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Pilot considered the only ace Tuskegee Airman, dies

Pilot considered the only ace Tuskegee Airman, dies

by Virginia Byrne NEW YORK (AP)—Retired Air Force Lt. Colonel Lee A. Archer, a Tuskegee Airman considered to be the only Black ace pilot who also broke racial barriers as an executive at a major U.S. company and founder of a venture capital firm, died Jan. 27 in New York City. He was 90. ...

Genealogist: Obama, Mass. Sen.-elect Brown related

Genealogist: Obama, Mass. Sen.-elect Brown related

by Glen Johnson BOSTON (AP)—It was bad enough that President Barack Obama lost his filibuster-proof margin in the U.S. Senate to a Republican. Now it turns out he also lost it to a relative. Genealogists said Jan. 29 that the Democratic president and the newly elected senator from Massachuset...

Body in backyard is missing Fla. lottery winner

Body in backyard is missing Fla. lottery winner

PLANT CITY, Florida (AP)—Winning millions of dollars in the Florida lottery should have been the best thing that ever happened to Abraham Shakespeare. But with his newfound wealth in 2006—$17 million in a lump sum payment—came a string of hangers-on who constantly hit him up for money. Nine ...

African-American or Black? The debate of defining ourselves continues

African-American or Black? The debate of defining ourselves continues

by Jessica Williams-Gibson INDIANAPOLIS—On the upcoming 2010 Census, when choosing race Blacks will be able to identify themselves as Black, African-American…or Negro. Conservative commentator Glenn Beck states “African-American is a bogus, PC, made-up term. I mean, that’s not...

This Week in Black History

This Week in Black History

The Week of Feb. 5-11 February 5 THADDEUS STEVENS 1866—Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, one of the great White heroes of Black history, offers his famous amendment to the Freedman’s Bureau bill to use land confiscated from former slave owners as well as some public lands to ...

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Black lawmakers under ethics spotlight PDF Print E-mail
Written by NNPA News Service   
Thursday, 19 November 2009 11:46
by Zenitha Prince
For New Pittsburgh Courier

WASHINGTON (NNPA)—All seven of the full-scale ethics investigations currently under way in the U.S. House of Representatives are focused on African-American lawmakers, and it would be eight if the committee conducting the investigations hadn’t deferred to the Justice Department’s investigation involving Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.

The disparity is beginning to raise some eyebrows.

“I don’t think they (Black lawmakers) are scared—they’re upset. They think [Congressional Black Caucus] members are being singled out,” said Rep. Elijah Cummings, former chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus.

“I can’t say there is an agenda behind this—I just don’t know,” Cummings said. “But when you have 435 members of Congress and the only ones under full-scale investigations are CBC members, it makes you wonder.”

California Democrats Laura Richardson and Maxine Waters became the latest CBC members to fall under official ethical scrutiny. The Committee on Standards of Official Conduct on Oct. 29 announced its decision to probe allegations that Richardson failed to report real estate and income in her financial disclosure forms, and received preferential treatment from a lender in the foreclosure/loan modification agreement for her Sacramento home.

Waters, chief deputy whip and member of the powerful Financial Services and Judiciary committees, has drawn more press attention. The panel said it is reviewing a possible conflict of interest in her request that then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson meet with the National Banker’s Association. The organization represents minority-owned banks such as OneUnited Bank, in which Waters’ husband owned stock and previously served on the board of directors.

Lester Spence, an associate professor of political science at Johns Hopkins University, said caucus members may be targeted for ethics probes because their violations are less egregious and easier to prove.

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