Society's Child
The body, found Sept. 8 in the basement of the home in north suburban Gurnee, has been identified through DNA testing as the 59-year-old resident who was supposed to vacate the home two days later.
A bank had foreclosed on the home in the 36000 block of Streamwood Drive, and it was put up for sheriff's sale on July 11, according to Lake County Sheriff's Sgt. Christopher Covelli.
The sale was approved by a judge on August 10, and the new owner took possession August 21. The former owner, Boris Slaskin, had remained in the home throughout the foreclosure process.
"I'm just trying to do what I'm supposed to do," nurse Alex Wubbels explained to Detective Jeff Payne on July 26. Video of her violent arrest was released by the Salt Lake Tribune late Thursday.
Payne lost his temper when Wubbels wouldn't comply with his demand to take a blood sample from an unconscious patient who had been the victim of an explosive car accident that occurred at the end of a high-speed police pursuit of another man.
A new poll from the Cato Institute throws some discouraging light on the overall state of public opinion regarding the First Amendment.
According to the topline poll results (to which I received advance access), 72 percent of Republicans would support making it illegal for an American to burn or desecrate the flag. A little more than half of Republicans would punish the desecrators by stripping them of their U.S. citizenship, something Donald Trump suggested (to great and deserved indignation) a few weeks after he won the election last November.
"The case would be the first of its kind to be heard by either the Missouri Supreme Court or U.S. Supreme Court," notes the Kansas City Star.
Doe claims the requirements violate her right to religious freedom, as Satanists do not believe that life begins at conception. The first court to hear the case rejected Doe's constitutional claims, but an appeals court last week decided Doe's claims might have merit.
It presents "a contested matter of right that involves fair doubt and reasonable room for disagreement," the Western District Court of Appeals ruled unanimously, ordering the case be transferred to the jurisdiction of the Missouri Supreme Court.

An employee of the Qatar-based news network and TV channel Al Jazeera is seen at the channel’s Jerusalem office on July 31, 2017
The move by the communications regulator, known as Ofcom, clears the way for a follow-up documentary focused on Israeli influence in the U.S., the existence of which has previously been suspected but had yet to be made public. Clayton Swisher, director of investigative journalism for Al Jazeera Media Network, confirmed it to The Intercept on Monday. The goal of the British complaint may partly have been to delay publication of the follow-up American version, he said. "At the very same time [as the London investigation] - and we can safely reveal this now - we had an undercover operative working in tandem in Washington, D.C. With this U.K. verdict and vindication past us, we can soon reveal how the Israel lobby in America works through the eyes of an undercover reporter," he said.
Comment: The charge of "anti-Semitism" gets leveled at any person or organization that dares question or criticize Israel's policies towards Palestinians (or anything else). But even with new laws that would seem to make any such questioning - or support of sanctions as something akin to a 'hate crime', there seem to be any number of other outlets now calling the colonialist nation out on its high crimes and inhuman behavior. More and more of the world has their number - and the psychopathic government of Israel doesn't like it.
The measures, which also would have banned smoking marijuana and the use of electronic cigarettes, were proposed by legislators to protect public health from second-hand smoking and to prevent wildfires and reduce litter.
Brown, who vetoed a similar bill last year, said the $100 fine proposed could reach $485 when court assessments are added, an amount he called excessive.
"If people can't smoke even on a deserted beach, where can they?" Brown asked in his veto message. "There must be some limit to the coercive power of government."

Alan P. Friz is accused of locking his 14-year-old daughter in a cage and sexually molesting her.
According to Friendly Atheist blogger Hemant Mehta, when 57-year-old dentist Alan Friz was asked why he'd meted out such inhumane punishment on his teen daughter, he replied, "The Lord is good" and refused to say more.
Friz and his wife Aimee Friz, 36, were arrested last week and arraigned in Dubois County Court on Thursday, said the Dubois County Free Press. Police were called to their house on a report of an out of control child, but what officers found shocked and appalled them.
The landmark ruling threw out the exception that judged sex with a girl below the age of 18 to be illegal, but legal in cases where the girl, aged 15-18, is married.
This meant that boys aged 17 were being prosecuted for having sex with girls their own age, while older men escaped a statutory rape charge because they were married to adolescent wives.
The Boy Scouts released a statement Wednesday, outlining their vision for implementing the changes and for the scouts movement to become gender neutral.
"This decision is true to the BSA's mission and core values outlined in the Scout Oath and Law. The values of Scouting - trustworthy, loyal, helpful, kind, brave and reverent, for example - are important for both young men and women,"Michael Surbaugh, the group's Chief Scout Executive said in the statement.
As the Gothamist reported, the incident took place around 9:00 a.m. at the intersection of 225th Street and Broadway in Marble Hill, where officers from the 50th Precinct say they were responding to a teenager allegedly stealing a bicycle. On the scene, 16-year-old Alfred Burns allegedly "began to struggle with officers and pushed one officer to the ground causing the suspect to fall on top of the officer," an NYPD spokeswoman said Monday.













Comment: (Sept. 2) "Warrant, we don't need no stinking warrant!" Well, yes buddy, you do: Update (Oct. 12): The police chief of Salt Lake City has fired the officer who arrested Wubbels, Jeff Payne, after an internal investigation determined that Payne and his watch commander the day of the confrontation, Lt. James Tracy, violated several department policies. Tracy was demoted for his role in the situation. The chief was quoted as saying: