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The Curry Report
January 20, 2010
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In This Issue
SCLC Tarnishes Dr. King's Image
Reid, Right and Racism
Shades of Prejudice
Creams Offering Lighter Skin May Bring Risks
Haiti's history created bond with many U.S. blacks
As Haitians Flee, the Dead Go Uncounted
Ignoring Rush Limbaugh, Americans donate to aid Haiti
Has Obama Kept His Promises to Blacks
5 Campaign Promises That Obama Kept
SCLC Tarnishes Dr. King's Image
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By George E. Curry
NNPA Columnist
 
On Tuesday, the day after the nation officially celebrates the birthday  of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., suspended Southern Christian Leadership Conference Board Chair Raleigh Trammell of Dayton, Ohio and Treasurer Spiver Gordon, a resident of Eutaw, Ala., are scheduled to appear in an Atlanta court to contest their dismissals amid allegations that they directly benefited from a secret $500,000 board account.
 
To the public, SCLC, co-founded by Dr. King, has been on the rise after almost going out of business in 2004. Charles Steele, Jr., one of my childhood friends from Tuscaloosa, Ala., brought the organization back from the brink of extinction as president and CEO, raising $8 million during his tenure from 2004 to 2009.
 

Approximately $3.3 million of that amount was used to build a new SCLC headquarters on historic Auburn Avenue. Even civil rights icon Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth - who once referenced SCLC by saying, "Only God can give life to the dead" - acknowledged the civil rights group had returned from the dead under the leadership of Steele, now an Atlanta businessman.

While the public perception of SCLC was that it had finally rebounded, Trammell was busy getting the board to revise the organization's bylaws, shifting many of the powers traditionally held by the president to him. Dexter M. Wimbish, the general counsel, was directed to report to Trammell instead of President Steele. Against the counsel of his closest advisers, Steele went along with the power shift, arguing that his personal friendship with Trammell would still allow him to function effectively.

That Trammell and Gordon could rise to top board positions should have been an embarrassment within itself. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported on Nov. 10, 2004 that Trammell "went to prison in the 1970s for cheating a county welfare department in Ohio."

Gordon, the SCLC treasurer, lost his city council seat in Alabama after pleading guilty in 1999 to federal vote fraud charges. He admitted that he had asked a person who lived outside of Greene County to fill out an absentee ballot and falsely list a county address. Gordon was sentenced to six months in federal prison, given three years of supervised probation and fined $2,000.

In the rough-and-tumble world of SCLC board politics, Trammell and Gordon have survived because they were among the last people standing.

Their fall from favor is tied to the unaudited secret account, described by one SCLC insider as "a slush fund." Approximately $500,000 has flowed through the account over the past three years, including about $200,000 said to have been siphoned off from prison ministry program operated by Gordon. Although some SCLC staff members were told that the account, opened in Eutaw, Ala. and supervised by Gordon, was subject to an outside audit, no record of an audit has been uncovered. Also, there is no known record of tax returns ever being filed for the account. Some SCLC board members said they had no knowledge that the secret account existed.

Charles Steele raised questions about the account before he resigned a year ago. Steele feared that contributions to SCLC would dry up if the public ever learned about the secret fund. Once Attorney Wimbish and Executive Director Ron Woods learned that there were no independent controls on the board account and suspected that some SCLC funds may have been embezzled, they felt a responsibility to share their concerns with Interim President Byron C. Clay.

On October 29, the board, which had recently elected a half dozen new members, was made aware of the special fund. On November 13, Trammell and Gordon were removed from their board positions, with the new members casting the critical votes against them.

Even before the vote, efforts were made to get Trammell to quietly step aside. A longtime former assistant, based in Dayton, filed a sexual harassment complaint against him with a state human rights agency. Persons familiar with the complaint say the assistant claims to have sexually-explicit videotapes of Trammell, a married minister. She is also said to be ready to make additional allegations that, if true, could lead to his returning to prison.

Rather than stepping aside, a request for an injunction was filed December 29 in Atlanta seeking to restore Trammell and Gordon to their former positions.

The board infighting continues as Bernice King, the youngest daughter of the late civil rights leader, prepares to take over as the first female president of SCLC.  Her oldest brother, Martin Luther King III, served as president from 1997 to 2004, but left after a bitter dispute with the board.

According to several people who serve on the board or staff of SCLC, Trammell said that under his leadership, no woman or another member of the King family would serve as president of the organization. However, the self-styled master politician made a major miscalculation.

As a condition for accepting the job as interim president and CEO of SCLC, Byron Clay requested - and got - about six people added to the board. Trammell campaigned for the election of former Arkansas Court of Appeals Judge Wendell Griffen as president and presumed he had the votes of the new board members recruited by Clay. He presumed wrong. Instead of going with Trammell's candidate, all of them backed King, providing the margin for her 23-15 victory.

If Bernice King is to be successful at SCLC, she'll need to get rid of Trammell, Gordon and those aligned with them for good.

 

George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him at www.twitter.com/currygeorge.

 

 READ MORE COLUMNS BY CURRY  

Reid, Right and Racism
 

 Michael Steele
Michael Steele Invokes a Double Standard 


By George E. Curry

NNPA Columnist

 

The flap over Senator Harry Reid's truthful - though clumsily phrased - comment on Barack Obama's electability has exposed hypocrisy, and in some cases racism, among Republicans and Democrats, including former President Bill Clinton.

 

Shades of Prejudice

Harry Reid
     
 

 

By Shankar Vedantam

© New York Times

January 19, 2010

Cambridge, Mass.

LAST week, the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, found himself in trouble for once suggesting that Barack Obama had a political edge over other African-American candidates because he was "light-skinned" and had "no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one." Mr. Reid was not expressing sadness but a gleeful opportunism that Americans were still judging one another by the color of their skin, rather than - as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., whose legacy we commemorated on Monday, dreamed - by the content of their character.

The Senate leader's choice of words was flawed, but positing that black candidates who look "less black" have a leg up is hardly more controversial than saying wealthy people have an advantage in elections. Dozens of research studies have shown that skin tone and other racial features play powerful roles in who gets ahead and who does not. These factors regularly determine who gets hired, who gets convicted and who gets elected.

  READ MORE

Creams Offering Lighter Skin May Bring Risks
 
Sammy Sosa 2
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 Sammy Sosa Before and After
 

By Catherine Saint Louis

© New York Times

January 16, 2010

 

 

For years, Allison Ross rubbed in skin-lightening creams with names like Hyprogel and Fair & White. She said she wanted to even out and brighten the tone of her face, neck and hands. Mrs. Ross, 45, who lives in Brooklyn, also said that she used the lightening creams "to be more accepted in society."

After months of twice-a-day applications, her skin was not only fairer, it had become so thin that a touch would bruise her face. Her capillaries became visible, and she developed stubborn acne. A doctor told her that all three were side effects of prescription-strength steroids in some of the creams, which she had bought over the counter in beauty supply stores.

READ MORE
Haiti's history created bond with many U.S. blacks 
 
Haiti Map
 

 

By Jesse Washington
© Associated Press
 January 17, 2010
 

 

A terrible earthquake anywhere in the Caribbean would have hit a sympathetic nerve in most Americans. But as the first black republic of the West, born when slaves overthrew white rulers, Haiti holds a unique place in the hearts of many American blacks.

That's why Toussaint Tabb, a college student named after the Haitian slave-turned-general who led the revolution more than 200 years ago, was jolted when he saw televised images of the devastation in Haiti.

"They looked just like any other black people over here in America," said Tabb, a history major at North Carolina Central University. "They're the same people."

"I would say it hit home harder because it was a predominantly black country, and my name is Toussaint and it's Haiti."

Joel Dreyfuss, a native Haitian and editor of the black-oriented Web site TheRoot.com, said American blacks easily "could have ended up in Haiti instead of the U.S., depending on where the slave ship stopped."   READ MORE

 

 As Haitians Flee, the Dead Go Uncounted
 
 

 Haiti earthquake

 

By Damien Cave

© New York Times

January 19, 2010

 

TITANYEN, Haiti - A few miles north of the busted-down buildings in Port-au-Prince, up a hillside where cows graze, an empty hole awaits the dead. Rectangular, 20 feet deep and wide, 100 feet long, it is one of the newest mass graves, but there are many more.

The government's dump trucks have been dropping off bodies here since Friday. No one counts, takes pictures or searches for names. In some places, legs  and arms of strangers are knotted together in a frozen dance, but here the ground has been leveled by a backhoe that has erased all but the tiniest scraps of life. READ MORE



 

Ignoring Rush Limbaugh, Americans donate to aid Haiti, new poll shows

 
Haiti 3 girls BEST 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 
 
 
Haiti, 2006. Photo by George E. Curry 
 

© Los Angeles Times

January 19, 2010

 

 

A new survey released by Zogby Interactive found that 64% of adults in the United States have given or plan to give to relief efforts to aid quake-ravaged Haiti.

The survey, released on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, found that 33% of respondents have already made a donation and 31% plan on doing so. Giving was more pronounced among African Americans, with 47% already donating and 34% planning to do so. Apparently these donors didn't pick up on what Rush Limbaugh had to say last week about donating to a government-created website to help Haiti.

As our colleague Mark Silva reported: "We've already donated to Haiti," Limbaugh told the caller on his radio show. "It's called the U.S. income tax."  READ MORE

 Has Obama Kept His Promises to Blacks
 
Obama Poster 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

By Hazel Trice Edney

Editor-in-Chief

NNPA News Service

 

 

On Nov. 3, 2008, an important telephone conference was held in Black America. That was the day that then candidate Barack Obama, on the eve of his historic election to the presidency, promised African-American leaders and representatives across the nation that if elected, he would never forget that Black people are specifically and disparately hurting from social ills. 

 

 READ MORE 

 

5 CampaignPromises That Obama Kept

 

Nobel Photo 

 
 
 

 
 
 

 

 

 
Yes, there are a lot of things that Obama didn't do in his first year in office. But here are five things that he did.
 
 
By Adam Serwer
(c) The Root
January 2, 2010
 

1.      The Health Care Bill-The health care reform bill the Senate passed last Thursday will, despite its shortcomings, ensure coverage for 31 million Americans, prohibit insurance companies from discriminating against people based on pre-existing conditions and provide $200 billion a year in subsidies to Americans making up to 400 percent above the poverty line to make sure people can afford care.

 READ MORE 

 

 

 

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The Best of Emerge Magazine
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