[Editorial] Waiting for an Outstanding Prosecutor

Memphis Police was said to announce the five MPD officers involved in the arrest of Mr. Tyre Nichols have been fired. Mr. Steve Mulroy is the Shelby County District Attorney. The former district attorney was Ms. Amy Weirich. Mr. Jim Strickland is the current mayor of the City of Memphis, TN.

We are waiting for an outstanding prosecutor in/for Memphis and Shelby County in the State of Tennessee. Will Mr. Mulroy be such a superb one? We don’t know yet, but it can depend on his performance as a district attorney. Time will show.

As we said before, the local police didn’t/doesn’t show the good quailities of the law enforcement around Memphis/Shelby County in Tennessee. There must/may have been/be multilayered reasons why such phenomena exist around Memphis/Shelby County.

Ms. Amy Weirich was a failed prosecutor. If she had been successful for the policies and performances of prosecuting, Memphis and Shelby County must not have had these kinds of social problems. Especially the white-collar crimes spread rampantly around Memphis.

Mr. Jim Strickland should take one of the biggest political responsibilities for the Memphians’ ending up seeing these kinds of social landscape over Memphis. If he had been a successful mayor, things must have been very different than the current situations.

Memphis and Shelby County have a lot of street crimes. We already know that. There should be more social experimental efforts to reduce such crimes let alone to detecting and punishing such crimes.

One of the fundamental problems around Memphis and Shelby County is that Memphis is the city of the white-collar crimes. One of the fundamental differences between a competent and talented prosecutor, and incompetent, incapable, and inefficient prosecutor is how they approach, analyze, and deal with such cunning criminals because such crimes are unseen, hidden, and consealed. That’s why Ms. Amy Weirich failed.

There are different types of the white-collar crimes, but corrupt business people, corrupt police officers, corrupt local politicians and government officials, and corrupt judges are the issues and problems which requires urgent attentions both from the local communities and from the Shelby County District Attorney General’s Office.

Only outstanding, capable, talented, superb, and excellent prosecutors can do that. We have been waiting for such district attorneys for a long time. Not for such prosecutors, but for Memphis and Shelby County. The local communities deserve that. The local communities should be better communites.

We hope that Mr. Steve Mulroy doesn’t lose such an opportunity to be an outstanding prosecutor. Not only for him, but also for Memphis and Shelby County.

The Editorial of the Memphis Times
www.memphistimes.org

Published: January 21, 2023







[Editorial] In terms of the Change of the Legal Status of the City of Memphis

It’s the time to think about the change of the legal status of the City of Memphis.

The City of Memphis doesn’t have its own ability to rule and/or run its jurisdiction of the legal territory nor does it have its moral integrity.

It is suspected that there are too many and too much corruptions around Memphis in Tennessee. Those allegations about such corruptions are political corruptions, judicial corruptions, administrative corruptions, police corruptions, media corruptions, business corruptions, and so on.

It is suspected that there are too many corrupt local politicians, corrupt judges, corrupt police officers, corrupt business people of corporations, corrupt local government officials, and so forth.

And, in parallel, it can be seen that there are too many criminals, too many low quality of people, too many thieves, too many car thefts, too many robberies, too many shootings, and fundamentally too many briberies, and too many white-collar criminals around Memphis in Tennessee.

The General Assembly of Tennessee should begin to try to change the legal status of the City of Memphis. The charter of the City of Memphis should be surrendered, terminated, retracted, revoked, withdrawn, recanted, or nullified. Or at least it should be changed on the fundamental level and/or by the innovative ways.

The bottom line is that Memphis is so corrupt and/or so contaminated in terms of its political, judicial, social, or/and cultural landscape around the city.

Memphis is so corrupt. The status quo is not acceptable.

The Editorial of the Memphis Times
www.memphistimes.org

Published: January 15, 2023

[Editorial] Eliza Fletcher & Mayor Strickland’s Great Talent

It is reported that Ms. Eliza Fletcher, 34, was identified as the person found dead Monday in the rear of a vacant duplex in Memphis, Tennessee. Mr. Jim Strickland, mayor of the city of Memphis seems to have great talent. What he is good at and what he isn’t are causing our attention, interest, analysis, and finally concerns.

Memphis is notorious for its violent crimes including, but not limited to gun violence. At the same time, it is very incompetent for diagnosing and solving so-called white-collar crimes, which are horrible, cunning, hidden, and even heinous.

Murder is the culmination of such violent crimes. And some murders are suspected to be originated from the white-collar crimes. Whenever mayor Strickland was deeply criticized, especially whenever such shocking news of crimes spread around Memphis, he was successful for showing his specialty. What is his specialty?

His specialty is to blame others whenever he faces the local criticism about his political responsiblities or administrative ones in terms of operating the municipal government of Memphis.

He almost always blames other players or other things. He blames violent criminals, juvenile criminals, and their parents. And he blames the law itself. He blamed the Tennessee Law which governed and regulated the gun control. And he finally began to blame the local citizens who he claimed put their guns in the storage box in their cars. And at last he began to blame the police chief, whom he chose.

If the police chief fails to maintain public order and safety, the ultimate responsibility can be concluded and ended to the mayor’s political role. But he never blames his own political responsibilities. In the world of mayor Strickland, ‘The buck doesn’t stop here.’ and ‘It should not.’

Who owns the legal and political power to mobilize the public resources and deal with taxpayers’ money around Memphis, TN? Political power and privileges are inseparable from political responsibilities. The execution of poticial will and power connotes and is accompanied by political responsibilities.

Mayor Strickland of the city of Memphis appears to have great talent FOR HIM. But his talent is NOT for the local community, which is sad, pathetic, pitiful, and contemptible.

Dear good citizens of Memphis, welcome to the world of Mr. Strickland!

The Editorial of the Memphis Times
www.memphistimes.org

Published: September 6, 2022

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