The tragedy of Darryl Hunt: How a wrongly convicted man came to take his own life

On the morning of 6 February 2004, the eyes of Winston Salem fell upon Darryl Hunt, who had calmly waited for this day, uncertain if it would ever arrive. By noon that Friday, judge Anderson Cromer would exonerate the 38-year-old inmate for his role in the 1984 murder of Deborah Sykes; but first, he listened to her mother, Evelyn Jefferson, who berated him for a ruling that would “set free a guilty man”.

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Owner of Mississippi's last abortion clinic won't stop fighting for her patients

In 1974, one year after the US supreme court ruled in its landmark Roe v Wade decision to legalize abortions, Diane Derzis stepped into a doctor’s office in Birmingham, Alabama, to terminate her pregnancy. The 20-year-old college student, who had been married, was three months pregnant and wasn’t ready to have a child. So she sat in a crowded waiting room, not knowing what to expect.

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KKK rally in South Carolina exposes the ugly underbelly of racism in the US

Outside the South Carolina statehouse, William Bader stood tall and defiant as he brandished a large Confederate battle flag. It was not unlike the one embroidered on his black shirt, or the one a local honor guard recently removed from a flagpole outside the legislative building where he protested.

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Muslim and Jewish groups at forefront of efforts to rebuild black churches

Groups seek to raise hundreds of thousands for southern churches that burned after Charleston shooting: ‘If we don’t stand up … we’re all going to suffer’

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US church burnings: A 'long and dark' history that never really stopped

Sometime after 8pm on Tuesday evening, Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church in Greeleyville, South Carolina went up in flames. Located 60 miles north of Charleston, the building’s torched roof lit up the night sky. It was similar to the six other predominantly black southern churches that have burned in the two weeks since the slaughter of nine black men and women inside a historic Charleston church on 17 June.

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Racially biased arrests in Louisiana school district prompt appeal to feds

After a 15-year-old boy in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, allegedly threw Skittles at fellow students on the bus ride home from school last January, he was picked up by police the next morning in the middle of a social studies test.

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Fatal police shooting of Atlanta mother triggers transparency concerns

Late in the afternoon of 30 April, Atlanta police officers Jeffery Cook and Omar Thyme found Alexia Christian inside a stolen white F-150 pickup truck parked in a downtown Atlanta parking deck.

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'Muslim-free' Arkansas gun range draws wary eye of Justice Department

On a Sunday afternoon in early January, a father and son walked into the Gun Cave Indoor Firing Range in the 35,600-person town of Hot Springs, Arkansas. They were hoping to fire rounds at targets, just as they have done at the same facility in past years, then under different ownership. During their latest visit, owner Jan Morgan asked the South Asian men to leave the range and threatened to call the cops if they did not.

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