Faith leaders and elected officials gathered Tuesday to pray and demand action on federal voting rights legislation.

Board members have decided to ignore history by passing a resolution that falsely affirms slavery and racism were exceptions and inconsistent with American values.

Matthew Zadok Williams' family spoke to journalists after meeting with DeKalb District Attorney Sherry Boston on Wednesday morning, urging for transparency and accountability in Williams' death.

The family of Matthew Zadok Williams maintains he was experiencing a mental health crisis when he was fatally shot on April 12 and listed a series of demands in order to better facilitate relationships between Williams' family and law enforcement investigators.

Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley set the trial date for October 18 after lawyers select jury members.

Rev. Abraham Mosley will become the first Black chairman of the Stone Mountain Memorial Association Board of Directors and will be responsible for the images of Confederate leaders carved into the granite mountain.

Smith and director Antoine Fuqua decided to pull their slave drama "Emancipation" out of Georgia in protest of new voting restrictions, but voting rights advocates have asked that high-profile celebrities stay and fight instead.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis decided against impaneling a grand jury after reviewing the evidence and considers the case closed.

Not burdened by respectability politics and rules of decorum, lawmakers like Park Cannon, Angie Nixon, Travaris McCurdy, and Michele K. Rayner-Goolsby center equity injustice and are fighting to protect democracy.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp and House Speaker David Ralston are placing the blame on everyone except for themselves.

Religious leaders have set forth four demands for the CEO's of three Georgia-based corporations: Coca-Cola, Delta and Home Depot, urging them to complete the actions by April 7, or face a boycott.

After facing threats of a boycott, Delta Air Lines' CEO Ed Bastain reversed his praise of Georgia's controversial new law restricting voting access expected to disproportionately affect Black and brown communities.