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Prospect of prison looms for ex-congressman Jesse Jackson Jr.

More of the old "Do as I say, not as I do" from our royal government masters.

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Prospect of prison looms for ex-congressman Jesse Jackson Jr.

Former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. and his wife have agreed to plead guilty to federal charges in an alleged scheme to spend $750,000 in campaign funds on personal items.

By Michael Tarm, Pete Yost, Associated Press / February 16, 2013

Then-Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill. speaks at a Democratic primary election night party in Chicago last March. The former congressman and his wife Sandra were charged Friday with spending $750,000 in campaign funds on personal expenses.

CHICAGO

The prospect of prison looms over former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. and his wife after they agreed to plead guilty to charges in an alleged scheme to spend $750,000 in campaign funds on personal items — including furs, a gold watch, a football signed by U.S. presidents and even a hat once owned by Michael Jackson.

It wasn't immediately clear how much time either Jackson could end up doing when the legal drama inevitably reaches its climax before a federal sentencing judge within a few months. But judges frown on brazen breaches of public trust, said one former federal prosecutor, and that may mean the former Chicago congressman will likely to have to serve at least a few years behind bars.

"It shows hubris and arrogance that a politician sees his campaign coffers as his to spend as he likes," said Jeff Cramer, who as an assistant U.S. attorney in Chicago worked on multiple corruption cases. "With these kinds of charges, I cannot imagine him not going to prison ... for 3 1/2 or 4 1/2 years."

He thought Mrs. Jackson, at most, would spend several months in prison.

Prosecutors are reluctant to ask judges to send couples with school-age children, like the Jacksons, to prison for long terms simultaneously — so it's possible, Cramer said, that the government will seek to stagger their sentences in such a way that the Jacksons aren't behind bars at the same time.

Federal prosecutors on Friday filed one charge of conspiracy against the former congressman and charged his ex-alderman wife, Sandra, with one count of filing false joint federal income tax returns for the years 2006 through 2011 that knowingly understated the income the couple received. Both agreed to plead guilty in deals with federal prosecutors.

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Both face maximum penalties of several years in prison; he also faces hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines and forfeitures. But the government did not immediately release the text of its plea agreements. Such agreements almost invariably call for prosecutors to recommend sentences below the maximum.

The son of a famed civil rights leader, Jackson, a Democrat, entered Congress in 1995 and resigned last November. Sandi, as she's known, was a Chicago alderman, but resigned last month amid the federal investigation.

Jackson used campaign money to buy a $43,350 gold-plated, men's Rolex watch and $9,587.64 on children's furniture, according to court papers filed in the case. His wife spent $5,150 on fur capes and parkas, the document said.

"I offer no excuses for my conduct, and I fully accept my responsibility for the improper decisions and mistakes I have made," the ex-congressman said in a written statement released by his lawyers. "I want to offer my sincerest apologies ... it is my hope that I am remembered for things that I did right."

Several messages left with Jackson's father, the voluble civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, were not returned Friday. The elder Jackson has often declined to comment about his son's health and legal woes over the past several months.

The government said, "Defendant Jesse L. Jackson Jr., willingly and knowingly, used approximately $750,000 from the campaign's accounts for personal expenses" that benefited him and his co-conspirator, who was not named in the one-count criminal information filed in the case. The filing of a criminal information means a defendant has waived the right to have a grand jury consider the case; it is used by federal prosecutors when they have reached a deal for a guilty plea.

The prosecutors' court filing said that upon conviction, Jackson must forfeit $750,000, plus tens of thousands of dollars' worth of memorabilia items and furs. The memorabilia includes a football signed by U.S. presidents, a Michael Jackson and Eddie Van Halen guitar, a Michael Jackson fedora, Martin Luther King Jr. memorabilia, Malcolm X memorabilia, Jimi Hendrix memorabilia and Bruce Lee memorabilia — all from a company called Antiquities of Nevada.

The conspiracy charge carries a maximum statutory penalty of up to five years in prison, a fine of up to $250,000, and other penalties. U.S. District Judge Robert L. Wilkins is assigned to the case.

Tom Kirsch, an attorney for Jackson's wife said she has signed a plea agreement with federal prosecutors and would plead guilty to one tax count.

Kirsch said his client and her husband have supported each other. He said the ordeal has been stressful for Sandi Jackson, but she "expected to be held responsible ... and wants to put it behind her and her family."

The charge against Sandi Jackson carries a maximum of three-year prison sentence. But Kirsch says the agreement "does not contemplate a sentence of that length."

The court papers said that Jackson filed false financial reports with the U.S. House of Representatives in an attempt to conceal his and his wife's conversion of campaign funds for their personal benefit.

Jackson's resignation ended a once-promising political career tarnished by unproven allegations that he was involved in discussions to raise campaign funds for imprisoned former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich in exchange for appointment — which never came — to President Barack Obama's vacated U.S. Senate seat. The House Ethics Committee, which no longer has any power over Jackson, may choose to issue a report on the matter.

Jackson denied any wrongdoing in the Blagojevich matter. But the suspicions, along with revelations that he had had an extramarital affair, derailed any aspirations for higher political office. It wasn't clear from the court papers whether the woman with whom he had the affair was among the half dozen people identified the documents by letters of the alphabet rather than by their names.

Since last June, Jackson has been hospitalized twice at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., for treatment of bipolar disorder and other issues, and he stayed out of the public eye for months, even during the November elections.


Sat, March 2 - Learn how the Chandler piggies operate

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City of Chandler hosting public safety day

Posted: Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:04 pm

Provided by City of Chandler | 0 comments

The Chandler Police Department will take part in the second annual Public Safety Day and Department Open House on March 2. The event will run from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the police department’s main precinct, 250 E. Chicago St.

A variety of departmental and city vehicles will be on display, along with a car show featuring police and vintage cars. Demonstrations will be given by Chandler’s K-9 Unit and Tactical Robot Unit. A D.E.A. prescription drug take-back campaign and a shred-a-thon will be available during the open house as well.

Tours of the police department will be held every half-hour, and the fire department administrative building will be open to tours for the duration of the event.

For more information, contact Officer Dan Chavarria at (480) 782-4967.


Struggling Caribbean Islands Selling Citizenship

You can buy a legal passport from a Caribbean nation for $100K??

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Struggling Caribbean Islands Selling Citizenship

By DAVID McFADDEN Associated Press

KINGSTON, Jamaica February 12, 2013 (AP)

Hadi Mezawi has never set foot on the Caribbean island of Dominica, has never seen its rainforests or black-sand beaches. But he's one of its newest citizens.

Without leaving his home in the United Arab Emirates, the Palestinian man recently received a brand new Dominican passport after sending a roughly $100,000 contribution to the tropical nation half a world away.

"At the start I was a little worried that it might be a fraud, but the process turned out to be quite smooth and simple. Now, I am a Dominican," said Mezawi, who like many Palestinians had not been recognized as a citizen of any country. That passport will help with travel for his job with a Brazilian food processing company, he said by telephone from Dubai.

Turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa has led to a surge of interest in programs that let investors buy citizenship or residence in countries around the world in return for a healthy contribution or investment. Most are seeking a second passport for hassle-free travel or a ready escape hatch in case things get worse at home.

Nowhere is it easier or faster than in the minuscule Eastern Caribbean nations of Dominica and St. Kitts & Nevis.

It's such a booming business that a Dubai-based company is building a 4-square-mile (10-square-kilometer) community in St. Kitts where investors can buy property and citizenship at the same time. In its first phase, some 375 shareholders will get citizenship by investing $400,000 each in the project, which is expected to include a 200-room hotel and a mega-yacht marina. Others will get passports for buying one of 50 condominium units.

"The more they fight over there, the more political problems there are, the more applications we get here," said Victor Doche, managing director of another company that offers four condominium projects where approved buyers are granted citizenship in St. Kitts, which is less than twice the size of Washington D.C.

It's impossible to say how many people have used the cash for citizenship programs. Officials in both countries declined to respond when asked by The Associated Press.

"Why do I have to speak on that?" said Levi Peter, Dominica's attorney general. "I have no explanation to give to AP."

But Bernard Wiltshire, a former Dominica attorney general, said there were already around 3,000 economic citizens when he left government about a decade ago. The country now has roughly 73,000 inhabitants in all.

"Investor visa" or citizenship programs are offered by many nations, including the United States, Canada, Britain and Austria. But the Caribbean countries offer a fast path to citizenship at a very low cost. The whole process, including background checks, can take as little as 90 days in St. Kitts. And there's no need to ever live on the islands, or even visit.

A foreigner can qualify for citizenship in St. Kitts with a $250,000 donation to a fund for retired sugar workers or with a minimum real estate investment of $400,000. The minimum contribution in Dominica is $100,000.

By contrast, a U.S. program allows visas for a $1 million investment in a U.S. business employing at least 10 people or $500,000 in designated economically depressed areas. The investor can apply for permanent residence in two years, and seek citizenship after five more. Demand in Canada is so great that the country stopped accepting new applications in July.

A Dominica passport holder can travel without a visa to more than 50 countries, while a St. Kitts passport provides visa-free travel to 139 countries, including all of the European Union. That's a big deal to people in countries from which travel is restricted or whose passports are treated with suspicion.

Critics say the programs undermine the integrity of national passports and have security risks. While there are no known cases of terrorists using the programs, experts say that's a possibility with many visa arrangements anywhere.

"No level of scrutiny can completely guarantee that terrorists will not make use of these programs, just as background checks cannot eliminate the risk that dangerous individuals will not enter the country (the U.S.) on tourist visas, as students or as refugees," said Madeleine Sumption, a senior policy analyst at the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute.

Canada imposed visa requirements on Dominica citizens a decade ago after complaining that suspected criminals had used island passports. And in 2010, Britain said it was considering visa requirements for Dominicans, prompting the island to review its 20-year-old economic citizenship program. Dominica never publicly released the results of its review and Britain took no action.

St. Kitts closed its program to Iranians in December 2011, shortly after Iranian students stormed the British Embassy in Tehran. Iranians had earlier been a major source of applicants, according to Doche.

Some locals worry the programs could get out of hand if conditions worsen abroad.

"There could be a flood of people with our passports relocating here," said Dominica's Wiltshire. "What are we going to do then? Really, this program must be halted. It's dangerous to us and dangerous for our neighbors."

St. Kitts opposition leader Mark Brantley said the citizenship program was bringing much needed revenue to the debt-swamped islands, but he said there should be better oversight and public accounting. "We do not see that sufficient controls are currently in place to ensure that bad people, for want of better language, do not get access to our citizenship," he said.

It's not just economic refugees who are interested in the programs.

American Neil Strauss wrote of securing citizenship in St. Kitts in his 2009 book on survivalist preparedness, "Emergency: This Book Will Save Your Life."

"The same way we have a backup drive for our computer in case the hard drive explodes, I just felt like I wanted a backup citizenship in case the same thing happened to my country," Strauss said during a phone call from his home in Los Angeles. Like most economic citizens of St. Kitts, he rents out his island property.

Some other struggling Eastern Caribbean islands are looking at adopting the St. Kitts model.

Antigua & Barbuda is launching its own citizenship program to drum up money. And leaders of both main parties on the poor island of Grenada have hinted they may revive a program that was suspended after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, due to fears that local passports could be mistakenly sold to terrorists,

In Dubai, Mezawi said he keeps meeting fellow Dominica passport holders, mostly people of Iranian and Palestinian background.

"After the Arab Spring, it's become more difficult for us to really travel around the world, even in the Arab region," he said. "But being a citizen of Dominica, it is much, much better for us."

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David McFadden on Twitter: http://twitter/com/dmcfadd


Sheriff Arpaio’s unit was sloppy in sex-crimes cases

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Review: Sheriff Arpaio’s unit was sloppy in sex-crimes cases

By JJ Hensley The Republic | azcentral.com Sun Feb 17, 2013 10:53 PM

Poor training, sloppy record-keeping, interpersonal conflicts, office politics and ignorant or indifferent administrators were to blame for hundreds of sex-crimes cases that were inadequately investigated by the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office, a review of more than 10,000 pages of records shows.

Officially, the Sheriff’s Office found no single individual or group of employees responsible for the poor investigation of sex crimes that the agency’s overburdened special-victims unit handled in the past decade.

But the internal-affairs report produced last week makes clear that a sloppy culture took root in the overburdened special-victims unit and was overlooked by key administrators.

As a result, the agency was forced to reopen more than 400 sex-crimes cases that were improperly handled between 2002 and 2008.

Some of those continue to be the subject of criminal investigations and prosecutions.

The Sheriff’s Office was among 22 law-enforcement agencies in the county to sign an agreement in 2004 that laid out a uniform approach to child-abuse investigations.

But the supervisor of the unit during a 20-month stretch, when many of the problem investigations were discovered, was unfamiliar with that protocol when she arrived in 2006 from the homicide division.

Lt. Kim Seagraves, who was originally a target of the internal investigation and threatened legal action against the office if she alone were held responsible, was also unfamiliar with the way cases were assigned to detectives in the special-victims unit and how investigators tracked their progress.

Seagraves said she received little guidance from her predecessor.

“When I first came to sex crimes, I knew nothing about sex crimes,” Seagraves told investigators. “If I had some sort of ... packet of information or if he had a (case log) book going, I certainly wanted to keep the continuity up. He told me he didn’t have a book.”

“As a matter of fact, the majority of the cases that were assigned to ... each detective went through Cheryl ... the gal that answers the phone,” Seagraves said. “She’s the one who was receiving, reviewing and assigning cases.”

The cases were farmed out by that administrative assistant to each of five detectives in the unit.

One of those detectives, according to Seagraves, had no business doing the stomach-turning work required of the special-victims unit.

The detective was also found to have boxes of evidence, including some originals, stored in the garage at his home.

But Seagraves’ concern about the detective’s work in the unit came long before that discovery, the investigation shows.

The detective’s supervisor thought he let his devout adherence to religion cloud his judgment when it came to victims and suspects in the often-complex cases.

Seagraves said it impacted the steps he was able to take during investigations.

“One family went to church and had a very clean house, and the other family was a meth house, and they were extremely dysfunctional. He would charge one and not charge another because in his mind … they were religious,” Seagraves said. “He’s a good person, but … he doesn’t want to look at the porn that comes in. We have to look at that because it’s spliced … child pornography with regular porn.”

Technological shortcomings in the Sheriff’s Office made things worse for the ill-prepared personnel in the special-victims unit.

Those problems were compounded in 2005 when the office took on police duties in El Mirage without increasing staff or taking the steps to ensure that its technology was up to the task, the report states.

Seagraves’ superior, Lt. Hank Brandimarte, claimed Seagraves was “intimately more familiar” with the office’s Records Management System than he was — though she told investigators she did not know how to use that internal case-tracking database when she arrived in the unit. The system relies on a unique report number assigned to each case.

But when the office took over police functions in El Mirage, deputies there received different case numbers, and in a different format, than the report numbers the Sheriff’s Office was generating.

The flaw meant some cases intended for the special-victims unit never made it to those detectives.

The poor records management also meant some investigations that ended with arrests never showed up in the sheriff’s system, a fact that defense attorneys could easily use to their clients’ advantage, investigators told the deputies involved, the report states.

Seagraves told investigators she tried to bring some of these issues to the attention of her supervisors.

One e-mail string contained in documents that the Sheriff’s Office released last week shows an administrator was aware but took no action.

Seagraves’ first clue that something was wrong came in July 2006, after she received calls from El Mirage parents who were curious about the status of cases involving their children.

Seagraves realized the cases were not in the sheriff’s records system and recommended a solution that required a separate report to generate a sheriff’s case number.

“This will resolve itself in a month,” Deputy Chief Scott Freeman wrote to the captain overseeing the special-victims unit. “Meantime, Kim will have to make effort to deal with this in-house.”

Interpersonal conflicts and office politics also allowed the problems in the unit to fester, the report shows.

The internal investigation highlighted a toxic relationship between Seagraves and Brandimarte, her superior.

Seagraves said their problems prevented information from flowing through the chain of command.

The notion that her cries for help stopped with her superior also provides sheriff’s administrators with some deniability about the unit’s problems.

Brandimarte, in turn, blamed the culture of the office for his failure to take a firmer stance with Seagraves and the lack of oversight he said he perceived in her unit.

At the time when problems in the unit were becoming more evident, Seagraves was engaged to an office administrator who was perceived to be in the good graces of the agency’s former chief deputy, David Hendershott, who ran day-to-day operations of the Sheriff’s Office for more than a decade.

Brandimarte told investigators the connection between Seagraves and the powerful chief deputy deterred him from taking a stronger stance against his subordinate.

“That was the culture of the organization at the time, which has since changed, but ... certainly it’s a real fear to hold a subordinate accountable who’s connected, married to a chief who’s connected to (Hendershott),” Brandimarte told investigators in May 2011, about a month after Hendershott was fired. “Does that make an excuse? No, but I just think that it’s important to note that inter-dynamics between people when you’re trying to hold somebody accountable for substandard performance versus how is this gonna affect my career in the long run?”

The excuses and explanations about the flow of information and the culture in the office allowed sheriff’s administrators to claim ignorance about the unit’s problems.

But some deputies interviewed during the internal investigation said administrators were aware — they simply did not care.

Documents show sheriff’s administrators knew of the unit’s problems as early as the 2004-05 budget cycle — years before they received complaints from El Mirage officials — and even tried to address it by requesting $800,000 for additional detectives and equipment.

“Additional manpower is needed to successfully complete sex crime and child crime cases in an expedient manner,” an unnamed sheriff’s official wrote in a 2004-05 budget request.

The Maricopa County Board of Supervisors would later give the office more than $600,000 to create a special child-abuse unit, which could have reduced the special-victims unit’s caseload by as much as 50 percent.

The unit received new computers, and Seagraves told investigators she saw a fleet of new unmarked vehicles gathering dust in the garage, but the promise of additional detectives never materialized.

Sheriff’s officials still cannot account for what became of those positions.

Despite administrators’ acknowledgment that the unit needed help, Hendershott and others continued to pull investigators and other personnel into areas that were high on the sheriff’s agenda.

A Spanish-speaking detective was recruited to help with the human-smuggling unit.

He and another detective also worked on material for a sheriff’s training junket in Honduras, and one of them traveled to the Central American country as part of the program.

Others were involved in “deadbeat-dad” roundups and other, more-complex investigations led by Hendershott’s anti-corruption unit.

Those anti-corruption probes have since been discredited amid accusations that they were politically motivated.

Seagraves recalled how the orders in the Sheriff’s Office were given at the time to the undermanned sex-crimes division: “Either you give up a body to Honduras or you guys are gonna be taking calls from homicide and jail crimes.”

“Shame on the chain of command for not knowing (of the manpower shortages) if they are saying that they don’t, because ... they know what was happening,” Seagraves said. “Even to this day ... there is more investigators in the animal crime unit than there are in sex crimes.”

The poor training, administrative indifference and competing agendas in the Sheriff’s Office affected hundreds of victims.

Many of the 400-plus sex-crimes cases the agency was forced to reopen needed supplemental reports and other paperwork to properly close, according to investigators.

But even the sheriff’s investigators, who said repeatedly in the transcripts that they were not looking to point fingers at anyone, were disturbed by several of the cases that showed little or no work from detectives.

One involved a 14-year-old girl who gave birth at a West Valley hospital where her family was supportive of the adolescent and the baby’s father, a man at least 18 years old at the time of conception.

“Obviously they can’t consent at that age ... You know we had mom and dad that knew about it as well. We also had the 19-year-old, 20-year-old suspect,” internal-affairs Sgt. Brad Licking explained to the case’s investigator, Roy Rojas, during the sheriff’s internal investigation. “Mom and dad should have been done for failure to protect. ... The suspect, obviously, should have been done.”

That case originated in El Mirage, as did slightly more than 10 percent of the cases the Sheriff’s Office had to reopen for further investigation. The rest were scattered throughout the Valley.

But the special-victims unit’s problems will forever be associated with El Mirage in the public consciousness because that’s where the poorly handled cases first came to light.

Sheriff’s employees interviewed during the office’s internal investigation said the issues could have continued if it weren’t for a persistent group of El Mirage residents who brought the matter to the attention of town officials and the media, forcing the Sheriff’s Office to address the matter.

“Frankly,” Seagraves said, “had El Mirage not existed ... I’m sure it would be just as screwed as it was when I got there.”


Gilbert firm, makers of ‘SweetLeaf’ sugar substitute, an industry pioneer

Using government to drive your competitors out of business??

One use of government is to drive your competitors out of business.

In this article the special interest groups that make aspartame tried to get the FDA to drive this maker of Stevia out of business.

As May puts it, companies that supported aspartame — a popular artifical sweetener — took notice of the article and used it to try to get him to stop selling Stevia as an alternative sweetener on its own.

Ultimately, May said the Food and Drug Administration told him he couldn’t bring Stevia to the U.S. as a separate sweetener — only if it was part of his herbal teas.

Source

Gilbert firm, makers of ‘SweetLeaf’ sugar substitute, an industry pioneer

Posted: Monday, February 18, 2013 7:59 am

By Abel Muñiz Jr., Special to Tribune

Five-hundred years ago, the Guarani Indians of Paraguay, Brazil and Bolivia started using the plant Ka’a He’ê — translated to English as “sweet herb” — for consumption and medical treatments.

Today, under the modern name “Stevia,” and thanks in no small part to the efforts of James May and his Gilbert-based company, Wisdom Natural Brands, it is consumption, as a zero-calorie sweetener in particular, that’s currently helping the product see significant worldwide growth.

May first came in contact with Stevia in the early 1980s. He saw the potential of both creating a business and promoting the consumer benefits of the product — used today as a natural alternative to sugar and other sweeteners. He traveled to Paraguay, home to an abundance of the “sweet herb” plants, to pursue his goal.

Thirty-one years later, after many successes — and certinaly a few setbacks, too — May, labeled by some as the “Father of Stevia,” is credited by industry leaders with helping stevia cultivation and distribution become a near $1 billion global industry.

Sweet beginnings

The story of May’s Gilbert-based company, Wisdom Natural Brands, and its connection to Stevia begins long before he was introduced to the plant in 1982.

The Guarani Indians of South America had presented the plant to the conquistadors when who came to their area in the 1500s. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, scientists began studying and determining ways to use the sweet qualities of Stevia as a possible sugar substitute, and by the time World War II ended, many countries — including the United States and United Kingdom were researching stevia as a possible substitute sweetener.

Japan was also researching the plant, seeing the potential of starting a Stevia industry of its own; by the time May had found out about the plant in 1982, it’s reported that a significant number of products in Japan already had Stevia in them.

Before Stevia entered May’s life he was involved in the field of renal disease, or kidney failure. Long a healthcare executive, May said he’s worked with both the artificial and transplant organ programs at Phoenix’s Good Samaritan Hospital, and has been on the board of directors of the Arizona Kidney Foundation and End Stage Renal Disease as well.

May’s Stevia experience began when, while at a get-together with friends, he met a Peace Corps volunteer who started telling him about the health benefits of Stevia. At first May didn’t believe the story, but the volunteer took out a sample of the plant and gave it to May to taste it. May was surprised at its sweet taste. The volunteer proceeded to tell him about the history and science of Stevia and May became immediately intrigued by it.

May said he saw so much potential in the plant that he decided to use his life savings to travel to Paraguay and start a business.

At the beginning of his new career, May already had a wife and five children; his wife, Carol, remembers the family had to sell almost everything they had during the first years.

“We started selling from our garage and the children even helped by putting labels on the boxes,” said Carol May, a former marriage and family therapist, and now the president of SweetLeaf working alongside her husband.

Bringing back a business

Upon May’s first trek to Paraguay, the issues with turning the sweet herb plant into what is now known as Stevia soon became apparent.

He said he met the ministers of commerce and agriculture before being introduced local farmers and businesses. Unfortunately because there was not much interest in Stevia, many of the farmers had stopped growing the plant and it took much convincing to get them to start cultivating it again.

May said some had even started growing other plants — in some cases marijuana and coca for the drug trade. But by offering them a steady, honest way to continue working, it didn’t take long for many of the farmers to join May’s business venture, he said.

As May worked to get the business off the ground the first few years — he first started selling Yerba Mate Tea with Stevia — he ran into trouble in 1985, he said, when a publication wrote a short story about his business. As May puts it, companies that supported aspartame — a popular artifical sweetener — took notice of the article and used it to try to get him to stop selling Stevia as an alternative sweetener on its own.

Ultimately, May said the Food and Drug Administration told him he couldn’t bring Stevia to the U.S. as a separate sweetener — only if it was part of his herbal teas.

May continued to fight the ruling, eventually tapping U.S. Sens. John McCain and Jon Kyl for help in 1993. He argued his business was the victim of restrictive trade. According to May, the senators got letters back from the FDA telling them, in essence, that Congress had no business in FDA decisions.

Even still, whether it had any influence or not, it wasn’t long before congress passed the 1994 Dietary Supplement Health and Education act; the act allows dietary products and their ingredients to be put under different sets of rules than those of “regular” food and pharmaceutical drugs, and in May’s case allowed for Stevia to be used as a dietary supplement, though still not a sweetener.

May said he had to get creative and figure out a way to get people to see that the product was sweet, without explicitely saying it to them. That, he says, is how the name SweetLeaf was created, with the brand serving as the ultimate descriptor.

A sweet commodity

In 2007, May focused his efforts on continuing to get ahead of the bigger companies which were trying to get into the Stevia business, May said he hired two organizations — GRAS Associates and the Life Sciences Research Office — to conduct studies to see if his product was safe enough to be marketed as a sweetner. GRAS Associates is a organization that helps companies meet, or prove that it meets, the “Generally Recognized as Safe” standard — hence the company’s name — as set by the FDA. The Life Sciences Research Office, May explained, is a non-profit organization that brings together groups of scientists to evaluate scientific data.

The studies were finished a year later, and May said SweetLeaf was granted GRAS certification, allowing it to be sold as a sweetner. Life Sciences also found that the product was safe and agreed with GRAS’ findings, leading to the FDA sending May a “no questions” letter; the letter isn’t a complete FDA affirmation of SweetLeaf, but it still allows May’s company to continue selling the product.

‘Father of Stevia’

May stands by his SweetLeaf product — and the ability of his business to be one of the pioneers of the trade.

“When he started, you could see he had a passion and vision for Stevia. I am very proud of him of his work and how he has been helpful for people’s health and farmers,” Carol said.

Throughout the years, May has been honored internationally with numerous awards for his work with Stevia. In addition to being presented the Lifetime Achievement Award by Stevia World International and the Visionary Award by the American Herbal Products Association, May has been honored by the President of Paraguay for his contributions to the country.

May himself is proud that the company was able to bring more awareness to the Stevia product.

“I am honored to been known as the father of Stevia,” May said.


Will Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. get a slap on the wrist???

I bet Jesse Jackson Jr gets a slap on the wrist for his crimes. While at the same time some person who has been convicted in California for the victimless crime of pot smoking under the "3 strikes" law will get 25 years in prison without parole!!!!

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Ex-congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. may lose federal pension

By Katherine Skiba, Chicago Tribune reporter

7:09 a.m. CST, February 19, 2013 WASHINGTON—

Former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., who plans to plead guilty to using campaign dollars to buy more than $750,000 worth of luxury items, memorabilia and other goods, is at risk of losing his freedom and a federal pension estimated at $45,000, observers said.

Jackson, 47, who could be in court as early as this week, faces up to five years in prison, according to federal prosecutors.

His wife, Sandi, a former Chicago alderman facing a separate felony charge of filing false tax returns for six years, faces up to three years in prison, they said. Like her husband, she has agreed to plead guilty, according to announcements by their separate legal teams Friday.

Jackson Jr. has been ordered to pay a judgment of $750,000 and surrender some of the goods he bought. He and his wife each could be fined up to $250,000 as well. Sentencing is likely weeks away.

Ohio State University law professor Douglas Berman, an expert on federal sentencing, said Jackson Jr.'s high-dollar crimes, mental condition and duties as a public servant will be considered at sentencing.

"His exposure — the most he could properly get if the judge decides to throw the book at him — clearly is at least five years," Berman said, "and it may be significantly more."

He said some factors help the Jacksons, including their stated remorse, their lack of criminal records and their willingness to plead guilty, saving the government from the burden and costs of a trial.

What hurts Jackson Jr. is the duration of the offenses set out in the federal charges, Berman said. And he noted that it's unclear whether prosecutors will bring up Jackson's dealings with now-imprisoned Gov. Rod Blagojevich or the ex-congressman's former relationship with a woman whose plane fare to Chicago was picked up by a Jackson friend.

Berman said his best early guess was that Jackson Jr. would be sentenced to "a year and a little bit more," and added: "But how hard the prosecutor pushes and what additional, aggravating information they put forward is definitely going to shape the sentencing outcome considerably."

Sandi Jackson's punishment is likely to be less harsh, he said, explaining that because of the couple's two young children, she might be given probation.

Since the two are unique defendants who held public office, the court of public opinion will sway what prosecutors and judges do, he said. Berman cited the public corruption nature of the charges against Jackson Jr., predicting that the government will want to make an example of him "so no one is fooled into believing that once you're a prominent politician, you can cut corners and get away with this."

Jackson Jr. suffers from bipolar disorder, but even if prosecutors are sympathetic to his illness, they will want to make clear that having mental problems does not mean you can commit crimes with impunity, Berman said.

The job of defense lawyers is to minimize their clients' exposure to prison, which may have been done in negotiations over the criminal counts, and "to tell a story as sympathetic as possible," Berman said.

Jackson Jr., 47, resigned Nov. 21 from the seat he had held in Congress for almost 17 years. Pete Sepp, executive vice president of the National Taxpayers Union, calculated then that Jackson Jr. — who was under investigation — might be eligible to collect a pension of $45,000 a year when he reached 62.

Washington attorney Ken Gross said Monday that if Jackson Jr. pleads guilty, that pension is in jeopardy because of a law that strips pensions from lawmakers convicted of an array of public corruption crimes.

Jackson is the son of the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., who issued a statement Monday asking for prayers for his son, his daughter-in-law and their children. In the statement, he said his son is "struggling with the highs and lows of his bipolar disorder" and under "tight medical supervision."

The father, speaking in an interview, said his son was in Washington — but not in a medical facility — and was seeing doctors and taking medicine. He said his son faced medical and legal challenges and "the additional pressure of press knocking at his door."

Tribune reporter Kim Geiger in Chicago contributed.

kskiba@tribune.com


Bills target public-sector [police] unions

I think these proposed laws are in response to the city of Phoenix paying cops hundreds of thousands of dollars to work for their union, something which is absolutely not benefit to the city of Phoenix and in fact counter to the interests of the city of Phoenix.

Source

Bills target public-sector unions

By Alia Beard Rau The Republic | azcentral.com

Tue Feb 19, 2013 12:14 AM

Republicans at the Arizona Legislature are continuing efforts to restrict public-employee unions.

Three bills to restrict unions passed a Senate committee on Monday. Another is scheduled for a House committee vote today. Several other bills are at various stages in the legislative process.

On Presidents Day, when most public employees had the day off, the Senate Government and Environment Committee held public hearings on three union-related bills. Sen. Rick Murphy, R-Peoria, sponsored all three bills. The committee passed:

Senate Bill 1348, which would prohibit a public employee from doing union activities during paid work time.

SB 1349, which would prohibit outside groups, such as unions, from deducting money from public-employee paychecks unless the employee provides written or electronic permission annually.

SB 1350, which would prohibit any individual who contracts with the state, counties or local governments from being able to strike.

The votes were all along party lines, with Republicans supporting them and Democrats opposing them.

“I am so profoundly sick and tired of the attacks by this body on public employees in all of their forms, especially the first responders putting their lives on the line every single day,” said Sen. Steve Farley, D-Tucson. “It is time to support those who support us.”

Sen. Kelli Ward, R-Lake Havasu City, defended the bills. “I don’t think there is an attack on public-sector unions,” she said. “When dealing with our money and taxpayer money, that’s when we need to put some brakes on.”

A.J. LaFaro, chairman of the Maricopa County Republican Party, spoke in support of the bills. He said he was testifying as a Tempe resident and not in his official capacity.

“Unions use release-time hours to affect the outcome of elections in our city elections by having firefighters ... put campaign signs up and campaign for candidates,” LaFaro said. “It is unfair to us as citizens to pay tax dollars for these people to go out there and use these hours against us.”

David Mendoza, a lobbyist with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, opposed all three bills.

“The system of negotiations and union release time has been in place for decades in the state of Arizona,” he said. “It has not needed the state Legislature to intervene. It is an issue of local control, and it has worked well.”

The bills next need a vote of the full Senate before moving on to the House.

Today, the House Government Committee will hear House Bill 2343, which, similarly to SB 1348, would prohibit a public employer from paying an employee for union activities.

Rep. Warren Petersen, R-Gilbert, is the sponsor.

Three other bills have already passed committee and are awaiting a vote of their full chamber:

SB 1182, sponsored by Sen. Gail Griffin, R-Hereford, is similar to SB 1349 in that it prohibits outside groups from deducting money from public-employee paychecks without annual authorization.

HB 2026, sponsored by Rep. Michelle Ugenti, R-Scottsdale, would require local governments to vote by the end of the year on whether to deduct union dues from employee paychecks.

HB 2330, sponsored by Rep. Steve Montenegro, R-Avondale, requires meetings between unions and a public body to follow the Open Meeting Law unless they are about employment-related matters.

Bills to forbid employees from doing union business on work time and to restrict unions from deducting dues from members’ paychecks failed to pass the Legislature last year.


750,000 Marijuana Arrests in 2011

1,500,000 Drug War Arrests in 2011

In an article titled
"Turning the tide on Drug reform"
written by Kristen Gwynne and published in the Feb 18, 2013 issue of "The Nation" it says that according to the FBI, 750,000 people were arrested for marijuana related crimes in 2011.

The article said that was about one half of all the drug war arrests in 2011, which was a total of 1.5 million.

I checked out an FBI web page titled:

Crime in the United States 2011
And that said in the United States there were a total of 12.4 million arrests in 2011.

That means arrests for victimless drug war crimes accounted for about 12 percent of all the arrests in the United Stated in 2011. And that arrests for victimless marijuana crimes accounted for about 6 percent of all the arrests in 2011.

I suspect these numbers are misleading because the FBI considers each charge a person was arrested for as a separate arrest.

So if a person was arrested and charged with 3 crimes that would account for 3 separate arrests, not one.

I frequently say that two thirds of the people in Federal prisons are there for victimless drug war crimes, so the 12 percent number here is about one sixth of the figure I usually give.

I don't know why the numbers are different.

Perhaps because the 12 percent number is number of arrests. While the two thirds number or 66 percent is the number of people in prisons, and each person arrested is not sent to prison.


Mom busted for hiring stripper for kids birthday party!!!!

Don't these pigs have any REAL criminals to hunt down??? You know REAL criminals that hurt people, like robbers, rapists and murders! Not some mom that hires a stripper for her child's birthday party!

Source

Mom hired strippers for son, 16, cops say

Associated Press Tue Feb 19, 2013 11:42 AM

SOUTH GLENS FALLS, N.Y. — Police say a 33-year-old upstate New York woman accused of hiring strippers for her son’s 16th birthday party has been arrested on child endangerment charges.

South Glens Falls police tell local media outlets Judy Viger of Gansevoort faces five counts of endangering the welfare of a child.

They say she hired two women who did lewd dances for five teens under the age of 17 during the party at a bowling alley.

The investigation began after people concerned about the November party showed authorities racy photos posted online. One showed a scantily clad, tattooed woman clinging upside down to a seated teen as others looked on.

The answering machine at Viger’s phone number wasn’t accepting messages Monday.

No other arrests are expected.

South Glens Falls is in Saratoga County, 44 miles north of Albany.


Sheriff Joe wants another $274 million for his gulag!!!!

If we quit throwing people in prison for the victimless crime of pot smoking and other silly victimless drug war crimes the jail would be just fine. Source

MCSO Sheriff Arpaio seeks to double budget for jail, upgrades

By Michelle Ye Hee Lee The Republic | azcentral.com Tue Feb 19, 2013 10:46 PM

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio is requesting an additional $274 million on top of his $280 million budget to pay for a new jail, additional staff and an overhaul of the agency’s aircraft, vehicles and technology equipment.

Sheriff’s administrators on Tuesday presented an overview of the agency’s fiscal 2014 budget to the county Board of Supervisors.

The sheriff’s budget for the current fiscal year is $280 million. The majority of the additional $274 million would be used to replace the Durango Jail, which was built 37 years ago.

The board oversees and approves budgets for all county offices. Once the board approves a budget amount, it cannot control how departments headed by an elected official spend the money. They include the Sheriff’s, Assessor’s, County Attorney’s and Recorder’s offices.

The budget has been a source of political tension among elected offices. The board’s decision in 2008 to cut the sheriff’s and county attorney’s budgets amid the deepening recession sparked years-long legal battles that have cost millions of taxpayer dollars to settle.

Among the sheriff’s budget requests were changes recommended through an ongoing board-imposed staffing study on the Sheriff’s Office after county budget officials found that the agency misspent about $104 million since 2004.

A consulting company’s initial recommendations included hiring finance and budget analysts and accountants; adding deputies through all ranks; hiring communications, crime-lab and administrative staff to relieve deputies from administrative duties; and increasing detention-bureau staff.

Those changes are expected to cost more than $4.75 million. The Sheriff’s Office expects the consulting company to find the agency understaffed in the area of information technology.

Supervisors have requested that all departments submit budget-cutting scenarios of 3, 5 and 10 percent. The Sheriff’s Office complied but warned that any cuts would be damaging to the agency.

Cutting 10 percent from the sheriff’s general fund would result in 68 eliminated positions. A 10 percent cut to the detention fund would close Estrella and Tent City jails and eliminate 293 jobs, mostly detention officers.

“As you can see, we can’t endure those kind of cuts. It just wouldn’t work for the county,” Scott Freeman, the sheriff’s chief of administration, told the board.

Arpaio’s office submitted its fiscal 2014 budget request late Friday, and budget staffers are still analyzing the cost impact.

The Sheriff’s Office estimates it would cost $240 million to shut down the aging Durango Jail, replace the already-closed Madison Street Jail with a new 2,400-bed facility, and transport inmates from the Durango Jail to the new facility.

The agency is in the beginning phases of a jail master plan. Plans to replace the Durango Jail are slated to be studied further starting next month, said Lisa Allen, a sheriff’s spokeswoman.

The Sheriff’s Office echoed other elected offices’ pleas for the board to lift the five-year freeze on merit-based salary raises. The freeze has created pay discrepancies across county departments and agencies, where entry-level employees are making as much as those with six years’ experience.

The lack of raises is difficult to argue because of the dangers law-enforcement officers face every day, Chief Deputy Jerry Sheridan said. Salaries for sheriff’s sworn and detention personnel are significantly lower than those of other Valley cities and towns, he said.

“This lack of recognition cannot be tolerated any longer,” Sheridan told the board.

County budget officials estimate it would cost $4.6 million to adjust just the sworn deputies’ salaries to the average minimum salary and to offset the salary-discrepancy issue.

The remaining requests presented to the board Tuesday included replacement and maintenance of aircraft and vehicle fleets, the jail-management system and IT equipment. Included was a host of other equipment requests, such as mobile data computers for sheriff’s vehicles, new Tasers, radar and breath-testing equipment.

The agency requested money for fuel, aircraft maintenance, equipment and training for aviation staff. Freeman noted that one criticism of the sheriff’s aviation unit is that its aircraft spends more time on the ground than in the air because of maintenance and fuel costs.


Maryland cops murder mentally retarded child with Down's syndrome???

Maryland cops murder mentally retarded child with Down's syndrome???

Source

Md. man with Down syndrome who died in police custody loved law enforcement

By Theresa Vargas, Published: February 19

Fascinated with law enforcement, Robert Ethan Saylor would sometimes call 911 just to ask the dispatchers a question. He loved talking to police officers and was a loyal follower of the TV show “NCIS.”

Now, his death at age 26 is the subject of a criminal investigation that has left those who knew him in his Frederick County community and those who didn’t around the country wondering: How did a young man with Down syndrome die in an encounter with the very people he idolized?

As officials tell it, Saylor had been watching “Zero Dark Thirty” at a Frederick movie theater last month and, as soon as it ended, wanted to watch it again. When he refused to leave, a theater employee called three off-duty Frederick County sheriff’s deputies who were working a security job at the Westview Promenade shopping center and told them that Saylor either needed to buy another ticket or be removed.

What happened next is the subject of a probe by the Frederick County Bureau of Investigation. The findings are expected to go to the Frederick County State’s Attorney’s Office for review this week.

Cpl. Jennifer Bailey, a spokeswoman for the sheriff’s office, said Saylor cursed at the deputies, who weren’t wearing uniforms, and began hitting and kicking them. The deputies restrained him using three sets of handcuffs linked together and escorted him from the theater. At some point, Saylor ended up on the ground and began showing signs of medical distress. A short while later, he was pronounced dead at a local hospital.

‘Not a criminal’

Late last week, the Chief Medical Examiner’s Office in Baltimore ruled Saylor’s death a homicide as a result of asphyxia. Since then, the case has ignited the fears of parents of children with Down syndrome, caught the attention of advocacy groups and left one family questioning how a young man who loved learning about criminal investigations could become the subject of one.

“Ethan was developmentally disabled, not a criminal,” said Joseph Espo, a lawyer who spoke on behalf of Saylor’s parents, Patti and Ron Saylor. “He was entranced by police and police departments and liked communicating with them to the extent that, if there was ever a complaint, it was that he’d call so they could come to the house so he could talk to them.”

Saylor’s mother took cookies to the sheriff’s office at the end of last year to thank the deputies for all the unnecessary trips they made to the house, Espo said.

Espo said the family has not seen the autopsy but believes that the incident was handled the wrong way from beginning to end. Saylor was in the theater with an aide, and his mother could have been called.

“Clearly it highlights a need for training, if there was none, or more and better training if there was some,” Espo said.

Bailey said that deputies receive annual training on the use of force and that all sworn and civilian staff members got training in dealing with people with mental health issues from the Frederick County Health Department in 2011.

Since the homicide determination, Bailey said, the sheriff’s office has been receiving calls from concerned residents, including parents of children with Down syndrome, and Sheriff Charles Jenkins has talked to some residents personally. Jenkins grew up with Saylor’s father, Ron.

“We want people to know we are very concerned about this case, and we’re taking it very seriously,” Bailey said. “This is a terrible loss for the Saylor family but also for the community and our agency as well.”

The three deputies — Lt. Scott Jewell, Sgt. Rich Rochford and Deputy 1st Class James Harris — were placed on paid administrative leave as of Monday. Bailey said the deputies have so far exercised their right as law enforcement officers not to give statements to investigators.

Denny Weikert, president of the Frederick-based Family Resource, Information & Education Network for Down Syndrome, said his organization has not previously encountered problems with law enforcement agencies. But since Saylor’s death, he said, he has been fielding calls from concerned organizations across the nation asking for guidance. Weikert said board members plan to meet and will issue a statement this week.

Julie B. Cevallos of the National Down Syndrome Society said, “This incident is of course scary and upsetting to our community,” adding: “With law enforcement, any misunderstandings are particularly risky, and we certainly hope that abuse is not tolerated. “

‘Now I don’t have my buddy’

Meanwhile, those who knew Saylor remember his love of music, reggae in particular, and the way he would greet them.

“He would regularly come up to me and give me a hug and put his head on my shoulder,” said Paul Foss, a leader at Damascus Road Community Church, which Saylor attended. “He would stay in that hug as long as I was willing to stay in that hug.”

Each Sunday, Saylor — who went by his middle name, Ethan — would sit in the same chair at the front of the church through two services. Foss said sometimes he would fall asleep and other times would sip a soda, but he’d remain in that spot from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., getting up only to greet his many friends.

When Foss learned of Saylor’s death, he said, he informed about 60 members of the church that night. The following Sunday, they brought bouquets to fill Saylor’s empty chair. The flowers overflowed onto the floor and an adjoining seat.

Cam Overs has a son Saylor’s age and has been friends with his family for 30 years. He remembered how Saylor would run curiously toward whatever caught his eye and was a pro at hide and seek because he had the endurance to stay in the same spot until he was found.

Saylor would get breakfast with Overs every Sunday at McDonald’s. Both scoffed at change, and so their orders were always the same: a No. 1 for Overs and a No. 7 for Saylor.

“Now I don’t have my buddy for breakfast every Sunday morning,” Overs said. “There’s a void that nobody expected.”

Overs said Saylor knew how to spell “satellite” because of his fascination with satellite photos and was thrilled when Overs’s son Jonathan, who is in the military, brought him a Kevlar vest. Overs said Saylor didn’t understand that he could call a non-emergency number for the police and dialed 911 so often that he was known to members of the law enforcement community.

On the day of Saylor’s funeral, two law enforcement officers sent a text that was read aloud; it said they, too, would miss him.

“What a fitting memorial it would be if a training module was created in his name,” Overs said, “so no other family or police force would have to suffer this pain.”


China to use drones to murder suspected drug war criminals????

Please don't give a copy of this article to the FBI, or DEA, they will probably copy the idea and use it to murder suspect drug war criminals in the USA. If they are not already secretly doing it.

Source

Chinese Plan to Kill Drug Dealer With Drone Highlights Military Advances

By JANE PERLEZ

Published: February 20, 2013

BEIJING — China considered using a drone strike in a mountainous region of Southeast Asia to kill a Myanmar drug lord wanted in the killings of 13 Chinese sailors, but decided instead to capture him alive, according to an influential state-run newspaper.

The plan to use a drone, described to the Global Times newspaper by a senior public security official, highlights China’s increasing capacity in unmanned aerial warfare, a technology dominated by the United States and used widely by the Obama administration for the targeted killing of terrorists.

Liu Yuejin, the director of the public security ministry’s antidrug bureau, told the newspaper that the plan called for using a drone carrying explosives to bomb the outlaw’s hide-out in the opium-growing area of Myanmar in the Golden Triangle at the intersection of Laos, Thailand and Vietnam.

China’s law enforcement officials were under pressure from an outraged public to take action after 13 Chinese sailors on two cargo ships laden with narcotics were killed in October 2011 on the Mekong River. Photos of the dead sailors, their bodies gagged and blindfolded and some with head wounds suggesting execution-style killings, circulated on China’s Internet.

It was one of the most brutal assaults on Chinese citizens abroad in recent years. Naw Kham, a member of Myanmar’s ethnic Shan minority and a major drug trafficker, was suspected in the killings.

A manhunt by the Chinese police in the jungles of the Golden Triangle produced no results, and security officials turned to a drone strike as a possible solution.

China’s global navigation system, Beidou, would have been used to guide the drones to the target, Mr. Liu said. China’s goal is for the Beidou system to compete with the United States’ Global Positioning System, Russia’s Glonass and the European Union’s Galileo, Chinese experts say.

Mr. Liu’s comments on the use of the Beidou system with the drones reflects the rapid advancement in that navigation system from its humble beginnings more than a decade ago.

The experimental navigation system was started in 2000 and has since expanded to 16 navigation satellites over Asia and the Pacific Ocean, according to an article in Wednesday’s China Daily, an English-language state-run newspaper. The Chinese military, particularly the navy, is now conducting patrols and training exercises using Beidou, the newspaper said.

As an example, China Daily quoted the information chief at the headquarters of the North Sea Fleet, Lei Xiwei, saying a fleet with the missile destroyer Qingdao, along with the missile frigates Yantai and Yancheng, entered the South China Sea on Feb. 1 using the Beidou navigation system to provide positioning, security and protection for the fleet.

As China has been vastly improving its navigation system, it is also making fast progress with drones, and many manufacturers for the Chinese military have research centers devoted to unmanned aerial vehicles, according to a report last year by the Defense Science Board of the Pentagon.

Two Chinese drones, apparently modeled on the American Reaper and Predator unmanned aerial vehicles, were unveiled at the Zhuhai air show in November. A larger drone that Western experts say is akin to the American RQ-4 Global Hawk is also known to be in the Chinese arsenal.

One of the Chinese drones, the CH-4, had a range of about 2,200 miles and was ideal for surveillance missions over islands in the East China Sea that are the subject of a dispute between China and Japan, an official with the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation said at the Zhuhai air show.

China has acknowledged a pilot program that uses drones as part of its stepped-up surveillance of its coastal areas, as well as in the South China Sea and the East China Sea.

By 2015, the State Oceanic Administration has said it plans to use drones along China’s coastline on a permanent basis and would establish monitoring bases in provinces along the coastline for drones.

As for Naw Kham, the fugitive, he was captured by Lao authorities at the Mekong River port of Mong Mo after a six-month hunt in the jungles of the Golden Triangle by the combined police forces of China, Myanmar, Thailand and Laos. After his extradition to China, Naw Kham received a death sentence from a Chinese court in Yunnan Province and awaits execution, according to Chinese press reports.

“We didn’t use China’s military, and we didn’t harm a single foreign citizen,” Mr. Liu bragged after the arrest in April 2012.

Bree Feng contributed reporting.


San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr made $321,522

San Francisco government rulers pay themselves very well!!!!

572 San Francisco city workers are paid more than governor

25% of San Francisco city workers make over $100,000

San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr made $321,522.

San Francisco Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-White came in second, at $314,759

The were followed by a slew of police and fire deputy chiefs.

Source

572 city workers paid more than governor

Phillip Matier and Andrew Ross

Updated 3:05 am, Wednesday, February 20, 2013

No fewer than 572 San Francisco city workers and executives made more than Gov. Jerry Brown last year.

More than 1,500 city workers made more than state Attorney General Kamala Harris.

And that's without overtime.

"That's pretty staggering," said Tom Dalzell, head of the California Citizens Compensation Commission, which sets pay for state lawmakers.

With a salary of $173,987, Brown makes about as much as a senior police sergeant in San Francisco, once premium pay for the cop's years of service, special training and the like are included.

At $151,127 a year, Harris is making less than many of the lawyers she used to oversee when she was San Francisco district attorney.

"I think you will find that in just about every major city or county in the state," Dalzell said.

That may be the case, but San Francisco is a true municipal gold mine when it comes to pay. The days when the headline-grabbing "$100,000 club" was made up of a handful of top managers and overtime earners are long gone.

Last year, city controller's records show, roughly a quarter of the city's 36,000 full- and part-time workers made more than $100,000 - without overtime.

And 195 workers and execs made more than $200,000.

The highest-paid was Police Chief Greg Suhr, who made $321,522. Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-White came in second, at $314,759, followed by a slew of police and fire deputy chiefs.

Mayor Ed Lee checked in at No. 27, with $260,547.

This year's cash-out prize went to outgoing police Capt. John Goldberg, who got $245,999 for his unused sick and vacation time, bringing his yearly pay to $350,403.

Lee's reaction to the numbers?

"Whenever the city opens a contract, we look at comparable rates around the region," said spokeswoman Christine Falvey. "We're constantly looking (at) how much we are paying employees and finding good people, and balancing that with protecting the city's fiscal health."

SNIP

San Francisco Chronicle columnists Phillip Matier and Andrew Ross appear Sundays, Mondays and Wednesdays. Matier can be seen on the KPIX-TV morning and evening news. He can also be heard on KCBS radio Monday through Friday at 7:50 a.m. and 5:50 p.m. Got a tip? Call (415) 777-8815, or e-mail matierandross@sfchronicle.com


Prescott Valley police chief Bill Fessler shovels the BS???

Prescott Valley police chief Bill Fessler claims he doesn't know which of his cops punched Justin Stafford, despite the fact that Police Chief Bill Fessler was in the fight???

Prescott Valley police chief Bill Fessler sounds a lot like Hogan's Heros Sgt Schultz - "I know nothing! I know nothing!"

Of course if a suspect criminal behaved in this manner the police would call him a lying criminal who is probably guilty of something and just having a convenient memory lapse to cover up his crimes!

While we all suspect that Prescott Valley Police Chief Bill Fessler is a lying criminal who is covering up the crimes of crooked cops that work for him, we will never know the truth about this.

Prescott Valley chief spoke to bar fight victim

Source

Prescott Valley chief spoke to bar fight victim

Posted: Feb 19, 2013 4:48 PM Updated: Feb 19, 2013 4:48 PM

Posted by Jennifer Jones

FLAGSTAFF, AZ (AP) -

Prescott Valley Police Chief Bill Fessler can't remember who the punched Justin Stafford in the mouth - Honest - Swear to God, he can't remember!!! The Prescott Valley police chief says he was at the center of a conversation that prompted a biker brawl but denies throwing any punches.

Bill Fessler told authorities that someone else got ahold of Justin Stafford at a Prescott bar in December, leaving him with a bloodied and bruised nose.

The Arizona Department of Public Safety says it's wrapping up its investigation of the fight that involves members of a law enforcement motorcycle club. The agency released unredacted police reports Tuesday.

Both Fessler and Yavapai County sheriff's employee Bill Suttle say a fellow officer hit Stafford, but they didn't know his name.

Suttle says he broke up the fight and immediately sent the law enforcement officer to the hotel where they were staying.

Stafford has told The Associated Press that he was caught off guard.

Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Prescott Valley police chief Bill Fessler spoke to bar fight victim

Source

Prescott Valley police chief Bill Fessler spoke to bar fight victim

Posted: 6:46 PM

By: Associated Press By: Associated Press

PRESCOTT, AZ -

The Prescott Valley police chief was at the center of a heated discussion that prompted a biker brawl , but he denied throwing any punches or knowing the name of the person who did, according to police reports released Tuesday.

Prescott Valley Police Chief Bill Fessler can't remember who the punched Justin Stafford in the mouth - Honest - Swear to God, he can't remember!!! Bill Fessler told authorities that someone else got ahold of Justin Stafford in December at a bar on Prescott's Whiskey Row, leaving him with a bloodied and bruised nose.

The state Department of Public Safety is about two weeks from wrapping up its investigation of the fight that involved members of the Arizona chapter of the Iron Brotherhood Motorcycle Club, which is made up of law enforcement officers, agency spokesman Bart Graves said.

The department previously released the police reports, but the documents were heavily redacted and didn't name the victim, witnesses or anyone involved in the fight. The unredacted reports were made public after the Prescott Daily Courier went to court to fight for their release.

Fessler told authorities that Stafford approached him at Moctezuma's bar, grabbed his vest and started talking trash and asking about his patches, according to the documents. Fessler responded by saying, "Why are you asking?"

Fessler told authorities that someone else then took away Stafford, and Fessler left.

Yavapai County sheriff's employee Bill Suttle recounted a similar story. Both he and Fessler said a fellow officer nicknamed "Top Gun" hit Stafford, but they didn't know his name. According to the reports, Suttle said he broke up the fight and immediately sent the law enforcement officer to the hotel where they were staying.

Officers from the Prescott Police Department had responded to the bar and the local hospital where Stafford's friend took him after he was hit. Stafford's family declined to comment Tuesday, but he previously told The Associated Press that he was talking to a biker and admiring his badge when he was grabbed by the throat, pushed toward the bar and punched in the face. Stafford, who admittedly was drunk, said he was caught off-guard.

Witnesses described a raucous fight where "everyone was swinging at everybody." A video shows Stafford walking up to a man in a black vest and talking to him when another similarly dressed man grabs Stafford at the neck and pushes him, according to the reports.

Moctezuma owner Bruce Reid said he doesn't allow bikers into his bar with their "cuts," but made an exception for the Iron Brotherhood after members showed police badges to the security staff. Reid told authorities the bikers were swinging their fists at him and his staff as they tried to break up the fight, and that the group reluctantly left when asked.

Prescott police officers caught up with Fessler and Suttle after the fight at a nearby bar where the Iron Brotherhood had held its Christmas party earlier that night. One officer wrote in a report that Fessler and Suttle "did not appear as if they were providing me with all of the information regarding the matter."

Suttle also told a Prescott officer that "Andy was there," and "I want him left out of this." Suttle was referring to Andy Reinhart, who was Prescott's acting police chief at the time but who has been cleared by DPS in the investigation.

"We knew you guys were going to show up. They told me you were coming, so I told Andy to go home," said Suttle, who commands the sheriff's narcotics unit.

Prescott police spokesman Lt. Ken Morley said neither Fessler nor Suttle came forward with the name of the law enforcement official they implicated in the fight before the investigation was turned over to the Department of Public Safety. Morley said there's no indication that any Prescott police officers were involved.

Sgt. Brandon Bonney, a spokesman for the nearby Prescott Valley Police Department, declined to comment Tuesday, citing the ongoing investigation. Fessler released a statement shortly after the fight defending his department. He didn't specify whether he was involved in the brawl but said "the truth will be told."

Yavapai County Sheriff Scott Mascher has asked the Coconino County Sheriff's Office to review the involvement of any of his employees.

Unredacted Police Report on Brawl Reveals Names But Questions Remain

Source

Unredacted Police Report on Brawl Reveals Names But Questions Remain

Written by Lynne LaMaster

Unredacted Police Report on Brawl Reveals Names But Questions Remain

The redactions are filled in. But questions still remain.

One month ago, we reported on a heavily redacted police report regarding a brawl in downtown Prescott's Moctezuma's Bar on Whiskey Row.

That was when off-duty law enforcement, members of a motorcycle club called "Iron Brotherhood" got into a fight at Moctezuma's the weekend before Christmas. One person, pummeled by a member of the Iron Brotherhood, was sent to the hospital with a broken nose. Yet, no arrests were made, no charges of assault were filed.

Read: Police Brawl Investigation Suggests Attempted Coverup and Lack of Cooperation

Today we have received the unredacted copy, which we duplicate for you here.

But, first, here are answers to some of the questions we posed last January.

1. There does not appear to be any attempt at a cover up by the investigating Prescott Police Officers. However, the off-duty law enforcement being interviewed certainly appear to be less than forthcoming.

2. The victim's name is Justin Stafford.

Prescott Valley Police Chief Bill Fessler can't remember who the punched Justin Stafford in the mouth - Honest - Swear to God, he can't remember!!! 3. It appears that the cop that threw the first punch is one with a club name of "Top Gun". What's his real name? Who knows? Neither Police Chief Bill Fessler (President of the "Iron Brotherhood" at the time) nor Yavapai County Sheriff's Officer (YCSO) Commander Bill Suttle could remember. Suttles and Fessler's lack of knowledge of "Top Gun's" real name was met with skepticism by the investigating officers.

4. We now know that it was Commander Suttle who sent Prescott Deputy Chief Andy Reinhardt home.

5. But someone else was also sent away - "Top Gun" - who apparently is the first one to punch Stafford. Who is "Top Gun"? As mentioned, we still don't know that.

And it appears that it will take a long time before we know much more. When the Arizona Department of Public Service (AZDPS) sent the un-redacted report, they included a note, "This is all that is available right now, it will be several months until all other investigations are complete."

Several months???

Unredacted Police Report:

Report from Officer Clayton Heath

12-24-2012, at approximately 1000 hours, I was informed by Lt. Morley that an assault had occurred at Moctezuma's bar on Saturday night the 22nd and that some officers may have been involved. He requested that I respond to Moctezuma's bar and two other bars as well (Matts, Hooligans) and see if more video could be obtained from these businesses, besides the video that was already obtained by patrol on the night of the incident.

At approximately 1045 hours, Detective Brazell and I responded to Moctezuma's bar in order to contact IL Reid to try an obtain more video. We talked to the day bartender who informed us that both of the owners were not there and to try and give them a call. I telephoned IL Reid and left a message to have him call me.

We then went to the Hooligans bar and I called the owner, who had IL Bennett respond to the bar to let us in and make copies of the videos we needed. While explaining to IL Bennett what video we needed he told us the following information. The club Iron Brotherhood reserved the back room for a party from 1800 hours to 2200 hours. He said there was about twenty subjects wearing vests with "Iron Brotherhood" at the party with their wives or girlfriends. He said they were a rowdy group and he had cut off about ninety percent of them from alcohol by the time the party had ended.

He said one of his sound crew men had to get into a business office to adjust the sound system during the party. He had to ask a female to move from in front of door and his hand on her to get her attention. The male subject that was with her started yelling at him and getting in his face. He didn't do anything about it and went into the room to finish his business. IL Bennett confirmed later that male subject was part of the Iron Brotherhood group. IL Bennett said the whole group was acting like they were some outlaw motorcycle gang. He said they all left the bar about 2230 hours and went to other bars on the row. He said that some of them came back about an hour later.

After instructing what video we needed from IL Bennett we left the bar. I tried to contact the owner of Matt's bar but have not received a phone call back from him yet.

Apparently a group of them tried to gain entry into the bar, but Matts has a "no color" policy the bar. A group of them however, according to what IL Bennett heard from the security at Matts, were flashing their badges and trying to bully way into the bar.

At about 1200 hours I received a call from IL Ried C. I told her I would like a copy of the video of when the first subject belonging to the "Iron Brotherhood" arrived at the bar and when the last one left. A short time later she called back and said this was completed. I had Detective Brazell respond to each bar and retrieve the videos. He later placed them into evidence.

Report from Officer Jeremy Brazell

On December 24, 2012 I was advised by Sgt Heath of this investigation and asked to assist. Around 1045hrs Sgt Heath and I responded to Moctezuma's Bar to inquire about additional video surveillance from the night of December 22, 2012. We were informed that (IL) C. Reid was coming in later that day. Sgt Heath later made contact with Reid about the video inquiry.

We then responded to Hooligans Pub (112 S. Montezuma St.). A short time later we made contact with (IL) William Bennett, general manager of Hooligans Pub. We informed Bennett that that we were there to inquire about possible video surveillance and he immediately asked us if this had anything to do with the "Iron Brotherhood." We informed him that it did and he said that he did have video from the night of December 22, 2012 and would be able to provide us with DVD's that contained the footage.

Bennett made a comment about the members of the "Iron Brotherhood" acting like "1 percenter's" and said that it wasn't right. Bennett was able to pull up several angles inside Hooligans Pub for us to look at. Bennett advised that man named "Bill" had reserved the back bar room for the night from about 1900hrs to 2200hrs for the "Iron Brotherhood." Bennett stated that he remembers around 20 members of the club being in the bar on the night of December 22, 2012 and said they started arriving around 1830hrs. Bennett said most of the members that were there brought a female companion and said that there were about 40-50 people in the back bar area. Bennett said that he would burn camera 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, and 11 starting at 1830hrs to about midnight. Bennett said that this would take some time and offered to call us when he was done burning the footage to DVD's.

Later in the day I was advised by Sgt Heath that (IL) Reid had called and would have additional video footage burned to a DVD around 1330hrs.

I contacted Bennett around 1400hrs and asked him if the video was available from Hooligans. He advised that he would have the video ready around 1430hrs. Around 1445 hours I made contact with (IL) Reid at Moctezuma's Bar. She provided me with one DVD inside a manila envelope that was marked "Moctezuma's 12-22-12, 2225- 2240". I asked (IL) Reid if she had any additional video available and she stated that she had already provided three DVD's to Prescott Police on the night of the incident and those DVD's covered the incident. I asked (IL) Reid if I needed additional video from the night of December 22, 2012 if it would be available and she said that it would be but only for a few more days (to December 27.) Reid said that all the video she had already provided to Police has been saved onto her hard drive and she could burn additional copies if needed.

I then responded to Hooligans Pub and contacted (IL) William Bennett. Bennett provided me with six DVD's that were all marked with different Camera numbers. Bennett said that these DVD's covered from 1830hrs to 2359hrs. Bennett said that each camera was on a separate DVD and also provided a list of the camera numbers and positions of each camera. I asked Bennett about his comment he had made earlier said that the "Iron Brotherhood" was acting like "1%er's." Bennett told me that he has had prior contact with members of the 'Iron Brotherhood" and they were usually polite and pleasant. Bennett said that on the night of December 22, 2012 many of the members were highly intoxicated and they had to cut off many of them from drinking because of their level of intoxication. Bennett then said that some of the were acting like they were "Hell's Angels" and he didn't feel it was right that police officers would portray themselves like that. Bennett also said that some of the members were flashing around their badges and he also didn't fee/like was right as well. Upon my arrival at the Prescott Police Department I placed all the DVD's into evidence under #350-001 and #350-002.

Nothing further at this time.

Report from Officer David Holmes

Synopsis:

On 12/22/12 at approximately 2259 hours, Justin Stafford reported that he was the victim of assault while he was Moctezumas bar located at 144 South Montezuma by an unknown male suspect. Stafford described the suspect as a shorter male with a crew cut hair cut with a black goatee who was wearing a black biker vest that had the words "Iron something" written on the back.·

Narrative: On 12/22/12 at approximately 2259 hours, I was dispatched to Yavapai Regional Medical Center located at 1003 Willow Creek Rd in reference to a delayed assault. Dispatch advised that I would be making contact with the victim Justin Stafford in the Emergency Room. Upon arrival to that location I made contact with Stafford and obseNed that his nose was swollen and bleeding. I also obseNed that there was another male subject in the room with Stafford at the hospital who was Identified as Staffords friend and Witness Richard Sprague. I then asked Stafford what happened.

Stafford stated "earlier about 30 minutes ago" while he was at Moctezuma's bar he was assaulted by some bikers who were wearing black biker vests with a bunch of patches on them. Stafford stated that he walked up to one of the bikers and asked him what was the name of his club because he didn't understand what the writing on the back said. Stafford then stated that the guy gave him attitude and asked him why did he want to know. Stafford stated after the guy asked him why he wanted to know, another male that was wearing a the same type of vest grabbed him by the neck, pushed him back toward the bar counter and then punched him in the face. I asked how many times did he get punched. Stafford stated that as far as he can remember was that he was hit once because after that everything was a blur. Stafford then stated that someone pulled the guy off of him at which time he and his friend Sprague left the bar and went to the hospital. I asked if he had a description of the male suspect who assaulted him. Stafford stat10d that everything happened so fast that he couldn't really describe the guy other than he was a shorter guy wearing a black biker vest who had a black mustache or goatee and a crew cut hair style. I asked if he was able to see any of the names or logos on the vests. Stafford stated that all he could see is that on the back of the vest it said "Iron something". I then asked Stafford if he wanted to aid in prosecution if the suspect was located. Stafford said "yes". Stafford had no further information at this time.

I then asked Stafford's friend Sprague what happened. Sprague stated that while he and Stafford was at the Moctezuma's bar, Stafford went up to talk to one of the biker [guys that was wearing a black vest and then shortly after he started talking to the [g'Uy, another guy who was wearing the same type of vest grabbed Stafford by the neck and then punched him in the face. I asked if he knew how many times Stafford was hit. Sprague stated that he only seen him get hit once. I asked what happened after Stafford got punched. Sprague stated that he grabbed Stafford, helped get him out of the bar and once they were outside he brought Stafford to the hospital. I asked Sprague if he could describe the guy who punched Stafford. Sprague stated that it was a shorter guy with a black goatee who was wearing a the same black biker vest as the one who Stafford originally began speaking to. Sprague had no further information.

At this time I took photos of Stafford's injuries and then left the hospital to go to Moctezuma's bar to attempt to located the male suspect who Stafford stated assaulted him.

As I was pulling up to Moctezuma's bar, a male subject, later identified as the owner of Moctezuma 's , Bruce Reid walked out of the bar and began to wave me down so that he could talk to me. Once I was parked, I made contact with Reid who advised me that he wanted to talk to me about an incident that just occurred at his bar. At this time Officer Shapiro# 398 arrived on scene. Reid then began to teJI myself and Officer Shapiro that a big group of bikers who he was told "were all cops either from Prescott or Prescott Valley" started a fight in his bar. I asked Reid how he knew they were cops. Reid stated that his security staff told him that several of them showed their badges, which is why he let them in with their "cuts" on. Reid also stated that one of his security staff members, Mike knew one of the cops as well. Reid then advised that while he was standing at the bar, one of the subjects in a black vest started punching another patron for no reason. Reid stated that as he was attempting to break the fight up, two more male subjects in black vests began swinging at him and his bartender. I asked Reid if he could describe any of the the subjects; Reid stated that it happened so quick that he did not get a good look at them. Reid then stated that the first one that initially started hitting the other patron, had a black goatee. Reid then stated that they finally got them to stop, at which time the other patron who was being assaulted took off out the door. Reid stated that he then kicked all of them out of the bar. Reid then stated that during the incident, knives started falling on the ground. Reid stated that he picked one up and threw it behind the bar and another knife that feJI, his security staff picked up. Reid then stated that one of the male subjects picked up the knife from from his security staff after he asked them to leave. Reid then advised that he heard that they all went to Hooligan's Pub which is located a 112 South Montezuma. Reid then advised that he would check his video surveiJ/ance to see if it showed the fight. Reid had no further information.

At this time Officer Shapiro made contact with security staff, Mike Bartels who advised that he knew jason Kaufman because they use to bounce together. Bartels also advised that he believes Kaufman worked for Prescott Valley PD.

At this time myself and Shapiro went to Hooligan's Pub to attempt to locate the male subjects.

Once we were at Hooligan's we observed several male subjects who were wearing the black biker vests as described by Stafford and Reid. Officer Shapiro made contact with one subject and as he was talking to that subject another subject who was · wearing a black vest with the name Mongo written on it and a vice president patch approached me, showed me a Deputy Sheriff badge and asked what was going on. I advised him that we were there investigating an incident that occurred at Moctezuma 's bar. At this time the subject pulled both myself and Officer Shapiro aside into the back emergency exit hallway of Hooligan's at which time he was identified as William Suttle who advised that he was the PANT Commander.

Suttle stated that while they were at Moctezuma's some kid went up to one of their guys, grabbed him and started talking crap at which time another one of their guys grabbed the kid and got him away. Suttle stated that they got into a little tussle. Suttle stated that he broke it up and then immediately sent their guy home. At this time Officer Shapiro advised Suttle that were going to have to write a report on this and that we needed all the information. Suttle then stated that their guy that was grabbed was the Prescott Valley PD Chief, Bill Fessler. Suttle then stated that their guy who hit the kid was "Top Gun". Suttle could not recall Tops Gun's real name only that he was from Ajo, but he would get us Top Gun's name as soon as he could. At this time Officer Shapiro went to get Fessler.

Once Officer Shapiro retumed with Fessler he asked what was going on. Fessler was advised that we were there investigating an incident that occurred at Moctezuma's. Fessler asked "What happened at Moctezuma's". Officer Shapiro advised Fessler of the allegations made by the victim. Fessler stated that a kid came up to him and started grabbing his vest talking crap asking him about his patches. Fessler then stated that he told the kid "Why are you asking". Fessler then stated that someone grabbed the kid and took him away. Fessler then stated that he left.

At this time Officer Shapiro contacted Sergeant Hobbs and advised him of the situation. Sergeant Hobbs advised that he was going to meet myself and Shapiro at Hooligan's. A short time later Sergeant Hobbs arrived at which time Suttle began telling Sergeant Hobbs what happen. See Sergeant Hobbs report for further information. .

After Sergeant Hobbs was done speaking to Suttle, myself and Officer Shapiro went back to Moctezuma's as Sergeant Hobbs went to make a phone call. Once back at Moctezuma's, Reid and his wife Christina Reid handed me Surveillance videos of the incident. We then went back into their Office and viewed several different video's from different angles.

In the video's they showed the victim Stafford walk up and start talking to one of the male subjects in a black vest with a long sleeve undershirt. The video's then showed that as Stafford was standing and talking, he backs up at which time another male subject in a black vest with a short sleeve under shirt, grabs Stafford toward the neck area and starts pushing back toward the bar, at which time·several people got involved. The video's also showed another male subject wearing a black vest with a hat on, swinging and punching at people, however it did not show if he actually hit someone or not. The video's then showed that as one male subject was attempting to break up the fight, the subject with the hat on, turned and attempted to hit him as well but did not make contact. The video's then showed Stafford falling to the ground and then getting picked up by another patron and taken outside. At this time C. Reid advised that she would make copies of all videos viewed. Officer Shapiro and I then left the office to go speak to other witnesses. See Officer Shapiro's report for further information.

I then made contact with Witness Scott Darrington and asked him what happened.

Darrington stated he just ordered a drink and then saw a guy in a vest "beating the fuck out of this dude in a green shirt". (It should be noted that Stafford was wearing a Gray shirt) Darrington then stated that it looked like the guy in the green shirt didn't have a clue what was going on. Darrington stated that he was just sitting there trying not to get flipped out of his chair and then saw a guy get beat up that's it. I asked if he could describe the guy who was beating up the guy in the green shirt. Darrington stated that subject was an older guy who had grayish hair, but.he didn't really see him that good. I asked Darrington if he witnessed anyone else swinging. Darrington said no not that he noticed. Darrington then stated that the guy in the green shirt got hit three or four times in the head. Darrington then stated that the guy in the green shirt was wearing a hat at the time as well but it got knocked off at the time when he got hit: (Stafford was wearing a hat at the time). Darrington had no further information.

I then made contact with witness Jannette Lentini who was the bartender at the time and asked her what happened. Lentini stated that all of these bikers guys walked into the bar and they were a little rowdy but they were fun at first. Lentini then stated that her security came up to her and told her that all the bikers were Police Officers at which time she realized that some of them looked familiar. Lentini then stated that she asked why are they all in colors because normally they don't let them in, but they were cops and they were being friendly. Lentini stated this is how she found out that they were all cops. I asked Lentini if she actually witnessed the assault. Lentini said no she did not. Lentini stated that her boss was thrown against the bar and then drinks were being thrown at her. Lentini stated that when it was getting broken up another guy raised his hand at the other bartender Adam. Lentini then states that she was pissed off cause they are police officers and when it was all broken up there was a "big ass knife behind her bar". Lentini stated that she then approached all the guys in the bikerjackets and told them that they had to go. Lentini then stated that she did not actually see what happened. I then asked if she actually seen anyone carrying the knives. Lentini stated that she did because she went up and looked and saw handles sticking out of their back pockets. I then asked if she could identify any of the guys that were involved, she said no. Lentini had no further information.

I then re-contacted Christina Reid, who gave me all of the copies of the videos, at which time I took custody of the knife that B. Reid threw behind the bar as well. I then asked C. Reid if she witnessed what happen. C. Reid stated that she was sitting at the end of the bar where it started but she didn't really see who hit who because she had her back toward the incident. C. Reid stated that as they were coming up to the bar she jumped back behind the bar because every body was swinging at everybody. C. Reid said that there was three of them swinging but she did not know who started it or who punched who. I asked if she could describe the three swinging. C. Reid stated that all she could see was their black vests not their faces. C. Reid stated that due to her back being toward them she can't give any good descriptions and that she did not see what happened initially when it all started. C. Reid stated that she only knows what the Victim looks like because she seen him · outside after the incident but she did not actually see him get hit. I asked other than the black vests, could she describe any other clothing that they were wearing.

She said no. C. Reid had no further information.

At this time there wasn't any further information pertaining to this case at which time Officer Shapiro and I left Moctezuma's.

I then spoke to Officer Haley# 401 who gave me a surveillance video from Hooligans Bar which showed several of the male subjects entering and exiting both Hooligans Pub and Matt's Saloon.

Three photos of Stafford, the knife, four surveillance videos and a CD of audio recordings of witness statements were all placed into property and evidence.

Investigation Continues

Report from Officer Jack Shapiro

On 12/22/2012, at approximately 2349 hours, I responded to Moctezuma's, 144 5. Montezuma Street, to assist Officer Holmes with follow up on an assault case. I met with Officer Holmes, who was speaking with the owner of Moctezuma's, Bruce Reid. I listened as Bruce Reid explained that the altercation in question involved a large group of bikers, who he believed were police officers. Reid stated there had been a group of subjects at Moctezuma's wearing biker "cuts" with biker gang style on them. Reid told us several of the subjects had shown police badges to his security staff, so he had allowed them to wear their "cuts", which is against his standard procedures. Reid said after the fight had started he attempted to break it up and many of the subjects wearing biker "cuts" began swinging at him and his staff. Reid told us he did not know what to do, because he knew the group of bikers to be police officers. After the altercation, Reid asked the bikers to leave and they reluctantly left his bar and went to Hooligans Pub. Reid stated the bouncer at his bar, Michael Bartels, knew one of the bilers by name.

I contacted Moctezuma's Bouncer, Michael Bartels, in front of the bar. I asked Bartels if he knew any of the subjects who had been at the bar in Biker "cuts". Bartel said he knew one of the subjects, Jason Kaufman, as he used to work with him as a bouncer. Bartels told me he believed Kaufman to be a Prescott Valley Police Officer. Bartels also informed me the group of bikers had gone to Hooligan's Pub.

After speaking with Bartels, I conferred with Officer Holmes. I advised Officer Holmes of what Bartels had told me. Officer Holmes and I are both familiar with Jason Kaufman and know him to be a Prescott Valley Police Officer. I advised Officer Holmes that I am aware of a police motorcycle club known as the "Iron Brotherhood" and I am aware that Kaufman is a member.

Officer Holmes informed me he had spoken with the victim in this matter, justin Stafford, at Yavapai Regional Medical Center West Campus. Stafford alleged that he was grabbed by the neck and punched in the face by a male subject wearing a biker vest at Moctezuma's. Stafford had visible injury to his face and a possible broken nose.

Officer Holmes and I responded to Hooligan's Pub, 112 S. Montezuma Street, in an attempt to locate the biker subjects. As we entered the bar I observed multiple subjects wearing black vests bearing, "Iron Brotherhood" on the back. I recognized several of the subjects to be police officers I am familiar with. Officer Holmes and I were pulled aside by Bill Suttle, who showed us his Yavapai County Sheriffs Office badge and identification. Officer Holmes and I, moved into a hallway to the rear of the bar with Suttle so we could hear each other speak. Suttle told Offlcer Holmes and I, that a kid grabbed "one of their guys" and "another one of their guys" got the kid off of him. Suttle told me he immediately sent the "guy" that was involved home. I informed Suttle of the victim involved in the case and advised him we would need to gather the information of the subjects involved for a report.

Suttle then told us the kid had grabbed the Prescott Valley Chief of Police, Bill Fessler. Suttle said another club member who goes by, ''Top Gun", hit the kid. Suttle us he broke the fight up and sent ''Top Gun" back to the Hotel St. Michael, where they were all staying. I asked Suttle what Top Gun's real name is. Suttle tole me me he did not know. Suttle stated ''Top Gun" was from Ajo Arizona.

I returned to the bar and contacted Bill Fessler. I asked Fessler if he would come into the hallway where Officer Holmes and Suttle were located. He agreed. I informed Fessler we were investigating what had occurred had Moctezuma's. Fessler stated, "What happened at Moctezuma's?". I informed Fessler of the report we had received from the victim. Fessler told me a kid grabbed him by his vest and was asking him what all the patches were. Fessler said he told the kid, "why are you asking", someone else pulled the kid away from him and he then left. Fessler told us, "That's all I know". Fessler also could not provide us with contact information for "Top Gun".

After speaking with Suttle and Fessler, I contacted Sergeant Hobbs by telephone. I ladvised Sergeant Hobbs of the details of the incident, as I knew them at the time. I informed him the matter involved the "Iron Brotherhood", a police motorcycle club. I also advised Sergeant Hobbs that I was speaking with Commander Suttle and Chief Fessler about the matter and it did not appear as if they were providing me with all of the information regarding the matter. Sergeant Hobbs advised he would be responding to our location.

I advised Suttle and Fessler that Sergeant Hobbs would be responding to speak with them. While waiting for Sergeant Hobbs, Suttle commented, ''Andy was there". I commented "who?". Suttle said, "Your Assistant Chief'. Suttle told me, "I want him left out of this". Suttle later stated, "We knew you guys were going to show up, they told me you were coming, so I told Andy to go home". Sergeant Hobbs arrived at Hooligan's and spoke with Suttle and Fessler. We were still not provided contact information for "Top Gun". See attached supplement by Sergeant Hobbs.

Officer Holmes and I returned to Moctezuma's to review surveillance footage from the bar. Moctezuma's employee, Christina Ried, played surveillance footage for us from several different angles. When reviewing the video, I observed a male subject, which Officer Holmes identified as the victim, approach a male subject wearing an Iron Brotherhood vest. I observed the victim standing in front of the Iron Brotherhood member for a short period and it appeared as if they were having a conversation. Due to the position of the camera, I could not observe the victim's hands at all times. I then observed a second Iron Brotherhood member approach the victim in an aggressive manner and push him toward the bar while grabbing his neck. This subject was wearing a t-shirt under his vest and appeared to have short black hair. After the initial Iron Brotherhood member, lunged at the victim, I observed a second Iron Brotherhood member run toward their location. This Iron Brotherhood member appears to throw several punches at people and bar staff, who were attempting to break up the fight. This subject is wearing a baseball cap, blue jeans and a t-shirt. After the initial incident, multiple subjects wearing Iron Brotherhood vests move toward the area of the incident. It was difficult to decipher anything further due to the quality of the video. More video should be received from Moctezumas and will be reviewed and placed into evidence.

After reviewing video, I spoke with Moctezuma's bartender Adam Hofmann. Hofmann informed me he observed a fight erupt at the other end of the bar from his location. He responded to the location to assist security in breaking up the fight. Adam attempted to pull away one of the bikers who was swinging at someone on the ground. When Adam grabbed at the biker, the biker turned around and attempted to punch him. Adam informed me the biker missed him and it looked like he was attempting to reach for something in his vest pocket. Adam described this subject as 5'7" tall approximately 215 pounds. The subject was wearing a black baseball cap and had a gray t-shirt under his vest. Adam stated the subject had a long brown goatee. Hofmann could not provide me with any further information.

After speaking with Hofmann, I contacted Moctezuma 's Bouncer, Royalton Cornelius. Cornelius informed me he observed a fight break out from a distance. He went to break up the fight and observed a biker punching at another subject who was on the ground. Cornelius said he was outnumbered by the bikers involved and the bikers thought he was trying to fight them. Cornelius had to inform the bikers that he was security for the bar. I asked Cornelius to describe the biker that was punching the subject on the ground. He described the subject as a Hispanic older male. Cornelius said subject had black hair, a black goatee and taltoos. He described the subject as being approximately 5'9" tall. I asked Cornelius if the subject on the ground was punching back. Cornelius informed me the subject was not punching back. Cornelius had heard that the fight started because the subject that was struck had grabbed one of the biker's vests. He informed me the bikers started causing problems with bar staff after the incident and they were asked to leave by Bruce Reid.

After speaking to Cornelius, I contacted Moctezuma's employee, Nathan Lieber. Lieber informed me he was standing out front when the fight started. Lieber went inside to help security and the bartenders with breaking it up. He said the bar staff was trying to hold the bikers back, but they continued to be aggressive and go after the subject that was hit in the face. Lieber stated the bikers continued to be aggressive after the fight was broken up and they were asked to leave the bar. I asked Lieber if he could describe the subject who struck the other subject in the face. He stated, "Yeah". Lieber described the subject as between 5'5" and 5'7" tall with dark hair. He said the subject had a mustache and he was well built. Lieber told me he did not see the hit happen, but the subject later told him he was the one who did it. He also said the subject was wearing a skull ring on his right and had tattoos. I attempted to locate further witnesses to the incident at Moctezuma's, without success.

Investigation continues.

Report from Sergeant Ryan Hobbs

On 12/23/12 at 0005 hours I received a call from Officer Shapiro in reference to this incident. Officer Shapiro informed me that he was assisting Officer Holmes with an assault that originated earlier on the evening of 12/22/12 at Moctemzuma's Bar (144 S. Montezuma St.) Pct, AZ. Officer Shapiro then explained that the victim in case responded to YRMC to seek treatment for his injuries and that is when it was reported to Officer Holmes.

Officer Shapiro then stated that after Holmes spoke with the victim at YRMC, Holmes asked him to respond to Moctezuma's Bar with him for follow up. Shapiro then stated that when he arrived at Moctezuma's he witnessed Holmes speaking with the owner of this bar being Bruce Reid. Shapiro heard B. Reid tell Holmes that this assault had numerous subjects involved and he believed the other half of the fight involved a group of police officers dressed in motorcycle biker apparel being biker jacket / vest "cuts" with a biker type logo on the back of these jacket / vests. Shapiro then explained that this biker group was the "Iron Brotherhood" motorcycle club which is a known Law Enforcement motorcycle club.

Officer Shapiro then stated that he and Holmes gained information that members of this club were currently at Hooligan's bar on S. Montezuma St. so they responded there. Upon their arrival Shapiro stated and he and Holmes contacted two members of the "Iron Brotherhood" being Suttle and Fessler inside this bar. Shapiro then began to speak with Suttle and Fessler but they were not giving him much information so he wanted to advise me of this situation due to the positions of both Fessler and Suttle in Law Enforcement. (It should be noted that Suttle is a Yavapai County Sheriff's Office employee and Fessler is employed with the Prescott Valley Police Department).

I then informed Shapiro that I would be responding to his location to speak with both Fessler and Suttle. Prior to responding to Hooligans Bar I called Lt. Gil! who is my supervisor with the Prescott Police Department and advised him of this situation.

At approximately 0025 hours I arrived to Hooligan's Bar and met with Officer Shapiro out front on 5. Montezuma St. Shapiro informed me that both Fessler and Suttle were not giving him or Holmes much information at all except that a unknown subject grabbed at Fessler's vest inside Moctezuma's Bar and that Fessler and Suttle were telling him that another Iron Brotherhood member grabbed this subject and pushed him away and they didn't see anything else. Shapiro then said this information was just vague and neither Suttle or Fessler knew their members name who grabbed this unknown subject except by his member nickname being "Top Gun". Officer Shapiro then informed me that Suttle told him that Deputy Chief Reinhardt with the Prescott Police Department was inside Moctezuma's Bar with their group when this incident occurred but wasn't involved. Shapiro then told me that Suttle told Reinhardt to leave Moctezuma's Bar after this incident occurred and Reinhardt did.

I then walked inside Hooligans Bar with Shapiro and informed Shapiro to record our interviews with Fessler and Suttle. We then walked to the back of Hooligan's Bar and down the rear stairway where we met with Suttle, Fessler and Officer Holmes. I asked Suttle if he could tell me what occurred this evening. He stated that all he knew was during this incident an unknown male subject walked up to Fessler and grabbed the front of his vest. When Suttle explained this he demonstrated with his hands out in front of him in an aggressive manner. Suttle then said that another member of their group he only knew as "Top Gun" grabbed this unknown male subject and pushed him away from Fessler and got into a "tussle' with this subject. I then asked Suttle what "Top Gun's" real name was and Suttle stated that he didn't know. I informed him that he had to know his name and that it doesn't sound good that he doesn't know this guys name. He again said that he didn't know this guys name but he would call me later when he found it and give it to me. Suttle then informed me that he was standing away from this incident and was told a fight had started so he just helped break up this fight and sent his guy home being "Top Gun". I then asked him if he knew anything about "Top Gun" and he said that he believes he is from Ajo, AZ and possibly a Border Patrol Agent or works for ICE. I then informed Suttle that is was important that we interview Top Gun and that it wouldn't even lead to him being arrested if this was a conflicting story as it could be something as simple as a report being sent to a prosecuting attorney for review. Suttle still told me that he didn't know his name and couldn't give that to me. I then asked Suttle if Reinhardt was present during this incident and he said no and that I needed to leave him out of this and he later told me that when this incident occurred he told Reinhardt to leave and he did. It should be noted that I was trying to gather information as to who everyone was who could have witnessed this incident but Suttle couldn't give me much information of names. While speaking with Suttle I could smell an odor of an alcoholic beverage coming from his mouth.

I then began to speak with Fessler. He first stated to me that he didn't even know why he had to be here at this time. I then informed him that obviously this incident started with him so I needed to gather information from him. He then said that he was approached by a guy who started asking him about his jacket and patches. He then said this guy stepped towards him and grabbed his jacket. While he stated this he demonstrated this action by grabbing the front inner sides of his vest / jacket in an aggressive manner. Fessler then said that when this occurred another member of their group pushed this subject away and they began to fight. I attempted to gather more information from Fessler as far as the incident and this members name and he said he didn't know. This was all of the information that Fessler would give me.

I then spoke to Suttle again and informed him that Moctezuma's has video cameras and that we would be able to view what had occurred so I needed to gather names and information of Top Gun. He again said that he would call me tonight as soon as he found this subjects name. I then gave him my phone number and informed him that I needed this information as soon as possible. (It should be noted that while I spoke to Suttle and Fessler I looked around this bar and area to see if I could see or recognize any other members of the "Iron Brotherhood". I only witnessed one other member being a Mark Schmidt who is also employed with Yavapai County Sheriffs Office. I was unable to speak with him as after I saw him once I could not locate him again.

I then left Hooligans and responded to Moctezuma 's bar with Officers Shapiro and Holmes. I contacted B. Reid the owner of this bar and he said that earlier a group of bikers wearing traditional biker vests came into his bar. He then said that his bar has a policy against bikers wearing "colors" inside the bar and his staff told this group this information. He then said his bouncers said several of the subjects in this group "badged" them stating they are all law enforcement so his staff felt that they needed to allow them to come inside with their "colors". I then informed B. Reid that we would need to gather any and all video that they have of this incident. He stated that his wife was now burning as much as she could and they would get us this video as soon as possible. I then informed Officers Shapiro and Holmes to also record interviews with every witness inside this bar including employees.

I then responded back to Hooligans bar with Officer Haley who had arrived on scene to recontact Suttle and Fessler to photograph them for comparison purposes to the video Moctezuma's was gathering for us. As I reentered this bar the only Iron Brotherhood member still inside was Suttle. I informed Suttle that I would like to photgraph him for the purpose of the video and also his hands to see whether there injuries etc. He agreed and I took several photographs of him and his hands. should be noted that he kept moving around and several of these photos were blurry. I did notice that he had no red marks or injuries to his hands. I then left this bar.

I then responded to Matt's Saloon at 112 S. Montezuma St. to see if any of the "Iron Brotherhood" members were inside this bar. Officer Haley assisted me with this. I made contact with a bouncer by the name of Cole Gregory. I asked Gregory if his staff had witnessed any subjects inside their bar wearing biker type jackets with the verbiage "Iron Brotherhood" on them. He stated that there was two male subjects earlier around 2130 inside his bar wearing this vest type jackets. He then said that he and his staff approached these subjects and told them that they could not be inside their bar wearing their biker colors. He further stated that these two male subjects were polite and left their bar. I then asked him if he could have his staff burn a video containing these subjects as we were trying to identify any of them. He said that no one was currently here who could but he would leave a message for his management to do so.

Myself and Officer Haley then responded back up to Hooligans Bar which is above Matt's Saloon. I contacted the General Manager being Porter Bennett. Bennett told me he was aware of this situation and that the "Iron Brotherhood" had rented out their back room tonight for their club. I then asked him if I was able to acquire any and all video footage from their front entrance on S. Montezuma St. that showed their front entrance as well as Matt's Saloon and also the interior of his bar. Bennett stated that he would burn this footage and give us the exterior disc tonight and the footage he could give us on 12/24/12 as it would take him some time to do. Officer Haley then waited and gathered the exterior footage.

Later during this shift I called YRMC at approximately 0700 hours to check the status of victim Stafford's injury. I was informed that his nose was broken and he left their care earlier this morning. As of this time I have not received a message from Suttle or anyone with the Iron Brotherhood in reference to the legal name of "Top Gun" or anyone else involved in this assault.

This concluded my involvement in this matter.

Investigation Continues.

Well, that's the entire report. You can download the original PDF here.


LAPD thugs who shot civilians are off the streets - for a few days!!!

 
The trigger happy cops in the LAPD shot 20 to 30 bullets into this truck thinking the Latino woman that were driving it were Black, male, LAPD fugitive Christopher Dorner
  The cops were looking for a Black male, Christopher Dorner, who was a former cop.

The the cops shot up the truck driven by two Latino woman who they claim they mistook for the Black male they were looking for.

Source

Dorner case: Cops who shot civilians are out of field, Beck says

February 20, 2013 | 11:23 am

The Los Angeles police officers who mistakenly shot at two newspaper delivery women in their truck in Torrance thinking it was the vehicle of fugitive ex-cop Christopher Dorner will be kept out of the field until an investigation into the shooting is complete, Chief Charlie Beck said.

The seven officers were working a protection detail Feb. 7 near the home of a high-ranking LAPD official who was a potential target for Dorner when they riddled the women's blue Toyota Tacoma truck with bullets after mistaking it for Dorner's gray Nissan truck.

The shooting occured after the officers received a radio call that a pickup truck had exited the freeway and was heading their way.

Dorner, who authorities say subsequently shot himself after a siege at a Big Bear-area cabin, had at the time already killed the daughter of a former LAPD captain, her boyfriend (a USC security officer) and a Riverside sheriff's deputy.

"I have done my initial 72-hour review on the Torrance shooting and I have taken the officers involved out of the field and they will stay out of the field until the investigation is complete," Beck said Tuesday. "At that point I will make a determination whether they need to be disciplined."

Margie Carranza, 47, and her mother, Emma Hernandez, 71, were delivering newspapers in Torrance when LAPD officers shot Hernandez twice in the back. Carranza sustained minor injuries from broken glass or possibly a bullet fragment, according to her attorney.

Beck has called the incident “a tragic misinterpretation” by officers working under "incredible tension” hours after Dorner allegedly shot three police officers, one fatally.

In the aftermath, Beck met separately with the two women and told them a truck will be purchased using money from donors. That truck has not been handed over yet.

The women's attorney, Glen T. Jonas, said, "The family appreciates that Chief Beck apologized on behalf of the LAPD." But the action won't preclude a legal settlement or lawsuit.

Jonas told The Times that the police officers gave "no commands, no instructions and no opportunity to surrender" before opening fire. He described a terrifying encounter in which the pair were in the early part of their delivery route through several South Bay communities.

Hernandez was in the back seat handing papers to her daughter, who was driving. Carranza would briefly slow the truck to throw papers on driveways and front walks. As bullets tore through the cabin, the two women "covered their faces and huddled down," Jonas said. "They felt like it was going on forever."

In an interview with The Times, Beck said the gunfire occurred in two bursts: The first came from an officer positioned down the block from the LAPD official's residence, and the second when Carranza accelerated away from the gunfire and toward other officers.

Jonas estimated that the officers fired between 20 and 30 rounds. Photographs of the back of the truck showed at least two dozen bullet holes. Neighbors, however, suggested there were more shots fired. The street was pockmarked with bullet holes in cars, trees, garage doors and roofs.

Meanwhile, Torrance police are investigating another shooting by their officers shortly after the LAPD shooting just a few streets away. In the second incident, a Torrance police cruiser slammed into the pickup and officers opened fire on a man heading to the beach to surf before work. Torrance police said the officers were responding to call that fellow officers were being shot at when they collided with the truck. The driver, David Perdue, was not hit by gunfire but was injured in the collision.

An investigation into the shooting remains ongoing, officials said. The Torrance police chief apologized to Perdue and offered him a rental car and payment for his medical expenses.


Lawsuit brought by Wiccan inmates revived by appeals court

Source

Lawsuit brought by Wiccan inmates revived by appeals court

February 20, 2013 | 12:14 pm

A lawsuit by female prisoners who contend the California prison system is violating their rights by refusing to hire a full-time Wiccan chaplain has been revived by a federal appeals court.

A district court rejected the inmates' suit, but a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday that the inmates may have a valid claim.

The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation hires chaplains for five faiths: Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, Muslim and Native American. Inmates of other religions are permitted to worship with those chaplains or with volunteer chaplains.

In their lawsuits, inmates at the Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla contend the prison policy favors mainstream religions in violation of the establishment clause of the 1st Amendment. The inmates said there were more Wiccans at the women's prison than there were Jewish, Muslim or Catholic prisoners.

Wicca is a pagan religion that involves witchcraft. [Duh!!! Every religion I can think of with perhaps the exception of the Flying Spaghetti Monster religion incorporates magic and witchcraft into their religion]


The full text of the white paper on the killing of U.S. citizens abroad

Source

The full text of the white paper on the killing of U.S. citizens abroad

Source

The full text of the white paper on the killing of U.S. citizens abroad

By Chris Wilson, Yahoo! News | The Ticket

This week, NBC News published a confidential Justice Department memo presenting the Obama administration's case for the lawful killing of U.S. citizens abroad who are involved with al-Qaida, reigniting a debate over presidential power that raged during much of the George W. Bush administration. NBC released a PDF of the 16-page white paper liberally embossed with watermarks of the outlet's logo on each page.

Given the extreme gravity of the subject, Yahoo News retyped the portions of the documents that could not be digitized automatically due to the watermarks, presented below. Information for how to contribute corrections is included at the bottom of the article.

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE WHITE PAPER

Lawfulness of a Lethal Operation Directed Against a U.S. Citizen Who Is a Senior Operational Leader of Al-Qa'ida or An Associated Force

This white paper sets forth a legal framework for considering the circumstances in which the U.S. government could use lethal force in a foreign country outside the area of active hostilities against a U.S. citizen who is a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or an associated force of al-Qa'ida—that is, an al-Qa'ida leader actively engaged in planning operations to kill Americans. The paper does not attempt to determine the minimum requirements necessary to render such an operation lawful; nor does it assess what might be required to render a lethal operation against a U.S. citizen lawful in other circumstances, including an operation against enemy forces on a traditional battlefield or an operation against a U.S. citizen who is not a senior operational leader of such forces. Here the Department of Justice concludes only that where the following three conditions are met, a U.S. operation using lethal force in a foreign country against a U.S. citizen who is a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or an associated force would be lawful:
an informed, high-level official of the U.S. government has determined that the targeted individual poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States;

capture is infeasible, and the United States continues to monitor whether capture becomes feasible; and

the operation would be conducted in a manner consistent with applicable law of war principles.

This conclusion is reached with recognition of the extraordinary seriousness of a lethal operation by the United States against a U.S. citizen, and also of the extraordinary seriousness of the threat posed by senior operational al- Qa'ida members and the loss of life that would result were their operations successful.

The President has authority to respond to the imminent threat posed by al-Qa'ida and its associated forces, arising from his constitutional responsibility to protect the country, the inherent right of the United States to national self defense under international law, Congress's authorization of the use of all necessary and appropriate military force against this enemy, and the existence of an armed conflict with al-Qa'ida under international law. Based on these authorities, the President may use force against al-Qa'ida and its associated forces. As detailed in this white paper, in defined circumstances, a targeted killing of a U.S. citizen who has joined al-Qa'ida or its associated forces would be lawful under U.S. and international law. Targeting a member of an enemy force who poses an imminent threat of violent attack to the United States is not unlawful. It is a lawful act of national self defense. Nor would it violate otherwise applicable federal laws barring unlawful killings in Title 18 or the assassination ban in Executive Order No. 12333. Moreover, a lethal operation in a foreign nation would be consistent with international legal principles of sovereignty and neutrality if it were conducted, for example, with the consent of the host nation's government or after a determination that the host nation is unable or unwilling to suppress the threat posed by the individual targeted.

Were the target of a lethal operation a U.S. citizen who may have rights under the Due Process Clause and the Fourth Amendment, that individual's citizenship would not immunize him from a lethal operation. Under the traditional due process balancing analysis of Mathews v. Eldridge, we recognize that there is no private interest more weighty than a person's interest in his life. But that interest must be balanced against the United States' interest in forestalling the threat of violence and death to other Americans that arises from an individual who is a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or an associated force of al-Qa'ida and who is engaged in plotting against the United States.

The paper begins with a brief summary of the authority for the use of force in the situation described here, including the authority to target a U.S. citizen having the characteristics described above with lethal force outside the area of active hostilities. It continues with the constitutional questions, considering first whether a lethal operation against such a U.S. citizen would be consistent with the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause, U.S. Const. amend. V. As part of the due process analysis, the paper explains the concepts of "imminence," feasibility of capture, and compliance with applicable law of war principles. The paper then discusses whether such an operation would be consistent with the Fourth Amendment's prohibition on unreasonable seizures, U.S. Const. amend. IV. It concludes that where certain conditions are met, a lethal operation against a U.S. citizen who is a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or its associated forces—a terrorist organization engaged in constant plotting against the United States, as well as an enemy force with which the United States is in a congressionally authorized armed conflict—and who himself poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States, would not violate the Constitution. The paper also includes an analysis concluding that such an operation would not violate certain criminal provisions prohibiting the killing of U.S. nationals outside the United States; nor would it constitute either the commission of a war crime or an assassination prohibited by Executive Order 12333.

I.

The United States is in an armed conflict with al-Qa'ida and its associated forces, and Congress has authorized the President to use all necessary and appropriate force against those entities. See Authorization for Use of Military Force ("AUMF"), Pub. L. No. 107-40, S 2(a), 115 Stat. 224, 224 (2001). In addition to the authority arising from the AUMF, the President's use of force against al-Qa'ida and associated forces is lawful under other principles of U.S. and international law, including the President's constitutional responsibility to protect the nation and the inherent right to national self defense recognized in international law (see, e.g., U.N. Charter art. 51). It was on these bases that the United States responded to the attacks of September 11, 2001, and "[t]hese domestic and international legal authorities continue to this day." Harold Hongju Koh, Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State, Address to the Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law: The Obama Administration and International Law (Mar. 25, 2010) ("2010 Koh ASIL Speech").

Any operation of the sort discussed here would be conducted in a foreign country against a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or its associated forces who poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States. A use of force under such circumstances would be justified as an act of national self-defense. In addition, such a person would be within the core of individuals against whom Congress has authorized the use of necessary and appropriate force. The fact that such a person would also be a U.S. citizen would not alter this conclusion. The Supreme Court has held that the military may constitutionally use force against a U.S. citizen who is a part of enemy forces. See Hamdi, 542 U.S. 507, 518 (2004) (plurality opinion); id. at 58?, 59? (Thomas, J., dissenting); Ex Parte Quirin, 317 U.S. at 37-38. Like the imposition of military detention, the use of lethal force against such enemy forces is an "important incident of war." Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 518 (2004) (plurality opinion) (quotation omitted). See, e.g., General Orders No. 100: Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field P 15 (Apr. 24, 1863) ("[m]ilitary necessity admits of all direct destruction of life or limb of armed enemies") (emphasis omitted); International Committee of the Red Cross, Commentary on the Additional Protocols of 8 June 1977 on the Geneva Conventions of 12 Aug. 1949 and Relating to the Protection of Victims of Non-International Armed Conflicts (Additional Protocol II) S 4789 (1987) ("Those who belong to armed forces or armed groups may be attacked at any time."); Yoram Dinstein, The Conduct of Hostilities Under the Law of International Armed Conflict 94 (2004) ("When a person takes up arms or merely dons a uniform as a member of the armed forces, he automatically exposes himself to enemy attack.") Accordingly, the Department does not believe that U.S. citizenship would immunize a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or its associated forces from a use of force abroad authorized by the AUMF or in national self-defense.

In addition, the United States retains its authority to use force against al-Qa'ida and associated forces outside the area of active hostilities when it targets a senior operational leader of the enemy forces who is actively engaged in planning operations to kill Americans. The United States is currently in a non-international armed conflict with al-Qa'ida and its associated forces. See Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 548 U.S. 557, 628-31 (2006) (holding that a conflict between a nation and a transnational non-state actor, occurring outside the nation's territory, is an armed conflict "not of an international character" (quoting Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions) because it is not a "clash between nations"). Any U.S. operation would be part of this non-international armed conflict, even if it were to take place away from the zone of active hostilities. See John O. Brennan, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism, Remarks at the Program on Law and Security, Harvard Law School: Strengthening Our Security by Adhering to Our Values and Laws (Sept. 16, 2011) ("The United States does not view our authority to use military force against Al-Qa'ida as being restricted solely to 'hot' battlefields like Afghanistan."). For example, the AUMF itself does not set forth an express geographic limitation on the use of force it authorizes. See Hamdan, 548 U.S. at 631 (Kennedy, J., concurring) (what makes a non-international armed conflict distinct from an international armed conflict is "the legal status of the entities opposing each other"). None of the three branches of the U.S. Government has identified a strict geographical limit on the permissible scope of the AUMP's authorization. See, e.g., Letter for the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President Pro Tempore of the Senate from the President (June 15, 2010) (reporting that the armed forces, with the assistance of numerous international partners, continue to conduct operations "against al- Qa'ida terrorists," and that the United States has "deployed combat-equipped forces to a number of locations in the U.S. Central ... Command area[] of operation in support of those [overseas counterterrorist] operations"); Bensayah v. Obama, 610 F.3d 718, 720, 724-25, 727 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (concluding that an individual turned over to the United States in Bosnia could be detained if the government demonstrates he was part of al- Qa'ida); al-Adahi v. Obama, 613 F.3d 1102, 1003, 1111 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (noting authority under AUMF to detain individual apprehended by Pakistani authorities in Pakistan and then transferred to U.S. custody).

Claiming that for purposes of international law, an armed conflict generally exists only when there is "protracted armed violence between governmental authorities and organized armed groups," Prosecutor v. Tadic, Case No. IT-94-1 AR72, Decision on the Defence Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction, P 70 (Int'l Crim. Trib. for the Former Yugoslavia, App. Chamber Oct. 2, 1995), some commenters have suggested that the conflict between the United States and al-Qa'ida cannot lawfully extend to nations outside Afghanistan in which the level of hostilities is less intense or prolonged than in Afghanistan itself. See, e.g., Mary Ellen O'Connell, Combatants and the Combat Zone, 43 U. Rich. L. Rev. 845, 857-59 (2009). There is little judicial or other authoritative precedent that speaks directly to the question of the geographic scope of a non- international armed conflict in which one of the parties is a transnational, non-state actor and where the principal theater of operations is not within the territory of the nation that is a party to the conflict. Thus, in considering this potential issue, the Department looks to principles and statements from analogous contexts.

The Department has not found any authority for the proposition that when one of the parties to an armed conflict plans and executes operations from a base in a new nation, an operation to engage the enemy in that location cannot be part of the original armed conflict, and thus the subject to the laws of war governing that conflict, unless the hostilities become sufficiently intense and protracted in the new location. That does not appear to be the rule of the historical practice, for instance, even in a traditional international conflict, See John R. Stevenson, Legal Adviser, Department of State, United States Military Action in Cambodia: Questions of International Law, Address before the Hammarskjold Forum of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York (May 28, 1970), in 3 The Vietnam War and International Law: The Widening Context 23, 28-30 (Richard A. Falk, ed. 1972) (arguing that in an international armed conflict, if a neutral state has been unable for any reason to prevent violations of its neutrality by the troops of one belligerent using its territory as a base of operations, the other belligerent has historically been justified in attacking those enemy forces in that state). Particularly in a non-international armed conflict, where terrorist organizations may move their base of operations from one country to another, the determination of whether a particular operation would be part of an ongoing armed conflict would require consideration of the particular facts and circumstances in each case, including the fact that transnational non- state organizations such as al-Qa'ida may have no single site serving as their base of operations. See also, e.g., Geoffrey S. Corn & Eric Albot Jensen, Untying the Gordian Knot: A Proposal for Determining Applicability of the Laws of War to the War on Terror, 81 Temp. L. Rev. 787, 799 (2008) ("If ... the ultimate purpose of the drafters of the Geneva Conventions was to prevent 'law avoidance' by developing de facto law triggers—a purpose consistent with the humanitarian foundation of the treaties— then the myopic focus on the geographic nature of an armed conflict in the context of transnational counterterrorist combat operations serves to frustrate that purpose.") [2]

If an operation of the kind discussed in this paper were to occur in a location where al-Qa'ida or an associated force has a significant and organized presence and from which al-Qa'ida or an associated force, including its senior operational leaders, plan attacks against U.S. persons and and interests, the operation would be part of the non-international armed conflict between the United States and al-Qa'ida that the Supreme Court recognized in Hamdan. Moreover, such an operation would be consistent with international legal principles of sovereignty and neutrality if it were conducted, for example, with the consent of the host nation's government or after a determination that the host nation is unable or unwilling to suppress the threat posed by the individual targeted. In such circumstances, targeting a U.S. citizen of the kind described in this paper would be authorized under the AUMF and the inherent right to national self-defense. Given this authority, the question becomes whether and what further restrictions may limit its exercise.

II.

The Department assumes that the rights afforded by Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause, as well as the Fourth Amendment, attach to a U.S. citizen even while he is abroad. See Reid v. Covert, 354 U.S. 1, 5-6 (1957) (plurality opinion); United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez, 494 U.S. 259, 269-70 (1990); see also In re Terrorist Bombings of U.S. Embassies in East Africa, 552 F.3d 157, 170 n.7 (2d Cir. 2008). The U.S. citizenship of a leader of al-Qa'ida or its associated forces, however, does not give that person constitutional immunity from attack. This paper next considers whether and in what circumstances a lethal operation would violate any possible constitutional protections of a U.S. citizen.

A.

The Due Process Clause would not prohibit a lethal operation of the sort contemplated here. In Hamdi, a plurality of the Supreme Court used the Mathews v. Eldridge balancing test to analyze the Fifth Amendment due process rights of a U.S. citizen who had been captured on the battlefield in Afghanistan and detained in the United States, and who wished to challenge the government's assertion that he was part of enemy forces. The Court explained that the "process due in any given instance is determined by weighing 'the private interest that will be affected by the official action' against the Government's asserted interest, 'including the function involved' and the burdens the Government would face in providing great process." Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 529 (plurality opinion) (quoting Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335 (1976)). The due process balancing analysis applied to determine the Fifth Amendment rights of a U.S. citizen with respect to law-of-war detention supplies the framework for assessing the process due a U.S. citizen who is a senior operational leader of an enemy force planning violent attacks against Americans before he is subjected to lethal targeting.

In the circumstances considered here, the interests on both sides would be weighty. See Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 529 (plurality opinion) ("It is beyond question that substantial interests lie on both sides of the scale in this case."). An individual's interest in avoiding erroneous deprivation of his life is "uniquely compelling." See Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 178 (1985) ("The private interest in the accuracy of a criminal proceeding that places an individual's life or liberty at risk is almost uniquely compelling."). No private interest is more substantial. At the same time, the government's interest in waging war, protecting its citizens, and removing the threat posed by members of enemy forces is also compelling. Cf. Hamdi, 543 U.S. at 531 (plurality opinion) ("On the other side of the scale are the weighty and sensitive governmental interests in ensuring that those who have in fact fought with the enemy during a war do not return to battle against the United States."). As the Hamdi plurality observed, in the "circumstances of war," "the risk of erroneous deprivation of a citizen's liberty in the absence of sufficient process . . . is very real," id. at 530 (plurality opinion), and, of course, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of a citizen's life is even more significant. But, "the realities of combat" render certain uses of force "necessary and appropriate," including force against U.S. citizens who have joined enemy forces in the armed conflict against the United States and whose activities pose an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States—and "due process analysis need not blink at those realities." Id. at 531 (plurality opinion). These same realities must also be considered in assessing "the burdens the Government would face in providing greater process" to a member of enemy forces. Id. at 529, 531 (plurality opinion).

In view of these interests and practical considerations, the United States would be able to use lethal force against a U.S. citizen, who is located outside the United States and is an operational leader continually planning attacks against U.S. persons and interests, in at least the following circumstances:

where an informed, high-level official of the U.S. government has determined that the targeted individual poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States;

where a capture operation would be infeasible—and where those conducting the operation continue to monitor whether capture becomes feasible; and

where such an operation would be conducted consistent with applicable law of war principles.

In these circumstances, the "realities" of the conflict and the weight of the government's interest in protecting its citizens from an imminent attack are such that the Constitution would not require the government to provide further process to such a U.S. citizen before using lethal force. Cf Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 535 (plurality opinion) (noting that the Court "accord[s] the greatest respect and consideration to the judgments of military authorities in matters relating to the actual prosecution of war, and . . . the scope of that discretion necessarily is wide"); id. at 534 (plurality opinion) ("The parties agree that initial captures on the battlefield need not receive the process we have discussed here; that process is due only when the determination is made to continue to hold those who have been seized.") (emphasis omitted).

Certain aspects of this legal framework require additional explication. First, the condition that an operational leader present an "imminent" threat of violent attack against the United States does not require the United States to have clear evidence that a specific attack on U.S. persons and interests will take place in the immediate future. Given the nature of, for example, the terrorist attacks on September 11, in which civilian airliners were hijacked to strike the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, this definition of imminence, which would require the United States to refrain from action until preparations for an attack are concluded, would not allow the United States sufficient time to defend itself. The defensive options available to the United States may be reduced or eliminated if al-Qa'ida operatives disappear and cannot be found when the time of their attack approaches. Consequently, with respect to al-Qa'ida leaders who are continually planning attacks, the United States is likely to have only a limited window of opportunity within which to defend Americans in a manner that has both a high likelihood of success and sufficiently reduces the probabilities of civilian causalities. See Michael N. Schmitt, State­ Sponsored Assassination in International and Domestic Law, l7 Yale J. Int'l L. 609, 648 (l992). Furthermore, a "terrorist 'war' does not consist of a massive attack across an international border, nor does it consist of one isolated incident that occurs and is then past. It is a drawn out, patient, sporadic pattern of attacks. It is very difficult to know when or where the next incident will occur." Gregory M. Travalio, Terrorism, International Law, and the Use of Military Force, 18 Wis. Int'l L.J. 145, 173 (2000); see also Testimony of Attorney-General Lord Goldsmith, 660 Hansard. H.L. (April 21. 2004) 370 (U.K.), (what constitutes an imminent threat "Will develop to meet new circumstances and new threats . . . . It must be right that states are able to act in self-defense in circumstances Where there is evidence of further imminent attacks by terrorist groups, even if there is no specific evidence of where such an attack will take place or of the precise nature of the attack."). Delaying action against individuals continually planning to kill Americans until some theoretical end stage of the planning for a particular plot would create an unacceptably high risk that the action would fail and that American casualties would result.

By its nature, therefore, the threat posed by al-Qa'ida and its associated forces demands a broader concept of imminence in judging when a person continually planning terror attacks presents an imminent threat, making the use of force appropriate. In this context, imminence must incorporate considerations of the relevant window of opportunity, the possibility of reducing collateral damage to civilians, and the likelihood of heading off future disastrous attacks on Americans. Thus, a decision maker determining whether an al-Qa'ida operational leader presents an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States must take into account that certain members of al- Qa'ida (including any potential target of lethal force) are continually plotting attacks against the United States; that al-Qa'ida would engage in such attacks regularly to the extent it were able to do so; that the U.S, government may not be aware of all al-Qa'ida plots as they are developing and thus cannot be confident that none is about to occur; and that, in light of these predicates, the nation may have a limited window of opportunity within which to strike in a manner that both has a high likelihood of success and reduces the probability of American casualties.

With this understanding, a high-level official could conclude, for example, that an individual poses an "imminent threat" of violent attack against the United States where he is an operational leader of al-Qa'ida or an associated force and is personally and continually involved in planning terrorist attacks against the United States. Moreover, where the al-Qa'ida member in question has recently been involved in activities posing an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States, and there is no evidence suggesting that he has renounced or abandoned such activities, that member's involvement in al-Qa'ida's continuing terrorist campaign against the United States would support the conclusion that the member poses an imminent threat.

Second, regarding the feasibility of capture, capture would not be feasible if it could not be physically effectuated during the relevant window of opportunity or if the relevant country were to decline to consent to a capture operation. Other factors such as undue risk to U.S. personnel conducting a potential capture operation also could be relevant. Feasibility would be a highly fact-specific and potentially time-sensitive inquiry.

Third, it is a premise here that any such lethal operation by the United States would comply with the four fundamental law-of-war principles governing the use of force: necessity, distinction, proportionality, and humanity (the avoidance of unnecessary suffering). See, e.g., United States Air Force, Targeting, Air Force Doctrine Document 2-1.9, at 88 (June 3, 2006); Dinstein, Conduct of Hostilities at 16-20, l 15-16, l 19-23; see also 2010 Koh ASIL Speech. For example, it would not be consistent with those principles to continue an operation if anticipated civilian casualties would be excessive in relation to the anticipated military advantage. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Instruction 5810.01D, Implementation of the DoD Law of War Program P 4.a, at 1 (Apr. 30, 2010). An operation consistent with the laws of war could not violate the prohibitions against treachery and perfidy, which address a breach of confidence by the assailant. See, e.g., Hague Convention IB, Annex, art. 23(b), Oct. 18, 1907, 36 Stat. 2277, 2301-02 ("[I]t is especially forbidden .... [t]o kill or wound treacherously individuals belonging to the hostile nation or army . . . ."). These prohibitions do not, however, categorically forbid the use of stealth or surprise, nor forbid attacks on identified individual soldiers or officers. See U.S. Army Field Manual 2?-10, The Law of Land Warfare, 31 (1956) (article 23(b) of the Annex to the Hague Convention IV does not "preclude attacks on individual soldiers or officers of the enemy whether in the zone of hostilities, occupied territory, or elsewhere"). And the Department is not aware of any other law-of-war grounds precluding use of such tactics. See Dinstein, Conduct of Hosrilfries at 94-95, 199; Abraham D. Sofaer, Terrorism, the Law, and the National Defense, 126 Mil. L. Rev. 89, 120-21 (1989). Relatedly, "there is no prohibition under the laws of war on the use of technologically advanced weapons systems in armed conflict—such as pilotless aircraft or so-called smart bombs—so long as they are employed in conformity with applicable laws of war." 2010 Koh ASIL Speech. Further, under this framework, the United States would also be required to accept a surrender if it were feasible to do so.

In sum, an operation in the circumstances and under the constraints described above would not result in a violation of any due process rights.

B.

Similarly, assuming that a lethal operation targeting a U.S. citizen abroad who is planning attacks against the United States would result in a "seizure" under the Fourth Amendment, such an operation would not violate that Amendment in the circumstances posited here. The Supreme Court has made clear that the constitutionality of a seizure is determined by "balanc[ing] the nature and quality of the intrusion on the individual's Fourth Amendment interests against the importance of the governmental interest alleged to justify the intrusion." Tennessee v. Garner, 471 US. 1, 8 (1985) (internal quotation marks omitted); accord Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 383 (2007). Even in domestic law enforcement operations, the Court has noted that "[w]here the officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others, it is not constitutionally unreasonable to prevent escape by using deadly force." Garner, 471 U.S. at 11. Thus, "if the suspect threatens the officer with a weapon or there is probable cause to believe that he has committed a crime involving the infliction or threatened infliction of serious physical harm, deadly force may be used if necessary to prevent escape, and if, where feasible, some warning has been given." Id. at 11-12.

The Fourth Amendment "reasonableness" test is situation­ dependent. Cf. Scott, 550 U.S. at 382 ("Garner did not establish a magical on/off switch that triggers rigid preconditions whenever an officer's actions constitute 'deadly force.'"). What would constitute a reasonable use of lethal force for purposes of domestic law enforcement operations differs substantially from what would be reasonable in the situation and circumstances discussed in this white paper. But at least in circumstances where the targeted person is an operational leader of an enemy force and an informed, high-level government official has determined that he poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States, and those conducting the operation would carry out the operation only if capture were infeasible, the use of lethal force would not violate the Fourth Amendment. Under such circumstances, the intrusion on any Fourth Amendment interests would be outweighed by the "importance of the governmental interests [that] justify the intrusion," Garner, 471 U.S. at Sr»-the interests in protecting the lives of Americans.

C.

Finally, the Department notes that under the circumstances described in this paper, there exists no appropriate judicial forum to evaluate these constitutional considerations. It is well-established that "[m]atters intimately related to foreign policy and national security are rarely proper subjects for judicial intervention," Haig v. Agee, 453 U.S. 280, 292 (1931), because such matters "frequently turn on standards that defy judicial application," or "involve the exercise of a discretion demonstrably committed to the executive or legislature," Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 211 (1962). Were a court to intervene here, it might be required inappropriately to issue an ex ante command to the President and officials responsible for operations with respect to their specific tactical judgment to mount a potential lethal operation against a senior operational leader of al- Qa'ida or its associated forces. And judicial enforcement of such orders would require the Court to supervise inherently predictive judgments by the President and his national security advisors as to when and how to use force against a member of an enemy force against which Congress has authorized the use of force.

III.

Section 1119(b) of title 18 provides that a "person who, being a national of the United States, kills or attempts to kill a national of the United States while such national is outside the United States but within the jurisdiction of another country shall be punished as provided under sections 1111, 1112, and 1113." 18 U.S.C. § 1119(b) (2006).[3] Because the person who would be the target of the kind of operation discussed here would be a U.S. citizen, it might be suggested that section 1119(b) would prohibit such an operation. Section 1119, however, incorporates the federal murder and manslaughter statutes, and thus its prohibition extends only to "unlawful killing[s]," 18 U.S.C. 1111(a), 1112(a) (2006). Section 1119 is best construed to incorporate the "public authority" justification, which renders lethal action carried out by a government official lawful in some circumstances. As this paper explains below, a lethal operation of the kind discussed here would fall within the public authority exception under the circumstances and conditions posited because it would be conducted in a manner consistent with applicable law of war principles governing the non-international conflict between the United States and al-Qa'ida and its associated forces. It therefore would not result in an unlawful killing.[4]

A.

Although section 1119(b) refers only to the "punish[ments]" provided under sections 1111, 1112, and 1113, courts have geld that section 1119(b) incorporates the substantive elements of those cross-referenced provisions of title 18. See, e.g., United States v. Wharton, 320 F.3d 526, 533 (5th Cir. 2003); United States v. White, 51 F. Supp. 2d 1008, 1013-14 (E.D. Cal. 1997). Section 1111 of title 18 sets forth criminal penalties for "murder", and provides that "[m]urder is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought." 18 U.S.C. S 1111(a). Section 1112 similarly provides criminal sanctions for "[m]anslaughter," and states that "[m]anslaughter is the unlawful killing of a human being without malice." Id. S 1112(a). Section 1113 provides criminal penalties for "attempts to commit murder or manslaughter." Id. S. 1113. It is therefore clear that section 11119(b) bars only "unlawful killing."

Guidance as to the meaning of the phrase "unlawful killing" in sections 1111 and 1112—and thus for purposes of section 1119(b)—be found in the historical understandings of murder and manslaughter. That history shows that states have long recognized justifications and excuses to statutes criminalizing "unlawful" killings.[5] One state court, for example, in construing that state's murder statute, explained that "the word 'unlawful' is a term of art" that "connotes a homicide with the absence of factors of excuse or justification." People v. Frye, 10 Cal. Rptr. 2d 217, 221 (Cal. Ct. App. 1992). That court further explained that the factors of excuse or justification in question include those that have traditionally been recognized. Id. at 221 n.2. Other authorities support the same conclusion. See, e.g., Mullaney v. Wilbur, 421 U.S. 684, 685 (1975) (requirement of "unlawful" killing in Maine murder statute meant that killing was "neither justifiable nor excusable"); cf also Rollin M. Perkins & Ronald N. Boyce, Criminal Law 56 (3d ed. 1982) ("Innocent homicide is of two kinds, (l) justifiable and (2) excusable."). Accordingly, section 1119 does not proscribe killings covered by a justification traditionally recognized under the common law or state and federal murder statutes. "Congress did not intend [section 1119] to criminalize justifiable or excusable killings." White, 51 F. Supp. 2d at 1013.

B.

The public authority justification is well-accepted, and it may be available even in cases where the particular criminal statute at issue does not expressly refer to a public authority justification. Prosecutions where such a "public authority" justification is invoked are understandably rare, see American Law Institute Model Penal Code and Commentaries S 3.03 Comment 1, at 23-24 (1985); cf Visa Fraud Investigation, 8 Op. O.L.C. 284, 285 n.2, 286 (1984), and thus there is little case law in which courts have analyzed the scope of the justification with respect to the conduct of government officials. Nonetheless, discussions in the leading treatises and in the Model Panel Code demonstrate its legitimacy. See 2 Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law S 10.2(b), at 135 (2d ed. 2003); Perkins & Boyce, Criminal Law at 1093 ("Deeds which otherwise would be criminal, such as taking or destroying property, taking hold of a person by force and against his will, placing him in confinement, or even taking his life, are not crimes if done with proper public authority."); see also Model Penal Code S 3.03(1)(a), (d), (e) at 22023 (proposing codification of justification where conduct is "required or authorized by," inter alia, "the law defining the duties or functions of a public officer," "the law governing the armed services or the lawful conduct of war," or "any other provision of law imposing a public duty"); National Commission on Reform of Federal Criminal Laws, A Proposed New Federal Criminal Code S 602(1) (1971) ("Conduct engaged in by a public servant in the course of his official duties is justified when it is required or authorized by law."). And the Department's Office of Legal Counsel ("OLC") has invoked analogous rationales when it has analyzed whether Congress intended a particular criminal statute to prohibit specific conduct that otherwise falls within a government agency's authorities. See, e.g., Visa Fraud Investigation, 8 Op. O.L.C. at 287-88 (concluding that a civil statute prohibiting issuance of visa to an alien known to be ineligible did not prohibit State Department from issuing such a visa where "necessary" to facilitate an important Immigration and Naturalization Service undercover operation carried out in a "reasonable" fashion).

The public authority justification would not excuse all conduct of public officials from all criminal prohibitions. Or the legislature may design some criminal prohibitions to place bounds on the kinds of governmental conduct that can be authorized by the Executive. Or the legislature may enact a criminal prohibition in order to limit the scope of the conduct that the legislature has otherwise authorized the Executive to undertake pursuant to another statute. See, e.g., Nardone v. United States, 302 U.S. 379, 384 (1937) (federal statute proscribed government wiretapping). But the generally recognized public authority justification reflects that it would not make sense to attribute to Congress the intent to criminalize all covered activities undertaken by public officials in the legitimate exercise of their otherwise lawful authorities, even if Congress clearly intends to make those same actions a crime when committed by persons not acting pursuant to public authority. In some instances, therefore, the best interpretation of a criminal prohibition is that Congress intended to distinguish persons who are acting pursuant to public authority from those who are not, even if the statute does not make that distinction express. Cf. id. at 384 (federal criminal statutes should be construed to exclude authorized conduct of public officers where such a reading "would work obvious absurdity as, for example, the application of a speed law to a policeman pursuing a criminal or the driver of a fire engine responding to an alarm"). [6]

The touchstone for the analysis whether section 1119 incorporates not only justifications generally, but also the public authority justification in particular, is the legislative intent underlying this statute. Here, the statute should be read to exclude from its prohibitory scope killings that are encompassed by traditional justification, which include the public authority justification. The statutory incorporation of two other criminal statutes expressly referencing "unlawful" killings is one indication. See supra at 10-11. Moreover, there are no indications that Congress had a contrary intention. Nothing in the text or legislative history of sections 1111-1113 of title 18 suggests that Congress intended to exclude the established public authority justification from those justifications that Congress otherwise must be understood to have imported through the use of the modifier "unlawful" in those statutes. Nor is there anything in the text or legislative history of section 1119 itself to suggest that Congress intended to abrogate or otherwise affect the availability of this traditional justification for killings. On the contrary, the relevant legislative materials indicate that, in enacting section 1119, Congress was merely closing a gap in a field dealing with entirely different kinds of conduct from that at issue here.[7]

The Department thus concludes that section 1119 incorporates the public authority justification.[8] This paper turns next to the question whether a lethal operation could be encompassed by that justification and, in particular, whether that justification would apply when the target is a U.S. citizen. The analysis here leads to the conclusion that it would.

A lethal operation against an enemy leader undertaken in national self-defense or during an armed conflict that is authorized by an informed, high-level official and carried out in a manner that accords with applicable law of war principles would fall within a well established variant of the public authority justification and therefore would not be murder. See, e.g., 2 Paul H. Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses S 148(a), at 208 (1984) (conduct that would violate a criminal statute is justified and thus not unlawful "[w]here the exercise of military authority relies upon the law governing the armed forces or upon the conduct of war"); 2 LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law S 10.2(c) at 136 ("another aspect of the public duty defense is where the conduct was required or authorized by 'the law governing the armed services or the lawful conduct of war); Perkins & Boyce, Criminal Law at 1093 (noting that a "typical instance[] in which even the extreme act of taking human life is done by public authority" involves "the killing of an enemy as an act of war and within the rules of war").[9]

The United States is currently in the midst of a congressionally authorized armed conflict with al-Qa'ida and associated forces, and may act in national self-defense to protect U.S. persons and interests who are under continual threat of violent attack by certain al-Q'aida operatives planning operations against them. The public authority justification would apply to a lethal operation of the kind discussed in this paper if it were conducted in accord with applicable law of war principles. As one legal commentator has explained, "if a soldier intentionally kills an enemy combatant in time of war and within the rules of warfare, he is not guilty of murder," whereas, for example, if that soldier intentionally kills a prisoner of war—a violation of the laws of war—"then he commits murder." 2 LaFave, Substantive Criminal Laws S 10.2(c), at 136; see also State v. Gut, 13 Minn. 341, 357 (1868) ("That it is legal to kill an alien enemy in the heat and exercise of war, is undeniable; but to kill such an enemy after he has laid down his arms, and especially when he is confined in prison, is murder."); Perkins & Boyce, Criminal Law at 1093 ("Even in time of War an alien enemy may not be killed needlessly after he has been disarmed and securely imprisoned."). Moreover, without invoking the public authority justification by its terms, this Department's OLC has relied on the same notion in an opinion addressing the intended scope of a federal criminal statute that concerned the use of potentially lethal force. See United States Assistance to Countries that Shoot Down Civil Aircraft Involved in Drug Trafficking, 18 Op. O.L.C. 148, 164 (1994) (concluding that the Aircraft Sabotage Act of 1984, 18 U.S.C. § 32(1))(2) (2006), which prohibits the willful destruction of a civil aircraft: and otherwise applies to U.S. government conduct, should not be construed to have "the surprising and almost certainly unintended effect of criminalizing actions by military personnel that are lawful under international law and the laws of almed conflict").

The fact that an operation may target a U.S. citizen does not alter this conclusion. As explained above, see supra at 3, the Supreme Court has held that the military may constitutionally use force against a U.S. citizen who is part of enemy forces. See Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 518 (plurality opinion); id. at 587, 597 (Thomas, J., dissenting); Ex parte Quirin, 317 U.S. at 37-38 ("Citizens who associate themselves with the military arm of the enemy government, and with its aid, guidance and direction enter [the United States] bent on hostile acts," may be treated as "enemy belligerents" under the law of war). Similarly, under the Constitution and the inherent right to national self-defense recognized in international law, the President may authorize the use of force against a U.S. citizen who is a member of al-Qa'ida or its associated forces and who poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States.

In light of these precedents, the Department believes that the use of lethal force addressed in this white paper would constitute a lawful killing under the public authority doctrine if conducted in a manner consistent with the fundamental law of war principles governing the use of force in a non-international armed conflict. Such an operation would not violate the assassination ban in Executive Order No. 12333. Section 2.11 of Executive Order No. 12333 provides that "[n]o person employed by or acting on behalf of the United States Government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in, assassination." 46 Fed. Reg. 59,941, 59, 952 (Dec. 4, 1981). A lawful killing in self-defense is not an assassination. In the Department's view, a lethal operation conducted against a U.S. citizen whose conduct poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States would be a legitimate act of national self-defense that would not violate the assassination ban. Similarly, the use of lethal force, consistent with the laws of war, against an individual who is a legitimate military target would be lawful and would not violate the assassination ban.

IV.

The War Crimes Act, 18 U.S.C. S 2441 (2006) makes it a federal crime for a member of the Armed Forces or a national of the United States to "commit[] a war crime." Id. S 2441(a). The only potentially applicable provision of section 2441 to operations of the type discussed herein makes it a war crime to commit a "grave breach" of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions when that breach is committed "in the context of and in association with an armed conflict not of an international character." Id. 2441(c)(3). As defined by the statute, a "grave breach" of Common Article 3 includes "[m]urder," described in pertinent part as "[t]he act of a person who intentionally kills, or conspires or attempts to kill . . . one or more persons taking no active part in the hostilities, including those placed out of combat by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause." Is. S 2441(s)(1)(D).

Whatever might be the outer bounds of this category of covered persons, Common Article 3 does not alter the fundamental law of war principle concerning a belligerent party's right in an armed conflict to target individuals who are part of an enemy's armed forces or eliminate a nation's authority to take legitimate action in national self-defense. The language of Common Article 3 "makes clear that members of such armed forces [of both the state and non-states parties to the conflict] ... are considered as 'taking no active part in the hostilities' only once have disengaged from their fighting function ('have laid down their arms') or are placed hors de combat; mere suspension of combat is insufficient." International Committee of the Red Cross, Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities Under International Humanitarian Law 28 (2009). An operation against a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or its associated forces who poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States would target a person who is taking "an active part in hostilities" and therefore would not constitute a "grave breach" of Common Article 3.

V.

In conclusion, it would be lawful for the United States to conduct a lethal operation outside the United States against a U.S. citizen who is a senior, operational leader of al-Qa'ida or an associated force of al-Qa'ida without violating the Constitution or the federal statutes discussed in this white paper under the following conditions:

(l) an informed, high-level official of the U.S. government has determined that the targeted individual poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States;

(2) capture is infeasible, and the United States continues to monitor whether capture becomes feasible; and

(3) the operation is conducted in a manner consistent with the four fundamental principles of the laws of war governing the use of force. As stated earlier, this paper does not attempt to determine the minimum requirements necessary to render such an operation lawful, nor does it assess what might be required to render a lethal operation against a U.S. citizen lawful in other circumstances. It concludes only that the stated conditions would be sufficient to make lawful a lethal operation in a foreign country directed against a U.S. citizen with the characteristics described above.

We are grateful for any and all corrections to this transcription. Please email errors to cewilson@yahoo-inc.com with the approximate location of the fix.


Sheriff Joe Arpaio recall unconstitutional????

Hmmm - A section of the Arizona Constitution that prohibits the circulation of recall petitions against an official has held office for six months.
Arizona Constitution

Article 8 Part 1 Section 5

No recall petition shall be circulated against any officer until he shall have held his office for a period of six months, except that it may be filed against a member of the legislature at any time after five days from the beginning of the first session after his election. After one recall petition and election, no further recall petition shall be filed against the same officer during the term for which he was elected, unless petitioners signing such petition shall first pay into the public treasury which has paid such election expenses, all expenses of the preceding election.

Man I guess life sucks!!!! I didn't sign that Recall Arpaio Petition more then a week ago.

Source

Arpaio supporters demand end to recall effort

Associated Press Wed Feb 20, 2013 6:38 PM

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — A group supporting metropolitan Phoenix’s sheriff demanded Wednesday that organizers of an effort to recall the lawman immediately end their campaign, and vowed to go to court to stop them.

Citizens To Protect Fair Election Results contends the recall effort against Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio is unconstitutional and intended to harass him and prevent him from carrying out his duties. Recall organizers say the self-proclaimed toughest sheriff in America should be ousted, in part, because his office failed to adequately investigate more than 400 sex-crimes cases. They also allege Arpaio’s office put immigration enforcement above other law enforcement priorities.

Arpaio supporters say the sheriff who is known for immigration enforcement and housing jail inmates in canvas tents won a sixth term in November fair and square and that recall organizers shouldn’t be allowed to contest the election simply because they don’t like the outcome.

Larry Klayman, a lawyer representing the pro-Arpaio group, said that if the recall effort continues, his group will file legal action against its organizers alleging they violated the free speech, equal protection and due process rights of the majority of county voters who re-elected the sheriff.

“There are no valid reasons for this recall petition,” Klayman said. “Nothing happened between the day of the election, the swearing-in of Sheriff Arpaio and this recall petition.”

The group called a news conference Wednesday to publicize a cease-and-desist letter it sent to recall organizers.

Arpaio isn’t affiliated with Citizens To Protect Fair Election Results but agrees that there’s no valid reason for the recall effort, sheriff’s spokeswoman Lisa Allen said.

“Sheriff Arpaio also believes there may be need for a legal clarification on whether any elected official, regardless of party, can be recalled only days after a general election,” Allen said.

Arpaio faced his second-tightest election in November, beating the closest candidate by 6 percentage points. Arpaio critics tried to turn the sheriff’s themes of unceasingly cracking down on crime and illegal immigration against him. In late 2011, his critics said they decided against pursuing a recall effort and instead would leave the matter to voters to decide.

Recall organizers face a May 30 deadline for handing in valid petition signatures from more than 335,000 voters in the county. If they succeed in securing a recall election, the earliest that race could be put on the ballot is November. Organizers say they have gathered at least 50,000 signatures so far.

William Fisher, a lawyer leading the group seeking the recall, said Arpaio denied voters the chance to justify his positions on critical issues when he refused to take part in any debates during last fall’s campaign. Fisher rejected the criticism that the sheriff’s critics have sour grapes.

“Then why have a recall statute in the state of Arizona?” Fisher said.

In arguing the recall effort was unconstitutional, Klayman cited a section of the Arizona Constitution that prohibits the circulation of recall petitions against an official until he or she has held office for six months.

Fisher countered in an interview with The Associated Press that a section of state law specifies the six-month period doesn’t apply to incumbents.

David Gartner, an Arizona State University professor who teaches constitutional law, agreed with that assessment.

“I interpret that language (of the state law) to mean that someone who has been re-elected to the same office isn’t subject to the six-month delay in terms of the possibility of a recall effort,” Gartner said.

In 2011, immigrant rights advocates succeeded in their effort to oust then-Arizona Senate President Russell Pearce, an Arpaio ally who was the driving force behind the state’s contentious 2010 immigration law.

Fisher said his group is separate from the organization that pursued Pearce’s recall, but he has talked one of its top organizers in his group’s effort to oust Arpaio.

Arpaio’s office reopened more than 400 of its sex-crime cases countywide for a three-year period after finding they were inadequately investigated or not examined at all. An internal affairs report released last week attributed the failures to understaffing and mismanagement and didn’t find any single person was responsible for the botched cases.

Arpaio apologized in December 2011 for the bungled cases, and his office has since said it has moved to clear up the cases and taken steps to prevent the problem from happening again.


Tempe to run homeless folks off of Mill Avenue???

Tempe to run homeless folks off of Mill Avenue with panhandling law???

Source

Tempe close to approving changes to code to curb panhandling, 'aggressive solicitation'

Posted: Wednesday, February 20, 2013 7:30 pm

By Brandon Smith, Special to Tribune

In an effort to curb unwanted panhandling and aggressive solicitation in high-traffic areas – including, notably, Mill Avenue, near Arizona State University – the Tempe City Council gave its first approval to amendments to two sections of its city code earlier this month.

The second and final public hearing – and subsequent vote – will take place at tonight's council meeting at Tempe City Hall.

The City of Tempe stated in a request to the council action that, “aggressive solicitation activities create a safety hazard and an increased potential for criminal activities.”

Multiple city council members stated that these changes will create a safer environment in high pedestrian and tourist areas such as the Mill Avenue District and throughout ASU’s Tempe campus.

The amendments would make it illegal to solicit within ten feet of or directly adjacent to the entrance of a business, as well as fifteen feet from any transit stop or taxi stand. This could mean more business for stores in areas where this is becoming more of a problem.

“There’s your average pan handlers this time of the year that flock to Mill Ave when it’s cold everywhere else,” said Amanda Darling, an employee at Hippie Gypsy on Mill Avenue. Darling, who works in the heart of the Mill Avenue district in downtown Tempe, has witnessed many situations where aggressive solicitation was involved.

Besides panhandlers, Darling said she has seen many people being “badgered” by religious groups trying to spread their message not only on mill, but on campus as well.

“I don’t think it’s horrible,” Arizona State Criminology student Julie Martin said when asked about aggressive religious preachers. “People have the ability to proclaim that, and I think that is one of the basic rights of our country.”

Martin believes the proposed amendments aren’t necessary and if there were a situation of unwanted or aggressive solicitation, the victims could simply call the police. “It’s not something I think there needs to be a law for,” Martin said.

When asked if he felt safe walking around Mill Avenue, Nick Yoakum, a frequent on Mill, said, “Generally yeah. Every now and then people jump out at you and ask for a dollar or a cigarette and it gets kind of intimidating.”

To go into effect within the City of Tempe, a proposed amendment must go through a three-part process. First, it is proposed at an issue review session held by city council. If the council accepts the proposed changes, the amendments get voted upon at two different public hearings. Only if it receives a majority vote in both hearings can it be adopted as city code.


Big brother is watching you on the freeway!!!!

ADOT finishes $2.1 million upgrade to camera system

Remember Big brother is watching you on the freeway!!!! Every inch that you drive on the Arizona Freeways you are being spied on by the folks at ADOT and the DPS or the Arizona Department of Transportation and the Arizona Department of Public Safety.

Source

ADOT finishes $2.1 million upgrade to camera system

By Sean Holstege The Republic | azcentral.com Wed Feb 20, 2013 10:59 PM

 
ADOT and the Arizona Highway Patrol or Arizona Department of Public Safety DPS is constantly spying on you as you cruise down the Arizona Freeways!!!
 

Maybe you’re one of those savvy commuters who checks out road conditions before getting behind the wheel.

If so, you’ve probably discovered the live feeds relayed from the 180 traffic cameras that the Arizona Department of Transportation has scattered around the Valley’s freeways. And you may have noticed that dozens of them didn’t work.

Until this week.

ADOT has announced that it has finished a $2.1 million upgrade of the system. It replaced cable with fiber-optic lines, so the cameras now show fresh images every 10 seconds rather than every 5 minutes. The work was one reason for the darkened cameras.

But not the only one. Another was an ongoing problem: copper thieves.

The camera network does not use copper wire, according to ADOT, but copper thieves sometimes also cut the fiber-optic cable used for the cameras and other freeway-management-system equipment, including overhead message boards.

ADOT estimates that thieves have cost taxpayers almost $100,000 in repairs over the past three years. Thieves are to blame for an Interstate 17 camera going down near Seventh Street.

Rodents also got the ADOT finger of blame for a camera malfunction on Loop 101. One creature got inside the wiring cabinet and started chewing through the cable, ADOT spokesman Doug Nintzel said. There was no word on whether the rodent fared better than the camera.

Loss of camera signals is not just an inconvenience to motorists and a cost to the state.

Authorities use the information to post the most accurate travel times on the changeable signs above some freeways and to deploy Highway Patrol cars or tow trucks. They also use images to manage incidents and deploy first responders.

They also watch a bank of video screens at the Traffic Operations Center. On the old, so-called video wall, officials used to monitor 32 traffic images at a time. With the federally funded upgrade, they can now scan up to 160 images simultaneously. Or they can focus on one, if there is a particularly bad incident, like the overturned truck that spilled coffee creamer all over Interstate 10 last Wednesday.

The Traffic Operations Center was built more than 20 years ago. The first camera was installed over I-10 in 1990.

“Now, the system will help give users a much better, accurate story,” said Darrell Bingham, ADOT’s project manager on the upgrade. “The benefit to drivers will be more information when they need it the most to avoid congestion and make informed decisions during their commute.”

Last year, almost 9.4million visitors went to ADOT’s traffic site at az511.gov to check the cameras. That’s nearly 26,000 visits a day from people who rely on the cameras to plan their trips. Travelers can get up-to-the-minute travel times, road conditions and alerts via the web or by calling the toll-free 511 number. The online service gives the added benefit of live traffic footage.

That’s the theory. In practice, there are still a few glitches.

A quick check Friday showed that a dozen cameras were still down. Every freeway except Arizona 143 near Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport was affected.

Some camera feeds posted “No Image Available,” like one on I-10 in the Deck Park Tunnel. By midafternoon, it was working properly. Some, such as an Arizona 51 image from south of Greenway Road, showed what appeared to be branches of a tree. Others showed images of a ditch.

No system is perfect, but the Valley’s freeway cameras are much more reliable than they were just two weeks ago.


Mexico disappearances constitute ‘crisis,’ report says

Sadly America's "War on Drug" has turned Mexico into a police state.

Remember Felipe Calderon "War on Drugs" has been financed by the American government.

And of course Enrique Pena Nieto has chosen to continue this "War on Drugs" for the money it brings Mexico from America.

Source

Mexico disappearances constitute ‘crisis,’ report says

Associated Press Wed Feb 20, 2013 2:26 PM

MEXICO CITY — A Human Rights Watch report released Wednesday calls Mexico’s anti-drug offensive “disastrous” and cites 249 cases of disappearances, most of which show evidence of having been carried out by the military or law enforcement.

The report says the enforced disappearances follow a pattern in which security forces detain people without warrants at checkpoints, homes or workplaces, or in public. When victims’ families ask about their relatives, security forces deny the detentions or instruct them to look for their loved ones at police stations or army bases.

Human Rights Watch criticizes former President Felipe Calderon for ignoring the problem, calling it “the most severe crisis of enforced disappearances in Latin America in decades.”

While the report acknowledges that current President Enrique Pena Nieto inherited the problem, it says he should act urgently “in cases where people have been taken against their will and their fate is still unknown.”

Mexico’s Interior Department, which oversees domestic security, declined to make an immediate comment about the report.

Among the examples cited by Human Rights Watch is evidence suggesting that marines detained about 20 people in three northern border states in June and July of 2011. Though it denied abducting the victims, the Navy later acknowledged it had contact with some before they disappeared.

The report also says security personnel sometimes work with criminals, detaining victims and handing them over to the gangs. The report cites incidents in which investigators used information collected in a case to pose as kidnappers and demand ransom payments from the victims’ families.

Authorities frequently fail to take even the most basic investigative steps, such as tracing victims’ cellular phone or bank records, and often rely on investigations carried out by the victims’ relatives, the report adds.

Human Rights Watch recommends include that the Mexican government take concrete steps to change security procedures, including issuing new rules that require that detainees be taken immediately to prosecutors’ offices, and not be held at military bases or police stations.


California program to seize illegal guns gaining notice

Kalifornia gun grabbers

California has the nation's only program to confiscate guns from people who bought them legally but later became disqualified.

The job requires a mixture of force and finesse. The agents show up in heavily armed teams, wearing black jumpsuits bulked up by bulletproof vests. But they don't have warrants and, unless their subject is on probation, they need permission to enter homes to search for guns.
So they are trying to trick you into thinking that you must allow your home to be searched by showing up dressed as well armed police thugs who will bust you head open if you don't allow then to search it???

Source

California program to seize illegal guns gaining notice

California has the nation's only program to confiscate firearms from people who bought them legally but are now barred from having them.

By Jessica Garrison, Los Angeles Times

February 18, 2013, 6:56 p.m.

By law, Alexander Hernandez should have surrendered his gun to the state of California three years ago after a judge issued a restraining order against him for alleged domestic violence.

He didn't.

So one night recently , when the 26-year-old was at home in Whittier with his toddler, eight armed agents from the California Department of Justice banged on his door and took it from him.

Agents found the loaded .45-caliber handgun in a safe by his bed. Hernandez, who told the agents he had forgotten that he was supposed to turn in the weapon, was arrested on suspicion of illegally possessing a handgun, records show.

After assuring that the child had a baby-sitter, the agents drove off into the night in search of more illegal guns. Their quest took them across the San Gabriel Valley, from a retirement home to a gated community to a small house with rosebushes in front. In the living room of that house, a mother wept as agents arrested her son. A conviction for misdemeanor battery made it illegal for him to continue possessing his four guns.

California has the nation's only program to confiscate guns from people who bought them legally but later became disqualified. During twice-weekly sweeps over the last five years, agents have collected more than 10,000 guns.

But there are still more than 19,700 people on the state's Armed Prohibited Persons database. Collectively, they own about 39,000 guns. About 3,000 people are added to the list each year.

Clearing the backlog would cost $40 million to $50 million, according to Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris. She estimated that once the backlog is cleared, fielding teams large enough to keep up with people added to the list would cost about $14 million a year.

"This is about prevention," Harris said. "This is about taking guns out of the hands of people who are prohibited from owning them, and are known to be potentially some of the most dangerous people walking around.... It's just common sense."

As gun control has moved to the forefront of national debate, California's program is being studied as a potential model.

The list of prohibited owners is compiled by analysts who track gun sales back to 1996 and match them against databases listing criminal convictions, restraining orders and mental health detentions.

Sometimes the guns are used in killings before the state can retrieve them, according to state Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco), who last month introduced legislation that would provide funding for more agents to conduct sweeps.

For example, Roy Perez had been on the list for three years before he shot and killed his mother, his neighbor and his neighbor's 4-year-old in Baldwin Park in 2008, officials said.

Until recently, the gun apprehension teams had received little attention in the five years they have been sweeping through neighborhoods. But they suddenly have become a topic of intense interest — so much so that when agents rolled through Southern California earlier this month , their big, unmarked trucks were joined by two agents in a rented minivan large enough to carry journalists and camera crews.

The job requires a mixture of force and finesse. The agents show up in heavily armed teams, wearing black jumpsuits bulked up by bulletproof vests. But they don't have warrants and, unless their subject is on probation, they need permission to enter homes to search for guns. Obtaining a search warrant typically requires a reasonable suspicion that the gun would be on the premises, a difficult standard to meet based solely on information from a database, officials said.

Instead, they must talk their way in and coax gun owners into turning over their weapons.

Often, they come away empty-handed.

As the sun was setting, they arrived at the home of a man who had a domestic violence restraining order and was living in a Whittier neighborhood of small ranch homes and backyard stables. As agents walked to the door, neighbors came by on horseback, staring.

The man told the agents he didn't have the gun anymore; it was at his brother's house.

The agents went on their way — in the absence of the gun, they had no proof of a crime, and thus no cause for arrest.

"They'll keep going until they find that gun," Special Agent Supervisor John Marsh said. "You exhaust every lead."

On one occasion, he said, the team tracked a gun owned by mentally ill person to a remote cabin in the mountains in Northern California, where it had been sealed into a wall.

Sometimes the addresses they have are wrong, as was the case that same night when armed teams strode into a retirement community in Whittier, startling residents.

Other times, they don't find the gun they are seeking, but come across others that are possessed illegally. In Oakland last fall, Marsh said, his team entered a house and found a stash of assault weapons with the serial numbers ground off.

Marsh said he once felt a little twinge when taking a gun. The man had been disqualified from ownership because of mental illness. Agents found him living in compound without electricity in a rural area near Crescent City. He was using his guns to shoot game to feed himself.

A more common scenario played out at the Whittier home of Gerardo Naranjo, the young man who had been convicted of misdemeanor battery.

As Naranjo's mother wept, agents recovered the two guns they knew about and two more, including a semiautomatic rifle.

"I know I've saved lives," Marsh said as he cracked open an energy drink and drove the minivan to the next location. "We're taking guns from people that shouldn't have guns."

jessica.garrison@latimes.com


Will Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. get a slap on the wrist???

Wonder if Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. will get probation like Tempe's Ben Arredondo did???

Of course if a private citizen did the same thing that Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. did or Tempe City Councilman Ben Arredondo did they would get a few years in prison minimum!!!

But hey, when government rulers commit crimes they usually get a slap on the wrist, if that much.

Source

Jacksons' case a tale of runaway spending

By Katherine Skiba, Jeff Coen and Wes Venteicher Tribune reporters

6:33 a.m. CST, February 21, 2013

WASHINGTON—

It was the kind of runaway spending usually reserved for someone with newfound riches — a holistic retreat, a cruise, pricey restaurant tabs, flat-screen televisions and even a pair of stuffed elk heads —and former Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. admitted he conspired with his then-Chicago alderman wife to pay for it all with campaign money and cover it up.

In two quiet federal court appearances just hours apart Wednesday, the power couple who once sought to write a new chapter in Chicago political history instead became the latest entry in an infamous culture of public corruption. Jackson pleaded guilty to conspiring with his wife, Sandi, to siphon campaign funds for personal use, and she pleaded guilty to not reporting most of the take as income on the couple's tax returns.

A sullen Jackson gave his wife a peck on the cheek at his own hearing and at times appeared to wipe tears from his eyes as he told a judge he was guilty of misusing about $750,000 in campaign money. And with that, a political star once seemingly destined for the U.S. Senate or the Chicago mayor's office dissolved once and for all.

"Tell everybody back home I'm sorry I let 'em down, OK?" Jackson told a reporter as he left the courtroom.

As part of Jackson's plea agreement, prosecutors filed a 22-page statement filled with stunning details of how the Jacksons used his congressional campaign fund to fuel a lavish lifestyle. Jackson admitted that together the couple used campaign credit cards to buy personal items, tapped campaign funds to pay those bills, sometimes arranged for their campaign treasurer to make purchases for them, filed falsified campaign-disclosure forms to hide their actions and ultimately understated their personal income for tax purposes.

Both Jacksons face the prospect of time in federal prison.

As part of the plea deal, prosecutors and Jesse Jackson's defense agreed that sentencing guidelines in the case call for a term of between 46 and 57 months, but the sides reserved the right to argue for a sentence above or below that range when he is sentenced June 28.

Sandi Jackson is to be sentenced days later on July 1 and may face from one to two years. Among the conduct in her case, prosecutors said, was failing to report that money in her aldermanic campaign fund was used for personal expenses.

Experts said the agreement for Jesse Jackson leaves room for the defense to argue for probation and use his mental health as a mitigating factor.

Jackson removed himself from the public spotlight last June after winning a primary election in March. His medical leave was initially attributed to "exhaustion." It was later revealed that he had been treated in the Sierra Tucson facility in Arizona and the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota and was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

He resigned in November amid the swirling probe, ending a 17-year congressional career just two weeks after winning re-election.

U.S. District Court Judge Robert Wilkins asked Jackson during the hearing whether he understood what was happening.

"Sir, I've never been more clear in my life," Jackson answered.

At a news conference after the hearing, Jackson Jr.'s attorney, Reid Weingarten, said Jackson's health problems contributed to his crimes, hinting it may be an issue raised in a sentencing hearing.

"It turns out that Jesse has serious health issues. ... Those health issues are directly related to his present predicament," Weingarten said. "That's not an excuse, that's just a fact."

Documents filed with the plea agreement lay out a steady pilfering of Jackson's campaign fund during a period of nearly seven years dating to August 2005.

Six people identified by letters of the alphabet — Persons A through F —- were involved in various aspects of the crimes, prosecutors said, and have not been granted immunity in the case. They include two former campaign treasurers, an Alabama businessman who issued a check to pay down a Jackson credit card balance and a Chicago consultant.

In January 2006, Jackson personally opened a bank account under the name "Jesse Jackson Jr. for Congress," and the following year withdrew $43,350 he used to buy a gold Rolex watch, prosecutors said. In 2007, he was also withdrawing funds to pay down personal credit cards, according to case documents.

After that year, the spending went into high gear.

"These expenditures included high-end electronic items, collector's items, clothing, food and supplies for daily consumption, movie tickets, health club dues, personal travel, and personal dining expenses," prosecutors said. When he was charged last week, Jackson was accused of buying, among other items, a fedora that belonged to pop superstar Michael Jackson, an Eddie Van Halen guitar and a football signed by U.S. presidents.

More than $10,000 was spent at Best Buy. A Martha's Vineyard retreat cost $5,687. The Jacksons even billed two shopping trips to a Build-A-Bear Workshop, according to the documents.

Jackson also spent more than $60,000 "at restaurants, nightclubs, and lounges," as well as more than $5,800 for alcohol and more than $17,000 at tobacco shops, prosecutors said. Jackson is known as a cigar aficionado.

One of the most curious purchases took place in the spring of 2011.

In a transaction arranged by Person A, a onetime campaign treasurer, campaign funds were used to pay a taxidermist in Montana $7,058 for two mounted elk heads that were shipped to Jackson's congressional office in Washington. But a year later, with the federal investigation brewing, Person A tried to sell the heads, prosecutors said.

With federal investigators already watching, the move led to an FBI sting operation where an undercover employee of the FBI posing as an interior designer offered to buy the heads at a loss. Prosecutors said $5,300 was wired to Jackson's personal bank account.

Shawn Andres, a taxidermist who owns Alpine Artistry in Arlee, Mont., told the Tribune he was not the person who handled the sale, nor did he know which colleague did. But he did have an observation, saying Jackson paid "top dollar" for his elk heads.

"So that's a significant amount of money," Andres said. "$1,800 is about the most you should be spending for an elk head."

Federal prosecutors said Person A — involved in the elk head sale — was the treasurer of Jackson's campaign until 2008. Separate campaign records identify that aide as Terri Eileen Jones, 62, of Columbia, Md. Person B, a second treasurer, held that post after Jones, and is identified in separate campaign documents as Vickie L. Pasley, 57, of Chicago. Neither could be reached for comment.

Often personal spending was made to look like campaign expenses on official forms, prosecutors said in court filings. A 2008 expense of more than $1,500 for space for a fundraiser purportedly at the Museum of Science and Industry really went for porcelain collectibles, prosecutors said, and $224 for a "FR dinner meeting" at the Peninsula Hotel actually was the tab for a family lunch.

Legal experts said the case is without question headed to Chicago's hall of shame for disgraced politicians — one that just in recent years welcomed two governors, a series of aldermen and another congressman, Dan Rostenkowski, who pleaded guilty in 1996 to diverting taxpayer dollars to his own use.

But the brazeness of the Jackson case makes it unique, some said. Former federal prosecutor Sergio Acosta, now in private practice, said he would not be surprised to see the defense use that element to its advantage at sentencing.

"The outlandishness of it may actually play into the idea that he was suffering from some sort of mental illness at the time," said Acosta, who noted Chicago has seen its share of the misuse of campaign money. "But not to that degree."

In recent years when he was in Congress and she was on the Council, the Jackson's combined annual salaries as public officials totaled more than $270,000.

The day had started with an unusual sight in a city accustomed to seeing Jackson and his well-known father, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, at official events. Members of the family looked somber and were linked arm-in-arm as they headed into federal court.

Jesse Jackson Jr. and his wife, both Democrats, wore dark suits to court, and switched places in a chair just behind the defense table as each stood before the judge to enter a plea at their separate hearings four hours apart.

Jesse Jackson Jr. was first to speak to the judge, and summed up his conduct in a short statement.

"Sir, for years I lived (off) my campaign. I used monies that should have been used for campaign purposes, and I used them for myself personally, to benefit me personally," Jackson said. "And I am acknowledging that that which the government has presented is accurate."

In the afternoon, it was Sandi Jackson's turn. But unlike her husband, she answered the judge's questions only with a string of "Yes, sirs," and sniffled loudly and dabbed her face as it came time to enter her plea.

"Guilty," she said in a tiny voice, choking back tears.

The "statement of offense" filed in Sandi Jackson's case alleges she failed to report at least $15,000 in taxable income earned through her political consulting firm, J. Donatella & Associates. Her husband's congressional fund paid that firm at least $452,500 since 2002, federal campaign reports show. Prosecutors said she knowingly failed to report nearly $570,000 in taxable income over six years ending in 2011, leading to an estimated tax loss of about $159,000.

There was dispute between government and defense lawyers about where Sandi Jackson would fall under federal sentencing guidelines, which the judge is not bound to follow. On the high end, favored by the government, she would face a prison term of 18 to 24 months, while her lawyers are pushing for a sentencing guideline of 12 to 18 months.

The couple have two young children, who lived with them in Washington and attended school there, despite their mother serving for years on the Chicago City Council. Acosta, the former federal prosecutor, said it is not unheard of in case involving convicted couples with young children for one spouse to have his or her sentence deferred until the other spouse finishes serving a sentence.

Dan Webb, Sandi Jackson's attorney and a former top federal prosecutor in Chicago, told reporters following his client's court appearance that Jackson had faced a "hard decision" to plead guilty rather than fight the charges against her. Despite documents detailing her central role in the conspiracy, Webb downplayed her offenses.

"She made the decision to plead guilty today to a one-tax charge, and that's the only thing she pleaded guilty to," Webb said.

The downward spiral of a politician who had been one of Chicago's favorite sons began in 2008 when his name surfaced in the Chicago corruption case against then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Prosecutors alleged top fundraisers for him offered as much as $6 million in campaign cash if Blagojevich would name Jackson to replace the newly elected president, Barack Obama, in the Senate.

Jackson has denied knowledge of that offer. The U.S. attorney in Washington, Ronald Machen Jr., said the criminal case that felled Jackson was not referred to Washington out of the Blagojevich matter.

Machen declined to specify when the investigation began or if it was an outgrowth of an ethics probe of Jackson when he was in the House.

Jackson's misdeeds were a betrayal of the public trust, he said, especially since he spent campaign funds on "items of excess" such as fur coats and music memorabilia. Prosecutors outlined about 3,100 personal purchases in all.

"The people of Illinois' 2nd Congressional District and the American people deserve better from our political leaders," Machen said.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, typically outspoken on a wide variety of issues, offered no comment at federal court on Wednesday.

Neither did his son or Sandi Jackson, who left her hearing holding hands, Sandi still with tears in her eyes.

Katherine Skiba and Wes Venteicher reported from Washington, with Jeff Coen in Chicago. Tribune reporters David Heinzmann, John Chase, David Kidwell and Kim Geiger in Chicago contributed.

kskiba@tribune.com jcoen@tribune.com


Third Schaumburg ex-cop accused of running drug ring out on bond

More of the old "Do as I say, not as I do" from our government masters!!!!

Source

Third Schaumburg ex-cop accused of running drug ring out on bond

By Clifford Ward Special to the Tribune

1:47 p.m. CST, February 20, 2013

A former Schaumburg police officer accused of running a drug ring was freed from jail Wednesday after a DuPage County judge rejected a bid to increase his bail.

Terrance O’Brien and two other ex-officers were arrested in mid January on charges that they were buying and selling illegal drugs and were using their police powers to facilitate their operation. O’Brien was the last of the trio to bond out of jail.

Judge Blanche Hill Fawell stuck with the order she made in late January, requiring O’Brien to post $30,000 to gain his release. Following his arrest, his bail initially was set at $750,000 full cash.

O’Brien’s attorney, Robert Irsuto, had previously told the judge that O’Brien had the support of his wife and could expect to live at home. But prosecutors learned that his wife had filed for divorce shortly after O’Brien’s arrest, prompting their request that the bail be reset at $750,000.

But Irsuto said the ex-cop could live with his mother in Hoffman Estates. She was one of about a dozen friends and family members in attendance at the hearing.

His brother, Patrick, testified that he would be willing to post the necessary money for bond.

During previous hearings, it was disclosed that O’Brien is the father of a teenage girl with his longtime mistress, who is also charged in connection with the alleged drug ring.

Irsuto called the situation between O’Brien and his wife something that would have to be worked through.

“If she doesn’t want him to return home, that’s something he respects,” Irsuto said following the hearing.

Fawell told O’Brien that he would be required to wear a GPS unit and would be barred from leaving the state. He was also barred from contacting John Cichy and Matthew Hudak, the two other officers charged in the case.

The Village of Schaumburg announced this week that it had contracted with an outside agency to review its police department in the wake of the scandal. The three cops resigned from the department following their arrests.

triblocaltips@tribune.com


When solitude is torture

Source

When solitude is torture

By George F. Will, Published: February 20

“Zero Dark Thirty,” a nominee for Sunday’s Oscar for Best Picture, reignited debate about whether the waterboarding of terrorism suspects was torture. This practice, which ended in 2003, was used on only three suspects. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of American prison inmates are kept in protracted solitary confinement that arguably constitutes torture and probably violates the Eighth Amendment prohibition of “cruel and unusual punishments.”

Noting that half of all prison suicides are committed by prisoners held in isolation, Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) has prompted an independent assessment of solitary confinement in federal prisons. State prisons are equally vulnerable to Eighth Amendment challenges concerning whether inmates are subjected to “substantial risk of serious harm.”

America, with 5 percent of the world’s population, has 25 percent of its prisoners. Mass incarceration, which means a perpetual crisis of prisoners re-entering society, has generated understanding of solitary confinement’s consequences when used as a long-term condition for an estimated 25,000 inmates in federal and state “supermax” prisons — and perhaps 80,000 others in isolation sections within regular prisons. Clearly, solitary confinement involves much more than the isolation of incorrigibly violent individuals for the protection of other inmates or prison personnel.

Federal law on torture prohibits conduct “specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering.” And “severe” physical pain is not limited to “excruciating or agonizing” pain, or pain “equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily functions, or even death.” The severe mental suffering from prolonged solitary confinement puts the confined at risk of brain impairment.

Supermax prisons isolate inmates from social contact. Often prisoners are in their cells, sometimes smaller than 8 by 12 feet, 23 hours a day, released only for a shower or exercise in a small fenced-in outdoor space. Isolation changes the way the brain works, often making individuals more impulsive, less able to control themselves. The mental pain of solitary confinement is crippling: Brain studies reveal durable impairments and abnormalities in individuals denied social interaction. Plainly put, prisoners often lose their minds.

The first supermax began functioning in Marion, Ill., in 1983. By the beginning of this century there were more than 60 around the nation, and solitary-confinement facilities were in most maximum-security prisons. In an article (“Hellhole”) in the March 30, 2009, issue of the New Yorker, Atul Gawande, a surgeon who writes on public health issues, noted, “One of the paradoxes of solitary confinement is that, as starved as people become for companionship, the experience typically leaves them unfit for social interaction.” And those who are most incapacitated by solitary confinement are forced to remain in it because they have been rendered unfit for “the highly social world of mainline prison or free society.” Last year, the New York Times reported that of the prisoners sent to solitary confinement in California’s Pelican Bay prison because of gang affiliation, “248 have been there for 5 to 10 years; 218 for 10 to 20 years; and 90 for 20 years or more.”

Two centuries ago, solitary confinement was considered a humane reform, promoting reflection, repentance — penitence; hence penitentiaries — and rehabilitation. Quakerism influenced the design of Philadelphia’s Eastern State Penitentiary, which opened in 1829 with a regime of strict solitude. In 1842, Charles Dickens visited it:

“I hold this slow and daily tampering with the mysteries of the brain, to be immeasurably worse than any torture of the body: and because its ghastly signs and tokens are not so palpable to the eye and sense of touch as scars upon the flesh; because its wounds are not upon the surface, and it extorts few cries that human ears can hear; therefore I the more denounce it, as a secret punishment which slumbering humanity is not roused up to stay.”

In 1890, the U.S. Supreme Court said of solitary confinement essentially what Dickens had said: “A considerable number of the prisoners fell, after even a short confinement, into a semi-fatuous condition, from which it was next to impossible to arouse them, and others became violently insane; others, still, committed suicide.” Americans should be roused against this by decency — and prudence.

Mass incarceration is expensive (California spends almost twice as much on prisons as on universities) and solitary confinement costs, on average, three times as much per inmate as in normal prisons. And remember: Most persons now in solitary confinement will someday be back on America’s streets, some of them rendered psychotic by what are called correctional institutions.

Read more from George F. Will’s archive.


Roosevelt School District tells Sheriff Joe to get lost!!!

Source

Phoenix group: MCSO posse not welcome at schools

Posted: Thursday, February 21, 2013 10:02 am

Associated Press

A Phoenix group says it doesn't want Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio's volunteer posse to patrol their kid's schools in the Roosevelt School District.

The school board met Tuesday night to talk about a resolution that would let Arpaio know his posse members aren't welcome at the district's 20 schools.

But Arpaio told KPHO-TV (http://bit.ly/12O8Sfl) that those schools fall within his jurisdiction, so he can do what he wants.

Arpaio recently launched a program for his volunteer armed posse members to patrol schools in unincorporated parts of Maricopa County.

The Rise of South Phoenix group says parents and students fear a patrol will turn into an immigration raid.

But Arpaio says the group is needlessly upset because the posse doesn't currently patrol schools in the Roosevelt district.

Source

Group tells Arpaio his posse's not welcome at schools

Posted: Feb 19, 2013 7:46 PM Updated: Feb 20, 2013 8:11 AM

By Colton Shone

A Valley group wants Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio to know they don't want his volunteer posse to patrol their kid's schools in the Roosevelt School District.

The school board met Tuesday night to talk about a resolution that would let Arpaio know his posse members aren't welcome at the district's schools. But Arpaio told CBS 5 News those schools fall within his jurisdiction so he can do what he wants.

Weeks after the Sandy Hook Elementary massacre, Arpaio launched a program for his volunteer armed posse members to patrol schools in unincorporated parts of Maricopa County.

"The posse under this sheriff has the authority to enforce the laws," Arpaio said.

The group, The Rise of South Phoenix, said its getting feedback from the community in South Phoenix to tell the sheriff to not patrol the 20 schools in the Roosevelt District.

"The parents don't feel safe, they don't feel any safer with his posse patrolling other school districts for the simple fact that he puts fear into the community," organizer Devin Del Palacio said.

He went on to say that parents and students would fear a patrol would turn into an immigration raid.

Currently, the posse isn't focused on the district, but Del Palacio said they want to stop it before it's an option.

"You've got a bunch of people shouting out ideas, arming teachers; posse with guns near schools. To me, rushing into a solution is not the answer," he said.

Roosevelt School District Board Member Lawrence Robinson wrote the resolution. He said this came about after listening to the community's concern.

"Our public safety is determined by Phoenix police, and it's determined by the plan we have in place. There's no place for sweeps, intimidation or fear on our schools," said Robinson before the board meeting.

Arpaio calls this is a political move.

"If we get information, even though it's in Phoenix, I will send my posse," he said. "I am the sheriff of everybody in this county."

But he says the board and the group are fussing over nothing.

"We don't do the schools in that area."


Mesa expands DUI "war on drugs" to raise revenue???

I suspect this is mostly about raising money.

If the cops force everybody they see to take a blood test there are bound to be a few more people with microscopic traces of illegal drugs in their bodies, which will make them automatically guilty of DUI and more important Mesa can shake them down with a $2,000 DUI fine.

Under Arizona law even if you are NOT intoxicated but have any measurable trace of illegal drugs in your body you are assumed to be guilty of DUI.

Remember if you smoke a marijuana cigarette, you are only "stoned" for around 4 hours, but the marijuana is detectable in your body for several days minimum, and as long as the pot is detectable you are assumed to be guilty of DUI in Arizona.

Source

Grant to help Mesa prosecute more DUI cases

Posted: Thursday, February 21, 2013 7:55 am

By Michelle Reese, Tribune

Use spice and drive, and it may be more likely you’ll pay for the crime in Mesa.

The City of Mesa’s Prosecutor’s Office was recently awarded a grant that will be used to help improve DUI prosecution — specifically those cases that involve synthetic drugs. The grant will allow the city to fund testing of blood samples for synthetic drugs like spice or bath salts when they are suspected. [I suspect the main idea it to give EVERYBODY a blood test, hoping that a few people will have microscopic traces of illegal drugs in their system which will allow Mesa to shake them down for a $2,000 fine even if they are NOT stoned]

Mesa Police Lt. Lt. Tom Intrieri said there has been a rise in the number of drug-related DUI cases overall, specifically with spice — a synthetic drug that mimics marijuana — and bath salts.

“Those two categories have been up a lot more this last year and the year before,” he said.

Mesa prosecutor Jon Eliason said the grant will also allow his office to bring in expert witnesses who can attest to the findings in samples. [If you have to bring in an "expert witness" to get a DUI conviction the person probably arrested was not intoxicated enough to be a danger to other people. So it sounds like it is about money, not safety]

Intrieri said while it’s a little easier to convince a jury in a DUI trial when alcohol is involved, the grant funds could help change that.

Mesa has traffic officers trained to recognize signs of drug use – whether it’s illicit, prescription or synthetic. The grant will provide funds to train more officers, as well as give them more knowledge on what to look for when they pull over an impaired driver, he said. [If only a skilled and highly trained police officer can determine that you are high on drugs, the degree of impairment you have probably isn't enough to make you legally drunk. - i.e. This sounds like it is more about increasing revenue, then getting dangerous drivers off of the road]

“They have to carry that (information) on to the forensics services division so when they analyze the blood, they know what they’re looking for,” Intrieri said.

When a synthetic drug or bath salt is suspected, it will be sent out of state for testing, Eliason said.

Most DUI cases where synthetic drugs or bath salts are suspected involve young people, Intrieri said.

“What we’re seeing through DUI enforcement is from 17, 18, on and up through the college age,” he said.

The nearly $60,000 grant was awarded by the DUI Abatement Council of the Arizona Governor’s Office of Highway Safety.

Part of the funds will also be used to design a website for officers to track their arrest logs. That information will then be available to attorneys. [This sounds meaningless. Each case should be based only on the person arrested, not on arrests before or after the person arrested]

“The web page is to make us more effective,” Eliason said. “In the end we hope it will help us get cases prosecuted.”

In 2012, there were 3,412 DUI arrests in Mesa, Eliason said. Of those, 41.6 percent — or 1,420 arrests — involved drugs of some type. That’s up slightly from 2011, when 41.2 percent of DUI arrests involved drugs and it’s even higher than 2010, when 37 percent of DUI arrests involved drugs. [3,412 DUI busts boils down to almost $7 million in fines. If they can get a 10 percent increase in drug busts this will result in a $700,000 increase in revenue. F*ck safety, this is all about money]

“They’re increasing. We hear about it on the prescription drug side,” Eliason said. “If you’re abusing it or it’s a powerful prescription, you’re not supposed to drive. You’re not safe.” [Translation - if you take a prescription drug we would love to shake you down for a $2,000 DUI fine. We need the cash to pay the cops!!!]

The passing of Arizona’s medical marijuana law isn’t helping the situation, Eliason said.

“With the passing of Prop. 203, they think it’s OK to smoke marijuana and drive. The scary thing is people think it’s legal, so they think it’s OK.” [You can't convict a medical marijuana patient for DUI simply because they have marijuana in their system. They have to PROVE with other tests the person is intoxicated.]

Contact writer: (480) 898-6549 or mreese@evtrib.com


Drones have murdered 4,700 - U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham

My only question is when will the American Empire start using drones to murder suspected drug dealers on American soil.

If Obama, the CIA, DEA and Generals in the military don't have any qualms about being the judge, jury and executioner of suspect or accused criminals on foreign soil, I doubt if they won't have any qualms about murdering suspected drug dealers on American soil.

I wonder what the cost of each of these murders was.

The General Atomics MQ-1 Predator program cost $2.38 billion.

Dividing the $2.38 billion by the 4,700 drone murders gives us a cost of $506,382 per drone murder. Of course that doesn't count for the operation costs of the program, such as manpower and fuel.

Source

Drones have killed 4,700, U.S. senator says

By Olivier Knox, Yahoo! News

Just how many people have America’s drones killed? Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham has put the death toll at 4,700 — the first time an American official has publicly put a precise figure on the impact of strikes by unmanned aerial vehicles. The South Carolina lawmaker's office said he was citing an estimate already discussed on cable television.

Graham, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, used the figure during a question and answer session on Tuesday with the Rotary Club of Easley in his home state of South Carolina. His remarks were first reported by the Easley Patch.

“We've killed 4,700,” the lawmaker said. “Sometimes you hit innocent people, [like 4,700 innocent people] and I hate that, but we're at war, and we've taken out some very senior members of al-Qaida.”

Drone strikes, President Barack Obama’s signature tactic for killing suspected al-Qaida and other extremist fighters, have been “very effective,” said Graham. “It's a weapon that needs to be used.”

Amid a controversy sparked by Obama’s targeted assassination of American citizens overseas suspected of consorting with terrorists, Graham came down sharply against any judicial oversight of the drone war, calling the idea “crazy.” [Hey, I'm a Senator and have a God given right to murder anybody I want to???]

“I can't imagine, in World War [II] for Roosevelt to have gone to a bunch of judges and said, 'I need your permission before we can attack the enemy,'” Graham said.

Drone war expert Micah Zenko of the Council on Foreign Relations noted on his blog that Graham’s figure lined up with the high-end estimate by The Bureau of Investigative Journalism.

“Either Graham is a big fan of TBIJ’s work, or perhaps he inadvertently revealed the U.S. government’s body count for nonbattlefield targeted killings,” Zenko said.

Asked about the disclosure, Graham's office forwarded a clip from MSNBC in which the anchor cites the figure of 4,700 killed. Asked whether the Obama Administration harbored any concerns about Graham's comments, National Security Council Spokesman Tommy Vietor sent along a blog post including the same clip.

Graham's remarks, as reported, did not specify whether he was discussing CIA drone strikes or military drone strikes.

Obama's expanded drone war has broad popular support in the U.S., according to a poll released earlier this month by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center. That survey found 56 percent support such strikes and 26 percent oppose them. At the same time, 53 percent worry about potential civilian casualties. But overseas it faces majority opposition, Pew found last year.


TSA apologizes for screening that upset girl, 3

You never can be too careful. My sister's 3 year old daughter packs an AK-47 and defected to the Taliban when she was 18 months old. From letters she has written back home that toddler has killed at least 12 American soldiers in her jihad against sick American values.

I'm just joking, but I suspect the TSA thugs are 100 percent serious when it comes to suspecting that all 3 year old children are armed with AK-47s and members of the Taliban. Especially the ones with brown skin.

Source

TSA apologizes for screening that upset girl, 3

Associated Press Thu Feb 21, 2013 10:35 AM

ST. LOUIS — The Transportation Security Administration is apologizing after agents at Lambert Airport in St. Louis sought to screen a 3-year-old girl in a wheelchair.

The mother of the child shot video that caused a stir in social media after it was posted online.

The incident happened Feb. 8. The girl and her family were about to fly to Disney World in Orlando, Fla. A TSA agent asked to pat down the 3-year-old and screen her wheelchair. The agent initially told the girl’s mother, Annie Schulte, it was illegal to tape the activity.

On the video, the little girl, Lucy, who has spina bifida, is seen crying.

Agents eventually decided against a pat-down.

The TSA says it regrets the incident and will address concerns with its workers.


Arpaio and his over-the-hill army’s sad charade

Wow how things change.

Now the Republic is actually writing anti-Arpaio editorials like this one.

A few years ago the Republic loved Sheriff Joe so much it often forgot to report his screw ups. I remember when Sheriff Joe crashed and totaled his cop car into a Walgreens in Fountain Hills, the Republic didn't even bother to report the crash.

Source

Arpaio and his over-the-hill army’s sad charade

OUR VIEW

Kudos to Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio for creating a new term — “simunition” — for what he and his posse performed last weekend at an abandoned Fountain Hills elementary school. When the English language doesn’t contain a single word suitable for describing an exercise of such fatuous machismo and brazen irresponsibility, sometimes a man has to improvise.

If you missed it — tough to do, frankly, given Arpaio’s unmatched ability to attract media attention — MCSO deputies spent last Saturday afternoon training posse members how to respond if an armed person were to approach or enter a school campus.

Forget, for a moment, just how ham-handed Arpaio’s mandate for posse members to patrol our schools is in the first place. These are armed volunteers — often retirees, many with little or no formal law-enforcement training — whom Arpaio pressed into service without first notifying districts or parents of their disconcerting intrusion.

The truly galling part of the exercise was Arpaio’s use of another band of disciples: Teens from his youth volunteer Explorers program. Apparently, the use of actual assault rifles, handguns and flash-bang grenades wasn’t quite realistic enough for posse members, so kids were brought in to play the part of, well, scared kids.

How scared they must have been when they realized the ammunition used in the training was anything but simulated. That’s right — some perverse demand for authenticity led to trainees eschewing blank rounds for actual projectiles. One posse member received first aid after a wayward projectile bloodied his ear, and another sustained a gashed forehead during the “mock” shootout.

That none of the student volunteers was injured is the sole silver lining to this embarrassing episode. It’s hard to infer, watching footage of elderly posse members crouching behind one another as shotgun blasts reverberate through the halls, that the exercise did anything but satisfy a curious craving for contrived combat.

“We got a bad guy, we got a bad guy!” one man yells in the footage, calling attention to a nearby classroom. His comrades arrive, guns pointed toward an unseen threat, wholly unaware of their involvement in a moment that perfectly encapsulates the entire farcical charade that is Arpaio’s response to the Newtown tragedy.

And while it’s easy to dismiss last weekend’s glorified paintball game as an isolated incident, the reality is that it’s reflective of a troubling brand of cowboy vigilantism Arpaio has long cultivated among his posse. The intentions of these acolytes are undoubtedly admirable, but their actions reflect an unfortunate desire to carry out the kind of tactical and dangerous enforcement best left to well-trained professional deputies.

A responsible leader might impress upon his devotees that there’s little place for “bad guy” bombast in contemporary law enforcement. A responsible leader might even be alarmed by the enthusiasm with which his followers discharged their rounds inside a school.

But instead of someone acting like a sheriff of one of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas, we get a man content to continually showcase his insouciant disregard for nuanced enforcement and professional sensibilities.

Instead of a responsible leader, we get Sheriff Joe Arpaio.


Japan hangs three prisoners

I really love Japan, it's a really cool country.

There is very little crime and if you lose your wallet or purse it will almost always show up in a police station, with all of the money still in it.

But the Japanese people are brainwashed from birth that their government knows what is best for them and they are docile people who do what the government tells them to do without asking questions.

Source

Japan hangs three prisoners, first executed under new government

By Emily Alpert

February 21, 2013, 1:13 p.m.

Japan hanged three convicted killers, its Justice Ministry said Thursday. The hangings are the first executions under the new government, continuing a secretive practice that has appalled human rights groups and made Japan an outlier among wealthy democracies.

The three inmates were identified in Japanese media as Masahiro Kanagawa, convicted in a string of stabbings five years ago; Keiki Kano, sentenced for murdering a bar owner; and Kaoru Kobayashi, convicted of abducting and killing a 7-year-old girl.

“All of these cases were extremely brutal; the precious lives of the victims were robbed for very selfish reasons,” Justice Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki told reporters Thursday after the executions, the Japan Times reported. Tanigaki said the courts had thoroughly considered the cases. "I decided to order the executions after carefully going over all of the various aspects.”

Executions in Japan are carried out under a shroud of secrecy. Until about five years ago, Japan did not even reveal the names of the executed. Prisoners are given only a few hours' notice that they will be put to death. Their families find out afterward.

Hangings are closed to inmates’ and victims’ families, the media and the public, and even glimpses of the execution chambers are rare. When Japanese lawmakers successfully petitioned to visit the Tokyo gallows a decade ago, it was the first time any outsider had seen them since 1973, according to activists.

In some ways, the Japanese criminal justice system “gives the impression of an authoritarian system, not a democratic one,” said David T. Johnson, a sociology professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. “And executions may be the ugliest part of the whole lot.”

What little is known about life on Japan's death row comes largely from the few prisoners who have been freed. Former inmate Masao Akahori, who was retried and released after 31 years on death row, told The Times he was so traumatized after his ordeal that for years, he could not speak.

The prisoners “were not allowed to communicate, but we would knock on the walls at the back of the cell to make sure the other guy was OK,” Akahori told The Times seven years ago. Once, he said, guards came to fetch him for execution, only to realize that they had gone to the wrong cell.

Death penalty opponents say that the secrecy is engineered to avoid the candlelight vigils and media attention that surround disputed cases in the United States and elsewhere. Government officials have told reporters that the system is meant to ensure privacy and soothe the prisoners awaiting death.

“According to the government, a blanket of isolation and quiet must cover death row to assist those who are to be executed in coming to terms with their inevitable fate,” Washington Post opinion writer Charles Lane wrote, reflecting on his studies on the Japanese death penalty in 2003 and 2004. “Any other policy, I was told, would result in psychological damage.”

Japan's Supreme Court has found execution to be extreme but not “cruel,” which would violate the constitution. Government polls have continued to show overwhelming support for the death penalty, despite the continued objections of local and international human rights groups and the Japan Federation of Bar Associations.

There are now 134 inmates on death row in Japan, one of the highest levels in decades, according to Amnesty International. Executions declined while the more liberal Democratic Party of Japan was in power, with no prisoners put to death in 2011. Human rights activists worry that executions could accelerate again under new Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose government oversaw an unusually high number of hangings during his last term.

“The fear is that this marks the beginning of a new wave of coldblooded killing by the State,” Roseann Rife of Amnesty International said in a statement Thursday.

There have already been signs of change: The Justice Ministry recently discontinued its study groups examining the death penalty, Johnson said. Reaction to the latest hangings seems muted. Abe and his Liberal Democratic Party appear to be returning to the same practices as before.

“They’re kind of going back to the future,” Johnson said.

About two-thirds of countries do not use the death penalty, according to Amnesty International. Japan and the U.S. are unusual among wealthy democracies in imposing the punishment.


Mandatory Gun Insurance??? A round about way to disarm Americans???

Machine guns were not made illegal, but the National Firearms Act, enacted on June 26, 1934, slapped a $200 tax on a machine gun that cost $10 to $50 at the time and effectively made them unaffordable for for most people.

I suspect this so called "mandatory gun insurance" is designed to do the same thing.

Requiring people who own guns to purchase insurance which will be made unaffordable to prevent people from legally buying and owning guns by making the insurance too expensive.

And of course after the government passes a law requiring mandatory gun insurance, the next step would be to pass laws that make it impossible for insurance companies to sell the mandatory gun insurance, effectively making guns illegal.

This isn't a new trick by our government rulers. They did the same thing when they made drugs illegal.

The "1914 Harrison Narcotic Tax Act" and the "1937 Marihuana Tax Act" effectively made drugs illegal by slapping a tax on them, while at the same time the government stopped issuing the tax licenses.

Source

Latest Front in the Gun Debate Is Mandatory Insurance

By MICHAEL COOPER and MARY WILLIAMS WALSH

Published: February 21, 2013 609 Comments

In a nation sharply divided over efforts to curb violence and the right to bear arms, both sides of the gun debate seem to agree on at least one thing: a bigger role for the insurance industry in a heavily armed society.

David P. Linsky is a Democratic state representative in Massachusetts who wants to require gun owners to buy insurance.

But just what that role should be, and whether insurers will choose to accept it, are very much in dispute.

Lawmakers in at least half a dozen states, including California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania, have proposed legislation this year that would require gun owners to buy liability insurance — much as car owners are required to buy auto insurance. Doing so would give a financial incentive for safe behavior, they hope, as people with less dangerous weapons or safety locks could qualify for lower rates.

“I believe that if we get the private sector and insurance companies involved in gun safety, we can help prevent a number of gun tragedies every year,” said David P. Linsky, a Democratic state representative in Massachusetts who wants to require gun owners to buy insurance. He believes it will encourage more responsible behavior and therefore reduce accidental shootings. “Insurance companies are very good at evaluating risk factors and setting their premiums appropriately,” he added.

Groups representing gun owners oppose efforts to make insurance mandatory, arguing that law-abiding people should not be forced to buy insurance to exercise their constitutional right to bear arms. But some groups, including the National Rifle Association, endorse voluntary liability policies for their members. And as several states pass laws making it easier for people to carry concealed weapons and use them for self-defense, some gun groups are now selling policies to cover some of the legal costs stemming from self-defense shootings.

The United States Concealed Carry Association recently began selling what it calls Self-Defense Shield. “If you’re forced to justifiably use your gun in self-defense,” its Web site says, “Self-Defense Shield will help pay for your expert pro-2nd Amendment lawyer by reimbursing your legal-defense expenses following your acquittal — an ingenious system critical to the arsenal of any responsibly armed citizen.”

Premiums for such insurance range from around $200 to $300 per year; in general, the coverage is narrowly written and excludes cases where a gun is used to commit a crime.

Some specialized underwriters are reviewing what their policies cover when it comes to shootings, and weighing whether they should offer new types of coverage for gun owners. And as more states pass laws allowing people to bring guns to public venues — including restaurants, bars, churches and the parking lots of their workplaces — some business groups have expressed concerns that they could be held liable for shootings on their properties, which could drive up their insurance costs.

On Thursday, when Gov. Dannel P. Malloy of Connecticut outlined his proposals to reduce gun violence — which included universal background checks, a ban on large-capacity ammunition magazines and a stronger assault weapons ban — he called for officials to study “whether owners of firearms should be required to carry additional insurance.”

The insurance industry is wary of some of the proposals to require gun owners to buy liability coverage — and particularly of bills, like one that was filed in New York that would require coverage for damages resulting not only from negligence but also from “willful acts.”

Robert P. Hartwig, the president of the Insurance Information Institute, said that insurance generally covered accidents and unintentional acts — not intentional or illegal ones. “Insurance will cover you if your home burns down in an electrical fire, but it will not cover you if you burn down your own house, and you cannot insure yourself for arson,” he said.

Some claims stemming from shootings have been covered by homeowners’ insurance — even by policies that said they did not cover illegal acts.

The families of the two students responsible for the 1999 killings at Columbine High School in Colorado were able to use money from their homeowners’ policies to settle a lawsuit brought by families of most of the victims. In 2001, a California court ordered an insurance company to defend a policyholder whose 16-year-old son shot and killed a friend with a Beretta handgun that he had found in his mother’s coat. But the year before, a North Carolina court ruled that an insurance company did not have to cover the expenses of a policyholder who had shot and wounded a prowler on his property.

Christopher J. Monge, an insurance agent and gun owner in Verona, Wis., recently wrote a book, “The Gun Owner’s Guide to Insurance for Concealed Carry and Self-Defense,” which he sells at gun shows. Mr. Monge said that the problem with most liability insurance is that it promises coverage only in cases of a gun owner’s negligence, or an accidental shooting — and not if the gun owner shoots someone intentionally in self-defense. “A negligent act is covered by your liability policy, but if you intentionally shoot somebody, it could be excluded,” he said.

So as more states pass self-defense laws, Mr. Monge said that he found several insurance companies that would specifically offer liability coverage in cases of self-defense, usually in the form of an “umbrella” policy that added a higher level of coverage than the routine coverage for negligence in a homeowners’ policy. An umbrella policy adds coverage for unusual, but potentially expensive, incidents.

But he opposes proposals to make liability insurance mandatory. “They’re barking up the wrong tree, if you ask me,” he said. “Ninety-nine percent of gun owners are going to be safe and not go crazy.”

States have been considering mandatory gun insurance bills for years, but no state has passed one yet, said Jon Griffin, a policy associate at the National Conference of State Legislatures. When Illinois considered a bill in 2009, the National Rifle Association wrote that it would “put firearms ownership out of reach for many law-abiding Illinoisans.” The N.R.A. endorses a policy that offers excess liability coverage — “because accidents do happen no matter how careful you are” — and another that offers “self-defense insurance.”

The recent trend of allowing guns in more public places has alarmed some business groups. When Ohio enacted a law allowing guns in bars in 2011, the Ohio Restaurant Association opposed it, writing officials that restaurant owners “expect that this law would be perceived by insurance companies as increasing the risk of injury in establishments that sell alcohol, which of course would result in increased liability insurance costs.” Owners have not reported higher premiums because of the new law, said a spokesman for the association, Jarrod A. Clabaugh, but some worry that a shooting could drive up their insurance costs.

The current debate over mandatory liability laws is being watched with interest by Nelson Lund, the Patrick Henry professor of Constitutional Law and the Second Amendment at George Mason University School of Law. Professor Lund proposed the idea of mandatory insurance in a 1987 article in the Alabama Law Review, seeing it as a form of gun control that could be consistent with the constitutional right to bear arms. But he said that he had not studied any of the current proposals, and noted that it made a great deal of difference how they are written.

“If this were done, the private insurance market would quickly and efficiently make it prohibitively expensive for people with a record of irresponsible ownership of guns to possess them legally,” he wrote in the 1987 article, “but would not impose unreasonable burdens on those who have the self-discipline to exercise their liberty in a responsible fashion.”


Mayor Oscar Hernandez says he was too stupid to know he was committing a crime!!!!

I wonder if I could use that excuse if I get caught robbing Circle Ks????

Hey, I only have a bachelors degree in Computer Science. You have to have at least a PhD. to know robbing Circle Ks is wrong!!!

Source

Defense: Mayor in corruption case is uneducated

Associated Press Thu Feb 21, 2013 8:52 PM

LOS ANGELES — The unschooled and illiterate former mayor of the scandal-ridden suburban city of Bell had no training that would have alerted him that his huge salary was illegal, his lawyer told a jury in closing arguments Thursday.

Former Mayor Oscar Hernandez didn’t have a college or high school degree and didn’t even finish elementary school, defense attorney Stanley Friedman said at the corruption trial.

Hernandez is among six former Bell city officials charged with misappropriating funds. He was earning just under $100,000 a year for the part-time job. [That should have been a clue right there!!!! Getting paid $100 an hour for a part time do nothing job???]

Friedman argued that financial advisers hired by the city could have informed Hernandez that salaries being paid to council members were illegal, but no one did that.

“They didn’t say, ‘Stop in the name of the law. These salaries are illegal,’” he said.

Hernandez, former vice mayor Teresa Jacobo and former council members George Cole, George Mirabal, Victor Bello and Luis Artiga are facing charges of misappropriating funds from the blue collar city near Los Angeles.

In prosecutors’ closing arguments on Wednesday, they said the six officials felt they were above the law and collected paychecks for jobs that didn’t exist.

Legally, the officials could have paid themselves $673 a month for what was a part-time job, since they didn’t actually run the city, Deputy District Attorney Ed Miller said. But in addition to their inflated council salaries, the officials appointed each other to commissions that did nothing and often met yearly just to increase their pay, he said. Some made $100,000 a year.

Attorneys for Jacobo and Cole made their closing arguments Wednesday afternoon, saying their clients were victims of a city attorney who never told them that what they were doing could be illegal.

Friedman echoed that argument on Thursday. He added that Hernandez was known around town for being willing to listen to everyone’s problems. Like many other politicians of simple backgrounds, he wasn’t required to be scholarly to be mayor, he said.

“We elect people who have a good heart. Someone who can listen to your problems and look you in the eye,” Friedman said. “There are a lot of elected officials who may not be the most scholarly. We had a vice president of the United States who didn’t know how to spell potato.”

Friedman said former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s main qualification was “he portrayed a killer robot in the movies. And (former Minnesota Gov.) Jesse Ventura was a professional wrestler.”

George Mgdesyan, representing Artiga, said his client had been on the council less than two years and “didn’t know what boards he was getting paid for.” Artiga learned the ropes by attending City Council meetings, he said.

“He sees at every meeting how it works. … He thought this was a full-time job,” the attorney said.

In the midst of a national economic meltdown, the council members were drawing salaries 3 1 / 2times that of the median income of a Bell resident, Miller said on Wednesday. But defense attorneys said they saw no problem with the compensation.

Attorney Alex Kessel, speaking on behalf of Mirabal, said that on the night his client was arrested he had been out all day and evening doing good works for the city.

“They deserve the money they got,” Kessel said. “This isn’t stealing from the city. This is hard-earned money earned by hard working people.” [Hmmm getting paid $100 and hour for a job that does nothing is hard work???]

After disclosure of the scandal in 2010, Bell residents revolted and turned out in the thousands to protest at City Council meetings. They ultimately staged a successful recall election in 2011, throwing out the entire council and electing a slate of new leaders.

An audit by the state controller’s office found that the city had illegally raised property taxes, business license fees and other sources of revenue to pay the salaries. The office ordered the money repaid.

Miller spoke to the jury again during his rebuttal on Thursday. He referred to the defendants as “a gang of crooks.”

“Did you have to be a lawyer to be horrified?” he asked jurors. “This is supposed to raise a red flag in front of you as a reasonable person.”

The case was expected to go to the jury Friday after Miller concludes his remarks. The six former officials face sentences ranging from 11 to 20 years in prison.

Former city manager Robert Rizzo and his assistant city manager, Angela Spaccia, face a trial later this year.


Chicago cop gets 38 years for murdering his wife

This is kind of unusual. When cops are accused of crimes normally nothing happens. When a cop is charged with a crime they usually get a slap on the wrist for punishment at the most.

Source

Peterson gets 38 years after screaming, 'I did not kill Kathleen'

By Matthew Walberg and Steve Schmadeke Tribune reporters

10:52 p.m. CST, February 21, 2013

Moments after screaming in court, "I did not kill Kathleen," Drew Peterson was sentenced to 38 years in prison for the 2004 murder of his third wife Kathleen Savio.

Peterson had faced as much as 60 years, but Judge Edward Burmila said he gave Peterson some consideration for his years as a police officer and his service in the military. Peterson is 59.

The sentence was handed down after Peterson, who did not testify at his trial, made an emotional appeal to the judge, at times appearing to choke up as he argued that he was convicted by "rumors, gossip, outrageous lies and, most importantly, unreliable hearsay."

"I don't deserve this," he told Burmila. "I don't deserve this."

Peterson, a former Bolingbrook police sergeant, was convicted last fall of drowning Savio in her bathtub. Prosecutors have said they believe Peterson also killed his missing fourth wife Stacy and could seek charges in that case.

Peterson began his appeal to the judge today by telling him, "Good day, my name is Drew Peterson. I hope I don't aggravate the situation here, but I have a lot of things to be said." Then he screamed, "I did not kill Kathleen!"

"Yes, you did," a woman said.

"Ma'am, I'd like you to leave the courtroom," Burmila said. "And Mr. Peterson, don't make any outbursts that are designed to aggravate people."

"I'm sorry, your honor. I must have been woozy," Peterson said.

After the sentencing, State's Atty. James Glasgow dismissed the outburst as a "shrill, kind of feminine screech."

Peterson insisted to the judge he is the victim of an unjust and invasive police investigation that ignored or lost evidence that could have shown his innocence. He accused the state police of falsifying reports.

"What they did uncover was rumors, gossip, outrageous lies, and most importantly, unreliable hearsay. Hearsay that pierced three privileges that have stood for centuries," Peterson said.

Peterson bitterly complained that the Rev. Neil Schori betrayed his promise never to repeat anything that was said by Peterson or Stacy. Schori testified at trial that Stacy confided to him that she lied to state police about Peterson's alleged slaying of Savio.

"Out of the privileged information from Neil Schori, the state police was able to create" a case, he said. "I find it hard to believe that the state was able to take information that they obtained illegally and turn it to their benefit."

Kathleen Savio’s divorce attorney Harry Smith, who also testified at trial about a conversation he had with Stacy before she disappeared, "gave up privileged information from both Kathy and Stacy, like it was yesterday's garbage," Peterson said. "Ultimately, it led to my conviction.

"Hearsay is a scary thing. There's no proof. Anything can be said and nobody's accountable for the truth.

"In my experience, in divorce situations everybody lies, and everybody lies under the instruction of their attorneys.

"There was an incident where Kathleen exited the house ... and punched Stacy in the face. They went to trial, my 9- and 10-year-old sons were called to testify, and under oath they lied," Peterson said.

"On their next visit, I questioned them, 'Why’d you guys lie?' They said Harry Smith told them to. They didn’t want their mom to go to jail,” Peterson said, growing emotional as he spoke. “I couldn't be mad at them.”

"Stacy provided me an alibi for Kathleen's death. Then she later said she was lying about that. Seems like Stacy was lying all the time about everything. But the state's attorney picked and chose what they wanted to believe.

"Stacy clearly had a crush on the Rev. Schori, which I think was a factor in this.

"There was a constant and consistently illegal activity by the state’s attorneys, including the state’s attorney himself.

"So what did the state’s attorney do? They hire a skinny ... spokesperson (Stacy Peterson family spokeswoman Pam Bosco) to go out and say anything she wants. It buffered the state’s attorney’s office from anything the court might bring.

"And when it came time for a vote from the grand jury, only a handful of people were selected. Not the entire grand jury was brought in to do the vote. Pretty much guaranteed ... that I was indicted, which I was.

"There was a first investigation on this case, in which probably one of the most experienced investigators was the first one on the scene in this case, and he determined Kathleen's death was an accident.

"Dr. (Bryan) Mitchell looked at Kathy's body when it was in its freshest state. He determined her death was an accident."

So did the coroner's jury, Peterson said. "All this was done when the evidence was freshest."

Peterson then paused and asked for some water. He resumed by talking about his service in the military and lengthy law enforcement career.

"I was probably one of the highest-decorated officers in the Bolingbrook Police Department," he said.

"I always took my job seriously, I never violated the public trust," he said, his voice husky with emotions. "And I never beared false witness against anyone.

"I loved having a job that helped people," he said. "In my private life, I ran up to six companies at one time. I employed nearly 100 people.

"Until this happened, I thought I was a great guy," he said. "And in moments, the media turned me into a monster.

"As soon as I get a chance, I'm going to get a tattoo on my back, from shoulder to shoulder, that says, 'No good deed goes unpunished.' "

He said he loved Savio and called her a good wife and mother who did not deserve to die, but insited it was an accident. He then talked about Savio’s upbringing, calling it difficult and abusive.

"The most pathetic thing I’ve ever seen in my life was the night after our wedding, when I held Kathy and she cried because her father failed to show up and give her away on her wedding.

"At Kathy's wake, friends and family put money in cards and envelopes to help cover the cost of the funeral.

“I paid for the funeral."

"That's a lie right there," a man in court shouted.

"I paid for Kathy’s funeral at the request of her sister, who's sitting right there," Peterson said.

He then attacked State's Atty. James Glasgow.

"Mr. Glasgow, all aspects of my life have been destroyed. Everything from my personal life to my professional life to my social life -- all aspects have been destroyed. And I tell you this to give you greater cause for celebration, when you celebrate the fact that you perpetrated the largest railroad job in the history of this country.

"Since I've been incarcerated, I've had nine family members who have died, six of which were cousins," Peterson said. None of them made it past the age of 60, he said.

“And in telling you this, I'm not looking for any sympathy, but anything you sentence me to, you're sentencing me to the Department of Corrections to die!" Peterson said.

Peterson said he believes his constitutional rights have been violated.

"And I think the only thing left to make this case run true to form would be a cruel and unusual punishment. And I don't think anybody would care because nobody cares. I can't believe I spent 32 years defending a constitution that allowed this to happen to me. I can't believe people fought and died in wars protecting a constitution that allowed this to happen to me.”

America should be outraged, but nobody cares, he said.

"I take full responsibility for my relationship with the media," Peterson continued. "I just wanted them away from my home because they were scaring my kids. They hounded me. I agreed to go on TV and tell my story and ask for legal help.

"Everybody from busy bodies like Nancy Grace ... to that ridiculous movie that played repeatedly before and during my trial.

"It pretty much guaranteed that I would not get a fair trial. It's pretty clear that the state took part in that movie because things I remember saying only to the state police appeared in that movie," Peterson said, apparently referring to a Lifetime TV movie starring Rob Lowe as Peterson.

"I'm an obnoxious man by nature, truly. And after 30 years as a police officer, as is normal with a police officer, my defense mechanism is comedy. The media took that and capitalized on that, and my obnoxious nature showed through. But I want to ensure the court that at no time did I want to portray any insensitivity about Kathy's death. That was not my intention.

“I hope Mr. Glasgow looks me in the eye right now. Never forget my face! Never forget what you’ve done.

“Originally I had some cute and funny things to say. But now in closing, it's time to be sentenced to a life of hardship and abuse in prison. I don't deserve this, I don't deserve this.

“Thank you.”

Earlier in the afternoon, Savio’s sister Anna Marie Savio-Doman told the judge that "my loss of my baby sister is beyond words. There will be no more birthday parties, backyard gatherings, holiday celebrations or other family activities to share. The laughter, hugs, guidance, advice, sense of security and those opportunities to say ‘I love you’ are forever gone.

“One of the hardest things for me is knowing the pain and fear that Kathleen must have suffered at the time of her murder. The horror and betrayal she must have felt when she realized that someone she had trusted and loved more than anything was actually killing her. I wonder if she could feel her heart breaking when she thought about leaving her two boys forever. The helplessness she must have felt knowing she was going to die.

“I have to say it hurts a lot. I hope it gets better, but I am not confident it will get better. I still talk to her. I hope she can hear me.”

Susan Doman described her sister as a “rock” and told the court she looked up to Savio, even though Savio was younger. She also expressed her anger toward Peterson.

“He showed no remorse,” she said. “For years I watched Peterson parade on TV, radio, photo shoots, and (that) radio promotion to win a date with him. That was a big joke to him. And he loved all the attention.

“Your honor, the defendant shows no remorse to this day for the horrible crime that he did to my sister Kathleen. This senseless action is inexcusable. I am placing my trust that you will give Kathleen justice once and for all.”

The judge also read a statement from Savio’s father, but not aloud.

In arguing for a maximum sentence, Glasgow reminded the judge about the damage done to his young children with Stacy. Prosecutors have said they believe Peterson killed Stacy and could seek charges in that case.

"Not only is their mother gone, but also their father is gone, as he sits before you," Glasgow said.

Glasgow said Peterson also should not get a break for living a law- abiding life because of his attacks on his second wife, when he threatened to kill her.

"There's a recurring them here with Mr. Peterson. He’s a police officer, and there's a number of occurrences with the victims here being afraid to call the police department.

"These are obviously very dangerous situation, and in this case, led to the demise of two young women."

Peterson’s second wife, Victoria Connolly, in 1992, woke up in the middle of the night and found him standing over her, staring at her, Glasgow said.

"You want to terrorize a women, that's how you do it. You let her know that any time, any place, she's yours. And that's what he did."

Glasgow noted that Peterson has a letter from a women's shelter thanking him for assisting victims of domestic violence.

"'It is apparent that you take domestic violence as a terrible criminal act,'" Glasgow said, quoting the letter. "It is incredibly ironic that this is in his packet, when his actions in his private life were completely the opposite case."

Glasgow said that Peterson, as a police officer, had a duty to serve and protect other people, but instead abused his authority and used it to intimidate, cause harm and cover up his actions.

"Obviously he violated that oath at the highest level. He betrayed the public trust, the sacred trust. And that, judge, is what I think you can place the highest weight on when you contemplate an appropriate sentence in this case.

"This sentence needs to send a very strong message that ... this breach of trust continually throughout his career will not be tolerated.

"We would ask for a sentence in the higher range of what is available," Glasgow said.

Defense attorney Joseph Lopez then argued for a lenient sentence for his client.

Lopez reminded the judge that Peterson will have to serve 100 percent of his sentence, not a percentage of it. And he reminded the judge that the primary goal of prison is "restoring a person to useful citizenship."

"Another goal of sentencing, as the court knows, is deterrence," Lopez said.

But crimes committed by jealous lovers or spouses happen all the time, and sending Peterson, who maintains his innocence, to prison for the rest of his life won't stop that, Lopez said.

"This is as old as the beginning of the birth of emotions such as jealously and rage," Lopez said. "It's not going to have any deterrent, because it happens over and over again."

Lopez said that even a 20 year sentence -- the minimum in this case -- may be a life sentence for Peterson.

The fact that Peterson has no prior criminal history, either as a juvenile or an adult, is a reason for the judge to consider a lower sentence, Lopez said.

"The state is right: Drew has led a law-abiding life until this moment, or I should say, until the moment he was convicted," he said. "But Drew has done some good things in his life."

He began working for Burger King at age 15, then a shoe store, and then entered the U.S. Army after a stint in junior college studying law enforcement. He attained the rank of Private E-4 before he was honorably discharged as a military police officer, Lopez said.

He applied for a job with the Bolingbrook Police Department in 1975 while still in the Army, and after he was hired, gained a reputation as a thorough investigator who was willing to help less-experienced officers, Lopez said.

Even Glasgow commended him in a 1994 letter thanking him for his efforts that led to the conviction of a man who killed his wife, Lopez said.

"Professionally, on the street, Mr. Peterson was a good police officer.

"He did this for 30 years, and that has to be something that the court takes into consideration."

"Every couple has arguments, and some are more volatile than others," he said, referring to Peterson's alleged attacks on his second wife, Victoria Connelly, and Savio prior to her death.

He argued that the judge should not make too much of that, noting that some couples handle disputes differently than others.

Lopez also said the judge should look at Peterson's relationships with his children, one of whom -- Tom -- testified on his father's behalf at trial. Kathleen Savio was Tom’s mother.

"Drew loved his children more than he hated any of the women in this case," Lopez said. "He would never do anything to hurt his children."

Drew is not going to commit any other crimes, and still maintains Savio's death was an accident, Lopez said.

"There's still no physical evidence that Drew Peterson did anything to Kathy Savio."

Lopez argued that an excessive sentence would create great hardship for his children.

"They'd be deprived of having any real relationship with their father," he said. "If the court gave him a sentence of 20, (the younger) children would be adults by the time he gets out of prison.

"Some people might argue he has only himself to blame, it's his fault. ... They can argue that all they want, but it still hurts the children."

Defense attorneys had argued their client deserved a new trial because former lead attorney Joel Brodsky’s inept performance violated Peterson’s right to a fair trial. But Burmila denied their motion this afternoon after two days of arguments.

"It was clear to the court from the very beginning that Mr. Brodsky was out of his depth," Burmila said. But the judge noted that Peterson was represented by five other attorneys. "Each of these attorneys brought something to the table."

As they entered the courthouse this afternoon, Peterson’s attorneys had expressed confidence they would be granted a new trial. Attorneys David Peilet and Steve Greenberg said their arguments regarding ineffective counsel and conflict of interest were powerful reasons to grant a new trial.

“I’m not much of a prognosticator, but if we don’t get a new trial here, we’ll get one from the next court,” said Greenberg.

The hearing on a motion for a new trial began Tuesday and centered primarily on Brodsky's trial decision to call Wheaton divorce attorney Harry Smith, who represented Savio in her bitter divorce fight with Peterson and also fielded a call from Stacy about her divorce options shortly before she vanished.

Smith testified at trial that Stacy had asked him if the fact that Peterson killed his third wife could be used as leverage in a divorce.

Several jurors said after trial that the testimony from Smith convinced them of Peterson's guilt. There was no physical evidence tying Peterson to Savio's death, which was initially treated as an accident.

“It was an awful decision,” Greenberg argued in court. “It ruined the case -- we brought out the worst possible evidence, and the best evidence for the state.”

mwalberg@tribune.com

sschmadeke@tribune.com


2 Cook County jail officers had inmate beaten up

Source

Cops: 2 Cook County jail officers had inmate beaten up

10:23 p.m. CST, February 21, 2013

Two Cook County Jail officers who got two inmates to beat up a third after the second one was disruptive and tried to light a cigarette in a broken electrical box have been charged in the case today.

Delphia A. Sawyer, 31, and Pamela R. Bruce, 30, were both charged with official misconduct, obstructing justice, perjury, and mob action, according to a release from the Cook County Sheriff’s office. They were arrested and relieved of their deputy positions this morning. They have both worked for the office since 2006.

In February 2012, the sheriff’s office was told that the two officers, who were working in Division X at Cook County Jail, had brought together two inmates and “knowingly facilitated” them beating up a third, according to the release.

The inmate who was beaten up had been yelling at the officers, as well as trying to light a cigarette on a broken electrical plate, Sheriff’s spokesman Frank Bilecki said.

The Sheriff’s Office of Professional Review investigated, and Sawyer, of the 8700 block of Covington Drive in Justice, and Bruce, of the first block of East 87 th Street, were expected to appear in bond court on Friday.

chicagobreaking@tribune.com Twitter: @ChicagoBreaking


More on those photo radar bandits!!!!!

Redflex Traffic Systems fires VP, sues him over Chicago scandal

Source

Red-light camera firm fires VP, sues him over Chicago scandal

By David Kidwell, Chicago Tribune reporter

7:41 p.m. CST, February 21, 2013

Embattled red-light camera vendor Redflex Traffic Systems Inc. fired its executive vice president Wednesday and accused him of misconduct involving the company's scandal-plagued Chicago contract.

Reeling from the crippling loss of that contract and the expanding corruption investigation, Arizona-based Redflex filed a lawsuit against the former top executive that lays much of the blame for the company's troubles on his "dishonest and unethical conduct" over a number of years.

The lawsuit marks a turnabout for Redflex officials, who dismissed similar allegations about Aaron Rosenberg after they were brought up more than two years ago in an internal letter to the board of directors for the company's Australian parent company.

Now they are acknowledging what the lawsuit calls a "protracted and covert scheme" to misappropriate company funds over a period of years.

Company officials have said an "exhaustive, deep dive" internal investigation in 2010 found no merit to the whistle-blower allegations that the executive lavished company-paid trips on the Chicago official who oversaw the Redflex contract as part of a broader attempt to improperly court favor.

But the company failed to tell City Hall about the accusations until last year, when the Chicago Tribune obtained the letter and began its own investigation. Even then, the company stood by the results of its internal probe and said the executive vice president had made a one-time mistake for which he was disciplined.

Those early revelations prompted Mayor Rahm Emanuel to ban Redflex from competing for a new speed camera program and refer the matter to city Inspector General Joseph Ferguson.

Amid growing questions about the company's conduct, the Emanuel administration recently announced it would not renew Redflex's red-light contract, which accounts for about 13 percent of the company's worldwide revenue and will expire this summer. The company's stock price in Australia has plummeted since the first stories, and its leaders have promised to regain the trust of its largest North American client.

"This company has pledged to take corrective action regarding unethical employee conduct in Chicago," Robert DeVincenzi, CEO of parent company Redflex Holdings Ltd., said in a written statement to the Tribune late Wednesday explaining the firing.

"Today we terminated the employment of the executive vice president of business development because our internal investigation revealed that he was violating company policies," he said. "Our inquiry is continuing and other corrective actions will be announced in the near future."

DeVincenzi — who took over the company in September — declined to elaborate or respond to questions.

Rosenberg did not return telephone messages.

The scandal now enveloping the company centers on its relationship to former Chicago transportation official John Bills, who retired in 2011 after overseeing the company's contract since it began in 2003.

The internal letter said Bills received lavish vacations directly on the expense report of Rosenberg and raised questions about inappropriate ties between Bills and a Redflex consultant who received more than $570,000 in company commissions.

Bills and the consultant, a longtime friend, have denied any wrongdoing.

The company told the Tribune in October that its investigation in 2010 found only one instance of an inadvertent expenditure for Bills, a two-day hotel stay at the Arizona Biltmore expensed by Rosenberg. Redflex general counsel Andrejs Bunkse told the newspaper that the company responded by sending Rosenberg to "anti-bribery" training and overhauling company expense procedures.

But after additional Tribune reports, the company hired a former Chicago inspector general, David Hoffman, to conduct another investigation. Hoffman made an interim report of his findings to company board members this month. That report prompted the company officials to acknowledge a much deeper involvement with Bills, including thousands of dollars for trips to the Super Bowl and White Sox spring training over many years.

The chairman of the company's Australian board of directors resigned, trading on company stock was temporarily suspended and the company acknowledged that it's sharing information with law enforcement.

The company informed employees of Rosenberg's departure in an internal memo Wednesday that asked them to cease further communication with him on company matters. The company also filed a lawsuit against Rosenberg in Arizona Superior Court in Phoenix seeking damages from the man it once credited for much of its expansion in the U.S.

"Mr. Rosenberg engaged in a protracted and covert scheme to misappropriate funds from Redflex through the submission to the company of false requests for expense reimbursement," the suit alleges. "Mr. Rosenberg's conduct was intentional, outrageous and committed with an evil mind with the intent of causing injury to and/or in deliberate disregard of the unjustifiably substantial risk of significant harm to Redflex."

The suit also alleged Rosenberg's "dishonest and unethical conduct has substantially harmed Redflex's business reputation and goodwill throughout the United States and has and will continue to cause Redflex significant damage."

The lawsuit also seeks relief from defamation claims it said Rosenberg has made privately to the company through his lawyers.

dkidwell@tribune.com


California judges make case for smaller juries

Of course smaller juries mean it is easier for the government to get convictions.

And of course in addition to saving money by hiring less jurors, that would also increase revenue from fines by increasing convictions.

Source

State judges make case for smaller juries

Bob Egelko

Published 10:46 pm, Thursday, February 21, 2013

A defendant's right to be tried by a jury of 12 people in criminal cases has been enshrined in California's Constitution since statehood. But judges say the state can no longer afford it.

With court funding evaporating, the California Judges Association is endorsing a state constitutional amendment that would shrink juries from 12 to eight members for misdemeanors, crimes punishable by up to a year in jail.

Judges are also proposing legislation that would cut the number of prosecutors' and defense attorneys' challenges to prospective jurors, likewise in the interest of saving time and thus money.

"It's time to be serious about efficiencies," said Mike Belote, the association's lobbyist. He said both measures would be introduced soon in the Legislature.

Passage of a constitutional amendment, which requires a two-thirds majority in both houses and approval by a majority of state voters, would be difficult, Belote said, but "it's an important subject at a time that the judicial system is in crisis."

Trial by judge

[The reason our forefathers in England created juries is because they knew that judges are biased toward the government. And the only way a person could get a fair trial is with an unbiased jury.]

A committee of presiding Superior Court judges wants to go further and eliminate jury trials altogether for misdemeanors punishable by less than six months in jail. Those cases would be heard by a judge. Juries would be reduced to eight members for other misdemeanors and civil suits.

"The biggest complaint we get is the time wasted by the legal system in the process of impaneling jurors," said Rene Chouteau, the Sonoma County judge who chaired the committee. [Sure that is what the state says. Of course a defense lawyer knows that is the only way to get an unbiased jury!!!]

He said the changes would benefit not only the courts but also the 1.5 million Californians who report for jury service each year. Fewer of them would be picked for juries, they would spend less time in court, and they might be more willing to show up in the future, Chouteau said. [And of course it would not benefit the people on trial at all, because a smaller jury or a trail by judge means innocent people are more likely to be falsely convicted]

Foremost among the opponents are defense lawyers, who say smaller juries are less diverse - by race, gender, background and viewpoint - and thus less representative.

"What you're giving up is the constitutional guarantee that you're going to be tried by a jury of your peers," said San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi. "There are not as many individuals scrutinizing the evidence, and there are fewer minorities."

Studies in other states, where smaller juries are common, have found that they increase the chance of an erroneous conviction, Adachi said. A 2004 study by the National Center for State Courts concluded that smaller juries would save money but "likely be less representative of the community."

OK from high court

But the U.S. Supreme Court, in a series of rulings since 1970, has upheld convictions by juries with as few as six members. The Justice Department says 39 states authorize juries with fewer than 12 members, mostly for misdemeanor cases.

The 12-juror standard can be traced back at least to 17th century England, where legal authority Edward Coke suggested its roots lay in "holy writ," such as biblical references to 12 tribes and 12 apostles.

California requires 12-member juries for felonies but allows smaller juries in misdemeanors and civil suits if both sides agree.

The state's courts are hurting financially after four years of budget cuts totaling $1.2 billion. Gov. Jerry Brown's 2013-14 budget avoids further reductions but would require trial courts to spend $200 million from their reserves to hold the line.

Potential savings

Belote said the courts could save tens of millions of dollars each year by making juries smaller and reducing juror challenges in all but the most serious criminal cases. [Another way to keep falsely convicted people in prison, allow biased jurors to go unchallenged!] Chouteau's committee of presiding judges estimated the savings at $5.1 million, and said the financial benefits of spending less time in court would be much greater for prospective jurors and their employers.

Adachi said he was skeptical about substantial savings, and questioned "sacrificing the quality of justice to meet a budget."

California's prosecutors support smaller juries but join with their defense counterparts to oppose any reduction in lawyers' challenges to prospective jurors. Each side now can dismiss as many as 10 jurors without giving a reason - or 20 in cases carrying a potential death or life sentence - in what are known as peremptory challenges.

"We have to get a unanimous jury verdict" for a conviction, said Scott Thorpe, executive director of the California District Attorneys Association. "Jury selection is critical to us, so we can make sure we don't have jurors who have an agenda."

Bob Egelko is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. E-mail: begelko@sfchronicle.com


 

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