Category Archives: Lynching

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

UMW

January 25, 1890:  in Columbus, Ohio,  the Knights of Labor Trade Assembly No. 135 and the National Progressive Miners Union merged to form the United Mine Workers of America. (see July 2)

Harwick mine explosion

January 25, 1904: an explosion at the Harwick mine in Cheswick, Pa killed two hundred miners. Many of the dead lie entombed in the sealed mine to this day. (see Mar 27)

Coppage v. Kansas

January 25, 1915:  the U.S. Supreme Court held that employers could make contracts that forbid employees from joining unions so-called “Yellow-dog” contracts. This case was decided in the era prior to the American Great Depression when the Supreme Court invalidated laws that imposed restrictions on contracts, especially those of employment. During this time, liberty of contract was viewed as a fundamental right, and therefore, only in extreme circumstances, could this right be abridged. (see Mar 3)

César E. Chávez, Dolores Huerta, UFW

January 25, 1972: a double trailer truck driven by a scab driver struck and killed 18-year old Nan Freeman – a college student who responded to appeals for help by striking farm workers at the Talisman Sugar plant near Belle Glade, Florida. Pickets had complained to the police about scab drivers speeding by the picket lines through stop signs at the plant gates to splash rain and mud on the striking workers. César Chávez wrote of Freeman, “…she is a sister who picketed with farm workers in the middle of the night because of her love for justice…to be honored and remembered for as long as farm workers struggle for justice.” (LH, see Apr 1; UFW, see Feb 21)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Cleo Wright lynched

January 25, 1942: a black man named Cleo Wright was arrested on charges of assaulting a white woman. Wright was shot several times by a city night marshal during his arrest, but the local hospital refused to admit him for treatment due to his race. Police initially brought the ailing Wright to his home to die, but later returned him to the city jail.

By the morning a mob of 75 white men had formed at the jail. They soon overcame city and state police officers and abducted the nearly unconscious Cleo Wright from his cell. The mob then dragged him through the streets of Sunset Addition, Sikeston’s predominantly black neighborhood, where the mob forced Wright’s wife to examine his body, then burned the corpse in front of two black churches in the presence of hundreds of black churchgoers.

A grand jury refused to indict the perpetrators, and no one was ever convicted.  [EJI article] (next BH, see July 1)

Annie Lee Cooper fights back

January 25, 1965: King led another march of about 250 people to the courthouse. When Sheriff Clark painfully twists the arm of Annie Lee Cooper, 54, and shoved her, she hit him — twice. (BH, see Jan 26; MLK, see Feb 1)

Shirley Chisholm

January 25, 1972: Shirley Chisholm, the first African American Congresswoman, announced her candidacy for President. (see Feb 28)

137 SHOTS

January 25, 2016: Cleveland officials said they were firing six police officers involved in a 137-shot barrage that killed two unarmed black people after a high-speed chase.

Those officers included Michael Brelo, a patrolman acquitted of manslaughter charges in May for having fired the last 15 shots of the barrage in East Cleveland on Nov. 29, 2012. The chase began when officers standing outside police headquarters mistook the sound of a beat-up Chevrolet Malibu backfiring as a gunshot.

Six more officers who fired during the barrage face suspensions ranging from 21 to 30 days, said Public Safety Director Michael McGrath, the former police chief. A total of 13 officers had been notified they faced administrative discipline, and one of them has retired, McGrath said. [Guardian article] (see August 8, 2017)

Jackie Robinson statue vandalized

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

January 25, 2024:  vandals entered McAdams Park in Wichita, KS and cut down a statue of Jackie Robinson at its ankles. All that remained was a pair of bronze shoes standing on a base.

A few days later, police received reports of a fire in a trash can at Garvey Park, located roughly seven miles away. When they responded, they found charred pieces of the statue.

In early 2021, League 42, a youth baseball nonprofit in Wichita, unveiled the statue to commemorate the pioneering civil rights leader and professional baseball player. Robinson’s jersey number, 42, is the league’s namesake. [Smithsonian article] (next BH, see Feb 22)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

The Red Scare

January 25, 1956: in a long interview with visiting American attorney Marshall MacDuffie, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev adopted a friendly attitude toward the United States and indicated that he believed President Dwight Eisenhower was sincere in his desire for peace. MacDuffie, a long-time acquaintance of the Soviet leader and a proponent of closer relations between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, had spent three hours conducting the interview. During the discussion, Khrushchev indicated that it was his desire that “We should have disarmament and we should think how to avoid a new war.” He was critical of some U.S. officials that he accused of making belligerent statements towards the Soviet Union, but he was also quick to point out that he did not hold Eisenhower responsible for those statements. In fact, the Soviet leader praised the president’s leadership, and apparently hoped that Eisenhower might negotiate seriously on a number of issues. (see Mar 8)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

January 25 Music et al

January 25, 1963: Vee-Jay record label of Chicago obtained a contract to release limited number of Beatles records in the U.S. for a limited time period. (see Feb 2)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

January 25, 1969: the first fully attended meeting of the formal Paris peace talks was held. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, the chief US negotiator, urged an immediate restoration of a genuine DMZ as the first “practical move toward peace.” Lodge also suggested a mutual withdrawal of “external” military forces and an early release of prisoners of war. Tran Buu Kiem and Xuan Thuy, heads of the National Liberation Front and North Vietnamese delegations respectively, refused Lodge’s proposals and condemned American “aggression.” (see February 1969)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Hiring discrimination

January 25, 1971: in Phillips v. Martin Marietta the Supreme Court ruled that it is contrary to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 for a company to refuse to hire a woman because she has pre-school aged children when it does not impose a similar restriction on hiring men, even where there is no showing of discrimination against women overall.  (next Feminism, see Mar 21)

Janet Yellen

January 25, 2021: lawmakers confirmed Janet Yellen as Treasury secretary, making her the first woman in American history to hold the position. {CNN article] (next Feminism, see Mar 8)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Charles Manson

January 25, 1971: in Los Angeles, California, cult leader Charles Manson was convicted, along with followers Susan Atkins, Leslie Van Houten, and Patricia Krenwinkle, of the brutal 1969 murders of actress Sharon Tate and six others. (see Mar 29)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

DEATH PENALTY

Herrera v. Collins

January 25, 1993: the Supreme Court in Herrera v. Collins held in a 6-3 vote that a death-row inmate was not ordinarily entitled to relief where a claim of innocence was based on newly discovered evidence, unless the claim also includes an independent constitutional violation. The Supreme Court found that there is no due process violation in the execution of someone who was arguably innocent. (see June 28, 1993)

Bill Bailey hung

January 25, 1996: Delaware executed convicted double-murder Bill Bailey  by hanging. Bailey was the third person executed by hanging since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976 and the first hanging in Delaware since 1946. Bailey was the last person executed by hanging in the US.  (see April 24, 1996)

Nitrogen Gas

January 25, 2024:  Alabama carried out the first American execution using nitrogen gas, killing Kenneth Smith, 58, a convicted murderer, whose jury had voted to spare his life and opening a new frontier in how states execute death row prisoners.

The execution of Smith began at 7:53 p.m. Central time, and he was pronounced dead at 8:25 p.m. in an execution chamber in Atmore, Ala., according to John Q. Hamm, the state prison system’s commissioner. The U.S. Supreme Court allowed the execution to move forward over the objections of its three liberal justices and concerns from death penalty opponents that the untested method would cause Mr. Smith to suffer. [NYT article] (next DP, see January 26)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear news

Almost Armageddon

January 25, 1995: Russia’s early-warning defense radar detected an unexpected missile launch near Norway, and Russian military command estimated the missile to be only minutes from impact on Moscow. Moments later, Russian President Boris Yeltsin, his defense minister, and his chief of staff were informed of the missile launch. The nuclear command systems switched to combat mode, and the nuclear suitcases carried by Yeltsin and his top commander were activated for the first time in the history of the Soviet-made weapons system. Five minutes after the launch detection, Russian command determined that the missile’s impact point would be outside Russia’s borders. Three more minutes passed, and Yeltsin was informed that the launching was likely not part of a surprise nuclear strike by Western nuclear submarines.

These conclusions came minutes before Yeltsin and his commanders should have ordered a nuclear response based on standard launch on warning protocols. Later, it was revealed that the missile, launched from Spitzbergen, Norway, was actually carrying instruments for scientific measurements. Nine days before, Norway had notified 35 countries, including Russia, of the exact details of the planned launch. The Russian Defense Ministry had received Norway’s announcement but had neglected to inform the on-duty personnel at the early-warning center of the imminent launch. The event raised serious concerns about the quality of the former Soviet Union’s nuclear systems. [BI article] (see May 11)

US/India agreement

January 25, 2015: President Barack Obama and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi unveiled plans to unlock billions of dollars in nuclear trade and to deepen defense ties, steps they hoped would establish an enduring strategic partnership.

The two countries reached an understanding on two issues that, despite a groundbreaking 2006 agreement, had stopped U.S. companies from setting up reactors in India and had become one of the major irritants in bilateral relations.

“We are committed to moving towards full implementation,” Obama told a joint news conference with Modi. “This is an important step that shows how we can work together to elevate our relationship.”

The new deal resolved differences over the liability of suppliers to India in the event of a nuclear accident and U.S. demands on tracking the whereabouts of material supplied to the country, U.S. ambassador to India Richard Verma told reporters.

Jeffrey A. Sterling convicted

January 25, 2015: Jeffrey A. Sterling, a former Central Intelligence Agency officer, was convicted of espionage on charges that he told a reporter for The New York Times about a secret operation to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program.

The case revolved around a C.I.A. operation in which a former Russian scientist provided Iran with intentionally flawed nuclear component schematics. Mr. Risen revealed the operation in his 2006 book, “State of War,” describing it as a mismanaged, potentially reckless mission that may have inadvertently aided the Iranian nuclear program. (next N/C N,  see Mar 9; next Iran, see Mar 9)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

Immunity

January 25, 1998: Lewinsky lawyer Ginsburg said she will “tell all” in exchange for immunity. Clinton political adviser James Carville said “a war” will be waged between Clinton supporters and Kenneth Starr over Starr’s investigation tactics.

Dismissal

January 25, 1999: Senators hear arguments about dismissing the charges against President Clinton and then deliberate in secret. (see Clinton for expanded story)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Occupy Wall Street

January 25, 2012: recalling the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, Adbusters published an ad calling for fifty thousand protesters to Occupy the G8 summit scheduled for May 2012. (see Sept 15)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Americans With Disabilities Act

January 25, 2013: Education Department stated that students with disabilities must be given the opportunity to play on a traditional sports team or have their own leagues. Disabled students who want to play for their school could join traditional teams if officials can make “reasonable modifications” to accommodate them. If those adjustments would fundamentally alter a sport or give the student an advantage, the department is directing the school to create parallel athletic programs that have comparable standing to traditional programs. (see Nov 7)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

January 25, 2014: an attorney for Steven Joshua Dinkle notified a judge that Dinkle intended to plead guilty at a court hearing. Prosecutors said Dinkle conspired with another person to burn a 6-foot cross in a black neighborhood in an attempt to intimidate its residents. Dinkle was also accused of lying to investigators. Dinkle said that he withdrew from the KKK months before the cross burning.

Dinkle was charged with conspiracy to violate housing rights, criminal interference with the right to fair housing, using fire to commit a federal felony and two counts of obstruction of justice. He will be sentenced in May. (DoJ article) (see Feb 3)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Crime and Punishment

Death-in-prison sentences for juveniles

January 25, 2016: the United States Supreme Court decided that states must retroactively apply the ban on mandatory death-in-prison sentences for juveniles.

On June 24,  2012, the US Supreme Court had struck down automatic life-without-parole sentences for children in Miller v. Alabama. Most state courts applied Miller retroactively to people already serving the banned sentence and granted them a new sentencing hearing, but states including Louisiana and Alabama refused to do so.

This  Montgomery v. Louisiana decision required all states to apply Miller retroactively, which meant that hundreds of people in Louisiana, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and several other states which had sentenced people to die in prison for crimes committed as children were entitled to a new sentencing hearing.

Solitary confinement for juveniles

January 25, 2016: President Obama announced a ban on solitary confinement for juveniles in the federal prison system, a practice he said is “increasingly overused . . . with heartbreaking results.”

In a Washington Post op-ed, the president wrote that solitary confinement can have “devastating, lasting psychological consequences,” including an increased risk of suicide, especially for juveniles and people with mental illnesses.  (Washington Post article) (see Mar 23)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

January 25, 2016: the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review North Dakota’s ban on abortion as early as six weeks of pregnancyallowing a July 2015 ruling from an appellate court striking the measure to stand.

The U.S. Supreme Court had consistently held—first in Roe v. Wade and again in Planned Parenthood v. Casey—that women have a constitutional right to decide whether to end or continue a pregnancy and states cannot ban abortion prior to viability.   The Supreme Court refused to review a decision permanently blocking Arizona’s ban on abortion at 20 weeks of pregnancy in 2013, and courts in Idaho and Georgia have also blocked similar pre-viability bans. (see Mar 4)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

Trump’s Wall 1

January 25, 2017: President Trump signed an order to start building a border wall with Mexico and planned to indefinitely block Syrian refugees from entering the United States and to institute a temporary halt on all refugees from the rest of the world. The refugee policies were part of an executive order he was expected to issue on January 26.

The order required tougher vetting of foreigners fleeing persecution and placed a month-long ban on allowing any person into the United States from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia or Yemen. Refugee admissions would be halted for 120 days while a review of screening procedures was completed. Upon resumption, the program would be far smaller, with the total number of refugees resettled in the United States more than halved to 50,000 from 110,000.

The mayors of American cities large and small reacted with outrage to the  order which said he would halt funding to municipalities that did not cooperate with federal immigration officials. The defiant officials — from New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and smaller cities, including New Haven; Syracuse; and Austin, Tex., said they were prepared for a protracted fight.

“We’re going to defend all of our people regardless of where they come from, regardless of their immigration status,” Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York said at a news conference with other city officials. (BBC article)  (IH & TW, see Jan 26)

 Trump’s Wall 2

January 25, 2019: President Trump agreed to reopen the federal government for three weeks while negotiations continued over how to secure the nation’s southwestern border, backing down after a monthlong standoff failed to force Democrats to give him billions of dollars for his long-promised wall. (next IH & TW, see Feb 5) or see TW for expanded chronology)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism
Voting Rights

January 25, 2018: Pennsylvania Republican lawmakers filed an emergency application asking the US Supreme Court to stay the State Court’s order to redistrict voting districts because they believed that federal law partly governed the case.

The lawmakers pointed to Article I, Section 4 of the United States Constitution, which said that the times, places and manners of congressional elections “shall be prescribed in each state by the legislature thereof.”

The lawmakers said the State Supreme Court had thus usurped the legislature’s role in violation of federal law. (VR & PA, see Feb 5)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Fair Housing

January 25, 2019: during the government shutdown, in which 800,000 federal workers worked without pay or were furloughed for five weeks alongside 1.2 million federal contractors, the Department of Housing and Urban Development was shuttered, with 95 percent of its staff furloughed. The effects reverberated throughout the country.

Programs like the Fair Housing and Equality Office, which is charged with eliminating housing discrimination, and the Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes Office, which helps local governments reduce lead-based paint hazards, were stalled. Vital services, including processing and investigating housing discrimination claims and providing funding for the fair-housing organizations that handle discrimination complaints, disappeared, leaving the patchwork system of federal employees and nonprofit advocates who fight for the victims of housing discrimination unable to serve their most vulnerable clients. (next FH, see July 15)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Trump Impeachment

January 25, 2020: the NYT reported that President Trump’s lawyers wrapped up a brief opening argument against his impeachment much as they had begun, seeking to turn accusations of wrongdoing back on Democrats and insisting that there were innocent explanations for Trump’s actions toward Ukraine.

“They’ve come here today and they’ve basically said, ‘Let’s cancel an election over a meeting with the Ukraine,’” said Pat A. Cipollone, the White House counsel. “It would be a completely irresponsible abuse of power to do what they’re asking you to do: to stop an election, to interfere in an election and to remove the president of the United States from the ballot.” (next TI, see Jan 27 or see Trump for expanded chronology)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

January 25, 2021: President Biden reversed former President Trump’s ban on transgender troops serving in the military, administration.

With Lloyd J. Austin III, his new defense secretary, by his side in the Oval Office, Biden signed an executive order restoring protections first put in place by former President Barack Obama that opened up the ranks of the armed services to qualified transgender people.

“What I’m doing is enabling all qualified Americans to serve their country in uniform,” Mr. Biden said from behind the Resolute Desk moments before putting his signature on the document. [NYT article] (next LGBTQ, see Feb 11)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

January 25, 2022: more than 500 acres of California redwood forestland was officially returned to the InterTribal Sinkyone Wilderness Council whose ancestors were expelled from it generations ago.

The land, formerly known as Andersonia West, was purchased by San Francisco conservation group Save the Redwoods League and donated to the the league announced.

The Sinkyone Council consists of 10 federally recognized Northern California tribal nations including the Cahto Tribe of Laytonville Rancheria, the Pinoleville Pomo Nation, and the Round Valley Indian Tribes.

People Indigenous to the land, located in Northern California’s Mendocino County, were “forcibly removed” by European American colonists, according to the league. But today, the Sinkyone people have been empowered with the ability to reclaim — and rename — the land they believe rightfully belongs to them.

“Renaming the property Tc’ih-Léh-Dûñ lets people know that it’s a sacred place; it’s a place for our Native people,” Sinkyone Council board member and tribal citizen Crista Ray said in a statement. “It lets them know that there was a language and that there was a people who lived there. [CNN article] (next NA, see Feb 22)

Space

January 25, 2023: after completing 72 historic flights on Mars over three years, NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter mission ended.

Originally designed as an experiment, Ingenuity became the first aircraft to operate and fly on another world, lifting off on April 19, 2021.

Imagery and data returned to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, showed that one or more of the chopper’s carbon fiber rotor blades was damaged while landing during its final flight this month. The team determined that the helicopter is no longer able to fly, according to the space agency.

Ingenuity, which had traveled to Mars as the Perseverance rover’s trusty sidekick, sits upright on the surface of Mars and mission controllers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory had been able to maintain communications with the rotorcraft.  [CNN article] (next Space, see Feb 12)

January 25 Peace Love Art Activism

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Elizabeth Blackwell

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

January 23, 1849: Geneva College in New York granted a medical degree to Elizabeth Blackwell. She became the first female officially recognized as a physician in U.S. history. (see June 21, 1851)

Madeleine Korbel AlbrightJanuary 23 Peace Love Activism

January 23, 1997: born in what was then Czechoslova, American diplomat Madeleine Korbel Albright was sworn in as the first female U.S. Secretary of State. With this appointment, she became the highest-ranking woman in the United States government.  (next Feminism see June 21, 1997)

Women in combat

January 23, 2013:  Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta lifted the military’s ban on women in combat, which opened up hundreds of thousands of additional front-line jobs to them. (see Feb 2)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

January 23 Peace Love Activism

January 23, 1907: Charles Curtis, of Kansas, began serving in the US Senate. He was the first American Indian to become a U.S. Senator. He resigned in March of 1929 to become U.S. President Herbert Hoover’s Vice President. (see January 29, 1908)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Silk Weavers strike

January 23, 1913: approximately 800 broad-silk weavers at the Doherty Company mill in Paterson, New Jersey leave work. Within a month, between 4,000 and 5,000 silk workers join them in protest of the introduction of the multiple-loom system, leading to a drop in wages, and the Paterson Silk Strike begins.

Clothing Workers Strike

January 23 Peace Love Activism

January 23, 1913: some 10,000 clothing workers strike in Rochester, N.Y., for the 8-hour day, a 10-percent wage increase, union recognition, and extra pay for overtime and holidays. Daily parades were held throughout the clothing district and there was at least one instance of mounted police charging the crowd of strikers and arresting 25 picketers. Six people were wounded over the course of the strike and one worker, 18-year-old Ida Breiman, was shot to death by a sweatshop contractor. The strike was called off in April after manufacturers agreed not to discriminate against workers for joining a union. (see Feb 10)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Marcus Garvey

January 23 Peace Love Activism

January 23, 1920: Marcus Garvey incorporated the Negro Factories Corporation. It was the finance arm of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and a cornerstone of Garvey’s vision for black economic independence. The Corporation’s goal was to support businesses that would employ African Americans and produce goods to sell to black consumers. Garvey envisioned a string of black-owned factories, retailers, services and other businesses, and hoped that the corporation would eventually be strong enough to power and sustain an all-black economy with worldwide significance.  (BH, see June 7;  see MG for expanded chronology)

Hawood Patterson

January 23, 1936: Haywood Patterson convicted for a fourth time of rape and sentenced to 75 years in prison. This was the first time in Alabama history a black man was sentenced to anything other than death for the rape of a white woman. (NYT article) (see Scottsboro for expanded story)

The tragedy of Willie Edwards Jr.

January 23, 1957: just before midnight on January 23, 1957, four Klansmen forced Willie Edwards Jr. to jump to his death from the Tyler Goodwin Bridge near Montgomery, Alabama. Mr. Edwards, a black resident of Montgomery, was driving back from his first assignment as a deliveryman for a Winn-Dixie grocery store when he stopped for a soft drink. As he read his log book under the console light in his truck, four armed white men approached the vehicle, forced Mr. Edwards to exit the truck at gunpoint, and ordered him to get into their car.

Accusing Mr. Edwards of “offending a white woman,” the men proceeded to shove and slap him as they drove. One man pointed his gun at Mr. Edwards and threatened to castrate him. Sobbing and begging the men not to harm him, Mr. Edwards repeatedly denied having said anything to any white woman. Eventually the men reached the bridge and ordered Mr. Edwards out of the car. Ordered to “hit the water” or be shot, Mr. Edwards climbed the railing of the bridge and fell 125 feet to his death.

The next morning, Mr. Edwards’s truck was found in the store parking lot, the console light still on. Mr. Edwards’ pregnant twenty-three-year-old wife, Sarah Salter, was left to raise their two young daughters. Initially hopeful that her husband may have left for California, where he had always wanted to go, Mrs. Salters learned three months later that her husband was dead when two fisherman found his decomposed body in April 1957.

Nearly twenty years later, in 1976, Attorney General Bill Baxley prosecuted three known Klansmen for Mr. Edwards’s murder, after a fourth man confessed in exchange for immunity. After the indictments were quashed twice for failure to specify a cause of death, the FBI informed Baxley that one of the men charged, Henry Alexander, was their primary Klan informant in the area and asked Baxley to give him “some consideration.” Alexander had been indicted for four church bombings, the bombings of two homes, and the assault of a black woman riding on a bus but he was never prosecuted. Baxley abandoned their case against the men and all charges were dropped.

Not until 1993, when Alexander confessed to his wife on his deathbed that he and three other Klansmen were responsible for “the truck driver’s” death, did the truth of Mr. Edwards’ last moments come to light. Alexander told his wife, “That man never hurt anybody. I was just running my mouth. I caused it.” In 1997, the Alabama Department of Vital Statistics changed Mr. Edwards’s cause of death from “unknown” to “homicide.”

A 1999 Montgomery County grand jury declined to indict any of the surviving suspects for the murder of Willie Edwards Jr. [see WE, Jr for expanded story] (see Feb 14)

Voting Rights

January 23, 1964: thirteen years after its proposal and nearly 2 years after its passage by the US Senate, the 24th Amendment to the United States Constitution, prohibiting the use of poll taxes in national elections, was ratified. (see Feb 17)

FREE SPEECH

January 23, 1964: a group protested racial voting discrimination and encouraged Negro registration by picketing the Forrest County, Mississippi, voting registration office in the county courthouse each weekday from January 23 to May 18, 1964. They walked in a “march route” set off by the sheriff with barricades to facilitate access to the courthouse. (see Mar 9)

Harlem Revolt

January 23, 1968: the Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal of William Epton, the leader of the Harlem Progressive Labor Movement, who was convicted of encouraging rioting in Harlem in July, 1964. (BH, see Feb 8; RR, see Feb 29; Harlem Riot, see Apr 25)

Clarence Norris

January 23, 1989: Clarence Norris, the last surviving Scottsboro boy, died at age 76. (see Scottsboro for expanded story)

Colin Kaepernick

January 23, 2018: Colin Kaepernick was named a finalist for an award honoring players for their community service work.

Kaepernick and four other players were announced as finalists for the NFL Players Association’s (NFLPA) Byron “Whizzer” White Community MVP award. (see Apr 21)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Cultural Milestones

Wham-O

January 23, 1957: machines at the Wham-O toy company rolled out the first batch of their aerodynamic plastic discs–Frisbees. (see May 1)

Roots mini-series

January 23, 1977: the TV mini-series “Roots,” based on the Alex Haley novel, began airing on ABC. . (see September 7, 1979)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

January 23 Music et al

Roots of Rock

January 23, 1959: the Winter Dance Party tour, featuring Buddy Holly , Ritchie Valens, The Big Bopper and Dion and the Belmonts, played its first date at Milwaukee’s Million Dollar Ballroom. It would become the most famous tour in the history of Rock and Roll, but would only last for 10 shows with the original lineup. (see Feb 3)

Wonderland by Night

January 23 – February 12, 1961: Bert Kaempfert’s Wonderland by Night is Billboard #1 album.

Janis Joplin and the Road to Bethel

January 23, 1963: Janis Joplin, a 20-year-old college dropout from Port Arthur, TX began hitchhiking to San Francisco in order to become a singer, along with her friend Chet Helms. Chet would become one of the major concert promoters in San Francisco with his “Family Dog” series of concerts. (see Janis Joplin for more) . (see June 13, 1967)

Downtown

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

January 23 – February 5, 1965: “Downtown” by Petula Clark #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Crawdaddy
Crawdaddy

January 23 – February 7, 1966: first issue of Crawdaddy! magazine: You are looking at the first issue of a magazine of rock and roll criticism. Crawdaddy! will feature neither pin-ups nor news-briefs; the specialty of this magazine is intelligent writing about pop music….” see Paul Williams Crawdaddy for more)  (see October 18, 1967)

Ken Kesey/LSD

January 23, 1966: Ken Kesey fakes suicide and flees to Mexico to avoid imprisonment. (see Jan 29)

First R & R Hall of Fame inductions

January 23 Peace Love Activism

January 23, 1986: the first annual induction ceremony for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame was held in New York City. Inductees were:

  • Chuck Berry
  • James Brown
  • Ray Charles
  • Sam Cooke
  • Fats Domino
  • The Everly Brothers
  • Alan Freed
  • John Hammond
  1. Buddy Holly
  2. Rober Johnson
  3. Jerry Lee Lewis
  4. Little Richard
  5. Sam Phillips
  6. Elvis Presley
  7. Jimmie Rodgers
  8. Jimmy Yancey

(see May 5)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

Ruptured storage tank

January 23, 1963: in Mankata Minnesota a storage tank ruptured and spilled three million gallons of soybean oil and flooded streets.  The oil eventually flowed into the Mississippi River. In the spring, more than 10,000 ducks were found dead in the wetlands along the river. (see Dec 17)

Wetlands protections removed

January 23, 2020: the Trump administration finalized a rule to strip away environmental protections for streams, wetlands and other water bodies, handing a victory to farmers, fossil fuel producers and real estate developers who said Obama-era rules had shackled them with onerous and unnecessary burdens.

From Day 1 of his administration, President Trump vowed to repeal President Barack Obama’s “Waters of the United States” regulation, which had frustrated rural landowners. His new rule was the latest step in the Trump administration’s push to repeal or weaken nearly 100 environmental rules and laws, loosening or eliminating rules on climate change, clean air, chemical pollution, coal mining, oil drilling and endangered species protections. [NYT article] (next EI, see Feb 6)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

January 23, 1967: in Keyishian v. Board of Regents the US Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional a New York State law that prohibited members of “seditious” groups from teaching in the state. The Court held that academic freedom “does not tolerate laws that cast a pall of orthodoxy over the classroom.” The law required an answer to the question: “Have you ever advised or taught or were you ever a member of any society or group of persons which taught or advocated the doctrine that the Government of the United States or of any political subdivisions thereof should be overthrown or overturned by force, violence or any unlawful means?” Sedition is generally defined to mean actions or direct incitement to challenge the established order and/or to advocate the overthrow of the government. (NYT article)  (CW, see Feb 15; FS, see May 8)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

January 23 1973: Nixon announced that Henry A. Kissinger and North Vietnam’s chief negotiator, Le Duc Tho, had initialed an agreement in Paris “to end the war and bring peace with honor in Vietnam and Southeast Asia.” (see Jan 27)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

Clinton claims innocence 

January 23, 1998: President Clinton assured his Cabinet of his innocence. Judge Susan Webber Wright put off “indefinitely” a deposition Lewinsky was scheduled to give in the Jones lawsuit. Clinton’s personal secretary, Betty Currie, and other aides were subpoenaed to appear before a federal grand jury. Lewinsky’s lawyar, William Ginsburg, said whe was being “squeezed” by Starr and was now a target of the Whitewater investigation.

Monica Lewinsky

January 23, 1999: a judge ordered Monica Lewinsky to cooperate with House prosecutors; Lewinsky returns to Washington, D.C., from California. (see Clinton for expanded story)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

January 23, 2002: John Walker Lindh returned to the U.S. under FBI custody. Lindh was charged with conspiring to kill U.S. citizens, providing support to terrorists and engaging in prohibited transactions with the Taliban while a member of the al-Quaida terrorist organization in Afghanistan.  (T, see Feb 21; JWL, see July 15)

Shannon Conley

January 23, 2015: Judge Raymond Moore sentenced 19-year-old Shannon Conley to four years in prison. She had tried to go to Syria to help Islamic State militants. Conley pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization in September under a deal that requires her to divulge information she may have about other Americans with similar intentions. Wearing a black and tan headscarf with her jail uniform, she tearfully told the judge that she had disavowed jihad and that the people who influenced her misconstrued the Quran.  (NYT article) (see Feb 6)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

Virginia ban on same-sex marriage

January 23, 2014:  Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring concluded that the state’s ban on gay marriage was unconstitutional and would  no longer defend it in federal lawsuits. Virginia would instead side with the plaintiffs who were seeking to have the ban struck down. “After a thorough legal review of the matter, Attorney General Herring… concluded that Virginia’s current ban… in violation of the U.S. constitution and he will not defend it,” spokesman wrote. [NYT article] (see Jan 30)

Alabama’s ban on same-sex marriage

January 23, 2015: U.S. District Judge Callie V.S. Granade ruled that Alabama’s ban on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional. Granade, ruled that Alabama’s constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, known as the Sanctity of Marriage Amendment, violated the 14th Amendment’s due process and equal protection clauses.

“If anything, Alabama’s prohibition of same-sex marriage detracts from its goal of promoting optimal environments for children,” Granade writes. “Those children currently being raised by same-sex parents in Alabama are just as worthy of protection and recognition by the State as are the children being raised by opposite-sex parents. Yet Alabama’s Sanctity laws harms the children of same-sex couples for the same reasons that the Supreme Court found that the Defense of Marriage Act harmed the children of same-sex couples.” The suit was brought against the state by two women, Cari Searcy and Kimberly McKeand, who had traveled out of state to get married in order to become the legal parents of their son. [NYT article]  (see Feb 3 or see December 13, 2022 re DoMA)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

DEATH PENALTY

January 23, 2015: the US Supreme Court agreed to review Oklahoma’s method of execution by lethal injection, taking up a case brought by Richard Glossip, John Grant and Benjamin Cole, three death row inmates, who accused the state of violating the U.S. Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. The three-drug process used by Oklahoma prison officials for carrying out the death penalty had been widely debated since the April 29, 2014 botched execution of inmate Clayton Lockett, a convicted murder. He was seen twisting on the gurney after death chamber staff failed to place the IV properly. The inmates challenging the state’s procedures argued that the sedative used by Oklahoma, midazolam, cannot achieve the level of unconsciousness required for surgery and was therefore unsuitable for executions.

Glossip, Grant, and Cole want the court to decide whether its decision in Baze v. Rees (see April 16, 2008) in which the justices upheld the three-drug execution protocol used by Kentucky applied to Oklahoma’s procedures. Lawyers for the inmates said that the Oklahoma protocol was different, so the reasoning of the 2008 ruling should not apply. (see Jan 28)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

January 23, 2017: President Donald Trump signed off on the first anti-abortion policy of his term.

It was expected as almost immediately upon entering office, every new administration since 1984 had repealed or reinstated, according to its party’s position on abortion rights, a rule that prohibited foreign organizations that received U.S. family-planning funds “from providing counseling or referrals for abortion or advocating for access to abortion services in their country.” This rule, known as the Mexico City policy, blocks U.S. family-planning assistance to these groups, even if their abortion-related activities—including information, referrals, or services—were conducted with non-U.S. funds.

Opponents to the restriction dubbed it the “Global Gag Rule” because it hindered communication between health-care providers and patients.  (NYT article) (see Jan 27)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

January 23, 2018:  NJ Governor Phil Murphy signed an Executive Order directing the New Jersey Department of Health and the Board of Medical Examiners to review the state’s existing medical marijuana program. The goal of the review was to eliminate barriers to access for patients who suffer from illnesses that could be treated with medical marijuana.

“We need to treat our residents with compassion,” Governor Murphy said. “We cannot turn a deaf ear to our veterans, the families of children facing terminal illness, or to any of the other countless New Jerseyans who only wish to be treated like people, and not criminals. And, doctors deserve the ability to provide their patients with access to medical marijuana free of stigmatization.”  [text of order] (next Cannabis see Jan 31) or see CCC for expanded chronology)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

January 23, 2020: the State Department gave visa officers more power to block pregnant women abroad from visiting the United States and directed them to stop “birth tourism” — trips designed to obtain citizenship for their children.

The administration used the new rule to push consular officers abroad to reject women they believe were entering the United States specifically to gain citizenship for their child by giving birth. The visas covered by the new rule were issued to those seeking to visit for pleasure, medical treatment or to see friends and family. [NYT article] (next IH, see  Jan 27)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Trump Impeachment

January 23, 2020: House Democrats sought to pre-emptively dismantle President Trump’s core defenses in his impeachment trial, invoking his own words to argue that his pressure campaign on Ukraine was an abuse of power that warranted his removal.

On the second day of arguments Democrats sought to make the case that Trump’s actions were an affront to the Constitution. And they worked to disprove his lawyers’ claims that he was acting only in the nation’s interests when he sought to enlist Ukraine to investigate political rivals. [NYT article] (next TI see Jan 24 or see Trump for expanded chronology)

January 23 Peace Love Art Activism

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

United States v. Harris

In 1876, Crockett County, Tennessee, Sheriff R. G. Harris and nineteen armed men had removed four African Americans, Robert Smith, William Overton, George Wells, Jr., and P.M. Wells, from the local jail and beat them, killing one.

Federal prosecutors brought criminal charges against Sheriff Harris and his accomplices under the Force Act of 1871, commonly known as the Ku Klux Klan Act or the Civil Rights Act of 1871. Introduced by progressive Republicans to extend the protection of federal law to African Americans in states that refused to protect Blacks from racial terror and violence, the act made it a federal crime for individuals to conspire for the purpose of depriving others of their right to the equal protection of the law.

On January 22, 1883, the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Harris dismissed the indictments against the sheriff and his accomplices and declared that the Force Act was unconstitutional because the Fourteenth Amendment limited Congress to taking remedial steps against state action that violated the Fourteenth Amendment and applied only to acts by states, not to acts of individuals.

The Harris decision dealt a devastating blow to congressional efforts to combat the widespread violence and terrorism targeting black Southerners during Reconstruction and left African Americans unprotected against lynching. (next BH, see Jan 29; see 19th century for expanded lynching chronology)

Emmett Till

January 22, 1957: William Bradford Huie wrote another article for Look magazine, “What’s Happened to the Emmett Till Killers?” Huie writes that “Milam does not regret the killing, though it has brought him nothing but trouble.” Blacks have stopped frequenting stores owned by the Milam and Bryant families and put them out of business. Bryant takes up welding for income, and both men are ostracized by the white community. (BH, see Jan 23;  see Till for expanded story)

Albany Movement

January 22, 1962: Ola Mae Quarterman (Jan 12) is tried and convicted. She served 60 days. (next BH, see Feb 12;  see Albany for expanded story)

Margaret Moore and the Rev. F.D. Reese

January 22, 1965: since local teachers in Selma could be fired, few had taken overt roles in the civil rights movement, but Margaret Moore and the Rev. F.D. Reese, who was also a teacher at Hudson High, organized the unprecedented teachers’ march on this date. Almost every black teacher in Selma — 110 of them — marched to register to vote. Sheriff Jim Clark and his deputies pushed them down the courthouse stairs three times, but they were not arrested.  (MLK, see Jan 25)

George Whitmore, Jr

January 22, 1965: The New York Times quoted Stanley J. Reiben, George Whitmore, Jr.’s pro bono lawyer, as saying that the photo found in Whitmore’s possession was not a photo of Wylie but of a women named Arlene Franco, who lived in Wildwood, N.J. next BH, see Jan 25; see Whitmore for expanded story)

Gordon Howell

January 22, 1976: Gordon Howell, a cattle ranch worker, was shot to death in a one-room grocery store owned by Linward Denton, six miles east of Dawson, a rural town in southwest Georgia. According to testimony, Howell was shot by a group of young African American men who came into the store and slipped on ski masks behind a beer cooler before pulling a weapon. Denton identified Roosevelt Watson, who was then 19, as the gunman. Police also arrested his brother, Henderson Jackson, 21; brothers Johnny B. Jackson, 17, and James “Junior” Jackson, 16; and J.D. Davenport, 18, the Watsons’ cousin. All five young men were charged with murder and robbery. In preliminary hearings, the prosecution claimed the accused had confessed, and announced an intention to seek the death penalty.

The five men were represented by Millard Farmer of the Team Defense Project Inc. from Atlanta. Mr. Farmer contended that police coerced the defendants’ alleged confessions by threatening to shoot, electrocute, and castrate the young men. The prosecution’s case began to unravel when, in August 1977, a former police captain testified that he was present when a fellow officer jammed his gun into the forehead of one defendant, cocked it, and repeatedly ordered the defendant to confess, saying to him, “Okay, nigger, I want to know where y’all threw the weapons at.

Following this testimony, Judge Walter Greer ultimately suppressed the confessions of three of the defendants, ruling that the illiterate young men could not have knowingly and intelligently waived their constitutional rights against self-incrimination. . (BH, see June 25; Howell case, see December 17, 1977)

Michael Griffith

January 22, 1988: Jon Lester received a sentence of ten to thirty years imprisonment for the death of Michael Griffith.

Lester served until 2001 and was deported to his native England where he became an electrical engineer and had three children. Lester committed suicide on August 14, 2017.  He was 48 years old. (NYT article) (see Feb 5)

Laquan McDonald

January 22, 2016: CPD Detective David March and Officer Joseph Walsh, whose reports were dramatically at odds with dashcam video of Laquan McDonald’s shooting, were put on desk duty. (B & S and McDonald, see In March)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

January 22, 1919: Ukraine independent. (see Aug 19)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Japanese Internment Camps

January 22, 1942: Congressman Ford (Calif.) urged total evacuation of all persons of Japanese ancestry. (see JIC for expanded chronology)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Religion and Public Education

January 22, 1947:  McCollum v. Board of Education—the Illinois Supreme Court concurred with the Circuit Court and ruled that schools can teach religion . (see March 5, 1953)

The Red Scare

January 22, 1953: the premier of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, a play about the Salem Witch Trials which actually took place in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. The play is an allegory of McCarthyism. The play’s title can be said to refer to the mixing of religious and secular aspects of society. (see March 5, 1953)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Covert operations

January 22, 1964: the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff informed Defense Secretary Robert McNamara that they were “wholly in favor of executing the covert actions against North Vietnam.”

President Johnson had recently approved Oplan 34A to be conducted by South Vietnamese forces (supported by the United States) to gather intelligence and conduct sabotage to destabilize the North Vietnamese regime. Actual operations began in February and involved raids by South Vietnamese commandos operating under American orders against North Vietnamese coastal and island installations. Although American forces were not directly involved in the actual raids, U.S. Navy ships were on station to conduct electronic surveillance and monitor North Vietnamese defense responses under another program called Operation De Soto. (see Jan 30)

LBJ dies

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

January 22, 1973: Lyndon Johnson died. (NYT obit)

Student Rights 

January 22, 1975: nine students at an Ohio public school had received 10-day suspensions for disruptive behavior without due process protections.

In Goss v. Lopez, the Supreme Court case held that a public school must conduct a hearing before subjecting a student to suspension. The Court held that a suspension without a hearing violated the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.  (Vietnam, see Jan 29; SR, see April 22, 1983)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

January 22 Music et al

The Sounds of Silence

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

January 22 – 28, 1966: “The Sounds of Silence” by Simon and Garfunkel #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. (see Wednesday Morning 3am for more)

Lady Soul

January 22, 1968: Aretha Franklin released Lady Soul album.

Annie Liebowitz

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

January 22, 1981: Rolling Stone magazine’s John Lennon tribute issue published. Its cover was a photograph of a naked John Lennon curled up in a fetal embrace of a fully clothed Yoko Ono. Annie Liebovitz’s portrait would become the definitive image of perhaps the most photographed married couple in music history. The photograph was all the more poignant for having been taken on the morning of December 8, 1980, just twelve hours before Lennon’s death.

Rolling Stone sent Liebovitz to take a photo of Lennon alone, but Lennon insisted on one with Yoko.  Liebovitz recalled, “…I walk in, and the first thing [Lennon] says to me is ‘I want to be with her.'” Liebovitz reluctantly agreed, Lennon told her on the spot that she “captured [his] relationship with Yoko perfectly.” (2011 LOMOGRAPHY article) (see Feb 6)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Cultural/Technological Milestones

Laugh-In

January 22, 1968: “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In” premiered on NBC. Thanks to an ever-changing cast of regulars including the likes of Dan Rowan, Dick Martin, Arte Johnson, Goldie Hawn, Ruth Buzzi, JoAnne Worley, Gary Owens, Alan Sues, Henry Gibson, Lily Tomlin, Richard Dawson, Judy Carne, the show became the highest-rated comedy series in TV history. (see Say Goodnight Dick for more) (see Feb 19)

Apple Macintosh

January 22, 1984: The Apple Macintosh computer was introduced in a TV commercial (“1984”) during Super Bowl XVIII. (2017 Chicago Tribute article) (see Jan 24)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Fair Housing

Romney appointed HUD Secretary

January 22, 1969: former Michigan governor George C. Romney appointed HUD Secretary by President Richard M. Nixon.

Title VII

In 1970: Title VII, otherwise known as the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1970 or New Communities Assistance Program was established to guarantee bonds, debentures, and other financing of private and public new community developers and to provide other development assistance through interest loans and grants, public service grants, and planning assistance. (see March 16, 1972)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Joseph Yablonski

January 22, 1970,: three Cleveland, OH, men, Paul Eugene Gilly, Claude Edward Vealey, and Aubran Wayne Martin, were accused of murdering labor organizer Joseph Yablonski and his family. (NYT article) (see Feb 25)

Union membership declines

January 22, 2010: the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that union membership fell so fast in the private sector in 2009 that the 7.9 million unionized public-sector workers easily outnumbered those in the private sector. According to the labor bureau, 7.2 percent of private-sector workers were union members in 2009, down from 7.6 in 2008. That, labor historians said, was the lowest percentage of private-sector workers in unions since 1900. Among government workers, union membership grew to 37.4 percent last year, from 36.8 percent in 2008. (see Apr 5)

LA Teacher Strike

January 22, 2019: Los Angeles public school teachers reached a deal with officials to end a weeklong strike that had affected more than half a million students, winning an array of supplementary services after an era in education marked by attacks on traditional public schools and their teachers. (see Feb 11)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Roe v. Wade

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

January 22, 1973:  in a decision authored by Justice Harry Blackmun, the Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade legalized abortion, overturning state and federal laws that regulated or prohibited a woman’s right to an abortion. The landmark decision, established by a vote of 7 to 2, began a longstanding, polarizing political debate between “pro-choice” and “pro-life” factions. “Roe” was Norma McCorvey (Women’s Health, see July 25, 1978; Feminism, see May 14; Norma McCorvey, see February 18, 2017)

Condoleezza Rice

January 22, 2001: Condoleezza Rice became the first woman to serve as U.S. National Security Advisor.  (see November 14, 2002)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Crime and Punishment

January 22, 1976: in Rizzo v. Goode the Supreme Court rejected a request for an injunction against misconduct by the Philadelphia Police Department. The decision severely limited the role of the federal courts in ordering remedies to end police misconduct.

Section 14141 of the 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, passed on September 13, 1994, however, authorized the U.S. Justice Department to bring civil suits that demand remedies when there is a “pattern or practice” of abuse of people’s rights. Under Section 14141, the Special Litigation Section of the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department has maintained an active program of investigations and lawsuits that have required major reforms in local police department, including Los Angeles, the New Jersey State Police, Cincinnati, and others. (see October 12, 1984)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

IRAQ War I

 

January 22, 1991: Iraqi troops began blowing up Kuwaiti oil wells. (see Feb 7)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

1998

January 22, 1998: President Clinton reiterated his denial of the relationship and said he never urged Lewinsky to lie. Starr issued subpoenas for a number of people, as well as for White House records. Starr also defended the expansion of his initial Whitewater investigation. Jordan held a press conference to flatly deny he told Lewinsky to lie. Jordan also said that Lewinsky told him that she did not have a sexual relationship with the president.

1999

January 22, 1999: Senators began two days of questioning of the prosecution and defense teams, passing written queries through Chief Justice William Rehnquist. (see Clinton for expanded chronology)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

World Trade Center

January 22 Peace Love Activism

January 22, 2008: Man on Wire  documentary which chronicled Philippe Petit’s 1974 high-wire walk between the Twin Towers is featured at the Sundance Film Festival. (see May 5, 2010)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

January 22, 2008: Jose Padilla, once accused of plotting with al-Qaida to blow up a radioactive “dirty bomb,” was sentenced by a U.S. federal judge in Miami to more than 17 years in prison on terrorism conspiracy charges. (see Feb 11)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Voting Rights

January 22, 2018: the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled 4 – 3 and struck down the state’s congressional district map, saying it “clearly, plainly and palpably” violated the state Constitution.

The Court gave State legislators the opportunity to redraw the map in time for the May 15 primary election, subject to the governor’s approval, and file it with the court by Feb. 15.

But the decision also invited “all parties and interveners” to submit their own proposed replacement maps. If lawmakers can’t make it happen on time, the justices will choose a new map based on the court record.

The order required the new map to divide the state’s voters into districts that are contiguous and have equal populations, which federal law already requires. But the districts also have to avoid dividing political jurisdictions like counties and municipalities, which isn’t a legal mandate but is recognized as “best practice” in redistricting. (VR & PA, see Jan 25)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

January 22, 2018: Congress brought an end to a three-day government shutdown as Senate Democrats buckled under pressure to adopt a short-term spending bill to fund government operations without first addressing the fate of young undocumented immigrants. The key part of the deal was a pledge by Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, to allow an immigration vote in the coming weeks. (see Jan 31)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

January 22, 2018:  approved by the Vermont legislature on January 11, Gov. Phil Scott (R) signed the bill legalizing marijuana for adults over 21. It allowed for the possession of an ounce or less of marijuana, two mature and four immature plants.

Vermont was the ninth state to legalize recreational marijuana for adults, but the first to do so legislatively and not through ballot initiatives. (see Jan 23 or see CCC for expanded cannabis history)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

January 22, 2019: the US Supreme Court granted the Trump administration’s request to allow it to bar most transgender people from serving in the military while cases challenging the policy make their way to the court.

The administration’s policy reversed a 2016 decision by the Obama administration to open the military to transgender service members. It generally prohibits transgender people from military service but makes exceptions for those already serving openly and those willing to serve “in their biological sex.”

The vote to lift two injunctions blocking the policy issued by lower courts was 5 to 4, with the Supreme Court’s five conservative members in the majority.

Lawyers questioning the new policy said there was no need to enforce it while the cases challenging it moved forward. (next LGBTQ, see Feb 4 military, see Mar 7)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Trump Impeachment

January 22, 2020: the House Democratic impeachment managers began formal arguments in the Senate trial, presenting a meticulous and scathing case for convicting President Trump and removing him from office on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

Representative Adam B. Schiff of California, the lead House prosecutor, took the lectern in the chamber as senators sat silently preparing to weigh Mr. Trump’s fate. Speaking in an even, measured manner, he accused the president of a corrupt scheme to pressure Ukraine for help “to cheat” in the 2020 presidential election.

Invoking the nation’s founders and their fears that a self-interested leader might subvert democracy for his own personal gain, Mr. Schiff argued that the president’s conduct was precisely what the framers of the Constitution had in mind when they devised the remedy of impeachment, one he said was “as powerful as the evil it was meant to combat.” [NYT article] (next TI, see Jan 23 or see Trump for expanded chronology)

January 22 Peace Love Art Activism