Saturday, May 24, 2025

George Floyd's legacy under siege as racial justice efforts lose ground, memorials removedNew Foto - George Floyd's legacy under siege as racial justice efforts lose ground, memorials removed

Five years after her nephew's murder, what Angela Harrelson misses most is hearing her phone buzz and knowing he was calling. "He would call me and say, 'What's up, auntie? Just calling to check on you,' " Harrelson said. "And it made me feel so good." Harrelson affectionately refers to her nephew by his middle name, Perry, but the world knows him as George Floyd. In 2020, millions watched in horror as former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin pinned Floyd beneath his knee for 9 minutes and 29 seconds.The murder sparked a massive outpouring of griefand anger as protesters took to the streets with handcrafted signs echoing some of his last words, "I can't breathe."Amid violent clashes with police, they pressed on.Artists adorned their cities with his image, a sign of resolve and the impact of his death. The intersection where Floyd took his last breaths was transformed from a gas station and corner store into a living memorial. Now that the chaos and media frenzy have settled, Harrelson visits the area − known as George Floyd Square − several times a week. "It's a safe haven for me to sit and reflect on everything that has happened," she said. "And that includes the pain and the heartache." The future of the square has been a subject of heated debate. Across the nation, othermemorials honoring Floydand the Black Lives Matter movementhave been removed,vandalized,orfallen into disrepair. As symbols of Floyd's place in history have faded, so too havehopes for federal police reform,commitments to diversity, equity and inclusionandAmerican optimism about the future of racial justice. Just days before the anniversary of his death, May 25, the Department of Justice announcedit is ending investigations and retracting findings of wrongdoing against the Minneapolis Police Departmentas well as those in Phoenix; Oklahoma City; Memphis, Tennessee; Trenton, New Jersey; Mount Vernon, New York; and Louisiana. Family members and advocates are determined not to let the losses and the nation's shifting political winds erase Floyd's legacy. Many say preserving the last vestiges of the protest movement is a key part of continuing to push for change and recover from the deep pain caused by his death. Some say it's a battle cry − a time to retrench and recommit to the fight. "The country is actually regressing," said Aba Blankson, a spokesperson for the NAACP. "So as we say, the anniversary is not about grief or recovering from the trauma. It is about purpose and being dedicated and recommitting to ensuring that the country is open to diversity, equity and inclusion, that the country continues to maintain equal protection under the law, that the country teaches truth in history, that the country is not diminishing the rights of women and immigrants." Since Floyd's murder, the intersection of 38th and Chicago has become a sacred space. Two iconic murals were painted at the site, including a blue-and-yellow tribute on the side of the Cup Foods where Floyd was accused of spending a counterfeit $20 bill, prompting the fatal police response. The community installed a raised-fist sculpture at the center of the intersection and headstones engraved with the names of Black people killed by police. Residents erected barricades to keep traffic − and police − out until their demands for reform were met and to "figure out how to build this space as one of healing," according to Ashley Tyner, co-director of "The People's Way," a documentary film about the square. In 2021,the city removed the barricadesand began to formulate a long-term plan for the area. Officials spent countless hours consulting with community members, in part, because one of the city's busiest bus routes runs through the square. "We knew as a city staff, as a community, that we needed to be incredibly thoughtful about this sacred space to create a vision that would be endured and appreciated for really decades and centuries," Alexander Kado, the city's senior project manager, said. They ended up with a proposal for a flexible, open layout that would allow traffic to flow unless officials closed part of the intersection for a special event. The plan would preserve space for Floyd's family to erect a permanent memorial in the spot where he took his last breaths and find someone to take over the former Speedway gas station, a property purchased by the city and dubbed thePeoples' Way. But the Minneapolis City Council rejected the plan and proposed that the city explore another option instead: establishing a pedestrian mall that would permanently close one leg of the intersection. Then-Mayor Jacob Frey vetoed that proposal. Thecouncil overrode Frey's veto in February. Council member Robin Wonsley said allowing traffic would "erase" the history of the square. "The way in which the city is approaching that is saying, essentially, 'Let's run buses up and down that same street. Let's run buses and cars across the very place where George Floyd was killed.' And that, for me, is a signal of erasure,"Wonsley saidduring one city council meeting. But Andrea Jenkins, who represents the area and supports the city's plan, said residents around the square want vehicle traffic. She pointed to a survey by the Center for Urban and Regional Affairs at the University of Minnesota that found about70% of residents in the surrounding neighborhoods preferred full transportation access in the square. For now, the fate of the square remains in limbo. A final decision won't be made for months and construction likely won't be complete until at least 2027. Jenkins told USA TODAY she wants the space to be one where businesses, public transit and a national memorial to victims of police brutality can coexist. "I would like it to be a space that honors the art and the artifacts that have been left at George Floyd Square, but also as a space for new work to be presented." People from around the world come to the square, leaving behind flowers, balloons, signs and artwork. Residents like Leesa Kelly have stepped up to serve as caretakers and archivists of these "offerings." Kelly, executive director ofMemorialize the Movement,said she was particularly moved by murals painted on the plywood businesses used to board up their windows during the 2020 protests. As demonstrations died down, she began to worry, "Will businesses keep them? Will they throw them out?" So Kelly began collecting the murals and eventually amassed over 1,000 pieces. She said they depict many facets of Floyd's life, including one that features his daughter and another a message from his partner. "It's just been really beautiful to see how we've been able to take something so tragic and still be able to build something powerful and impactful for our community," she said. The murals have been exhibited in universities and gallery spaces around the Twin Cities. Art from the square has also begun to make its way across the country. Rashad Shabazz, a historical cultural geographer at Arizona State University, helped bring hundreds of signs, posters and artwork from the protests to Phoenix in 2024. Shabazz, a former Minneapolis resident, said thousands of people, including members of the Floyd family,visited the Arizona State University Art Museum exhibit, which he called "one of the most important legacies" to come from the movement. He said it is crucial for institutions like museums to put the items on display − whether they be carefully painted portraits or messages hastily scrawled on pizza boxes. "The offerings are stories, and preservation of them is a preservation of the story," he said. "And in doing that, we add those stories to our collective understanding of the world we live in, that moment in time. And they serve as lessons. If we listen to them, we might learn something." While some work to preserve memories of the movement,others have found symbolic and substantive ways to try and erase it. One by one, memorials to Floyd and the Black Lives Matter movement have come down in recent years, including inWashington;Des Moines;Indianapolis;Salt Lake City; Santa Barbara, California;andAsheville, North Carolina. A pushjump-started by Floyd's deathto remove or rename Confederate memorials has slowed to a trickle. In early 2024, only two had been removed, compared to nearly 170 in 2020, according to a recent report from the Southern Poverty Law Center. More than 2,000 Confederate symbols remain, and some have recently been restored, includingthe Confederate names of two Virginia schoolsthat were changed during the racial reckoning of 2020. After theSupreme Court in 2023 struck down race-based affirmative action admissions at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the precedent has had far-reaching implications for the racial justice movement. Citingthe decision, PresidentDonald Trumpwiped out diversity initiatives across the federal governmentand urgedschoolsandbusinessesto follow suitdespite pledges made after Floyd's murder. In Minnesota, leaders arebracing for the possibility that Trump will pardon Chauvin, who is serving concurrentstateandfederal prison sentencesfor murder, violating Floyd's constitutional rights and other crimes. Trump has said heisn't consideringa federal pardon for Chauvin, though aides haveraised the idea. Changing the narrative:How Trump 2.0 is reframing George Floyd and the 2020 protests The DOJ announced in Januarythat it had reached a court-enforceable agreement known asa consent decreewith the city of Minneapolis to make systemic changes to its police department after a federal investigation sparked by Floyd's murder founda pattern of civil rights violations. Harmeet Dhillon, the assistant attorney general for the department's Civil Rights Division, announced on May 21 thatthe government would abandon those effortsand retract the department's findings in Minneapolis and a host of other cities, including Louisville, Kentucky, wherethe 2020 police killing of Breonna Taylor drew outrage. Amid all the changes, Americans are feeling increasingly pessimistic about gains in racial justice, if any, since 2020 and the possibility that Black Americans will ever have equal rights, according to Kiana Cox, a senior researcher at Pew Research Center. "The majority of Americans think that the attention that the country paid to race as a result of George Floyd's murder was a watershed moment," she said. "But when we asked the more specific question, 'Do you think that attention actually resulted in changes to Black people's lives?' we get a different story." In 2023, 40% of respondents said such changes had happened. But in 2025,just 27% said the same. Still, Harrelson said the current political climate can't erase her nephew's lasting legacy. "It has not changed how people feel about what happened five years ago. They still carry that pain. They still carry that weight," she said. Harrelson said she sees Floyd's impact each time she visits the square, where dozens of their family members and thousands of others will soon gather for athree-day festival in his honor. The annual celebration will include live music, a church service, and community discussions about racism, police reform and grief called "Perry Talks." But Harrelson's favorite part is taking a quiet moment to think about her nephew during the candlelight vigil. "I hope I'm doing right by his legacy the best I can," she said. Contributing:Phillip M. Baileyand Savannah Kuchar This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:George Floyd legacy under siege as reform stalls, memorials disappear

George Floyd’s legacy under siege as racial justice efforts lose ground, memorials removed

George Floyd's legacy under siege as racial justice efforts lose ground, memorials removed Five years after her nephew's murder, wha...
A tsunami that never ends? Study highlights a looming West Coast risk.New Foto - A tsunami that never ends? Study highlights a looming West Coast risk.

The pressure keeps building below the Earth's surface off the coast of the Pacific Northwest, and a multi-layered disaster could strike at any time. A huge earthquake is brewing along theCascadia Subduction Zonethat could destroy bridges, reshape the landscape and trigger a massive tsunami. Scientists have known about the looming danger for years, but ongoing research keeps painting a clearer picture of what could happen. Among the dangers: A huge tsunami that will wash over costal areas and permanently flood them. The quake is a matter of if, not when, said Tina Dura, a geologist and professor of natural hazards at Virginia Polytechnic Institute in Blacksburg, Virginia. Recent research has focused on howclimate changeis increasing the impact of the earthquakeon coastal areas that will suddenly sink. Researchers expect the quake will trigger an as much a 6-foot drop in some inland areas — then a massive tsunami will flood those regions, some permanently. "Imagine if, after Hurricane Katrina, after all the horrible things that happened, if we'd also lost big chunks of New Orleans and it never came back," said Diego Melgar, a professor at the University of Oregon and director of the Cascadia Region Earthquake Science Center. The loss of swaths of land is just one of the surreal series of events that will occur when the earthquake eventually strikes, researchers say. This is a mix of bad and good news. The quake is a certainty, but could be hundreds of years off. While it could happen at any time, seismologists have estimated there isa 15% probability of a magnitude 8in the next 50 years — a substantial risk for such a devastating scenario. Part of their confidence comes from the history of huge earthquakes in the region. "It could be tomorrow or decades from now. But geologically speaking, we're well within the window of possibility," Dura said. "The last event was in 1700, and paleoseismic records show these earthquakes recur roughly every 200 to 800 years. By 2100, there is a 30% chance of a large earthquake happening." Scientists have a clear picture of what will happen when the earthquake strikes. "First would come extremely strong shaking – shaking that makes it difficult to stand or walk. This would probably last a minute or longer," said Melgar. Next, land along the coast would drop as much as six-and-a-half feet in places, probably within minutes. "Then there would probably be 30 to 40 minutes of seeming peace. But that's a false impression, because the tsunami is coming," he said. The resulting waves would be on the order of the2004 Indian Ocean tsunamithat killed more than 50,000 people. The tsunami wave from an earthquake of this size could get to 90 or 100 feet tall, Melgar said. When the tsunami wave arrives at the shore "you get this massive surge that lasts for hours, sometimes days," Melgar said. This is where global warming comes in. Two things play a part in creating the catastrophe their research describes. First, the land would have dropped as much as six feet. At the same time,sea level rise from climate changemeans that the water which rushes in will cover more land. "You'd hope the tsunami could come to shore, then flow out again and the land would dry out. But there will be parts where it's now below sea level – the water won't flow back," said Melgar. A great Cascadia earthquake could instantly expand flood zones and double flood exposure for residents, structures, and roads. When combined with rising sea levels, these effects could render some coastal communities permanently uninhabitable, said Dura. Even if some areas along the coastline do dry out, they will be much closer to sea level and becomesusceptible to nuisance floodingif there's a particularly big storm or high tide. The West Coast is subject to numerous small earthquakes all the time, but they're not big enough to relieve the pressure that's being built up along the Cascadia fault line, Melgar said. So much energy has built up in the zone that even a magnitude 8 earthquake wouldn't relieve it. "Remember, the magnitude scale is logarithmic. So each increase in magnitude is an increase of 30 in terms of energy," he said. The great San Francisco earthquake of 1906 was a magnitude 8 temblor and it was devastating. "If we had one magnitude 8 quake here, we'd still have 29 to go to relieve the pressure," he said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:A tsunami that never ends? Study highlights a West Coast risk.

A tsunami that never ends? Study highlights a looming West Coast risk.

A tsunami that never ends? Study highlights a looming West Coast risk. The pressure keeps building below the Earth's surface off the coa...
How a bold mass escape exploited a New Orleans jail's security failuresNew Foto - How a bold mass escape exploited a New Orleans jail's security failures

The path to freedom began behind a toilet. After midnight on May 16, inmates at the New Orleans city jail forced open the door of a first-floor cell and crammed inside. At the back, inmates had wrenched a metal bathroom fixture from the wall, exposing a narrow hole where steel bars were sawed off. On the other side was a walkway leading to a loading dock. The timing was perfect. A jail worker had cut off water to the cell, which allowed the inmates to dislodge the toilet without a telltale flood. There was no deputy patrolling the housing area as there should have been, and a civilian employee whose job was to monitor inmates' movements had reportedly stepped away for food. The group assembled in Cell 6 included men who had been held in the Orleans Justice Center for months or years, many of them accused of terrible crimes. One had been convicted in October of killing two people during a 2018 Mardi Gras celebration and was waiting for a likely sentence of life in prison. Two others were awaiting trial on murder charges, another two on attempted murder. A couple of them had previously escaped other lockups. Now, they were pulling offone of the biggest jailbreaksin Louisiana history, an audacious feat that exploited long-documented failures in the local criminal justice system, including the jail's inability to properly supervise high-risk inmates. The escape spread anxiety through one of America's most beloved tourist cities, opening new wounds for victims' relatives and forcing some into hiding. And it prompted finger-pointing among a Republican governor and local Democratic officials, with much of the heat falling on Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson, who was elected in 2021 as a progressive reformer but has been criticized for falling short on federally mandated improvements at the jail, including regular security checks. While the investigation continues, it's already clear that no one was able to stop the 10 inmates in Cell 6. The men, ranging in age from 19 to 42, some wearing orange jail uniforms and others in long, white pants and T-shirts, each shimmied through the hole, some pausing to leave taunting messages on the wall. "To easy LOL," one wrote. They leapt off the loading dock and made it to a barbed-wire fence, which they scaled with blankets. Then they dashed across an interstate and slipped into the night. It was about 1:30 a.m. Another seven hours passed before the regular morning head count revealed that the 10 men were missing from Pod 1-D. By then, they were long gone. Dawn Cook, a truck driver, was at the wheel of her rig that Friday morning when she got a call from someone at the Orleans Parish District Attorney's Office telling her Corey Boyd, the man accused of killing her son last year, had broken out of jail. "He said there'd been an escape," Cook, 71, recalled. "He didn't have any details." Around the same time, she also got an automated text from a jail messaging system notifying her that Boyd, who was charged with murder, was no longer in custody. If she needed help, it said, call 911. The news made her more mad than scared. On April 29, 2024, her son, "Mister" Brandon Fees, was on a porch in the Marigny neighborhood with his girlfriend when they saw a group of people breaking into cars, according to police. Fees, 38, confronted them. They argued, and one of the suspects shot Fees. Boyd then struck Fees with a car, authorities said. Boyd, 19, who pleaded not guilty, had been in jail for nearly a year before he escaped, and the case was nowhere near going to trial. The killing was caught on surveillance footage, but it took four months for Boyd to be indicted, and since then the case has been slowed by postponements and arguments over the sharing of evidence. The holdups infuriated her. "I've been angry for a year now," Cook said. "There's a lot more to this than this escape. This is just too much." Delays in criminal cases are a chronic problem in New Orleans — and many other areas of the country — due in large part to backlogs created when the pandemic shut down courts. The difficulties in New Orleans go even deeper. The jail has been under federal scrutiny for overcrowding, understaffing, defective technology and malfunctioning doors; a court-appointed monitor cited the jail last year for failing to separate inmates who were violent or at risk of escape and for leaving housing units unsupervised for hours at a time. Hutsonresponded that the jail had improved in some areas, including training, and said she had about half of the staff members she would need to run the jail optimally. At last count, more than half the 1,400 or so inmates at the Orleans Justice Centerwere charged with a violent crime, more than 200 of them charged with a homicide. At 10:30 a.m.on May 16, after authorities knew for sure who was missing and had talked to their alleged victims, officials released word of the jailbreak to the public. By that point, federal, state and local law enforcement had launched an enormous manhunt, tapping into the city's network of cameras equipped with facial recognition software. The escapees had scattered. A surveillance camera spotted Kendell Myles, 20 — charged in a carjacking that left a man seriously wounded —walking in the French Quarterjust before 10 a.m. in a dark hoodie and jeans, according to local NBC affiliate WDSU. Police later found him hiding under a car in a hotel parking garage and arrested him after a short chase, officials said. Robert Moody, 21, who is facing battery, weapons and drug charges, fled south, making it about 2 miles before authorities captured him with help from aCrimestopperstip. Two more inmates were later caught farther afield, 8 to 10 miles northeast of the jail. Then, on Tuesday, Cook got a call from the district attorney's office telling her that Boyd, the man accused of killing her son, had been captured. She had mixed feelings: happy he was back in custody, but not much closer to justice. "It's going to take so long for them to do anything," Cook said. By the end of the week, half of the inmates remained at large. They included the Mardi Gras killer, Derrick Groves, convicted of opening fire on a 2018 Fat Tuesday party, killing Jamar Robinson, 26, and Byron Jackson, 21. Groves and a co-defendant were first found guilty in 2019, but a new law requiring unanimous jury verdicts forced a 2023 retrial, which collapsed when a juror broke court rules by reading news accounts of the case. A second trial that year ended with a deadlocked jury. Finally, in October 2024,a new jury found them guilty. Groves' escape galled Robinson's relatives. The family said in a statement that they heard about it from neighbors at 9 a.m. on May 16, before anyone in law enforcement reached out to them. "This breakdown in communication has only deepened our grief and added to the pain we are already enduring," the family said. As a precaution, the family temporarily left the city. The relatives accused Hutson, the sheriff, and her jail staff of allowing the escape to happen. "We say 'allowed' because these inmates were essentially handed a 'Get Out of Jail Free' card, as if this were a game," the family said. Prosecutors who tried Groves also left town with their families over the weekend, Orleans District Attorney Jason Williams said. "Any family member who is scared or frustrated, they have every right to be because this should not have happened," Williams said at a Monday news conference. "And if it happened at 1 a.m. they should have been notified at 1:30, because they were in harm's way." As the searchwore on, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry demanded an investigation by the state attorney general and answers on why some of the escapees' criminal cases had dragged on for more than a year. He signed an executive order to track cases in Orleans and other "high crime areas," saying some of the escapees had been kept in the jail for far too long. "Had they gone to trial, had they been convicted, had they been sentenced, they would most likely not be in Orleans Parish jail, but in the custody of one of the state penitentiaries," Landry, a Republican, said at a news conference. Williams, who has said the delays aren't the fault of the district attorney's office, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The escape itself raised grave questions about jail operations. Among them: How were the inmates able to leave their cells in the middle of the night, force open the door to Cell 6, tear out the bathroom fixture and cut steel bars — and escape through the loading dock under the watch of security cameras — without anyone raising an alarm? Jail protocols under the federal monitor require a deputy on each housing pod around the clock and a supervisor to perform regular checks, said Rafael C. Goyeneche III, president of the Metropolitan Crime Commission, a private organization that researches the New Orleans-area criminal justice system. "That means someone should have gone onto that pod, looked in every cell and seen if everyone who was supposed to be in the cells were there," Goyeneche said. "Obviously that didn't happen." Goyeneche said the jail appears to have missed several opportunities — mandated security rounds, camera surveillance, door-lock monitoring, Friday-morning breakfast service — to notice the escape. These questions fall to Hutson, a lawyer and former police monitor in Los Angeles and New Orleans who did not have experience as a jailer before she became the first Black female sheriff in Louisiana. Since the escape, she has faced criticism from Landry and local officials in her own party,including Williams and members of the city council. Hutson, who temporarily suspended her re-election campaign this week and did not respond to a request for comment, has admitted to "procedural failures and missed notifications" and said that the escapees had help from her staff. She said she suspended three employees without pay, and one civilian worker was arrested on charges he cut water from the cell's pipes prior to the breakout. The worker, Sterling Williams,told investigatorsthat one of the escapees, Antoine Massey, threatened to shank him if he did not turn the water off, court papers say. But Williams' lawyer gave a different story, saying his client was asked by a deputyto help fix a clogged toiletin the cell — and was not part of any plan to help the inmates. And on Friday, authorities arrested a current inmate, Trevon D. Williams, on charges related to the escape. It is not clear what role he allegedly played. The men alsohad helpafter they broke out, according to police. Two women have been charged with giving two fugitives rides around New Orleans. Another allegedly got Boyd food while he was holed up in a house. A fourth gave escapee Jermaine Donald, who is charged with aggravated battery and remains on the run, money through Cash App, police said. And a fifth personwas arrested Friday, accused of aiding the escapees. As the New Orleans manhunt continued, a new one began about 70 miles north. Tra'Von Johnson, charged with murder in a deadly home invasion,escaped the Tangipahoa Parish Jailon Thursday afternoon after another inmate boosted him over a fence, authorities said. The local sheriff's office said it didn't discover the breakout until five hours later, when someone called asking if the man was still in custody. This was the second time Johnson, 22, has escaped the jail in the past year.

How a bold mass escape exploited a New Orleans jail’s security failures

How a bold mass escape exploited a New Orleans jail's security failures The path to freedom began behind a toilet. After midnight on May...
Fear and anger in New Orleans turn to calls for action over jail escape: 'Get it together'New Foto - Fear and anger in New Orleans turn to calls for action over jail escape: 'Get it together'

NEW ORLEANS — About 18 hours after10 inmates broke out of jailonly a mile away, Lakisha Catchings' neighbor ran up the wooden stairs to the house she shares with her children. "The police just got a fugitive," she recalled her neighbor saying, pointing down the street. "It's so close," Catchings replied, stunned. In the week since the May 16 jailbreak and resulting manhunt, the mother of eight hasremained hunkered downin her New Orleans neighborhood, dotted in places by rutted streets, threadbare wood-frame homes on stilts, corner stores and small churches. She stays mostly inside asfive of the 10 escapees, some charged with or convicted of violent offenses, remain at large. But as the fugitive search continues into Memorial Day weekend, her fears are increasingly giving way to frustration, anger and a desire for accountability for putting her family in jeopardy. "How did they let this happen?" said Catchings, 44, as she stood near her front door, a welcome sign hanging to one side. Police officials have said they believe some of the fugitives are still in the city. Amid rewards of $20,000 for tips leading to an apprehension, more than 200 law enforcement personnel led by the Louisiana State Police are seeking to capture them and anyone helping them. On May 22, a third woman was charged for aiding two of the 10 inmates who escaped from the jail known as the Orleans Justice Center, according to police. One jail maintenance worker has also been charged amid several investigations into the escapes at the jail operated by the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office A spokesperson for Sheriff Susan Hutson's office has not responded to requests for comment but previously said she took "full accountability" for the breach. In Catchings' neighborhood, where some residents were avoiding gatherings this weekend, the escape has resurfaced underlying concerns about crime and a jail that has faced staffing shortages and overcrowding. And it has brought new reminders of city's history of law enforcement misconduct. In 1996, a corrupt patrol officer was convicted of ordering the killing of Kim Groves, the grandmother of escapee Derrick Groves,NOLA.comreported. Derrick Groves, convicted last year for second-degree murder, remains on the loose and has ledtwo prosecutors to flee the state for fear of reprisals. The Department of Justice said last year that the New Orleans police have improved substantially since 2011, when it found evidence of misconduct and bias, including unconstitutional arrests. Neighborhood resident Sidney O'Connor, Jr. said he knows people in jail and doesn't wonder why they'd want to escape. He isn't worried that the escapees will commit crimes because he figures they want to lay low and avoid being sent back. Others said they hoped investigations and reviews of the jail, including one being conducted by the Louisiana attorney general, would uncover problems that needed solving. "It wasn't built right," said Lawrence Wicker, 82, as he completed a crossword puzzle on a folded newspaper at his home. His son, Ron J. Wicker,  57, smoked a cigar on a bench outside the family home they've owned and lived in since the 1940s. It was right next door on May 16 that Ron Wicker saw a flood of unmarked police cars suddenly descend to capture on of the escaped prisoners.  Authorities were soon putting Robert Moody, 21, who was being held on drug and weapon charges, in custody. Wicker didn't know how long he'd been hiding there. "I couldn't believe he was next door," he said. Not far away, Lacy Favaroth, 34, said she, too, has changed her routine amid the escapes, keeping her child inside. She's seen some police and unmarked law enforcement vehicles since, but was unnerved by one that seemed to follow her on an errand. "I've been kind of scared," she said. "I'm not walking my dog at night at all." Favaroth said the jailbreak was confounding because it occurred at a facility opened in 2015 to replace aging lockups. But it also tapped into deeper concerns about the root causes that were filling jails, such as insufficient investment in youth programs. Jobs for teens are harder to get than when she was young, she said. "Youth have less to do to keep people out of trouble," she said. Even as some residents shrug off the dangers, Catchings said she's worried about her children, who range in age from 9 to 28. And she's waiting for accountability, including why it took so long to discover the escape – authorities were alerted to the 1 a.m. escape during an 8:30 a.m. headcount – and why she didn't hear about it until two hours after that. She says the sheriff "has got to go." "They gotta get it together. Crime is everywhere," she said. "But to be at your front door? That's scary." These days, Catchings is not working so she can help take care of her grandchild. One of her sons, "a Katrina Baby" born in a city devastated byHurricane Katrinain 2005, was about to graduate high school. She said they'd probably go out to eat rather than hold a party, given the manhunt that seemed like it would continue through Memorial Day weekend. Out front of her home here, a red charcoal barbecue sat unused. For now, she'd continue to hunker down. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:New Orleans jail escape has residents angry, calling for action

Fear and anger in New Orleans turn to calls for action over jail escape: 'Get it together'

Fear and anger in New Orleans turn to calls for action over jail escape: 'Get it together' NEW ORLEANS — About 18 hours after10 inma...
Judge rules Trump administration must work to return asylum seeker from Guatemala who was wrongfully deportedNew Foto - Judge rules Trump administration must work to return asylum seeker from Guatemala who was wrongfully deported

The Trump administration has been ordered to facilitate the return of a Guatemalan man who was wrongly deported to Mexico in February, after he told authorities about his fears of violence and torture across the border. This case marks at least the third time the administration has been ordered to return a migrant it wrongfully deported. The Guatemalan man, identified as "O.C.G," sought asylum in the United States in 2024, after "suffering multiple violent attacks" in Guatemala, according to court documents. On his way to the US, O.C.G. said, he was raped and held for ransom in Mexico –– a detail he made known to an immigration judge before the judge ruled he should not be sent back to his native country, the documents read. Two days after he received status, however, the man was forced by immigration authorities onto a bus to Mexico, without having a chance to explain the nuances of his case or contact his lawyer. Mexican authorities then deported him to Guatemala where he says he lives "in constant fear of his attackers," according to the documents. O.C.G.'s removal to Mexico and subsequently Guatemala likely "lacked due process," US District Judge Brian Murphy said in his ruling released Friday night. During his immigration proceedings, O.C.G. said he feared being sent to Mexico, but the judge told him that since Mexico isn't his native country, he can't be sent there without additional steps in the process, the ruling said. "Those necessary steps, and O.C.G.'s pleas for help, were ignored. As a result, O.C.G. was given up to Mexico, which then sent him back to Guatemala, where he remains in hiding today," Murphy said. "No one has ever suggested that O.C.G poses any sort of security threat," Murphy noted. "In general, this case presents no special facts or legal circumstances, only the banal horror of a man being wrongfully loaded onto a bus and sent back to a county where he was allegedly just raped and kidnapped." Murphy's ruling came days after an appeals courtdenied the Trump administration's requestto put on hold an order requiring it to facilitate the return of a 20-year-old Venezuelan migrant wrongly deported to El Salvador earlier this year. "Cristian," as he was identified in court documents, was among a group of migrants who were deported in mid-March under the Alien Enemies Act, a sweeping 18th Century wartime authority Trump invoked to speed up removals of individuals it claims are members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. During a hearing earlier this month, US District Judge Stephanie Gallagher said officials had done virtually nothing to comply with her directive that they "facilitate" Cristian's return to the US from the mega-prison in El Salvador where he was sent so he can have his asylum application resolved. In a similar case, the Trump administration has been in astandoffwith another federal judge in Maryland over her order that it facilitate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man who was mistakenly deported in March. Abrego Garcia was also sent to the El Salvador prison, known as CECOT, in violation of a 2019 court order that said he could not be deported to that country. US District Judge Paula Xinis, who is overseeing the case, has facedrepeated stonewallingfrom the Justice Department and members of the Trump administration, who have continued to thwart an "expedited fact-finding" search for answers on what officials are doing to facilitate his return from El Salvador. CNN's Devan Cole and Angélica Franganillo Díaz contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Judge rules Trump administration must work to return asylum seeker from Guatemala who was wrongfully deported

Judge rules Trump administration must work to return asylum seeker from Guatemala who was wrongfully deported The Trump administration has b...

 

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