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  1. Urban Justice (released in the United Kingdom as Renegade Justice) is a 2007 American vigilante action film directed and shot by Don E. FauntLeRoy. The film stars Steven Seagal, who also produced, with a supporting cast of Eddie Griffin, Carmen Serano and Danny Trejo.

  2. Columbus CEO: Stephanie Hightower is urban Columbus’ advocate. In 2012, a former Bloods gang leader from the South Side of Columbus turned in a job application to the Columbus Urban League after 20 combined years of incarceration and three years of joblessness, and without a high school diploma.

  3. Urban Justice: Directed by Don E. FauntLeRoy. With Steven Seagal, Eddie Griffin, Carmen Serano, Cory Hart. When a dedicated police officer is murdered, his father goes on a hunt for the people responsible.

    • (6.4K)
    • Action, Crime, Thriller
    • Don E. FauntLeRoy
    • 2007-11-13
  4. Apr 28, 2022 · Seventy percent of Columbus’ urban forest canopy is on private land, and Hendon says the city should consider an ordinance that protects trees on private land, a regulation already in place in Austin, Charlotte, Jacksonville and Indianapolis.

    • Randy Edwards
  5. web.columbus.org › Columbus-Urban-League-9938Columbus Urban League

    Apr 1, 2024 · The Columbus Urban League (CUL) is a community‐based, non‐profit, advocacy organization. Founded in 1918, the CUL is an affiliate of the National Urban League. We stand as one of the largest and most prestigious community‐based organizations in Central Ohio.

  6. COLUMBUS — Today, more than 30 advocacy organizations, including The Amos Project, ACLU of Ohio, Columbus NAACP, and Columbus Urban League, announced their formal demand for the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the Columbus Police Department’s (CPD) history of violence and misconduct targeting Black people.

  7. The Urban Justice Center is a non-profit legal services and advocacy organization serving the New York City area. It is known as an incubator for progressive programs and initiatives and for being a significant legal presence in the struggles of New York's poverty stricken and minority populations. [1]