(BALTIMORE – April 16, 2026) – The issue of police violence against Black people has been a central site for the struggle against the societal dehumanization of Black people. The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement published a report in 2012 that revealed that a Black person was killed once every 40 hours by police or someone acting in the capacity of law enforcement. A 2020 study from Harvard’s School of Public Health found that Black people are 3 times more likely to be killed by police. In Maryland, according to a 2015 report from the ACLU of Maryland, there were 109 people who were killed by police between 2010 and 2014, and 75% of them were Black (Black people only make up 31% of Maryland’s population). There is no credible refutation of the claim that Black people historically, and contemporarily, have been victims of ongoing violence from the institution of law enforcement. This is not a statement of liking or disliking individual police officers; it is an objective, social-scientific assessment of the relationship between the institution of law enforcement and the Black community. The analysis that emerges from mainstream social justice organizations is that this is the result of bias or racial discrimination, but this analysis is insufficient. The narrative of white police officers killing unarmed Black people is an easier narrative for a white liberal mainstream to be galvanized by, but this is an oversimplified frame. The dynamic that drives the violence that is brought to bear against Black people from law enforcement (and the entire criminal justice system) is the societal propaganda that has seared the notion of Black masculinity as inherently animalistic and criminal into the collective American consciousness. During the 1831 Nat Turner rebellion against white enslavers, the press characterized Turner and his comrades as savages for killing white people, which is absurd given the fact that the actual savages were the society of white people that normalized reducing Black people to chattel. The widely held notion that Black people are inherently animalistic and criminal provided the justification for chattel slavery and was essential to characterizing armed rebellion against being enslaved as an act of savagery. The first motion picture film produced in America, Birth of a Nation by DW Griffith, had a storyline that featured a Black man as a villain who was looking to rape white women. This aligns with the phenomenon of lynching, where Black men were often hanged as a result of accusations (which were most of the time false) of sexually assaulting white women. In a book called Brown in Baltimore by Howell Baum, he documents how Brown v. Board of Education was implemented in Baltimore. He reveals that on the eve of the implementation of desegregation in Baltimore, the school district received a flurry of letters from white parents expressing strong opposition to integrating public schools. Baum documents the fact that one of the most common explanations given by white parents in opposition to integration was the fear of Black boys…
(BALTIMORE – April 13, 2026) – The very first person I remember — a Black man leading Baltimore’s tourism charge…
2026 SCHEDULE Black Wall Street NEW YEAR SUMMIT — January 3, Downtown Cultural Arts Center, Baltimore (Robyn Murphy keynote, honoring…
Arizona’s Junior Senator to Join Rev. Sharpton for One-on-One Conversation on Civil Rights, Immigration, and the Fight for America’s Most Vulnerable Communities (NEW YORK, NY…
Politics
More News
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.
Featured Videos
Attorney Tanya Baña, Esq., is taking on some of the toughest workplace discrimination cases involving employees at Baltimore … Watch full video on YouTube
After years of studying stand-up, media strategy, and the grind behind the laughs, Doni Glover breaks down what separates real comedians from casual entertainers—and why…
(BALTIMORE – April 4, 2026) — A couple of days ago, a man was shot near Pennsylvania Avenue behind The Avenue Market. BMORENews was on…
(BALTIMORE – February 26, 2026) – What a privilege it is to know so many upwardly mobile people in Baltimore.…
From Thurgood Marshall to the brothers on the Avenue — Baltimore’s Black community has always been built on strength. (BALTIMORE…
You may have missed
(WASHINGTON, DC – April 9, 2026) — Fifteen years ago, a vision took root in…
More Than 1,200 Graduates Expected; Equal Justice Initiative Founder to Receive Honorary Doctor of Laws…
BMORENews.com · April 2026 · 15th Anniversary 15 Years of Excellence: The Joe Manns Black…
(BALTIMORE COUNTY – April 7, 2026) — The mission continues. On Thursday, June 4, 2026,…
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
Trending News
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest Baltimore news and updates directly to your inbox.
Advertisement
Episode taped at STEM CITY USA inside the Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center highlights housing policy, education reform, and Black entrepreneurship. (BALTIMORE – March 10, 2026) — Today’s taping of the…
(NEW YORK – April 6, 2026) – When you have spent years working alongside one of the most consequential civil rights voices in American history, you either fold under the weight of that legacy or you rise to carry it forward. Gina C. Williams chose to rise. A former corporate employee of the National Action Network (NAN), Gina had the rare distinction of working directly under the Reverend Al Sharpton — frontline warrior, living legend, and unapologetically controversial champion in the fight against racial prejudice and injustice. That proximity to power wasn’t a title. It was a calling. Gina answered…
Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards Continues 2026 Tour Celebrating Excellence Across Communities (BALTIMORE COUNTY – April 5, 2025) — The Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards continues its landmark 2026 season with Black Wall Street MILFORD MILL 2.0, set for Saturday, April 11, from 4 to 6 p.m., honoring one of the Baltimore region’s most formidable husband-and-wife legal teams — David and Tonya Baña. Now in its 15th year, the Black Wall Street Awards has become a national platform recognizing entrepreneurs, professionals, and community leaders who exemplify excellence, resilience, and impact. The Milford Mill installment underscores a continued commitment…
(NEW YORK – April 1, 2026) – Edward Harrison knows the criminal justice system not as an observer — but as someone who lived it for over four decades. A formerly incarcerated person who spent more than 40 years navigating in and out of the prison system, Edward Harrison carries a truth that no policy paper, no commission report, and no government study can replicate: the truth of a man who was there. What Edward witnessed inside those walls would shake the conscience of any taxpaying citizen — a system where the very people funded to serve as watchdogs became…
(BROOKLYN, NY – April 1, 2026) – Nathaniel B. Evans is a Brooklyn native who has lived the criminal justice story from every angle — on the streets, behind the walls, and within the halls of government. With over 15 years of experience navigating and challenging a system that too often fails the communities it claims to serve, Nathaniel brings an unmatched depth of perspective to his work. As a Community Organizer for Justice & Safety for the NYC Public Advocate, Nathaniel has transformed personal experience into powerful public advocacy — bridging the gap between those who have been impacted…
Human rights activist, artist, and organizer recognized for his leadership on justice, reentry, and human dignity (NEW YORK, NY – March 31, 2026) — Black Wall Street CHELSEA will honor Mr. Five Mualimmak, a prominent human rights activist, artist, and organizer whose life’s work has been dedicated to challenging the carceral state and uplifting people directly impacted by incarceration. The event will take place on Tuesday, April 14, 2026, from 4 to 6 PM at 135 West 20th Street, Suite 302, New York, NY. Born into a legacy of resistance and service as the child of Black Panther Party members,…
Politics ’26: Power, Policy & the People LIVE | Tuesday, March 31, 2026 | 6:00 PM Join Doni Glover for Politics ’26 — a real … Watch full video on YouTube
We explore the stark racial homeownership gap and the unaffordability crisis for renters. Discover why deregulation without … Watch full video on YouTube
DAVID HEIBER: Discover how societal systems and structures can foster a ‘slave mentality’, hindering personal growth. Watch full video on YouTube
(RANDALLSTOWN, MD – March 26, 2026) — When you talk about building — not just structures, but systems, communities, and long-term wealth — Derrick Burnett is part of that conversation. On Saturday, April 11, 2026, from 4 to 6 p.m. at 8128 Liberty Road, Burnett will be honored at Black Wall Street MILFORD MILL 2.0, a gathering that continues to spotlight the entrepreneurs and professionals shaping the economic future of Northwest Baltimore County. As President and CEO of AEI-DESIGN BUILD LLC, Burnett represents a rare combination of vision, technical expertise, and execution. Building More Than Structures At AEI-DESIGN BUILD LLC,…
(NEW YORK, NY – March 26, 2026) — The spirit of Black Wall Street lives on through modern entrepreneurs who pair technical mastery with a relentless commitment to excellence. One such leader is Nancy Alers, founder of IMPROOV, a full-service laboratory consulting firm based in New York City. Alers will be honored at Black Wall Street CHELSEA, hosted by The Doni Glover Show, on Tuesday, April 14, 2026, from 4 to 6 PM at 135 West 20th Street, Suite 302. With more than 20 years of experience across hospital, reference, and academic laboratory environments, Alers brings uncommon depth and perspective…
Ukraine Conflict
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

































































































