Days after Brown’s arrest, university holds conference on human trafficking

There have been 19,935 and 16,604 human trafficking victims of moderate and high ratings respectively in the United States from 2007 to 2014.

Additional information reveals 5,042 cases of human trafficking reported just in 2014. Pennsylvania also ranks 14th out of the 24 highest states to report cases for the crime with 113 and Maryland came in 10th with 135.

And former Temple football runningback Matt Brown, 25, was arrested and charged with human trafficking on March 19 after he was found in a Baltimore hotel room with his accomplice Anthony Leon Eley Jr, who were planning to pay for sex with three females aged 14, 16 and 17.

So when the Life After Trauma Organization held its conference on human trafficking Friday in the Student Center, more than the location connected the issue to Temple.

Daily News writer Morgan Zalot was one of six panelists at the conference, along with Deputy Chief of the Amtrak police Lisa Shahade, Judge Lori Dumas of the Court of Common Pleas, U.S assistant attorney of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania Michelle Morgan, Dr. Delane Casiano of Princeton Behavioral Health, and LATO member Ivan Cole.

Shahade revealed human trafficking’s effect on the United States through statistics from the National Human Trafficking Resource center and its Polaris Project.

News of the alumnus’ arrest event struck a chord with some of the conference going student body.

“I would say it’s inappropriate and outraging,” Lexi Liu, a freshman psychology major said. “Honestly, why would you have to go after teenage girls?”

Liu, who is from China,  is aware of the scale of the issue and said she wants to work against it.

“This is a global issue,” Liu said. “This is definitely a good opportunity to do something about it.”

Exton, Pa. native Judith Haupt, who has a doctorate in psychology and was attending the conference in support of LATO chair Dr. Clara Whaley Perkins. Haupt was unaware of the news until recently, but was quick to apply it back to the LATO conference in understanding his mindset.

“It’s shocking, but as one of the speakers had mentioned this morning, it’s a very lucrative body of work, so obviously he values money over anyone, including these teenage girls,” Haupt said. “According to what we learned this morning, he must be a master of manipulation.”

Zalot, who spent three months working on a Daily News report on sex trafficking, said federal sentences can be from 10 years to life imprisonment.


Stephen Godwin Jr. can be reached at stephen.godwin@temple.edu or on Twitter @StephenGodwinJr.

News in brief: 3.31 Issue

LAW STUDENT ORGANIZATION FELL ILL AFTER BANQUET IN CHINATOWN

About 100 people suffered bouts of sickness after eating at a Chinatown restaurant on Feb. 27 during a banquet hosted by a Temple student organization, according to a philly.com report.

The Asian Pacific American Law Student Association’s event drew about 250 people to Joy Tsin Lau at 11th and Race streets. About two days afterward, several attendees experienced symptoms of food poisoning.

“Many, many people fell horribly ill,” user Antima C. wrote on restaurant-review site Yelp!. “This was the worst case of food poisoning I’ve ever witnessed,” she said. Yelp identifies users only by their first name and last initial, but philly.com identified her as Antima Chakraborty, an assistant district attorney for the City of Philadelphia.

Chi Mabel Chan, owner of Joy Tsin Lau, told philly.com she did not believe the diners got sick at her restaurant.

“It was not a problem with my restaurant,” she said. “Maybe they got cold or drank too much.”

The restaurant, well known for more than 30 years for its dim sum cuisine, has also faced several health inspection violations.

The APALSA supports Asian Pacific American law students in finding career and networking opportunities.

-Joe Brandt

AMBLER CAMPUS EXPERIENCES POWER OUTAGE, CANCELS CLASS

Temple’s Ambler Campus experienced a power outage on Friday morning, according to a TU Alert sent out around 11:45 a.m.

Ambler’s Facilities Management and Public Relations offices could not be reached for comment Monday on the cause of the outage.

Because of the outage, classes were canceled for the remainder of the day. A second TU Alert sent out at around 12:45 p.m. on Friday stated that power had been restored, but that classes and activities remained canceled for the day. The university’s shuttle service remained operational through the outage.

-Steve Bohnel

TEMPLE JAPAN STUDENTS MEET U.S. AND JAPAN’S FIRST LADIES

On March 19, Temple Japan students Shoko Ito and Aiko Shigeta met with First Lady Michelle Obama and Akie Abe, the wife of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, in a joint Japan-U.S. Event on Girls Education, according a press release last week.

The event, held in the Iikura Guest House of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, focused on the importance of education for women, especially between those in Japan and America.

According to the release, only a few students spoke at the roundtable discussion, including Shigeta, who said she was thankful for having the opportunity to talk with Obama and Abe.

“It was evident from the discussion that both of them are very serious about the issue of girls not having access to education, and the importance of female students like us stepping up and taking action,” Shigeta said.

“This experience has left us to reflect on the significance of the issue and the importance of solving it,” she added.

The event was part of a three-day trip in Japan for Obama, who was promoting the “Let Girls Learn” initiative – a plan that aims to better education opportunities for women worldwide – the Washington Post reported.

-Steve Bohnel

MAYORAL HOPEFUL OLIVER SLAMS ABRAHAM FOR INTERNAL POLL

After a recent poll conducted by Democratic mayoral candidate Lynne Abraham’s campaign indicated 30 percent of respondents favored the candidate above the rest, Doug Oliver released a statement on the incident.

Oliver cited his own satirical poll which put him at 60 percent, far above other candidates Jim Kenney and Anthony Hardy Williams, who were each given 10 percent. Other candidates including Abraham were given 1-percent ratings.

“The survey utilized a gym-membership registration-based sample which models the likely electorate that we chose to create,” the statement, which was primarily satire, read.

The polling results “unsurprisingly indicated whatever [Oliver] wanted them to indicate,” the release read.

The Abraham poll gave Oliver just 2 percent of the vote, while Kenney and Williams were each given 14 percent. Nelson Diaz and T. Milton Street Sr. were reported at 6 and 5 percent, respectively.

The poll also showed that Abraham drew 24 percent of African-American voters, compared with 22 percent for Williams and 7 percent for Kenney.

The Next Mayor reported Sunday that TV ads would soon be ramping up for the candidates, with Kenney and Williams ads beginning to air Friday. American Cities, a political action committee operated by three Main Line financiers, purchased $560,000 in ad space on behalf of Williams.

-Joe Brandt

News in brief: 3.24 Issue

DIAZ CAMPAIGN COURTS ACTOR AS SPONSOR

The Daily News and The Next Mayor 2015 reported Friday that mayoral candidate and Temple trustee Nelson Diaz is seeking a Hollywood presence to boost the publicity of his campaign, which is trailing most other candidates in fundraising.

According to the report, workers for Diaz’s campaign were trying to connect with the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts, run by actor Jimmy Smits, known for playing Nero on the TV show “Sons of Anarchy” and Senator Bail Organa in the “Star Wars” prequel films.

The campaign considered involving Hispanic celebrities like the half-Puerto Rican Smits, who grew up in Brooklyn and Puerto Rico, to bring in more Latino votes.

But Carol Marshall, Smits’ publicist, told the outlets that she was unaware of any connection between Smits and the Diaz campaign.

“I don’t know anything about it, and I’m pretty much up to speed on everything Jimmy does,” Marshall told the Daily News.

-Joe Brandt

UNION PROCESS CONTINUES AFTER HEARING WITH ADJUNCTS

A hearing in Harrisburg was held on March 19 to determine the next steps in the university’s adjunct professors’ potential merger with the Temple Association of University Professionals, the university’s full-time faculty union that represents about 1,400 employees, not including those in the health professional buildings.

The hearing, which will eventually determine whether or not an election for a merger will be held, was only step one in the process. Another hearing will be held in the coming months, though a date is yet to be determined by the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board.

Michael Sitler, deputy provost, sent out a statement to the faculty after the hearing that said adjuncts joining TAUP “is not in the best interest of our students.”

“By attempting to merge the adjunct faculty into the full-time faculty union, TAUP places its interests over those of both the adjunct faculty and full-time faculty and does not give careful consideration to the best interests of either,” the statement said.

Art Hochner, president of TAUP, said six adjuncts testified at the hearing and discussed their workload.

“The Temple lawyers didn’t seem particularly interested in that stuff,” Hochner said. “They wanted to know technical things.”

The process started in mid-December when adjunct professors filed authorization cards with the PLRB to merge with TAUP, which they hope could better job and wage security.

Hochner said he looks forward to the next step in the process.

-Patricia Madej

HOUSE OF REPS’ BUDGET CUTS STUDENT FINANCIAL AID

The U.S. House of Representatives revealed last week that spending toward student aid would be cut more than was initially expected in a spending blueprint on March 17, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported.

In the House’s initial spending plan, the maximum Pell Grant would freeze for the next 10 years. On Wednesday, Republican leaders added that the blueprint would also terminate public-sector loan forgiveness, reverse a recent expansion of income-based repayment and end the in-school interest subsidy on Stafford loans, the Chronicle reported.

The cuts would save taxpayers about $61 billion during the next 10 years, according to budget estimates. The Chronicle reported last April that House Republicans proposed freezing the Pell Grant and failed – but that was before Republicans controlled both chambers in Congress.

At a Senate Budget Committee hearing last Wednesday, student protesters interrupted the meeting holding signs reading “Dreams not Debt” and “Student Aid Crisis,” while chanting “No cuts, no fees, education should be free.”

The Senate’s budget blueprint, which was released last Wednesday, proposed not to freeze Pell Grants – but like the House bill, it would end mandatory money for the program, which makes some of its supporters worried that it would face further budget cuts, according to the Chronicle’s report.

-Steve Bohnel

News in brief: 3.17 Issue

ALUMNUS ROBBED SATURDAY NIGHT ON FRENCH STREET

A Temple alumnus was robbed at gunpoint around 9:45 p.m. Saturday on the 1700 block of French Street, police said.

Two males approached the victim and displayed a handgun, Charlie Leone, executive director of Campus Safety Services said in an email. The suspects took a wallet, keys and a cell phone.

One suspect was described as an 18-year-old male of medium height and build, wearing a gray hoodie with a dark coat and holding a handgun. The other suspect was described as an 18-year-old male of medium height and build, wearing dark clothes.

No injuries were reported.

The victim did not wish to pursue the incident further, Leone said.

-Lian Parsons

PLRB TO HOLD HEARING WITH ADJUNCTS, ADMINISTRATORS

The Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board will hold a hearing in Harrisburg March 19 to decide whether or not an election can be held for Temple’s adjunct professors to join a union.

The Temple Adjunct Organizing Committee has said it wants an election to decide whether adjuncts can join the Temple Association of University Professionals, the union for full-time faculty. Several adjunct professors had sent signed cards to the labor board to show that at least 30 percent of the group wants to unionize.

The hearing will include Temple administrators and outside legal counsel for Temple, as well as adjuncts and PLRB officials.

-Joe Brandt

GRADUATE SCHOOLS CLIMB U.S NEWS & WORLD REPORT RANKS

Programs at four of the university’s schools and colleges – the Fox School of Business, Beasley School of Law, College of Education and College of Engineering – jumped in the 2016 U.S. News and World Report’s “Best Grad Schools” rankings.

The business and law schools both reached all-time highs in the rankings, with Fox’s full-time MBA program – the Global MBA – rising seven spots to No. 41, and the Beasley School of Law climbing nine spots to No. 52.

“These rankings reaffirm what our faculty and students know to be true – indeed, what they have worked together to create,” President Theobald said in a press release. “Temple is a red-hot institution that provides education of the highest quality and fosters world-class research.”

Fox’s new ranking makes it the only business school located in the Greater Philadelphia Region, other than the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business, to place in the Top 50 of U.S. News’ rankings. Similarly, Temple Law joined the University of Pennsylvania’s Law School as the only law schools from Pennsylvania to earn a spot in the Top 70.

The top-ranked business school in the nation is the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University, which tied with Harvard Business School and Wharton for the first spot last year. The leading law school is the Law School at Yale University, staying in the same position as the 2015 rankings.

-Steve Bohnel

CASELOAD DASHBOARDS TO BE LAUNCHED IN PA

Last Thursday, Pennsylvania’s judiciary launched criminal caseload “dashboards,” allowing the public, court staff and researchers to use “web-based data visuals” to examine criminal-case data across the state, according to an Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts press release.

Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice J. Michael Eakin said the new dashboards will make statewide criminal-case information more effective.

“Dashboards have proven to be valuable resources that continue to help judges and court staffs make informed decisions about court operations,” Eakin said in the release.  “They also make it possible for Pennsylvanians to see the important work being done by the judiciary, and provides this data to the public in an accessible format.”

The three caseload dashboards – Statewide, County and Case Type – combine data from the general civil and criminal trial courts of Pennsylvania, Courts of Common Pleas, and Philadelphia Municipal Court.

The dashboard also includes data from civil cases, Protection from Abuse cases, child dependency and financial information, the last of which includes court distributions and court collection rates.

All of the preceding information can be found at pacourts.us on the “Interactive Data Dashboards” page through the “Research and Statistics” tab.

-Steve Bohnel

Construction worker injured near Main Campus

A 21-year-old construction worker was injured Tuesday while working on a residential building in the 1600 block of Cecil B. Moore Avenue, philly.com reported.

The man, who has not yet been identified, fell 20 feet from the first floor to the basement, Philadelphia Police spokeswoman Leeloni Palmeiro said.

The worker was taken to Hahnemann University Hospital, where he is in stable condition, said Tanya Little, another Philadelphia Police spokeswoman. Little added that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration was notified of the incident.

As of 5:30 p.m., Little told The Temple News that no information had been released pertaining to the worker’s injuries.

Steve Bohnel can be reached at steven.bohnel@temple.edu or on Twitter @Steve_Bohnel.

 

News in brief: 3.10 Issue

LOCAL POLICE OFFICER KILLED IN 22ND DISTRICT

Robert Wilson III was shot and killed in a GameStop on Lehigh Avenue while picking up a birthday gift for his son on Thursday night, the Inquirer reported.

Wilson, a police officer in the police department’s 22nd district, was performing a security check and was at the store counter when two brothers entered and declared that they were robbing the establishment.

When the 30-year-old officer drew his gun, shots were soon fired by Ramone Williams and Carlton Hipps, the two individuals police identified as the perpetrators on Thursday.

In the ensuing gunfight that lasted 30 seconds, more than 50 shots were fired. Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey said in a press conference on Friday that Wilson “redefined what being a hero is all about.”

“He stepped away from the counter, there were civilians there … he stepped away so that the shots weren’t going directly at them,” Ramsey said at the press conference. “He was actually being hit during the exchange of gunfire but he continued to fight, continued to shoot.”

Williams and Hipps were both charged with first-degree murder, along with attempted murder for attacking Wilson’s partner, Officer Damien Stevenson.

Captain Robert Glenn, who was Wilson’s commanding officer, said the eight-year veteran always volunteered for various tasks in order to make his community safer.

“If there was a crime pattern, he would be the first to say, ‘Let me and my partner be part of the solution,’” Glenn said.

Wilson left behind two sons and a grandmother. The older son – who Wilson was buying a gift for – turned 10 on Monday.

-Steve Bohnel

STUDENT ROBBED ON 15TH AND DIAMOND STREETS

Temple Police apprehended a male in connection with an armed robbery of two students on 15th and Diamond streets Wednesday night.

The suspect was found on 17th and Diamond streets, carrying a pellet gun, Charlie Leone, executive director of campus safety services said in an email.

Around 8 p.m., two students reported that they had been robbed at gunpoint, Leone said.

A male approached the students and asked them both for their belongings, Leone said. One student refused and the suspect displayed a handgun. The students said they believe that the gun was a pellet gun.

A wallet and a cellphone were taken before the suspect fled on foot southbound on 15th Street from the location, Leone said.

No injuries were reported.

The suspect was described as thin, approximately 6 feet tall, with a mustache. He was wearing a baggy blue and gray hooded windbreaker and dark baggy clothing.

-Lian Parsons

TEMPLE TO HOST DEMOCRATIC MAYORAL DEBATE

A Democratic mayoral debate will be held on May 4 on Main Campus at Temple’s Performing Arts Center prior to the primary elections on May 14, philly.com reported.

The debate is part of “The Next Mayor,” a collaborative project created to inform voters about the mayoral race, which concludes with the general election on Nov. 3.

Partners in the project include Temple’s Center for Public Interest Journalism, the Inquirer, Daily News, WHYY/Newsworks, The Committee of Seventy and WURD Radio.

Daily News Editorial Page Editor Sandra Shea and WHYY Senior Reporter Dave Davies will co-moderate the debate, which will cover several issues tied to the race, including education, taxes, economic development and several others.

“Philadelphia Media Network is delighted to host this important debate just two weeks before the primary,” said Stan Wischnowski, the company’s vice president of news operations in the press release. “The format will provide voters a final chance to hear directly from the candidates on the issues most critical to the city’s future.”

-Steve Bohnel

KITCH NAMED CHAIR OF JOURNALISM DEPARTMENT

The journalism department now has a new permanent chair after the departure of Dr. Andrew Mendelson for the City University of New York.

Carolyn Kitch, a professor of Journalism, was named department chair last week after serving as interim chair during this semester. 

-Joe Brandt

Gov. Wolf proposes restoration of state funding to higher education

In his budget address Tuesday, Gov. Tom Wolf said he would restore 50 percent of the state funding cut from higher education institutions in the past few years, with the expectation of a tuition freeze at the affected schools.

“In return for these increases, today I am calling on our institutions of higher education to freeze tuition, and I expect them to answer that call,” Wolf said.

For Temple, this amounts to an increase of more than $15 million after being flat-funded at just under $140 million since 2011.

The proposal must be approved by the state’s General Assembly – meaning the House of Representatives and the Senate, which are both currently controlled by Republicans.

Following the announcement, President Theobald said that he appreciated Gov. Wolf’s commitment to funding higher education throughout Pennsylvania.

“We are grateful for the governor’s investment in public higher education in Pennsylvania,” Theobald said in a university press release. “The restored funds in the governor’s proposal—if approved by the General Assembly—will go directly to helping us hold down tuition and recruit the best faculty.”

For Temple, the next step in the state funding process will be public hearings before the House and Senate appropriation committees, which are scheduled for March 24.

 

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

 

Students robbed near 16th and Oxford streets

Two students were robbed on 16th and Oxford streets around 8:45 p.m. Sunday, police said.

The students were walking on Oxford Street towards 16th Street and were approached by a male who displayed a handgun, Charlie Leone, executive director of Campus Safety Services said in an email. No injuries were reported.

Two cellphones and a wallet were taken. The suspect then fled west on Oxford Street, Leone said. He is described as thin, with a mustache, wearing a dark jacket over a gray hooded sweatshirt.

Lian Parsons can be reached at lian.parsons@temple.edu or on Twitter @Lian_Parsons.

Suspect arrested for murder of student

A Camden man sought in connection with the Jan. 24 murder of a Temple student turned himself in to police Friday, according to a press release.

Leonaldo Rivera, 25, of the 200 block of Erie Street in Camden, New Jersey, is charged with murder, attempted murder and unlawful possession of a firearm in the shooting of Alejandro Rojas-Garcia in the Feltonville neighborhood of Philadelphia.

Rojas-Garcia, 34, was driving down the 4200 block of Macalester Street in his Chevrolet Trailblazer when a suspect fired at his car, killing him and wounding a passenger, police said.

Two weeks after the shooting, Rojas-Garcia’s family held a vigil on that block, where they discussed peaceful methods of resolving conflict and the life of the advertising major and father of two who was also called “Alex” and “Luchi.”

Alex’s mother, Aleida Garcia, said she had been calm at the funeral but the vigil changed her mood.

“I am committed to finding justice for my son, for that person who pulled a gun on my son,” Garcia said. “I give you my word here today, standing in front of the place that my son died, that I am committed to justice. And I want you all to be with me.”

Rivera was arraigned Friday when he turned himself in, and has a preliminary hearing scheduled for March 18.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Suspect named in January shooting of student

Leonaldo Rivera | Courtesy Philadelphia Police

Leonaldo Rivera | Courtesy Philadelphia Police

Philadelphia police announced Friday that they have identified a suspect wanted for the murder of 34-year-old Temple advertising major Alejandro Rojas-Garcia, who was shot in his car Jan. 24 on the 4200 block of Macalester Street in the Feltonville neighborhood.

Leonaldo Rivera, 25, has an address listed on the 200 block of Erie Street in Camden, New Jersey, police said in a press release. He has also been known to frequent the 300 block of East Williams Street in Camden.

Rojas-Garcia’s family mourned him in a Feb. 6 vigil at the site of his shooting, where they expressed anti-gun and anti-violence sentiments and were joined by Nelson Diaz, a Temple trustee and mayoral candidate.

Rojas-Garcia’s father, Wilfredo Rojas, an NAACP official in Gloucester County, New Jersey, said that day that he usually organized vigils for victims of violent crime.

“I never thought that I would be at a vigil for my own son,” he said. He promised further action.

“In the Rojas family, we don’t get angry, we get even,” Rojas said. “We get even by educating their kids, the criminals’ kids, and we get even by praying for them. And we get even by assuring that there will be justice.”

Rivera should be considered armed and dangerous, according to the release. Anyone with information on Rivera is advised to contact the Homicide Fugitive Squad at 215-686-3038, 215-686-3334 or call 911.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.