Detroit, MI
Michiganders react to possible ceasefire
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Detroit, MI
Detroit judge, 3 others charged in alleged scheme to steal thousands from vulnerable and incapacitated people
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A Detroit judge and three other residents were charged by federal prosecutors for their alleged roles in a “years-long scheme” to embezzle money from incapacitated and vulnerable individuals.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Michigan said Andrea Bradley-Baskin, 46, who is a district judge on Michigan’s 36th District Court, is alleged “to have used $70,000 in a ward’s funds to purchase an ownership stake in a local bar” and “money embezzled from the estate of a ward to pay a two-year lease on a new Ford Expedition for herself.”
“We respect the authority that covers a black robe. This state judge and her cronies allegedly abused that high honor for personal gain by preying on the needy protected by the court,” U.S. Attorney Jerome Gorgon said in a statement. “This would be a grievous abuse of our public trust.”
“Regardless of a person’s position in society, no one is above the law. These four defendants allegedly conspired to steal from some of our most vulnerable citizens — looting bank accounts, exploiting legal authority, and profiting off those who relied on them for care and protection,” added Jennifer Runyan, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Detroit Field Office.
EX-ERIC ADAMS STAFFER WHO CELEBRATED CHARLIE KIRK ASSASSINATION POCKETED $36K IN BRIBERY, FRAUD CASES: FEDS
Andrea Bradley-Baskin, left, is a judge at Michigan’s 36th District Court in Detroit. (36th District Court/Google Maps)
The Attorney’s Office said Nancy Williams, 59, Avery Bradley, 72, Dwight Rashad, 69, and Bradley-Baskin, all Detroit residents, were charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
“The indictment also charges Bradley with one count of wire fraud, Bradley, Bradley-Baskin, and Rashad with several counts of money laundering, and Bradley-Baskin with a single count of making a false statement to federal law enforcement agent,” it added.
Lawyers representing Bradley-Baskin did not immediately respond Saturday to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.
The Attorney’s Office, citing the indictment, said “probate courts regularly appoint guardians and conservators to manage the personal and financial affairs of adults, known as wards, who have been found by the court to lack the capacity to do so themselves.”
MINNESOTA HEALTH CARE OWNER CHARGED WITH YEARS-LONG MEDICAID SCAM TOPPING $3M
U.S. Attorney Jerome Gorgon said Judge Andrea Bradley-Baskin “and her cronies allegedly abused” her “high honor for personal gain by preying on the needy protected by the court.” (Brian A. Jackson/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
“The indictment alleges that Nancy Williams owned Guardian and Associates, an agency that was appointed as a fiduciary by the Wayne County Probate Court for incapacitated wards in over 1,000 cases. Avery Bradley is an attorney, who, along with his daughter (and fellow attorney) Andrea Bradley-Baskin, operated a law firm that often represented Guardian and Associates in Wayne County Probate Court and otherwise practiced regularly in that court,” it continued. “Dwight Rashad operated a series of group homes and residential facilities for elderly individuals, including wards, who needed support and care.”
“The indictment alleges that the four defendants conspired to systematically embezzle funds from wards, and to obtain and retain money for themselves that rightly belonged to the wards and the wards’ estates,” it also said.
Prosecutors described how in one case, Bradley, Williams, and Rashad allegedly took around $203,000 in funds from a ward’s legal settlement, with “none of the money being used to benefit the ward.”
“Williams is alleged to have paid Rashad rent for wards who did not live in one of Rashad’s homes,” they said.
Nancy Williams, 59, Avery Bradley, 72, Andrea Bradley-Baskin, 46, and Dwight Rashad, 69, are all Detroit residents, prosecutors said. (Roberto Machado Noa/LightRocket via Getty Images)
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The case is being investigated by the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigations.
Detroit, MI
Vitti urges Michigan leaders to see what Detroit schools are doing
Detroit Public Schools Community District Superintendent Nikolai Vitti has a message for much of the state of Michigan as well as for his district’s parents and other stakeholders.
Come see what Detroit is doing, Vitti urged in his annual State of the Schools address Thursday night.
“There are visitors across the country, superintendents, constantly coming in to learn what we’re doing,” Vitti said. “It needs to happen in Michigan.”
The usual narrative, Vitti said, of Detroit schools being the worst in the state, or even the nation, or that the state’s scores are being dragged down by Detroit? That narrative has been flipped on its head, he said. Reform is essential, he said, but other districts in Michigan should be looking to learn from what Detroit is doing.
“The conversation shouldn’t be, well, we need to change Michigan’s education because of Detroit being the problem,” Vitti said. “The data is not indicated. Now, (it’s) what do we learn from what DPSCD (has done) in the last 10 years that can be scaled, around recruiting teachers, around using one-time money for facilities and developing teachers, around core curriculum, around intervention, around training teachers.”
Nine years ago, for example, 59 schools were designated for the highest level of state academic support, meaning they either were performing in the bottom 5% in the state or, for high schools, had a graduation rate below 60%. Now, 25 schools meet one or both of those two criteria.
Vitti did not declare the work over, however. Several times during the speech, he highlighted the work left to be done, with attendance, test scores, and graduation rates.
But with many of those same data points, Vitti said, Detroit is on an upward trajectory, while the state averages are dropping. That means while the rest of the state is going backward in some areas, Detroit is still finding ways to move forward, he argued.
A Michigan Department of Education spokesperson couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.
The district has closed the gap between its data and the state averages, most notably on graduation rates. Five years ago, Detroit’s graduation rate was 16 percentage points below the state average. In the 2023-24 school year, the most recent year of available graduation data, it was just 5 points below, although the state average did increase from 80% to 83% during that time.
Early literacy is an area where Detroit’s students are finally starting to show growth, even though their overall scores still are low.
The percentage of students in grades three through seven testing proficient on the state test (or for seventh grade, the PSAT exam) has risen 4 points since the 2016-17 school year, from 11% to 15%. That represents roughly an additional 820 students testing proficient, which Vitti said Thursday goes beyond whether students can read, but how they can apply what they have read.
In that same time frame, for the same group of students, the state average dropped 5 percentage points, from 46% to 41%.
In grades three through eight in math, Detroit has grown five percentage points over the last nine years, while the state average has dropped two points.
“The point here is we’re doing something better and different, and the trend is disciplined,” Vitti said. “Now we’ve got to celebrate that while we continue to narrow that gap and exceed the performance of the state. It is sustained, continual work.”
New Detroit Board of Education President LaTrice McClendon said in her remarks ahead of Vitti’s that the work is not done.
“We have made progress, but we still have a great deal of work to do,” she said. “Our district has come a long way but the needs of our students remain significant. And the expectations we set for ourselves must continue to rise.”
She said the moment was not for “comfort” but for “clarity.”
“There is no finish line for public education,” McClendon said. “Not for Detroit, not anywhere.”
Vitti attributed Detroit’s literacy growth in large part to the district’s embracing of curriculum rooted in what’s known as the science of reading, a way of teaching reading that aligns with how the brain learns to read. Detroit was an early adopter of the science of reading, which starts with a heavy dose of phonics but also emphasizes vocabulary and reading comprehension.
The Michigan Legislature passed two literacy laws aimed at pushing districts toward the science of reading, but it fell short of a strict mandate. The Michigan Department of Education is now lobbying the legislature for a requirement that districts must only use programs from a list vetted by the state for their strength in teaching the components of the science of reading.
Vitti said after his speech he would support such a mandate.
“Yeah, the state should say: ‘These are all curriculum that would be sufficient at being at grade level,’” Vitti said. “‘And here’s the list, but you got to pick from the list.’”
The state has published such a list, but it is only a recommendation that districts use programs from that list. Grant money is also available to choose a program from the list, adding an incentive for districts looking to make a change.
Vitti said the push from the Michigan Department of Education, now led by new State Superintendent Glenn Maleyko, the former Dearborn Public Schools leader, is an example of “visionary leadership” that he said has been lacking.
Vitti said Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has been supportive of education, but he would like to see more reforms. He pushed whoever becomes the next governor to look at both the need for more aid and more equitable funding, going to those most in need, and to look at reforms of the system, not just one or the other.
“I think you can’t just hold everyone accountable,” Vitti said. “I always talk about, for every degree of accountability, there has to be a degree of support, and you got to balance the two.”
Prior Republican governors and legislatures have emphasized accountability measures, while Democrats have focused more on funding, he said.’
“And I think it actually needs to be a balance of the two.”
jpignolet@detroitnews.com
Detroit, MI
Detroit area businesses, schools join general strike against ICE
Democrats demand ‘masks off, body cameras on’ from ICE operatives
Democrats are refusing to vote on any legislation that funds ICE after the killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis.
Small businesses throughout metro Detroit closed on Friday, Jan. 30, as part of a national shutdown general strike to protest Immigration and Customs Enforcement after a series of high-profile killings by the agency in Minneapolis and elsewhere.
The Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, the City Bird and Nest shops in midtown, Drifter Coffee in Ferndale, and Sidetrack Bookshop in downtown Royal Oak are among those participating in the campaign encouraging participants to avoid school, work, and shopping.
“ICE has no place in our communities, and we stand with the people of Minnesota and everywhere who are being targeted by this terror,” Sidetrack Bookshop on Washington Avenue said in a Facebook post announcing its closure.
Protests are also scheduled Friday throughout Michigan, including in Detroit, Dearborn, Novi, and Ferndale.
Students at Rochester High School staged a walkout Friday morning; Cass Technical High School students in Detroit planned one for the afternoon.
The actions follow ICE officers’ killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. The agency was involved in the killings of at least six others last year, according to a tally compiled by the liberal American Prospect magazine and based on news articles.
“Every day, ICE, Border Patrol and other enforcers of Trump’s racist agenda are going into our communities to kidnap our neighbors and sow fear,” the national shutdown organizing website reads. “It is time for us to all stand up together in a nationwide shutdown and say enough is enough!”
Other businesses that have announced closures in southeast Michigan include:
- Lost and Found Vintage in Royal Oak
- Full Measure Brewing Company in Detroit
- Library Street Collective in Detroit
- Beara Bakes in Ypsilanti
- Gutman Gallery in Ann Arbor
Businesses are showing support through various means. Detroit café Trinosophes announced on social media that it would open for an evening concert with proceeds going toward the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota.
Others said they would remain open but issued anti-ICE statements. Detroit and Oak Park pizzeria Pie Sci wrote on Facebook that it does not support “the harm caused by current immigration enforcement practices” but will remain open.
“As a small, independent business, closing our doors — even for a single day — would have consequences for only our people,” the post said. “We pay our team a living wage, offer health benefits, paid time off, earned sick time and 401k match. Staying open is what allows us to do that.”
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