|
Want Brotherly Love? Don't be Poor! (#456, 10/12/24)
Violence is down in Philly, L.A. and D.C. Have their poor noticed?
Prevention Through Preemption (#455, 9/16/24)
Expanding the scope of policing beyond making arrests
Switching Sides (#454, 8/30/24)
St. Louis’ D.A. argues that a condemned man is in fact innocent
"Distraction Strike"? Angry Punch? Both? (#453, 8/11/24)
When cops get rattled, the distinction may ring hollow
Bringing a Gun To a Knife Fight (#452, 7/30/24)
Cops carry guns. Some citizens flaunt knives. Are poor outcomes inevitable?
"Numbers" Rule – Everywhere (#451, 7/2/24)
Production pressures degrade what's "produced" – and not just in policing
Is Crime Really Down? It Depends... (#450, 6/20/24)
Even when citywide numbers improve, place really, really matters
Kids With Guns (#449, 6/3/24)
Ready access and permissive laws create a daunting problem
De-Prosecution? What's That? (#448, 4/27/24)
Philadelphia's D.A. eased up on lawbreakers. Did it increase crime?
Ideology (Still) Trumps Reason (#447, 4/9/24)
When it comes to gun laws, “Red” and “Blue” remain in the driver’s seat
Shutting the Barn Door (#446, 3/19/24)
Oregon moves to re-criminalize hard drugs
Houston, We Have (Another) Problem (#445, 2/28/24)
Fueled by assault rifles, murders plague the land
Wrong Place, Wrong Time, Wrong Cop (#444, 2/8/24)
Recent exonerees set "records" for wrongful imprisonment
America's Violence- Beset Capital City (#443, 1/20/24)
Our Nation's capital is plagued by murder
Are Civilians Too Easy on the Police? (II) (#442, 12/18/23)
Exonerated of murder, but not yet done
Warning: (Frail) Humans at Work (#441, 11/29/23)
The presence of a gun can prove lethal
See No Evil - Hear No Evil - Speak No Evil (#440, 11/14/23)
Is the violent crime problem really all in our heads?
Policing Can't Fix What Really Ails (#439, 10/18/23)
California's posturing overlooks a chronic issue
Confirmation Bias Can be Lethal (#438, 9/21/23)
Why did a "routine" stop cost a man's life?
When (Very) Hard Heads Collide (II) (#437, 9/5/23)
What should cops do when miscreants refuse to comply? Refuse to comply?
Keep going...
|
|
|
10/15/24 An in-depth assessment of the consequences of officer
exposure to the “cumulative stress of policing” reveals that an accumulation of stressful and
traumatic events, and the frequent use of force, can lead to depression and PTSD. Officers involved in an
episode that leads to a death seem particularly apt to “quietly deal with trauma in ways that cause their
performance or judgment to slip on the streets.” Related posts
1
2
3
A Missouri apartment management firm has been sued by DOJ for violating the Fair Housing
Act by categorically banning prospective tenants “with any past felony conviction and certain other
criminal histories,” no matter the nature of the crime nor when it occurred. Doing so, according to DOJ,
unlawfully discriminates against persons of color. Although criminal histories “are known to have
significant racial disparities”, they’re not considered to accurately depict current conduct or
predict future behavior.
Related post
Perceptions that transit crime has skyrocketed are keeping riders away, and particularly from trains.
Big city systems including New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and San Francisco, are now
requiring payment up-front. They’ve also been “fortifying” entrances to keep fare-jumpers at
bay. Chicago’s Metro Link is installing eight-foot metal gates for that purpose. No fare card: no entry.
Related post
10/14/24 An in-depth assessment
of LAPD’s field training program for new officers criticized the agency’s inattention to
recruit feedback about their experiences. Trainees reported that some training officers display negative
attitudes. Recruits are frequently told to “forget everything you learned in the Academy”.
Degrading “hazing rituals” and “rites of passage” (e.g., requiring that new officers
shave their heads, wear long-sleeved attire in hot weather, and keep quiet unless spoken to) are also
commonplace.
Related post
South Bend, Indiana’s police officer entrance examinations are under fire.
According to DOJ’s just-filed lawsuit, the physical fitness test is biased against females, and the
written exam discriminates against Black applicants. What’s more, neither can “meaningfully
distinguish between applicants who can and cannot perform the position of entry-level police officer.”
The fitness test includes “a vertical jump, sit-ups, 300-meter run, push-ups, 1.5-mile run, and a pistol
trigger pull.” The written test has 120-130 multiple choice questions in seven sections. Lawsuit
Related post
And the
carnage in D.C. continues. Last week our nation’s capital suffered five dead in five shootings over
four days. Two persons were also wounded in the gunfire, which reportedly took place in five different
neighborhoods. D.C. also had three homicides from a fire, and one by a stabbing. Nine murders in four days.
And that’s how the story in the Washington Post ends. Related posts
1
2
In a message to PoliceIssues, the mother of Marcellis Stinnette, who was shot and killed by a then-
Waukegan, Ill. police officer four years ago, states that “after investigations , it was founded that
there was no active warrant for my son. My family had been harassed by the same officer for years prior to him
murdering my son.” Ex-Waukegan officer Dante Salinas is pending trial for Mr. Stinnette's murder.
Related post
Soon after former L.A. Sheriff’s Lt. Alex Villanueva was elected to his
agency’s top job in 2018, he created a unit to investigate county officials. A current inquiry reveals
that it focused on digging up dirt on Villanueva’s critics, including Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, Inspector
General Max Huntsman, and an L.A. Times reporter. But prosecutors rejected what cases the unit sent
forward. In 2022 Villanueva lost his bid for re-election. And his former henchmen are now being grilled about
their true intentions.
Related post
10/11/24 Having pled guilty to Federal civil rights violations, ex-Crawford Co.,
Arkansas deputy Levi White drew 63 months in Federal prison, and his former partner Zackary King got twelve,
for brutally assaulting a man who shoplifted a water bottle. Although “R.W.” (Randal Ray Worcester,
26) wound up lying helplessly on the ground, White delivered repeated blows to his head, then violently
slammed it to the ground. And, yes, a bystander captured it all on video. Video
Related post
10/10/24 Three years ago then-Long Beach, Calif. school cop Eddie Gonzalez
impulsively opened fire on a vehicle that was speeding away from a fight. One of his bullets struck and killed
18-year old Manuela Rodriguez, who had been involved in the brawl. Gonzalez was fired, charged with murder and
locked up. A jury deadlocked in April, and he soon pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter. Prosecutors asked for
six years but he drew three. And based on time served, he was just released on parole.
Related post
Prompted by the brutal death of a rookie Sheriff’s deputy while training at the
Southwest Indiana Law Enforcement Academy, the AP examined its reportedly aggressive, hands-on culture,
and that of its host agency, the Evansville police dept. Why do officers come to view virtually all citizens as
“a potentially deadly threat”? Why do they develop a “mindset” that often leads to the
use of weapons and physical force? These issues will soon be explored as the lawsuit filed by the
deputy’s widow unfolds.
Related post
Former Houston P.D. detective Gerald Goines will have to serve at least thirty years on a pair of 60-year
murder terms he just received over the deaths of two occupants of a home that was raided by his colleagues
during a no-knock entry. Not knowing it was the police, the occupants opened fire and wounded four officers
during the ensuing shootout. Goines, who lied about a narcotics buy to get the search warrant, was responsible
for George Floyd’s 2004 conviction for selling crack cocaine.
Related post
10/9/24 In the U.S. on special immigrant visas, a 27-year old Afghan man and his brother-in
-law, a juvenile, have been charged with conspiring to provide material support to the Islamic state by
committing a massacre on Election Day. Nasir Ahmad Tawhedi was arrested after buying two AK-47 rifles, along
with magazines and ammunition, from an FBI informant. Tawhedi had used his phone to communicate with an alleged
Islamic recruiter. He had also searched for information about buying guns and went online to view images from
the White House and Washington Monument webcams.
Related post
A 2022 Federal
rule expanded the definition of just what is a firearm, thus subject to legal controls, to include parts
kits that can be readily fashioned into a working gun. That upset the Fifth Circuit, which struck down the
rule. But the Supreme Court voted 5-4 to keep it in place until it decided things. Yesterday it heard
arguments, pro and con. Chief Justice Roberts seemed to favor the rule. “My understanding is that
it’s not terribly difficult for someone to do this,” he said, about turning parts kits into
unserialized “ghost guns.” But his colleagues seemed split. And a decision will come.
Related post
One-hundred license plate-reading cameras are being installed throughout L.A.’s San
Fernando Valley, particularly near neighborhoods beset by burglaries and robberies. Optical character
recognition will allow plates to be compared to those of wanted vehicles, and images will remain online to ID
vehicles present near crime scenes. But in 2020 the State Auditor criticized the usefulness of the cameras and
their privacy implications, and civil rights groups have come out in opposition.
Related post
10/8/24 Mobs that have been besieging 7-Elevens in Los Angeles have expanded into the home of Disneyland. While
a street takeover delayed the cops, an aggressive band of masked shoplifters “ransacked” an Anaheim
7-Eleven, punching the clerk and carting off the cash register and a load of merchandise. Calling the incident
the first in the city, Anaheim PD Sgt. Matt Sutter promised his agency would endeavor to “stop this
before it gets started.”
Related post
The Supreme Court rejected hearing an appeal by former Forth Worth officer Aaron Dean, who in
2019 shot and killed a resident by firing through a window as he stood outside her home. Dean had assumed that
Atatiana Jefferson, who apparently had a gun, was an intruder. In December 2022 a jury convicted Dean of
manslaughter and sentenced him to twelve years. He argued that he was tried for murder, and that the
lesser crime wasn’t mentioned until the end of trial.
Related post
10/7/24 LAPD officer Toni McBride remained on the job after Chief Bernard Parks held
that her April 2020 shooting of Daniel Hernandez, who aggressively flaunted a box cutter, was
“in policy”. But the Police Commission disagreed because her last two rounds were fired while
Hernandez was on the ground. McBride appealed, and a hearing examiner just reversed the Commission. McBride is
now fully cleared.
Related post
One year
ago Fairfax County (Va.) police sergeant Wesley Shifflett and another officer chased Timothy McCree
Johnson, 37 after he shoplifted a pair of sunglasses. As they entered a dark wooded area Sgt. Shifflett said
Mr. Johnson reached for his waist. Both officers fired their guns. Sgt. Shifflett’s rounds killed Mr.
Johnson, who was unarmed. Mr. Johnson was Black; both officers are White. Sgt. Shifflett was fired. At his
recentl trial jurors acquitted him of manslaughter but convicted him of felony reckless handling of a
firearm. According to the original story, Sgt. Shifflett had pointed his gun at other shoplifters
in the past.
Related post
State and Federal cases against the Louisville cops accused of civil rights and other charges in
the death of Breonna Taylor continue to be litigated. Just filed, a superseding Federal indictment uses
“additional allegations” to accuse ex-cops Sgt. Kyle Meany and Det. Joshua Jaynes of using false
information to secure the search warrant. A recent ruling absolved them of directly causing the death of Ms.
Taylor, whose killing a judge blamed on her boyfriend opening fire when the officers burst in.
Related post
The L.A. Sheriff’s Dept. is reportedly beset by
deputy subgroups that critics - within and outside the agency - liken to gangs. Shot-callers allegedly prod
deputies to lie and cheat to embellish cases and protect each other from oversight. It now seems that the
Norwalk station, which wasn’t known to have a deputy gang, has at least its trappings, with a logo that
includes “Nazi-like imagery.” But deputies insist it’s simply a harmless
“station tattoo”.
Related post
In 1992, on retrial, an L.A. jury convicted Franky Carrillo of a 1991 murder based on the eyewitness
testimony of six witnesses. What the jurors weren’t allowed to hear was a seventh voice, from a man who
was also there and said he was the shooter. In time the Innocence Project brought that critical fact to
light. And the witnesses conceded they were coached to I.D. Carrillo. His conviction was vacated in 2011.
Carrillo subsequently earned a university degree and was elected to an L.A.-area Democratic committee. He is
now a candidate to represent California’s 51st. District in the State Assembly.
Related post
An investigation by the Washington Post reveals that “hundreds” of persons have been
arrested during the past several years based on connections made through facial recognition technology. But
police seldom reveal their use of the tool, and instead credit identifications to human sources or general
investigative efforts. That deprives accused and their lawyers of being able to challenge use of the
technology, which is known to be imprecise, and is particularly prone to misfire with persons of color.
Related post
In an editorial entitled “Two weeks and too many bodies on the streets,” the editors of the
Chicago Tribune implore Mayor Brandon Johnson to reinstate ShotSpotter. Its absence, they write, has
already led to six instances of bodies lying on the streets for extended periods after shots are fired and no
one calls 9-1-1. An alderman complained that a 14-year old’s body wasn’t found for an hour.
“An ambulance could have been dispatched within minutes, but instead a young man bled out on the
street.”
Related post
10/4/24 In 2019 Crips gangster Shanice Amanda Dyer, then 17, helped
gun down two rivals. But strict policies by progressive Los Angeles D.A. George Gascon led her to be prosecuted
as a juvenile. She was released on probation last February. Four months later Dyer, now 22, staged a murder. In
the interim Gascon, whose stance was openly resented by his staff, has given prosecutors more freedom. But one
of his former prosecutors calls Dyer’s latest killing “predictable and preventable.”
Related post
Jurors convicted the remaining three ex-Memphis cops who participated in the lethal beating of Tyre
Nichols. But the verdicts were mixed. None was convicted of the most serious civil rights violation, causing a
death, which carries a life sentence. Tadarrius Bean and Justin Smith were acquitted of civil rights charges
altogether, while Demetrius Haley was convicted of a lesser civil rights violation that carries up to ten years
imprisonment. All were convicted of witness tampering, which can bring up to a 20-year sentence. Haley was also
convicted of conspiracy to witness tamper. DOJ news release
Related post
In Chicago’s beset Englewood area, officers conducted an “investigate stop”
of a 16-year old boy. During the pat-down, a loaded handgun was found in the youth’s waistband, and a
round discharged as an officer sought to remove it. The officer and the teen were both wounded and taken to the
hospital. They are reportedly in “good condition.”
Related post
10/3/24 Settling a long-running dispute with the Justice Department, Maryland has
agreed to revamp its hiring practices for State Police applicants. It will modify its written entrance exam,
which DOJ said discriminated against Blacks, and the physical fitness test, which reportedly discriminated
against women. Past applicants who were needlessly disqualified will be recompensed; up to twenty-five will be
hired.
Related post
Dismantling a long-standing White supremacist gang, Federal and local authorities arrested
sixty-two alleged members of the “SFV Peckerwoods.” Based in L.A.’s San Fernando Valley, the
accused - including many middle-aged men and women - ran drug houses, marketing large quantities of illicit
drugs, including fentanyl, heroin and meth. They also pretended to own legitimate businesses, and used stolen
ID’s and prisoner names to get salary reimbursements through the COVID-19 paycheck protection program.
Related post
Three men were originally
charged with the 2011 murder of Chicago police officer Clifton Lewis, who was shot and killed while working a
second job as a security guard. Allegations of police coercion and prosecutorial misconduct ultimately led to
charges being dropped against Edgardo Colon and Tyrone Clay. And now, for like reasons, prosecutors vacated the
conviction of the third defendant, Alexander Villa. He was just released after serving nearly thirteen years.
Related post
10/2/24 A million bucks each. That’s what the FBI has agreed to pay 22 women who sued the agency
for wrongly dismissing them from the FBI Academy. According to the plaintiffs, they were forced to endure sexual
harassment and were subjected to far higher standards than male recruits. A 2022 OIG report confirmed, among other things, that women had been treated
more harshly during “tactical and defensive tactics training.” Plaintiffs who wish to return to the
Academy will be allowed to do so.
Related post
On July 19 Chicago mail carrier Octavia Redmond, 48, was shot dead while making
her rounds. And a 15-year old boy was just arrested in Iowa for the killing. Police claim that the youth exited
a stolen car, walked up to the carrier and shot her “multiple times at close range.” He’s been
charged as a juvenile with first-degree murder. Chicago mail carriers have been beset by armed robbers who steal
packages and “arrow keys” to collection boxes. Related posts
1
2
California’s Governor just signed into law a measure that
allows licensed recreational marijuana outlets to prepare and serve food and (nonalcoholic) drinks and host live
entertainment. Patrons are also allowed to smoke and vape. Advocates say this will help licensed pot dealers
compete with black-market sellers. Skeptics worry about the effects of secondhand pot smoke. Coincidentally,
the National Academies just issued an urgent call for “a public health campaign aimed at
parents and vulnerable populations...that would protect public health and reduce the harms of rising cannabis
use.”
Drug legalization updates
Related post
10/1/24 In 2021 “witness inconsistencies” led outgoing N.Y. Gov. Andrew Cuomo to grant
Jon-Adrian Velazquez clemency for the 1998 murder of a retired NYPD officer. Velazquez, who always insisted he
was innocent, was released after serving 23 years. New DNA techniques failed to connect him to a betting slip
that the shooter handled, and D.A. Alvin Bragg just had the conviction vacated. Velazquez’s travails
had long drawn attention from politicians and the
media and were fodder for a celebrated Dateline episode. Related posts
1
2
More than
fourteen-million bucks. That’s how much Zishan Alvi, owner of a Chicago lab, collected from
Federal COVID-19 funds by submitting numerous fraudulent COVID-19 test results for reimbursement. Worse still, he
falsely informed numerous patients that their tests had proven negative, even though they were either not
performed or the results were inconclusive. Alvi just pled guilty and faces up to twenty years in prison.
COVID-19 Updates
Prior rules
allowed illegal border crossers to apply for asylum, but only when illegal crossings didn’t exceed
2,500 per day, averaged over a week. In June an “interim” change set the maximum at 1,500 per day.
And now it’s grown even tougher. Although the maximum remains 1,500, it’s averaged over 28 days.
Although illegal crossings never dipped low enough to meet the most forgiving threshold, border officials say
the change was needed because crossings were once fairly low and could again dip.
Immigration updates
Related post
9/30/24 A recently-filed Federal criminal complaint charges Adam Iza, aka “The
Godfather,” with engaging in a largescale, years-long scheme to hide millions of dollars in illicit
earnings from his cryptocurrency business. Iza allegedly had several L.A. County Sheriff’s deputies on his
payroll, and they supposedly helped him extort clients by performing illegal searches and making illegal arrests.
Several deputies were recently relieved of duty in connection with an unspecified Federal probe.
Related post
In 2017 a Mayoral directive barred L.A. city employees from helping the Feds enforce civil
immigration laws. To give the order legal heft, the City Council introduced a bill last year that would codify
L.A.’s “sanctuary city” status into law. But the proposal has been criticized by skeptics who
fear it would encourage illegal migration and burden taxpayers. It’s languished in committee, and unless
the “Reds” triumph in the Presidential contest, its future in the predominantly “Blue”
city seems uncertain.
Immigration updates
Related post
An analysis of existing data about
police stops in Chicago between 2013-2015 revealed that Black officers stopped fewer Black citizens than White
officers; that this effect increased as the number of Black officers patrolling an area increased; and that as
the latter took place, stops of Black persons by White officers also decreased, demonstrating a collegial
influence. Related posts
1
2
Rejecting defense contentions that the accused, a schizophrenic, was unable to tell right from wrong, a jury
convicted Ahmad Alissa of ten counts of first-degree murder and numerous other charges for the 2021 massacre at a
Boulder, CO supermarket. He was sentenced to life without parole. Prosecutors furnished evidence that Alissa made
many objective decisions, from how he armed himself to how he conducted the massacre, not firing at random and
chasing persons who were trying to hide.
Related post
|
|
|