https://apnews.com/f56b445a4e54468caff28c1844c55aa4
Tags: Church Shooter, Emanuel Samson
https://apnews.com/f56b445a4e54468caff28c1844c55aa4
Tags: Church Shooter, Emanuel Samson
Tags: Assistant District Attorney Nominated to ATHENA Awards Young Professional
To make Nashville a safer city, it will take more than law enforcement incarcerating criminals after violence occurs. It is just as important that citizens take proactive, common-sense steps to prevent violence from being committed.
Tags: Guns, ADA Jenny Charles
https://fox17.com/news/local/nashville-bar-recognizes-davidson-county-da-office-for-diversity
spokesperson Dorinda Carter said 11 black and Latino prosecutors and key staff have been hired at the Davidson County District Attorney’s office since District Attorney Glenn Funk took office. The Nashville Bar Association has given the Davidson County DA
Tags: Diversity
Nashville District Attorney General Glenn Funk has been appointed special prosecutor in the 2021 shooting death of Alvin Motley Jr., in Memphis, Tenn.
Motley was shot and killed on Aug. 7 at the Kroger Fuel Center, 6600 Poplar Ave., near the East Memphis and Germantown line. Prominent national civil rights attorney Ben Crump is representing the Motley family.
Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich declared that her office was recusing itself from the case because of an employee’s possible connection to the shooting.
After 27 years in prison, and more than 30 years after her ordeal began, Joyce Watkins was exonerated for a crime that she and her late boyfriend did not commit.
Watkins and the late Charlie Dunn were convicted in 1988 for the rape and murder of a 4 year old girl. A review of the case by the Conviction Review Unit in the Office of the District Attorney for Nashville and the Tennessee Innocence Project found faulty testimony from the then state medical examiner.
Their review led to the exoneration of both Ms. Watkins and Mr. Dunn.
https://afro.com/black-tennessee-woman-is-exonerated-after-27-years-in-prison/
Nashville District Attorney Glenn Funk received national attention from People magazine for his stance against the so-called ‘hate bill’ against the transgender community passed in 2021.
Days after Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed a bill in 2021 requiring businesses and government facilities to display signs notifying the public if they let transgender people use their multi-person bathrooms or changing rooms, Nashville’s top prosecutor stated he won’t enforce the law.
“I believe every person is welcome and valued in Nashville. Enforcement of transphobic or homophobic laws is contrary to those values,” District Attorney General Glenn Funk said. “My office will not promote hate.”
The bill in question is aimed at transgender people and carries criminal penalties for businesses that don’t comply. Tennessee is the first state in the nation to enact such a law. It’s one of five anti-transgender measures approved by the legislature and signed into law by Governor Lee during the 2021 session.
https://people.com/politics/tennessee-da-wont-enforce-transgender-bathroom-access-bill/