A pregnant Black woman in South Carolina is serving 4 years in prison for chanting at police at 2020 protests — convicted of "breaching of the peace."
Brittany Martin has lost 12 lbs in prison and was hospitalized twice for pregnancy complications in July, family says. 🧵
Breaching the peace is usually punished by up to 30 days in jail and a $500 fine.
But prosecutors in Sumter claimed Brittany Martin's comments were "high and aggravated" — punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Her attorney says the distinction was not made clear to the jury.
Brittany Martin was sentenced to 4 years after telling police: "You better be ready to die for the blue. I'm ready to die for the Black."
January 6 Capitol rioters got less harsh sentences:
▪️Median sentence: 45 days
▪️As of January: 1 in 3 took plea deals for 1 year or less
Breach of peace laws have targeted Black activists since before the civil rights movement, traced to Jim Crow.
"They would create certain crimes that only apply to Black people."
The GOP is pushing new anti-protest laws, like one passed in Florida. "These are the same people who call Jan. 6 rioters 'patriots,'" @cliff_notes told AJ+.
"If we even gather, no flagpoles, no guns. Just our presence and audacity to use our 1st Amendment right is made a crime."
Martin was already known by Sumter police for her activism and leading protests, Dr. Candace Brewer, national president of the Racial Justice Network, told AJ+.
"I guess they thought this was one way to get rid of Brittany... 'Maybe if we cut off the head, the body will fall.'"
Martin has been protesting police violence for years and her brother-in-law was shot and killed by police in 2016, says Brewer.
In 2020, she led protests over the police killings of #GeorgeFloyd and #BreonnaTaylor, and co-founded a group that gives meals to unhoused people.
Prosecutors and police claimed Brittany Martin disturbed the peace by using her words to protest police violence.
In 2020, police:
▪️ shot at least 115 people in the head/neck with "less lethal" weapons at protests across the U.S.
▪️ arrested 10,000+ protesters within days.
In prison, advocates say Martin has been harassed, denied medical care and put in solitary for not cutting her locs.
She has only recently been allowed to see external OB-GYNs, Brewer told AJ+: "She needs medical care, she's been bleeding for the last couple weeks."
A judge is set to hear arguments for reducing Brittany Martin’s sentence the week of September 12.
"We never thought an activist would receive 4 years in prison for protesting police violence," Brewer says. "We're hoping and praying she does not give birth in prison."
Senior Producer: Kareem Yasin
Photos: Free Brittany Martin, Change
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FEMA says there is no timeline for when Jackson will have access to drinkable water.
Residents of the 80%-Black city have been getting brown water or none at all for a week due to decades of neglect.
Water pressure is improving, but it still needs to be boiled before using.
Mississippi Governor Reeves has not yet called for a special session about getting aid to Jackson.
▪️ Last year, he said funds to solve the water crisis should come from residents (25% are in poverty)
▪️ He signed massive tax cuts, eliminating about $500M in annual state revenue
The EPA has warned about problems with Jackson's water system 3 times since 2020.
Critics say Mississippi's GOP-led legislature systematically pours most infrastructure funding into mostly white areas around Jackson — leading to decades of neglect in the 80%-Black state capital.
The UN accused China of possible crimes against humanity against Uyghur and Muslim minorities — citing "credible evidence" of torture.
Human rights groups say China forced over 1 million Uyghurs into abusive internment camps in Xinjiang, with reports of forced sterilization.
China forced over 1 million Uyghur and other Muslim people into internment camps, say rights groups.
China calls them "re-education" camps. Groups accuse China of genocide, and say detainees face:
- “Systematic” torture
- Forced labor
- Sexual violence
- Mass surveillance
China is committing "demographic genocide" on Uyghur Muslims through forced sterilization, rights groups said in 2020:
- Forced abortions, sterilization on hundreds of thousands of women
- Women sent to camps for having too many children
- Birth rates fell up to 60% from 2015-18
Up to 180,000 people in Jackson, Mississippi may have little or no running water for an "extended period," say officials.
Water available now is not safe enough to brush teeth.
The majority-Black city's water system is chronically underfunded, but officials blame flood damage.
Jackson, 82% Black, has chronic water issues due to underfunded infrastructure. It asked Mississippi for $47M for water repairs last year, but got just 6% of that.
- Residents report raw sewage in streets
- Many rely on bottled water
- Boil-water notice for the last month
Schools in Jackson, Mississippi are teaching online after its water system collapsed — blamed on chronic underfunding — with not enough water to "reliably flush toilets."
Businesses also closed. One restaurant chain told 200+ workers to stay home, meaning they won't be paid.
Today in 1791, enslaved people in Haiti launched a rebellion against European colonizers — sparking global revolts that collapsed the slave trade.
Haiti became the world's first Black-led republic and the first country founded by former enslaved people. #SlaveryRemembranceDay 🧵
Haiti was the second country in the Americas to gain independence, after the U.S.
But the U.S. did not recognize Haiti for decades. Rather, it sent aid to French colonizers to suppress the rebellion by enslaved people, over fears it could spark similar revolts in the U.S.
The French enslaved some 770,000 African men, women and children in Haiti — double the number of enslaved people sent to North America.
Deaths were so high on plantations, the enslaved population was fully replaced about every 20 years.