Society's ChildS


Star

20 potential jurors refuse to serve judge in Stanford rape case

Judge Perskey
© CBS NewsJudge Aaron Persky
Potential jurors in Santa Clara County are apparently refusing to serve in the courtroom of the judge who handed down a six-month sentence to a former Stanford University student convicted of sexual assault.

KPIX 5 reporter Len Ramirez confirmed Thursday that 20 jurors refused to serve in Judge Aaron Persky's courtroom on Wednesday, citing the judge as a hardship.

The prospective jurors were there for an unrelated misdemeanor case involving a woman accused of receiving stolen goods.

Persky has faced intense scrutiny for sentencing Brock Turner to six months for sexually assaulting a woman outside a fraternity house. An attorney for the public defender's office said Persky and his family have been receiving threatening phone calls. A recall effort has also been launched against the judge.

The case gained worldwide attention after the victim's emotional court statement addressing her attacker was posted online.

Outrage over the case was also stoked by statements issued in Turner's defense by his father and one of his childhood friends.

Comment: Here is the powerful letter the Stanford victim read aloud to her attacker


War Whore

Bryce Masters: Tased in the heart for 23 seconds, dead for 8 minutes, faces a lifetime of recovery after brutal police attack

taser heart attack coma
© The Masters familyBryce Masters in a coma at Centerpoint Medical Center, Independence, Missouri, Sept. 16, 2014.
The sentencing hearing began with a surprise. Timothy Runnels, a 32-year-old former Independence, Missouri, police officer, sat at a large, rectangular defense table inside Courtroom 8B at the Charles Evans Whittaker Federal Courthouse in downtown Kansas City, Missouri, late last month. He was waiting to learn his fate after pleading guilty to a federal crime he committed almost two years ago, on September 14, 2014. Judge Dean Whipple had not yet watched the government's key piece of evidence — a dashboard video — because he wanted to do so with attorneys present to make arguments. Today the video, which had never been played in any public setting, would be played in open court. Even the victim, 18-year-old Bryce Masters, had seen it only once.

As the video opens we see a gray Pontiac enter the frame, and Bryce's dad, Matt, put his hand on his son's knee. His mom, Stacy, folded her arms, clutching a tissue. Tears began to form in both his parents' eyes, anticipating what everyone else in the room was about to see. Unfazed, Bryce leaned his 6-foot-1-inch frame forward, his eyes focused on the makeshift projector. He knew this piece of evidence absolved him of any wrongdoing.

In the video, Runnels pulls Bryce over and approaches the car. He tells Bryce to get out but doesn't give a reason. Bryce repeatedly asks if he is under arrest. Runnels says, "You're under arrest. Get your ass out of the car," and attempts to pull him out by force. He then tases Bryce for 23 seconds, handcuffs him, drags the boy's body behind the car, and deliberately drops him face first onto the asphalt road. Runnels may not have known it at the time, but Bryce was going into cardiac arrest. When the loud thud of the drop boomed throughout the courtroom, gasps echoed out. One woman looked down and covered her eyes with her hand. A man said, "Oh, my god." A police officer with the Kansas City Police Department quickly brought his fist to his mouth, turned to the man next to him, and whispered, "Jesus." Even those sitting behind the defendant — a few friends, his wife, his family — gasped, as if the recording revealed a truth about Runnels they had never considered.

Comment: Police recruiting standards practically select for candidates prone to this sort of brutal behaviour. Add the culture of impunity, and the endless supplies of military-grade toys, how could things not be otherwise?


Brick Wall

Police state education: Schools across the U.S. fire guidance counselors - opt for cops instead

police in schools
© time.com
This week, the United States Department of Education (DOE) released a collection of survey data from all 95,000 public schools in America. According to the DOE, the 2013-14 Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC) is a survey of all public schools and school districts in the United States. The CRDC measures student access to courses, programs, instructional and other staff, and resources — as well as school climate factors, such as student discipline and bullying and harassment — that impact education equity and opportunity for students.

The trove of data highlights a frightening state of affairs in which public schools now find themselves.

Comment: More 'horrid effects' of the police state on school children:


Piggy Bank

EBT card outage? Eight days into June and many Americans are still waiting for food stamp money

Grocery store bananas
Widespread reports continue to pour in from all over the nation of "glitches" with the food stamp system. It is eight days into the month and large numbers of people still have not received their benefits, and in other instances it is being reported that EBT cards are simply not working correctly. So what in the world is going on here? On downdetector.com there are scores of reports of problems with the EBT system from people all over the nation. Could this simply be another example of government incompetence, or is something else at work here?

I had heard some rumblings about this over the past few days, but I had not really taken them seriously until I read an article from highly respected author Ray Gano...
It interesting over the weekend I got several emails telling me about cell phones being down, internet being down, and get this, EBT cards not working and having no money associated to them.

This is a concern because when the US Government has payment failures, then there is possibly something happening that the press is not telling you about.

Now, we know that computers have problems and that states, counties and cities run on computers. But what is interesting is that since the beginning of 2016, The US government has had over 2,700 reports on downdetector.com showing that they have been late loading the money onto these EBT cards.

Folks, we are now going on 8 days where the Government has not paid the EBT payments so that people have food.

Handcuffs

Information kept secret regarding 12 Gitmo detainees' attacks on Americans

Camp 6
© www.rt.comPentagon's plan is to close Gitmo.
Since a Pentagon official reported two months ago that some dozen former Guantánamo detainees were responsible for the deaths of Americans overseas, the Obama administration has not been forthcoming on the locations or names of those involved.

The disclosure was first made in March by senior Pentagon official Paul Lewis, who oversees Guantánamo issues at the Defense Department, before Congressional lawmakers. Since then, the Obama administration and Lewis have failed to provide further details on the specifics of those attacks or the names of those allegedly involved.

The Washington Post, however, learned from current and former US officials that all of the detainees that were implicated in the attacks were released during the Bush administration. They also discovered that most of the incidents were directed at military personnel, with the dead including one American civilian, a female aid worker who died in Afghanistan in 2008.

Another official told the Post that nine of the detainees are "now dead or in foreign government custody." "Because many of these incidents were large-scale firefights in a war zone, we cannot always distinguish whether Americans were killed by the former detainees or by others in the same fight," the official told the Post.

The accusation comes at a politically sensitive time for the Obama administration, which is ostensibly trying to fulfill a 2008 campaign pledge to close the Guantanamo Bay military prison by transferring many of the detainees to third-party countries. Those that are still considered the greatest threat to the US would be transferred to a US location under Obama's plan. Obama has argued that keeping detainees at Guantánamo only supports terrorist efforts in recruiting soldiers. Just under 700 detainees have been released from Guantánamo since the prison opened in 2002, while 80 inmates remain.


Comment: The Republican-led Congress would be required to change a current law that prohibits the Obama administration from spending money to transfer detainees, many held without charge or trial, to the mainland United States.


2 + 2 = 4

Tel Aviv mayor: Military occupation of Palestine is to blame for cafe attack

tel aviv
© Baz Ratner / ReutersAn Israeli policeman searches a restaurant following a shooting attack in the center of Tel Aviv June 8, 2016
The mayor of Tel Aviv has blamed Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories for an attack on a cafe that left four Israelis dead. The country's deputy defense minister labeled the remarks "bizarre" and "delusional."

"We might be the only country in the world where another nation is under occupation without civil rights," Mayor Ron Huldai told Israeli Army Radio, referring to the Wednesday attack by two Palestinian gunmen.

"You can't hold people in a situation of occupation and hope they'll reach the conclusion everything is alright," he added.

The mayor went on to state that "no one has the courage" to find peace with the Palestinians, and called for attempts to strike an agreement.

"There has been an occupation for 49 years, which I was part of and I know the reality, and I know leaders need courage to not just talk...we have to show our neighbours that we have true intentions to return to a reality of a smaller Jewish state with a clear Jewish majority," Huldai said.

Comment: Kudos to Huldai for telling the truth. It's a rarity in Israel these days.


Padlock

Police state formed through militarized stress training, inculcation of pathological thinking and selection for stupidity

Police state training
Policing in the United States metamorphosed drastically over the last few decades after the NDAA in 1990 allowed departments to obtain surplus military equipment free of charge. With the weapons and gear of war likewise came the warrior ethos. Though unprepared to handle accouterments of the battlefield, hapless American police waged war on the very communities in their charge — an epidemic level of violence by law enforcement has since erupted.

But this article isn't a condemnation of police officers, many of whom spend their entire career without resorting to the use of excessive force. But because incidents involving excessively violent tactics resulting in serious injury and death have become so frequent people often don't take notice, it's necessary to point out the simplest means to end the epidemic already exists.

Training.

If we are to end or at least significantly curb the unnecessary brutality, militaristic police training must end. As intuitive as it might sound, ending the stress-based, boot camp-style instruction — currently the model for the majority of police academies — would transform American policing.

Treasure Chest

Income inequality keeps growing: The 1% now own almost half of total global wealth

Nairobi slums
© Noor Khamis / Reuters Young girls do laundry outside their house early morning in Nairobi's Kibera slums.
Another report shows the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. Boston Consulting Group says only one percent of the population can call themselves millionaires or richer, and the share of their wealth is growing.

About 18.5 million households have net assets of at least $1 million, totaling $78.8 trillion, which is near the global annual economic output, Boston Consulting said in its Global Wealth 2016 report.

That also amounts to 47 percent of total global wealth, i.e. financial assets (bonds, shares, cash and deposits) excluding property. Overall, global wealth grew by 5.2 percent to $168 trillion.

Comment: Moral decay and wealth inequality: Following in the footsteps of ancient Rome


Jet5

2 F-16 fighter jets collide mid-air in Georgia: 6 crashed jets in the U.S. over 2 weeks

What is up with all these plane crashes?
jet crash US
Still from footage of the F/A-18 jet crash outside Nashville on June 2nd

On June 8th:
Two South Carolina Air National Guard fighter jets involved in training ahead of an upcoming deployment collided Tuesday night over rural Georgia, forcing both pilots to eject safely, according to a unit commander.
On June 2nd:
The U.S. Navy has announced that its elite flight demonstration squadron, the Blue Angels, has canceled upcoming performances in New York and Ohio following the death of one of its pilots during a crash outside Nashville.
Also on June 2nd:
Minutes after his team streaked over President Obama and Air Force Academy cadets at a graduation ceremony on Thursday, the pilot of a Thunderbirds fighter jet maneuvered his plane away from homes as it crashed into a field near Colorado Springs.
On May 26th:
Two Navy F/A-18Fs crashed off the coast of North Carolina during a routine training mission on Thursday, Navy officials told USNI News. The four crew were recovered and transported to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital by a Coast Guard helicopter, according to a release from the Coast Guard's 5th District.

Stormtrooper

Civil asset forfeiture goes digital: Police tool swipes money from cards before conviction

Oklahoma police cruiser
© Charles Duggar / Wikipedia
Confiscating cash or property without a conviction or charges is now old hat for law enforcement. Stand by for the Electronic Recovery and Access to Data machine (ERAD), a device that sucks digital money off prepaid cards and into police accounts.

The Oklahoma Highway Patrol purchased 16 ERADs and began using them last month. In instances where troopers suspect a prepaid, debit, credit or virtually any card with a magnetic strip has been used in a crime, they can take the card and slide it through their new machine to generate information on the account - as well as either freeze or transfer the digital funds.

Comment: What happened to "innocent until proven guilty"? Radley Balko at WaPo adds:
Wealthier people with conventional credit cards don't have to worry about this new technology. ... Let's not forget that this is the same state where a district attorney was caught contracting forfeiture actions out to private company, including the authority to pull over motorists. Another prosecutor used forfeiture funds to pay off his student loans. Still another used the law to live rent-free in a seized house, despite a judge's order to sell it. He also used forfeiture proceeds to pay his utility bills.

A report published last year found that of the $6 million seized by Oklahoma law enforcement agencies over the previous five years, two-thirds was taken from people who were never charged with a crime. The state received a "D" grade for its forfeiture polices by the libertarian advocacy law firm the Institute for Justice. And Oklahoma's law enforcement community has been especially hostile to any efforts at reform. Last year, Tulsa District Attorney Steve Kunzweiler warned that if Oklahoma passed a law like the one in New Mexico, the state could expect to see decapitations by drug cartels and corpses swinging from bridges.
...
New Mexico, Montana and New Hampshire recently passed laws requiring a conviction before property can be forfeited. (Although at least in New Mexico, police agencies appear to be straight-up ignoring the law.) ... The most common form of property seized is cash. In fact, carrying large amounts of cash is now in and of itself viewed as suspicion of criminal activity.
Here's a link to the ERAD contract, signed in early April of this year. EARD is listed as registering with the Texas Secretary of Sate in January 2014. Its president is Jack Williams, who counts among his clients "multiple federal and state law enforcement agencies including DHS, ICE, and USSS". His bio says: "In 2012, ERAD Group, Inc. was awarded a prime development contract to provide the Department of Homeland Security, Advanced Technology Directorate, with a prepaid access card reader solution to process prepaid debit cards at time of arrest." He is also the president of Paymentcard Services Inc. Williams appears to be the sole officer/director for both companies.