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Friday, July 26, 2024

ROBERT F KENNEDY HUMAN RIGHTS: JUSTICE ROUNDUP FOR JULY 2024.

 

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U.S. JUSTICE

PURSUING ONE LAST AVENUE FOR ACCOUNTABILITY AFTER MICHAEL BROWN’S MURDER BY FERGUSON POLICE

On August 9, 2014, 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot and killed by Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson. Michael’s murder has been stymied by impunity in the decade since, but on July 10, his family had one last avenue for justice before the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights. By using international human rights standards to critique U.S. law and the Justice Department, Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights and the Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center at Howard University have pursued an innovative, potentially extremely powerful route to justice for Michael’s killing.

Learn more about the case →
 

OUR VOICES

KERRY KENNEDY IN THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS: ‘YOUNG PEOPLE UNDER ARREST NEED LEGAL PROTECTION’


35 years ago, five Black and Latino teenagers, later dubbed the “Central Park Five,” were falsely accused and wrongly convicted of assault, attempted murder, and rape of a woman jogging in Central Park. Their convictions were overturned in 2002 when the real culprit was identified, but their case remains emblematic of the vulnerability minors face to being abused in the U.S. justice system or coerced into a false confession. Writing in the NY Daily News, RFK Human Rights President Kerry Kennedy argues that additional legislation, like New York’s proposed Youth Interrogation Bill (S1099/A1963), is crucial in protecting future generations from the irreversible impacts of wrongful convictions.

Read the full op-ed →

 

BOOK CLUB

HISTORIAN BLAIR LM KELLEY ILLUMINATES THE LIVES OF THE BLACK WORKING CLASS IN LATEST RFKHR BOOK CLUB CONVERSATION

On July 23, author and 2024 RFK Book Award winner Blair LM Kelley joined our first book club conversation of the summer to discuss her latest book, Black Folk: The Roots of the Black Working Class. In this conversation with fellow author and historian Ted Widmer, Kelley discusses her research on the lives of the laundresses, Pullman porters, domestic maids, and postal workers who established the Black working class as a force in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. 

Read more and listen to the conversation →

 

RFK HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE NEWS

UPCOMING EVENTS

Header photo of Sen. Robert Kennedy © Lawrence Schiller.

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