Monday, December 23, 2019

News We Love!


County Executive Alsobrooks and Prince George’s County NAACP Branch President Bob Ross advocate for accurate count in Census 2020!




Federal Appeals Court Reinstates NAACP Census Suit

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Prince George’s County, Maryland, and other plaintiffs won an important appeals court ruling on December 19, 2019, which reinstates their federal suit challenging the federal government’s inadequate plans for conducting the 2020 Census after the district court erroneously dismissed it. The ruling will aid efforts to ensure that the 2020 Census properly counts all people, including historically undercounted communities of color, who are at risk of being missed under the Census Bureau’s current plans. The Peter Gruber Rule of Law Clinic at Yale Law School, Jenner & Block, and the NAACP Office of the General Counsel represent the plaintiffs.
“Mindful of the Supreme Court’s recent guidance affirming judicial review of ‘both constitutional and statutory challenges to census-related decision-making’ . . . we conclude that the district court erred in dismissing the plaintiffs’ Enumeration Clause claims as unripe,” a unanimous three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit wrote in an opinion authored by Judge Barbara Keenan on December 19, 2019. The Court directed the District Court to expeditiously proceed with the plaintiffs’ claims under the Enumeration Clause.
Chief Judge Roger L. Gregory added in a concurring opinion: “If Congress is in violation of the Enumeration Clause’s mandate, it cannot take refuge behind the fig leaf of deference to administrative procedure. Nothing is more existential to the preservation of the ‘Republic’ than requiring an ‘actual Enumeration’ without ‘partiality or oppression.’”
The suit, NAACP et al. v. Bureau of the Census, was filed in March 2018. Plaintiffs allege that the Bureau’s deficient plans for the 2020 Census will lead to an undercount of communities of color, leading to decreased political representation and diminished allocations of federal funding for plaintiffs. The suit seeks to ensure the government fulfills its legal obligations to enumerate the entire population.
“Today’s decision moves us closer to our goal of ensuring that African Americans and other historically undercounted communities are fairly and accurately counted in the 2020 census, a necessary predicate to equal representation in Congress and state legislative bodies,” said NAACP General Counsel Bradford M. Berry ’88. “An accurate count will also ensure that traditionally underserved communities receive their fair share of the billions spent each year on federal program payments in such critically important areas as education, transportation, and health care.”
The Department of Commerce is putting hard-to-count populations at risk of a severe undercount in 2020 by slashing field infrastructure, drastically cutting the resources dedicated to community outreach and advertising, and reducing follow up with individuals who do not initially respond to the census questionnaire, according to the lawsuit.
“The government’s decisions about the 2020 Census will have a deep impact on racial inequality over the next 10 years and beyond,” said Robert Ross, President of the Prince George’s County NAACP Branch, which is also a plaintiff in the suit. “By cutting key programs and resources meant to ensure that traditionally neglected communities are properly counted, the government is perpetuating a cycle of political and financial disempowerment.”
“This is a critical step for Prince George’s County, and other traditionally undercounted communities, as we work to ensure that we have the resources and opportunity to achieve a complete count in 2020,” said Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks. “As a result of the undercount during the 2010 Census, our County lost out on approximately $363 million in federal funding; money that goes to help us fund schools, infrastructure and healthcare. We are now closer to ensuring that Prince George’s County and other traditionally undercounted communities receive the public resources and political representation they are due.”
The proceedings before the Fourth Circuit stemmed from an appeal by the plaintiffs. In opinions in January and August 2019, Judge Paul W. Grimm of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland dismissed plaintiffs’ case. The Fourth Circuit has now reversed Judge Grimm’s decisions and reinstated the plaintiffs’ constitutional claims, while affirming the dismissal of their separate claims under the Administrative Procedure Act.
“This ruling provides hope that some of the decisions that will undercount communities of color can be redressed in time for the 2020 Census,” said Rachel Brown ’20, a law student intern with the Yale Law School Peter Gruber Rule of Law Clinic. Brown argued the appeal together with Jessica Ring Amunson of Jenner & Block LLP, co-counsel for the plaintiffs. “This decision gets us closer to a more just 2020 Census and shines a light on the critical issues at stake in the decennial census,” added Amunson.
Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest nonpartisan civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities.
The Yale Law School Peter Gruber Rule of Law Clinic encourages a collaborative approach to addressing issues of national security, antidiscrimination, climate change, and democracy through litigation, policy advocacy, and strategic planning. The students working on the case are Rachel Brown ’20, Lisa Chen ’21, Daniel Ki ’21, Nikita Lalwani ’20, Geng Ngarmboonanant ’21, Laura Pietrantoni ’21, and Josh Zoffer ’20.

Friday, December 13, 2019

Prince George’s County’s Public Safety Family Mourns Passing of William Milligan

                          Mourning Our Friend & Colleague William “Bill” Milligan
From our colleagues at PGPD, we are honored to share this video remembering our dear friend Bill Milligan whose gentle love and care were the force behind the Annual Valor Awards and the Christmas Food Basket Program that was renamed in his honor in 2018.
                                                                                     
                                                                                             Sheriff High, and the members of the
                                                                                       Prince George's County Office of the Sheriff

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Prince George’s County’s Public Safety Family Mourns Passing of William Milligan

                          Mourning Our Friend & Colleague William “Bill” Milligan
From our colleagues at PGPD, we are honored to share this video remembering our dear friend Bill Milligan whose gentle love and care were the force behind the Annual Valor Awards and the Christmas Food Basket Program that was renamed in his honor in 2018.
                                                                                       
                                                                                             Sheriff High, and the members of the
                                                                                       Prince George's County Office of the Sheriff

Sheriff’s Deputies Arrest Third Degree Burglary Suspect !

Upper Marlboro, MD… The Office of the Sheriff's Warrant/Fugitive Division reported the arrest of Fredrick Scott on December 4, 2019, for a Third-Degree Burglary warrant obtained by County Police detectives on November 7, 2019.
 
According to the warrant, on November 7, 2019, Fredrick Scott broke into a residence in the 9400 block of Grand Blvd, Largo, Md. Scott is alleged to have stolen the victim’s dog and damaged property.

Deputies investigating Scott’s whereabouts were led to the 6000 block of Oxon Hill Road, in Oxon Hill, Md, where they approached Scott getting out of his vehicle and placed him under arrest. He was transported to the County Department of Corrections.

In addition to Third-Degree Burglary, Scott is also charged with Fourth- Degree Burglary, and Malicious Destruction of Property.


For more information about this release contact the communications and Public Affairs Division at 301-780-7354.

Friday, December 6, 2019

Sheriff’s Deputies Arrest First Degree Arson Suspect !

Upper Marlboro, MD…. The Office of the Sheriff's Warrant/Fugitive Division reported the arrest of Roderick Jackson on December 3, 2019, for a First-Degree Arson warrant obtained by fire investigators from the Prince George’s County Office of the Fire Marshal on October 28, 2019.


According to the warrant, on September 19, 2019, Roderick Jackson was in the 5300 blocks of Quincy Street Hyattsville, MD, when he allegedly set fire to a window air conditioner unit. The victim reported seeing flames and smelled smoke coming from her air conditioner unit where Mr. Jackson was standing. She contacted the fire department for emergency assistance, after which Jackson fled the scene.

The U. S. Marshal Services Capital Area Regional Fugitive Task Force was assigned the case and deputies on the Task Force who were investigating Jackson's whereabouts located him at his residence in the ten-block of Halley Street in Washington, D.C. They arrested Jackson without incident and he was transported to the Metropolitan Police Department for processing where he will remain in custody until he is extradited to Prince George’s County, MD.


In addition to First -Degree Arson, Jackson is also charged with Arson 2nd Degree, Malicious Burning/2nd Degree, and Reckless Endangerment.


For more information about this release contact the communications and Public Affairs Division at 301-780-7354.

Thursday, December 5, 2019

Sheriff Melvin C. High joined by members from the Prince George's County Office of the Sheriff were excited to participate at today's Information and Independence Christmas Party for the Blind in Hyattsville, MD.
#PGSOisEverywhere