Mississippi
State issues Silver Alert for woman from Fulton

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Mississippi
This week in politics: Lawmakers looking at suffrage bills

Updates on governor vetoes, bills becoming law
House Bill 1 signed into law
Gov. Tate Reeves signs House Bill 1 onto law, eliminating the state income tax.
As the 2025 session draws near to its April 6 conclusion, lawmakers will have dozens of opportunities to restore voting rights to some of Mississippi’s citizens.
As of March 28, about 60 or so bills had been filed with the Legislature requesting restoration of individual voting rights.
The process to file such bills with the Legislature is tedious and often unknown to many people who want to have their voting rights restored after being disenfranchised for committing certain felonies.
First, a disenfranchised person must request a lawmaker, typically from their district, to file a bill with the Legislature. Then, if approved, that bill would be put through the legislative process, including passing several committees, both chambers and by the governor, who has the option to veto a restoration bill.
There was effort early in the session to restore voting rights to certain nonviolent felony holders who had served their sentencing terms, but it died on the House calendar after House Constitution Chairman Price Wallace, R-Mendenhall, said he was given no indication the Senate would take the idea seriously.
Disenfranchisement has its roots deep in the soil of Jim Crow. During the 1890 constitutional convention in Mississippi, the practice was adopted to prevent Black voters from reaching the polls, according to Clarion Ledger records and reporting.
“There is no use to equivocate or lie about the matter. Mississippi’s constitutional convention of 1890 was held for no other purpose than to eliminate the (explicative) from politics,” Former Gov. James K. Vardaman said of the decision years later. Other Southern states soon followed with similar laws, as reported by the Clarion Ledger.
Today, about 68,000 people are disenfranchised in Mississippi, according to the Sentencing Project, a nonprofit. Of them, more than 50,000 committed nonviolent felonies, which would have been the primary focus of the disenfranchisement legislation.
Governor vetoes Medicaid tech bill
Last week, Republican Gov. Tate Reeves vetoed his second bill of the legislative session, a piece of legislation meant to make changes mostly to a supplemental payment program for hospitals participating in the state’s Medicaid program.
Referred to as the Medicaid Tech bill, it typically addresses making changes to the state’s Medicaid program and also makes sure the state’s Medicaid program falls in compliance with federal guidelines.
This year’s bill would, among other things, have expanded some funding for hospitals in that program, Reeves said, and allowed for some out-of-state hospitals to participate in the program, which he said was impossible.
After the veto was read to the Senate on Friday, Senate Medicaid Chairman Kevin Blackwell, R-Southaven, recommitted the bill to committee for further work, which gives lawmaker an opportunity to send the bill back to Reeves with various amendments.
Happenings at the legislature last week
While Reeves has now vetoed two bills this session, plenty of others have made it past his desk and onto the books as new law.
This week alone, Reeves allowed a bill to establish presumed Medicaid eligibility for pregnant women pass without his signature. Reeves also signed a bill into law that established paid parental leave for primary care givers working in government.
Reeves also signed the Safe Solicitation Act, a bill that requires panhandlers to obtain a $25 permit to solicit donations at specific locations from 9 a.m. to sundown.
The bill had seen some debate in the legislature between Republicans and Democrats. Advocates of the bill have said the legislation would help to address safety concerns with homeless people soliciting donations on roadways.
Opponents have said the bill would do nothing to address helping people who are homeless but only punish them for being so.
If anyone who panhandles violated the provisions in the law, they could be convicted of a misdemeanor that carries a fine of up to $500 or be imprisoned at a county jail for no longer than six weeks.
Grant McLaughlin covers the Legislature and state government for the Clarion Ledger. He can be reached at gmclaughlin@gannett.com or 972-571-2335.
Mississippi
79-year-old grandmother in Mississippi arrested

WEST POINT, Miss. (WTVA) — A grandmother faces charges after someone found a toddler walking down a busy road in Clay County, Mississippi.
Deputies arrested Marie Kelley, 79, Thursday afternoon on child abuse and contributing to the delinquency of a minor charges.
Clay County Sheriff Eddie Scott said a motorist saw Kelley’s grandson walking down the road and called 911.
The 2-year-old ran away after Kelley allegedly struck him multiple times with a switch, the sheriff explained.
Scott said the child received numerous marks and welts on his body, including his head.
This resulted in the felony child abuse charge.
Scott said the child is in Child Protection Services’ custody.
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Mississippi
UCLA women's basketball beats Mississippi 76-62 to advance to Elite Eight for first time since 2018

SPOKANE, Wash. — Lauren Betts was so dominant inside that she barely missed, scoring 31 points on 15-of-16 shooting to lead UCLA past Mississippi 76-62 on Friday night and sending the Bruins to the Elite Eight of the women’s NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2018.
The 6-foot-7 Betts added 10 rebounds and three blocks for the No. 1 overall seed, which will face LSU on Sunday for a chance to advance to the Final Four. The Tigers beat N.C. State 80-73 earlier Friday.
Kiki Rice added 13 points and seven assists and was the only other player in double figures for the Bruins (32-2).
Tameiya Sadler scored 14 points for the fifth-seeded Rebels (22-10), who had reached the Elite Eight five times, but not since 2007.
Betts had a similar line – 30 points and 14 rebounds – in the Bruins’ second-round 84-67 victory over Richmond.
UCLA center Lauren Betts, guard Gabriela Jaquez and their teammates celebrate their win against Mississippi in the NCAA college basketball tournament Sweet 16, March 28, 2025.
AP Photo/Young Kwak
Ole Miss beat Baylor on its home floor to reach the Sweet 16 for the second time in the past three years. In 2023, the Rebels upset Stanford in the second round before falling to Louisville.
Betts’ layup put the Bruins ahead 19-10 in the opening quarter, but Ole Miss closed within 21-19 on KK Deans’ jumper.
Deans’ fast-break layup at the end of the first half got the Rebels within 30-29 at the break.
The Bruins opened the second half with an 8-0 run and went up 45-33 on Londynn Jones’ 3-pointer.
Gabriela Jaquez was all alone on a fast-break layup that put UCLA up 63-46 in the final quarter, and Ole Miss never threatened after that.
UCLA’s only two losses this season came against JuJu Watkins and Southern California before the Bruins got their revenge in the Big Ten Tournament final, beating USC 72-67.
The Trojans will also play in Spokane, facing Kansas State on Saturday. It will be their first full game without Watkins, who tore the ACL in her right knee during the first quarter of a 96-59 second-round victory over Mississippi State.
Big-time Betts
Betts scored 16 of UCLA’s 30 first-half points, the second time this season that she’s scored more than half of the Bruins’ points in a half.
She has 93 blocks this season, averaging nearly three a game, and was named the Big Ten’s Defensive Player of the Year.
Copyright © 2025 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
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