2008-11-07

Police Recruits: young, armed, dangerous, horny

New recruits figure out they can get away with almost anything as long as they don't break ranks. That feeling of "anything goes" lasts entire police careers.

::::::::

The State Police in many, or most, states are White and Male. Connecticut is no exception, and might just show what is most wrong with our nation's policing.

If women are raped, especially in downtown area, officers can threaten the victims with arrest for making a "false statement", if officers are too lazy to do an actual investigation. When officers rape, assault, rob, murder, and are responsible for murders and mayhem, officers aren't even investigated. [video of hearing testimony]

Bill Collins, the former mayor of Norwalk, Connecticut, talks about officers wearing ski masks abducting citizens to beat them at waterfront warehouses, officers throwing beer bottles on his porch, vandalizing his house, and putting up police union stickers on his vehicles and house. [video of official testimony]

In Connecticut, the State Police have a "100 Club", where an officer belongs to the special club, and can go on golf outings, if he has more than 100 driving while drunk, or impaired, arrests (DUI, DWI, OUI). [info on 100 club]

A false arrest can land a citizen in prison. It can mean job, home, and family loss. Taxes being paid in by an individual stop, and he, or she, is now a burden on taxpayers based on a false report, false arrest, lies to be part of a club!

A prison sentence can mean a citizen is ruined for life, never trusting authorities again. Maybe the citizen will never support a family, be productive, or even pay taxes, ever again. All over "fun in a club".

If police will lie, falsify and manufacture evidence to arrest citizens for driving while drunk and for drugs, they will alter and fix ANY case. If police, police themselves, police aren't policed.

A campaign manager for the rival party's governor choice, can mean being placed on the secret police "Enemies List". Kenneth Krayeske, also a journalist was placed on "the list", and arrested on sight. [story]

Connecticut State Police Colonel Lynch was allegedly asked to change an official police report. The heirs of Neil Esposito, wanted the millions of Neil's money. Esposito and been died driving drunk and Heather Specyalski was allegedly performing oral sex on him at the time of the crash. I assume there was evidence of this as Heather was in coma for months following the accident. [story]

So, if an important doner to former Republican Connecticut Governor John G. Rowland requests an official State Police investigation be changed, orders from the top will see that it will. These "law enforcement" can't be trusted when they come up with DNA and other lab results when they can just alter official reports. They're willing to put an innocent woman in prison for manslaughter at the request of the rich and powerful.

If a police officer breaks ranks with other officers by actually protecting and serving the public, caring about the law, he can get felony arrested and his sons can be hauled out of his house to be beaten at the State Police HQ. For police to retaliate against police who break ranks, the courts ALSO, have to be rigged. [story]

Judicial Branch employees can blow the whistle on judges and judicial managers rigging cases, racketeering, obstructing justice, nepotism, bid rigging, the altering of court hard drives, retaliation, and felonies committed. The "public comment" will then be sealed and the "mouthy" employees will be retaliated against. [CT Judicial Branch whistle blower video]

Every citizen who I know who has proposed Civilian Oversight of Police has been terrorized out of the state, into silence, and/or is falsely arrested and imprisoned. Richard "Ritt" Goldstein proposed Civilian Oversight of Police to the Connecticut Judiciary Committee assembling international experts on the subject and victims of Connecticut State Police misconduct and brutality. Ritt fled to Sweden seeking political asylum, so terrorized by police after making [this video].

Police use state registered confidential informants to kill, beat up, and terrorize citizens making misconduct complaints. [video of an informant under oath]

The police misconduct only gets worse with each passing year. There is more technology, more money, more of them, and less and less oversight and accountability. We have "Black Water"-style policing inside the US. God help us all ...

My beefs can be found in "Faces of a Police State".

-Steven G. Erickson

[links to police, attorney, prosecutorial, and judicial misconduct stories]

[video, witness to the basics of police retaliation]

OBAMAJUANA

Let's Get Really High on Change. Let's End the Drug War.

How pleasant, to be alive as the old regime gasps its final breaths!
No, no, no, nurse, the morphine drip won't be necessary. I'm enjoying
every last painful second of it. Not that the Obama landslide marks
the final end of the ancien regime. The president-elect remains
deeply indebted to Wall Street aristocrats, as evidenced by his
enthusiastic support for the taxpayer-funded $750 billion bailout of
the very same banksters who crashed the world economy with their $500
trillion pyramid scheme. Still, to borrow Obama's primary campaign
themes, we can hope his relentless move to the center this summer was
simply a ruse to get elected and real progressive change is just
around the corner.

There'd be no better place to start and achieve immediate results
than dismantling America's disastrous drug policies and the prison
industrial complex along with it. Since Nancy Reagan just said "no,"
California's prison population has more than doubled. Thanks in part
to mandatory-minimum sentencing laws, there are currently 30,000
Californians incarcerated for nonviolent drug offenses, a
disproportionate number of them people of color. Our prisons are
operating at double their designed capacity. The response by federal
and state officials, Republican and Democrat? Build more prisons. Get
tougher on crime.

Proposition 5 aimed to change all that. Which is why every public
official with their fingers in the prison industrial complex's pie,
from the drug czar John Walters to Sen. Dianne Feinstein to
Sacramento County District Attorney Jan Scully, vehemently opposed it.

Forgotten amid the controversy over Prop. 8, the patently
unconstitutional anti-gay marriage initiative, Prop. 5 would
decriminalize marijuana use and offer more rehabilitation services to
nonviolent drug offenders, substantially altering the state's
approach. As SN&R reported last week, after an initial outlay of $2.5
billion, the program would pay for itself. But you'd never guess that
watching Feinstein's commercial against the measure.

Feinstein must take her fashion cues from the same geniuses who
dreamed up the color-coded Homeland Security Advisory System. Here's
Diane in her powder-blue blouse advising us to vote against Prop. 8,
because all discrimination is bad. Here's Diane in her fire-engine
red blazer advising us to be tough on crime and vote against Prop. 5,
even though the ongoing prosecution of the drug war is inherently
discriminatory.

Never mind the commercial was paid for by the prison guards union.
Never mind that her husband, billionaire war profiteer Richard
Blum--who along with CEO Ronald Tutor holds 75 percent of the voting
stock for Perini Corporation--has made a fortune building military
bases, prisons and casinos. Perhaps the latter explains why the
state's American Indian tribes also sponsored the commercial.

On the home drug-war front, Sacramento took a back seat in its quest
to become a world-class city in September, when the Fresno County
Board of Supervisors voted to adopt the state's medical-marijuana
I.D. card system, the 41st county to do so. By remaining one of only
17 counties that have declined to adopt the system, the Sacramento
County Board of Supervisors is not only potentially endangering the
lives of patients by limiting their access to medicine, it's making
the lives of local law enforcement more difficult, since they have no
way of easily validating a patient's medical recommendation.

Fortunately, cooler heads have prevailed at the Sacramento Police
Department. According to SPD spokesman Matt Young, "We encourage our
officers to consider the 'spirit of the law' vs. the 'letter of the
law,' and handle each event on an ad hoc basis."

Federally, possession of over 28.5 grams is a misdemeanor; less than
that is an infraction. However, Young says, "If we stop a person with
what an officer can articulate as an amount a user would have--there
are no indication of sales--and they have a doctor's recommendation,
whether or not they are on their way from a dispensary, we have the
discretion not to cite or arrest. Our tendency would be to do nothing
and send them on their way, with their marijuana, since if it is
later determined that the person was entitled to the marijuana, the
police department is liable for its return. If we can't return it,
then we can be responsible for the monetary loss."

Pity a majority of the county board of supes can't share the same
enlightened views of our local constables. Before his move to the
center this summer, Obama indicated that he favors reforming our drug
laws, including the decriminalization of marijuana. Let's hope change
really is in the air, and we're not just all smoking dope.

--------
November-L is a ONE-WAY voluntary announcement mailing
list of the November Coalition.
To unsubscribe, visit http://www.november.org/lists/ or send a
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the command "unsubscribe"

Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Pubdate: Thu, 6 Nov 2008
Source: Sacramento News & Review (CA)
Column: Race to the Bottom
Copyright: 2008 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact: sactoletters@newsreview.com
Website: http://newsreview.com/sacto/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/540
Author: R. V. Scheide
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Obama
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Marijuana - Popular)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John)

2008-11-06

Censorship in the Western Media: What they Don't Want You to Know

The Western media has recently outdone itself in censoring important stories - stories which contradict the policies and interests the media seeks to uphold.. Western publics have been systematically misled in recent weeks on vital issues related to war-and-peace, human rights, the financial crisis, and more. Only a few examples can be set out here. But it should be enough to indicate the extent to which world reality is being filtered by the media.
East Germans want to return to Socialism
Outright suppression has hidden the news that half the people living in East Germany now want to return to socialism, partly due to the world financial crisis.
When the Berlin wall fell in 1989 - an early harbinger of the unraveling of the Soviet Block socialism in Eastern Europe - it was trumpeted in thousands of capitalist media stories across the U.S. and the western world.
But now that half the people in Eastern Germany want to go back, the story is blacked out. The story reached the wire service level - Reuters News Service made it available to thousands of media. But not one western world newspaper or magazine published the article.
Key quote from the article: "A recent survey found 52 percent of eastern Germans believe the free market economy is "unsuitable" and 43 percent said they wanted socialism rather than capitalism,"
You can read "Global crisis sends east Germans flocking to Marx | Reuters" here:
http://www.reuters.com/article/artsNews/idUSTRE49F5MX20081016

U.S. Dollar has Plundered the World
Another financial crisis article that western media blacked out is a tough-worded critique of U.S. financial policy from the front-page of the Chinese version of People's Daily, the official newspaper of Chinas' Communist party. '
'U.S. has plundered world wealth with dollar...' made it onto the Reuters wire service. The article proposed that, as a starting point, all trade transactions between Asia and Europe should be settled in Euros, Pounds, RMB, and Yen. But no western world writer or media published or alluded to the artilce, with one exception: Cuba's Fidel Castro paid tribute to it in one of his weekly news columns in Cuba. Given that this article appeared on the front page of the official newspaper of the governing party of China, failure to relay it to western publics is a serious ommission.

Venezuela will Nationalize Its Banks in Event of Crisis.
Still another suppressed financial crisis story is a public promise by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez to nationalize Venezuela's' banks if the world financial crisis should become acute in his country.
Chavez also promised not to give away even 'one penny' of tax money to the banks. He also questioned why the U.S. government could find billions for the U.S. banks and financial institutions but money was not available to help poor and working people
The story made the wire service. But again no western newspaper or magazine published it.
Promises not to give 'one penny to the banks' might sound appealing in the U.S., where both McCain and Obama have backed the giveaway of one trillion U.S. dollars to U.S. banks and financial companies, despite furious resistance from half or more of Americans.
Obamas' campaign spokesman recently characterized Chavez as 'governing undemocratically' and without 'the rule of law'. But as Obama backed the undemocratic one trillion giveaway of U.S. tax money, it is Chavez who might seem democratic to the American people if his promise to give 'not one penny to the banks' were made known.

Hu Jia: Chinese human Rights Hero or CIA frontman?
On another front, serious filtering of reality can be seen in the coverage of the European Parliament's bestowing of the annual Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought on Hu Jia, a Chinese human rights activist.
Google news portal searches show four thousand -plus articles on Hu Jia and the award in western media in the past month.
But not one story mentions a key fact: His legal troubles began after the organization he was associated with received one million RMB ($170,000 U.S.) from the notorious CIA front organization The National Endowment for democracy.
The story was played in western media as that of an innocent activist imprisoned for his work on behalf of Chinese AIDS patients and of other 'unjustly treated' human rights workers.
Omission of the National Endowment connection is a serious matter. Self-described by its first leader as carrying on the work of the CIA, the National Endowment receives thirty million U.S. Per year from the U.S. Congress; and its primary work is attempting to destabilize governments, from Venezuela to Russia, which the U.S. state wishes to modify or eliminate. Interested readers can easily verify this by clicking here: http://www.google.com/searchhl=en&newwindow=1&q=national+endowment+for+democracy+CIA
To be clear, receiving money from the National Endowment for Democracy is equivalent to receiving money from the espionage service or intelligence service of a foreign power. From this perspective, Hu Jia appears not just as an activist but as a witting or unwitting tool of U.S. intelligence.
"As if on Command..."
Finally, going only slightly further back in time, the western media was stunningly silent when the U.S.-backed government of Georgia invaded South Ossettia. Only after Russia responded by using military force to push the invading Georgians out of South Ossetia did the western media spring to attention, running articles emphasizing the 'Russian attack', with scant attention to the reality that Georgia had instituted the conflict with a military invasion clearly violating internationally recognized agreements regarding South Ossettias status as an independent entity.
Russian Premier Vladimir Putin, in an interview after the events, said: "It was amazing" and 'As if on command - and I think it was on command" in reference to the initial silence on the Georgian aggression, followed by the thousands of articles which made Russia appear to be responsible for the war.
Whether on command, or in deference to economic and political interests, the western media is a reality screen which hides important truths from western publics, and over time induces undue prejudices against other countries and peoples. Readers who doubt this are invited to reflect that it was the same media which enabled the war in Iraq by helping to persuade the U.S. public that there 'weapons of mass destruction aimed at the U.S.' in Iraq.
Eric Sommers is a university teacher, journalist, and social theorist based in China.

Global Research Articles by Eric Sommer

'America's Sheriff' Faces California Corruption Trial

By GILLIAN FLACCUS
Associated Press Writer

SANTA ANA, Calif. --

Six years ago, Orange County Sheriff Michael Carona looked into national television cameras and told the abductor of a 5-year-old girl not to eat and not to sleep: Deputies were right behind him.

The abductor was quickly caught and the way Carona handled the case propelled him into the national spotlight and prompted CNN's Larry King to nickname him "America's sheriff."

Now, Carona is grappling with legal woes of his own. The square-jawed, three-time sheriff goes on trial Wednesday in a federal public corruption case charging him with conspiracy, mail fraud and witness tampering. Carona, 53, has vigorously denied the charges.

Also charged are his alleged mistress, who has pleaded not guilty to conspiracy, mail fraud and bankruptcy fraud; and his wife, who has pleaded not guilty to a single count of conspiracy.

Deborah Carona will stand trial after her husband, but his alleged mistress - an attorney - will be tried with him.

The trial is expected to last two months and a series of conversations secretly recorded by one of Carona's former assistant sheriffs and closest friends promises to figure prominently in the case.

In court papers, the government accuses Carona, who has since stepped down, and his friends of accepting nearly $700,000 in cash, gifts, kickbacks and questionable loans in exchange for political favors beginning in 1998.

Prosecutors say many of those bribes came from Don Haidl, a wealthy businessman.

In exchange, authorities say, Carona made Haidl an assistant sheriff and put him in charge of a new reserve deputy program that allowed him to hand out badges and concealed weapons permits in a pay-to-play scheme.

Haidl pleaded guilty last year to tax fraud and agreed to become an undercover informant.

Prosecutors expect to present Haidl as a witness, as well as another former assistant sheriff and an attorney who allegedly provided kickbacks for legal referrals.

It's unclear if Carona will testify in his own defense, and his legal team has declined to comment on the case or the secret recordings.

In legal filings, however, Carona's attorneys argue their client was a dedicated public servant who was targeted by overzealous prosecutors with a flawed case.

They also question the tactics of prosecutors who provided phony grand jury subpoena attachments to help Haidl get Carona to talk and accuse prosecutors of presenting grand jury witnesses who gave potentially false testimony.

A judge rejected a defense motion to suppress the tapes but did bar some portions where Carona makes sexually explicit and racially offensive remarks.

Pot Wins in a Landslide: A Thundering Rejection of America's Longest War

On Tuesday, largely under the radar of the pundits and political chattering classes, voters dealt what may be a fatal blow to America's longest-running and least-discussed war -- the war on marijuana.

Michigan voters made their state the 13th to allow the medical use of marijuana by a whopping 63 percent to 37 percent, the largest margin ever for a medical marijuana initiative. And by 65 percent to 35 percent, Massachusetts voters decriminalized the possession of up to an ounce of marijuana, replacing arrests, legal fees, court appearances, the possibility of jail and a lifelong criminal record with a $100 fine, much like a traffic ticket, that can be paid through the mail.

What makes these results so amazing is that they followed the most intensive anti-marijuana campaign by federal officials since the days of "Reefer Madness." Marijuana arrests have been setting all-time records year after year, reaching the point where one American is arrested on marijuana charges every 36 seconds. More Americans are arrested each year for marijuana possession -- not sales or trafficking, just possession -- than for all violent crimes combined.

And the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, with “drug czar” John Walters at the helm, has led a hysterical anti-marijuana propaganda campaign. During Walters' tenure, ONDCP has released at least 127 separate anti-marijuana TV, radio and print ads, at a cost of hundreds of millions of tax dollars, plus 34 press releases focused mainly on marijuana, while no fewer than 50 reports from ONDCP and other federal agencies focused on the alleged evils of marijuana or touted anti-marijuana campaigns.

Walters himself campaigned personally in Michigan against the medical marijuana initiative, calling it an "abomination" and claiming yet again that there is no evidence that marijuana has medical value -- an assertion flatly contradicted by at least four published clinical trials in just the last two years.

In Massachusetts, the state's political and law enforcement establishment lined up solidly against the marijuana decriminalization initiative, including both Republican and Democratic politicians and all 11 district attorneys -- several of whom actually admitted to having smoked marijuana. They warned of rampant drug abuse and crime should the measure pass, simply ignoring the fact that no such thing has happened in the 11 other states (including California, Ohio and New York) that have had similar laws for years.

Voters were having none of it, giving a thumping rejection to government officials’ lies and hysteria in both states. Americans have taken a hard look at our national war on marijuana and rejected it for the cruel, counterproductive disaster that it is.

The voters are right. Of over 872,000 arrests in one year, 89 percent are for possession only.

What has this gotten us? Not much. Marijuana arrests weren't the only thing that set a record last year. So did the number of Americans who have tried marijuana. Usage rates came down marginally in the last few years but are still higher than in the early 1990s. Marijuana is our nation's number one cash crop.

The one thing our costly and futile efforts to "eradicate" marijuana have accomplished is to create a boom for criminal gangs, to whom we've handed a monopoly on production and distribution. Unlike producers of legal drugs like beer, wine or tobacco, these criminals pay no taxes and obey no rules. Their illicit efforts despoil our national forests and bring violence and destabilization to Mexico.

For years, politicians who know our current marijuana laws make no sense have been afraid to change them for fear of political retribution. The voters' thundering rejection of our misguided war on marijuana shows that those fears are misplaced.

It's time for Congress and the new administration -- not to mention state governments around the country -- to listen to the public. It's time for a new approach.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: marijuana, election 2008, medical marijuana

Rob Kampia is executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, DC.

U.S. DRUG CZAR SUPPORTS MEXICAN DECRIMINALIZATION PLAN

The Marijuana Policy Project congratulated White House drug czar John Walters for backing a Mexican government proposal that would remove criminal penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana. "I can't believe I'm actually saying this, but John Walters is right," said MPP executive director Rob Kampia.

On Oct. 22, The New York Times reported Walters' public support for a drug decriminalization proposal by Mexican President Felipe Calderon, quoting Walters as saying, "I don't think that's legalization." Under Calderon's proposal, individuals caught with small quantities of marijuana would receive no jail sentence or fine and would not receive a criminal record so long as they complete either drug education or, if addicted, drug treatment. The Mexican president's proposal would also decriminalize possession of small amounts of heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine.

"It's fantastic that John Walters has recognized the massive destruction the drug war has inflicted on Mexico and is now calling for reforms there, but he's a rank hypocrite if he continues opposing similar reforms in the U.S.," Kampia said. "

In a March 19, 2008, press release from the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, deputy director Scott Burns called a New Hampshire proposal to impose a $200 fine rather than jail time for a small amount of marijuana "a dangerous first step toward complete drug legalization."

2008-11-05

Cleaning Out the Pentagon Pig Sty

The Money Party Must End

By WINSLOW T. WHEELER

With the profound prob lems the new U.S. presi dent will face next year in the economy, health care, energy, Social Security, gridlock in Wash ington, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, some might be tempted to take solace that our defenses, while costly, are sound.

Sorry, Mr. President- elect-to- be; that’s not the case. You have a real mess on your hands in the Pentagon. You have addressed the other crises in your election campaign, but you have completely ignored the meltdown in the Pentagon.

Perhaps you need a short review. America’s defense budget is now larger in inflation-adjusted dollars than at any point since the end of World War II. However, our Army has fewer combat divisions than at any point in that period, our Navy has fewer combat ships and the Air Force has fewer combat aircraft.

It gets worse. According to data collected by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and many others, major categories of military hardware are, on average, aging and in dire need of service. The prediction is for this problem to get worse.

Other data from the Pentagon show that significant elements of our armed forces are less ready for combat than they should be.

Air Force and Navy combat pilots get one-half to one-third of the in-air training time they had, for example, in the early 1970s. Army units are sent into Iraq and Afghanistan without the months of training and retraining they need with all the equipment and people they will take with them into combat.

The U.S. emphasis on technology does not rescue us. As was the case in Vietnam, the immeasurable technological advantage we hold over our enemies in Iraq and Afghanistan means little to winning this form of conflict.

For waging conventional war, we are burdened by technological failures at extraordinary cost. The Air Force’s newest fighter, the F 35, can be regarded as only a tech nical failure, and it will cost multi ples of the aircraft it replaces, the aging, overweight F-16. The Navy’s newest — ultra-expensive — de stroyer cannot protect itself effec tively against aircraft and missiles, and the Army’s newest armored vehicles, which cost several mil lion each, can be and have been destroyed by a simple anti-armor rocket that was first designed in the 1940s.

Despite decades of acquisition reform from Washington’s best minds in Congress, the Pentagon and the think tanks, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) tells us that cost overruns in weapon systems are higher today than any time since they have been measured. Not a single current major weapon has been delivered on time, on cost and as promised for performance.

The Pentagon refuses to tell Congress and the public exactly how it spends the hundreds of billions of dollars appropriated to it each year. The reason is simple: It doesn’t know. In a strict financial accountability sense, it doesn’t even know if the money is spent.

Decades of reports from the Department of Defense Inspector General and GAO make this problem painfully clear.

Some argue the answer is even more money for a defense budget that already is at historic heights and that approximates what the entire rest of the world spends for military forces. We must stop throwing dollars at the Pentagon.

The evidence, while counterintu itive, is irrefutable that more mon ey makes our problems worse. As the Army, Navy and Air Force budgets have climbed, their forces have grown smaller, older and less ready.

Others argue for acquisition reform but their proposals are rid dled with loopholes, and they con sistently refuse to cede control of decisions to any but those who have a track record of failure piled upon failure.

What, then, is to be done? The road to real reform starts with three simple principles:

? No failed system can be fixed if it cannot be accurately measured. A crash program to make Pentagon spending accountable is essential. But that is also insufficient. DoD also must have an ability to predict much more accurately the cost, performance and schedule of its future programs and policies. The current bias, based on advocacy, is the heart and core of business as usual.

? The basis for competence cannot just be intelligence and hard work; it must also be objectivity and independence. The latter are impossible without ending a fundamentally corrupt incentive system. The iron-clad control of the Pentagon decision-making process by people (in and out of uniform) who are free to then collect salaries and other emoluments from defense contractors and their support structure in Washington must end — without compromise.

The similar sham of members of Congress and — especially — their staff pretending to perform oversight and then accepting jobs from those they “oversee” (includ ing the Pentagon) must also end.

? The money party in Washington for the defense budget must end. The global economic melt down now confronts the Pentagon budget with a mandate to economize, and to do so in a very major way. The days when big Pentagon spenders can dream up new tricks to grow the DoD budget are over.

Consider the fact that today’s de fense budget is more than three times the combined size of every single nation currently or poten tially hostile to us (including China and Russia).

National security “leaders” who cannot find safety at a significantly different standard will bankrupt us and must be discarded.

While simple, these principles will be extremely difficult to im plement. The paragons of cost, bias and deceit will reveal them selves by their obstreperous ran cor at the idea of accepting these principles and the tough-minded actions they imply.

Such uncomplicated principles offer the promise of real reform to a system desperately in need of it.

What is lacking is a president, or a candidate for that office, with the strength of character to acknowl edge the depth of our problems, to embrace principles such as those stated here, and to withstand the typhoon of acrimony that will en sue from those who seek to keep us fat and fadimg.

Winslow T. Wheeler spent 31 years working on Capitol Hill with senators from both political parties and the Government Accountability Office, specializing in national security affairs. Currently, he directs the Straus Military Reform Project of the Center for Defense Information in Washington and is author of The Wastrels of Defense.

Teachers told to spy on five year old Muslim pupils

http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/paper/index.php?article=3737

Teachers told to spy on five year old Muslim pupils

By Hamed Chapman

New controversial guidelines issued by Schools Secretary Ed Balls as part of the Government’s “de-radicalisation” strategy have been greeted with a certain amount of caution and cynicism from teachers and Muslims alike.

Balls insisted that the strategy was “not about teachers monitoring pupils” but was a toolkit to provide more practical advice to teachers on how to support vulnerable pupils, working alongside other local partners and community organisations. “We need to address the underlying issues that can drive people into the hands of violent extremist groups and encourage local communities to come together to expose the flaws in extremists’ arguments, to reject cruelty and violence and promote our core British values of tolerance, liberty, fairness and respect of the rule of law,” he said.

Teachers are being asked under the guidelines to extend their ‘in loco parentis’ responsibilities to monitoring whether pupils in their charge are developing extreme views and informing the authorities, including the police, where there are concerns. It comes after similar guidance was sent to local authorities in June that also dismisses such issues as foreign policy, discrimination or racism, and even counterterrorism measures themselves, as contributing factors.

Former Pomona police sergeant charged with robbing banks

By Jannise Johnson, Staff Writer

RANCHO CUCAMONGA - A former Pomona police sergeant has been arrested in connection with a series of bank robberies in Escondido, Glendora and Rancho Cucamonga.

Frank Holder, 61, was arrested Wednesday afternoon in Rancho Cucamonga after he allegedly robbed a bank, FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller said.

Witnesses inside the bank were able to describe the suspect to deputies at the scene, Eimiller said.

San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies then stopped a vehicle nearby with Holder in it. The suspect description matched Holder.

Holder, a Phelan resident, was identified and booked into Central Detention Center in San Bernardino on suspicion of bank robbery, Eimiller said.

FBI investigators dubbed Holder the "Grandpa Bandit."

Holder got his nickname because witnesses would say, "He appeared to be a grandfatherly figure," Eimiller said.

Holder is set to appear at 2p.m. today in U.S. District Court in Santa Ana.

Pomona Police Chief Joe Romero confirmed Thursday that Holder is a former employee.

Holder transferred in 1974 from the Montclair Police Department to the Pomona Police Department.

He was promoted to senior police officer in 1987 and became a sergeant in 1991, Romero said.

Holder retired from duty in 2004 under honorable circumstances.

"He worked a variety of assignments," Romero said.

News of Holder's arrest came as a shock to people who worked with him, Romero said.

"It is totally out of his character," he said.

jannise.johnson@inlandnewspapers.com

(909) 483-9318

Ex-deputy faces sex charges

A former San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputy was arraigned Wednesday on charges he solicited sexual favors from four women he detained while on duty.

Matthew Linderman, 30, who was recently assigned to a Victorville mall, was charged with sexual battery on a woman who was “unlawfully restrained”; two counts of soliciting lewd conduct in a public place; soliciting oral copulation from a woman he threatened to arrest; and four counts of soliciting bribes, according to court documents.

He pleaded not guilty to all charges, Deputy Dist. Atty. Steven Sinfield said.

Sinfield said he could not comment on the details of the alleged crimes or where they occurred. He said the office was continuing to investigate Linderman’s conduct.

At least four more people have come forward since Linderman’s arrest saying they are victims, he said.

Linderman, who is free on $500,000 bail, worked at the Sheriff’s Department from 1998 until his arrest in early September.

The department initiated an investigation after receiving complaints that he had engaged in inappropriate behavior. A sheriff’s spokeswoman said she could not comment on whether Linderman resigned or was fired.

Bail bond case in San Bernardino postponed

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The arraignment of eight defendants indicted in San Bernardino County's bail-bond investigation, which includes a son of former Sheriff Floyd Tidwell, was expected to be postponed this afternoon because a defense lawyer was recovering from surgery, prosecutors said.

The defendants have yet to enter a plea on an ammended indictment filed by Deputy District Attorney William Lee, which was originally issued by a special criminal grand jury in December.

The defendants are accused of participating in a scheme using jail inmates to help corner the county's market on bail bonds from 2001 to 2003, according to court records.

Lee confirmed today's hearing in San Bernardino Superior Court would be postponed.

The indictment names Danial Tidwell, 53, a son of the former sheriff; and his wife, Shirley Tidwell, 47. It also names Michael Steele, 50, Keith Widener, 41, Kirk Widener, 37, Samantha Widener, 38, Randy Ideshi, 43, and Jerry Christian, 49.

The grand jury issued the indictment after the criminal complaint filed in 2004 by the District Attorney's Office "got stuck in the system," Lee said earlier.

Tidwell and others who worked for Boone's Bail Bond were arrested in 2004 after a two-year investigation by the Sheriff's Department. Authorities said evidence indicated they were paying inmates for soliciting business for the bail bond company.

All of the defendants have been charged with two counts of conspiracy relating to unlawful solicitation of bail bonds and one count of unlawful solicitation of bail bonds.

Danial Tidwell also was indicted on two counts of possessing assault weapons, one count of receiving stolen property and one count of grand theft of a firearm.

Shirley Tidwell and two Boone's employees were indicted on several counts relating to unlawful notary practices, filing false or forged documents and perjury.

Former Operation Phoenix center manager appears in court

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Former Operation Phoenix centers Manager Mike Miller appeared in San Bernardino Superior Court today.

The 48-year-old was arrested July 3 on suspicion of molesting three girls under 14 years old and possessing child pornography. Miller has pleaded not guilty.

A preliminary hearing, where a judge will determine whether there is enough evidence to send the case to trial, has been scheduled for Dec. 11. Miller is expected to appear back in court on Dec. 9 to confirm the hearing date.

Miller worked in San Bernardino's parks department from 1999 until his arrest. Since 2006, he supervised recreational activities at the city's first Operation Phoenix community center.

Atlanta cop in botched drug raid pleads guilty

Arthur Bruce Tesler is already serving four and a half years in prison

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The federal investigation into the fatal shooting of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston ended Thursday with the guilty plea of former Atlanta police Officer Arthur Bruce Tesler.

Against the advice of his lawyer, Tesler pleaded guilty to conspiring to violate civil rights, resulting in the Nov. 21, 2006, death of Johnston at her Neal Street home.

As part of a plea agreement, federal prosecutors will recommend a sentence of 10 years and one month in prison. Tesler, 42, is to sentenced in February.

Johnston’s killing shocked the nation. It also rocked the Atlanta police force with revelations that officers faked warrants to make drug cases.

“The killing of Kathryn Johnston by Atlanta police officers was a terrible and unnecessary tragedy,” U.S. Attorney David Nahmias said. “We are glad that today’s guilty plea brings another measure of justice to Ms. Johnston, her family and our community.”

The case prompted a revamping of the narcotics squad and extensive training, Nahmias added.

The federal investigation is now over. The FBI will hand over a report to Atlanta Police Chief Richard Pennington with recommendations that could lead to state prosecutions or administrative discipline of other officers, Nahmias said.

Greg Jones, FBI special agent in charge, said both he and Nahmias were pleased the federal probe did not uncover “systemic corruption” throughout the Atlanta Police Department.

Still, Jones said, he believed it was “inevitable” that misconduct by Atlanta narcotics officers taking illegal shortcuts to obtain warrants would result in a fatal shooting such as Johnston’s.

The federal probe already resulted in the guilty pleas of Jason R. Smith and Gregg Junnier, two of Tesler’s partners the night of Johnston’s death. Both pleaded guilty to a state charge of voluntary manslaughter and federal civil rights charges. They have yet to be sentenced.

Tesler, who did not fire shots on the evening of Johnston’s death, was stationed at the rear of the home when the shooting occurred.

The fatal incident started out as a planned arrest of a drug dealer, with officers believing a kilogram of cocaine was inside Johnston’s Neal Street home.

The officers lied to a judge, smashed in Johnston’s door and unloaded 39 shots at the elderly woman as she fired a shot at the invaders with an old revolver. One officer then handcuffed Johnston as she lay dying. Drugs were then planted in her basement.

In May, Tesler was convicted in Fulton County of lying in the investigation of the botched drug raid. He was sentenced to four years and six months in prison.

Nahmias said federal authorities did not believe Tesler’s state punishment was adequate.

Tesler’s plea almost didn’t occur. Hours before the hearing, his lawyer, William McKenney, said his client had yet to make up his mind. At the plea hearing, McKenney disclosed he thought Tesler should have fought the charges at trial.

“But he’s making a decision that’s only his to make,” the defense attorney told U.S. District Judge Julie Carnes.

When Assistant U.S. Attorney Jon-Peter Kelly read the “factual basis” of the case, Tesler waivered. Carnes then gave Tesler, wearing leg irons and an orange prison jumpsuit, time to read the prosecution’s account.

For the next 10 minutes, Tesler sat at the defense table reviewing it. McKenney then gave the document back to prosecutors, who made minor changes and returned it to Tesler for his review.

Tesler, finally satisfied, agreed to the changes another 10 minutes later and entered his plea.

State Sen. Vincent Fort (D-Atlanta), who attended the plea, said the two years since Johnston’s shooting have been “hellish” for the northwest Atlanta community. He called for a robustly funded citizen review board to investigate police misconduct and legislation outlawing no-knock warrants to protect both the public and the police.

“Hopefully, what happened today will be one step in a healing process, but we have a long way to go,” Fort said. “Do I think something like this can happen again? Yes, I do.”

San Bernardino County deputy pleads not guilty to four felony charges

Accused of holding driver at gunpoint
By Will Bigham, Staff Writer

A San Bernardino County sheriff's deputy accused of handcuffing a tow-truck driver and holding him at gunpoint in Riverside County pleaded not guilty Wednesday to four felony charges.

Richard Heverly, 41, of La Verne did not appear at the Indio Superior Court hearing. His attorney, Michael Schwartz, entered the not-guilty pleas on his behalf.

Prosecutors say Heverly was off-duty when he came across a traffic accident Aug. 10 on the 10 Freeway about 50 miles east of Indio.

A tractor-trailer had caught fire, and a tow-truck driver positioned his truck on the freeway to block off lanes near the accident, prosecutors said.

When Heverly came across the accident, he flashed his sheriff's deputy badge, then handcuffed the tow-truck driver and held a gun to his head, according to prosecutors.

Heverly was placed on paid administrative leave by the sheriff's department Aug. 18. He remains on administrative leave, department spokeswoman Cindy Beavers said Wednesday.

He was hired by the department in 2006, and worked in the transportation division at West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga.

Heverly was arrested Aug. 18 and charged with four felonies: assault with a semi-automatic firearm, assault by a public officer, criminal threats of death or great bodily injury, and false imprisonment. All charges carry sentencing enhancements for use of a firearm.

He was released the day of his arrest after posting $150,000 bail.

A settlement conference was scheduled Wednesday for Nov. 19, and a preliminary hearing was scheduled for Dec. 9.

Judge Dale Wells also ordered Heverly to appear in person for the future hearings, according to online court records.

Schwartz did not immediately return a call seeking comment Wednesday afternoon.

will.bigham@inlandnewspapers.com

(909) 483-8553

Left of Centrist Rotating Header Image When did we become a police state

For the past seven years, we have talked about the possibility of the United States becoming a police state under the Bush regime. We have even joked about the classic Nazi Germany films that inevitably show a check point with some guard saying, “Let me zee your papers!“ Perhaps all of this isn’t as far fetched as many would have us believe.

What if I told you that we already have police check points? I’m not talking about borders. I’m not talking about sobriety check points. I’m talking about honest to goodness “let me see your papers” check points complete with dogs, up to one hundred miles from the nearest border.

From the ACLU web site:

  • Normally under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the American people are not generally subject to random and arbitrary stops and searches.
  • The border, however, has always been an exception. There, the longstanding view is that the normal rules do not apply. For example the authorities do not need a warrant or probable cause to conduct a “routine search.”
  • But what is “the border”? According to the government, it is a 100-mile wide strip that wraps around the “external boundary” of the United States.
  • As a result of this claimed authority, individuals who are far away from the border, American citizens traveling from one place in America to another, are being stopped and harassed in ways that our Constitution does not permit.
  • Border Patrol has been setting up checkpoints inland — on highways in states such as California, Texas and Arizona, and at ferry terminals in Washington State. Typically, the agents ask drivers and passengers about their citizenship. Unfortunately, our courts so far have permitted these kinds of checkpoints – legally speaking, they are “administrative” stops that are permitted only for the specific purpose of protecting the nation’s borders. They cannot become general drug-search or other law enforcement efforts.
  • However, these stops by Border Patrol agents are not remaining confined to that border security purpose. On the roads of California and elsewhere in the nation – places far removed from the actual border – agents are stopping, interrogating, and searching Americans on an everyday basis with absolutely no suspicion of wrongdoing.
  • The bottom line is that the extraordinary authorities that the government possesses at the border are spilling into regular American streets.

After reading this, I assumed I was immune from such nonsense, but a quick look at the map below shows clearly that even Fort Wayne, IN is included.

We’re not in Kansas anymore - and that’s too bad because Kansas is immune from this nonsense. Watch this video also from the ACLU:

San Bernardino County sheriff's deputy charged with assault, crminal threats to be arraigned Wednesday

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A San Bernardino County deputy sheriff accused of handcuffing and holding at gunpoint a tow-truck driver on the side of the 10 Freeway in Riverside County is scheduled to be arraigned on four felony charges Wednesday morning in Indio.

According to prosecutors, Richard Heverly, 41, of La Verne, was off duty and driving about 50 miles east of Indio on Aug. 18 when he came across a traffic accident.

A car had caught fire as a result of the crash, and a tow truck driver had slowed and blocked off lanes, according to the Riverside County District Attorney's Office.

When Heverly arrived at the accident site, he flashed his badge, then handcuffed the tow-truck driver and held him at gunpoint, according to the Riverside County District Attorney's Office.

Heverly is charged with four felonies: Assault with a semi-automatic firearm, assault by public officer, criminal threats of death or great bodily injury, and false imprisonment. All four charges carry sentencing enhancements for use of a firearm.

He was placed on administrative leave by the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department the day of his arrest.

Heverly was hired by the department in 2006 and worked in the transportation division at West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga.

Click the link below for a past news article on Heverly's arrest.

...

Deputy charged with felonies on paid leave

Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (Ontario, CA) - Thursday, August 21, 2008

Author: Will Bigham, Staff Writer

A San Bernardino County sheriff's deputy who was charged with four felonies in Riverside County this week has been placed on administrative leave, a department spokeswoman said.

Richard Charles Heverly , 41, is accused of handcuffing and holding at gunpoint a tow truck driver who pulled to the side of the 10 Freeway east of Indio after a big rig caught fire.

Heverly , of La Verne, was assigned to the transportation division at the West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga. He was hired by the department in 2006, said spokeswoman Cindy Beavers.

Heverly was placed on paid administrative leave Monday, the same day he was arrested by Riverside County officials.

"There is an administrative investigation that is under way, and we're prohibited from speaking about that either now or when the investigation is complete," Beavers said.

When reached by phone at his La Verne home Thursday, Heverly declined to comment.

Heverly was off duty Aug. 10 when the incident on the westbound 10 Freeway occurred.

The tow truck driver noticed a big rig on fire on the shoulder of the freeway near Eagle Mountain Road, about 50 miles east of Indio.

The driver maneuvered his tow truck into a position to block off some of the affected lanes of the freeway and waited for emergency personnel to arrive, according to a news release from the Riverside County District Attorney's Office.

Heverly arrived at the scene and showed a law enforcement badge to the tow truck driver.

Witnesses told authorities that Heverly escalated the confrontation, eventually handcuffing the tow truck driver and holding him at gunpoint, the news release stated.

A spokesman for the Riverside County District Attorney's Office declined to go into detail when asked about the incident.

Heverly was arrested Monday and charged with four felonies: assault with a semiautomatic firearm, assault under the color of authority, making a criminal threat and false imprisonment, the news release stated.

He posted $150,000 bail and was released from custody.

Heverly is scheduled to be arraigned Oct. 29 in Indio Superior Court.

County supervisors play partisan politics

California Political Desk
Taxpayers Association smears Democrats running for nonpartisan offices.

Three members of the County Board of Supervisors are large financial contributors to a political action committee which says it fights taxes but whose main political activity is to attack candidates for local nonpartisan offices who happen to be Democrats.

San Bernardino County Supervisors Gary Ovitt, Paul Biane and Dennis Hansberger have together given $135,000 to the San Bernardino County Taxpayers Association since April to send out negative mailers attacking Democrats running for nonpartisan office.

Ovitt is Chair and Biane is Vice-Chair of the San Bernardino County Republican Party. Each has contributed $35,000, and Hansberger has contributed $65,000.

Republican Assemblymen Bill Emmerson and Paul Cook also gave $15,000 and $10,000, respectively.

The San Bernardino County Young Republicans, led by former Assistant County Assessor Adam Aleman who is now charged with six felonies, contributed $40,000.

The Taxpayers Association PAC has recently mailed two negative political advertisements attacking Democrats running for local city councils

Its first mailer was an attack on Jeremy Baca, son of Congressman Joe Baca, who is running for a seat on the Colton City Council. It featured a photo of Baca with a black band across his mouth and the word "guilty."

"This is an unfair and unjust attack on me, personally, by the Republican party," Jeremy Baca said. "Just because I made a mistake in my life doesn't make me a bad person."

"America is a country of second chances. It's one of the things that makes this country so great," said Baca.

"The Republicans just want to maintain control over the Colton City Council, which is why they are so heavily involved in running negative campaigns against honorable citizens.

"They should just let the candidates run on their own merits for these nonpartisan offices and let the voters decide who they want without being besieged with all these lies and negativity."

The second ad is a sexist attack against Congressman Joe Baca and a personal attack against Fontana City Council candidate Angel Santiago, another candidate supported by Congressman Joe Baca.

The mailer attacks Congressman Baca for alleged remarks made against another California Congressional representative and accuses the Congressman of bankrolling campaigns against women.

It also accuses Santiago of failing to pay child support and having his drivers' license revoked.

"I have never owed any back child support," Santiago said, "and my ex-wife and children will confirm that."

Santiago is an elected official who has served six years on the Inland Empire Utilities Agency.

"I really question the motives of an organization like this for what they do and how they do it," Santiago said. "Is it to better the communities? I don't think so. I think it's only for their own self-interest. It epitomizes Bush politics and it must come to an end."

Controversy has recently surrounded a group of candidates endorsed by Congressman Joe Baca, whom he supported with a slate mailer to thousands of voters in western San Bernardino County cities.

Opponents accuse Baca of "dynasty building" while supporters say he is developing a "farm team" of highly qualified Democrats to run for local offices, just as Republicans do.

But the attacks have not been limited to candidates supported by Congressman Baca.

Last November the group sent three negative mailers to Redlands voters attacking Nancy Ruth White, another well-respected Democrat, in her nonpartisan campaign for a seat on the Redlands City Council, which she lost by a few hundred votes.

Non-partisan positions have traditionally been free of partisan campaigning but the Republican-financed Taxpayers Association has been pulling these dirty tricks for more than ten years.

While Democratic candidates for nonpartisan positions occupy themselves with positive self-promotion, the Taxpayers Association uses negative campaigning to support elitist good-old-boy politics and perpetuate a culture of corruption among locally elected Republican officials.

Many concerned citizens feel the Board of Supervisors, and the county Republican Party in general, should be concerned with their own corruption and failure to bolster the county's economy with effective policies and programs.

But, behind an iron curtain of Republican partisanship, Machiavellian power brokers continue to play a shell game with money from a variety of benignly named committees in a form of political socialism where they "share the wealth" to manipulate nonpartisan elections and deny the voters a clear and factual decision of the most qualified candidates.

It may be legal, but it is not ethical, moral, or responsible, and Democratic candidates and the County Democratic Party are now organizing to oppose it in the future.

At stake may be two Supervisorial districts which have just recently turned "blue" with more registered Democrats than Republicans to change the majority on the board.

The seats are held by Ovitt and Biane, the two supervisors who gave money to the Taxpayers Association to attack the Democrats.

Hansberger, the third supervisor who contributed to the Taxpayers Association, lost the June election to Neil Derry who has recently come under fire for hiring Jim Ervin with a six-figure salary as his Chief of Staff. Ervin received a fat severance package last year from Assessor Postmus, which some believe Ervin received from Postmus as payment for his silence about Postmus' alleged methamphetamine addiction.

Chomsky Discusses Economy, Military Hegemony

SPECIAL TO THE TECH
October 28, 2008

This is the second of a three-part interview with Institute Professor Noam A. Chomsky, conducted in early September by Subrata Ghoshroy, a researcher in the Science, Technology, and Global Security Working Group at MIT. In this part, Ghoshroy and Chomsky discussed the development of the modern tech economy, the current economic crisis, and the power of U.S. propaganda.

Another version of this interview was previously published at Alternet.org.

Noam Chomsky:The New York Times happened to have an article by its economic correspondent in its magazine section [in August] about Obama’s economic programs. He talked about Reagan as the model of passionate commitment to free markets and reduction of the role of the state, and so on.

Where are these people? Reagan was the most protectionist president in post war American history. In fact, more protectionist than all others combined. He virtually doubled protective barriers. He brought in the Pentagon to develop the “factory of the future” to teach backward American management how to catch up on the Japanese lead in production. SEMATECH [“Semiconductor Manufacturing Technology”] was formed.

If it was not for Reagan’s protectionism and calling in of state power, we would not have a steel industry, or an automobile industry, or a semi-conductor industry or whatever they protected. They reindustrialized America by protectionism and state intervention.

All of this is washed away by propaganda as though it never happened. It is very interesting to look at a place like MIT which was right in the center of these developments. My department — you are teaching a course in the Military Industrial Complex — my department is an example of it.

I came here in the mid-50s. I don’t know the difference between a radio and a tape recorder, but I was in the electronics lab. I was perhaps the one person who refused to get clearance on principle. Not that it made any difference; everything was open anyway.

The electronics lab, along with the closely connected Lincoln Labs, was just developing the basis of the modern high tech economy. In those days, the computer was the size of this set of offices and vacuum tubes were blowing all over the place [with] computer printouts, paper running everywhere.

By the time they finally got computers down to the size of a marketable mainframe, some of the directors of the project pulled out and formed DEC [Digital Equipment Corporation], the first main frame producer.

IBM was in there at government expense learning how to move from punch cards to electronic computers. By the early l960s IBM was capable of producing its own computers, but no one could buy them. They were too expensive. So they were bought by the National Security Agency.

Bell Labs did develop transistors. That is about the only example you can think of a significant part of the high tech system which came out of private enterprise. But that is a joke too!

Bell Labs were able to run a great laboratory because they had a monopoly, so they could use monopoly pricing powers to set up a great laboratory. They worked on technology. Their transistor producer was Western Electric, who could not sell them on the market; they were too expensive. So the government bought about 100 percent of advanced transistors.

Finally, of course, all of this gets to the point where you can market them privately. It was not until the l980s after 30 years of development essentially in the state sector that these things became marketable commodities and Bill Gates could get rich.

The Internet was the same thing. I was here when they were starting to work on the Internet. It was not until l995 that it was privatized, after 30 years. If you look at the funding at MIT, in the l950s and l960s, it was almost entirely Pentagon. For a very simple reason, the cutting edge of the economy was electronics based.

A good cover for developing an electronics-based economy was the Pentagon. You sort of frighten people into thinking the Russians are coming, so they pay their taxes and their children and grandchildren have computers.

Through the 70s and 80s funding has been shifting to NIH. Why? Because the cutting edge of the economy is becoming biology-based. So, therefore, the state sector is shifting its priorities to developing biology-based industries.

In the meantime, all of this is going on with accolades to the free market. You don’t know whether to laugh or cry.

The point is, to get back to the new international economic order: it was a serious proposal which was immediately kicked out the window and UNCTAD was reduced to a data collecting agency with no policy initiatives and the new information order was destroyed, along with UNESCO.

What we had were the neo-liberal programs rammed down the throats of the poor. Although the rich did not accept them, and to the extent that they do accept them, it is harmful to them too.

This went along with the great shift to the liberalization of finance. It was a disaster in the making all along, serious economists have been pointing out since the early 70s that the freeing up of financial capital flows is just a disaster in the making, with in fact periodic crises.

Also, Reagan the great free marketer carried out one of the biggest bailouts in American history when he bailed out [and virtually nationalized] a major bank.

Subrata Ghoshroy: This was the Latin American crisis? Brazil?

NC: This was before that. This was Continental Illinois. Later they had the savings and loan crisis; Citibank was overexposed in Latin America. The federal government has to continually step in to insure that the financial institutions that it is letting run wild survive.

SG: Do you see any special characteristics to this crisis?

NC: This is apparently considerably worse, for one thing, because no one seems to understand what is really going on. There was clearly a housing bubble and some of the better, more serious economists began writing about it a couple of years ago.

So Dean Baker, for example, has been regularly pointing out that housing prices are completely unsustainable. Greenspan was saying, “Don’t worry about it.” It is the Greenspan crisis. It has turned into a crisis for the entire credit industry. And a major one.

I don’t think that the banks and the hedge funds even understand the instruments that they are using, but they are very delicate and they could crash. I presume that the financial institutions are strong enough to be able to weather it somehow, but no one really knows. Just like no one knows whether China, Japan and Dubai and Singapore will continue to keep what from their point of view are poor investments in the U.S. economy, treasury securities, etc., or whether they will diversify.

If they diversify, what happens to the U.S. economy? The U.S. has become a low production, high consumption economy. What happens if the Chinese, the Japanese, and Dubai stop funding the American consumers? A lot of things could happen, but unlike poor countries, U.S. does not really have to pay its debts. There are a lot of ways to avoid doing so, but these are real hammer blows to the international economy, the kind that are not understood.

The bailouts of Fannie Mae and Freddie [Mac], was described pretty well by Martin Wolf, the economic correspondent for the Financial Times. He says it is outrageous, a case of the public taking the risks and being forced to pay for the foolishness and incompetence of the private management of the market institutions.

The public takes the risks and pays for the costs.

SG: So, the public debt goes up tremendously.

NC: Yes, enormously; liabilities from these takeovers are, I forget the number, but it is a substantial proportion of the national debt.

SG: They are talking about close to a $200 billion injection from the treasury.

NC: I think, it is something like one-third of the deficit, the public debt. It is huge. That is the public debt, that’s my grandchildren, you know. It is permitting financial institutions to run wild without regulation. So, if you allow unregulated capital, of course you will have corruption and disaster.

Read Adam Smith. He points out if you see two business men talking in the corner, they are probably arranging a conspiracy against the public. That’s their job. It is not that they are bad people. That is just what they are supposed to do.

Just like a corporation is not evil to try to maximize profit. If managers are not trying to maximize profit, they are breaking the law. They are not supposed to be ethical institutions; they are supposed to be operating in the interests of their shareholders.

SG: Because of the integrated nature of the global economy, are there others who would want to keep the American economy vibrant?

NC: Sure that’s why China buys U.S. treasury securities. They want to keep America spending. So, in a way that may be stabilizing, … but it is a very uncertain kind of stability. They might decide to devote their resources to increase purchasing power inside China, for example, instead of inside the U.S. It is conceivable, which would mean a big shift in the international economy.

SG: If China makes a precipitous decision to do something — for example, there is one fund, a Sovereign fund; it is $200 billion dollars — and if they pull money out, will there be military threats from the U.S.?

NC: But what do the military threats mean from the U.S.? Of course, the U.S. outspends the rest of the world in military spending and is more technologically advanced. But what are they going to do? Are they going to bomb Beijing? I mean, they can’t [even] control Afghanistan.

Sure, they have a huge military, but I doubt that the U.S. will use it as a weapon. U.S. capacity to undermine governments by military threats has been declining in recent years.

Take Latin America, a traditional region where U.S. has regularly overthrown governments through military coups and so on, in the last 10 years it has been very hard. U.S. sponsored a military coup in Venezuela, but could not carry it off, had to back down, partly because the military coup was immediately overthrown by popular uprising and partly because of the uproar in Latin America, where they would not tolerate it any longer.

If you look at the history, it is quite a change. U.S. and France did effectively carry out a military coup in Haiti and threw out the government, but you know that Haiti is a desperate country. It was the richest colony in the world and the source of much of France’s wealth, but it has been tortured by France and then the U.S. for 200 years, now it barely survives. Overthrowing the government of Haiti was not that difficult a task.

SG: So, do you see a decline in the military ability of the U.S.?

NC: There is a very serious decline in the ability of the U.S. to undermine and overthrow governments. South America for the first time since the European conquest, 500 years, is moving uneasily, but noticeably, in the direction of independence and gaining sovereignty. The U.S. is unable to do much about it.

One of the main military bases for the United States until recently was Paraguay; the U.S. just lost Paraguay with the last election of a liberation theology priest. That was one of the few remaining U.S. military bases in South America. In Central America, which was devastated by Reaganite terrorist wars, nevertheless, there are beginnings of a recovery. In Honduras, which was the center of the whole U.S. terrorist apparatus, President Zelaya has been moving towards alliances with Venezuela. There is not much that the U.S. can do about it.

[The U.S. is] trying; the training of Latin American officers has risen very sharply. The School of the Americas has been renamed. In fact, if you look at U.S. aid to Latin America, the percentage of military aid, as compared to economic aid, is far higher now than at the peak of the cold war. I think that the U.S. is trying to rebuild some kind of military capacity to deal with its loss of control over Latin America. It used to be able to overthrow governments easily or destroy a country back in the l980s, but now it is harder. …

How to Destroy an Industrial Complex

How to Destroy an Industrial Complex

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If we are talking about militarism -- an overgrown military establishment, a proclivity for war, and runaway executive power, all justified by exaggerated security concerns -- then I agree that we have a problem. But the problem results not because we can't sustain this posture but because we can.

We are still rich as hell, despite our current trouble, which is not a result of military spending or war in any case. Despite George Bush's assaults on our civil liberties, our freedoms are essentially intact; we vote and speak as we like. And the vast majority of us are safe and secure. The danger of war does not touch us.

When Harold Lasswell warned long ago about the danger of a garrison state, this is what he misunderstood. Our economy is so productive that we can pay for a massive military establishment and still be free and prosperous. Sure, we are a little less free and prosperous as a result, but for those of us who do not fight our wars, it is a small sacrifice.

This is the trouble. The costs of militarism are distributed among the population and the benefits are concentrated in what we call the military industrial complex, a way of describing a group of people who benefit from preparation for war-- not, I argue -- war itself. Because these people dominate our discourse about security, they teach us to be unduly afraid and attached to military means of solving our problems. They create a militarized ideology, which primes us for war. That is the thesis of Jack Snyder's classic book, Myths of Empire. Note that a set of interests incentivized to prepare for war is a good thing to have while dangers are large. But when they fade, the complex does not, and it generates support for itself.

What's the solution? Not cutting consumption, as Andrew Bacevich (who taught me much about militarism) argues. Importing oil does not require heavy military spending -- wrong-headed economic ideas about the need to "secure" Middle-Eastern energy supply do.

Nor does salvation lie in the reorganization of our national security institutions, via a new National Security Act, as Eugene suggests in the conclusion of his book. (It is surprising that Eugene, who is so critical of Washington, adopts one of its worst conceits, the idea that every policy problem has a solution in the organization of the executive branch). The National Security Act of 1947, on which Eugene pins so much blame, is a consequence of the problem he describes, a large peace-time military establishment, not its cause.

The solution lies in three things: international politics, Congressional power, and the conflict of interests favoring militarism with other interests.

Realists believe that states that act unwisely abroad ultimately get burned. That has happened, tragically, in Iraq and, increasingly, in Afghanistan. It's true that bad wars do not cost most people, but they do tend to discredit the ideology that justified them. Unfortunately, the tendency to mythologize the surge is teaching Americans the wrong lessons about Iraq. We may need to repeat the experience before we learn the limits of our power.

Congress could relearn its constitutional responsibilities, remembering the invitation that the Constitution gives them to struggle for war powers. (The irony of self-described strict constructionists on the right debasing Congress' war powers is rich.) This outcome is unlikely, however, without divided government.

Third, the military industrial complex may conflict with other concentrated interests. As federal revenue drops and entitlement costs rise, there is bound to be a reckoning between competing spending priorities with powerful backers. Greater federal spending on health care would accelerate that reckoning. That could cause a public fight about what our biggest threats are. Americans might decide that they'd rather have prescription drugs than imperial commitments.

Judicial panel admonishes retired San Bernardino County Superior Court judge

Bryant's comments deemed improper
Will Bigham, Staff Writer

View PDF Document: Bryant

A retired San Bernardino County Superior Court judge was publicly admonished Monday by the state Commission on Judicial Performance for making inappropriate comments to attorneys.

Paul M. Bryant Jr. was accused by the commission of making the comments on five instances since 2005, including calling two attorneys "obnoxious" and saying a prosecutor had "rocks for brains."

Bryant retired in January after 20 years as a Superior Court judge.

In an interview Monday, he said that for 18 years preceding his retirement he was a judge at West Valley Superior Court in Rancho Cucamonga.

According to the commission, in late 2006 or early 2007, Bryant told Deputy District Attorney Mary Izadi words to the effect that she had "rocks for brains" while refusing to accept a proposed plea bargain.

In February 2007, Bryant said Deputy District Attorney Kent Williams said, "One of the dumbest things I've ever heard a lawyer say," about the possibility that the judge could review an entire box of new documents that day.

Bryant later made a sarcastic comment about Williams' command of the English language, according to the commission's admonishment.

Also that month, Bryant said the District Attorney's Office "wimp(s) out" for not filing criminal charges against people who fail to appear in court when ordered to appear, according to the commission.

A public admonishment is the third-most severe of five levels of discipline that can be taken against judges, a commission spokeswoman said.

In 2007, there were 37 instances of discipline in the state, five being public admonishments, said Victoria Henley, spokeswoman for the commission.

Since his retirement, Bryant has often served as a retired judge on assignment, usually in civil courts in San Bernardino, said Brad Campbell, spokesman for the Assigned Judges Program of the Administrative Office of the Courts.

The public admonishment against Bryant will not preclude him from filling in on assignment in the future, Henley said.

In an interview Monday afternoon, Bryant said: "It was a great honor to serve the community as a Superior Court judge for the past 20-odd years."

He referred specific questions about the disciplinary procedures to his attorney, Heather Rosing.

She did not immediately respond to a call seeking comment on Monday afternoon.

The public admonishment against Bryant was the fifth instance of disciplinary action taken against a county judge in the past 10 years and the 11th instance since 1960, according to the state commission's Web site.

will.bigham@inlandnewspapers.com
(909) 483-8553

What is misconduct?

By Tracy E. Barnhart
Published: 10/27/2008

Tracy Barnhart is a Marine combat veteran of Desert Storm / Desert Shield. In 2000, he joined the Ohio Department of Youth Services at the Marion Juvenile Corrections Facility, a maximum security male correctional facility housing more than 320 offenders. Barnhart works with 16 to 21-year-old, male offenders with violent criminal convictions and aggressive natures. In his monthly column, he discusses everyday issues affecting corrections professionals.

Every time you interact with a citizen or inmate it seems that they are constantly complaining that their rights have been violated, or they’ve been treated poorly or wronged in some way. When it comes right down to it, many officers do not even know what constitutes “misconduct” or how it’s investigated in the first place.

The vast majority of the law enforcement officers in this country perform their very difficult jobs with respect for their communities and in compliance with the law. Even so, there are incidents where this is not the case.

This document outlines the laws that address police misconduct. Federal laws that address this include both criminal and civil statutes. These laws cover the actions of state, county, and local officers, including those who work in prisons and jails.

Federal Criminal Enforcement
It is a crime for one or more persons acting under color of law willfully to deprive or conspire to deprive another person of any right protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States. (18 U.S.C. §§ 241, 242).

"Color of law" simply means that the person doing the act is using power given to him or her by a governmental agency (local, state, or federal). A law enforcement officer acts "under color of law" even if he or she is exceeding his or her rightful power.

The types of law enforcement misconduct covered by these laws include excessive force, sexual assault, intentional false arrests, or the intentional fabrication of evidence resulting in a loss of liberty to another. Enforcement of these provisions does not require that any racial, religious, or other discriminatory motive existed.

Federal Civil Enforcement
"Police Misconduct Provision"
This law makes it unlawful for state or local law enforcement officers to engage in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives persons of rights protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States. (42 U.S.C. § 14141).

The types of conduct covered by this law can include, among other things, excessive force, discriminatory harassment, false arrests, coercive sexual conduct, and unlawful stops, searches or arrests.

In order to be covered by this law, the misconduct must constitute a "pattern or practice" -- it may not simply be an isolated incident. The investigation must be able to show in court that the agency has an unlawful policy or that the incidents constituted a pattern of unlawful conduct.

However, unlike the other civil laws discussed below, the investigation does not have to show that discrimination has occurred in order to prove a pattern or practice of misconduct.

Pattern or practice misconduct investigations involve a comprehensive evaluation of the agency's policies, procedures and actual practices impacting on the areas where there are allegations of misconduct. Investigations include examination of specific incidents that may be pieces of an alleged pattern of misconduct and civil rights violations.

In general the investigations review the following kinds of information:
  • Conduct in-depth interviews with the police command staff, representatives of police labor organizations, persons who believe they have been subject to police misconduct, lawyers and community leaders who have dealings with the police department, and individual officers.


  • Evaluate the agency's education and training programs and curricula regarding areas involving alleged misconduct.


  • Review the agency's written policies and practices, as well as any systems for reporting or otherwise memorializing specific officer actions in the areas of alleged misconduct.


  • Review the agency's systems for monitoring and supervising officers, including any procedures and systems to inform supervisors of officer actions in areas of alleged misconduct. Also review any procedures and systems providing for supervisory feedback to officers on the propriety of such actions.


  • Analyze the agency's formal procedures and actual practices for receiving, investigating, and adjudicating citizen complaints. Also assess the agency's records regarding how complaints are adjudicated and whether and to what extent discipline is imposed or non-disciplinary corrective action is taken in appropriate cases.
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the "OJP Program Statute"
Together, these laws prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, and religion by State and local law enforcement agencies that receive financial assistance from the Department of Justice. (42 U.S.C. § 2000d, et seq. and 42 U.S.C. § 3789d(c)).

Currently, most persons are served by a law enforcement agency that receives DOJ funds. These laws prohibit both individual instances and patterns or practices of discriminatory misconduct, i.e., treating a person differently because of race, color, national origin, sex, or religion.

The misconduct covered by Title VI and the OJP (Office of Justice Programs) Program Statute includes, for example, harassment or use of racial slurs, unjustified arrests, discriminatory traffic stops, coercive sexual conduct, retaliation for filing a complaint with DOJ or participating in the investigation, use of excessive force, or refusal by the agency to respond to complaints alleging discriminatory treatment by its officers.

Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 prohibit discrimination against individuals with disabilities on the basis of disability. (42 U.S.C. § 12131, et seq. and 29 U.S.C. § 794).

These laws protect all people with disabilities in the United States. An individual is considered to have a "disability" if he or she has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, has a record of such impairment, or is regarded as having such impairment.

The ADA prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in all State and local government programs, services, and activities regardless of whether they receive DOJ financial assistance. it also protects people who are discriminated against because of their association with a person with a disability.

These laws prohibit discriminatory treatment, including misconduct, on the basis of disability in virtually all law enforcement services and activities. These activities include, among others, interrogating witnesses, providing emergency services, enforcing laws, addressing citizen complaints, and arresting, booking, and holding suspects. These laws also prohibit retaliation for filing a complaint or participating in the investigation.

This document should keep you informed about what is misconduct and save your career when you succumb to a weak moment. Bottom line; use the analogy, “Bell. Book, Candle.” Would you like your actions to be heard about, read about, or seen?

Ultimately, our ability to build and maintain community credibility is dependant on our basic values. However, values themselves, whether they are personal, organizational, or professional, are essentially non-negotiable.

Other articles by Barnhart:

The God complex Youth inmate subculture