Saturday :: June 11, 2005
Missing Alabama Teen: 'Something Bad Happened'

One of the three young men arrested yesterday in the Aruba disappearance of Alabama teen Natalie Holloway, has told police "something bad happened" to her and is leading police to the beach and lighthouse where they had taken her after leaving Carlos 'N Charlies.

The AP and CNN initially reported the teen had confessed to killing her, and now have amended their statement to say he said "something bad happened" to her.

Police aren't saying which of the three made the admission. Two of the three are brothers, and the third is the 17 year old son of a man about to become a judge who had become romantically involved with Holloway during her trip.

Meanwhile, the two black security guards who had alibis are still in jail. They were arrested when the three said they had dropped Natalie back off at the hotel and saw a "dark colored" man approach her.

The police said the two black guards were not cooperative. How could they be if they didn't know anything about the incident?

Now you know what will be on cable news all weekend...

12:24 AM |  PermalinkCrimes in the NewsComments (8)
Friday :: June 10, 2005
Bush Names Civil Liberties Board

The 9/11 Commission recommended the establishment of a civil liberties board to ensure our rights weren't trampled in the conduct of the war on terror. Bush has faced criticism for dragging his feet in appointing a chair to the board. Today he named the chair and several members.

Bush picked Texas lawyer Carol Dinkins, who was deputy attorney general under former President Reagan, to chair the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, and Alan Charles Raul, an administration official in the former Bush and Clinton administrations, to be vice chairman.

The other members chosen by Bush were: Lanny Davis, once a crisis manager in the Clinton White House; former Solicitor General Ted Olson; and General Electric Co. executive Francis X. Taylor, a former head of diplomatic security and counterterrorism coordinator at the State Department.

Ted Olsen, whose wife was killed in the 9/11 attacks, who represented the Administration before the Supreme Court as Solicitor General in defending the Administration's enemy combatant policy?

Alan Charles Raul, former Associate White House counsel to President Reagan, and a supporter of the Administration's enemy combatant policy, has been lobbying for the position since right after the Sept. 11 attacks. Here is an op-ed he wrote, titled "Cheer Ashcroft On, With a Little Friendly Oversight; A civil liberties panel would help quell the naysayers in the fight against terrorism" for the Los Angeles Times (December 5, 2001, available on Lexis.com)

MORE...
07:46 PM |  PermalinkWar on TerrorComments (6)
Trinidad and Tobago to Resume Hangings

Via CrimProf Blog:

John Jeremie, the AG of Trindad and Tobago, told Parliament this week that he will resume hanging convicts on death row as soon as they exhaust their appeals. Jeremie said the hangings are necessary to fight the recent upswing in crime. "The Government recognises that our people have grown tired of plans, talk and discussions of the problems ...today the Government states in forthright and unambiguous terms that we are at war with each and every criminal in Trinidad and Tobago," said Jeremie.

Jeremie also stated that if the courts intervene, the AG's office will do everything in its power to hang every person on death row.

06:14 PM |  PermalinkForeign AffairsComments (2)
Michael Jackson: Jury Recesses, No Verdict

Verdict Watch, Day 6
Friday, June 9, 2005

The jury has recessed for the weekend without a verdict. There are 2,200 journalists on site.

This is not a surprise. 28 hours of deliberations is not excessive by any stretch, given the 100 pages of jury instructions, 130 witnesses, 14 weeks of testimony and the complex verdict form.

05:12 PM |  PermalinkCrimes in the NewsComments (0)
Sensenbrenner Cuts Mikes During Patriot Act Hearing

Update: Sensenbrenner storms out of hearing, gavel in hand. Crooks and Liars has the video.

[Rep. Jerome] Nadler said Sensenbrenner, one of the authors of the Patriot Act, was "rather rude, cutting everybody off in mid-sentence with an attitude of total hostility."

*******
Original Post:

Raw Story has the details:

A furor erupted after Republican House Judiciary Chairman F. James Sensenbrenner shut off the microphones during a hearing on the Patriot Act Friday, accusing Democrats of raising issues unrelated to the Act such as treatment of detainees at Guantanamo Bay, RAW STORY has learned.

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04:19 PM |  PermalinkPolitics - OtherComments (30)
Geldof Live 8 Conference Call Audio Now Online

The entire telephone conference call bloggers had Monday with Sir Bob Geldof about Live 8 is now available here. You really should listen, particularly to Geldof's talk at the beginning. He has an amazing amount of knowledge about Africa and its problems and what we can do to help.

Happy birthday to Joe Trippi. For his birthday, he'd like you to go over to One.Org and learn more about Live 8. Remember, they don't want your money, only your voice. Sign the One Declaration.

Let's help Make Poverty History. Live 8. July 2.

MORE...
04:19 PM |  PermalinkMediaComments (0)
House Medical Marijuana Vote Tuesday

According to Marijuana Policy Project, a critical vote in the House on medical marijuana will take place Tuesday. Take a moment to visit MPP or NORML and urge your Representatives to support the Hinchey-Rohrabacher medical marijuana amendment to the Justice and other departments' appropriations bill when it comes to the House floor on Tuesday, June 14. The Amendment would:

....prohibit the DOJ and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) from spending taxpayers' dollars for the purpose of pursuing "any criminal or civil penalty or remedy against any person for the production, distribution, or use of marijuana for medicinal purposes in a state that authorizes that production, distribution, or use."

Background here. Marijuana Policy Project's action page is here.

11:44 AM |  PermalinkLegislationComments (11)
Is Newest Bush Nominee a Bigot?

Think Progress reports that the person that Bush wants to put in charge of human resources at the State Department has had offensive, bigoted things to say about every major ethnic group.

On May 10, 2005, the current director of the U.S. Mint, Henrietta Holsman Fore, was nominated by President Bush to be the next Under Secretary of State for Management.

....The position of Under Secretary of Management is a vital one, as described by the State Department’s website. It is responsible for leading the offices of administration and human resources, which deal with the hiring and firing of personnel. Fore’s nomination to this post has raised many concerns due to her record of making racially-insensitive remarks.

More over at Peek, Alternet's blog.

11:27 AM |  PermalinkPolitics - OtherComments (3)
Bush Grants Seven Pardons This Week

According to this DOJ press release, President Bush granted seven pardons this week. Law Professor Ellen Podgor of White Collar Crime Blog has the breakdown and analysis.

The pardons are mostly for "white collar" offenses, but one marijuana defendant from Texas is in the group. I wonder if an enterprising reporter or blogger will uncover a connection between Bush and this pardonee:

James Edward Reed
Kaufman, Texas
Offense: Conspiracy to possess
with intent to distribute marijuana; 21 U.S.C. § 846.
Sentence: January 10, 1975; Northern District of Texas;
18 months imprisonment; two years special parole.

Update: Could he have any connection to Bush White House political director Ron Kaufman? Never mind, Kaufman is the city in Texas, not the pardoned man's name. Thanks to the commenter who pointed this out.

09:37 AM |  PermalinkInmates and PrisonsComments (17)
Affidavit Changed in Lodi Terror Case

The most sensationalized details in the charges against the Lodi, CA terror defendants have been deleted from the final Affidavit filed with the court.

The first version of the affidavit released to media organizations Tuesday by the Department of Justice in Washington said potential terrorist targets included hospitals and stores and contained names of key individuals and statements about the international origins of "hundreds" of participants in alleged Al Qaeda terrorist training camps inside Pakistan.

MORE...
09:26 AM |  PermalinkTerror TrialsComments (1)
Time to Support Howard Dean

TalkLeft has never been a "Deaniac." He was not my choice for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 2004. But I agree with Kos and Atrios, we need to support him, and the Democratic party, now. Give generously.

Update: Jann Wenner weighs in on the Dean flap at the Huffington Post - and he's right.

Karl Rove, Ken Mehlman, and Tom DeLay don't even have to bother attacking Howard Dean anymore; their work is being done for them by the stalwarts of what's left of the Democratic Party establishment.

....the bottom line effect of all this sniping is to marginalize and shame Dean for speaking a truth that the Republicans do not wish spoken or given credence. Our guys are doing the work of the so-called GOP Echo Machine.

08:07 AM |  PermalinkPolitics - OtherComments (19)
Nancy Pelosi Interview

Raw Story has an exclusive interview with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. She praises blogs, and says of the MSM:

The House Democratic leader made striking comments about the mainstream media, even asserting that reporters had told her journalists couldn’t tell the Democrats’ story because they feared losing access.

“I’ve had reporters say to me, I have orthodontia, I have tuition, I have mortgage, I need access, I’m not writing your story,” Pelosi remarked.

07:48 AM |  PermalinkPolitics - OtherComments (4)
Eliot Spitzer Loses a Round

After a five-week high profile trial, a jury has returned a verdict of "not guilty" against former Bank of America Corp. broker Theodore Sihpol ... The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription only):

Former Bank of America Corp. broker Theodore Sihpol was found not guilty of improperly trading mutual funds, in the first real courtroom test of New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer's campaign against financial fraud.

.... The acquittal is a high-profile setback for Mr. Spitzer, who has made a name for himself while largely avoiding the courtroom. He has extracted multimillion-dollar settlements from corporate defendants, forced executives to resign and launched sweeping changes of practices on Wall Street and in the mutual-fund and insurance industries. Buoyed by his victories and the cheers of supporters, Mr. Spitzer has announced plans to run for governor in 2006.

MORE...
12:10 AM |  PermalinkCrimes in the NewsComments (1)
Thursday :: June 09, 2005
Vietnam to Execute Australian Heroin Smuggler

The Ho Chi Minh City People's Court yesterday sentenced 46 year old Australian Mai Cong Thanh, a native of Vietnam, to death for smuggling approximately 2 kilograms of heroin into Vietnam in loudspeakers. He is the second Austrailian to be sentenced to death in a year.

Vietnam, which has vowed to get tougher on drugs, launched a nationwide police crackdown this month on social vices such as prostitution and drugs abuse.

Meanwhile, in Bali, the Bali Nine were taken back to the airport and made to reenact the crime for police. It's a peculiarity of Indonesian law, that in deciding which charges to bring against a suspect, the police can force him or her to reenact the crime.

MORE...
08:52 PM |  PermalinkForeign AffairsComments (12)
Colombia Considers Killer Moths to Wipe Out Coca Plants

The Colombian Government says is considering a newly proposed plan to eradicate the country's coca fields:

A group of Colombian scientists believe they've found a way to wipe out cocaine production: unleash an army of hungry moth caterpillars. But critics of the proposal say the chance for "ecological mischief" is high.

The plan envisions breeding thousands of beige-colored Eloria Noyesi moths in laboratories, packing them into boxes and releasing them into steamy coca-growing regions of Colombia, the world's main supplier of the drug. The moths, about twice the size of a fly, are native only to the Andean region of South America.

The moths would be better than infecting the plants with a fungus (tried in the past):

.... moths would better counter the replanting problem because they would continue to reproduce and attack the plants.

I can't wait to see the movie version.

[link via Huffington Post.]

08:37 PM |  PermalinkForeign AffairsComments (25)
300 Agents Take Down the Bandidos

What's up with this? 300 agents in a choreographed simulcast bust the Bandidos in the Western U.S? Why not Osama? Oh, it's the ATF, the folks that brought us Ruby Ridge and Waco. Never mind.

Today more than 300 federal, state and local law enforcement officers have teamed up to execute 21 search warrants and 32 arrest warrants across the Northwest. This investigation centered in Bellingham, Washington, addresses federal firearm and narcotic violations, allegedly committed by members or associates of the Bandidos Outlaw Motorcycle Organization. Additional search and arrest warrants are being executed in the states of Montana & South Dakota.

08:23 PM |  PermalinkCrimes in the NewsComments (10)
'Draft Edward Prado' for Supreme Court Justice

Say hello to "Draft Edward Prado for Supreme Court Justice." Judge Prado is the only Bush nominee to an appeals court that I have endorsed. He'd make a great Supreme Court Justice.

In 2003, Judge Prado made Sen. Schumer's short list of nominees contained in this letter to President Bush.

06:06 PM |  PermalinkJudiciaryComments (1)
Anti-Rape 'Rat Trap'

In the "you can't make this stuff up" department....A battle is brewing in South Africa over an anti-rape device planned to be sold along side of tampons in supermarkets. It was designed by a woman.

The tampon-like device, invented by a woman, supposedly protects women from rapists by cutting into a man’s p*nis.

Feministing has more.

04:08 PM |  PermalinkOff TopicComments (11)
Former Stripper Wins Judicial Election

A former stripper in Nevada has won an election for a municipal court judgeship. Good for her.

Ex-stripper Diana Hampton will soon have something new to wear — judicial robes. Hampton was elected to the Municipal Court in Henderson on Tuesday, defeating Michael Miller in a run-off by 176 votes.

Hampton, 39, had acknowledged during the campaign that she worked at a Las Vegas striptease club to help pay her way through college 14 years ago. She called it "a fact of life" and said she hoped the interest it drew to her candidacy would eventually die down.

Update: And a former dominatrix is pondering a 2006 run for Governor of Nevada.

04:04 PM |  PermalinkJudiciaryComments (16)
Nixon-Felt Tape Recording Released

Unlike Mark Felt, I didn't get a chuckle out of this taped conversation between Felt and then President Nixon over the arrest of the shooting suspect of former Gov. George Wallace:

The May 15, 1972, phone call is believed to be the only tape-recorded conversation between Nixon and Felt, the No. 2 FBI official. Nixon expressed satisfaction when Felt told him the suspect had some cuts and bruises.

"I hope they worked him over a little bit more than that," Nixon said.

"I think they did pretty well," Felt, who now lives in Santa Rosa, responded with a chuckle.

04:01 PM |  PermalinkPolitics - OtherComments (9)
Senators Respond to Bush's Patriot Act Speech

Bump and Update: Senators Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Larry Craig (R-ID)respond to Bush's speech on the Patriot Act (received by e-mail):

We voted for the PATRIOT Act and agree with President Bush that it should be reauthorized. But we must strike a careful balance -- improving our nation’s security while also protecting individual Americans’ liberties.”

“Congress should revise the PATRIOT Act to protect the constitutional rights of American citizens while preserving the powers law enforcement needs to fight terrorism. The Craig-Durbin Security and Freedom Enhancement (SAFE) Act would accomplish this goal. It is a narrowly-tailored bipartisan bill that would revise several provisions of the PATRIOT Act. The SAFE Act would not repeal a single provision of the PATRIOT Act. It would retain all of the additional authorities created by the PATRIOT Act but place important limits on these authorities.”

“We are on opposite sides of the political spectrum, but we have come together to safeguard the civil liberties that every American values. We want to mend the PATRIOT Act, not end it. The great challenge of our age is combating terrorism while remaining true to our Constitution. The SAFE Act will help us to meet that challenge.”

MORE...
William Pryor Confirmed as 11th Circuit Judge

The Senate today confirmed William Pryor as a Judge on the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. Here's what the Times had to say about him after his 2004 recess appointment. More reasons Pryor was opposed are here.

The Senate will take up William Meyers next, whom I refer to as the "fall guy" in the Senate compromise. He'll probably be confirmed - the compromisers just didn't guarantee it.

If anyone expected Arlen Specter to be a balancing force, see TChris's post here and what Dobson said here.

MORE...
02:58 PM |  PermalinkJudiciaryComments (5)
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