Society's Child
The Lens reports that the state's supply of pentobarbital had expired in September, and that it was having difficulty acquiring a new source because pharmaceutical companies are increasingly wary of having their product associated with state-sponsored executions. After the harrowing 25-minute-long execution of Dennis McGuire in January, the state of Louisiana agreed to delay Christoper Sepulvado's execution for six months as it "explored" options other than the drug cocktail that Oklahoma used.
Sepulvado was convicted of torturing and beating his 6-year-old stepson, Wesley Allen Mercer, to death in 1992. In March, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal (R) told The Advocate that the state had acquired the drugs it needed to put Sepulvado to death, but declined to say where it had acquired them.
Following the shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown, police dispatched riot-control officers to deal with hundreds of protesters at the crime scene on Saturday night. KMOV reported that more than 100 police cars responded to the demonstration.
In a press conference on Sunday, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said that the Ferguson Police Department had requested that his office take over the investigation.
According to Belmar, one of the two teens who were stopped on the street "allegedly pushed the police officer back into the [patrol] car, where he physically assaulted the police officer."
Belmar confirmed that the teen was unarmed, and said that his "understanding" was that there was a "struggle over the officer's weapon" inside the police car.
"After that, the officer exited his vehicle, and there was a shooting where the officer, in fact, shot the subject," he explained.

A member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards reacts as he stands next to the remains of a plane that crashed near Tehran's Mehrabad airport on August 10, 2014.
The Iran-140 Sepahan Air jetliner had barely left the airport, crashing shortly after take off on the outskirts of the capital at 09:45 (0515 GMT) on Sunday, according to Iran's semi-official Fars news agency.
Info of crashed jet in #Tehran: flight number: 5915 departure: Tehran destination: Tabas. Time: 9:15 am Airplane: Iran 140, Sepahan AirIran's police chief put the death toll at 45, with three survivors, but later reports fluctuated around 39 dead and a further nine injured. The Deputy Minister for Transport told the Mehr News Agency that this included six children, of whom three were under two and another three under 12 years of age. There is no unified consensus yet at this point.
- Abas Aslani (@abasinfo) August 10, 2014
Little Karina went missing in Russia's Yakutia Republic on July 29, but local authorities were only notified on August 3 about the missing child.
The girl's mother thought her husband had picked her up, while he was in fact fighting local fires with a brigade of firemen and there had been no communication between the two.
Before the child went missing, she was last seen heading off into the forest with her puppy.
Anhel Davilla-Rivas, 29, and Rafa Munez, 28, arrived in Donetsk two weeks ago to offer their assistance to the residents of eastern Ukraine.
"What we see in these weeks that we are here is only bombing of the people and the assault of all the fronts from Kiev. They are trying to separate the cities, they are sending mercenaries to kill the journalists and to demoralize any person that can tell the truth about what's happening here," Davilla-Rivas told RT's Ruptly agency on Saturday.
The pair has not engaged in the fighting just yet, stressing that their main goal is to reveal the truth about what is happening on the ground.
The host of Extra 3, the comedy show, got the program going with a few pieces of 'evidence': a US-photographed satellite image that supposedly depicts Russian complicity in cross-border fire with Ukraine, then a picture that appeared to be drawn by a child with color crayons.
Christian Ehring pulled no punches when sharing his frank belief that the coverage of the Ukrainian crisis by the Western media has been full of holes since its start in February.
The move no longer appears to be some miscalculated foolhardy decision, once you get acquainted with Carl-Magnus Helgegren - a journalist, university teacher, triathlete, DJ, and systems analyst who speaks five languages.
Helgegren, who shares custody of his children with their mother, wrote in a personal blog entry that a point comes when one simply isn't able to control everything their kids see.
Leo and Frank, both aged 10, developed an interest for violent video games with a war theme, like many others, before they had reached the mandatory age of 16. So, they brought the issue up with Helgegren, touting the latest installment in the Call of Duty franchise, with its blood, guts, dramatic music, and ultra-realistic action.
There is an attitude on our streets today that it is acceptable to resist arrest. That attitude is a direct result of a lack of respect for law enforcement.
"We've heard a lot in the last number of weeks about what police officers can't do, and what police officers shouldn't do," groused Patrick Lynch, designated spokesliar for the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, New York's largest police union. "No one's telling us what we are able to do, and what we should do, when we're faced with a situation where the person being placed under arrest says, 'I'm not going. I'm not being placed under arrest.'"
"What is it we should do?" continued Lynch, his voice colored by theatrical incredulity. "Walk away?"
If the would-be arrestee isn't involved in an actual crime - that is, an act of aggression against another person - the only morally suitable answer is: Yes. The cop should shut up, go away, and refrain from molesting one of his betters. The experience might encourage him to find honest work.
"We don't have that option," Lynch insisted. "Nor would the public that called and complained about these crimes want us to. If they called, it's important to them."
In this fashion Lynch attempted to shift the blame for the killing of Eric Garner on merchants in the Staten Island neighborhood where the harmless man was killed through an act of criminal homicide by NYPD officers enforcing a demented "zero tolerance" policy regarding the sale of untaxed cigarettes. Lynch, who has spent his entire adult life as a member of the coercive caste, tried to depict Garner - a micro-entrepreneur - as a menace to the public, and a threat to commerce. Lynch appears to believe that the spectacle of police killing a harmless and unarmed man is less damaging to the local economy than allowing that man to sell loose cigarettes to willing customers.
Lynch resurrected the unproven claim that plainclothes officers had seen Garner commit an act of unsanctioned petty commerce, and that he resisted their efforts to abduct him on behalf of the state's tax-consuming class. He carefully avoided mention of the fact that Garner, according to eyewitnesses, had broken up a fight while the officers, ever vigilant for economic "crimes," refused to intervene.
"There is an attitude on our streets today that it is acceptable to resist arrest," lamented Lynch. "That attitude is a direct result of a lack of respect for law enforcement."
Police in Malmö arrested a man after approaching him because his muscular physique led them to suspect steroid use.
They interviewed the man in the street, but their suspicions grew when he was reluctant to answer their questions.
After they obtained a warrant to search his home, they discovered over 20,000 pills and vials of performance enhancing drugs, including steroids.
He told police that the drugs were for personal use and denied that he was a dealer, but "150,000 kronor ($21,000) in cash and packaging materials in the apartment led the court to believe otherwise", The Swedish news site Local News reports.
Text messages about drug deals strengthened the case against him and he was sentenced to 21 months in jail. A woman who shared his apartment denied all knowledge of the drugs but was also found guilty and sentenced to a year and a half in prison.
Earlier this year, after a similar incident, the Swedish Justice Ombudsman warned police that "big muscles are not adequate grounds for arrest".
Things have gotten so bad that California enlisted Lady Gaga to record a public service announcement (PSA).
Given the situation, anti-fracking activists say it's time for Governor Jerry Brown to put a stop to water-intensive fracking, claiming that the controversial oil and gas production method is exacerbating the problem.
"We're talking about a triple threat to our water from fracking," says Adam Scow, the California Director for Food & Water Watch.
The first threat: The fracking process requires a lot of water, which then becomes unsuitable for any other use.













Comment: If our psychopathic leaders don't respect the laws, why should police?
New Jersey cop: 'Obama decimated the Constitution, we don't have to' follow it