City court workers including a municipal judge in an Atlanta suburb will undergo sensitivity training after police arrested a Muslim woman for refusing to remove her headscarf before attending a hearing.
The judge ordered Lisa Valentine, 40, to serve 10 days in jail for contempt of court after the Dec. 16 incident. She was released in less than a day.
Muslim rights activists have asked the US Department of Justice to investigate the incident that triggered a protest in Douglasville, a city of about 20,000 people on Atlanta’s suburban outskirts.
Council on American-Islamic Relations spokesman Ibrahim Hooper said on Wednesday that the training doesn’t address the problem.
“We can deal with whether people knew about policies or whether they handled things correctly, but the bottom line is, can a Muslim woman walk into this courtroom wearing religious attire?” he said.
In a news release this week, the city police department acknowledged that while courtroom rules restrict headgear, Municipal Court Judge Keith Rollins has made accommodations for religious reasons, such as hearing cases outside the courtroom.
OFFICER CHASTIZED
Officials admonished the officer who detained Valentine for not “seeking an accommodation that would preserve the spirit of the law.”
It’s unclear whether the officer was punished.
Chief Joe Whisenant characterized the incident as a miscommunication.
“It’s not our intent to embarrass anybody and we’re taking all steps we think are reasonable to make sure this doesn’t happen again,” Whisenant said.
RULES POSTED
All police officers and some city employees who work with the court will be trained on court restrictions and special accommodations, and will post courtroom decorum rules at the front door and throughout the building, police said.
Rollins will also undergo the training, said Gary Sparks, deputy police chief of administration.
Akil Secret, an attorney representing Valentine, said a lawsuit is likely.
Meanwhile, police dispute details of the incident.
HEADSCARF
Valentine said she was accompanying her nephew to a traffic citation hearing when officials stopped her at the metal detector and told her she couldn’t enter the courtroom with the headscarf, known as a hijab.
Valentine said she objected and turned to leave, but officers stopped her.
She later was brought before Rollins, who ordered her held for contempt of court.
Rollins did not return a call from reporters on Wednesday.
But a department news release says Valentine argued with authorities, called the judge racist and repeated expletives until an officer grabbed her wrist.
Authorities say Rollins found her in contempt for fighting with one of the officers, not for wearing a scarf.
However, police released Valentine after Whisenant determined there had not been a fight.
A feud has broken out between the top leaders of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party on whether to maintain close ties with Russia. The AfD leader Alice Weidel this week slammed planned visits to Russia by some party lawmakers, while coleader Tino Chrupalla voiced a defense of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The unusual split comes at a time when mainstream politicians have accused the anti-immigration AfD of acting as stooges for the Kremlin and even spying for Russia. The row has also erupted in a year in which the AfD is flying high, often polling above the record 20 percent it
Ecuadorans are today to vote on whether to allow the return of foreign military bases and the drafting of a new constitution that could give the country’s president more power. Voters are to decide on the presence of foreign military bases, which have been banned on Ecuadoran soil since 2008. A “yes” vote would likely bring the return of the US military to the Manta air base on the Pacific coast — once a hub for US anti-drug operations. Other questions concern ending public funding for political parties, reducing the number of lawmakers and creating an elected body that would
The latest batch from convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s e-mails illustrates the extraordinary scope of his contacts with powerful people, ranging from a top Trump adviser to Britain’s ex-prince Andrew. The US House of Representatives is expected to vote this week on trying to force release of evidence gathered on Epstein by law enforcement over the years — including the identities of the men suspected of participating in his alleged sex trafficking ring. However, a slew of e-mails released this week have already opened new windows to the extent of Epstein’s network. These include multiple references to US President Donald
CHARGES: The former president, who maintains his innocence, was sentenced to 27 years and three months in prison for a failed coup bid, as well as an assassination plot Far-right former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro is running out of options to avoid prison, after judges on Friday rejected his appeal against a 27-year sentence for a botched coup bid. Bolsonaro lost the 2022 elections and was convicted in September for his efforts to prevent Brazlian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from taking power after the polls. Prosecutors said the scheme — which included plans to assassinate Lula and a top Brazilian Supreme Court judge — failed only due to a lack of support from military top brass. A panel of Supreme Court judges weighing Bolsonaro’s appeal all voted to uphold