Society's ChildS


Airplane

Delta jet makes emergency landing in South Carolina after crew reported cockpit 'electrical smell'

GSP Airport, South Carolina
© Bing MapGSP Airport
A commercial regional jet landed at Greenville Spartanburg International Airport after a "declared emergency" Wednesday afternoon, according to officials.

The crew of the regional jet reported an electrical smell in the cockpit, leading to the landing.

Emergency vehicles were called to GSP to prepare for the plane's arrival.

The plane landed safely just before 3:30 p.m.

Rosylin Weston, with GSP, said the jet was a Delta flight from Roanoke to Atlanta.

The emergency landing at GSP is categorized as a diversion, since that was not its destination.

"These are always nerve-racking," Weston said. "But the good news is we have a great team of first responders -- policemen, firemen -- who are trained to spring into action and they do. And fortunately today was good practice for them."

Comment: A few days ago a smoke-filled cabin forced an Alaska Airlines flight from Seattle to Spokane to make an emergency landing.

Some other aircraft related incidents this year include: Planes suddenly 'disappearing' from radar, sometimes in "unprecedented" blackouts; more planes diverting due to "electrical burning and smoke smells", "engine fires" and plane wings "bursting into flames". See also:

SOTT EXCLUSIVE: Year of the planes Cluster of plane problems as 2014 comes to a close


Dollar

Several US state lotteries were fixed - investigation expands

Eddie Tipton
© Brian Powers/The Des Moines Register, FileFILE - In this July 15, 2015 file photo, Eddie Tipton looks over at his lawyers before the start of his trial in Des Moines, Iowa. The former security director of the Multi-State Lottery Association, accused of tampering with lottery drawings to rig jackpots in four states, was convicted of fraud in the attempt to claim a $16.5 million jackpot in Iowa. Investigators are now looking at payouts in 37 other states and U.S. territories that used random-number generators from the Iowa-based association, which administers games and distributes prizes for the lottery consortium.
The allegations read like a movie plot: a lottery industry insider installs an undetectable software program in the computers that pick winning numbers so he can know them in advance. He enlists accomplices to play those numbers and collect the jackpots. And they enrich themselves for years until a misstep unravels their high-tech scheme.

Eddie Tipton, former security director of the Multi-State Lottery Association, has been accused of tampering with drawings in four states over a six-year period, and investigators are now expanding the inquiry nationwide to determine if the number could be larger.

State lotteries in Colorado, Wisconsin, and Oklahoma have confirmed they paid jackpots worth $8 million to Tipton associates, including his old college roommate, Robert Rhodes. Investigators are looking at payouts in the other 37 states and U.S. territories that used random-number generators from the Iowa-based association, which administers games and distributes prizes for the lottery consortium.

The inquiry is sending a chill through state governments that receive $20 billion annually in lottery revenue, and that depend on public confidence in the contests. Tipton installed software or had access to machines for national games such as Hot Lotto and some state-based games. The most lucrative ones, Powerball and scratch tickets, weren't part of the scheme, according to lottery officials.

"It would be pretty naive to believe they are the only four" jackpots involved, said now-retired Iowa deputy attorney general Thomas H. Miller, who oversaw the investigation for 2 ½bd} years. "If you find one cockroach, you have to assume there are 100 more you haven't found."

Tipton, 52, was convicted in July of fraud in the attempt to claim a $16.5 million jackpot in Iowa. He was sentenced to 10 years but is free pending appeal. He is also charged with ongoing criminal conduct and money laundering involving the other three state lotteries. Rhodes, a businessman from Sugar Land, Texas, is charged with fraud in connection with the Iowa jackpot, and is under investigation in Wisconsin.

Tommy Tipton, Eddie's brother, who bought a winning Colorado Lotto ticket in 2005, resigned his position last month as a justice of the peace in Flatonia, Texas, 100 miles west of Houston, but hasn't been charged. Colorado authorities are investigating.

Eddie Tipton's attorney, Dean Stowers, says his client is innocent.

Info

The truth about conspiracy theories

Operation Northwoods
"In many nations, rational people end up believing crazy things, including (false) conspiracy theories. Those crazy thoughts can lead to violence, including terrorism. Many terrorist acts have been fueled by false conspiracy theories, and there is a good argument that some such acts would not have occurred in the absence of such theories. The key point—and, in a way, the most puzzling and disturbing one—is that the crazy thoughts are often held by people who are not crazy at all."

Cass Sunstein - White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
If you don't know who Cass Sunstein is, or what he does now would be a good time to do some research. Not only because of his position with the White House and the power that entails, but because he understands quite clearly what problems are posed by people who, in his own words are, "...neither ignorant, not ill-educated. On the contrary they can be spectacularly well informed..."

Chalkboard

Preschool kids are working harder but learning less

preschool stress, school stress
Step into an American preschool classroom today and you are likely to be bombarded with what we educators call a print-rich environment, every surface festooned with alphabet charts, bar graphs, word walls, instructional posters, classroom rules, calendars, schedules, and motivational platitudes—few of which a 4-year-old can "decode," the contemporary word for what used to be known as reading.

Because so few adults can remember the pertinent details of their own preschool or kindergarten years, it can be hard to appreciate just how much the early-education landscape has been transformed over the past two decades. The changes are not restricted to the confusing pastiche on classroom walls. Pedagogy and curricula have changed too, most recently in response to the Common Core State Standards Initiative's kindergarten guidelines. Much greater portions of the day are now spent on what's called "seat work" (a term that probably doesn't need any exposition) and a form of tightly scripted teaching known as direct instruction, formerly used mainly in the older grades, in which a teacher carefully controls the content and pacing of what a child is supposed to learn.

One study, titled "Is Kindergarten the New First Grade?," compared kindergarten teachers' attitudes nationwide in 1998 and 2010 and found that the percentage of teachers expecting children to know how to read by the end of the year had risen from 30 to 80 percent. The researchers also reported more time spent with workbooks and worksheets, and less time devoted to music and art. Kindergarten is indeed the new first grade, the authors concluded glumly. In turn, children who would once have used the kindergarten year as a gentle transition into school are in some cases being held back before they've had a chance to start. A study out of Mississippi found that in some counties, more than 10 percent of kindergartners weren't allowed to advance to first grade.

Comment:


Sheriff

Four innocent Native Americans set free after 18 years of wrongful incarceration on the condition that they promise not to sue

Fairbanks Four
© Erin Corneliussen/Fairbanks Daily News-MinerThe Fairbanks Four - Marvin Roberts, left to right, Kevin Pease, Eugene Vent, and George Frese - hold up four fingers, symbolizing the Fairbanks Four, in the David Salmon Tribal Hall after they were freed on Thursday, December 17, 2015.
After realizing they were holding 4 innocent men in jail, authorities issued them an ultimatum - If you want freedom, promise not to sue us.

Four innocent Native American men have been set free from prison this week after they agreed not to sue the city or the state for the wrongful conviction and the unnecessary time behind bars. Eugene Vent, Kevin Pease, George Frese and Marvin Roberts, known as the Fairbanks Four, have all been sitting in jail since 1997 for the murder of teenager John Hartman.

Even at the time of the conviction, the case was extremely controversial, with many supporters of the four insisting on their innocence. Family and supporters have continued to fight over the years, collecting evidence of their innocence and pushing for a new trial. As the years went on, the case against them fell apart, making it obvious that the justice system had locked away innocent men for a crime that they did not commit. After years of legal posturing, a new trial was granted this month, and the wrongfully convicted men were quickly released after the new evidence was finally brought to light.

Fearing legal retribution, the court forced the innocent men to agree that they would not sue the state or city, even though they should have every right to do so, after losing many of their adult years to prison.

Attorney General Craig Richards admitted that there was no case against them, but insisted that the state did not make any mistakes in its investigation.

"This is not an exoneration. In this settlement, the four defendants agreed they were properly and validly investigated, prosecuted and convicted. Nonetheless, in light of the new evidence produced at the recent hearing, this settlement is just that, a compromise by the parties in a hard-fought legal battle. This compromise reflects the Attorney General's recognition that if the defendants were retried today it is not clear under the current state of the evidence that they would be convicted," Richard's office said in a statement.

Obviously, if there was any doubt among the prosecution and the courts that these men were innocent, there is no way that they would allow them to walk free. Governor Bill Walker seemed pleased that the group was banned from filing a lawsuit, as he quickly released a statement praising the "compromise."


Comment: "Compromise"!? How is torturing these innocent men by dangling freedom over their heads with the condition that they don't get their rightful reparations considered a 'compromise'? What a despicably conniving and under-handed way to avoid taking responsibility for the wrongful convictions of these four men.


Comment: This story should make us consider just how ex


Sheriff

Cop claims he was spat on as justification for why he assaulted a Seattle homeless man

After an extended investigation, dash cam footage was recently released, thanks to the work of a police accountability activist, showing an 11-year veteran cop violently assaulting a 21-year old homeless man.

On the evening of Saturday, January 3, Seattle police officer, Clark Dickson was dispatched as a backup officer to a homeless encampment, where officers were checking for men with outstanding warrants. After officers had arrested one man without incident, they approached 21-year-old Christopher Tavai.

The officers walk Tavai to the front of their vehicle and begin to question him about his identity. Dickson immediately postures himself in front of the homeless in an intimidating fashion and after a brief conversation Dickson, seemingly for no reason, rears back and proceeds to viciously punch the unsuspecting man directly in the face. He attempted to justify this assault by claiming that Tavai had spit on him.


Comment: Even if Tavai had spit on the officer, which there's no evidence to support that claim, how does that justify assaulting a man that is non-violently complying with their impromptu interrogation?


In the video, Tavai can be seen leaning his head in a slightly downward angle just prior to the punch. However, an investigation conducted by the department's civilian-led accountability arm, which included a detailed analysis of the video, couldn't definitively prove that the homeless man ever spit in the first place.


Sheriff

Oglala Sioux Tribe cop found not guilty after tasing incapacitated man 28 times

Incapacitate man tased
© Black Powder/You Tube
A former Oglala Sioux Tribe police officer charged with three criminal offenses following the repeated use of a Taser on an unresponsive, handcuffed man in 2014 was exonerated by a South Dakota jury last week despite multiple videos of the incident.

The former officer, Rebecca Sotherland, faced charges including "deprivation of constitutional rights, assault with a dangerous weapon and obstruction of a federal investigation by filing a false report." Following a week-long trial in US District Court, the jury in Rapid City, South Dakota found Sotherland not guilty on December 8, according to the Indian Country Today Media Network.

On August 15, 2014, Sotherland, 33, was dispatched to Manderson, South Dakota on a"welfare call," the Associated Press reported. When an intoxicated and handcuffed Jeffrey Eagle Bull would not get up from where he was lying on the ground near a house, Sotherland resorted to force. She was videoed by a witness tasing Eagle Bull about 17 times while he lay unresponsive on the ground.

Sotherland's own body camera, meanwhile, taped the entire incident, which included approximately 28 Taser shocks to Eagle Bull during the 26-minute footage, which was played for the jury during the trial. According to the Rapid City Journal, 18 of the 28 jolts were "drive stuns," known to be less-painful shocks from a Taser, as opposed to the weapon's two, more powerful probes that have the capability to cause neuromuscular incapacitation.


Comment: Dead drunk or playing possum, the man was not a threat. She should be in a jail cell along with the judge that let her off.


Sheriff

Instead of de-escalating the situation, school cop turns things up by repeatedly punching student in the face


A school resource officer is under investigation after a student's cell phone video captured him repeatedly punching a teenager instead of de-escalating the incident. Temporarily reassigned pending an internal investigation, the officer has been accused of having prior run-ins with the student assaulted in the video.

On Thursday, a female student at Millard South High School recorded a cellphone video of several students arguing in the hallway before one of them suddenly charged into another teen. As security guard Tim Kimpson immediately intervened, Kimpson and the two students fell to the ground before continuing the fight on their feet.

Instead of de-escalating the fight, Officer Nicholas Caniglia could be seen in the video grabbing one of the teens and repeatedly punching him at least five times in the head and upper body. According to the Omaha Police Department, one of the teens punched Kimpson's left cheek during the brawl and was later cited for misdemeanor assault.

Yoda

4 out of 5 Brits prefer Putin over Cameron as UK leader in reader poll

Putin Cameron
© Getty
Russian President Vladimir Putin has beaten David Cameron to be crowned the most popular choice for the next prime minster of the United Kingdom.

The ex-KGB strongman attracted the support of four out of five Express.co.uk readers, compared with just one in five who opted for the current PM running the country.

Asked 'Who would you rather was Britain's prime minister?', 78 per cent chose the Russian president, while 22 per cent voted for Mr Cameron.

Calendar

Pew Research poll: Most Americans say scrutiny of Muslims is not warranted

White House
© Unknown
Little change in views of relationship between Islam and violence

Following the terrorist attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, Calif., the public's concerns about terrorism have surged and positive ratings of the government's handling of terrorism have plummeted. But other attitudes relating to terrorism and security, as well as perceptions of whether Islam is more likely than other religions to encourage violence, have shown far less change.

Pew chart negative terrorism
© Pew Research
The latest national survey by Pew Research Center, conducted Dec. 8-13 among 1,500 adults, finds that since the start of this year, the share of Americans who say the government is doing well in reducing the threat of terrorism has fallen by 26 percentage points - from 72% to 46% - and now stands at its lowest point in the post-9/11 era.

Approval of the way Barack Obama is handling the threat of terrorism also has declined, even as his overall job rating (currently 46%) - and his ratings on immigration, the economy and other issues - is little changed. Just 37% approve of the way Obama is handling terrorism while 57% disapprove, the lowest rating of his presidency for this issue.

Terrorism has reshaped the public's agenda, both at home and abroad. Currently, 29% cite terrorism (18%), national security (8%) or ISIS (7%) as the most important problem facing the country today. One year ago, just 4% of the public cited any of these issues. And while ISIS already ranked high among leading international dangers, 83% now regard ISIS as a major threat to the well-being of the U.S., up from 67% in August 2014.

Public concerns that anti-terrorism policies have gone too far in restricting civil liberties have fallen to their lowest level in five years (28%); twice as many (56%) now say their greater concern is that these policies have not gone far enough to adequately protect the country.

Comment: See also: Unbelievable! Poll finds 30% of GOP voters want to bomb Aladdin, 25% support Muslim internment camps