Mississippi Today
Federal judge sentences state Rep. Earle Banks to probation for tax crime
Longtime state Rep. Earle Banks, a Democrat from Jackson who pleaded guilty in May to evading the payment of federal taxes, has been sentenced to two years of supervised probation and ordered to pay nearly $85,000 in restitution.
Banks, according to news reports, has already paid the restitution.
Banks, who was recently reelected after running unopposed for the Mississippi House, was sentenced Monday in federal court for the Southern District of Mississippi by Judge Carlton Reeves.
The maximum penalty Banks could have faced was three years in prison and a fine of $250,000 followed by one year of supervised release.
Banks will continue serving in the Mississippi House during his probation. He has been a member of the House since 1993.
The Mississippi Constitution prohibits people convicted of most state or federal felonies from serving in elected office. But Section 44 of the state constitution does not bar people convicted of federal tax crimes from serving in elected office.
According to court documents unsealed in May, Banks received more than $500,000 in 2018 but only reported income of $38,237 on his federal income tax return.
Banks’ attorney Rob McDuff said in May, “Mr. Banks has cooperated with the U.S. attorney’s office and today had the opportunity to speak directly to the judge and admit that he made a mistake in failing to report on his tax return the proceeds from the sale of land that had belonged to his family for many years.”
Banks is an attorney, funeral home director and ran unsuccessfully for the state Supreme Court in 2012.
READ MORE: Longtime state Rep. Earle Banks pleads guilty to federal tax crime
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1919
Dec. 27, 1919
Black World War I veteran Powell Green was lynched by a mob of white men near Franklinton, North Carolina.
Many returning Black soldiers, who wanted their full rights as citizens, became targets of violence. Green was arrested for allegedly killing a “prominent” white movie theater owner, but he was never able to defend himself in a court of law. A mob of masked white men abducted him as while officers were transporting the 23-year-old from the jail in Franklinton to the jail in Raleigh.
During that kidnapping, Green broke free from the mob, but they managed to overtake him and tied him to a car, and he was dragged for at least a half mile before they shot him and hung him.
In the days that followed, crowds flocked to the site of his lynching. According to press accounts, “souvenir hunters” cut buttons and pieces of clothing from the body and later cut down the tree for more keepsakes. One news account seemed to suggest Green was to blame for his death, saying that he “was disposed to think well of himself and was self-assertive.”
No one was ever prosecuted for his killing, one of at least 80 lynchings that took place in 1919.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1908
Dec. 26, 1908
Pro boxing pioneer Jack Johnson defeated Tommy Burns, becoming the first Black heavyweight boxing champion.
Johnson grew up in Galveston, Texas, where “white boys were my friends and pals. … No one ever taught me that white men were superior to me.”
After quitting school, he worked at the local docks and then at a race track in Dallas, where he first discovered boxing. He began saving money until he had enough to buy boxing gloves.
He made his professional debut in 1898, knocking out Charley Brooks. Because prizefighting was illegal in Texas, he was occasionally arrested there. He developed his own style, dodging opponents’ blows and then counterpunching. After Johnson defeated Burns, he took on a series of challengers, including Tony Ross, Al Kaufman and Stanley Ketchel.
In 1910, he successfully defended his title in what was called the “Battle of the Century,” dominating the “Great White Hope” James J. Jeffries and winning $65,000 — the equivalent of $1.7 million today.
Black Americans rejoiced, but the racial animosity by whites toward Johnson erupted that night in race riots. That animosity came to a head when he was arrested on racially motivated charges for violating the Mann Act — transporting a woman across state lines for “immoral purposes.”
In fact, the law wasn’t even in effect when Johnson had the relationship with the white woman. Sentenced to a year in prison, Johnson fled the country and fought boxing matches abroad for seven years until 1920 when he served his federal sentence.
He died in 1946, and six decades later, PBS aired Ken Burns’ documentary on the boxer, “Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson,” which fueled a campaign for a posthumous pardon for Johnson. That finally happened in 2018, when then-President Donald Trump granted the pardon.
To honor its native son, Galveston has built Jack Johnson Park, which includes an imposing statue of Johnson, throwing a left hook.
“With enemies all around him — white and even Black — who were terrified his boldness would cause them to become a target, Jack Johnson’s stand certainly created a wall of positive change,” the sculptor told The New York Times. “Not many people could dare to follow that act.”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Health department’s budget request prioritizes training doctors, increasing health insurance coverage
New programs to train early-career doctors and help Mississippians enroll in health insurance are at the top of the state Department of Health’s budget wish list this year.
The agency tasked with overseeing public health in the state is asking for $4.8 million in additional state funding, a 4% increase over last year’s budget appropriation.
The department hopes to use funding increases to start three new medical residency programs across the state. The programs will be located in south central Mississippi, Meridian and the Delta and focus on internal and family medicine, obstetric care and rural training.
The Office of Mississippi Physician Workforce, which the Legislature moved from UMMC to the State Department of Health last year, will oversee the programs.
The office was created by the Legislature in 2012 and has assisted with the creation or supported 19 accredited graduate medical education programs in Mississippi, said health department spokesperson Greg Flynn.
A $1 million dollar appropriation requested by the department will fund a patient navigation program to help people access health services in their communities and apply for health insurance coverage.
People will access these services at community-based health departments, said Flynn.
Patient navigators will help patients apply for coverage through Medicaid or the Health Insurance Marketplace, said Health Department Senior Deputy Kris Adcock at the Joint Legislative Budget Committee meeting on Sept. 26.
“We want to increase the number of people who have access to health care coverage and therefore have access to health care,” she said.
The Health Insurance Marketplace is a federally-operated service that helps people enroll in health insurance programs. Enrollees can access premium tax credits, which lower the cost of health insurance, through the Marketplace.
The department received its largest appropriation from the state’s general fund in nearly a decade last year, illustrating a slow but steady rebound from drastic budget cuts in 2017 that forced the agency to shutter county health clinics and lay off staff.
State Health Officer Dr. Daniel Edney said he is “begging for some help with inflationary pressure” on the department’s operations budget at the State Board of Health meeting Oct. 9, but additional funding for operations was not included in the budget request.
“They’re (lawmakers) making it pretty clear to me that they’re not really interested in putting more money in (operations) to run the agency, and I understand that,” he said.
State agencies present budget requests to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee in September. The committee makes recommendations in December, and most appropriations bills are passed by lawmakers in the latter months of the legislative session, which ends in April.
The Department of Health’s budget request will likely change in the new year depending on the Legislature’s preferences, Edney said Oct. 9.
The state Health Department’s responsibilities are vast. It oversees health center planning and licensure, provides clinical services to underserved populations, regulates environmental health standards and operates infectious and chronic disease prevention programs.
Over half of the agency’s $600 million budget is funded with federal dollars. State funding accounts for just 15% of its total budget.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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