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Mangino column: Bail reform is safe, humane and fiscally responsible - Opinion - Arkansas News Bureau

  Friday Jan 29, 2021 at 8:40 AM Jan 29, 2021 at 8:40 AM Columns share an author’s personal perspective. Every day in America thousands of people are locked-up because they don’t have money. Although those accused of a crime are presumed innocent until proven guilty, the monetary bail system denies them their freedom. Those unfortunate few, without resources, sit in jail and are at risk of losing their jobs, their homes and their families. Certainly, it’s unfair to incarcerate someone merely because they cannot afford bail. It is equally unfair to every man and woman in this nation to contribute to the nearly $1 trillion spent on pretrial detention, according to the Pretrial Justice Institute - which amounts to about 6% of the Gross Domestic Product.

Rev Robert C Smith, interim rector at The Church of St Luke & the Epiphany, dies at 80

Rev. Robert C. Smith, interim rector at The Church of St. Luke & the Epiphany, dies at 80 Valerie Russ, The Philadelphia Inquirer Rev. Robert C. Smith, of Philadelphia, the interim rector at The Church of St. Luke & The Epiphany in Center City, died Wednesday, Jan. 27, at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital after suffering a brain aneurysm. He was 80. In 2012, he retired as rector at the Memorial Church of the Good Shepherd in East Falls. After retiring, Rev. Smith worked as an interim minister in the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania, traveling from one parish to the next to administer to the needs of parishioners after a priest had moved to another church or died.

I m So Exhausted : Some Muslims Hopeful, Others Uncertain After Travel Ban Lifted – NBC 7 San Diego

President Joe Biden’s repeal of the Trump administration’s travel ban for several Muslim-majority nations brought a sigh of relief from those affected.

Alabama s trans ID law requiring proof of surgery is unconstitutional, court rules

Alabama s trans ID law requiring proof of surgery is unconstitutional, court rules Jo Yurcaba © Provided by NBC News Alabama s policy requiring transgender people to have undergone gender-affirming surgery before they can get state IDs that accurately reflect their gender identities is unconstitutional, a federal court ruled this month. Fewer than 10 states now require proof of surgery to update the gender marker on a driver s license. The Alabama case began in 2018, when three transgender people Darcy Corbitt, Destiny Clark and an unnamed third person sued the state after they were denied driver s licenses that reflected their genders, opposed to their sexes assigned at birth, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

I m So Exhausted : Some Muslims Hopeful, Others Uncertain After Travel Ban Lifted – NBC10 Philadelphia

‘I m So Exhausted : Some Muslims Hopeful, Others Uncertain After Travel Ban Lifted Many of those whose lives were upended by the ban must now navigate questions about backlogs, paid fees and travel restrictions due to the pandemic By Mariam Fam and Sarah El Deeb • Published January 29, 2021 AP Photo/Hani Mohammed Mohammed Al Zabidi celebrated in 2017 when he learned he had been selected in the U.S. green card lottery, which picks people at random from a large pool of applicants. It was a chance to escape his war-torn homeland of Yemen and pursue his dreams in the United States. “I won! I won!” Al Zabidi cheered. He borrowed money to finance his trip, bought clothes for his new life in America and packed souvenirs for friends there. With no U.S. Embassy in Yemen, he made a grueling journey to Djibouti for his visa interview.

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