- Created on 18 June 2013
East Point Fire Department Presents 'Healthy, Wealthy and Wise' Men's Leadership Conference
The City of East Point Fire Department will host its first Men's Leadership & Wellness Conference on Thursday, June 20, from 9:00a.m. - 3:00p.m. at the Holiday Inn & Suites Atlanta Airport North Hotel, located at 1380 Virginia Avenue, Atlanta, Georgia 30344.
The conference, entitled "Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise," will offer tips to men on health, finances and career strategies. Keynote Speakers will include Fire Chief Kelvin Cochran of the Atlanta Fire Rescue Department, and Fire Chief Jeff Hood of the Clayton County Fire Department, as well as others. Partners for this event include Atlanta Medical Center and Midtown Urology.
The conference is free and open to Firefighters and Fire Officers throughout the Atlanta Metropolitan area. Persons interested are encouraged to register in advance by calling the East Point Fire Department at (404)559-6401.
- Created on 18 June 2013
Stabbing Attack at Atlanta Senior Living Facility Leaves 1 Dead, 1 in Hospital
A man in his 60s is in police custody today after allegedly stabbing two other residents of a southwest Atlanta senior living facility.
A woman, Mary Oliver, was declared dead at the scene and another victim remains at Grady Memorial Hospital in stable condition, according to Atlanta Police Department Capt. Tim Peek. According to the Baptist Towers newsletter, Oliver's birthday would have been today. The AJC reports that she would have been 76.
APD has not released the name of the suspect in the stabbings, but say they caught a man with knives that were bloody near the complex. The attacks happened around 11 p.m. on Monday at Baptist Towers, near East Point.
Peek said officers "were able to apprehend the suspect near the scene and were able to recover two knives that did have blood on them."
Peek added the facility's on-site security guard was apparently making rounds outside the tower when the stabbings occurred.
Oliver's daughter, Ellen Hall Varner, said that the suspect, who lives on the 11-story high rise's 5th floor, first stabbed the man on the 7th floor, then "went home, took a shower, changed clothes and stuff."
The suspect then went to the second floor, "and kicked my mother's door in," Varner told the AJC.
"Immediately when you come in the door, her kitchen is to the right," Varner said, describing her mother's apartment. "He got one of her butcher knives out of there and went in and started stabbing her. She was in bed."
Varner said detectives told her that her mother suffered a deep gash to the back of her head, a cut under her left eye and several stab wounds to the chest.
Police said they have not yet determined a motive for the attacks.
"There does not appear to be any definite relationships between the parties at this point," Peek said.
- Created on 17 June 2013
Supreme Court Strikes Down Citizenship Provision in Arizona Voter Law
(CNN) -- The Supreme Court on Monday tossed out a provision in Arizona's voter registration law that required proof of citizenship.
The 7-2 majority said the state's voter-approved Proposition 200 interfered with federal law designed to make voter registration easier.
The state called the provision a "sensible precaution" to prevent voter fraud. Civil rights group countered that it added an unconstitutional and burdensome layer of paperwork for tens of thousands of citizens.
Justice Antonin Scalia said the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 "forbids states to demand an applicant submit additional information beyond that required by the federal form."
But in a nod to state authority, he said the federal law "does not prevent states from denying registration based on any information in their possession establishing the applicant's eligibility."
The appeal was a classic federalism dispute, on the often delicate line between conflict and cooperation between state and federal governments over enforcing voting procedures. During last year's election, there were numerous court challenges to state voter identification laws at the polls. The current fight has produced a range of states, lawmakers and advocacy groups on both sides on the gateway issue of registration. The Obama Justice Department opposed the Arizona law, which went beyond what other states have done to ensure integrity in the registration system.
Retired justice Sandra Day O'Connor, an Arizona native, was among those who attended the spirited April oral arguments.
National Voter Registration Act
Justice Anthony Kennedy a year ago blocked the Arizona law from being enforced, while the high court decided internally whether to accept pending appeals for review. The ballot measure was passed in 2004 and has been lingering in the federal courts ever since.
The Constitution's Article I says "the times, places, and manners of holding elections for senators and representatives shall be prescribed in each state by the legislature." But Congress is also given the power "to make or alter such regulations."
Federal lawmakers did just that, passing the National Voter Registration Act two decades ago, which has since been called the Motor Voter Law, designed to streamline election participation.
It requires states to have any application for a driver's license treated also as a voter registration -- the "motor voter." And it requires states to "accept and use" mail-in and in-person applications. A federal Election Assistance Commission was created to produce a nationally uniform voter application form, which states must use. Any extra state instructions, or "add-ons," must be approved by the commission.
The question was whether certain extra instructions are permitted, and just how the federal from must be respected in the first place.
The majority said the mail-in postcard was presumptive evidence of registration and of qualification. Would-be voters would check off a box attesting they are a U.S. citizen, then sign the form under penalty of perjury.
The state said they had prosecuted cases of noncitizens registering to vote.
Dissenting justices
In a dissent, Justice Samuel Alito said the majority produced "truly strange results."
"What is a state to do if it has reason to doubt an applicant's eligibility but cannot be sure that the applicant is ineligible? Must the state either grant or deny registration without communicating with the applicant? Or does the court believe that a state may ask for additional information in individual cases but may not impose a categorical requirement for all applicants? If that is the Court's position, on which provision of the NVRA does it rely? The Court's reading of [federal law] is atextual and makes little sense."
Justice Clarence Thomas produced a separate dissent.
But Scalia and his six colleagues said that if the state were allowed to impose the additional requirements, "the federal form ceases to perform any meaningful function, and would feeble means of increasing the number of eligible citizens who register to vote in elections for federal office."
Registration problems
Among those bringing suit was Jesus Gonzalez, a public school employee in Yuma, Arizona, who tried to register to vote the day he became a citizen. His application was twice rejected when his separate naturalization and driver's license numbers were improperly "red-flagged" by state databases that initially indicated he was a noncitizen.
The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which helped bring the original lawsuit against the state regulations, said 31,000 potential voters had their applications rejected in the two years after the Arizona law took effect. MALDEF said 90% of those were born in the U.S.
The group's Nina Perales said voter registration drives at county fairs, church services and similar venues have dropped, since many potential voters don't bring the necessary citizenship documents -- like a birth certificate -- to these community events. One estimate found a 45% reduction in Maricopa County, the state's largest county and the seat of Phoenix, the capital.
The ACLU said about 13 million people nationwide lack documents proving their citizenship, and it praised Monday's ruling.
"This decision reaffirms the principle that states may not undermine this critical law's effectiveness by adding burdens not required under federal law," said Laughlin McDonald, of the group's Voting Rights Project. "In doing so, the court has taken a vital step in ensuring the ballot remains free, fair, and accessible for all citizens."
The Obama administration said that if the provision in Arizona's law were allowed to continue, it would create a mishmash of regulations across the county. "Each state could impose all manner of its own supplemental requirements beyond the federal form," Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. said.
What supporters have to say
But Proposition 200 supporters say the state needs the power to keep illegal immigrants and those ineligible to vote in the U.S. from getting a ballot.
"The integrity of our nation's elections suffered a blow today from the Supreme Court," Tom Fitton, president of the conservative Judicial Watch, said Monday. "This issue takes on increasing urgency with the prospect of 11 million illegal immigrants being given amnesty. It is essential that our elections be secured by ensuring that only citizens register to vote."
Some Arizona activists agreed. "I believe we must go out of our way to protect the integrity of America's elections, to avoid the fraud we see regularly in other nations, and which if not checked will rise up here in the United States," said Russell Pearce, a former state Senate president, who helped spearhead Proposition 200's passage. "It ought to be common sense that proof of citizenship be required for voter registration, especially given the concrete evidence we've seen that illegal aliens are indeed both registered and voting. But common sense and America's judicial system don't always see eye to eye, and this is one area we'll just have to keep working."
O'Connor has a professional stake in the current high court fight. As a retired justice, she can sit on lower appeals court cases, and she was part of a 9-2 majority to rule in 2010 that Arizona's citizenship requirement conflicted with federal law.
The Supreme Court case is Arizona v. Inter Tribal Council of Arizona (12-71).
- Created on 17 June 2013
NAACP Pleased with Supreme Court Ruling on National Voter Registration Act
On Monday, the NAACP released the following statement in response to the Supreme Court ruling that Arizona's proof of citizenship requirement is preempted by the federal law requiring states use the federal voter registration form:
"State government should encourage voting, not discourage it," said NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous. "The Supreme Court made the right decision to strike down Arizona's proof-of-citizenship law. We need to find innovative ways to make voting easier and more accessible for Americans, rather than coming up with new ways to suppress it."
"Any victory for the National Voting Rights Act is a victory for our voters," said Jotaka Eaddy, Senior Director, Voting Rights. "Today's decision reaffirms the importance of the National Voting Rights Act. It is a victory for voters and our Democracy."
Read the opinion of the case here:
http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/12pdf/12-71_7l48.pdf
- Created on 17 June 2013
Neighborhood Gun Sale Shooting Puts 6-Year-Old Boy in Hospital
Darious Calhoun, Jr., a 6-year-old boy, was caught in an illegal gun sale shooting Sunday before 8 p.m. near Mongo Circle and Monteel Drive in Atlanta while outside playing.
Witnesses said that when the would-be buyer didn't make a purchase, the shooting began.
"Gun shots, I just saw people running up the street," Anthony Dowdell told CBS Atlanta. "Somebody went up the street and started shooting at the vehicle. During the process the little kid who was riding the bike got shot."
Calhoun, Jr. was shot in the lower back and the bullet exited in the front.
"He was just shocked. He was feeling it. He was holding it and he was bleeding everywhere. He didn't want to say anything at all," Taquavious Dunlap, Calhoun's 14-year-old cousin, told CBS Atlanta.
Calhoun, Jr. is being treated at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta and police are still investigating the shooting. So far, no arrest has been made.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Previous versions of this story mistakenly reported that Calhoun was 8 years old.
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