• MICHAEL JACKSO'N PINUP INSIDE G _ 51 ULE5.COU. TY POLICY e' cleared the path of ro d blocks and e're re dy to move abe d . th rent rike ainst Action Ren- tals," id Rev. athanieI Gathright, pre 'dent of the Concerned Tenant Organization (CTO) after a trip to Lansing, April 23. " e met with officials in the At­ torney General' office and the Depart­ ment of Social Service," id-Rev, Gath­ right. The Berrien County Department of Social Service (DSS) h d told the Tenant group that if an aid client anted to stop her vendor payments to the land­ lord, then DSS would cut off that client's elter alIo ance completely, Rev. Gath- right said. e got a copy of the regulations directly from the state DSS office, and e were exactly right, Rev. Gathright told The Citizen. "As long the e ro ed rent is not available to the tenant, but remains in an escro account, then DSS has to alIo that client her rights under the landlord-tenant . ws of the state)" Rev. G thrightexphdned. DSS is suppo d to be sending u .jhat interpretation is writing and also forwarding a copy to the Berrien DSS office, the Tenant president noted. Last wee the CTO called a rent BE TO HARBOR - Black youths in the city are being "grabbed off the reet and plunked in jail" in violation of their Constitutional rights. So charged Harold Han n he ed the Michlgan pvil Rights Com­ mission for help with the Berrien County j Hanson' a Ufelong re dent of the city and a member of the Twin Cities Opportunities Inc. (TCO) a volunteer group who help prisoner make the re­ turn to society from jail. Hanson reeled off a Ii of ill includ­ ing: poor performance from "over­ worked" court appointed attorney; ex­ ce tve bonds for minor offenses; long dalays before jailed defendants are brought to trail; no attorney pre nt at arraignment. Hanson recounted one incident which he said happen frequently. Hanson said the story happened to a neighbor of his, but TCO had four such case documented. According to Hanson the youth was walking home from his girlfriend's one night when he . wa opped and arrested by the Ben on Harbor police. The youth had 26 pennies in hi pocket. Police took the youth to the scene of I I " C C HEA BE IE VIOLATI T5 a burglary. The youth' boots did not m too the foot prints found by police-in the ow, Han n said. Despite having only 26 cent on him, and no evidence of any stolen goods, de pite his alibi of being with girl- friend, despite his wrong-sized boots} th youth with br and ntering and bond stat 10,000. The family could not afford the bond, the youth - who had no prior record - sat in jail. Han n told the commission that the problems the youth experienced . h hi court-appointed attorney ere n t unusual. Attorneys may h ve five or . c s each morning, Hanson td, and will come to the defendant warning th t the chanrges offense is pretty bad, and advising the defendant -to pie d guilty to a Ie r charge. The attorney do not listen to the defendant's tory or prepare a defense. "The kid is scared, to death. He's been tre tened with four to 15 ye r . He's alre dy t in jail four to five months - he 'II plead guilty to anything to get out," Hanson 'd. Continued on p 16