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Detroit leaders participate in roundtable for Duggan's final State of the City address

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Detroit leaders participate in roundtable for Duggan's final State of the City address


DETROIT (WXYZ) — Detroit business owners, residents and community leaders gathered for a roundtable discussion reacting to Mayor Mike Duggan’s final State of the City address at The Congregation coffee shop on the city’s west side Tuesday.

7 News Detroit hosted the community conversation with people of diverse backgrounds.

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Community leaders gather for roundtable discussion about mayor’s final State of the City address

We asked the leaders what they were hoping the mayor would touch on in his final address and then watched his speech together.

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Imani Foster is a member of 482 Forward and fights for education justice across the city. She was hoping the mayor would discuss the issues students face inside schools including low literacy levels and higher education opportunities.

Watch coverage of Mike Duggan’s speech below:

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan delivers his final State of the City address

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“I think every child at base level needs to be able to read and comprehend,” she said before the mayor took the stage.

Spencer Ellis is the lead pastor at Citadel of Praise in the Brightmoor neighborhood. He says he’s seen improvement in the neighborhood he lives and works in and hopes to see that progress continue.

“I’ve been in that area for almost 20 years and when we first got there, it was abandoned property after abandoned home after abandoned property,” Ellis said.

Watch Mike Duggan’s full speech below:

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FULL SPEECH: Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan gives final State of the City

Imhotep Blue is the vice president Detroit 300, a grassroots organization that helps communities by policing targeted neighborhoods, providing support to those who have experienced violent and nonviolent crime. He says mitigating crime and focusing on the city’s youth is top of the priority list to him.

“You have to understand the different dynamics of the different people that come from different areas,” he said.

Imhotep Blue

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Imhotep Blue

Delly is the sister of Rayshawn Bryant, who was an innocent bystander shot and killed at a Detroit Lions tailgate at Eastern Market last September. For her, community safety is most important and she hopes what happened to her brother doesn’t happen to anyone else.

Delly lost her brother to gun violence in September

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Delly lost her brother to gun violence in September

“I want to feel comfortable in large environments like concerts and festivals within the city and know there’s not a potential that I’ll have to run or hide or that someone I love is gonna be taken away,” Delly said.

Motor City Match recipient and owner of the clothing store Coup D’etat, Angela Wisniewski-Cobbina, says she’s proud of the progress the city has made in the downtown area but hopes some of those successes can be transferred to surrounding neighborhoods.

Motor City Match recipient and owner of Coup D’etat Angela Wisniewski-Cobbina

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Motor City Match recipient and owner of Coup D’etat, Angela Wisniewski-Cobbina

“We need to spread some of that love right into the other pockets who aren’t seeing as much,” she said.

The members of our roundtable listened intently to the mayor’s address, taking notes and comparing what he said to what they’re seeing in their own backyards.

In the end, they say they feel hopeful for the city and its future.

“It is an exciting time in the city of Detroit. What I was especially impressed with was the crime rate,” Ellis said.

Pastor Spencer Ellis

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Pastor Spencer Ellis

However, others were hoping to hear less about development strictly in the downtown area and more about the neighborhoods.

“I think that I did have a little bit of tension and frustration with how much of the focus was on so much of the development happening downtown and leaving the neighborhoods last in his speech,” Foster said. “A nice, pretty city… People stay because they can be rooted in a place.”

Imani Foster

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Imani Foster

These residents and community leaders say they hope the next mayor can continue pushing the city along and make their city a place everyone can continue to be proud of.

“We want to stay in Detroit, we want to continue to live in Detroit, we just want to see the next mayor that comes after Mayor Duggan take the baton and run with it,” Ellis said.

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Detroit, MI

Retired Detroit sergeant faces new sexual assault charge involving 14-year-old victim from 2002

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Retired Detroit sergeant faces new sexual assault charge involving 14-year-old victim from 2002



An additional case, this one involving a victim who was then 14 years old, has been added to the sexual assault investigation against a former Detroit Police Department sergeant. 

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announced the latest charges on Friday against Benjamin Martin Wagner, 68, who now lives in Greenville, N.C. He had retired from the Detroit Police Department in 2017. 

The victim in the additional charges was 14 years old when the assault happened in October 2002 in Detroit, Worthy said. The prosecutor alleges that Wagner approached the victim, pointed a handgun at her, ordered her away from the location and then sexually assaulted her. 

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In this case, he faces charges of kidnapping, two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of third-degree criminal sexual conduct. An arraignment hearing took place Friday in the 36th District Court in Detroit. A probable cause conference is scheduled for April 7.

The woman is now 37 years old. 

“She has lived with what happened to her for 23 years and has now bravely decided that she wants to be a part of holding him accountable,” Worthy said. 

Wagner participated in a court hearing Thursday and was remanded to jail, one week after he was charged with 15 counts of kidnapping and rape in five separate sexual assault cases. All of those incidents happened between 1999 and 2003 in the northwest side of Detroit, with the victims being young women between the ages of 15 and 23. 

The court dates for the earlier list of charges are April 7 for a probable cause hearing and April 14 for a preliminary exam. 

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Wagner joined the Detroit Police Department in 1989 as a police officer and was eventually promoted to sergeant. He retired in 2017 and moved to North Carolina. 



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Detroit, MI

Metro Detroit weather forecast, March 26, 2026 — 11 p.m. Update

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Metro Detroit weather forecast, March 26, 2026  — 11 p.m. Update


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Fangirl Culture is Front and Center as Detroit Mercy Theatre Company Presents a Zany Y2K Comedy

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Fangirl Culture is Front and Center as Detroit Mercy Theatre Company Presents a Zany Y2K Comedy


I’m Gonna Marry You Tobey Maguire closes Detroit Mercy’s 55th Season

DETROIT — Detroit Mercy Theatre Company (DMTC) closes the inaugural season of the new Detroit

Mercy Black Box Theatre with I’m Gonna Marry You Tobey Maguire by Samantha Hurley, playing April 10-19 on University of Detroit Mercy’s McNichols Campus.

I’m Gonna Marry You Tobey Maguire is set in 2004 and follows 14-year-old Shelby Hinkley, who is obsessed with Hollywood star Tobey Maguire and creates a play to kidnap and marry him in her basement.

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“This play is as hilarious as it is heartfelt,” said DMTC managing director Sarah Rusk. “Shelby truly believes Tobey Maguire is her destiny, and through her obsession we get a look into the complicated emotions of growing up during the Y2K era.”

“I absolutely love working with young actors,” said director Cassandra Svacha.

Student Actor, Rileyt McDevitt.  Detroit Mercy

Student actor Riley McDevitt, Photo by Alan Devlin

Watching them create and rise to the challenge is thrilling. I’m Gonna Marry You Tobey Maguire to college-aged kids is like a period piece; none of them were alive when this story takes place so it’s extra fun to have them dive into this world in an anthropologic way. They aren’t reminiscing or remembering 2004, they have to study that world and build it for themselves.”

I’m Gonna Marry You Tobey Maguire runs six performances April 10-19 at the new Detroit Mercy Black Box Theatre on University of Detroit Mercy’s McNichols Campus. The DMTC Ticket Office is open Tuesday-Thursday 10 a.m.- 2 p.m., with tickets being available for purchase anytime online at www.DetroitMercyArts.com.

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Individual tickets are $25 for adults, $18 for seniors and Detroit Mercy faculty, staff and alumni, and $10 for veterans and students (ages 4-college). Discounts are available for groups of 10 or more. To schedule your group, contact Sarah Rusk at 313-993-3273.

Those looking to buy tickets should note that the play is rated R and contains adult language and

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