Jamala Rogers
Black Jurors Matter Campaign
Complete form on employer’s support of jury duty.
Endorse Black Jurors Matter here.
Check out the next Black Jurors Matter Teach-In on the OBS Calendar.
There’s lots of screwin’ going down by MO DOC
More sickening news of a former guard in the Missouri prison system receiving a settlement for sexual harassment. TVs purchased through the canteen by prisoners are defective and no recourse is being offered by the prison administration. Women employees gettin’ screwed. Prisoners gettin’ screwed. Taxpayers gettin’ screwed.Tina Gallego was awarded $800k for the horrific treatment by her fellow guards including trying to poison her. The award adds to the growing list of settlements by women who were employed by the Missouri Department of Corrections. Taxpayers are now on the hook for more the $52 millions in payoffs to settle cases like this across state agencies. If they treat guards like shit, you know what happens to the men and women in cages.
Here is OBS’s letter to Anne Precythe, Director of Corrections, regarding the television rip off.
Make St. Louis White Again
No Excuse for Forgetting Black St. Louis, a commentary by Jamala Rogers and Walter Johnson.
Still Fighting for Justice!
#ChargeTheOfficers We need your to write letters to the Circuit Attorney’s office demanding they reopen the #CaryBallJr case against the 2 officers who shot and killed him.
Celebrate Juneteenth!
Sabayet Annual Juneteenth Celebration
Saturday, June 16, 2018
4000 Maffit Ave. (at Sarah Street)
10 am – 6 pm
Free & Open to the Public
Open Letter to Ferguson Police Chief Knowles
The City of Ferguson simply needs to do better when it comes to rectifying the unconstitutional policing that was exposed by the 2014 Ferguson Uprising and the March 4, 2015 Department of Justice’s report on the Ferguson Police Department report. Half-measures currently being implemented are not enough to make whole again the people victimized by the city’s past conduct. Ferguson’s reluctance to solve these problems fully and completely impact our neighbors’ ability to live, work, and raise their children in our community and could well affect citizens’ right to vote this August.
As documented in the Department of Justice’s report on our city’s practices, in the years preceding 2014, Ferguson created and carried out a scheme to generate revenue on the backs of the community – primarily people of color living in Ferguson and the surrounding area. This has resulted in thousands of lingering cases and outstanding warrants that continue to reinforce the city’s unconstitutional practices. For this reason, the Consent Decree between the DOJ and the City of Ferguson requires that Ferguson eliminate all charges, fines, and fees for Failure to Appear violations and review the other lingering cases from before 2014 to see if they too should be dismissed.
Ferguson is still reviewing the pending cases initiated prior to 2014. Due to pressure from the Ferguson Collaborative, the city has dismissed a majority of the outstanding cases by changing the good cause standard, including those for Driving with a Suspended License stemming from the city’s unconstitutional revenue-generating system.
The City of Ferguson must take immediate action to correct the harms that the Failure to Appear warrants have caused. For example, a valid driver’s license is most often the only photo I.D. that Ferguson’s citizens have to comply with new voter I.D. laws, yet those whose licenses are suspended do not have valid ID. The city should be doing everything possible to get wrongly suspended licenses reinstated and back into the hands of the people from whom they were unconstitutionally taken.
To truly end this ongoing crisis in real people’s lives, the Ferguson Collaborative is demanding that the City adopt some solutions.
The city must dismiss all remaining municipal cases and associated warrants from pre-January 1, 2014, non-adjudicated cases; there are approximately 2,000 outstanding cases that have not been dismissed.
The citizens with lingering court issues and suspended licenses are in a constant state of anxiety. Citizens are subject to continued employment challenges and economic burdens.
Citizens with suspended licenses may not have access to alternative identification and so are negatively impacted by an inability to vote, a right of citizenship.
The city must notify all persons who have had their cases dismissed.
Citizens should have knowledge of their ability to reinstate licenses and resume driving. Citizens have a right to know that they are eligible to vote. Citizens need and deserve appropriate, legal identification. Notification should be mailed to all last known addresses, with further postings on the city’s website and in the Ferguson Times. Notifications shall include a clear description of the remedial processes spelled out below.
The city must create a clear, publicized, and fast process to facilitate the process of Missouri’s reinstatement of all licenses that were suspended for all cases that have been dismissed.
Citizens who have lost driving privileges and their form of voter ID should immediately have their licenses reinstated. The city must provide detailed information regarding the process to reinstate a driver’s license.
The city must create a transparent and easy process for people to obtain letters of compliance.
The city must establish a voucher system to pay for license reinstatement for ALL citizens that have been negatively impacted by a suspended license.
The city should pay for license reinstatements for citizens whose licenses were suspended due to the city municipal court’s unconstitutional practices and reimburse all citizens who have already paid the cost of having a suspended license reinstated.
Citizens should have violations against them corrected at no cost.
Citizens who lost their privilege to drive, right to vote and access to legal identification because of an unconstitutional process that illegally stripped them of rights and benefits should not be economically liable to regain these rights and benefits.
Citizens should have the harm caused by unconstitutional, predatory policing practices appropriately addressed at no cost to the victims.
The Ferguson Collaborative hopes to meet with city officials to discuss and resolve these matters within the next week. If we cannot come to an adequate solution quickly, we will begin exploring other means of enforcing a just result for a community still suffering from the after-effects of earlier injustices, and suffering as well from the current failures of city government to live up to its responsibilities.
Endorsed by: ACLU of Missouri, Advancement Project, ArchCity Defenders, Coalition Against Police Crimes and Repression, Ethical Society of Police, Greater Saint Marks Church, Organization for Black Struggle, St. Louis Action Council, St. Louis University Civil Litigation Clinic, Young Voices With Action.
MO Legislative Update
Locally
Board Bill 234 establishes an Independent Force Investigative Unit within the Circuit Attorney’s office for criminal conduct within the SLPD will be re-introduced this legislative session.
OBS Testimony on the City Budget
Testimony to Ways & Means Committee Hearing on the City Budget
Jamala Rogers, Organization for Black Struggle
June 2, 2018
Good Morning Distinguished Members of the Committee. I appreciate the opportunity to come before you today.
For the last several years, the Organization for Black Struggle –in collaboration with our partners in the Coalition Against Police Crimes and Repression—have been facilitating a community engagement campaign on “Reenvisioning Public Safety.” The goals of the campaign were to take our public consciousness past crime-fighting (reactive) to addressing the root causes of crime (proactive and preventive). The knee-jerk response to crime in our city is to shout more police. That is not the only answer to our crime problems and our current situation is a testament to this fact.