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Mississippi Today

New sheriffs, DAs emerge from primaries

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mississippitoday.org – Mina Corpuz – 2023-08-15 09:00:00

Over 20 new sheriffs and three new district attorneys are expected to take office next year following last week's primary elections, and that number could grow after runoff elections later this month and the November general election. 

There are at least a dozen runoff sheriff elections scheduled for Aug. 29, according to a of unofficial election results, and a dozen sheriff incumbents who ran without opponents who will face a challenger on Nov 7. 

About half of the state's incumbent sheriffs faced no challengers and are expected to be the only name on the ballot in the general election. The same is true for most of the state's district attorneys and coroners. 

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Here is a look at wins and losses from the primary elections and what is to for the runoffs and general election.  

Sheriffs

Clay County: Sheriff Eddie Scott won the Democratic primary against challengers Chief Deputy Sheriff Ramirez Williams and law enforcement officer Cedric Sykes with 51% of the vote, according to unofficial election results.  

Scott was the subject of a July investigation by Mississippi and the New York Times that details accusations that he used his office's power to harass women who were detained at the jail or worked for the sheriff's office, coerce some into sex and retaliate against those who alleged abuse or criticsized him.  

In an interview with Mississippi Today, Scott denied the allegations. 

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Last month, he said he would be vindicated and that voters would see through the allegations to re-elect him. 

DeSoto County: Thomas Tuggle will become the county's first Black sheriff since Reconstruction. He ran against County Supervisor Michael Lee in the GOP primary to replace Sheriff Bill Rasco, who will retire after 15 years. 

Tuggle, a Republican, is a Marine Corps veteran and worked in local and state law enforcement, as director of the Mississippi Law Enforcement Officer Academy. Lee is also a former law enforcement officer. 

Hinds County: Incumbent Tyree Jones won about 70% of the vote in a second faceoff against former interim sheriff Marshand Crisler, who is under federal indictment on bribery charges. 

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Jones will face Independent candidate Reginald Thompson, who has worked for the sheriff's office and the Bolton Department. 

Lauderdale County: Chief Deputy Sheriff Ward Calhoun and Lauderdale County Justice Court Judge Ricky Roberts faced off in the GOP primary to succeed longtime Sheriff William “Billy” Sollie. 

Calhoun will face Gerald Reon Johnson, a Democrat who has worked as an auxiliary officer with the Meridian Police Department and operated a private security agency. 

District Attorney

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5th Circuit Court District: Assistant District Attorney William Adam Hopper won the GOP primary against fellow ADA Rosaline Jordan. 

Instead of waiting until January to take office, Hopper will step into the role this week after Gov. Tate Reeves appointed him to serve the remainder of Doug Evans' term. 

Evans retired in June instead of finishing out his term. He ran for 5th Circuit Court judge last year, but lost in a runoff election to then-Winona Municipal Court Judge Alan “Devo” Lancaster

Hopper worked with Evans on the Curtis Flowers case. Flowers faced six prosecutions by Evans and his team of assistant district attorneys for the 1997 killings of four people at the Tardy Furniture Store in Winona. Four of those convictions included the penalty, but they were overturned by state and federal courts. 

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In 2019, the overturned Flowers' conviction, saying Evans barred Black jurors in the case. A year later the state dropped charges against Flowers after he spent 23 years in prison. 

6th Circuit Court District (Adams, Amite, Franklin and Wilkinson counties): Incumbent District Attorney Shameca Collins is seeking a second term, and will face Independent Tim Cotton, a Natchez attorney, in the general election. 

Jody Owens Credit: Eric J. Shelton/Mississippi Today, Report For America

7th Circuit Court District (Hinds County): Incumbent Jody Owens, also seeking a second term, will face a challenge from Independent Darla Palmer in November. Owens faced off against the attorney in the 2019 Democratic primary. 

14th Circuit Court  District (Lincoln, Pike and Walthall counties): Democrat Patrick Beasley and Republican Brandon Adams are seeking to succeed District Attorney Dewitt “Dee Bates,” who has been in office since 2003.  

16th Circuit Court District (Clay, Oktibbeha, Lowndes and Noxubee counties): Assistant District Attorney J. Douglas “Jase” Dalrymple II won the GOP primary against ADA Chuck Easley. The current incumbent district attorney, Scott Colom, was the only candidate listed on the democratic primary ballot and will face Dalrymple in November. 

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Colom was nominated last year for a judgeship with the U.S. District Court of Northern Mississippi, but that confirmation has been held up by Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith. 

23rd Circuit Court District: This is the first elected, full term for a district attorney to represent DeSoto County, which was made into its own judicial district earlier this year. 

Special prosecutor and private attorney Matthew Barton beat Robert ‘Bob' Reid Morris III in the GOP primary with about 60% of the vote, according to unofficial results. 

Gov. Reeves appointed then-assistant district attorney Morris to become district attorney 

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in September after the death of John Champion and prior to DeSoto becoming its own judicial district. 

Barton said most of DeSoto's crime problems are because of Memphis and he said the office would bring harsher penalties for people from there who commit crimes in the county, according to his campaign website

“Stop Memphis. Save Desoto” he said in a post announcing his primary win. 

Lauderdale County Coroner: For the first time in decades, the country won't have a coroner with the last name “Cobler.” Clayton Cobler is the current coroner, and his father, Marl Cobler,  also served in that role before him. Clayon Cobler has served for 20 years in that position; his father for 24.

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Two GOP candidates, Stella McMahan and Kenneth Graham, are headed to a runoff, local reported from unofficial election results. The winner will face Democrat Rita Jackson in the general election. 

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1945

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April 29, 1945

Richard Wright wrote his memoir about growing up in Roxie, Miss., called “Black Boy.” Credit: Wikipedia

The memoir by Richard Wright about his upbringing in Roxie, Mississippi, “Black Boy,” became the top-selling book in the U.S.

Wrighyt described Roxie as “swarming with rats, cats, dogs, fortune tellers, cripples, blind , whores, salesmen, rent collectors, and .”

In his home, he looked to his mother: “My mother's suffering grew into a symbol in my mind, gathering to itself all the poverty, the ignorance, the helplessness; the painful, baffling, hunger-ridden days and hours; the restless moving, the futile seeking, the uncertainty, the fear, the dread; the meaningless pain and the endless suffering. Her set the emotional tone of my life.”

When he was alone, he wrote, “I would hurl words into this darkness and wait for an echo, and if an echo sounded, no matter how faintly, I would send other words to tell, to march, to fight, to create a sense of the hunger for life that gnaws in us all.”

Reading became his refuge.

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“Whenever my had failed to or nourish me, I had clutched at books,” he wrote. “Reading was like a drug, a dope. The novels created moods in which I lived for days.”

In the end, he discovered that “if you possess enough courage to speak out what you are, you will find you are not alone.” He was the first Black author to see his work sold through the Book-of-a-Month Club.

Wright's novel, “Native Son,” told the story of Bigger , a 20-year-old Black man whose bleak life him to kill. Through the book, he sought to expose the racism he saw: “I was guided by but one criterion: to tell the truth as I saw it and felt it. I swore to myself that if I ever wrote another book, no one would weep over it; that it would be so hard and deep that they would have to face it without the consolation of tears.”

The novel, which sold more than 250,000 copies in its first three weeks, was turned into a play on Broadway, directed by Orson Welles. He became friends with other writers, Ralph Ellison in Harlem and Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus in Paris. His works played a role in changing white Americans' views on race.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

Podcast: The contentious final days of the 2024 legislative session

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's Adam Ganucheau, Bobby Harrison and Geoff Pender break down the final negotiations of the 2024 legislative 's three major issues: expansion, education , and retirement system reform.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.biloxinewsevents.com/?p=353661

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Mississippi Today

Lawmakers negotiate Medicaid expansion behind closed doors, hit impasse on state budget

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mississippitoday.org – Geoff Pender, Taylor Vance and Bobby Harrison – 2024-04-28 18:32:45

House and Senate continued to haggle over Medicaid expansion proposals Sunday, and the state budget process hit a snag after couldn't reach final agreements by a Saturday night deadline on how to spend $7 .

House Speaker Jason White on Sunday told his chamber that Medicaid expansion negotiators from the House and Senate had been meeting and he expected a compromise “will be filed by Monday or Tuesday at the latest.”

House Medicaid Chairwoman Missy McGee said the Senate had delivered another counter proposal on expansion Sunday evening but declined to provide details. Her Senate counterpart, Medicaid Chairman Kevin Blackwell, declined comment on Sunday. The two leaders met in McGee's office on Sunday evening following a Saturday afternoon meeting.

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READ MORE: House, Senate close in on Medicaid expansion agreement

Lawmakers have for the past of months been debating on how to expand Medicaid coverage for poor and help the state's flagging hospitals. The House initially voted to expand coverage to an estimated 200,000 people, and accept more that $1 billion a year in federal dollars to cover the cost, as most other states have done. The Senate initially passed a far more austere plan, that would cover about 40,000 people, and would decline the extra federal money to cover costs.

Since those plans passed, each has offered counter proposals, but no deal has been reached.

A group of about 50 clergy, physicians and other citizens who support full expansion showed up at the Capitol on Sunday to sit in the Senate gallery and deliver letters to key leaders who are negotiating a final plan.

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“When we stand before the Lord, he's not going to ask how much money did you save the state. He's going to ask you what you did for the least of these,” Monsignor Elvin Sounds, a retired Catholic priest, said outside the Senate gallery on Sunday.

READ MORE: A solution to the Republican impasse on Medicaid expansion

Lawmakers hit an impasse on setting a $7 billion state budget and missed Saturday night's deadline for filing appropriations bills. This will force the into extra innings, and require lawmakers to vote to push back deadlines. Lawmakers had expected to end this year's and leave by early this . But House Speaker Jason White told his chamber on Sunday they should expect to continue working through Friday, “and possibly through Saturday or Sunday.

White later said of the budget impasse, “When you get to haggling over spending $7 billion, folks are going to have disagreements.”

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Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, who presides over the Senate, said “things are fluid. But everybody is working.”

He looked at his watch and said “It is 5 o'clock. By 6 o'clock what I tell you will have changed.”

White said one reason for the session to run extra innings is that when he became speaker he vowed to House members that he would not continue the practice of passing much of the state budget last-minute, late at night or in the wee hours of the morning with little or no time for lawmakers to read or vet what they are passing.

He said the House was prepared early Saturday night to file budget bills with agreed-upon numbers, but not to file “dummy bills” with zeros or blanks and continue haggling a budget late into the night.

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“I made a promise that we are not going to keep them up here until midnight, then plow through all these budget bills,” White said. “We had had a gentleman's agreement (between the House and Senate) earlier in the session to negotiate a budget by April 15. That didn't happen … We are not going to do everything last minute with no time for our members to read things and ask questions. We are not going to do it in the middle of the night.”

READ MORE: Senate negotiators a no-show for second meeting with House on Medicaid expansion

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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