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December 2007 Archives

December 4, 2007

Brad Pitt's Make It Right Campaign

This week, actor Brad Pitt launched an ambitious campaign to build 150 homes in the devastated Lower Ninth Ward. Properties close to the Industrial Canal are cloaked in pink as part of the "Make It Right" project.

Unfortunatelty, Pitt's people chose a convicted felon to be the face of the program at the unveiling ceremony on Monday. 52-year old Robert Green gave an emotional speech about his two family members who died in Katrina's flood waters and how he was looking forward to getting a new home.

Green pleaded guilty earlier this year to preparing false tax returns in connection with fraudulent FHA loan applications at Citywide Mortgage in New Orleans. He is set to be sentenced up to 5 years in February.

Pitt's people say the actor had no idea about Green's criminal record.

Do you think this will hurt fundraising efforts for the "Make It Right" campaign? Was Pitt the victim of poor planning?

December 6, 2007

"I thought he was out putting nooses out or something."

As Kenner Mayor Ed Muniz was addressing a group of Kenner business professionals, he began introducing some of the government workers present.

When he came to a the city attorney who he did not see in the room at the time, he remarked, "Where is he? There he is... I thought he was out putting nooses out or something."

Nervous laughter came from the audience -- nervous because the topic of nooses has been a delicate one lately, especially with parish governments.

The speech was videotaped by KTV 76. You can see Muniz's comments here in this report by ABC 26 reporter Sheldon Fox.

Muniz said over the phone that he was praising his city attorney for working the noose hanging incident in Kenner and he meant no harm.

Danatus King of the local chapter of the NAACP says Muniz may have intended for his comments to be a joke. But he also held up a picture of lynched black man, hanged to death, and said, "The reality of it is we don't have to deal with intent. The mayor of the city is making light of this hate symbol. This symbol of terror -- a noose, and that's wrong."

What do you think? Are we becoming too sensitive when it comes to subject of race? Or, is the symbol of the noose so strong that it should never be treated as a lightly?

Some background.

The case of six black teens in Jena, Louisiana -- called the Jena 6 -- brought nooses back into the public view. In 2006, the six black teens were accused of beating a fellow white student at Jena High School. Five were charged with second degree murder.

Mychal Bell, one of the teens, was tried as an adult - though he was a juvenile at the time of the beating incident. He was convicted of second degree murder.

The beating of the white student, Justin Barker, happened as racial tensions built in the small town. Several incidents involving conflict between whites and blacks followed the hanging of a noose in a tree at Jena High School. School officials say the noose hanging was a prank and had nothing to do with Barker's beating.

After Bell's conviction, tens of thousands of people marched in Jena, protesting what they said was unfair treatment of the teens. The conviction was later overturned, and Bell was ordered to be tried as a juvenile. He is in jail right now, but his lawyer recently worked out a deal to get him out in eight months. The other five teens await trial.

In November of this year, Jefferson Parish worker Terrence Lee claimed his supervisors displayed racist images at work. One of those images appeared to be a noose. Parish officials investigated and determined the noose-like rope, dartboard and bullwhip displayed were offensive and employees should have taken them down. The parish suspended six workers and the FBI is investigating.

Yesterday, New Orleans City Councilman Arnie Fielkow withdrew a proposed hate crime law that would have made displaying a noose punishable by law.

Is the noose that strong a symbol to incite beatings, to incite laws banning its display?

December 10, 2007

Rescuing The Rescuers

Actor Denis Leary's Firefighters Foundation, volunteer labor from the Carpenters Council of New York City and corporate sponsors like Frigidaire teamed up to reopen 4 firehouses in New Orleans. The city lost 22 of 33 firehouses during Katrina.

City leaders could not or would not make rebuilding first responder facilities a top priority. If not for donated materials and labor, firefighters would still be in trailers and their firehouses gutted and unusable, more than two years after the storm.

The Leary Foundation vowed to fix up 11 of the hurricane damaged fire stations.

Is it a national disgrace that city firefighters have to depend on the kindness of strangers to get back in a fixed wall facility? Who do you blame? Did city leaders do all they could to help rescue the resuers?


About December 2007

This page contains all entries posted to ABC26 News in December 2007. They are listed from oldest to newest.

November 2007 is the previous archive.

January 2008 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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