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  • 29
    Apr
    2013
    6:30am, EDT

    Students hold Georgia school's 1st racially integrated prom

    Students at Georgia high school celebrate their first racially integrated prom. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Almost half a century after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed racial discrimination in schools and other public places, black and white students in Georgia's rural Wilcox County danced together for the first time at prom over the weekend.

    "I feel like we are living Martin Luther King's dream," NBC station WMGT 41 quoted student Alexis Miller as saying. Miller, who is white, attended Saturday's event with her black boyfriend.

    WMGT reported:

    Racially segregated proms have been held in Wilcox County almost every year since the schools integrated in the 1970s. In a long-standing tradition, parents raised money to host separate dances, the community referred to one as the "black prom" and the other as the "white prom." Traditionally, most students were welcome to the "black prom" but an unwritten rule kept students of different races from attending the "white prom." 

    Wilcox County High School was quick to point out on its website that it hasn’t organized or hosted the segregated proms that have been traditional. It called the events “private parties” over which it “has no influence.”

    Additionally, the school hosts an integrated dance called the Military Ball and says it will discuss making next year’s prom an inclusive, official school event.

    However, the NAACP has put the onus on Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal, starting a petition calling on him to “put an end to segregated proms, homecomings, and other school related social events.”

    Georgia NAACP joins call for integrated prom after students plan their own dance.

    But perhaps nothing had as much impact as a Facebook page started by the small group of students who organized the integrated prom.

    As of Monday, with the prom finished, the page, carrying the banner “Love Has No Color” had almost 30,000 “likes.”

    So many donors came forward – from as far away as Australia -- that the students say they have money left over to help local families in need. And the publicity brought in DJs from Atlanta and Texas to provide the music.

    The students’ appeal was simple and from the heart:

    “We live in rural south Georgia, where not too many things change,” the page says. “Well, as a group of adamant high school seniors, we want to make a difference in our community. For the first time in the history of our county, we plan to have an integrated prom.”

    On its website, Wilcox County Schools praised the efforts of the student organizers, saying they were seeking "to right the wrongs of the past."

     

    442 comments

    If only we all could follow the example of these students.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: georgia, race, naacp, segregation, featured, integrated-prom, wilcox-county
  • 21
    Feb
    2012
    8:47pm, EST

    Georgia sheriff charged with beating inmates resigns

    Wilcox County Sheriff's Department

    Wilcox County Sheriff Stacy Bloodsworth agreed not to run for re-election as part of the deal that allowed him to be freed on bond.

    By msnbc.com staff

    The sheriff of a small Georgia county resigned Tuesday after he and his son were released on bond on federal charges of abusing inmates and lying to the FBI to cover it up.

    Wilcox County Sheriff Stacy Bloodsworth resigned and agreed not to run for re-election as part of an agreement that allowed him to be released to house arrest on $25,000 bond. Wilcox County, population 8,600, is in south Georgia about 50 miles south of Macon.

    Bloodsworth; his son, Austin Bloodsworth; and former inmate Willie James Caruthers — a jail trusty at the time — are charged with conspiracy, violation of constitutional rights, inmate abuse and lying to the FBI in the beatings of three inmates in 2009, according to the 14-count indictment on file with the office of the U.S. attorney's for the Middle District of Georgia.


    The sheriff was also charged with tampering with one of the victims and with two witnesses, while former county jailer Casey Owens was charged with obstructing justice by writing false reports.

    The civil rights charges carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison for each count, while the conspiracy and false statements charges carry a maximum penalty of up to five years.

    All of the defendants have pleaded not guilty. Bloodsworth's attorney, Tim Withers, wouldn't comment. No trial date has been set.

    The two Bloodsworths and Caruthers are accused of assaulting two inmates and of joining Owens in assaulting a third inside the Wilcox County Jail in July 2009. One of the inmates suffered a broken jaw.

    No further details of the alleged assaults were released.

    "I think the indictment speaks for itself," U.S. Attorney Michael Moore told NBC station WMGT of Macon, who said his office was working with the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Justice Department. "Obviously, we consider them to be serious charges."

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    7 comments

    Yet another bad cop. No wonder no one trusts the police any more.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sheriff, georgia, civil-rights, crime, wilcox-county

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