Connect with us

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1847

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2025-01-27 07:00:00

Jan. 27, 1847

Adam Crosswhite Credit: Wikipedia

More than 100 citizens of Marshall, Michigan, helped Adam Crosswhite, his wife, Sarah, and their children, who had escaped slavery, to flee to Canada rather than be captured by bounty hunters. 

Three years earlier, Crosswhite and his family had fled a Kentucky plantation after learning one of his four children was going to be sold. They traveled on the Underground Railroad through Indiana and Illinois before winding up in Michigan. 

At 4 a.m., bounty hunters broke into the home of Crosswhite and his family, telling them they were being taken back to Kentucky. Before that could happen, hordes of citizens intervened. When the bounty hunters offered to take the children only, the couple refused. The sheriff’s office then arrived and arrested the bounty hunters for trespassing, enabling the Crosswhite family to escape to Canada. 

Later, the slaveholder sued seven Black and white Marshall citizens who intervened and won $1,926, which with court costs totalled nearly $6,000 (more than $211,000 today). 

Citizens of the town rallied, raised the money and adopted a resolution that said, “We will never voluntarily separate ourselves from the slave population in the country, for they are our fathers and mothers, and sisters and our brothers, their interest is our interest, their wrongs and their sufferings are ours, the injuries inflicted on them are alike inflicted on us; therefore it is our duty to aid and assist them in their attempts to regain their liberty.” 

An abolitionist journal at the time, The Signal of Liberty, wrote, “If the slaveholder has the right to seize a fugitive from slavery in a free State, let him appeal to the proper tribunals to maintain that right, instead of midnight seizure, backed by a display of bowie knives and seven shooters.”

After the Civil War ended, Crosswhite and his family returned to Marshall. A monument now marks the place where they made their courageous stand.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi Stories

Mississippi Stories: Landon Bryant

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Marshall Ramsey – 2025-01-28 16:36:00

Landon Bryant is a top-notch educator. Whether it is in an art classroom or on Instagram discussing one of the South’s little idiosyncrasies, he has an ability to explain things in a hilarious way.  Known online as LandonTalks, he and his wife Kate have created clever short videos that have tickled the nation’s funny bone. I visited him in his hometown of Laurel (where it all began and continues to this day.)  We traveled to the Lauren Rogers Museum and toured downtown, all while he gave us a glimpse into his brilliant imagination. No longer in the classroom, Landon fills his time as a stand-up comic, author, podcaster, and commentator on all things Southern. It’s fun to watch good people succeed.  And in this episode, you’ll get to know the good man behind the meteoric success story. 

For more videos, subscribe to Mississippi Today’s YouTube channel.


This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Continue Reading

Mississippi Today

State lawmakers propose strict new rules on Taser use by police

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Nate Rosenfield – 2025-01-28 14:30:00

Two state lawmakers in Mississippi have introduced bills to restrict the use of Tasers by police following an investigation by Mississippi Today and The New York Times that revealed lax oversight and dangerous use of the weapons across the state. 

The bills, both sponsored by Democrats, are likely to face pushback from law enforcement officials and significant hurdles in a legislature controlled by Republicans. 

One, House Bill 1596, proposed by Rep. Omeria Scott of Laurel, would ban police in Mississippi from using Tasers. The other, Senate Bill 2317, introduced by Sen. Bradford Blackmon of Canton, would allow Taser use only in circumstances where deadly force by police officers is justifiable. It would also bar officers from shocking people who are elderly, pregnant, mentally ill or intoxicated.

Sen. Blackmon said he drafted his bill after learning from recent reporting by Mississippi Today and The Times that there are no statewide guidelines for how law enforcement officers use Tasers. 

The news organizations found that departments in Mississippi have developed a patchwork of outdated Taser policies that often do not address whether officers can shock children or people with known medical conditions. Most do not bar officers from using Tasers against someone in handcuffs. 

Few departments aggressively monitor Taser use, even though the devices keep an electronic log of every activation. Reporters used those logs, gathered from departments across the state, to uncover hundreds of suspicious Taser incidents, including some where the person was shocked for far longer than experts consider safe.

In 2023, one of the state’s most extreme examples of Taser abuse was uncovered when Mississippi Today and Tthe New York Times found that a group of sheriff’s deputies in Rankin County, some of whom called themselves the Goon Squad, used their Tasers for years to torture people they suspected of using drugs.

Blackmon said that similar abuses could be prevented by his bill, which requires officers to receive additional training and provide detailed reports of the circumstances that led to each Taser deployment.

“That type of activity could be erased,” Blackmon said. “Or at least caught a whole lot earlier than after you terrorize a whole county for as long as they did.” 

After six former officers associated with the Goon Squad were sentenced to decades in prison for torturing three men last year, the Justice Department announced it was investigating a possible pattern of civil rights abuses at the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department. 

However, the new leadership of the Justice Department under President Donald Trump has circulated a memo, obtained by the New York Times, pausing new civil rights investigations into law enforcement agencies, raising doubts about whether the case will proceed. 

Scott said that because Mississippi has neglected to create safety standards around officer Taser use for so long, she drafted a bill that would take the weapon away.

Developing a standard is “the least that should be done,” Scott said. “We’ve had people tortured at the hands of law enforcement using these weapons.” 

Mississippi Public Safety Commissioner Sean Tindell said that Tasers are critical tools that help prevent injuries to the public and police. 

“I just think an outright ban would not be good policy,” Tindell said, adding that limiting Taser use to deadly force encounters or banning their use on potentially vulnerable groups would put undue pressure on officers making split-second decisions with limited information. 

However, requiring officers throughout the state to report their Taser use and mandating additional training were ideas Tindell said he thought were worth discussing.

Tindell plans to address the issue at the next meeting of the state’s Board on Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Training. He said that if Mississippi law enforcement leaders and community stakeholders thought a statewide Taser standard could be beneficial, he would consider what rules would be helpful to establish. 

Pearl Police Chief Nick McLendon rejected the idea of banning the weapon, saying “Tasers have been one of the best advances in technology in modern-day policing.” 

But he noted that some statewide reforms could be helpful, including requiring all departments to document when their officers use Tasers and providing cadets at the state’s law enforcement academy with Taser training, which individual agencies currently must provide.. 

Beverly Padgett, whose son died after being shocked by Simpson County sheriff’s deputies, said she supports measures to bring more accountability to Taser use by law enforcement. 

In 2023, her 34-year-old son, Jared Padgett, said he was hallucinating, so the family called the Simpson County Sheriff’s Department to help transport him to the hospital. Beverly said that rather than helping Jared, who was unarmed and following commands, one deputy shot him with a Taser, causing Jared to flee. 

Taser logs show deputies deployed their Tasers 17 times for 94 seconds during the incident, which ended in Jared Padgett being fatally shot by police after he drove off in an officer’s vehicle. 

“I hope the bills pass,” Beverly Padgett said. “You can’t just repeatedly put someone through that amount of pain and not help them. Their job is to protect and serve, not to hurt people.” 

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Continue Reading

Mississippi Today

Mississippi universities scramble to understand impact of federal grant pause: ‘It’s a lot’

Published

on

mississippitoday.org – Molly Minta – 2025-01-28 13:55:00

Mississippi universities scrambled to understand the far-reaching implications of a memo issued by the White House late Monday night that ordered a temporary freeze of all federal grants, specifically those supporting research and programs that do not align with President Donald Trump’s ideology.

The Office of Management and Budget memo, which is set to take effect at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, sparked widespread anxiety in faculty, staff and administrators at Mississippi’s universities where federal dollars fund everything from research into automated blackberry harvesting, medical centers focused on major diseases affecting Mississippians, salaries, and tuition and health insurance for graduate students.

In total, Mississippi’s universities receive more than $530 million in federal funding for research, with the bulk of that going to Mississippi State University and the University of Mississippi. It’s still unclear what will happen to programs at those universities, but likely to be affected is research on topics impacted by Trump’s flurry of executive orders targeting federal grants that support illegal immigrants or promote diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, abortion and gender ideology.

The memo does not apply to federal assistance to students, such as student loans or Pell Grants for low-income students, the Trump administration clarified on Tuesday.

As of press time, little information was available about what that will look like or if the universities are putting any programs on pause. The Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees released a statement that it was monitoring the OMB directive.

“We are aware of the temporary pause on federal financial assistance programs and its potential impact on the state’s public universities,” John Sewell, the IHL spokesperson, wrote in a statement.

Sid Salter, Mississippi State’s vice president for strategic communications, said any further comment beyond IHL’s statement was premature.

“Because of the size of our research enterprise, it’s a lot to review, so we’re going to review before we speak,” Salter said.

In a statement, State Auditor Shad White, who has repeatedly called for Mississippi lawmakers to ban state funding for DEI initiatives, applauded the memo.

“President Trump’s decision to freeze federal dollars going towards DEI and other racial social engineering policies is 100% the right move,” White said.

At the University of Mississippi, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences called a 9:30 a.m. emergency meeting, but administrators were not able to answer questions from the handful of faculty who showed up.

“They’re in triage but also not really knowing like, what they can triage,” said James Thomas, a sociology professor who attended the meeting.

Thomas said the administrator who led the meeting told faculty that the college was prioritizing financial support for student researchers who are funded with federal dollars, but the plan for how that would happen was unclear. The university receives federal funds in the form of reimbursements.

Any other spending that was not “mission critical” should be paused, Thomas said the faculty were told.

This led a biology professor to ask what would happen to their animals.

“We have live animals and they need to get fed and we feed them with these federal dollars,” Thomas recalled the biology professor saying, to which the administrator responded, “Don’t charge anything to your grants today. We can’t guarantee you that we would be able to reimburse for any cost.”

The sociology department has two graduate students with federal funding, Thomas said. He was just about to send acceptance letters to students for a 10-week summer fellowship focused on preparing for a STEM career.

But since the fellowship has the word “race” in the title, Thomas said he thinks his National Science Foundation grant will likely be canceled. He tried checking the NSF website to confirm the title, but it wasn’t working as of Tuesday morning.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Continue Reading

Trending