Shortly after the transit referendum was announced, we asked WeGo for Nashville's worst bus stops. Our photographer @martinbcherry documented some of the city's stops most in need of repair or shelter.
https://t.co/o03VoicpHJ
Wanted to amplify this a little here in Nashville. This is to help cover the medical costs for all around great guy Wes Boling's wife Lisa, who has been fighting cancer and other stuff. The Bolings are great folks. SZD is a great pod.
Good scoop from @connor_daryani this morning:
It's looking like Plaza Mariachi will sell off all of the shops around the property and keep the main building in an effort to pay off debtors.
https://t.co/KSTcM3ioeO
"It's a drunken rodeo"
@iamstevenhale looks at safety and security at Lower Broad bars, where one Glassdoor review for a security company sums it up: “It can be dangerous. You may get into fights.”
https://t.co/lb6qPmqlfP
Out this morning: Meharry receives $175M for endowment as part of $600M gift from Bloomberg philanthropies to boost endowment at historically black med schools.
https://t.co/jFUx2ob2sd
In a column for the Banner, I wrote about Melrose Billiards — open for 80 years, it somehow has avoided the fate of so many bars and restaurants lost in Nashville's relentless march towards all things shiny and new.
https://t.co/8lDk2A72O7
When Judge Blackburn "sealed" the case, there hadn't been a story written on it in months. When she finally wrote an order sealing the case 18 months later, there was virtually no coverage. Her justification? “Extensive pre-trial publicity.”
Sealing an entire case instead of a document or a piece of testimony is extremely rare. And this case was closed without so much as a note until the Banner asked about it.
When judges don't follow the rules and they're not transparent in their actions, it leaves the public in the dark. For 18 months, a high-profile homicide case has been happening in secret with no justification issued by the court.
When @iamstevenhale asked about why 18 months of the docket in a criminal case were missing, the clerk's office said to ask the judge. When he asked Judge Blackburn why there was nothing, she issued an order sealing the case -- on the day he inquired about it.
“I’ve been the one person that’s been consistent in her whole life,” said Redmond. “And I feel like I have cut her free. It’s horrible. How equipped is somebody who can’t talk or do anything for themselves or fend for themselves, in a facility where she might be uncomfortable..."