntarily remove Cleveland Judge Angela Stokes from hearing criminal cases, a move he made to media hoopla on Friday afternoon, including the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Ohio's largest newspaper that did a Sunday headliner expose' on it by political reporter Mark Namik.

Adrine claims that his decision, effective Monday, was influenced by a motion to transfer cases from Stokes' courtroom filed by the Cuyahoga County Office of the Public Defender , a venue led by Chief Public Defender Robert L. Tobik , and a venue that data show s also plagued with unprecedented corruption against the majority Black indigent clients that it represents in state courts including municipal courts involving a serious offense such as first degree misdemeanors and DUI's. Most defendants lose, including in the general division of the 34-member Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas where felonies and other legal matters are heard, data show.

Namik reported that Tobik, who is White, contacted Adrine to get Stokes saying his office  has filed a motion against Stokes substantiating the request, though the investigation shows that such motion cannot serve to remove her from hearing legally designated case loads, or otherwise.

Stokes said that she will fight the gesture and called it warrant-less and void of fundamental "due process."

THE OHIO SUPREME COURT HAS MADE IT CLEAR IN RULINGS THAT PER THE OHIO LAWYER'S PROFESSIONAL CODE OF RESPONSIBILITY AND CASE LAW ONLY IT CAN DISCIPLINE A JUDGE AND PRECLUDE A JUDGE FROM PRESIDING OVER CASES IN GENERAL, AND THE AUTHORITY TO INVOLUNTARILY REMOVE AN OHIO MUNICIPAL COURT JUDGE UNDER STATE LAW.  (Ohio Revised Code 2701.031) FROM HEARING A PARTICULAR CASE RESTS SOLELY WITH THE PRESIDING JUDGE OF GENERAL DIVISION COMMON PLEAS COURTS IN OHIO. AND IN STOKES'  CASE THAT PERSON IS CUYAHOGA COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS PRESIDING AND ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE NANCY FUERST, AND ONLY FOLLOWING THE FILING OF AN AFFIDAVIT OF PREJUDICE OR DISQUALIFICATION  THAT FUERST SUBSEQUENTLY DETERMINES SHOWS A JUDICIAL BIAS OR CONFLICT. AND WHILE FUERST CAN REASSIGN CASES BASED UPON THE GRANTING OF AN AFFIDAVIT OF PREJUDICE SHE CANNOT, BY LAW, DISCIPLINE JUDGES, AND NEITHER CAN ANY OTHER INDIVIDUAL JUDGE, THAT AUTHORITY AGAIN RESTING SOLELY AMONG THE JUSTICES OF THE OHIO SUPREME COURT IN CONJUNCTION WITH A BAR COMPLAINT. (Editor's Note: Effective January 2014 Fuerst is no longer the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Administrative and Presiding judge. That position is currently held by Judge John Russo).

Last Updated on Tuesday, 01 April 2014 21:05

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Former Congressman Louis Stokes takes on Governor Kasich over voter suppression laws that he says hurt Blacks, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ed FitzGerald leading efforts against the laws, a Plain Dealer editorial called the new laws anti-Black

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Pictured are former 11th Congressional District Congressman Louis Stokes (in red tie), and Cuyahoga County Executive Ed FitzGerald, the democratic candidate for Ohio governor

By former Congressman Louis Stokes,  a Shaker Heights, Ohio Democrat and former senior counsel with the Squire, Sanders and Dempsey law firm who led the 11th congressional district, which is now led by Congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge,  a Warrensville Heights Democrat and chair of the Congressional Black Caucus of Blacks in Congress. Congressman Stokes addresses below efforts to steal the Black vote in Ohio via voter suppression bills signed into law this year by Republican Governor John Kasich. The new state laws limit early voting, among other strategies to intimidate Black, elderly and low-income voters, Click here to join the fight for voting rights in Ohio. That fight is also being taken up by Democratic candidate for governor Ed FitzGerald, the Cuyahoga County executive. Cuyahoga County is the state's largest of 88 counties and includes the largely Blacks cities of Cleveland and East Cleveland. It is roughly 29 percent Black. Congresswoman Fudge , state Sen. Nina Turner (D-25),  the Cleveland NAACP, the United Pastor's in Mission of greater Cleveland and others that oppose the voter suppression laws and a Plain Dealer Newspaper editorial called them anti-Black and against low-income people. CLICK THIS LINK HERE TO GO TO THE CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER AT CLEVELAND.COM TO READ THE EDITORIAL

(www.clevelandurbannews.com) /

(www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

By Former Congressman Louis Stokes, Ohio's First Black Congressperson

CLEVELAND, Ohio-I was raised in the first housing projects in Cleveland, and went on to serve our country in WWII, and then as the first African American elected to Congress from Ohio. I was afforded those opportunities because my mother had left the south years earlier in search of a better life, and found it as a domestic worker making $8 a day.

We both witnessed the punishing struggle for equal rights, but I have lived the political and economic mobility of its success. Neither would have been possible without Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who I first met in 1965. He was traveling around Cleveland registering voters from the back of a flatbed truck. He’d say that we must vote, because Southern blacks could not. And fresh in our minds was the memory of the three boys killed for registering voters in Mississippi the year before.So we registered voters, and we voted ourselves – and eventually, America passed the Voting Rights Act.

Ever since, Dr. King’s long walk has resulted in expanded access to the ballot box and empowered citizens with a say in their future. That’s how each generation has bent the arc of the moral universe toward justice.Governor Kasich is restricting the vote – and the ability of Ohio’s citizens to make their voices heard. Once again, we need to make our voices heard. Join me and Ed [Cuyahoga County Executive Ed FitzGerald, the Democratic candidate this year for governor] and tell Governor Kasich that the right to vote deserves to be protected, not restricted.

In 2012, 59,000 Ohioans voted during the Golden Week [early voting] that Governor Kasich is eliminating, and 1.3 million voted absentee. With the swipe of Kasich’s pen, those absentee votes now face an uncertain and unnecessary hurdle.


Ohio’s Republican leaders are unraveling decades of progress expanding the vote. Stand with me – and Ed and let’s fight to ensure every Ohioan has the right to vote without restriction.

Last Updated on Monday, 17 March 2014 21:22

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Attorneys for Dimora argue before appeals court, say 28-year sentence was too harsh, Judge Lioi is biased, community activists agree, say the judge mistreated former judge Steven Terry, who is Black and whom she also sentenced

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Pictured are Former Cuyahoga County Commissioner Jimmy Dimora, also a former chair of the Cuyahoga County Democratic Party (in eye glasses), Federal District Court Judge Sara Lioi (in Black attire), Former Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Judge Bridget McCafferty (in red attire) and Former Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Judge Steven Terry ( Black man in grey attire)

By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief

(www.clevelandurbannews.com) /

(www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

CINCINNATI, Ohio-Former Cuyahoga County Commissioner Jimmy Dimora, also a former chair of the powerful Cuyahoga County Democratic Party,  is asking a federal appeals court to reverse his convictions on 32 corruption-related charges, including racketeering, and his attorneys want a new trial.

Oral arguments were held yesterday morning before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Cincinnati, which will issue its ruling in upcoming months.  Dimora did not attend the hearing.

His lawyers say that Federal District Court Judge Sara Lioi out of Akron is biased and that she erred to the extent that a new trial is warranted.

Appeals are typically about whether a trial court judge erred or did wrong in civil, criminal and other court cases, and whether that wrongdoing merits a reversal of the trial court proceedings at issue, sometimes via a new trial, and other times overturning the convictions outright, among other remedies the appeals court panel might order.

Dimora, 59, was sentenced to 28 years in prison. He is now serving his sentence at the Federal Transfer Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

In a brief filed by attorney Christian J. Grostic on behalf of Dimora, the former county commissioner's attorneys told the appeals court that "Dimora was deprived of a fair trial" and that the government convinced Lioi to "exclude relevant, admissible and powerful exculpatory evidence of Dimora's intent."

In the brief, Dimora argues in part that he "did not solicit or accept things of value knowing they were given in exchange for official acts." And that he reported the gifts on ethics reports.

A three-judge panel heard the oral arguments by both sides, federal prosecutors telling the three judges that a mountain of evidence supports Dimora's bribery and other convictions.

But whether arguments made to the appellate panel and in briefs filed by Dimora's legal team, including the judge's  refusal to admit evidence at trial that Dimora reported the gifts on ethics reports , gifts the prosecution says were bribes, are enough for a new trial, remains to be seen.

The former county commissioner's convictions came as part of an ongoing county corruption probe that has netted over 60 convictions or guilty pleas, including two former Cuyahoga County Common Pleas judges and former county auditor Frank Russo, who is serving a 22-year sentence.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 March 2014 20:27

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NBA teams make moves as the playoffs approach, the Cleveland Cavaliers trade and get Spenser Hawes of the 76ers

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Pictured are Cleveland Urban News.Com Sportswriter Karl Kinbrough and Cleveland Cavaliers Center Spenser Hawes

By Cleveland Urban News.Con Sportswriter Karl Kimbrough

(www.clevelandurbannews.com) /

(www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

CLEVELAND, Ohio-Several NBA teams, including our Cleveland Cavaliers, made moves recently to strengthen their teams for the playoff run this year. Some teams made trades, some cleared roster space to add players, and some did both.

There were not many high profiled players changing teams late this season. But most of the players who went to contending teams have helped them.

The Cavaliers, who have not lived up to their own expectations as a strong contender for a playoff position all season, made one last effort by trading forwards Earl Clark, Henry Sims for Philadelphia 76ers center Spencer Hawes. That trade also gives the 76eres bids on two second round draft picks in upcoming drafts that would ordinarily be given to the Cavaliers.

Last Updated on Thursday, 13 March 2014 04:55

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