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The family of a 21-year-old Black man found hanging from a tree in his girlfriend's Scott County yard three years ago will be awarded $11 million in a civil suit related to his death.

Willie Jones Jr., 21, was found hanging from a tree in front of his white girlfriend Alexis Rankin's home the night of Feb. 8, 2018.

Jones' family sued Rankin, her stepfather & several others for not acting to prevent Jones' death, according to court documents filed in December 2020 in the Hinds County Circuit Court. The lawsuit alleged stepfather Harold O'Bryant, with the help of others, either hanged Jones or failed to stop Jones from taking his own life.

Jill Collen Jefferson, one of the family's attorneys, said in a news release that Judge Winston Kidd awarded the family $11,391,662.40.

Evidence found during an independent investigation — done by the Bellinder Law Firm, Jefferson & the People’s Advocacy Institute, a Mississippi based organization dedicated to transformative justice in the South — contradicted an initial ruling of suicide.

“I’m thankful, but justice for my son will only come fully when criminal charges are brought," Tammie Townsend, Jones' mother, said in the release. "They must really pay for what they did to my baby.”

Jefferson said she and her team are now working to get the Scott County district attorney to reopen the case & bring criminal charges against O’Bryant & others involved in Jones' death.

“Willie’s death is just one example of how lynchings have never stopped,” Jefferson said. “And they keep happening, in part, because, until this verdict, there has been no accountability from anywhere for these absolutely heinous crimes. But this judgement is more than someone finally being held accountable.

"It is a first step to putting evil perpetrators on notice that we will come for you." 

#williejonesjr #ripwilliejonesjr #williejonesjrlynching #williejonesjrsuicide #scottcountymississippi #mississippi #lynching #suicide #murder #homicide #alexisrankin #haroldobryant #interracialrelationship #blackman #whitewoman #boyfriendandgirlfriend #stepfather #stepdaughter #civillawsuit #williejonesjrfamily #11milliondollars #whitegirlfriend #blackboyfriend #unsolvedmystery #suspicious #tammietownsend #mom #mother #son #motherandson

Source: Clarion Ledger

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Report via TMZ -- Mac Miller's fortune has officially been totaled up -- and the guy was worth over $11 million ... which will be split among his closest friends and family.

The rapper's estate filed new legal docs showing Mac's wealth has been appraised in full at about $11.3 million, including his personal property and cash on hand. A few of Mac's buddies are going to get a vast majority of his belongings -- including LOTS of jewelry and other cool stuff -- while his mom, dad and bro will get the rest.

According to the docs, obtained by TMZ, Mac's trust left special instructions to give Bryan Johnson all of his clothing and electronics, specifically ... his TV, laptop, iPads, etc. Another friend named Q Chandler-Cuff is getting more than 20 pieces of jewelry ... valued at several tens of thousands of dollars.

His bud, Dylan Rectenwald, will be getting all of Mac's musical instruments and equipment -- MM was a known musician and producer, so he had his fair share of toys, including a $5,000 guitar. He also left someone named Jimmy Murton his household furnishings.

As for Mac's family, he left them a whopping $5 million-plus in bank and brokerage accounts -- plus whatever else he had to his name.

Mac Miller died of an accidental overdose last year at the age of 26. His death resulted in the arrest of his alleged drug dealer, who the feds say provided him a lethal dose of spiked drugs.

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Video After The Jump

 

The L.A. Lakers management quickly lost patience with coach Mike Brown and gave him his walking papers just five games into his second second season as coach.

 

"Mike just called saying he was relieved of his coaching duties," Mike's agent Warren Legarie wrote to USA TODAY Sports this morning.

 

According to USA Today, owner Jerry Buss still had to cut Brown an $11 million check after letting him go.

 

The Lakers gave Brown a guaranteed contract worth $18 million in the first three seasons when they hired him in 2011 as a replacement for retired coach Phil Jackson. The contract included a team option for a fourth season.

 

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The Lakers made big splashes this off season by trading for Dwight Howard and acquiring point guard Steve Nash in a sign-and-trade with the Phoenix Suns. They were expected to start winning immediately, but the team stumbled out of the gate with a 1-4 record. The fact that Nash has missed the last three games with a non-displaced fracture in the head of his left fibula hasn't helped.

 

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The L.A. Times reports that Brown's firing is the earliest of any coach in team history. Del Harris was fired after twelve games in 1999.

 

The Lakers were 41-25 in Brown's first season, losing to Oklahoma City in the second round of the playoffs.

 

The team will now conduct a national search to find Brown's replacement. Early candidates include Mike D'Antoni, Jerry Sloan, Nate McMillan and Phil Jackson.


 

 

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Actor/comedian Chris Tucker has somehow gotten himself into a huge problem with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

TMZ is reporting that he owes an astonishing $11 million dollars in back taxes.

The star, who really broke onto the national radar with his role as "Smokey" in the Ice Cube penned comedy 'Friday' has been very selective in his movie roles of late. He's only appeared in the two 'Rush Hour' sequels since 2001, but he earned a total of $45 million dollars from them.

According to the TMZ report, Tucker failed to pay his taxes in 2001, 2002 and 2004 through 2006.

Here's the breakdown of what he owes.

2001 -- $4,007,794.34
2002 -- $5,060,074.23
2004 -- $55,544.84
2005 -- $660,414.94
2006 -- $1,788,080.91


It just makes you wonder what he or his accountants were thinking. No matter what, yhou can't hide from Uncle Sam.

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DenverPost Reports Love motivated Michelle Cawthra to steal $11 million from the Colorado Department of Revenue and funnel the tax returns into her ex-boyfriend's bank accounts. Cawthra testified Wednesday that she falsified documents and created fake businesses so that her former lover, Hysear Randell, could receive millions in tax refunds in order to pay for his business ventures, delinquent child support, land deals, diamond jewelry and expensive cars. Some of the transactions, which took place over more than two years, were in the thousands of dollars and included money from unclaimed taxpayer refunds. Cawthra told the jury that she often used her co-workers' computer passwords to adjust tax returns so that the trail did not come back to her Hysear Don Randell

"I did things I don't think I otherwise would have done had I not been in love with him," Cawthra testified. Prosecutor Kandace Gerdes asked Cawthra what Randell needed in exchange for love. "Money, I guess," Cawthra said, and began to cry. Cawthra also told Gerdes that except for a few pieces of jewelry and a couple of trips, she did not live a luxurious lifestyle and did not share in the money she stole for Randell. "I did what I was told," she said. Randell, 42, is on trial in Denver District Court on multiple criminal charges including violations of the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act, theft by receiving, forgery and computer crime. Randell's defense lawyer, Scott Reisch, said that his client did not know Cawthra, 32, was stealing money from her employer, but thought the money was coming from her family trust fund. Reisch tried to show the jury that Cawthra was a woman obsessed with making Randell her "Prince Charming" by luring him away from his wife, Trudy Randell, with money. Trudy Randell was also charged in the case and has pleaded guilty to theft but has not yet been sentenced. Cawthra's testimony is part of a plea deal with prosecutors. She later hopes to reduce the 24-year prison sentence she is serving. Cawthra testified she did not have a family trust fund and that while she did try to lure Randell away from his wife, he knew the money was coming from the state of Colorado. The two met in 2002 at the Department of Revenue, when Randell briefly worked in the mailroom as a temporary employee. She told Gerdes that before they were arrested in 2007, Randell again asked her to take money, but this time he wanted her to try and get $13 million to $14 million in one shot. "As this went on over time there was more and more pressure to get more and more money and it was hard and the pressure was making me crack," Cawthra said.

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