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Friday, May 8, 2020

‘Just Mercy’ campaign launches COVID-19 fund to help the incarcerated

The coronavirus has impacted many but the prison population has been one of the most marginalized populations in the wake of the pandemic.

Prison advocate April Grayson knows firsthand how they are feeling as she was incarcerated for 17 years. In an interview with theGrio, Grayson explains how her advocacy came to be.

READ MORE: Atlanta woman’s death raises more questions about COVID-19 risk in prisons

“Who can speak to incarceration and situations involving incarceration but people who are formerly incarcerated?” she muses.

Grayson is now a surrogate for Represent Justice, an organization working to protect the health and safety of vulnerable individuals in jails and prisons and their families. They’ve started a COVID-19 relief fund to assist them.

The campaign was launched in conjunction with the release of the 2019 film Just Mercy.  Starring Jamie Foxx and Michael B. Jordan, it tells the story of the wrongful conviction of an Alabama man, Walter McMillian, for a 1986 murder.

The late McMillan ultimately served six years on death row before he was freed through the efforts of the Equal Justice Initiative, which Represent Justice was born from.

It works with a coalition of partners, artists, athletes, and more to advance reform and build capacity for other organizations in the space.

Just Mercy

The emergency fund also resolves to:

–Support over a dozen organizations across the country that help protect the health and safety of those living and working in prisons, jails, and detention centers right now.

–Assist organizations that receive funding were selected by Represent Justice surrogates, ambassadors, advocates, formerly incarcerated and/or working in criminal justice reform.

–Match all donations up to $50,000.

–Donate 20,000 masks to its sponsored programs and initiatives such as Play for Justice. 

READ MORE: Incarcerated Black women face numerous issues in COVID-19 pandemic

The Represent Justice Campaign says it doesn’t use terms like “inmate,” “convict,” “criminal,” “addict,” “offender” and “felon” because the organization believes they are degrading and contribute to a cycle of harm perpetuated by the legal system.

From Incarcerated to Advocate


April Grayson (Credit: April Grayson)

Grayson also serves as the statewide coordinator for the Young Women’s Freedom Center which works in the community and in detention facilities in San Francisco, Alameda County, Santa Clara, Los Angeles, and through a network of over 500 women across the state in 14 cities. Grayson is also involved with Sisters Warriors Freedom Coalition which seeks to influence systematic change and legislation.

Grayson vividly remembers how there weren’t many advocates for her and others during their time in prison. It was as if the world moved on without them; their lives and well being were not a concern to anyone but themselves.

READ MORE: Coronavirus hits U.S. prisons, putting imprisoned populations at risk

“I do understand that there are a lot of harsh beliefs around ‘They did the crime, do the time.’ The thing about it, I never minded doing my time. I wanted to be treated decently and humanely. So, it was never about let me out. It’s while I’m in here, please treat me correctly,” she says.

Instead, Grayson says, the experience became more punitive beyond just paying her debt to society. Even when sick, there are 8 beds to a cell, which makes social distancing impossible. Reporting mistreatment to prison officials became mired in red tape and health care was inconsistent or inadequate.

Grayson was imprisoned during major flu outbreaks and the SARS outbreak. She has a friend who’s been jailed for 45 years and suffering from health issues. The advocate wants those with immunocompromised systems freed and those who remain to be treated with humanity.

“We have been viewed forever as the lowest of the low and we’re not. And so, for me to sit at home and act like these brilliant and amazing people are would be a disservice,” she says.

“We always felt that we were the forgotten generation and there wasn’t a lot of organizations and people reaching out to us. And when they were incarcerating us, this is right around the time of [President] Bill Clinton and these tough crime laws. We were called super predators and people wanted to leave us in prison forever.”

Back to Normal?

April Grayson
April Grayson school supply giveaway (Credit: April Grayson)

Grayson continues her work even though it affects her emotionally. The lockdown in San Francisco triggered post-traumatic stress disorder for her and others on the front line of this issue. Grayson locked herself in her room and only came out for bare necessities, reliving previous lockdowns while in prison. She’s had her bad days, especially in the midst of COVID-19 but persists because of those who need her help.

“These are people too,” Grayson says. “They’re not aliens and dogs and cats. They’re your mother, your aunties and your cousins, your brother. They’re people. They have feelings. They have kids. They have concerns. Yes, they made a mistake.”

Grayson maintains those incarcerated deserve a second chance at hope and redemption. Until such a time they afforded their full freedom, Reform Justice is standing in the gap as this crucial time as COVID-19 shows no signs of abating.

Represent Justice (Credit: Represent Justice)

Data from John Hopkins University showed there have been over 68,000 deaths due to COVID-19—almost 2,000 Americans dying per day and that is expected to rise. According to The New York Times, there will be 3,000 daily deaths by June. As of early May, The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) confirmed that there were 1984 federal inmates and 356 BOP staff who have confirmed positive test results for COVID-19 nationwide.

SWFC lead members have been given a $500 budget to assist with immediate needs such as getting people out of detention, proving safe placements, gift cards, internet, and food. Full-time re-entry specialists are also being provided for. It’s often difficult to transition from a life where one’s movements are restricted to one of more autonomy.

Normal, especially under these current circumstances, is not a one size fits all.

“It all depends on what normal looks like. The thing that sucks about our country is normal is putting your foot on someone’s neck,” Grayson states. “And I hope we never go back to that. I hope everybody understands that right now we’re all in the same boat. Everybody needs their job.  Everybody knows everybody needs toilet paper. Everybody needs food. Everybody needs to be able to go outside and be free from whatever hardship or harm that we know are causing them to have poor quality of life.”

To learn more about Represent Justice and how you can support the organization, click here.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

 

The post ‘Just Mercy’ campaign launches COVID-19 fund to help the incarcerated appeared first on TheGrio.



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Russell Simmons defends dating Kimora Lee Simmons as a teen: ‘She was legal’

Def Jam founder and hip hop mogul Russell Simmons is currently facing several accusations of sexual assault, including rape. As a result, his relationships with women have been re-examined, including his May-December marriage to model/entrepreneur Kimora Lee Simmons.

READ MORE: Reese Witherspoon wants to cast Ice Cube in ‘Big Little Lies’

Case in point: earlier this week Simmons posted a throwback picture of him and his ex-wife, wishing her a happy birthday. And amidst a sea of well wishes, one particularly bold follower questioned whether Simmons started dating Kimora while she was still a teenager.

And that’s when things got interesting.

According to The Jasmine Brand, in a since-deleted comment caught via screenshot Simmons responded, “I never do this but…. That’s not true… She turned 18 right after i met her February fashion week Tyra banks (our bridesmaid) Cindy Crawford Naomi were all backstage at the Mary McFadden show they said i was a modelizer and that i wasn’t gonna stick around… i think that may have inspired her.”

Russell and Kimora Lee Simmons in 2010. (Photo by Donald Bowers/Getty Images for Starbucks)

“We got to know each other by May we were dating. She was legal at 17 But she turned 18 that may her mother and her manager Bethann Hardison approved supported and Rushed us (we really didn’t need a push) and the love affair began People like to talk every so often i loose my cool and talk back so take this advice  Be happy and share happiness… try to think uplifting thoughts and keep learning to practice love… that’s our goal… oh and celebrate the queen @kimoraleesimmons”

As a matter of record, when Simmons met his wife, she was 17 and he was 35.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

 

The post Russell Simmons defends dating Kimora Lee Simmons as a teen: ‘She was legal’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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Microsoft Is Starting to Tease Xbox Series X Games

Also, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is on 'Animal Crossing: New Horizons' now.

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Grocery workers ‘hero’ pay for coronavirus pandemic may end this month

They say heroes don’t always wear capes. Sometimes, they wear grocery store uniforms. But as important as those essential workers have turned out to be and as much risk as they take coming to work every day, it appears there are limits on what heroes can be paid.

READ MORE: Black grocery store workers say they feel vulnerable during pandemic 

Grocery store chains like Kroger, the largest supermarket in terms of revenue in the U.S. with $121B in 2019, offered its workers a $2 an hour pay upgrade during the coronavirus pandemic. But according to The Huffington Post, that increase is coming to an end.


The United Food and Commercial Workers announced that Kroger informed them that the increase would end on May 17.

“Taking away this hero pay from these essential workers disregards their continued heroism as they serve their communities in crisis,” UFCW Local 7 president Kim Cordova said in a statement.

Amazon, who owns Whole Foods, upgraded both their warehouse and grocery stores workers with a $2 an hour raise to incentive their workers to come to work despite the risks during the COVID-19 pandemic. They have only committed to the raise through May 16th. A press release from the Southern California UFCW confirms that grocery retailers Albertsons, Vons, and Pavilions also committed to the raises with through May 16th.

What happens after that is unclear. With states like Georgia, Texas, and parts of Pennsylvania, among other states, opening up, it’s possible that stores will see more foot traffic than before. That could potentially put workers at even more risk.

supermarket theGrio.com
Supermarket (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Costco, the membership-only big-box retailer that sells its products in bulk, trended on Twitter today as some customers threatened to boycott. Why? Because Costco has now mandated that customers wear masks in their stores to protect their workers and others.

There are others who believe the essential services that grocery store workers and other essential employees provide means they should be paid to assume more risk than those who can do their jobs working from home.

There has been a proposal in Congress championed by New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, called the Heroes Fund to give essential workers up to $25,000 more a year, Forbes reports.

READ MORE: Maryland grocery clerk dies of coronavirus

And this week, Sen. Mitt Romney forwarded a plan called Patriot Pay to give those workers hazard pay up to $12 an hour for May, June, and July. This would be for essential workers making up to $90,000 who work at least 100 hours a month.

Will it happen? As Schumer and Romney are on opposite sides of the political aisle, it appears offering essential workers some additional pay has bipartisan support.

“Patriot Pay is a way for us to reward our essential workers as they continue to keep Americans safe, healthy, and fed,” Romney has said.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

The post Grocery workers ‘hero’ pay for coronavirus pandemic may end this month appeared first on TheGrio.



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California identifies nail salons as source of coronavirus community spread

While other states begin to allow different establishments to reopen, California Gov. Gavin Newsom says they’ve traced the spread of the coronavirus in the state and confirmed it began in a nail salon.

READ MORE: Atlanta mom with coronavirus gives birth to twins while in coma

Thursday, Newsom announced a four-phase plan to begin reopening the state’s economy that would launch on Friday. Unlike some other governors who have opted to reopen nail salons, in California that wouldn’t be allowed until the state’s phase 3. California has just begun to shift into phase 2.

 

“This whole thing started in the state of California, the first community spread, in a nail salon,” Newsom said at a news briefing. “I’m very worried about that.”

Newsom also added that state health directors have also put several “red flags” on nail salons, delegating them as high-risk businesses much like gyms and hair salons. Businesses considered low-risk like bookstores and warehouses will be reopening with modifications like curbside pick up.

Salon owners like Michelle Saunders James of Saunders and James Nail Care in Oakland, California told CNN she was “shocked” by the governor’s claims.

“Had they known that this was the situation, absolutely zero information was ever sent to any nail care people in the industry at all,” she said in an interview. “It was very scary to hear that.”

READ MORE: 35 of 40 NYPD arrests for social distancing were black 

“I am just intuitively kind of following the rules of what a nurse would wear or a physician, or something that is more in the medical field,” she continued. “Because if you’re comfortable enough to go to the dentist, or go in to see your physician, then if we’re wearing the same thing and our environment is as sterile and sanitized as a medical office, then why wouldn’t the customer feel comfortable getting a manicure in that situation?”

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

The post California identifies nail salons as source of coronavirus community spread appeared first on TheGrio.



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Sens. Harris & Sanders propose sending $2K monthly checks to Americans

The Democratic senators have a proposal that could make a world of difference in the lives of millions of Americans struggling to make ends meet during the pandemic.

According to Politico, Friday, Sens. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) released what the are calling the Monthly Economic Crisis Support Act. As the name suggests, if passed most families in the country could expect to receive thousands of dollars every month.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) greets supporters at his Super Tuesday night event on March 03, 2020 in Essex Junction, Vermont. 1,357 Democratic delegates are at stake as voters cast their ballots in 14 states and American Samoa on what is known as Super Tuesday. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

READ MORE: Cardi B and Bernie Sanders talk pandemic and politics on IG Live

Unlike the one time $1,200 subsidy sent to Americans as part of March’s coronavirus response bill, the Monthly Economic Crisis Support Act would see legislation sending a monthly $2,000 check to every resident who makes less than $120,000 a year.

Married couples who file taxes jointly would receive $4,000 and each child (up to three children) would be given $2,000 each. That means a family with two guardians and three minors could expect to receive $10,000 every month until the COVID-19 pandemic subsides.

Harris said the bill reflects Congress’s subpar efforts which up till now were “nearly enough to meet the needs of this historic crisis.” Markey also called the significant cash infusion “the most direct and efficient mechanism for delivering economic relief to those most vulnerable.”

“Congress has a responsibility to make sure that every working-class household in America receives a $2,000 emergency payment a month for each family member,” said Sanders.

READ MORE: Kamala Harris introduces bill for ‘safe’ voting during coronavirus

When instated the payments would be retroactive going back to March and then continue until three months after the Health and Human Services Department confirmed the public health emergency over.

This legislation would also prohibit debt collectors from garnishing the payments and would pay people even if they don’t have a Social Security number or failed to file taxes last year.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

The post Sens. Harris & Sanders propose sending $2K monthly checks to Americans appeared first on TheGrio.



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Black Michigan lawmaker escorted by armed activists to capitol after protests

Sarah Anthony, a State Representative in Michigan was escorted to work by six armed constituents on Wednesday.

Anthony told The Guardian that the escort was meant to highlight what she perceives as a failure of capitol police to provide legislators with adequate security when dozens of armed protestors stormed the Michigan State Capitol.

READ MORE: Armed protestors storm Michigan Capitol over stay-at-home orders

“When traditional systems, whether it’s law enforcement or whatever, fail us,” she said, “We also have the ability to take care of ourselves.”

In describing last week’s protests where white demonstrators armed with rifles confronted police and lawmakers over Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s stay at home order, Anthony said that it was one of the most unnerving feelings of her life.

“If I don’t vote the way that these people want me to vote, are they going to rush in and start shooting us?” she said. “You could feel the floor rumbling. You could hear them yelling and screaming.”

Sarah Anthony theGrio.com
State Rep. Sarah Anthony (D-Lansing), accompanied by Representatives Kara Hope (D-Holt), Julie Brixie (D-East Lansing) and Angela Witwer (D-Delta Township), spoke to a resolution commemorating the 160th anniversary of the founding of the city of Lansing, on Thursday, May 16, 2019. (Image from https://ift.tt/2LdTfsC)

Anthony, who was the first Black woman elected to represent her district in Lansing, Michigan’s capital, in 2018, was escorted by six of her constituents. The four men and two women carried handguns and rifles. One of the participants, Michael Lynn Jr., expressed frustration in seeing his legislator intimidated in her workplace. “Being a Black and Brown female Democrat in the Capitol now is a dangerous job,” he told The Guardian, “This is an environment that Donald Trump has nurtured.”

READ MORE: Black Panthers trend as Twitter notes #WhitePrivilege in Michigan protests

Since the protest, Gov. Whitmer has publicly stated that she is seeking to ban guns from the state capital. The move was applauded by an opinion piece in the Detroit Free Press which claims that guns in the Capitol make a mockery of Second Amendment rights.

To her credit, Anthony states that she doesn’t want to see more armed citizens at the Capitol. Instead, she hopes that law enforcement officers will do a better job of keeping legislators safe at work.

The post Black Michigan lawmaker escorted by armed activists to capitol after protests appeared first on TheGrio.



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The 7 Best Soundbars for Every Budget (2020)

We've listened to a ton of soundbars and these are the best sounding systems from Vizio, Sonos, Yamaha, and more.

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Ahmaud Arbery’s Killers Arrested and Charged with Murder and Aggravated Assault

arrested for Ahmaud Arbery murder

Retired district attorney Gregory McMichael, 64, and his son Travis McMichael, 34, were arrested yesterday for the February shooting death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. The father and son will face charges of murder and aggravated assault, according to BET.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigations released a statement confirming the McMichaels’ arrest. Both men were booked in Glynn County Jail.

“On February 23, 2020, Ahmaud Arbery was in the Satilla Shores neighborhood in Brunswick, GA when both Gregory and Travis McMichael confronted Arbery with two firearms. During the encounter, Travis McMichael shot and killed Arbery,” the GBI said. 

“On May 5th, 2020, District Attorney Tom Durden formally requested the GBI investigate the death of Ahmaud Arbery. The Kingsland Office initiated an investigation on May 6th, 2020.

“On April 29th, 2020, the Glynn County Police Department (GCPD) requested that the GBI investigate allegations of threats against GCPD and individuals involved in the active investigation.

“On the morning of May 5th, 2020, GCPD requested the GBI investigate the public release of video related to Arbery’s death.”

Before a video that was released capturing Arbery’s killing, the police refused to charge the father and son.

It was previously reported that “the Glynn County Police Department released its report on the deadly incident Tuesday. [Gregory] McMichael thought Arbery looked like the suspect in several recent break-ins. However, Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper, believes her son was judged because of the color of his skin.

“George Barnhill, a prosecutor in the case, told the police in a letter that McMichael and his son acted within the state’s citizen’s arrest law and Travis acted out of self-defense.”

The GBI’s investigation of Arbery’s death is still under investigation. Anyone with information related to the case can call 800-597-TIPS (8477).



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Will Smith’s Bel-Air Athletics Partners with Jermaine Dupri to Launch Capsule Collection in Support of Essential Workers

Will Smith Bel-Air Essentials

As the country continues to struggle with the crippling effects of COVID-19, a number of celebrities are stepping up to help essentials workers fighting on the frontlines of the public health crisis. On Thursday, Bel-Air Athletics, the streetwear brand created by Hollywood icon Will Smith, announced a partnership with legendary rapper and producer Jermaine Dupri to launch a capsule collection in honor of essential workers called “Bel-Air Essentials.”

According to a press release, 25% of proceeds from the collection will be donated to Frontline Foods, an organization that supports restaurants that have been impacted by shelter-in-place measures, and that feeds healthcare workers.

“It’s important that I recognize our front-line workers out there that are working to keep us all safe— they are the real heroes,” said Dupri in a statement sent to BLACK ENTERPRISE. “I’m grateful to have a part in celebrating their courage with this Bel-Air Athletics launch. Together, we look forward to supporting Frontline Foods, so we can give back to those in need.”

Each item in the collection features graphics honoring different frontline workers, from doctors and nurses to teachers to postal services workers to restaurant employees to childcare workers. The message “To All On The Front Lines, We Appreciate You” is also printed on each piece.

Products in the collection range from $40 to $75 and include the Essential Workers Tee ($40), Thank You Long-Sleeve Tee ($55), and Bel-Air Essentials Hoodie ($75).

The capsule will be available for purchase for a limited amount of time, starting Thursday evening to  Monday, May 11 on belairathletics.com.

To help spread the word about the collection, Dupri will be spinning a live DJ set on Bel-Air Athletics’ Instagram on Friday, May 8, starting at 7 PM EST.

Bel-Air AthleticsJust days after Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced that he was reopening certain businesses, Dupri urged people to continue to stay home and practice social distancing in the state.

“Y’all know the love I have for this city and what I pour into the city and how much I care about Atlanta,” said the Atlanta resident in a nearly 8-minute message posted on Instagram.

“So this message is really for us in this city,” he continued. “The image that we have in this city, I don’t like. I don’t like the way people think our minds move and the way people are like basically shortchanging us to make us look like we just a bunch of dumb a– n—-s out here running around happy to spend money [on] drugs, strip clubs and you know, just blow s–t.”



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Detective in Sean Reed shooting joked ‘it’s going to be a closed casket’

The police shooting of 21-year-old Dreasjon ‘Sean’ Reed is one of three police-involved killings that has recently set Indianapolis on edge. Reed was shot while attempting to elude police and filming the entire event on Facebook Live.

The brutal slaying has been compounded by a comment by a police detective. Off-camera on the Facebook Live video, the detective can be heard saying, “Think it’s going to be a closed casket, homie,” in reference to Reed’s funeral.

READ MORE: Indianapolis police fatally shoot Sean Reed, 21, during Facebook Live

According to the New York Times, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Chief Randal Taylor called the comments “unacceptable,” and said that disciplinary action will be taken.

The shooting took place on Wednesday when police observed Reed driving recklessly and attempted to pull him over, but he kept driving. Reed then started broadcasting on Facebook Live. In the video, he is heard saying, “Somebody come get me! Please come get me! I don’t want to go to jail.”

Sean Reed theGrio.com
Sean Reed (Twitter)

Reed then pulled the car over and took off on foot. He was pursued by an officer, who has not been identified. The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department has not identified the officer only saying that he too is African American.

According to the IMPD, at least 14 shots were fired including two from a gun found near Reed’s body.

The shooting is the third police-involved killing in Indianapolis in a span of eight hours. According to the Indy Star, the first shooting of the three took place around 1:30 am on Thursday. The second shooting appears to be an attempt to ambush police officers.

In responding to a burglary call, police encountered a man armed with a rifle as they approached the residence. They returned fire and the suspect, 19-year-old McHale Rose, was pronounced dead at the scene.

READ MORE: Protests as Indianapolis police kill 3 in separate incidents

In another incident, IMPD officer, Jonathon Henderson struck a pregnant woman who was walking up an expressway ramp Wednesday night. Identified as 23-year-old, Ashlynn Lisby, the woman, and her fetus did not survive.

The three incidents have sparked outrage in Indianapolis setting off protests to which Indianapolis’ Mayor Joe Hogsett responded in a statement, “Last night, our city experienced a series of tragedies that raise understandable questions and once again reveal the scars of mistrust left behind by a national legacy of discrimination against communities of color.”

The post Detective in Sean Reed shooting joked ‘it’s going to be a closed casket’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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Ray J gets served divorce papers from wife Princess Love

Love and Hip Hop: Hollywood Star and former model, Princess Love has filed for divorce from her singer husband, Ray J.

The stars have been estranged from each other since November when the then-pregnant Love publicly stated that her husband left her and their daughter, Melody Norwood, alone in Vegas after an argument.

READ MORE: Ray J’s estranged wife won’t let him see their kids until he quarantines alone

Love said that her husband left them to “party with escorts and strippers,” with no way to get home and while blocking her from calling. In a comment on Ray J’s Instagram, she said, “Left me and Melody stranded in Las Vegas and blocked me from calling… now you wanna post family photos. #ByeUgly.” This caption has since been deleted.

Eight months pregnant at the time, Love said that she was uncomfortable driving back to Los Angeles with her young daughter. “I’m over 8-months pregnant and I don’t even want to have to stop for gas or go into labor with all of this human trafficking going on.”

Princess Love (L) and Ray J attend the 2019 BET Awards at Microsoft Theater on June 23, 2019 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Leon Bennett/Getty Images)

Ray J tried to apologize to his wife in an appearance on The Wendy Williams Show, “I have to do better, and I have to understand my wife is pregnant,” he said at the time. “I have to think a little wiser when I’m making decisions.”

According to an interview with Page Six, Ray J said that his wife asked him to quarantine by himself amid the coronavirus pandemic. “I’m lonely right now. I don’t want to quarantine by myself. I keep telling Princess, but she says, ‘If I see one person over there with you, you got to start over,’ ” he says. “So I really have to lock myself in, because I really miss my kids.”

READ MORE: Ray J tells Wendy Williams his public spat with his wife, Princess Love, was his fault

Love gave birth to the couple’s son, Epik Ray Norwood, in January. The two stars have been married for nearly four years.

Love filed the papers in Los Angeles Superior Court on Tuesday, according to TMZ.

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Electra Townie Path Go! Review: An Expensive Starter E-Bike

This premium electric cruiser is a stylish, spendy ride with top-of-the-line performance.

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We Asked for Flying Cars. We Got Axl Rose's Twitter Spat

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Ohio Lawmaker Refuses to Wear Mask Because He Believes It Dishonors God

Ohio lawmaker Nino Vitale

When you have faith in your beliefs, sometimes you can’t make room for anything that may get in the way. This is what an Ohio lawmaker thinks as he declines to wear a mask because it dishonors God, according to NBC News.

“This is the greatest nation on earth founded on Judeo-Christian Principles. One of those principles is that we are all created in the image and likeness of God. That image is seen the most by our face. I will not wear a mask,” Rep. Nino Vitale, a Republican, wrote on Facebook. “That’s the image of God right there, and I want to see it in my brothers and sisters.”

“People want to wear masks, they can. But mandating it, that’s a whole different story for me,” Vitale’s post said. “No one is stopping anybody from wearing a face mask. But quite frankly everyone else’s freedom ends at the tip of my nose. You’re not going to tell me what to do and there’s a lot of people that feel that way.”

“If someone is that scared, that they do not want to go out into the public because 100 percent of the people are not wearing masks, then that person should stay home, not tell everyone else what they should be doing,” said Vitale.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, who is also a Republican, had previously said on April 27 that wearing masks was one of the “essential tools” to fight the spread of the coronavirus and ordered that shoppers wear them in stores at all times. “To not wear masks would be negligent and a mistake. We have to protect these employees,” he wrote on Twitter.

But DeWine backed down the next day after receiving backlash over the mandate and decided to reverse the order.

“Though it is not a mandate, it is clearly in the best interest for Ohioans to wear a mask in retail settings. This gives added protection to others,” DeWine said. “When I go out in public and go into a business, I will wear a mask. And, I have recommended to my family members that they wear masks.”



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How Will We Dine and Uber in the Post-Pandemic City?

This week, Aarian Marshall joins us to talk about how cities can respond to the coronavirus by redesigning streets to accommodate outdoor dining and changes to transit.

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Social Distancing Has Become the Norm. What Have We Learned?

It's a good time to sort through what's known, unknown, and only just beginning to be understood about this months-long intervention.

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NASA's EmDrive Leader Has a New Interstellar Project

Harold White left NASA in December to join a new nonprofit focused on building the technologies to bring humans to the outer solar system and beyond.

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Rapper Ty dies after contracting coronavirus

The Mercury-nominated rapper had been put in an induced coma in April.

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Mississippi Welfare Scandal: Audit Shows Luxury Cars Among $94 Million in Questionable Spending

Mississippi welfare fraud

A 104-page audit of the Mississippi Department of Human Services exposed spending not being used for the purposes the money was earmarked for, according to USA Today.

Money that was meant to assist poor residents was used to purchase luxury cars, sponsor a college baseball tournament, and encouraged nepotism by hiring family members of a top state official, according to a report from State Auditor Shad White.

The audit, which was released earlier this week,  shows how federal welfare grant funds flowed from DHS into two nonprofit groups, which allegedly spent money in inappropriate or questionable ways.

In a written statement, White said the report “shows the most egregious misspending my staff have seen in their careers at the Office of the State Auditor.” He continued, “If there was a way to misspend money, it seems DHS leadership or their grantees thought of it and tried it.”

White said his office will forward the information it found to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the welfare program. He said this could lead to cuts in the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) allotments or other sanctions placed on the state.

The audit found these items questionable:

  • The two nonprofit groups used welfare money to hire lobbyists, often without paperwork describing the work they were supposed to do.
  • One of the groups, Mississippi Community Education Center (MCEC), gave contracts to, and hired, family members of former Department of Human Services Director John Davis, sometimes making lump-sum payments. The payments and salaries to his nephew and brother-in-law totaled more than $1 million over the past several years, auditors said.
  • Both nonprofit groups gave welfare money to a trio of wrestlers, Ted DiBiase, Ted DiBiase, Jr., and Brett DiBiase—some of it for work never performed, some for “unreasonable” travel costs.
  • MCEC paid Victory Sports Foundation with welfare money to run fitness programs, some of which Mississippi legislators and other officials or staffers participated in, free of charge. The trainer who runs Victory said he did not know he received welfare money.
  • MCEC bought three cars with welfare money, each worth more than $50,000, for Nancy New, the head of MCEC, and two sons. Salaries, cellphones, and other expenses were paid using welfare money. The vehicles included a 2018 Nissan Armada, a Chevrolet Silverado, and a Ford F-250. In each case, the vehicle was registered to MCEC, but in each case, auditors said the vehicles were for personal use.
  • MCEC used welfare money for sports-related purposes, including sponsoring a college baseball tournament and other NCAA events.
  • MCEC cut a $3,000 check to a bookkeeper of MCEC, though a handwritten note says “$3,000 cash was given to” Davis, the DHS executive director.
  • MCEC moved $6 million to a private school and organization run by New and bought supplies for the school.


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