In an interview with TMZ, Black Lives Matter Los Angeles co-founder Melina Abdullah tore apart the claims of Kyle Rittenhouse that he supports the group. Rittenhouse made the remarks during an interview with Fox News' Tucker Carlson after his acquittal from charges related to the shooting of three men in Kenosha, Wisconsin last week.

News

After over 11 hours of deliberation, all three of the men accused of murdering Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery were found guilty. Hey, even a broken clock is right twice a day, right?

News

Charges have been dropped against former Ladue, Missouri, police officer Julia Crews, who shot Ashley Fountain Hall in the back and claimed she mistook her gun for her taser. Hall requested the charges be dropped after the two participated in what's known as a "restorative justice mediation."

News

The racist organizers and groups behind the so-called "Unite The Right" rally are finally being held accountable more than four years later and will cost them more than $26 million.

Books

Both books discuss perspectives and experiences not commonly represented in literature, providing a more representative selection for students. Claims that the content is “pornographic” are unfounded.  

His release comes over 42 years after he was convicted of a triple homicide. It is the longest wrongful conviction in Missouri History and one of the longest in the country.

Beyond the verdict, the group has emphasized the need for transparent investigations of police misconduct and prosecutorial accountability for the first two prosecutors who obstructed justice. 

Civil Rights & Social Justice

It’s great you can rattle off the definition of privilege, yet when Black organizations ask you to stand with them, you find an excuse. You have more work to do.

Civil Rights & Social Justice

As lawmakers discuss today’s hot topic policy issues, we must remain focused and hold our leaders accountable during the redistricting process that is producing a number of gerrymandered maps of where people can vote.

Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio is asking a judge to either reduce his sentence for burning a BLM banner or allow him to finish it under house arrest because he's "deathly afraid that something is going to happen to me."