White bouncers get change of venue NEW ORLEANS ( AP) - Four while bouncer* accused of lulling a black college student on Bourbon Street will be tried by jurors from outside New Orleans, the Louisiana Supreme Court has ruled. The 6- 1 ruling overturned a state appeal court decision against the request by Clay Mont/. 34, Matthew Taylor, 24, Arthur Irons, 43, and Brandon Vicknair, 24, all of whom are charged with manslaughter of Levon Jones and are free on $50j000 bonds. District Judge Raymond Bigelow was correct to order a change of venue in their trial, the justices concluded. Jones, 26, of Statesboro, Ga., was pinned to the sidewalk outside Razzoo Bar & Patio after a member of his party was denied entrance to the club based on a dress-code violation on New Year's Eve 2004, police said. Coroner Frank Minyard said Jones was asphyxiated. He ruled the death a homicide The four may be tried separately, but none wanted a jury select ed from New Orleans, convinced that there was no chance of a fair trial. The dissent was written by the one black justice, Bemette Johnson of New Orleans. She said the court should try to choose a jury before deciding one couldn't be found. She said many high-profile cases have been tried in the parish where they took place, including that of New Orleans police officer Antoinette Rank, on death row for killing a former patrol partner and two other people at a Vietnamese restaurant in 1995. Shift in Baltimore police strategy BALTIMORE (AP) - Arrest statistics through August provide dramatic evidence of the city's move away from the zero tolerance policing advocated by Gov. Martin O'Malley during his two terms as Baltimore's mayor. A report by the Baltimore State's Attorney's office shows police not only made fewer arrests, compared to recent years, but higner quality arrests. In 2005. police made about 100,000 arrests - nearly one-sixth of Baltimore's population of 640j000. Last year, police arrested 67,000 people, including 45,947 through August. This year, arrests had dropped to 38,460 through August. Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld, 3rd, who was confirmed last week, called the volume of arrests in previ ous years "mind-boggling." "Did we really accomplish a lot doing Dixon that / Bealeteld asked during an interview with The (Baltimore) Sun. Instead of filling the city's Central Booking and Intake Center "with a whole bunch of arrests for arrests' sake, ... we're going to be much more focused." As mayor, O'Malley advocated a zero tolerance approach, simi lar to that advocated by former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. The approach included strategies such as "stop and frisk," popular under Commissioner Leonard D. Hamm, and the "broken windows" or quality-of-life-crimes crackdown, popular under O'Malley's appointees, Ed Norris and Kevin Clark. O'Malley brought Norris and Clark down from New York, where they were veterans of the zero policing campaign there. Mayor Sheila Dixon promised to change the approach when she took office in January, after O'Malley became governor. Birmingham ranks high for number of minority, female managers BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - Birmingham tops cities in the southeastern United States for the number of minorities holding man agement positions at private companies and ranked second for the number of female managers, according to a study analyzing data from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The Birmingham Regional Chamber of Commerce analysis of EEOC data from 2005 showed that minorities made up 24.5 percent of managers at companies employing 100 or more people and feder al contractors with 50 or more employees. Women made up 38.2 per cent of the management at such firms Birmingham surpassed Southeastern peers such as Atlanta, Charlotte and Nashville. Chamber researcher Larry Holt said the trend shows signs of the city's progress when it comes to upward mobility for women and minorities. Birmingham's percentage of minority managers in 2005 was up from 14.8 percent in 2001. surpassing the national average, according to Holt. Congressman: stop racially motivated CHICAGO ( AP) - An Illinois congressman said he was a victim of racial profiling when police gave him a traffic ticket alleging he swerved over the center line. U.S. Rep, Danny Davis, who is black, said he will go to traffic Davis coun to cnaiienge tne > /3 ticket given to turn early Monday by two white officere. "I'm not one of these people who cry racism," Davis told The Associated Press on Friday. "I'm a person who believes in hard work and follows the rules." Davis, 66, said he was on his way home from co-hosting his Sunday late-night radio talk show, "Talking to the People." and was driving with three black passengers when he was stopped. Interim Police Supt Dana Starks said in a statement that the department "does not encourage, tolerate or condone racial profiling on any level." He said Davis "was stopped on probable cause and issued a citation for vio lating a traffic law." In 2005, state Sen. James Meeks. a popular black minister, accused police of racial profiling after a white Chicago police officer stuck a gun in his face and repeatedly shouted at him to get back in his car during a traffic stop. State lawmakers are gathering data to try to determine whether there is a pattern of racial profiling in traffic stops. The Chronicle (USPS 067-910) was established by Ernest H. Pitt and Ndubisi Egemonye in 1974 and is published every Thursday by Winston-Salem Chronicle Publishing Co. Inc.. 617 N. Liberty Street. Winston-Salem. N.C. 27101. Periodicals postage paid at Winston-Salem. N.C. Annual subscription price is $30.72. ? ' ' ' ? . 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