Mississippi Today
Attorney General Merrick Garland calls Goon Squad’s acts ‘a betrayal of their community, a betrayal of their profession’
Attorney General Merrick B. Garland met Wednesday with law enforcement officials in Mississippi, days after the Justice Department announced it was widening its investigation into a local sheriff’s office where a group of deputies known as the “Goon Squad” has been accused of brutalizing residents for two decades.
He called the Goon Squad’s acts “a betrayal of their community, a betrayal of their profession and a betrayal of their fellow officers.”
Rankin County came to national attention last year after officers from a self-described “Goon Squad” tortured two Black men in their home and shot one of them, nearly killing him. Six officers were sentenced to federal prison in March, and last week, the Justice Department announced a probe into the county’s policing practices.
Garland’s visit was part of a tour he said he is making to each state as attorney general, and reiterated the Justice Department’s commitment to working with local officials, deputies and the community to conduct a comprehensive investigation into violations of civil rights committed by law enforcement.
He also discussed various efforts by the Justice Department throughout the state, including their work to reduce violent crime, curb interstate drug trafficking and investigate police departments accused of misconduct.
He touted the Justice Department’s convictions of drug traffickers funneling narcotics from California to Mississippi and $300,000 in funding to enhance the state’s forensic science capabilities.
He credited the department’s work with helping to reduce homicides by nearly 12% across the U.S.
After addressing the press, he spoke with representatives from federal agencies along with the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, the Jackson Police Department, the Department of Public Safety for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, as well as sheriffs from Hinds, Warren, Lauderdale, Adams and Harrison counties.
Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey, who has denied any knowledge of the Goon Squad’s operations, was not among those present.
Justice Department investigators are seeking to determine if the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department engaged in a pattern of unconstitutional policing through widespread violence, illegal searches and arrests or other discriminatory practices.
This review, known as a pattern or practice investigation, is expected to probe department records and practices to determine whether the agency has allowed routine abuses to occur. The investigation would not seek criminal charges for individual officers, but could result in a lawsuit against the department designed to force reforms and federal monitoring.
An investigation by The New York Times and Mississippi Today detailed the stories of nearly two dozen residents who said that Rankin deputies had burst into their homes, restrained the residents and brutalized them in search of illegal drugs.
According to dozens of interviews with victims and witnesses, the deputies waterboarded people, beat them and used Tasers to shock them in the groin and face. The accusations are supported by medical records, photographs of injuries and department records tracking deputy Taser use.
At least 20 Rankin County deputies were present during these incidents, reporters found, including the former undersheriff, high-ranking detectives and a deputy who later became a local police chief.
Five deputies and a local police officer were convicted for their role in torturing Michael Jenkins and Eddie Parker last year, but so far, no other deputies have been criminally charged.
In a statement on Facebook last week, the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department wrote that it would “fully cooperate with all aspects of this investigation, while also welcoming DOJ’s input into our updated policies and practices.”
The Rankin County NAACP is collecting signatures for a petition calling on the governor to remove Mr. Bailey from the office. Rankin County NAACP chapter president Angela English said they are close to the nearly 30,000 signatures required.
“He has allowed his deputies to carry out criminal activities without any repercussions,” she said. “In any other leadership capacity, someone would have lost their job or accepted responsibility for their actions and resigned. He has done neither.”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Southern Miss oral history center launches podcast about Mississippi in World War II
The University of Southern Mississippi’s Center for Oral History and Cultural Heritage launched a new longform podcast about Mississippians in World War II.
The 10-episode first season of the “Voices of Our People” podcast covers World War II from the Pearl Harbor attack to Armistice Day. The podcast consists of oral histories from Mississippians who experienced the war on the homefront and overseas, as well as storytelling from historians at USM’s Dale Center for the Study of War and Society. Mississippi musician and media personality Bill Ellison serves as the host.
“By combining the insights of our state’s leading scholars with the memories of those who lived it, the ‘Voices of Our People’ series attempts to contextualize our shared experiences with the goal of gaining a more grounded view of history,” said Ross Walton, who leads digital production and preservation at the oral history center and hosts its other podcast called “Mississippi Moments.”
“Each season of the series will examine a different historic event that shaped who we are as Mississippians and Americans,” Walton said.
The 20th anniversary of the USM center’s “Mississippi Moments” podcast inspired Walton to create a new podcast using the oral history center’s extensive collection of oral histories from World War II.
“Often unfiltered and raw, these interviews capture the deep, visceral reactions to such an uneasy age,” said Dr. Kevin Greene, historian and director of the oral history center. “They give voice to the voiceless in a way only qualitative interviewing can.”
Listen to Voices of Our People at this link.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1871
Oct. 10, 1871
Octavius Catto, a 32-year-old educator and civil rights activist who had pushed for Black Americans to be treated as equal citizens, was assassinated during an election day uprising in Philadelphia, which had the nation’s largest population of free African Americans.
Born free in Charleston, South Carolina, he moved north with his family, where he became an educator, minister, activist and athlete.
When the Civil War came, he recruited Black soldiers for the Union Army. After the war ended, he fought for the desegregation of Philadelphia’s trolley cars. He played a role in the passage of a bill that barred segregation on transit systems. A conductor’s refusal to admit Catto’s fiancée to a streetcar helped bring about the new law.
On election day, a mob of white thugs roamed the community, attacking Black residents who tried to vote. One of those men, Frank Kelly, confronted Catto, shooting him in the heart. Kelly escaped, but was arrested and returned to trial, where an all-white, all-male jury acquitted him.
Catto’s headstone remembers him as “the forgotten hero.” The city of Philadelphia has erected a monument in his honor outside the city hall. It was the first public monument in the city to honor a specific Black American.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Youth mental health task force makes recommendations, including workforce development and addressing cell phones in schools
The committee tasked with studying young people’s mental health made recommendations to the state Legislature Oct. 1.
The group proposed measures to shore up the state’s youth mental health workforce, enhance behavioral health training for school officials and school resource officers and screen students statewide for mental health concerns.
“Our mental health resources are so sparse and stretched,” said State Health Officer Dr. Dan Edney at the task force’s final meeting on Sept. 18.
Other proposals included requiring all school districts and colleges to partner with their local community mental health center, inventorying available mental health resources in the state and requiring that school districts issue policies on the use of cell phones in the classroom.
The K-12 and Postsecondary Mental Health Task Force, composed of legislators, state officials, mental health and education professionals and one student, met five times from July to September to hear from youth mental health experts and state leaders.
Sen. Nicole Boyd, a Republican from Oxford, sponsored the bill that created the committee in response to growing concerns from educators and health leaders about Mississippi children and adolescents’ declining mental health.
There is a dearth of mental health professionals who work with young people, experts and state officials told the committee.
The task force recommended that school psychologists receive a $6,000 salary supplement from the state. Nationally certified school counselors and nurses already receive this supplement.
There are just 519 school therapists statewide, Wendy Bailey, the executive director of the Mississippi Department of Mental Health, told task force members. That amounts to one for every two public elementary and secondary schools in the state.
The group proposed that the Mississippi Department of Education set a goal to raise the number of school counselors and school psychologists to a ratio of 250 students to one.
Mississippi’s current school counselor to student ratio is 400 to one, said Lance Evans, the Missisispi State Superintendent of Education.
Task force members proposed that all teachers and administrators receive Mental Health First Aid Training, a program that teaches participants to identify students who have or are developing a mental health or substance use problem and connect them with appropriate resources.
School resource officers should receive standardized law enforcement officer training to be employed in a school setting, including mentorship training, suggested the committee.
Committee members and experts were in support of implementing universal mental health screenings for students in order to identify mental health conditions early.
The task force recommended that mental health screeners be funded by the School Safety Grant Program in all school districts, though each district would be allowed to use a screener of their choosing.
“We have to make mental health screenings as routine as vaccines and hearing exams and eye exams,” said Phaedra Cole, the executive director of Life Help/Region 6 Community Mental Health Center.
A statewide ban on cell phones in school elicited much discussion, but the task force ultimately chose to recommend that the legislature require school districts to individually implement policies for cell phone and social media use in the classroom.
Eight states have implemented state-wide policies that ban or restrict cell phone use in schools, according to KFF.
All of Mississippi’s surrounding states have taken steps towards a cell phone ban or statewide restrictions. Louisiana is the only state to ban the use of electronic devices on school grounds with a new law taking effect during the 2024-2025 school year.
“I’m for a statewide ban,” said House Public Health and Human Services Chair Sam Creekmore, R-New Albany. “…If we can ban it in the state, it would take that pressure off the school boards and I think greatly improve the mental health of our children.”
“I don’t think we need to ban cell phones,” countered Melody Medaris, the executive director of Communicare, North Central Mississippi’s community mental health center. “…You’re going to take away one of their opportunities to reach out for help.”
She pointed to the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline as a use for cell phones in the classroom.
Legislators will consider the task force’s recommendations during the legislative session, which begins Jan. 7.
The task force was chaired by Rep. Rob Roberson, R-Starkville and chair of the House Education Committee, and Sen. David Parker, R-Olive Branch and chair of Senate Accountability.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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