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Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

Rhea Clift and Justin Gee are both running to fill the remaining six years of the current eight-year term of Germantown Municipal Court judge. Raymond Clift Jr., Rhea’s father, retired from the bench in 2022. Kevin Patterson, appointed to the interim position, is not seeking election. According to the Daily Memphian, Clift and Gee both applied for the interim post before Patterson was ultimately appointed. Clift began her prosecuting career 33 years ago with the Shelby County District Attorney’s office. In 2000 she became a prosecutor in Bartlett and in 2020 she became the suburb’s chief prosecutor. She is also a prosecutor in Millington City Court. Gee has 18 years of experience as a defense attorney and has been with the law firm of Wagerman Katzman for 19 years. He specializes in seizures of property but also works on many criminal cases. Early voting runs from July 12 to 27. Election Day is Aug, 1.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

The trial court terminated a mother’s parental rights to two of her minor children on the grounds of abandonment by failure to visit, substantial noncompliance with the permanency plans, persistent conditions, and failure to manifest an ability and willingness to assume custody or financial responsibility of the children. We affirm the trial court’s ruling on all grounds. We also conclude that terminating the mother’s parental rights is in the children’s best interests and affirm the trial court’s ultimate ruling.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

The Petitioner, Jay William Edwards, appeals from the denial of his petition seeking post-conviction relief from his convictions of aggravated kidnapping, assault, and interfering with an emergency call, for which he received an effective sentence of ten years’ confinement. On appeal, he argues: (1) trial counsels were ineffective in failing to object to (a) a constructive amendment to the indictment and (b) an incomplete White instruction; and (2) he was deprived of his right to testify at trial. After review, we affirm the judgment of the post-conviction court.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

This is an interlocutory appeal as of right, pursuant to Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 10B, from the trial court’s orders denying the petitioner’s two pro se motions to recuse the trial court judge in the underlying restoration of citizenship action. The petitioner based his first motion to recuse in the instant case entirely upon actions and rulings made by the trial court judge in a previous civil case. He based his second motion to recuse on the same actions and rulings plus two additional orders, one entered by the trial court judge while the petitioner’s appeal of the first recusal denial was pending. Discerning no reversible error in the trial court judge’s denial of the motions to recuse, we affirm.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

A group of mainly Black clergy and business and community leaders in Chattanooga held a press conference on Monday in front of District Attorney Coty Wamp's office, saying the indictment of Police Chief Celeste Murphy was the result of politics, reports Chattanoogan.com. Dr. Ernest Reid, pastor of Second Missionary Baptist Church, said Murphy's historic appointment as the city's first Black female police chief "was met with hostility almost from the start," adding that this "attempt to discredit an African American woman in leadership reeks of petty partisan politics with dangerous outcomes if applied uniformly." Wamp attended the press conference and stated she had referred the matter from the start to a prosecutor from another county and that her office had not brought the charges against Murphy, stating, "I cannot and will not comment on Chief Murphy's investigation or indictment, because I do not know anything about it other than what I have read in the news media."

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

Defense attorneys for the widow of Gershun Freeman, a Shelby County Jail inmate who died in custody in 2022, have subpoenaed Memphis attorney Allan Wade's office in the federal civil lawsuit about Freeman’s death. The Daily Memphian reports that the subpoena seeks written communications, documents and phone calls between Wade’s office and the Shelby County District Attorney General’s Office, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, the Tennessee Attorney General’s Office and any of the nine officers who have been charged in Freeman’s death, charges which range from aggravated assault to second-degree murder. Freeman died in October 2022 after an altercation with corrections deputies at the jail, during what his widow’s lawsuit describes as a “mental health crisis.”

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

A new report released by the nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank Prison Policy Initiative found that Tennessee has the ninth-highest incarceration rate in the world based on population if each U.S. state were considered its own country, according to the Tennessee Lookout. Tennessee has more than 55,000 people in local jails or state and federal prisons. Seven other states, mainly in the South, and El Salvador are the only places that have higher rates of people in jails or prisons. The report analyzes prison data from various U.S. counties, states and other countries, using population data to find which ones have the most people incarcerated. Read the full report here

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

U.S. District Judge Ada Brown in Dallas has delayed implementation of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) near-total ban on noncompete agreements. Bloomberg Law reports that the ban was set to take effect nationwide Sept. 4, and it will now be on hold until August for the groups that seek to permanently strike the rule from the books, while the judge considers the merits of their suit. The groups warned the new rule would invalidate 30 million employment contracts in a move that “amounts to a vast overhaul of the national economy.” The FTC argues it has full authority to issue the rule, but Brown said in her ruling Wednesday that the challenge to the measure is “likely to succeed on the merits,” and that the public interest weighed in favor of temporarily blocking the rule.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

U.S. District Judge Aleta Trauger on Wednesday sentenced four anti-abortion activists who were convicted in January on felony conspiracy charges for their roles in a 2021 clinic blockade in Mt. Juliet. The sentences, which are less than what prosecutors requested, range from six months in prison to three years of supervised release. The Associated Press reports that while the judge recognized activists' actions were based on sincerely held religious beliefs, she said that was not an excuse to break the law. The defendants used their religious fervor to “give themselves permission to ignore the pain they caused other people and ignore their own humanity,” Trauger said. Two others charged with felonies in the case will be sentenced in September. Five more people were charged with misdemeanors in April.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jul 5, 2024

Nashville Chancellor I'Ashea Myles late Thursday ruled that the Covenant School shooter's writings should not be made public "at this time." The Tennessean reports that in her 60-page ruling, Myles was swayed in part by the argument brought by a group of Covenant School families, who said that materials created by the shooter, including the shooter’s journals, were protected by copyright laws and should not be treated as public records. The shooter’s parents transferred ownership of these materials to a group of Covenant families, allowing them to assert a copyright interest in them. Following the shooting in March 2023, reporters and others requested that the Metro Nashville Police Deprtment (MNPD) release records related to the shooting, which MNPD denied. In response, six groups sued the city about a month after the shooting, seeking a court order to grant them access to several different records, most notably a pair of journals found in the shooter’s home and car.


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