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JusticeThere are no lawyers in the military
During the recent debate over how to handle the prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, the Bush administration made a lot of noise about its commitment to fair treatment for the detainees and its respect for the uniformed lawyers of the armed forces. Anyone who believed those claims should consider the fate of the Navy lawyer whose integrity helped spark that debate in the first place. God forbid we recognize human fallibility
Righting a wrong isn't being `soft' on crime PEOPLE MAKE mistakes in life, and evaluating them long after is the pursuit of critics galore. Which rights will be left?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on October 7, 2006 - 12:26pm.
on Justice | People of the Word Bush Judges Confirm Opponents' Fears Federal appeals court judges nominated by President Bush are threatening and undermining Americans’ rights and liberties, and working to reduce congressional authority to protect those rights and liberties, according to a legal analysis published today by People For the American Way Foundation. “President Bush has fallen far short in keeping his promise to appoint judges who will interpret the law, not make it,” said People For the American Way Foundation President Ralph G. Neas. “Judges nominated by President Bush and confirmed by the U.S. Senate are undermining Americans’ rights, liberties, and legal protections.” The report, Confirmed Judges, Confirmed Fears , covers cases decided between September 1, 2004 and May 31, 2006. It provides a significant update to preliminary analyses of Bush-nominated judges that PFAWF published in 2004. The new report documents that troubling trends identified in earlier reviews have continued as more Bush appointees gain more experience and tenure on the appellate courts – more and more opinions seek, sometimes successfully, to cut back broadly on Americans’ rights under our Constitution and laws. A taste of the Old South in New York StateSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 25, 2006 - 8:59am.
on Justice In the Old South, though, they would call them sheriffs instead of judges.
In Tiny Courts of New York, Abuses of Law and Power Some of the courtrooms are not even courtrooms: tiny offices or basement rooms without a judge’s bench or jury box. Sometimes the public is not admitted, witnesses are not sworn to tell the truth, and there is no word-for-word record of the proceedings. Yeah, this is offensive enough to override my political focus
In New York, a Report Details Abuse and Neglect at 2 State-Run Centers for Girls Lansing and Tryon. They are among the most secure facilities in New York State for girls who have crossed the law — remote state-run institutions located far from New York City, where most of their inmates are from. And to the girls who are sent there, the facilities are notorious. “They restrain you for no reason,” Antoinette, a 17-year-old, said in an interview last week. She was confined at Tryon Girls Center, near Albany, after she was found to have committed a robbery. “They throw you down and mush your face into the floor,” she said. “It’s just like having rug burns on your face. They make girls cry and are always doing strip searches.” My sidebar block was at least as good as a yellow ribbon magnetSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 23, 2006 - 11:20pm.
on Justice Click that image...it links to the guy that kept the issue alive. Maye's death decree tossed POPLARVILLE — A judge on Thursday threw out the death sentence of a Prentiss man convicted of killing a cop in a 2001 drug raid and handed Cory Maye a second chance of avoiding lethal injection. After a two-day hearing in Pearl River County Circuit Court, Judge Michael Eubanks ruled that Maye's trial attorney, Rhonda Cooper of Jackson, did not represent her client adequately during the penalty phase of Maye's 2003 trial. Eubanks overturned the sentence, ordered a new sentencing hearing and said he would rule on the other matters raised by Maye's new defense team later. I think the very existence of such sites is sufficient proof they should be closedThat's all. Effort to Combat Child Pornography Would Close Web Sites As part of the battle against the spread of child pornography on the Internet, an initiative has begun allowing for the shutdown or blocking of sites offering illicit images of minors, even in cases where no criminal investigation is being conducted. The initiative, expected to be announced today at a Congressional hearing, is part of an effort among a group of Internet service providers and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Until now, the decisions to close child pornography sites were ad hoc, based on thousands of referrals to the service providers and the Cybertipline of the center. Caught with his hand in the cookie jar, Rep. Jefferson refuses to step downI'm...sorry, that's Bob Ney. Jefferson is a Democrat, Ney is a Republicker. Critical difference, eh? Another difference: everyone called for Jefferson to step down. The Republickers fully support Ney, who confessed to being drunk enough to sell the influence of his office yet sober enough to hide it well for years... Okay, that may be unfair. There was so much corruption going on it didn't take sobriety to hide it. Call it hiding in plain sight. Anyway, the Lead Republicker in the House of Representatives is leaving the matter up to this confessed criminal's conscience . And as soon as he finds where he left it, I'm sure he'll turn it on again and make the right decision. Yup. I'm sure he will. An election is an election...Diebold will make it all turn out rightSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 19, 2006 - 10:45am.
on Culture wars | Justice Contests for important state judgeships around the country are getting nastier, more partisan and tons more expensive. Monied interests seeking to influence court decisions are spending lavishly to boost preferred candidates, much as they do in campaigns for regular political office. Today’s round of judicial elections in Washington State points to the seriousness of the problem and its threat to judicial integrity, independence and impartiality. With three seats on the Washington State Supreme Court up for grabs, a record amount of money — some $2 million — has poured in to underwrite the contested races. Some of the television and radio attack ads against the incumbent chief justice, Gerry Alexander, were so unfair or misleading they would have seemed out of line even if the contests were for local alderman instead of a lofty position on the state’s highest court. The inevitable result: reinforced ties between would-be judges and their partisan supporters, and diminished public respect and confidence in judicial decision making no matter which candidates win today. Incorrect rendition
Canadians Fault U.S. for Its Role in Torture Case OTTAWA, Sept. 18 — A government commission on Monday exonerated a Canadian computer engineer of any ties to terrorism and issued a scathing report that faulted Canada and the United States for his deportation four years ago to Syria, where he was imprisoned and tortured. Should have studied TaoismSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 17, 2006 - 1:07pm.
on Justice He would have known to stop when you have enough.
Oh, I can't WAIT to see how this one turns out
Jackson Mayor Is Indicted Over Crime-Fighting Tactics ATLANTA, Sept. 15 — The mayor of Jackson, Miss., was indicted on six felony charges Friday after months of criticism and warnings that his unorthodox crime-fighting tactics might put him on the wrong side of the law. Among the counts now faced by the mayor, Frank Melton, are burglary, malicious mischief, illegally carrying a gun and causing a minor to commit a felony. The most serious of the charges against him carry sentences of up to 25 years, said the local district attorney, Faye Peterson. The mayor’s supporters called the charges politically motivated and said he would not resign. I can't waitSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 15, 2006 - 1:16pm.
on Justice What can I say?I like some types of pain.
Don't read it unless you're going to read ALL of itSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 12, 2006 - 7:08am.
on Culture wars | Justice | Politics | Race and Identity George linked What happened to black San Francisco? at Negrophile. It's a little long for web reading, but you should read it. I'm just very serious about the title here. Not to underplay the fact that it gets really, really fucked up in Bayview sometimes. The article doesn't ignore that. I just think it give you a pretty good sense of the people there. My short time in the Bay Area gives me much sympathy for the Bayview/Hunter's Point residents POV. You want not to believe in an actual plan to move Black folk out of the city, but when an urban renewal plan looks 10 years into the future and says there will be an order of magnitude fewer Black folk, that is NOT a prediction. It is the repercussions of choices consciously made. When they tear down your home, give you a voucher guaranteeing you a spot in the planned replacement then let the project lay fallow for five or more years...in almost each and every case...it's hard to believe the 'guarantee' was made in good faith. So arrogant a sense of humor deserves punishment
FBI searches offices of 6 Alaska lawmakers, including son of U.S. senator JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — The offices of at least six Alaska legislators, including the son of Sen. Ted Stevens, were raided by federal agents searching for possible ties between the lawmakers and a large oil field services company, officials and aides said. Department of Justice spokeswoman Jaclyn Lesch said Friday the searches began Thursday and were continuing Friday. FBI spokesman Eric Gonzalez said a total of 20 search warrants were being executed across Alaska, but would not say where. Finally a properly Libertarian op-edSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 26, 2006 - 7:50am.
on Justice
[TS] The Czars’ Reefer Madness AMSTERDAM Arjan Roskam, the creator of the award-winning marijuana blend named “Arjan’s Haze,” has dozens of pictures of celebrity visitors on the wall of his coffee shop in Amsterdam. He’s got Eminem, Lenny Kravitz, Alicia Keys, Mike Tyson — but so far, unfortunately, not a single White House drug czar. That is not sufficientSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 24, 2006 - 7:53am.
on Justice Throw their asses in jail...three strikes, all the way! States list meth offenders on Web States frustrated with the growth of toxic methamphetamine labs are creating Internet registries to publicize the names of people convicted of making or selling meth, the cheap and highly addictive stimulant plaguing communities across the nation. The registries — similar to the sex-offender registries operated by every state — have been approved within the past 18 months in Tennessee, Minnesota and Illinois. Montana has listed those convicted of running illegal drug labs on its Internet registry of sexual and violent offenders since 2003. Meth-offender registries are being considered in Georgia, Maine, Oklahoma, Oregon, Washington state and West Virginia. Burn his assFind all these thieves and burn their asses. Ex-Chief Of Schools in Pr. George's Is Indicted A federal grand jury indicted former Prince George's County schools chief Andre J. Hornsby yesterday on charges of steering school business to associates in exchange for kickbacks that were intended to exceed $100,000 and possibly include expensive art, a yacht or other indulgences. The indictment, announced on the county's second day of school, is the result of an investigation that helped drive Hornsby from office one year ago. It centers on two alleged schemes, both of which had been disclosed in broad strokes after questions arose in 2004 about Hornsby's stewardship of the third-largest school district in the region. They probably didn't budget the casting of the medalsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 14, 2006 - 8:34pm.
on Justice | Race and Identity Tuskegee Airmen Still Waiting
Five months after Congress voted to bestow its highest honor on the Tuskegee Airmen -- pioneering aviators who during World War II broke the color bar banning black pilots in the U.S. military -- the Congressional Gold Medal is still not in their hands. "Every time you pick up a newspaper, one or two more are gone," said retired Lt. Col. Spann Watson of Westbury, N.Y. "We'd like people who are still living to be able to receive them. I want to get my medal in my hand." "There is some concern," said retired Col. Lee Archer, 84, of New Rochelle, N.Y., the nation's first black combat ace. "Since Congress approved it, I know of three people who have passed on and will never see it. But I have no intention of dying before we get the medal." Ethical dilemmaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 5, 2006 - 9:52am.
on Justice | Race and Identity The Ethicist at the New York Times:
That's it?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 27, 2006 - 6:58am.
on Justice I can see it now...Peter will be like, "Hey Lucy...you got a purdy mouth..."
Probation in Money-Laundering Case A former officer at the Bank of New York and her husband were sentenced to five years’ probation yesterday, almost six years after they admitted conspiring to use the bank to launder more than $7 billion from Russia. The executive, Lucy Edwards, 48, who was a vice president of the bank and based in London, and her husband, Peter Berlin, 51, who ran companies with accounts at the bank, pleaded guilty in February 2000 and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors investigating money laundering. I wonder who has the movie rights?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 25, 2006 - 4:54am.
on Justice In Latest Turn of Mob Case, Ex-Detectives May Go Free When Louis J. Eppolito and Stephen Caracappa appear in court today to ask a judge for bail, a pair of questions will be buzzing in the air. The first is fairly simple: Will these two retired detectives, defendants in the so-called Mafia Cops corruption case, actually go free? The second is more complex: How is it possible that — after an indictment, a monthlong federal trial, a jury verdict that determined they had murdered for the mob and life sentences for both — there is even a chance that they could be released? The answer to the first will await a ruling by Judge Jack B. Weinstein, who presides in the case. The answer to the second is this: Last month, Judge Weinstein issued an astonishing acquittal in the case, arguing that even though the men were icy killers, the statute of limitations in their case had effectively run out. The victimology defense
Soldiers Plan to Argue Rape Tied to Distress Yes!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 10:26pm.
on Justice | Media | Politics | Race and Identity EYES ON THE PRIZE, PRODUCED BY BLACKSIDE, RETURNS TO PBS ON AMERICAN EXPERIENCEFirst airing of acclaimed civil rights documentary series since 1993PBS Press Tour, Pasadena, CA, January 14, 2006 – PBS, AMERICAN EXPERIENCE, and Blackside today announced the return of the award-winning "Eyes on the Prize," a landmark series documenting the history of the civil rights movement. Originally broadcast on PBS in 1987, "Eyes on the Prize" will air on AMERICAN EXPERIENCE in fall 2006 as part of the series' 19th season. Three, two-hour programs will be presented this fall, with an additional eight hours made available at a later date. The N.A.A.C.P. should ask Bush about thisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 10:41am.
on Economics | Justice | Race and Identity
Bush's Poverty Talk Is Now All but Silent I'm sure you've heardSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 9:39am.
on Justice | Race and Identity I don't feel like thinking too much about this one, so this is the sidebar from the Chicago Sun-Times.
As the unitary executive, Bush should be sued too
The Wilsons Launch Civil Suit Against Cheney, Rove, Libby That face-lift gave you a purdy mouthSchrenko steps closer to prison "I'll probably be paying the rest of my life," she says of restitutionBy BETH WARREN The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Published on: 07/13/06 Four years after Linda Schrenko assailed Democrats for corruption as she campaigned in the Republican primary for governor, the former state school superintendent is heading to federal prison herself. Schrenko, who has a few more weeks of freedom before she begins serving an eight-year sentence, said then that accusations of cronyism and corruption against Democrat-dominated state government reflected "a good ol' boy system" that voters would no longer tolerate. What you don't see depends on where you refuse to lookSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 6, 2006 - 10:19am.
on Justice This is not innocent. Prosecutors in general don't like this business of reviewing of old convictions. Too often it doesn't reflect well on them.
New York Fails at Finding Evidence to Help the Wrongfully Convicted Alan Newton, a former bank teller from the Bronx, is due to leave prison today after serving 22 years for a rape he did not commit — a victim first of mistaken identification, then of a housekeeping problem of epic scope. |
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