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More Poverty, Less Trust (#469, 6/23/25)
Citizens who most need the cops trust them the least
Violence Isn't Down for the Cops (#468, 5/30/25)
More officers are being murdered. And mostly, with guns.
A Lethal Distraction (#467, 5/12/25)
A foot pursuit of hit-and-run suspects turns into an exchange of fire with an armed resident
Putting Things Off (#466, 4/27/25)
Pursuits hurt and kill innocents. What are the options?
Gun Control? What's That? (#465, 4/1/25)
Ideological quarrels beset gun laws. And gun law-making. And gun law-enforcing.
Forewarned is Forearmed (#464, 3/19/25)
Killings of police officers seem inevitable. What might help?
Who's Under the Gun? The ATF, That's Whom (#463, 3/6/25)
Going after gun controllers, for the usual reasons
Who's Under the Gun? The FBI, That's Whom (#462, 2/14/25)
Going after the FBI for going after the Capitol rioters
Point of View (#461, 1/30/25)
Do scholars really “get” the craft of policing?
All in the Family (Part II) (#460, 1/6/25)
A decade after Part I, domestic killings remain commomplace
Acting...or Re-acting? (#459, 12/8/24)
An urgent response proves tragically imprecise
Citizen Misbehavior Breeds Voter Discontent (#458, 11/20/24)
Progressive agendas face rebuke in even the "Bluest" of places
A Matter of Facts (#457, 11/3/24)
Did flawed science place an innocent man on death row?
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
Keep going...
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7/7/25 Lethal violence continues to beset Chicago. During the early morning hours of July 2nd., a male attempted to rob two women inside a South Shore residence. When they
resisted, he opened fire, killing a 29-year old woman and wounding her 37-year old companion. One day later, during the early morning hours of July 3rd., gunfire broke
out at an outdoor gathering on the Far South Side. Four persons were wounded, two critically. So far, no arrests have been announced for
either episode.
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President Trump signed the final
version of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” As enacted, it sets the making and transfer tax for silencers and short-barreled
rifles and shotguns, which had been $200, to zero. But it does not remove them from the special registration and transfer provisions of the National
Firearms Act, as the original House version had intended. That language was stripped from the final bill by the Senate after its
Parliamentarian objected to non-budgetary changes. Act (see sec.
70436).
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Lethal gunplay struck several cities during the overnight hours of July 4th.-5th.
In Indianapolis a street brawl devolved into a mass shooting. Two teens, ages 15 and 16 were killed, and five persons ages 17 to 21
were wounded. “Several guns” were recovered. About the same time, a “large altercation” in Brockton, MS also ended with gunfire. Six were wounded, apparently
none fatally. And in chronically beset Chicago, a spate of violent episodes (click here and here) in its chronically troubled neighborhoods killed four and left at
least eight wounded.
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A former Marine who served in Iraq and
Afghanistan, Edward Kelley must have seemed a natural for the July 6th. pardons of Capitol rioters that were meted out by President Trump.
But Kelley’s upset over his arrest had led to him to devise an elaborate plot to kill everyone who helped investigate his actions on
January 6th. Alas, one of his buds turned him in. Convicted at trial of conspiracy to murder, he just drew a life sentence. And the judge
turned away his claim that the pardon covered that crime as well. You see, his murder plot was hatched after January 6th.
Capitol updates
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According to an inquiry by the New York Times,
American cops are far less successful at solving murders than their peers in other “rich nations” such as Australia, Germany
and Great Britain. Their murder clearance rates are between seventy and ninety percent, while America’s is fifty-eight. One reason
might be that the sheer numbers of murders in the U.S. overwhelms investigative resources. Most killings in the U.S. are also committed
with guns, enabling assailants to keep their distance. And many involve gang members, thus minimizing the availability of willing witnesses.
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“The majority’s
ruling…is…profoundly dangerous, since it gives the Executive the go-ahead to sometimes wield the kind of unchecked,
arbitrary power the Founders crafted our Constitution to eradicate.” Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s blast at her
conservative colleagues for stripping District Courts’ authority to issue nationwide injunctions illustrates the assertedly
“deepening” division between the six “conservative” and three “liberal” Justices. According to a
legal scholar, Justice Jackson “realizes the balls and strikes on the court” and is responding accordingly.
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7/3/25 “Drill” rap expresses the
violence that besets gang life. And Chicago’s “drill” rap scene made another dark turn as a drive-by took the lives of
four persons and wounded fourteen others who were waiting outside the Artis Lounge, where rapper Mello Buckzz was set to stage an album
release party. Victim ages ranged from 21 to 32, and at least two of the wounded were reportedly in critical condition. As of yet, no
arrests. Three years ago another shooting at the same address killed one and wounded three.
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Bryan Kohberger, a
criminology PhD student at Washington State University, was identified as the killer of four University of Idaho students with the help of
genetic DNA. Three years ago, Kohberger, who was unacquainted with his victims, broke into a home late at night and used a “military
-style” knife he had bought online to stab them as they lay in bed. His motives are unknown. He just pled guilty, ostensibly to
avoid the death penalty. Some of the victim’s relatives support the outcome; others are upset that Kohberger wasn’t required
to fully confess.
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California doesn’t
recognize concealed-carry licenses issued by other States. Its laws also forbid non-residents from applying for a CCW permit. This,
according to a Southern California Federal judge, is a bridge too far. Ruling in a lawsuit filed against the State’s A.G. by an
out-of-state resident, U.S. District Judge Cathy Ann Bencivengo just found that California’s unforgiving posture violates the Second
and Fourteenth Amendments. She has ordered that the parties “meet and confer and submit a proposed order for an injunction
consistent with this order within 30 days.” Related posts
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On the one
hand, the Department of Homeland Security just announced that its get-tough on illegal immigrants posture has cleaned up border
areas, leading to “the lowest nationwide encounters and apprehensions in history—shattering record lows set earlier this
year under the Trump Administration.” On the other, California’s farmers fear for their crops. “In the fields, I would say
70% of the workers are gone. If 70% of your workforce doesn’t show up, 70% of your crop doesn’t get picked and can go bad in
one day.” One farmer usually has 300 workers planting strawberries. But fears of an immigration raid meant that only 80 showed up.
Immigration updates
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7/2/25 In reportedly the largest-ever such scheme, four Californians - Kristerpher Turner, 52, Toriano Knox, 55, Kenya
Jones, 46, and Joyce Johnson, 55 - were Federally indicted for submitting fraudulent applications for COVID-19 tax relief that caused the
Treasury to pay out $93 million in unearned benefits to 148 companies. Knox and Jones were also indicted for orchestrating the near-fatal
shooting of Turner, whom they feared intended to cooperate with the authorities. Turner was paralyzed.
COVID updates
Overturning a lower-court decision, a
three-judge panel of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Federal law prohibiting the sale of handguns to persons under 21
“fits squarely within” the test imposed by Bruen,
and is therefore Constitutional. “From English common law to America’s founding and beyond, our regulatory tradition has
permitted restrictions on the sale of firearms to individuals under the age of 21.” However, this opinion clashes with a January ruling by the Fifth Circuit, so it will be ultimately up to
the Supreme Court to decide. Decision
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Los Angeles bills itself as a “sanctuary city.” But what should cops do while ICE conducts its highly
controversial “sweeps”? Guidelines reportedly just issued by LAPD instruct officers to avoid participating in the enforcement
of immigration law. Instead, they should concentrate on keeping the peace, ensure that citizens stay safe, and try to keep property from
being damaged. Immigration agents have been working in plain clothes, sowing uncertainty about their identity. That’s caused fear
and confusion. Officers are instructed to verify that questionable agents are who they claim to be, and to record encounters with those
who don’t cooperate.
Immigration updates
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7/1/25
U.S. Rep. Jamie Raskin, a staunch “Blue” in his second term representing Maryland’s 8th. District, has introduced the
“Clean Hands Firearm Procurement Act.’’ It pertains to firearms dealers to whom ATF traced 25 or more guns that were
recovered from crimes within three years of their sale. Dealers who fall into this category at least twice within a three-year period
would be publicly identified, and Federal agencies would be barred from entering into contracts with them. On the other side of the isle, his bid was joined by Senator Alex Padilla.
House Bill
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Last December L.A. Mayor Karen Bass signed an
ordinance entitled “Prohibition of the Use of City Resources for Federal Immigration Enforcement” into law. According to its
provisions, city employees may not (among many other things) “investigate, cite, arrest, hold, transfer, or detain” anyone for
the purposes of immigration enforcement, “provide any Immigration Agent access” to non-public areas, or “make any person
in City custody available” to immigration agents. And that just led DOJ to sue the city. In its view, the ordinance “is
preempted by federal immigration law.”
Ordinance
Immigration updates
Related post
6/30/25
A blaze broke out in Canfield Mountain, a popular hiking spot in the hills next to Coeur d’Alene early Sunday afternoon. About a
half hour later a sniper opened fire, killing two firefighters and critically wounding a third. Hostile gunfire continued as deputies
arrived, and they fired back. Mid-afternoon a cell signal guided a tactical team to the spot where they found a weapon and a man’s
body. No information about his identity has yet been released. He is thought to have acted alone.
Related post
About one a.m., June
8, 2022, U.S. Marshals guarding the residence of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh observed a man being dropped off by a taxi. Nicholas
John Roske, a 26-year old California resident, promptly called 911 and said he intended to kill the Justice, then commit suicide. Police
soon arrived and arrested Roske. He was armed with a Glock 9mm. pistol that he had purchased from a California gun store six days earlier.
Roske just pled guilty to attempted murder of a Federal official. He faces thirty years to life.
Related post
In June, 2022, during a
scorching Texas day, a passer-by came across a locked and seemingly abandoned tractor-trailer that was packed with undocumented migrants.
Its air conditioning wasn’t working, and fifty-three, including six children, died. Last Friday a Federal judge sentenced two leaders
of the human smuggling enterprise responsible for the tragedy. Armando Gonzales-Ortega, 55, drew 83 years, and Felipe Orduna-Torres, 30,
got life. Six other accused are still to be tried or sentenced.
Immigration updates
Related post
The Supremes are yet
to decide whether being born in the U.S. carries automatic citizenship. According to President Trump’s Executive Order #14160, it
does not. But their just-issued decision in Trump v. CASA et
al. (24A884) bars Federal District courts from issuing injunctions whose effects extend beyond their geographical boundaries. That
follows on cases in Maryland, Washington State and Massachusetts where Federal judges ruled for birthright and against Trump.
And yes, the decision was split 6-3, with the three liberal Justices (Sotomayor, Kagan and Jackson) dissenting.
Immigration updates
Related posts 1
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One of the founders
of a company that helped clients obtain funds through the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) was found guilty of preparing numerous
fraudulent applications. Federal jurors convicted Stephanie Hockridge, a principal of the firm “Blueacorn,” of enabling the
wrongful collection of “tens of millions of dollars” in exchange for kickbacks. She faces up to 20 years in prison. Meanwhile, in New York City, former
Gubernatorial aide Linda Sun and her husband Chris Hu were indicted for steering multi-million dollar contracts for personal protective
gear during the pandemic to a Chinese firm with whom Sun had close personal ties. And the kickbacks allegedly flowed in.
COVID updates
Three Federal prosecutors
who were involved in cases stemming from the Capitol assault have been fired. One handled these matters as a line lawyer, while the
other two acted in a supervisory capacity. One of the lawyers disclosed that he received a termination notice from A.G. Pam Bondi. It cited
the authority for his removal as “Article II of the United States Constitution and the laws of the United States” (Article II
enumerates Presidential authority, including the appointment of “inferior officers”) but did not articulate a reason.
Capitol updates
Related post
Chicago’s Crime Gun Intelligence Center (CGIC), a partnership between local police departments and ATF, brings
officers together to track the paths that guns took on their way to misuse and to link them, using advanced ballistics techniques, to shell
casings found at current and past crime scenes. Non-fatal shootings, of which there were 1,800 last year, get much of the team’s
attention, and solution rates in such cases have significantly improved. Related posts
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6/27/25 Texas is one of 29 states
without a “Red Flag” law. Such laws authorize
judges, on application from police or family members, to issue “Extreme Risk Protection Orders” that direct the seizure of
firearms from allegedly dangerous persons. A new Texas law
forbids localities from adopting such laws, and makes it a felony for officials to act on them. It also bars judges from ordering that guns
be seized except in criminal cases or in family law matters where a protective order is in effect.
Related post
As agencies around the country have discovered,
drones can alert street cops of lurking dangers and other critical information while they’re enroute to a call. With that in mind,
the Los Angeles Police Commission, LAPD’s civilian overseers, has loosened rules that restricted the use of drones to barricaded
suspects and such. In the future they can be deployed on any “call for service.” They’ll also be available for observing
mass events. Tracking lawful demonstrators, though, is forbidden.
Related post
“The
5th. Street Crew” and the “Philly Flowers.” One year ago these and other groups fell in the bull’s-eye of
Pennsylvania's newly organized Organized Retail Crime Unit. Established by the State Attorney General, its mission was to go after the
ring leaders whose crews had been swarming clothing, electronics and food stores in and near Philadelphia. During the past year its
investigations have led to charges against “more than forty” defendants and the recovery of over $2 million dollar’s
worth of purloined goods. And they’re just getting started.
Related post
While employed as a “constitutional
policing” advisor to former L.A. District Atty. George Gascon, a “progressive” with an eye out for bad cops, Diana Teran
gave him information about eleven troubled deputies that she got during a prior stint with the Sheriff’s Dept. That drew the ire of
the former Sheriff and of the new D.A., who had ousted Gascon. Teran was charged by the Calif. Atty. General with improperly using
confidential information. But an appeals court just dismissed the case. According to its ruling, everything that Teran furnished was part
of a court record and accessible to the public.
Related post
6/26/25
Cynthia Gonzalez is vice-mayor of Cudahy, a small, poverty-stricken community in Southeast Los Angeles County. She recently posted a
video on social media that berates street gang members for not participating in demonstrations against immigration sweeps. It ends on this
note: “So whoever is the leadership over there just fucking get your members in order.” Ms. Gonzalez has been criticized by the
city. And by a local police union, which pointed out that local gang members have murdered Hispanic cops.
Click here for the video.
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Three years ago a
12-year old Philadelphia boy riding a bicycle fired at undercover officers who tried to stop him, shattering a police car’s back
window. Then-officer Edsaul Mendoza caught up to Thomas Siderio on foot and shot the boy dead. As it turns out, Mendoza knew that the
boy had already tossed his gun, but he fired anyways. Last year Mendoza pled guilty to 3rd. degree murder and drew 8-20 years. Philadelphia
just agreed to settle a lawsuit by the boy’s family for $3 million.
Related post
As the Administration implements its forceful immigration agenda, litigation pro- and con- continues to mount.
ACLU is suing Nassau County
(Long Island, NY) for authorizing its cops to partner with ICE and make immigration arrests. Meanwhile, DOJ sued the Orange County (CA) Registrar of
Voters for refusing to provide information about non-citizens who try to vote. And the State of Minnesota for letting illegal aliens pay
in-state tuition. There are also struggles within the Federal system. DOJ has sued Maryland’s Federal District Court for automatically
enjoining the removal of any immigrant who files a habeas petition.
Immigration updates
Related post
Violence is up in Cincinnati, with 172
violent crimes during the last month-long period compared to 147 in 2024. That includes twelve homicides, compared with four last year.
Mayor Aftab Pureval warns that this surge is having a “real, tangible, and negative impact on our local economy, the health of our
communities, and our vibrancy as a city.” Police are responding with a citywide task force. And they’ll be increasing the use
of drones.
Related post
6/25/25 Three weekend shootings in Montgomery killed a 13-year old and left a man in the hospital. That’s led Alabama’s
capital city to enhance the police response in hard-hit areas. Along with a bolstered police presence and an increased focus on suspected
offenders, license plate readers, facial recognition tools and drones will be put into play. Montgomery will also expand its Star Watch program, which integrates residential cameras into a citywide system.
Related post
“Scientific” interviewing? A new
Police Chief article urges cops to avoid making confessions their objective when interviewing criminal suspects. That can provoke false
admissions of guilt and lead to a wrongful conviction. Instead, officers should focus on gathering information. Obtaining detailed exculpatory
statements can help identify the innocent and build “stronger, more reliable” cases against the guilty.
Related post
“Guns and drugs go
together.” That, according to Attorney General Pamela Bondi, is why it makes sense to abolish ATF and assign its functions to DEA.
Her plan, which is part of DOJ’s 2026 proposed budget, would need Congressional approval. But gun-control groups (and a few members of
Congress) worry that, given the budget cuts already planned for ATF, a merger would further weaken oversight of the gun industry. Even some
gun enthusiasts are opposed, but for the opposite reason. A merger, they fear, would create “a taxpayer-funded super agency to target
gun owners.”
Related post
Civil injunctions against street gangs have lost favor in California. Five years ago Los Angeles settled a lawsuit that accused its
officers of falsely labeling persons as gang members by dropping injunctions against 46 named gangs. Their example was just followed by Orange
County, which dropped injunctions against thirteen gangs.
According to D.A. Todd Spitzer, the move was prompted by a 2022 State law that substantially narrowed the definition of a gang or gang activity.
Related post
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