Dettroit #4

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Mayor

Detroit Mayor Kenneth Cockrel Jr

As Mayor of Detroit, I want you to know that City government’s most important role is to serve your family and community. Whether it’s making your streets safer or improving your local park, your quality
of life must be the focus of our efforts.

I encourage you to participate in making Detroit better and stronger by attending a local police district meeting or one of my regular town hall meetings in your community, or by calling City Hall or one of your City Council members with your ideas or concerns. If you run a business — or want to start one — I hope you’ll take advantage of the assistance we can offer. If you are interested in volunteering to help our city, we’d be happy to offer ideas — or to hear yours. full story

Cockrel, an African American and a cum laude graduate of Wayne State University, is a former journalist for the Detroit Free Press and a former Wayne County commissioner. He is the son of Kenneth Cockrel, Sr., a former Detroit city council member, attorney and self-proclaimed Marxist-Leninist who died from a heart attack,[4] and Carol Cockrel, a schoolteacher.

Crime Rate (source)

Detroit Violent Crime Rate per Capita:
Murder Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault All Violent Crime
National Local National Local National Local National Local National Local
Is 5.16 times the National Average Is 2.41 times the National Average Is 2.86 times the National Average Is 3.49 times the National Average Is 3.38 times the

Previous Mayor

Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick in Wayne County Circuit Court
Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick in Wayne County Circuit Court

By KATE LINEBAUGH

DETROIT — Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick resigned, pleading guilty to two felony charges that will put him in jail for no more than 120 days. His resignation ends a six-month legal saga that leaves the city in a state of flux and could challenge Democratic Party efforts to win Michigan in November.

Under an agreement with prosecutors, Mr. Kilpatrick Thursday pleaded guilty to two counts of obstruction of justice and will pay the city $1 million in restitution, give up his pension benefits and not seek elected office for five years. complete story

Police Commissioner

Chief of Police James R. Barren, Ph.D.

Police Chief James R. Barren, Ph.D., is a clear example of what perseverance, confidence and integrity in an individual can bring. Appointed Chief of Police on September 19, 2008, by The Honorable Mayor Kenneth Cockrel, Jr., Chief Barren is the 38th person to lead the Detroit Police Department in its 143 year history

Previous Chief of Police Ella M. Bully-Cummings, Esq.

Appointed to the position of Chief of Police on November 3, 2003, by The Honorable Kwame M. Kilpatrick, Mayor of the City of Detroit, Ella M. Bully-Cummings became the first female police chief for the Detroit Police Department in its 138-year history. Active in law enforcement over the past 29 years, Chief Bully-Cummings joined the Detroit Police Department on July 18, 1977, at the age of 19. She is responsible for the 10th largest police department in the nation which consists of 3,700 sworn and civilian employees and an annual budget of over $414 million.
The Police commissioners

Rev. Jim Holley, Ph.D. Chairperson
Rev. Jim Holley, Ph.D. Chairpersoa

.

Rev. Ronald L. Griffin Vice Chairperson
Rev. Ronald L. Griffin Vice Chairperso
 Mohamed Okdie
Mohamed Okdie
Erminia Ramirez
Erminia Ramirez
Adela Rivera

Detroit City Council

Council President Monica Conyers

Conyers admits ex-con is her brother

City Council president had at first denied ex-con who got city job was related to her
David Josar / The Detroit News
Monyca Conyers
Monyca Conyers

Detroit –One day after denying it, City Council President Monica Conyers acknowledged that Reggie Esters, the ex-con she helped get a job in City Hall, is her brother.

“We can’t pick our family,” said Conyers, who explained her initial denial by saying she did not understand how records obtained by The Detroit News identified Esters, 38, a felon with a long rap sheet, as her sibling. When speaking to a reporter Thursday at City Hall, Conyers said, “That’s not my brother.”

This is not the first time she has hired a relative. The News has reported that Conyers also had hired her teenage son and he traveled with her on pension board trips.

Her brother was eventually fired last summer on claims of absenteeism.

“Everyone has a right to be productive,” she said. “That is why I fight so hard at council for ex-offenders to have jobs. We just want to lock up people and not give them training. That is why there is such a high rate of recidivism.”

She added that she also visits inmates at local correctional facilities to “lift and encourage them.”

Barbara Rose Collins

Then U.S. Congresswoman Barbara-Rose Collins says she was misquoted in Detroit newspaper about hating whites

(Collins was again elected to the Detroit city council in 2001 and 2005. Her current term expires in 2009.)

Jet , August 19, 1996

Rep. Barbara-Rose Collins (D-MI) of the 15th Congressional District in Michigan says her remarks about White people were taken out of context when she was quoted in a Detroit newspaper as saying that she hates the White race.

The Detroit Free Press newspaper published a story in July and reported that Collinssaid racism is “so ingrained in American society that there’s nothing I can do about it. I think God is going to have to burn it out of White people.” In another quote in the story, Collins said, “All White people, I don’t believe, are intolerant. That’s why I say I love the individuals, but I hate the race…”

he reporter, Anne Hazard, said she turned over the tape of the two-hour interview to the newspaper and a 22-page transcript.

“I stand by the accuracy of the quotes,” said Hazard.

Recently, in a two-page faxed statement, Collins explained that her views on racism were mischaracterized in the article.

“In order to set the record straight, let me just say quite plainly that I am not a racist,” Collins said in her statement.

“I summarized my thoughts on racism by stating that I loved the individual but that `I hated the (sins committed by) the White race against people of color throughout history,’ ” she added.

Kwame Kenyatta

Detroit councilman Kwame Kenyatta walks away from his mortgage
Kwame Kenyatta
Kwame Kenyatta

..But then, one day in December, City Councilman Kwame Kenyatta and his wife packed up their belongings, locked the doors, mailed in the keys and walked away — adding another vacant house to the thousands in a city hard hit by the nation’s mortgage crisis.

“We’re already underwater when it comes to what we’re paying on the house versus what the house is worth,” Kenyatta said.

It could damage his bid for mayor of Detroit this summer, particularly since he has been one of the city’s most vocal supporters of measures to improve neighborhoods and clean up blight.

“If I’m going to follow you, you need to be a leader,” said Patricia Dixon, a former neighbor of Kenyatta’s. “You don’t show leadership by walking away from your home in the city of Detroit. You have vandalism where they find out the houses are vacant. You have people stealing fireplaces.”

Kenyatta, a Democrat, is not the only elected official facing mortgage trouble. The Wayne County prosecutor’s Detroit home has gone into foreclosure. And California Rep. Laura Richardson nearly lost her home before she paid up delinquent home loans.

Congressional Representatives

John Conyers Jr.

John Conyers, Jr. (born May 16, 1929) is a member of the United States House of Representatives representing Michigan’s 14th congressional district, which includes most of northwestern Detroit, as well as Highland Park, Hamtramck and part of Dearborn. A Democrat, he has served since 1965 (the district was numbered as the 1st District until 1993). In January 2007, Conyers became chairman of the House Judiciary Committee in the 110th United States Congress; he had been the committee’s ranking Democrat since 1997.

Conyers is currently the second-longest serving incumbent member of the House (just after fellow Democrat from Michigan, John Dingell) and the fifth-longest incumbent member of the entire Congress by length of service (after Robert Byrd, John Dingell, Ted Kennedy and Daniel Inouye). He is married to Monica Conyers, who is currently President of the Detroit City Council and the subject of an ongoing FBI investigation into political corruption in the city.[1]


John Dingell

WASHINGTON — Rep. John Dingell, the iron-fisted Michigan Democrat and advocate for Detroit’s automakers, was honored Tuesday by former President Bill Clinton and congressional leaders as he became the longest-serving House member in history.

Dingell, who succeeded his late father in Congress in 1955, will begin his 19,420th day in Congress on Wednesday, surpassing the late Rep. Jamie Whitten, D-Miss.

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