Don Lemon, Ku Klux Klan and church service
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What we know about the FACE and KKK acts that could be used to prosecute Minnesota church protesters
Sunday church services were underway at Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, when protesters entered and began shouting “Justice for Renee Good” and “ICE out,” a video from the incident shows.
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Taking the words of a top DOJ lawyer at face value, Don Lemon might consider lawyering up, along with the protesters he "followed" into church on Sunday. The post 'Put people away for a long, long time': Top DOJ lawyer cites KKK Act among legal trouble Don Lemon may face after he 'embedded' with protesters disrupting church first appeared on Law & Crime.
Mississippi has approved a state historical marker in Natchez honoring civil rights leader George Metcalfe at the site where the Ku Klux Klan bombed his car in 1965.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison says the FACE Act doesn't protect churches from invasion by anti-ICE agitators. He's wrong.
This act of defiance gave Coach Knute Rockne’s undefeated 1924 football team the defining identity as the “Fighting Irish,” earning them their first national title, followed by 10 more. The 20th century belonged to the university on the lake; it was the Notre Dame football century.
The roots of the Ku Klux Klan in Pulaski, Tennessee -- Ku-Klux attacks define a new black and white manhood -- Ku-Klux attacks define Southern public life -- The Ku-Klux in the national press -- Ku-Klux skepticism and denial in Reconstruction-era public ...
The assistant attorney general for civil rights says the law could lengthen any sentence related to infringing on another individual’s rights.