Showing posts with label Press Release. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Press Release. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Washington Post’s Turnaround On Its Opinion Pages Is Returning Journalism To Its Partisan Roots − But Without The Principles



BY JOSEPH JONES
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF MEDIA
ETHICS AND LAW AT REED COLLEGE
OF MEDIA, WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY

Jeff Bezos, the world’s third-richest person and owner of The Washington Post, announced in February 2025 significant changes to the editorial pages of his Pulitzer-Prize winning newspaper.

The editorial section, also called the opinion section, is where editors and contributors with a deep and broad understanding of the latest news offer their analysis of the day’s issues. This content is distinct from the fact-based news reporting of the outlet’s everyday journalists.

Both kinds of content serve the public interest. Journalists report news to inform the public, while editors and opinion writers analyze and explain news, putting facts into a larger context to aid understanding.

At the Post, instead of news editors making independent decisions on what to write and the perspectives they should take, Bezos tweeted, “We are going to be writing every day in support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets. We’ll cover other topics too of course, but viewpoints opposing those pillars will be left to be published by others.”

Opinion and analysis in the Post was thus going to limit itself to one particular viewpoint.

As a journalism historian, I analyze how journalism has changed over time. Over the years, the purpose, practices and forms of journalism have evolved.

Bezos’ decision harks back to an earlier time when editors and owners were the same person, and newspapers offered a specific interpretation of the world, not just a neutral report.

Informed opinions and analysis

While editorial writers and opinion columnists offer their opinions, these views are still expected to be grounded in journalistic principles, building from verifiable facts and comprehensively considering context to offer well-reasoned analysis.

Many of today’s news editors and journalists stake their professional reputations on their obligation to truth, independent of special interests or particular ideologies. They pride themselves on reporting and explaining the news without fear or favor.

After Bezos’ announcement, editorial page editor and veteran journalist David Shipley resigned from his position. Shipley told his staff he was stepping down “after reflection on how I can best move forward in the profession that I love.”

Journalists and media critics from across the political spectrum read Bezos’ editorial policy change as going against the tradition of a paper that long prided itself on editorial independence in the name of public service. Historically, the newspaper’s opinion section offered a range of views on a variety of issues.

Limiting the newspaper’s opinion section to a single viewpoint, critics argue, doesn’t seem to align with the Post’s slogan, “Democracy Dies in Darkness,” as it stifles public discussion and purposefully turns off some of the lights.

Former Washington Post editor Marty Baron told the Guardian, “If you’re trying to advance the cause of democracy, then you allow for public debate, which is what democracy is all about.”

Putting all of this in historical context can help illuminate Bezos’ decision as well as the current state of American media.

Opinionated early American journalism

At the nation’s founding, the very first newspapers were highly partisan, supporting and receiving much of their funding from particular political parties and government subsidies. Newspapers were small operations where editors, owners, writers and typesetters were usually all the same person.

As the country and its political direction were just forming, these editor-owners felt a public obligation and duty to stake out a clear political position. There were no standards of journalistic neutrality; editor-owners framed news reports, wrote columns and published other people’s opinions based on their own particular viewpoints.

Editors wrote passionately, using language that suggested the fate of the nation was at stake. They were also principled and willing to criticize their own parties if they thought it warranted. And because they were transparent about their views, readers responded by gravitating to their preferred newspapers. Consequently, the number of newspapers in the U.S. increased from 35 in 1783 to 1,200 by 1833. Historians have thus argued that the early United States was a “nation of newspaper readers.”

Unlike modern notions of journalistic impartiality, if a newspaper didn’t support a political party or remained neutral, it was dismissed by readers as either lacking morals or being too stupid to form an opinion.

As newspapers of the early republic developed from reporting recycled news from other sources to guiding public discussion, the editorial thus emerged as a short opinion essay separate from reports on local speeches or foreign news.

Fact-based journalism and informed analysis

For various reasons, the partisan press gave way to a journalism that attempted wider appeal. By 1900, many news outlets aimed for impartiality and neutrality.

By the 1920s, most journalists embraced the ideals of objectivity, the notion that journalists should only report facts.

Interestingly, this led to a growth in editorials, opinion columns and news analysis.

Opinion columns written by journalists provided interpretive frameworks for readers to understand the meaning of news events. One such journalist-commentator was Walter Lippmann (1889-1974), a political analyst who wrote a number of influential columns, including a piece infamously viewed as a catalyst for Japanese internment during World War II.

Such content provided journalists a means to show their independence from the powerful. Journalists could commit themselves to truth and verifiable facts while still asserting their independent role to contextualize news, explain its implications and guide the conversations necessary for democracy.

Research has shown that such opinion-based news content can influence what citizens and media outlets prioritize as important, as well as how policymakers approach certain issues.

Today, especially with the increase in partisan television, radio and internet outlets, there is no shortage of opinion-based news and analysis.

As long as people stay empathetic and open to others with different experiences, this is not inherently bad for democracy. Problems arise, however, when opinionated news outweighs fact-based reporting and people begin to mistrust all reporting they do not agree with, a psychological phenomenon known as confirmation bias.

In today’s digital world, everyone can broadcast or publish their opinion, whereas fact-based reporting takes time and resources. While news analysis and thoughtful opinion can generate important social conversations and help citizens understand news, too much opinion that isn’t grounded in facts can also lead to a general atmosphere of mistrust and suspicion. This spells trouble for the good-faith understanding, open dialogue and mutual trust so vital to democracy.

Profiting from polarization

Polling data suggests Americans are more divided than ever.

Perhaps Washington Post owner Bezos is simply responding to the public’s documented preference for partisanship over truth or to the profitability of partisan news.

But as a matter of context, there is a difference between the principled partisans of the early republic, the professional analysts of the 20th century, and an owner who demands his media outlet’s opinions should be limited to his preferences.

When he purchased The Washington Post in 2013, Bezos said the newspaper would not change and that “the paper’s duty will remain to its reader and not to the private interests of its owners.”

In this latest move, he has signaled that his private interest is a priority, at least for the editorial section. This limits the perspectives the Post-reading public can encounter and restricts the free marketplace of ideas. So when a Post journalist of 40 years wrote a column opposing Bezos’ editorial decision, her bosses refused to publish it.

Apparently, light criticism was not a “personal liberty” afforded a longtime employee. With her beloved employer not even willing to discuss the column – discussion being the cornerstone of deliberative democracy – the veteran journalist resigned.

In the current media environment, organizations and people who don’t participate in news production or share its values can purchase journalistic outlets and alter their standards and practices. As a result, principled journalists may decide to leave rather than compromise their mission of public service.

Ultimately, Bezos is being transparent. It is thus up to the American people to decide on the kind of journalism and pursuit of truth they desire. It’s worth noting that tens of thousands of canceled subscriptions have already begun to make that decision clear.

READ ORIGINAL STORY HERE

Monday, October 07, 2024

Foundations Launch New Collaborative Fund To Strengthen Democracy In West Africa


The Ford Foundation, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Luminate, and Open Society Foundations have launched a $20 million West Africa Democracy Fund (WADF) to reimagine, renew and strengthen democracy across the region. The fund, targeted at supporting West African states currently facing various democratic challenges, will, over a period of three years, support activities to increase citizens’ engagement with democratic and political transitions in the respective countries.

Darren Walker, President of Ford Foundation stated, “I am grateful for the collaboration of our philanthropic, civil society, and government partners, as we launch the West Africa Democracy Fund, which follows the lead of the people of West Africa as they work to strengthen the foundations of democracy and build a more resilient future.”

“Research has shown the inextricable link between the rising decline of democracy across West Africa and rising inequality, therefore these issues must be addressed simultaneously. Greater citizen participation in democratic processes is needed to fully realize a peaceful, inclusive democracy that empowers citizens to build a society that is more just, and that contributes to greater prosperity and stable economy.”

“As an organization focused on the advancement of social justice, the Ford Foundation is matching our commitment with action with this Fund, which we envision will propel our collective efforts in expanding democratic and civic spaces for citizens’ voices to be included in defining the norms for the governance of their countries,” Walker added.

“In West Africa, the demand for democracy is not matched by the supply of democracy. Opposition to military rule has weakened across the continent, and citizens bear the brunt of abuses of power by ruling classes,” said Dr. Kole Shettima, Director, Nigeria Office of the MacArthur Foundation. “The new Democracy Fund will support the realization of aspirations of West Africans for ‘democracy dividends’ and a more just, verdant, and peaceful world.”

Brian Kagoro, Managing Director of Programs at the Open Society Foundations, stated, “Democracy in West Africa is an ideal embedded in the traditions and cultures of the people. It is an aspiration ingrained in the vision of the young people. The fight for a more democratic West Africa is a fight for a West Africa that is free from imperial domination, neo-colonial political mortgaging, and external manipulation. True democracy in West Africa requires governments that are accountable to their citizens and systems that deliver equitable outcomes for all. The democracy fund provides an opportunity to leverage the current momentum for democratic advancement in the region.”

According to Dr. ChiChi Aniagolu-Okoye, Regional Director, Ford Foundation Office of West Africa (OWA), “It is important to emphasize that the West Africa Democracy Fund is the result of deep engagement and listening across the region with local leaders and Civil Society Organizations. Therefore, the solutions we seek through this Fund will be homegrown, rooted in the needs and aspirations of the people of the sub-region and driven by the people themselves” she concluded.

Through grantmaking to national consortia, the Fund will support activities that promote a more inclusive approach to democracy including multi-stakeholder dialogues, regional engagements with the Economic Community of West African States and the African Union, joint learning and the strengthening of key state institutions, including the judiciary. Luminate is focusing its contributions on supporting tech accountability efforts.

------------THE FORD FOUNDATION

Thursday, September 07, 2023

St Helena’s “Liberated” Africans Came From West Central Africa Between Northern Angola And Gabon

A plaque dedicated to "Liberated Africans" in St. Helena with flowers around it.
CREDIT: St Helena Government. 
Media Contact:
Kristopher Benke
Cell Press
press@cell.com


Between 1840 and 1867, thousands of enslaved Africans who had been “liberated” from slave ships intercepted by the British Royal Navy were taken to the South Atlantic island of St Helena. But little is written in history books or otherwise known about the lives of these individuals. Now, ancient DNA analyses reported in The American Journal of Human Genetics on September 7 offer the first direct evidence for the origins of St Helena’s liberated Africans.

“It was known that they most likely originated from areas south of the equator, but where exactly they came from was unclear,” says lead author Marcela Sandoval-Velasco (@marce_save) at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. “By sequencing their DNA and comparing it with that of thousands of living people from across sub-Saharan Africa we were able to infer where in Africa they likely originated and thereby help restore knowledge of their ancestral connections.”

Historical records of the Transatlantic Slave Trade Database have indicated that most of the captives came from West Central Africa, but details have been scant.

In the new study, Sandoval-Velasco, Hannes Schroeder, and their colleagues analyzed the ancient DNA of 20 individuals who were among the thousands freed from slave ships and brought to St Helena. The ancestral remains in question came from archaeological excavations that took place between 2007 and 2008 ahead of roadwork and the construction of the island’s first airport.

The DNA analyses showed that this group of liberated Africans most likely originated in the general area between northern Angola and Gabon in West Central Africa, according to the authors. They also show that most of the individuals were male, supporting a well-documented sex bias in the latter phase of the transatlantic slave trade.

The researchers say they hope the new findings create new awareness about the fate of the 27,000 liberated Africans who were brought to St Helena. They also note that this type of research can carry a lot of meaning, especially for descendant communities who are trying to recover aspects of their past.

“I think this study illustrates how ancient genomics can be used to recover long-lost aspects of the lives and experiences of enslaved and other marginalized communities whose stories were often omitted from written records or deliberately obscured,” Schroeder said.

“This project was part of a larger ongoing effort by many people on and off the island to try and restore knowledge of St Helena’s liberated Africans,” added Helena Bennett, a co-author of the study and resident of St Helena. “We hope that by telling their story we can honor their legacy and ensure that their lives and fates are not forgotten.”

The work was supported by the European Union through the Marie Sk1odowska-Curie Actions.

The American Journal of Human Genetics, Sandoval-Velasco et al. “The ancestry and geographical origins of St Helena’s liberated Africans” https://www.cell.com/ajhg/fulltext/S0002-9297(23)00277-X

The American Journal of Human Genetics (@AJHGNews), published by Cell Press for the American Society of Human Genetics, is a monthly journal that provides a record of research and review relating to heredity in humans and to the application of genetic principles in medicine and public policy, as well as in related areas of molecular and cell biology. Visit http://www.cell.com/ajhg. To receive Cell Press media alerts, contact press@cell.com.

Monday, July 24, 2023

Santa Barbara News-Press Declares Bankruptcy, Ceases Publication After More Than 150 Years

BY BCONNOR SHEETS

SANTA BARBARA, CA (LOS ANGELES TIMES)
- The Santa Barbara News-Press is no more. After more than 150 years of newsgathering, the Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper has posted its last online edition a month after the News-Press ceased publication of its print newspaper and went all-digital.

The death knell for the once-mighty but long-floundering News-Press came in the form of a bankruptcy filing last week by Ampersand Publishing LLC, the entity by which the newspaper does business.

Ampersand’s Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing was authorized during a meeting “on or about” May 1, nearly three months before it was filed Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for California’s Central District, according to federal court records.

The move also comes about three months after the newspaper relocated its operations and staff from the landmark building on Santa Barbara’s De la Guerra Plaza — where it had been housed for the last 101 years — to its printing plant in Goleta, the Santa Barbara Independent reported.

As of Sunday evening, the News-Press’ website appeared to include no mention of the bankruptcy or cessation of operation. There was also no mention on its Twitter feed, Facebook page or Instagram account, the bio of which still reads “Publishing since 1855 — the longest running daily newspaper in Southern California.” Friday’s is the most recent online edition of the publication posted on its website, which features a red-lettered banner stating that “The News-Press is entirely digital” and directing readers to its online edition. The Friday edition is the last the News-Press will issue, according to the Independent.

Dave Mason, the newspaper’s managing editor, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Sunday evening.

Mason wrote in an email to News-Press employees that Wendy McCaw, the company’s owner since 2000, “filed for bankruptcy on Friday,” the Independent reported. “They ran out of money to pay us. They will issue final paychecks when the bankruptcy is approved in court.” The contents of the email could not be independently verified on Sunday.

Neither Jerry Namba, the bankruptcy trustee, nor Levene, Neale, Bender, Yoo & Golubchik, the law firm identified in the bankruptcy filing as representing Ampersand, responded to requests for comment via telephone or email on Sunday. A voicemail left on the News-Press’ main office line went unreturned Sunday evening.

The outfit is in dire financial straits, according to Ampersand’s Chapter 7 filing. A meeting of the company’s creditors — of which there are from 200 to 999, per the Friday filing — is scheduled for Sept. 1. But “no property appears to be available to pay creditors,” according to the document, meaning it’s unlikely the company, which claims to have less than $50,000 of assets, will make good on its $1 million to $10 million of liabilities.

Joshua Molina of Noozhawk, a Santa Barbara-based online news outlet, claimed credit for breaking the story in a tweet Sunday afternoon.

Friday, March 24, 2023

Healthcare Fraudster Charged With Fleeing U.S. Before Serving Sentence



For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Northern District of Texas
Friday, March 24, 2023

A Flower Mound woman who allegedly absconded from the United States in order to avoid serving a 46-month prison sentence has been federally charged, announced U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Leigha Simonton.

Florence Enerwim Onyegbu, 64, also known as Florence Oshiegbe, was charged via criminal complaint with failure to surrender for service of sentence. She made her initial appearance in federal court Friday afternoon.

According to court documents, on February 14, 2011, a federal judge sentenced Ms. Onyegbu to 46 months in federal prison for her role in a healthcare fraud scheme.

Ms. Onyegbu had pleaded guilty to one count of offer and payment of illegal remuneration. In plea papers, she had admitted that her home health company, De-Promise, paid kickbacks to induce Medicare beneficiaries to arrange for home health services, then billed Medicare for home health services that were not provided – knowing full well that the beneficiaries were not home-bound or confined to a hospital and did not need those services. She had admitted she submitted more than $1.8 million in fraudulent claims and received more than $1.3 million in fraudulently-obtained payments.

At her 2011 sentencing, the judge ordered Ms. Onyegbu to self-surrender to a Bureau of Prisons facility on Monday, April 14, 2011 before 11 a.m. Ms. Onyegbu allegedly failed to do so.

She was arrested in Lagos, Nigeria on February 22, 2022 by the Nigerian Economic and Financial Crimes Commission at the request of the United States. Following court proceedings in Nigeria, she was extradited to the United States and arrived in Texas on Thursday.

A criminal complaint is merely an allegation of criminal conduct, not evidence. Ms. Onyegbu is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of law.

If convicted, she faces five years in prison on the failure to surrender charge.

The U.S. Marshals Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Dallas Field Office conducted the investigation into the alleged failure to surrender. The US. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General and the FBI’s Dallas Field Office investigated the healthcare fraud. Assistant U.S. Attorney Marty Basu is prosecuting the case with the help of Assistant U.S. Attorney Katherine Miller, who prosecuted the original fraud case alongside Assistant U.S. Attorneys John de la Garza and Megan Fahey (fmr).

The U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs and the FBI’s Legal Attaché Office at the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria provided significant assistance in securing the defendant’s extradition from Nigeria, as did FBI’s Dallas Field Office. The United States Attorney’s Office also thanked Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Justice, Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (“EFCC”), the Central Authority Unit of Nigeria’s Ministry of Justice, and the Attorney General of the Federal Republic of Nigeria for their assistance with her arrest and extradition.

Saturday, October 01, 2022

Full Statement: How To Save Nigeria @62 – NADECO




The National Democratic Coalition, NADECO, at its National Steering Committee meetings held between 22-25th September, 2022 reviewed the State of the Nation since the commencement of the Fourth Republic in 1999, and after a thorough and exhaustive assessment of the standing of the country will like to make the following sobering observations,: THAT

Nigeria, forcefully coupled together for the political and economic interests of the imperialist United Kingdom of Great Britain at the great expense of the heterogeneous indigenous ethnic nationalities along with foreign migrants with their different languages, religions, customs, traditions, cultures, artefacts, folklore, mores, morals, etc. had remained unsustainable colonial misadventure of the 19th century.

At independence, the high hopes and expectations for a much deserved higher quality of life through transparent, responsive and responsible, credible, technologically driven, humane, and democratic government policies have been dashed and substituted with despair, despondency and hopelessness.

After another 16 years misrule and maladministration of military strongmen turned civilian Presidents, (1999-2007;-2015-2023), the civilian aberrations in between being their surrogates; apart from the 13 and 15 years when they governed the country in full military uniforms during their first and second military dictatorship, (1966-1979; 1983-1998) making a total of 44 years out of post 1960 Independence years.

The politicians in military uniform must now accept the painful fact that it was their treasonable insurrection against democratically elected government that have really arrested, halted and stunted the then on-going growth and development of Nigeria when the British Colonial overlord grudgingly conceded political freedom to her colony called Nigeria.

By usurping political offices, the politicians in military uniforms have politically and economically mismanaged, misdirected our national institutions so much that:

i. economic misery and poverty remains intolerable high giving the Godly human and material endowments of Nigeria,; The country’s Human Development Index data locates us within the group of war ravaged areas like Afghanistan, Somalia, etc.

ii. the state of insecurity, whereby non-state actors have proven to be superior to the state coercive apparatus dictating and enforcing their demands at will thereby making a mockery of Nigeria’s security architecture, and proving the Nigerian State’s incompetence .It is a painful fact that the Nigerian rulers have failed in their primary responsibility of securing life and property of their citizens. The Nigerian State, in spite of various disclosures and suspicions about its possible collisions with the unrestrained foreign and local bandits have willingly or not accorded the bandits with the audacity .to capture innocent Nigerians and dictating their ransome for such releases. Again, the Nigerian State has without admitting it, has being reported to be paying humongous ransome to the bandits without using modern technology to apprehend the violent operators.

iii the state of political instability for the last 56 years in spite of the strong arm tactics of the military despots amounted to and constitutes the greatest tragedy that soldiers of fortune can impose on any country for their greed and selfish purposes.

Nigeria today as the most populous black nation in the world with manifest divine destiny has remained a disappointment to the BLACK RACE which has been expecting Nigeria to providing Leadership for the black people globally. Therefore, the BLACK has not been able to make spectacular contributions to human civilization nor own registered inventions. Nigeria has remained a giant with a feet of clay till date.

The 1966 military suspension and abrogation of the Federal Constitutional Governance of Nigeria as negotiated by the Founding Fathers and it’s substitution with series of decrees including their 1979 and 1999 manufactured decrees called constitutions which have centralized governance has been the main reason for our national woes and calamities. The decrees forcefully empowered the centralized government to appropriate to itself all the major natural endowments of the component units. If the military has not violently usurped power, the politicians for enlightened self-interest could have bent-over backward to accommodate themselves. The political crises could possibly have been resolved.

Nigeria has since then become a cesspool of corruption. The military juntas have built a culture of unquestionable perversion and opaque governance which have turned Nigeria into a country of opposites where we import what we have, petroleum and export what we don’t have, democracy. Other oil exporting countries have enough refineries to satisfy their local needs thereby punishing Nigerians to pay undeserved high price for petroleum products. Nigeria which has expended huge petroleum dollars on TURN-AROUND MAINTENANCE for about five to six times now, for which we have received no value. Another one TAM is reportedly now. Yet no one is brought to account, rather, they are the ones dictating the economic and political pace shamelessly. None of the countries who secured their independence around the same time like Nigeria is today as backward, underdeveloped and retrogressive as Nigeria has turned out to be despite our being the largest exporter of petroleum for over two three decades.

Nigeria is an heterogeneous country with over 350 ethnic Nationalities with their different languages, religions, customs, traditions, cultures, artefacts, folklore, mores, morals, etc. which cannot be legislated out of existence. Hats the reason why all the dubious efforts to make Nigerians out of many people remain a pipe dream. And it was the reason why the British along with the Founding Fathers and Nationalists resolved that the only suitable constitution for heterogeneous people as we have in Nigeria, Germany, Australia, etc. if they were to cohabit in a country is a Federal Constitution.

The efforts, campaigns and agitations of most ethnic Nationalities for a return to the Negotiated Federal Constitutional Governance have till date been ignored, disregarded and treated with provocative contempt by the impostors who will rather chase shadows e.g., insisting on manipulated elections to further their stranglehold on the political and economic authorities of the state, rather than obeying the popular will of the people for a return to federal constitutional governance.

The Nigerian State must accept the fact that whether she likes it or not, Nigerians had never at any democratic assembly accepted the suspension and abrogation of the Independence Constitution by the politicians in uniform neither have they voluntarily accepted the militarily imposed prohibitive Executive Presidential System.

Therefore, the current dubious rat race to hold elections in the midst of aggravated security crises, political instability, unbelievable depth of economic deprivations and misery is a misplaced priority and insensitivity to the popular, nation-wide demand for a return to federal constitutional governance because a sectional agenda is being foisted and programmed to retain its hold on the country at all cost. No one is fooled to believe that the election is to consolidate democracy considering how the two main so called parties abandoned rotational presidency agreement for equity, but to further the imposition of ethnic agenda which has denied Nigeria the chance to provide modern, transparent, people oriented governance and where the popular will of the people is treated with the highest regard.

What the Nigerian State and its power brokers, accomplices, politicians of questionable conducts, ethnically selected bureaucrats and their minions who must play politics at all costs are attempting to do is beguiling Nigerians to forget the illegalities, unjust, and inequitable laws and policies they have severally imposed on us and insisting that those outrageous deeds be accepted as given while we build on them no matter how crooked they constitute as foundations for democracy and democratization generally. Most Nigerians are not simpletons as they take us to be.

What kind of democracy is the country practicing, when Presidential Nomination Form is sold for ₦100 million and many States cannot pay ₦30,000 minimum wage. Nigerian Universities have been on strike for over 6months now, but the unreasonable and provocative take home pay of most political office holders are being regularly paid. Readers should be reminded about our recent historical facts. For example, President Buhari’s military dictatorship jailed many credible political leaders of the 2nd Republic just for acts that were not constitutionally against public interest and it’s the acceptable practice in democratic government nations globally. For example, Chief Bisi Onabanjo, Governor of Ogun State was sentenced to 22 calendar years by Gen. Paul Omu’s Miscellaneous Tribunal just because Bouygues Construction Company decided to donate ₦2.8 million to the UPN. Perhaps the offence of Governor Onabanjo was that the transaction took place in the Governor’s Official Lodge in Ikeja, Lagos. Chief Onabanjo invited Alhaji S. T. Labode, the National Accountant of UPN to collect the fund from the Contractor’s representative. Again, the same Tribunal under the RECOVERY OF PUBLIC PROPERTY DECREE No.3, had difficult reason to nail THE EMANCIPATOR, Chief Solomon Daushep Lar, former Governor of Plateau State. He was therefore discharged on the first three charges but convicted and sentenced to 22 calendar years for “Contributing to economic adversity” of Plateau State. Governor BakinZuwo of Kano State was also sentenced to the ridiculous 22 calendar years for keeping some money In the Governor’s lodge, giving the political votality of Kano State then. Can the current rulers tell us how much they now keep in their official quarters. These same “discredited politicians” are still men of honour and awe in the state they governed. How can the same ruler preside over political charade/ gymnastic whereby former and recent public officials were purchasing nomination form for ₦100 million?

Nigeria therefore must of necessity return to federal constitutional governance before the holding of any election. WHAT TANGIBLE GAINS HAVE NIGERIANS BENEFITTED FROM ALL THE ELECTIONS HELD SINCE 1999? Returning Nigeria to Federal Constitutional Governance is not the end in itself but will provide a legitimate foundation for the construction of all other derivatives that make Federalism Feature a necessity for an HETEROGENEOUS COUNTRY. The alternative is certainly to be more of the same whereby the manipulated and compromised so called winners will continue with their provocative corruption of all public institutions to the shame and deprivation of the fundamental rights of majority of Nigerians. This NATIONAL STRUCTURE THAT IS WARPED, SKEWED, AND LOPSIDED IS UNSUSTAINABLE.

United Kingdom of Great Britain’s new Monarch, His Majesty, King Herry III as the Defender of the Faith and Promoter of the Rule of Law must of necessity take urgent decision to utilize his imperial soft powers to prevent monumental internal strife and dislocations that are hanging over the country because the popular agitations of majority of ethnic Nationalities in Nigeria for a RETURN TO FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNANCE upon which Nigeria secured her independence have since 1966 been replaced with decrees which has centralized governance since then resulting into unmanageable political instability and deplorable insecurity have been provocatively treated with contempt and ignored by politicians in military uniform and in mufti.

NADECO hereby calls on His Majesty, King Charles III as the Head of the Commonwealth and it’s Secretariat to act timeously and without equivocation to demonstrably take steps to avert the possible counter reactions from the entrapped ethnic nationalities under severe anguish of deprivations of their fundamental human rights to self-determination, incessant discriminations in appointments to high economic and political offices, abysmal failure of the Nigerian State to provide security for life and property, including ethnic cleansing in many part of the middle belt and southern regions, and permanently being forced to comply with all these indignities because of an illegitimate and forged “1999 Constitution” which has appropriated to the monopolized unitary and centralized government, the ethnic nationalities natural endowments, thereby replacing the legitimate and negotiated federal constitution which was the binding chord upon which the various ethnic nationalities were forced to be part of a geographical and political pace called Nigeria. The strength of human endurance of majority of ethnic nationalities have been stretched beyond limits and may snapped in no distant time if there is no concrete and practical steps to reverse the misguided public policies and conducts.

NADECO hereby commends the endurance and nationalistic comportment of majority of ethnic Nationalities who have been agitating unrelentlesslly for a return to Federal Constitutional Governance upon which Nigeria secured her independence and had been ignored by the Nigerian State. NADECO is advising and appealing to them to complete their internal discussions and consultations on the campaign and exercises for a return to the negotiated federal constitution by reaching out to other ethnic Nationalities and by also forwarding and sending to NADECO their patriotic suggestions as to how we can peacefully implement their agreed positions at the earliest times.

This position becomes inevitable because the Nigerian State has total disregard for the popular will and sensitivities of most ethnic nationalities who as of need and necessity must assert their inalienable rights to self-determination which was in 1948 enshrined in the United Nations Charter on Human Rights (articles 2, 4, 5, 7, 21) as well as African Charter On Human And Peoples Rights adopted by the 18th Assembly of Heads of Government, June 1981(articles 3, 17, 19, 22) respectively.

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

MAYOR GARCETTI RELEASES GREEN NEW DEAL UPDATE


Los Angeles. Image: City of Los Angeles

Also announced that an EPA report shows that Los Angeles has the most sustainable buildings of any U.S. City

LOS ANGELES — Mayor Eric Garcetti today released the third update of his Green New Deal, which demonstrates dramatic progress on the ambitious targets he set three years ago, highlighted by a 36% reduction in L.A.’s citywide greenhouse gas emissions from the City’s 1990 baseline.

“When we laid out L.A.’s Green New Deal, we presented a vision for the sustainable and equitable future our children deserve — and three years later, we can proudly report on our incredible progress,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti. “Los Angeles is a globally recognized climate leader because of so much more than what happens at City Hall — it’s the growing coalition of community, business, and environmental justice leaders who have made it their mission to make this decade one of climate action.”

Mayor Garcetti launched L.A.’s Green New Deal in 2019 to set aggressive goals for the City to address the climate emergency, strengthen our economy and middle class, and place L.A. on course to be carbon neutral by 2050. The plan is guided by four key principles: uphold the Paris Climate Agreement; deliver environmental justice and equity through an inclusive green economy; ensure every Angeleno has the ability to join the green economy by creating pipelines to good-paying, green jobs; and lead by example within City government, showing the world what an urban Green New Deal looks like in practice.

Los Angeles’ sustainability progress through its Green New Deal helped lead to a 36% reduction in L.A.’s citywide greenhouse gas emissions from the city’s 1990 baseline, outpacing the standards set by the United Nations IPCC guidelines. The announcement comes as the City was recognized last week as the #1 Energy Star City by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, with nearly 650 Energy Star-certified buildings and $195 million in cost savings through improved energy efficiency.

The latest update to the report shows significant progress across Los Angeles’ main sources of emissions: buildings, transportation, electricity, water, and waste. These include:

Installation of 577 MW of local solar today, surpassing the goal by 77 MW;


82,000 AFY in stormwater capture capacity, exceeding the target by 10%;


Installation of 18,205 commercial EV chargers, exceeding the target by 8,205 — the most of any U.S. city;

Installation of 36,000 cool roofs, achieving the goal one year faster and exceeding it by 23,000;

Investing $150 million in energy efficiency programs to renters and affordable housing customers, exceeding the milestone by $50 million;

Energy grid that runs on 62% zero-emission sources, ahead of schedule to reach 100% by 2035;

$247 million invested in customer water conservation efforts, with 38% specifically going to low-income customers;

Los Angeles World Airports and the L.A. Convention Center have banned single-use plastic water bottles;

Expansion of Metro Bike Share to 10 additional neighborhoods, bringing the total to 27, which is seven greater than the 2021 goal;

Worked hand-in-hand with frontline communities and the City Council to create a directive to phase out oil drilling in the City.

Taken together, by 2050, the work and milestones of our Green New Deal are expected to save more than 1,650 lives, 660 trips to the hospital, create 400,000 green jobs, and save $16 billion in avoided healthcare expenses each year.

Mayor Garcetti has pursued one of the most aggressive sustainability agendas in the world, including an ambitious goal to reach a 100% clean energy grid by 2035. Since he took office in 2013, the share of Los Angeles’ electricity coming from renewable sources has more than doubled to 43%, which exceeds the State’s current trajectory. The Mayor has taken bold steps to reduce the City’s reliance on dirty energy sources, from completely divesting from coal power by 2025, to building out the largest public EV charging network of any city in the country.

Mayor Garcetti has led Los Angeles to pursue its own resilient local water supply and become a national model in conservation. Since 2013, LADWP customers have saved over 256 billion gallons of water — enough water to fill the LA Coliseum over 900 times, and nearly double the amount of water LADWP uses in an entire year. In 2018, Mayor Garcetti played a critical role in the passage of Measure W, L.A. County's Safe, Clean Water Program. Measure W provides nearly $300 million in local, dedicated annual funding for projects that increase local water supplies, improve water quality, enhance the public right of way, and protect public health.

Mayor Garcetti has also pushed Metro and LADOT to create and accelerate some of the most ambitious sustainability goals in the nation — including the commitment to fully electrify Metro’s bus fleet by 2030 and LADOT’s fleet by 2028. After Mayor Garcetti helped lead the coalition to pass Measure M in 2016, the largest local transportation funding program in North American history, Metro is expanding its rail transit system with 15 new and expanded lines, fixing streets and freeways, and putting more than 777,800 people to work for decades to come.

Led by the Mayor’s Office of Sustainability, the report was prepared with the generous support of The Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles, a partner to the City on numerous sustainability initiatives, including the Save the Drop campaign and the Sustainable Development Goals. To read the full report or download L.A.’s Green New Deal, visit plan.lamayor.org.

Support for L.A.’s Green New Deal

“The City of LA is leading the way by proving that cutting energy costs, increasing efficiency, and reducing emissions, can also save money for municipalities and their constituents,” said EPA Pacific Southwest Regional Administrator Martha Guzman. “Congratulations Los Angeles for your #1 Energy Star recognition in reducing carbon pollution and fighting the effects of climate change.”

“LACCD is in lockstep with the City’s efforts to build a more inclusive, sustainable and prosperous Los Angeles. Our Board of Trustees recent approval of our Clean Energy and Sustainability Resolution sets goals for our district to be carbon-free by 2040 and to install EV chargers at 25% of all parking stalls by 2030, amongst other bold and visionary goals,” said Francisco C. Rodriguez, Ph.D., Chancellor of the Los Angeles Community College District (LACCD). “Our nine colleges are also focused on developing the next generation of our local workforce with career training opportunities that support the emerging green economy.”

“Cities are critically important to combating air and climate pollution. I’m glad Mayor Garcetti has placed a focus on kicking our addiction to combustion transportation and focused on deploying electric buses and trucks,” said Adrian Martinez, Senior Attorney with Right To Zero Campaign at Earthjustice. “There’s still much more work to be done to clean up our community, but our zero-emission future is within sight."

"Mayor Garcetti’s Green New Deal rightly highlighted the role of greening our building stock in our city’s efforts around addressing climate change," said Councilmember Nithya Raman, Mayor Garcetti's appointee to the South Coast Air Quality Management District Board. "I’m so happy that the legislation that the City Council passed last week will get us to our goal for new buildings seven years ahead of schedule."

"Los Angeles is taking an equitable, 'all in' approach to our just transition to clean energy by 2035," said Councilmember Mitch O'Farrell, the chair of the Energy, Climate Change, Environmental Justice, and River committee. "This is the issue of our day: we either have a habitable city and planet, or we don't. Making Los Angeles 100% carbon free by 2035, while meeting the benchmarks of the Green New Deal, is an imperative. In my committee, we will continue this hard work to ensure we meet our collective goal."

"In the year 2100, when the human race looks back at the challenges this century brought us, I know they will be grateful for everything Mayor Garcetti and the City Council accomplished in this past decade on climate, and for everything we are going to accomplish next." said Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Koretz.

Tuesday, May 03, 2022

Chair Mitchell Passes Motion Declaring LA County a Housing First County, Rejects Wasting Taxpayer Money on Strategies that Fall Short in Ending Homelessness

PRESS RELEASE
TUESDAY, MAY 3, 2022
Holly J. Mitchell. Image courtesy of Mitchell/LA County

HOLLY J. MITCHELL
LA COUNTY SUPERVISOR 2ND DISTRICT

Media Contact
Lenée Richards
(213) 709-9334

LOS ANGELES, CALIF. (LOS ANGELES COUNTY) — Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Chair Holly Mitchell provided the following statement on why she voted no on the motion to support the recommendations of the Blue Ribbon Commission on Homelessness and the importance of declaring LA County a Housing First County in helping to end the homelessness crisis:

My votes today reflect the best practices across the country of putting resources and time towards what works in addressing our homelessness crisis. Last year, I voted no on the motion to form the Blue Ribbon Commission on Homelessness – this entity was formed to discuss and address the issues of Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s governance.

I did not vote to support the formation of the Blue Ribbon Commission on Homelessness because doubling down on governance will not solve our housing and homelessness crisis. Even before the six-month process to create the commission with $1 million of taxpayer money, the County had plenty of studies, and over 500 interviews with stakeholders – who agreed that the increased governance was not the issue here.

Today, I voted no on the motion that will require the County to move forward with all seven of the recommendations by the Blue Ribbon Commission on Homelessness without the option to vote separately for each recommendation. All seven of the recommendations do not uphold public transparency on decision making and the usage of our limited homelessness funds. Without the option to bifurcate the vote on the recommendations that do make sense, as a whole I could not support the motion.

Our constituents and taxpayers have been clear. We need action now to close the gap in housing, services, and funding. I refuse to support a blank check of taxpayer funds to setting up more committees which do not focus on the long-term solutions of creating the housing, health facilities and corresponding services that have been proven to bring people off the streets and into homes.

The solutions to homelessness are known, simply put it comes down to homes and services. The crisis has grown in scope and scale across the 88 cities and unincorporated areas that make up LA County. Our geography, history of racial discrimination and diverse jurisdictions further complicate this issue. Solving it requires aligned policies across all jurisdictions that will:

1) Increase capacity to build the diverse housing needs such as board and care and permanent affordable housing,

2) Intentionally address systemic racial and economic inequities that lead to poverty and becoming unhoused and

3) Provide consistent long-term funding to meet the challenge of scope and scale of wrap around services to keep residents housed.

I will continue to emphatically support the Housing First model and policies which center the creation and preservation of housing along with wrap around services. I am not alone in seeing the value of Housing First and want to thank my co-author Supervisor Solis and my colleagues Supervisors Hahn, Kuehl for supporting my motion declaring LA County a Housing First County. I am proud to have also supported Supervisors Hahn and Barger’s motion accepting the County’s Measure H Strategy Reassessment and Homelessness Framework, which provides actions for improving the system of care for our unhoused residents.

I voted yes on the two motions listed above that keep us focused on real solutions for the most impacted residents, allow us to significantly close the disparity of Black people and communities of color experiencing homelessness and tackle the challenge of stopping the rising numbers of young people, seniors, and justice system involved residents from re-entry into homelessness.

Friday, March 25, 2022

Treasury Sanctions Six Individuals For Raising Funds In The United Arab Emirates To Support Nigeria’s Boko Haram Terrorist Group

Boko Haram

PRESS RELEASE

WASHINGTON (US DEPT. OF THE TREASURY
) — Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated a network of six individuals connected to Nigeria-based terrorist group, Boko Haram. All six were found guilty of establishing a Boko Haram cell in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to raise funds for and provide material assistance to Boko Haram insurgents in Nigeria. OFAC’s action follows arrests, prosecutions, and designations in the UAE in September 2021, demonstrating the commitment of the Emirati government to using judicial measures and targeted financial sanctions to disrupt the flow of funds to these networks.

“With this action, the United States joins the UAE in targeting terrorist financing networks of mutual concern,” said Under Secretary of the Treasury Brian Nelson. “Treasury continues to target financial facilitators of terrorist activity worldwide. We welcome multilateral action on this Boko Haram network to ensure that it is not able to move any further funds through the international financial system.”

OFAC designated Abdurrahman Ado Musa, Salihu Yusuf Adamu, Bashir Ali Yusuf, Muhammed Ibrahim Isa, Ibrahim Ali Alhassan, and Surajo Abubakar Muhammad pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13224, as amended, which targets terrorists, leaders, and officials of terrorist groups, and those providing support to terrorists or acts of terrorism. The U.S. Department of State designated Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and a Specially Designated Global Terrorist on November 14, 2013.

BOKO HARAM NETWORK IN THE UAE

The UAE Federal Court of Appeals in Abu Dhabi convicted Abdurrahman Ado Musa, Salihu Yusuf Adamu, Bashir Ali Yusuf, Muhammed Ibrahim Isa, Ibrahim Ali Alhassan, and Surajo Abubakar Muhammad for transferring $782,000 from Dubai to Boko Haram in Nigeria. Salihu Yusuf Adamu and Surajo Abubakar Muhammad were sentenced to life imprisonment for violations of UAE anti-terrorism laws; Abdurrahman Ado Musa, Bashir Ali Yusuf, Muhammed Ibrahim Isa, and Ibrahim Ali Alhassan were sentenced to 10 years in prison, followed by deportation. Today’s designations will prevent these individuals’ funds from being used further to support terrorism.

SANCTIONS IMPLICATIONS

As a result of today’s action, all property and interests in property of the individuals named above, and of any entities that are owned, directly or indirectly, 50 percent or more by them, individually, or with other blocked persons, that are in the United States or in the possession or control of U.S. persons, must be blocked and reported to OFAC. Unless authorized by a general or specific license issued by OFAC or otherwise exempt, OFAC’s regulations generally prohibit all transactions by U.S. persons or within the United States (including transactions transiting the United States) that involve any property or interests in property of designated or otherwise blocked persons.

Furthermore, engaging in certain transactions with the individuals designated today entails risk of secondary sanctions pursuant to E.O. 13224, as amended. Pursuant to this authority, OFAC can prohibit or impose strict conditions on the opening or maintaining in the United States of a correspondent account or a payable-through account of a foreign financial institution that knowingly conducted or facilitated any significant transaction on behalf of a Specially Designated Global Terrorist.

The power and integrity of OFAC sanctions derive not only from its ability to designate and add persons to the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List (SDN List), but also from its willingness to remove persons from the SDN List consistent with the law. The ultimate goal of sanctions is not to punish but to bring about a positive change in behavior. For information concerning the process for seeking removal from an OFAC list, including the SDN List, please refer to OFAC’s Frequently Asked Question 897 here. For detailed information on the process to submit a request for removal from an OFAC sanctions list, please here.

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Calif. Reparations Task Force Meeting To Honor Movement’s Histor

BY ANTONIO RAY HARVEY, CALIFORNIA BLACK MEDIA
Chad Brown


The California Task Force to Study and Development Reparations Proposal for African Americans is holding its seventh meeting this week.

During the two-day virtual conference, the task force will pay homage to Black History Month as well as African American heroes who initiated the fight for reparations – and kept it alive over the years — in the United States.

“Happy Black History Month! The first-in-the-nation California Reparations Task Force meets again on Wed-Thurs Feb 23-24,” tweeted Kamilah Moore, chair of the task force. “Join us as we celebrate past and current reparations efforts!”

Moore, a Los Angeles native, is an attorney and activist whose scholarship and work has focused on the study of reparations.

On Feb. 23, the committee members and guest speakers will revisit the origins of Black History Month, followed by a commemoration of past and current reparations movements that have fought for restitution from the government for formerly enslaved Black people in the United States.

Chad Brown, a member of the National Assembly of American Slavery Descendants – Los Angeles, will speak to the panel during the segment of the program recognizing current reparations movements.

“Sending *special* Congratulations to @Chad_Boogie @NAASDLA on his selection testify to the CA Reparations Task Force on Wed 2/23 (between 3pm & 4pm) in recognition of current efforts at reparations,” tweeted the Coalition for a Just and Equitable California.

During the second half of the first day, the panel will host historian, attorney and University of Pennsylvania professor Mary Frances Berry. She will lead a discussion titled “Recognizing Current Efforts at Reparations” discussion. 

Berry is the author of “My Face is Black Is True: Callie House and the Struggle for Ex-Slave Reparations.” The book tells the story of a formerly enslaved woman named Callie House who spearheaded a movement for reparations for the descendants of enslaved Black people 70 years before the Civil Rights Movement. A widowed washerwoman from Nashville and mother of five, House (1861-1928) fought for African American Union soldiers to get pensions denied them, strategically targeting $68 million generated in taxes on seized cotton from Confederacy states.

On Feb. 24, the members of the task force are scheduled to hold a discussion focused on eligibility.

The nine-member panel will also vote on operational details of the project as outlined in Assembly Bill (AB) 3121, the law that authorized the task force.

The same day, the task force’s Advisory Committee Members: Moore, Jovan Lewis, who is chair of the Department of Geography at UC Berkeley, and a representative from the California Department of Justice will discuss how the task force will employ expert consultants to assist with their work.

Each day, the first action on the task force agenda is an hour devoted to public comment. Each speaker will be allowed three minutes to speak.

In 2020, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the state’s historic reparations task force bill into law. It was authored by California’s current Secretary of State Dr. Shirley Weber when she was a member of the Assembly representing the 79th District in the San Diego area.

This week’s meeting will be accessible by video and teleconference. For more information on the task force, visit the California Department of Justice website.

LA County Regional Parks District Awards $26 Million In Grants

Los Angeles County’s First-Ever Cycle of Measure A Competitive Grant Programs

BY LA BLADE

The Park to Playa Trail (Photo Credit: County of Los Angeles)


LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles County Regional Park and Open Space District (RPOSD) announced grant awards totaling over $26 million for park development across Los Angeles County, completing the first-ever cycle of three Measure A competitive grant programs.

The grant programs were released on April 30 of last year as part of the special district’s ongoing implementation of Measure A.

Los Angeles County voters passed the Safe, Clean Neighborhood Parks and Beaches Measure (Measure A) in 2016, with nearly 75% of voters approving the annual parcel tax. The passage of Measure A confirmed Los Angeles County residents’ commitment to parks and open space and secured perpetual funding to address the park inequities identified by the 2016 Los Angeles Countywide Park and Recreation Needs Assessment.

“I am incredibly excited and proud to announce these long-awaited funds for projects that will provide critically needed investment in parks and recreational areas and expand access to green space for our High and Very High Need communities,” said Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Chair, Holly Mitchell, Supervisor to the 2nd District.

“The allocation of these competitive grant funds will serve countless residents across Los Angeles County who will soon see on the ground improvements coming to our parks and places where our residents recreate, explore and find respite in the outdoors, helping to address park inequities,” said Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda L. Solis, First District.

“These critical funds will help implement a number of projects to expand open space for all LA County residents, human and animal. The plans range from land acquisitions for urban park expansion to projects that will help preserve and protect our critical wildlife corridors,” said Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, Third District.

“Our local parks are some of the most important places in our neighborhoods and I think that too many of us took them for granted before the pandemic,” said Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn, Fourth District. “These grants are a way to empower cities and community organizations to expand and improve local parks and help us ensure everyone has access to open space where they can play, exercise, and just enjoy the outdoors.”

“In rural and urban communities alike, parks play an important role in enhancing physical and mental health,” said Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who represents the Fifth District. “These grant awards align with my priorities for our communities and support the Board of Supervisors’ commitment to provide fair and convenient access to parks and open space.”

“The $26 Million in Measure A grant funds being announced today are funded through taxpayer dollars to develop, enhance and provide wider access to parks, trails and open space projects, as well as boost the local economy through the creation of jobs,” said Norma Edith García-González, Director of the Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation and Los Angeles County Regional Park and Open Space District. “The implementation of these critical needed park, trail and open space projects throughout the County of Los Angeles will undoubtedly serve to enhance the community’s well-being and provide respite and joy to children and families for years to come.”

Director García-González will be announcing the grant awards at a local community park and future Measure A grant recipient located in South Gate, taking place at 10:30 am today.

Measure A has a multipronged approach to tackling the park inequity problem: a category of annually allocated funds dedicated specifically to entities in high and very high park need study areas, a Technical Assistance Program, and a commitment to set aside 30% of competitive grant funds for projects in high and very high need study areas. Of the $26 million in competitive grants awarded, $11 million in awards went to projects in high and very high park need study areas.

The Technical Assistance Program, or TAP, links high/very high park need entities with professional consultants at no cost to the applicants, with expertise in various park development disciplines, including community outreach and engagement, environment studies, project feasibility, planning and design, and grant writing and application. For this grant round, RPOSD awarded TAP grants to three high/very high park need cities, amounting to over $40,000 in professional grant writing support and resulting in $2 million in awarded funds.

The 42 applications received during the 6-month application period underwent review by a 9-member evaluation panel, and 30 were ultimately funded:
11 applications totaling $9.4 million were funded for Natural Lands, Local Beaches, Water Conservation and Protection, for projects that improve and protect open space, watersheds, and water resources through planning, acquisition, development, improvement, and restoration of multi-benefit parks;
13 applications totaling $11.1 million were funded for Regional Recreation Facilities, Multi-Use Trails, and Accessibility, for acquisition, development, improvement, restoration, or rehabilitation projects that improve and protect regional recreational facilities, trails, and accessibility; and
6 applications totaling $5.7 million were funded for Parkland Acquisition, for acquisition-only projects that meet the goals of the Natural Lands, Local Beaches, Water Conservation and Protection Competitive Grants Program or the Regional Recreation, Multi-use Trails and Accessibility Competitive Grant Programs. This program prioritizes urgent acquisitions in Study Areas with High or Very High Park Need as well as trail connections and access, wildlife corridors, and critical habitat.

Since the passage of Measure A, RPOSD has allocated $245 million in Measure A funds to cities and park development agencies to help fund new park space, create better access to existing parks, and improve park amenities. RPOSD anticipates the release of two additional competitive grant programs, Recreational Access and Youth & Veteran Job Training and Placement, this spring.

For more information on the competitive grant programs and Measure A funding, visit the RPOSD website at https://rposd.lacounty.gov.

Friday, January 14, 2022

East Providence Man Sentenced For Laundering Proceeds Of Email And Online Scams

 PRESS RELEASE

Samson Ikotun. Image: Twitter


US ATTORNEY'S OFFICE

PROVIDENCE, R.I. –  An East Providence man who played a critical role in an international money laundering conspiracy that moved nearly $1.8 million to Nigeria obtained through various scams perpetrated in the United States was sentenced today to 42 months in federal prison, announced United States Attorney Zachary A. Cunha.

Samson Ikotun, 34, pleaded guilty on September 29, 2021, to conspiracy to commit money laundering.

According to court documents and information presented to the court, victims were defrauded of $1.784,654 through romance scams, lottery frauds, rental property frauds, email compromises, and other schemes. Ikotun moved more than $888,000 of that money to co-conspirators in Nigeria, using various banking methods and the purchase of used vehicles that were shipped to Nigeria and resold.

According to court documents, as an FBI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and Tallmadge, Ohio, and Moscow, Idaho Police Department investigation into Ikotun and others criminal activity was concluding, Ikotun was apprehended by FBI agents at the airport with a one-way ticket to Nigeria.

U.S. District Court Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., sentenced Ikotun today to  42 months in federal prison to be followed by two years federal supervised release. The court is expected to issue a restitution order at a later date.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney John P. McAdams.

United States Attorney Cunha thanks United States Customs and Border Patrol; United States Secret Service; Rhode Island State Police; Providence, North Providence, East Providence, and Johnston, RI, Police Departments; Seekonk, Newton, Norfolk, and Hull, MA, Police Departments; New York State Police; Murphysboro, IL, Police Department; Greybull, WY, Police Department; Grand Island, NE, Police Department; Boca Raton, FL, Police Department; Lake County, FL, Sheriff’s Office; Brecknock Township, PA, Police Department; East Ridge, TN, Police Department; and San Angelo, TX, Police Department for their assistance in the investigation of the defendants involved in this conspiracy.

Thursday, January 06, 2022

Nigerian Sentenced For Federal Fraud Violations In The Eastern District Of Texas

 PRESS RELEASE

Shalom Olumide Ayotunde. Image: Henderson County Mugshots


SHERMAN, TEXAS (US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE) – A Nigerian man has been sentenced to federal prison for fraud violations in the Eastern District of Texas, announced U.S. Attorney Brit Featherston today.

Shalom Olumide Ayotunde, 39, pleaded guilty on July 1, 2021, to passport fraud, false claim to U.S. citizenship, wire fraud, and false statement to a financial institution, and was sentenced to 46 months in federal prison today by U.S. District Judge Amos L. Mazzant, III.  Ayotunde was also ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $1,067,000.

According to court documents, in June 2018, Ayotunde provided false identifying information in his application for a U.S. passport, and in doing so, also falsely claimed to be a U.S. citizen.  Ayotunde was also involved in falsifying information in connection with numerous applications for Payment Protection Program loans, and ultimately received more than $1 million in fraudulent PPP loan proceeds. Additionally, evidence showed that Ayotunde was part of a conspiracy to defraud companies through business email compromise schemes and acted as a money mule when he knowingly received and transferred proceeds of fraudulent activity. Evidence showed that Ayotunde received or attempted to receive more than $800,000 in stolen funds.  A federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Ayotunde with federal violations on Nov. 13, 2020.

On May 17, 2021, the Attorney General established the COVID-19 Fraud Enforcement Task Force to marshal the resources of the Department of Justice in partnership with agencies across government to enhance efforts to combat and prevent pandemic-related fraud. The Task Force bolsters efforts to investigate and prosecute the most culpable domestic and international criminal actors and assists agencies tasked with administering relief programs to prevent fraud by, among other methods, augmenting and incorporating existing coordination mechanisms, identifying resources and techniques to uncover fraudulent actors and their schemes, and sharing and harnessing information and insights gained from prior enforcement efforts. For more information on the Department’s response to the pandemic, please visit https://www.justice.gov/coronavirus.

Anyone with information about allegations of attempted fraud involving COVID-19 can report it by calling the Department of Justice’s National Center for Disaster Fraud (NCDF) Hotline at 866-720-5721 or via the NCDF Web Complaint Form at: https://www.justice.gov/disaster-fraud/ncdf-disaster-complaint-form.

 If you or someone you know is age 60 or older and has been a victim of financial fraud, help is standing by at the National Elder Fraud Hotline: 1-833-FRAUD-11 (1-833-372-8311).  This U.S. Department of Justice hotline, managed by the Office for Victims of Crime, is staffed by experienced professionals who provide personalized support to callers by assessing the needs of the victim, and identifying relevant next steps.  Case managers will identify appropriate reporting agencies, provide information to callers to assist them in reporting, connect callers directly with appropriate agencies, and provide resources and referrals, on a case-by-case basis.  Reporting is the first step.  Reporting can help authorities identify those who commit fraud and reporting certain financial losses due to fraud as soon as possible can increase the likelihood of recovering losses.  The hotline is staffed 10am-6pm Eastern Time, Monday-Friday. English, Spanish, and other languages are available.   

This case was investigated by the U.S. Department of State- Diplomatic Security Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation and was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Camelia Lopez.

Thursday, December 30, 2021

Vatican Agency Reveals Number Of Missionaries Murdered Around World During 2021




VATICAN PRESS OFFICE (CATHOLIC NEWS AGENCY) -- 22 Catholic missionaries were killed around the world in 2021, half of them in Africa, according to a report released by the Fides News Agency and distributed Thursday by the Vatican press office.

Fides, the news agency of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, reported that of the 22 missionaries killed in 2021, 13 were priests, two were women religious, one was a male religious, and six were lay people. Half of the total were killed in Africa: seven priests, two religious sisters, and two lay people.

In its report, Fides explains that their annual list “has not only included missionaries ad gentes in the strict sense, but has tried to register all Catholic Christians engaged in some way in a pastoral activity who died violently, not expressly ‘in hatred of the faith’.”

According to the report, seven missionaries were murdered in Latin America, three in Asia, and one in Europe.

“In recent years, Africa and Latin America have alternated in the first place of this tragic ranking. From 2000 to 2020, according to our data, 536 missionaries were killed worldwide,” says the report.

The full report (in a MSWord document,) provides a detailed list of all the missionaries; but summarizes the motives and different circumstances of their killing: “Parish priests killed in their communities, in Africa and the Americas, tortured, kidnapped by criminals in search of non-existent treasures or attracted by the mirage of easy redemptions or to silence uncomfortable voices, which urged not to passively submit to the regime of crime; priests engaged in social works, as in Haiti, killed to rob them of what was needed to run such activities, or even killed by those they were helping, as in France, or in Venezuela, where a religious was killed by thieves in the same school where he taught to young people how to build a future.”

“Nuns hunted and killed in cold blood by bandits in South Sudan. And still many lay people, whose number is growing: catechists killed by armed clashes together with the communities that animated South Sudan; youths killed by snipers while trying to bring aid to displaced people fleeing clashes between the army and guerrillas in Myanmar; a female lay missionary brutally murdered to steal her cellphone in Peru.”

The Fides report, nevertheless, avoids any mention of the number of Catholics in Africa, mostly priests, killed by Islamist radicals, especially in Nigeria. The report only mentions the victims as being killed by “a group of armed men,” with no mention to their connection to radical Islamist organizations in sub-Saharan Africa such as Boko Haram.

According to Fides, to this list, “must be added the long list of the many, of whom perhaps we will never know or whose name we will not even know, who in every corner of the planet suffer and pay with their lives their faith in Jesus Christ.”

The Catholic News Agency (CNA) has been, since 2004, one of the fastest growing Catholic news providers to the English speaking world. The Catholic News Agency takes much of its mission from its sister agency, ACI Prensa, which was founded in Lima, Peru, in 1980 by Fr. Adalbert Marie Mohm (†1986).

One Of Calgary's Top Lawyers Charles Osuji Recipient Of Prestigious Awards In 2021

PRESS RELEASE
Charles Osuji. Image courtesy of Charles Osuji


CALGARY, AB, DECEMBER 30, 2021 (24-7 PRESS RELEASE) — Osuji’s acclaim began in 2016 when he was nominated as the 2016 Professional of the Year by Obsidian, Alberta. The next year, he was rated one of the Top 3 Employment Lawyers in Calgary, Alberta for 2017 – an award he’s won every year since then.

2021 Awards & Recognition for Charles Osuji

This winning trend continues today. In 2021, Osuji added many awards and recognitions to his already lengthy list of accomplishments, including being named “one of the best lawyers in Canada.”

Lexpert Rising Star: 2021 Leading Lawyers Under 40, Canada

Every year, Lexpert selects lawyers who are “at the top of their professional game while still dedicated to giving back.” This year, Lexpert named Charles Osuji a 2021 Rising Star in Canada’s Leading Lawyers Under 40 category.

Osuji has risen in the Canadian legal community “fast and furiously” while maintaining his humility, kindness, and generosity with his time and professional talent. “His unique combination of high intellect, tireless work ethic and business acumen fuels this rising star, but Osuji remains grounded by his role as a model citizen for all young professionals.”

Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch in Canada, 2022

Charles Osuji was recognized and chosen by peer review as a Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch in Canada, 2022, for his outstanding professional excellence in private practice. For Osuji, this award is “yet another confirmation that there’s a place for you at the table if you consistently put in the work and keep a good name while surrounded by a tribe of supporters…There are no limits!”

2021 Avenue Calgary Top 40 Under 40

Avenue Calgary recognized Osuji as a Top 40 Under 40 this year for his ability to “champion diversity at his law firm and mentor other immigrants to succeed in business. Osuji says, “Excellence in diversity – that’s the story I want to tell.” And he tells it well by inspiring, hiring, and mentoring locally and internationally trained lawyers from a range of cultural heritages.

2021 Power of Inclusion Community Award

The Council of Nigerian Professionals, an organization that empowers people to enrich our community with a focus on Canada’s socio-economic and political needs, recognized Osuji’s contributions to the community with the Power of Inclusion Community Award.

The Power of Inclusion Award is given to “individuals, leaders and community members working tirelessly within their sphere of influence to be inclusive of others irrespective of culture, creed, beliefs, social class, sexual orientation and more.”

2021 Top 25 DEI Persons of the Year Award

The Canadian Multicultural Group named Charles Osuji one of the Top 25 DEI Persons of the Year in 2021. The Group recognized Osuji’s unique approach to law and leadership, and highlighted the prominence of diversity in his practice.

Evidence of this diversity is in the multilingual staff at Osuji & Smith, who speak English, Igbo, Bengali, Edo, Spanish, Arabic, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, French, Hindi, Punjabi, Gujarati, Marathi, and Urdu.

Top 3 Lawyers in Calgary, Alberta

Besides all this national recognition, Osuji was recognized as one of the Top 3 Employment Lawyers in Calgary, Alberta by ThreeBestRated for the fifth year in a row. He was also named one of the Top 3 Business Lawyers in Calgary, Alberta for the third year in a row, and one of the Top 3 Divorce Lawyers in Calgary, Top 3 Estate Planning Lawyers in Calgary, and Top 3 Civil Litigation Lawyers in Calgary, Alberta for the second year in a row.

2021 Nominations

The accolades don’t end there for Charles Osuji in 2021. In addition to the awards, he was nominated for the Black Excellence Award by Calgary Black Chambers, the 2021 Les Prix Canie Awards’ Black Entrepreneur Award, and the 2021 Torch Awards by Better Business Bureau.

Ongoing Nominations & Awards for Charles Osuji

The acclamation of 2021 followed increasing recognition in 2020, including being named a Young Influencer by Canadian Magazine in their list of Canada’s Top 25 Most Influential Lawyers, and the 2020 Immigrant of Distinction (Achievement Under 35) Award by Immigrant Services Calgary.

Osuji was also nominated for the 2020 Employer Awards for Newcomer Employment by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada and the 2020 Canadian Bar Association’s Douglas Miller Rising Star Award.

Awards Osuji won in 2019 included the 2019 Hope Awards by Aspen Family and Community Network Society, the 2019 Entrepreneur of the Year (Afro Canadians) Award by Diversity Magazine, and the 2019 CY Ekwulugo Award for Volunteering and Community Service, courtesy of the Igbo Cultural Association of Calgary, Alberta.

Influential & Award-Winning Lawyer Charles Osuji

Despite all this attention, Osuji remains dedicated to giving back to the community in various ways while leading his own law firm with excellence. His entrepreneurial, multicultural, and holistic approach to the practice of law makes him a role model for diversity and the legal profession in general.

Besides running a free legal clinic primarily for Calgary’s newcomer population, and mentoring Canadian immigrants through the Calgary Catholic Immigration Society, Osuji continues to offer his expertise with:

– Alberta Legal Aid,
– the Alberta Law Society Lawyer Referral Service,
– Igbo Cultural Association of Calgary,
– the Mustard Seed,
– Habitat for Humanity, and
– his church, where he plays piano.

Osuji’s law firm Osuji & Smith Lawyers has won awards and recognitions as well, including:

Top Choice of Business Law Services of 2021 in Calgary
– 2021 Best Business in Canada by Canadian Business Review Board
– Best Employment Lawyers in Calgary
– Best Real Estate Lawyers in Calgary
– Best Family Lawyers in Calgary
– Best Divorce Lawyers in Calgary

Osuji & Smith Lawyers provides services in various areas of law including employment and labour law, family, real estate, wills and estate, corporate commercial and business, personal injury, civil litigation, and immigration law.

Contact Lawyer Charles Osuji, one of Calgary’s top lawyers, at 403-283-8018 or by email at info@osujismith.ca.

Founded in 1980, Osuji & Smith: Calgary Employment, Business & Family Lawyers is a diverse, fast-growing, award-winning Calgary full-service law firm with a focus on Employment Law, Civil Litigation, Real Estate, Family & Divorce, Personal Injury, Immigration, Business and Corporate, Wills and Estate.

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