Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "The National Civil Rights Museum"


9 mentions found


Christopher Furlong/Getty Images The Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, the site where 168 people were killed by a bombing that remains the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in US history. Berk Ozkan/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Visitors walk in the ghost city of Pripyat during a tour in the Chernobyl exclusion zone, the site of Ukraine's 1986 nuclear disaster. And somewhere in between is the subjective line that dark tourism dances around. Dark tourism (also known as memorial tourism, or thanatourism, from the Greek “Thanatos” meaning death, or more derogatorily as morbid tourism, or grief tourism) comes in various shades. In the end, you may be the only one who can judge the ethics of visiting these places.
Persons: Jim Jones, Leo Ryan, Patrick Fort, John F, Kennedy, Adrees Latif, Chris J, Ratcliffe, Christopher Furlong, Craig F, Walker, Spencer Platt, Evelyn Hockstein, Anne Frank, Lex Van Lieshout, Jack the, Mark Kerrison, Kim Kyung, Berk Ozkan, Genya Savilov, Tang Chhin Sothy, Nelson Mandela, Wolfgang Kaehler, Ciro De Luca, Martin Luther King Jr, Carlo Allegri, Davy Crockett, Nicole Brown Simpson, You’ve, Lyle, Erik Menendez, David Swanson, Simpson, Manson, Vesuvius, Jack, Sebastian Junger, Anne Frank House, Frank, Koen Van Weel, I’ve, Anne Frank’s Organizations: CNN, Jim Jones ’ Peoples, Dealey Plaza, Reuters, Bloomberg, Getty, Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, Boston Globe, Museum, Reuters Alcatraz, Anadolu Agency, National Civil Rights Museum, North Atlantic, Alamo, National Park Service, Nazi, , Ford’s Theatre, Washington DC, The National Civil Rights Museum Locations: San Francisco, American, Guyana, Jonestown, AFP, Dallas, Bogside, Londonderry, Derry, Northern Ireland, Poland, Nazi Germany, Europe, New York City, Stoystown , Pennsylvania, Amsterdam, London, Hiroshima Peace, Japan, Canakkale, Turkey, Pripyat, Khmer Rouge, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Robben Island, South Africa, Pompeii, Vesuvius, Memphis , Tennessee, North, San Antonio , Texas, Los Angeles, Gettysburg, France, Khmer, Savannah , Georgia, Beverly Hills , California, Washington, Pompei, Italy, Gloucester , Massachusetts, Netherlands, Bergen, Alcatraz, Hiroshima
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Relatives of Tyre Nichols, George Floyd and Eric Garner — three Black men killed in violent confrontations with police officers — expressed frustration Friday with politicians who have failed to pass police reform legislation or have worked to invalidate laws intended to reduce chances that citizens' encounters with police end in death. Philonise Floyd, the brother of George Floyd, told an audience at a police violence symposium in Memphis that the time has come for Congress to pass a federal law that would ban certain police tactics such as chokeholds and no-knock warrants. The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, proposed after Floyd died in Minneapolis in May 2020 after a white police officer pressed his knee to his neck for more than nine minutes, was passed by the House in 2021, but the Senate failed to reach a consensus. “You need to know your politicians ... because these are people that are not applying pressure to help,” Floyd said. Nichols' parents said they are seeking to meet with Lee, who has never vetoed a bill.
Persons: Tyre Nichols, George Floyd, Eric Garner —, , Philonise Floyd, Floyd, ” Floyd, “ I'm, Nichols, RowVaughn Wells, Rodney Wells, Gwen Carr, Garner, Sybrina Fulton, Trayvon Martin, United, Bill Lee, Republican Donald Trump, Lee, it's, ” Fulton, George Zimmerman, She's, Florida's, Fulton, Ron DeSantis, , Carr, Eric Garner, Garner's, , Weeks, Michael Brown, Andrew Cuomo, “ It's, There's Organizations: George Floyd Justice, House, Senate, National Civil Rights Museum, Black Memphis, City Council, Republican, Tennessee General Assembly, Tennessee Gov, Florida's Republican Gov, Gov Locations: MEMPHIS, Tenn, Memphis, Minneapolis, Black, Tennessee, Florida, New York, Ferguson , Missouri
MEMPHIS, Tennessee, April 12 (Reuters) - Local government officials in Memphis, Tennessee, voted on Wednesday to return the second of two Democratic state lawmakers who were expelled last week for protesting gun violence on the chamber floor. Seven of the board's 13 councilors were present for the meeting, and all seven voted in favor of Pearson's return. He is expected to return to the State Capitol in Nashville on Thursday to be sworn back in. Democrats in the U.S. Senate have asked the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate whether the expelled lawmakers' constitutional rights were violated. Before marching with supporters to the commissioners' meeting, Pearson, joined by Jones and Johnson, addressed a crowd of about 500 outside the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis.
April 12 (Reuters) - Local officials will meet in Memphis, Tennessee, on Wednesday to decide whether to return the second of two Democratic state lawmakers who were expelled last week for protesting gun violence on the chamber floor. In a rare rebuke, Republicans who control the state House of Representatives voted to kick out Justin Jones and Justin Pearson, two Black men who had recently joined the legislature, over their rule-breaking protest on the House floor on March 30. "I believe the expulsion of State Representative Justin Pearson was conducted in a hasty manner without consideration of other corrective action methods," Lowery said in a statement. Johnson, who unlike Jones and Pearson did not use a megaphone during the protest, narrowly escaped also being expelled. Tennessee's House Republicans, who have a supermajority, have said this week they will "welcome" back any expelled state lawmakers returned by county-level governments, so long as those members follow the legislature's rules.
The Shelby County Commission voted to reinstate Justin Pearson back to his seat in the Tennessee House. Pearson was removed from the body alongside newly-reinstated state Rep. Justin Jones over a gun reform protest. On Wednesday, the Shelby County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously former state Rep. Justin Pearson of Memphis back to the seat that he last occupied just last Thursday. Pearson, along with state Rep. Justin Jones of Nashville, had been expelled from the legislature for what Republicans said was a breach in decorum in leading an unauthorized gun control push on the House floor. Tennessee Republicans have denied that Pearson and Johnson were removed from the body because of race.
Family members of Tyre Nichols are set to meet with officials Monday to view footage of the traffic stop that led to his death, three days after he was hospitalized in critical condition. Nichols' family scheduled a press conference to follow their viewing of the video of the traffic stop. Family members and local activists hold a rally for Tyre Nichols at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tenn., on Jan. 16, 2023. Tyre Nichols. Courtesy familyNichols' case is being investigated by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations and the Department of Justice, which announced it was launching a civil rights inquiry into the traffic stop.
Jan 23 (Reuters) - The video of Memphis police beating a Black man who died after a traffic stop on Jan. 7 reminded civil rights attorney Ben Crump of the assault on Rodney King, Crump said after viewing the police bodycam recording with the man's family on Monday. Crump said the video reminded him of how Los Angeles police repeatedly beat King in video captured by a witness in 1991, sparking protests and reforms in the department. "Regrettably, it reminded us of (the) Rodney King video," said Crump, who previously represented the families of George Floyd and Trayvon Martin. "Regrettably, unlike Rodney King, Tyre didn't survive." Nichols was less than 100 yards (meters) from home during the traffic stop and called out for this mother three times at the end of the video, Crump told a news conference.
The Department of Justice and FBI on Wednesday announced a civil rights inquiry into a traffic stop in Memphis, Tennessee, that preceded the death of a Black man. Tyre Nichols, 29, died three days after being taken to a hospital in critical condition following the Jan. 7 stop. Nichols' family has retained civil rights attorney Ben Crump and have demanded the public release of body camera and any other surveillance footage from the stop. Crump did not immediately respond to an NBC News request for comment regarding the civil rights investigation Wednesday. Sierra Rogers, holding her daughter Khloe Rogers, wipes away tears as she speaks during a memorial service for her friend Tyre Nichols on Tuesday.
The family of a Memphis man who was hospitalized and died following a traffic stop with police are demanding the official release of body camera and surveillance footage from the encounter. Courtesy family"Nobody should ever die from a simple traffic stop — the footage is the only way to discern the true narrative of why and how that happened to Tyre," Crump said. Family members also demonstrated outside the National Civil Rights Museum with protesters on Monday, holding signs with photos of Nichols. "You shouldn't be on a dialysis machine press machine looking like this because of a traffic stop," Wells told WMC. According to the Memphis Police Department, a "confrontation" occurred between Nichols and the officers when they approached his car on January 7.
Total: 9