Results matching “jack camp”
Even so, filing a separate civil suit to restrain prosecution was doomed to failure, and today Judge Amy Jackson dismissed it.
But a civil case is not the appropriate vehicle for taking issue with what a prosecutor has done in the past or where he might be headed in the future. It is a sound and well-established principle that a court should not exercise its equitable powers to interfere with or enjoin an ongoing criminal investigation when the defendant will have the opportunity to challenge any defects in the prosecution in the trial court or on direct appeal. Therefore, the Court finds that this civil complaint must be dismissed.The opinion also discusses the Younger abstention doctrine, which is partly based on federalism (which is not applicable here) and partly on the traditional rule that equity will not enjoin a criminal prosecution (which is).* * *For all of these reasons, Manafort's civil case will be dismissed, and his concerns regarding the Special Counsel's investigation will be taken up in the criminal case.
Last November, a deranged 26-year-old man, Devin Patrick Kelley, opened fire on worshipers inside a church in Sutherland, Texas, killing 26. High-casualty mass shootings are tragic in human terms but anomalous statistically, at least in terms of the portion of total U.S. homicides that they represent. The vast majority of murders, which take place disproportionately in America's low-income and minority neighborhoods, don't get nearly the same attention. The Texas church shooting does have an important point of commonality with the majority of American murders, however: its perpetrator had a troubling criminal record. The deincarceration movement, which would return thousands of convicts to American streets, presents a threat to public safety. Repeat offenders already commit a substantial portion of the nation's violent crime--according to one study, 53 percent of killers have at least one prior felony conviction. They will be walking the streets in greater numbers if deincarceration advocates have their way.* * *
Update: The U.S. Supreme Court denied a stay and a petition to take up the case for full review. No dissent is noted.
Campbell argues that poor health is one reason he shouldn't be put to death, but he used an earlier, false health claim to commit the crime that put him on death row. Campbell feigned paralysis from a glancing bullet wound suffered during a robbery arrest. As Campbell was being taken to the Franklin County Courthouse for a hearing on April 2, 1997, he sprang from his wheelchair, overpowered a deputy sheriff, took her gun and fled. He then carjacked Dials, who was at the courthouse to pay a traffic ticket. After driving Dials around for hours, Campbell ordered him onto the floor of his truck and shot him twice.
Two Prison Guards Killed During Escape: A manhunt is underway in Putnam County, Georgia after two inmates on a transport bus overpowered and killed two guards and fled. Fox News reports that both inmates are armed and are considered very dangerous. Both inmates had been serving time for armed robbery when they overpowered the guards and shot them with their own guns. A witness told police that the inmates were seen driving a dark green Honda.
CA Bill Reduces Sentences for Gun Crimes: The California Assembly Committee on Public Safety is considering a bill today that would eliminate the current sentence increase for criminals who use guns in the commission of felonies. As the Los Angeles Times reports, SB 620 by Senator Steven Bradford (D. Los Angeles), which passed out of the state senate last month, would make the 10 year enhancement for the use of a firearm during the commission of felonies including rape, robbery and carjacking optional with the judge. Supporters of the bill believe that removing the mandate will reduce racial disparities in sentencing. Virtually every state law enforcement and crime victims group opposes the bill.
Florida Prosecutor Seeking the Death Penalty: A Florida prosecutor says that he will be seeking the death penalty in the case of a man who is being charged with the murder of his pregnant girlfriend and a police officer. According to Fox News, State Attorney Brad King filed notice of intent Monday to seek the death penalty in the case of Markeith Loyd. Loyd was arrested after a week-long manhunt in January following the murder of his pregnant ex-girlfriend Sade Dixon and the slaying of an Orlando police officer Lt. Debra Clayton. The current Orlando State Attorney Aramis Ayala announced her unwillingness to seek capital punishment in this case or any other, so Gov. Rick Scott reassigned this and 21 other cases to a nearby circuit where King could deal with them. According to this story in Politico, liberal hedge fund billionaire George Soros pumped nearly $1.4 million in to Ayala's campaign to elect her last November.
Chicago Man Charged in Quadruple Homicide: Charges have been filed in connection with a quadruple homicide that took place in Chicago last Thursday. Jeremy Gorner of the Chicago Tribune reports that 19-year-old Maurice Harris has been charged with four counts of first degree murder according to Chicago police reports. This event accounts for four of the seven lives lost on Thursday. The police are still attempting to discern whether all of these deaths may have been connected, but it is believed that this quadruple homicide was in retaliation for a gangland shooting that had taken place the night before.
I have been battling the opponents of the death penalty for a very long time. In that time, I have found that the intentionally misleading half-truth is their weapon of choice, and I spend a lot of time correcting the mistaken impressions they intentionally create.
However, the opponents are not above outright lying when they think they can get away with it. A whopper has just come to my attention from the state of Nebraska, where the people are going to vote on whether to abolish or retain the death penalty.
Ernest Goss, Scott Strain, and Jackson Blalock have released a paper titled The Economic Impact of the Death Penalty on the State of Nebraska: a Taxpayer Burden? The paper is sponsored by the anti-death-penalty campaign. On page 23 we find this:
According to Scheidegger,48 "There is no credible evidence that replacing the DP with LWOP will result in significant added trial costs to the state due to defendants refusing to plead guilty and forcing prosecutors to meet their burdens at trial. The few studies that have been completed support the proposition that the threat of the DP does not increase plea bargain rates."Note the quotation marks. The authors are not saying that this is their interpretation of my results. They are saying that these are my exact words and my interpretation. This is a bald-faced lie.
48Kent S. Scheidegger, The DP and Plea Bargaining to Life Sentences, Criminal Justice Legal Foundations, Feb. 2009, p. 10.
The number of murders in 29 of the nation's largest cities rose during the first six months of the year, according to the results of a survey released by the Major Cities Chiefs Association on Monday.
Overall, homicides jumped 15% in the 51 large cities that submitted crime data, compared with the same year-ago period.
The article notes that the 15% figure is artificially high to some extent because of Chicago's out-of-control violent crime and the gruesome Jihadist attack in Orlando. What it fails to note is that murder rose by 17% in the 50 largest cities last year. An increase of 17% in 2015, combined with (even an inflated) increase of 15% so far in 2016, is shocking. There's no other way to put it.
Shocking, that is, unless, like the Major Cities Chiefs -- an overwhelmingly liberal group that marches arm-in-arm with the Brennan Center -- you have a stake in minimizing the problem.
I've argued that America has an under-incarceration problem. Criminals whose records clearly show they should be in jail have, instead, been released and are on the streets committing violent crimes, including some very bloody, high-profile ones.
But hey, look, as the anonymous Republican Senate aide said, we can't get everything right. Boys will be boys! If police officers get shot, there's really nothing to see, folks. Move along.Here's another example. Samuel Harviley, paroled from prison less than three months ago, is being held without bond for shooting an off-duty Chicago police officer outside his home earlier this week. In withholding bond, the local judge said that Harviley "poses an extreme danger to the rest of us out in public."
Indeed, he does. And he did three months ago when he was released early from jail.
Harviley was paroled from state prison on New Year's Eve after serving four years of a nine-year sentence for a 2011 carjacking, an inherently dangerous crime. A nine year sentence is meaningless if it can be completed in four. Harviley's early release always posed a danger to the community. Now, it has resulted in the shooting of a police officer.
Though the examples are few, they tend to support the right of Republicans to handle -- or not handle --this nomination as they wish.
NH Gov. Criticized for Heroin Epidemic Inaction: The mayor of Manchester, New Hampshire publicly criticized Gov. Maggie Hassan for failing to step up and address the deadly heroin epidemic plaguing the Granite State. Bill McMorris of the Washington Free Beacon reports that last June Gov. Hassan vetoed a budget that would have significantly boosted drug program spending and two months later, she denied Mayor Gatsas' request to establish a drug court. Other critics say that Gov. Hassan has stonewalled spending on the issue, failed to appoint a top official to lead the fight and is currently more focused on her Senate campaign than governing her state. Last month, 60 people overdosed on opioids leading to 14 deaths, making February 2016 the single-deadliest month on record in the state.
House to Vote on Immigration Case: House Republicans are set to vote in the next few weeks on a resolution that would allow lawmakers to file a brief in the Supreme Court case that will determine if President Obama overstepped his authority with his 2014 executive action on immigration. Susan Ferrechio of the Washington Examiner reports that the vote could permit the House to file the brief in the United States v. State of Texas case "as an institution on behalf of self government," says Speaker Paul Ryan. Obama's deferred deportation program is being challenged in the brief by Texas and two dozen other states, arguing that the president "exceeded his constitutional authority" when he went over the heads of Congress to defer deportation of illegal immigrants.
Is eight enough?One paragraph in the article needs correction, though.
The Supreme Court has managed to function effectively at less than its full nine-member strength for two extended periods in the past 50 years. The question now is whether the death of Justice Antonin Scalia in the middle of the court term and a polarizing presidential campaign will make it harder for the justices to get their work done.
The most notable of the deferred cases may have been challenges to the death penalty, according to Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong's book "The Brethren." Harry Blackmun joined the court in May 1970, after the Democratic-controlled Senate rejected President Richard Nixon's first two choices. It was another two years, after the retirements of two more justices, before the court took up the issue and struck down every state death penalty statute.It was, in fact, two weeks, not two years, "before the court took up the issue."
Supreme Court to Rule on Immigration: The Supreme Court justices agreed Tuesday to review President Obama's plan to shield five million illegal immigrants from deportation in a review of a lower court rulings that blocked the sweeping executive actions from going into effect. Fox News reports that the Obama administration's plan primarily benefits the parents of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents, bringing the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans program into the forefront of the issue. Critics argue that Obama's plan is unconstitutional because he overrode the legislative authority in Congress, bypassing the "constitutionally ordained legislative process" to rewrite the law unilaterally. The case is likely to be argued in April and decided by June.
FL Courts Face Death Penalty Dilemma: Between now and April 5, five death penalty trials are scheduled in a Florida court, which is a problem, given that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last week that the state's death penalty procedures are unconstitutional. Larry Hannan of the Florida Times-Union reports that the high court ruled on Jan. 12 that Florida's death penalty is unconstitutional because the final decision on life in prison or death is decided by a judge rather than a jury. An attorney representing one of the condemned inmates scheduled for trial in the coming months said that the Florida Supreme Court could either issue an emergency ruling, or the Legislature could act quickly to amend the death penalty sentencing law. Each option will take considerable time, making it unlikely that any case is to move forward anytime soon. Whichever option is taken, their remains the question of whether defendants can be tried under a new statute that was passed after they committed their crimes.
NYPD Ordered to Purge Counter-Terror Docs: A U.S. court has directed the New York Police Department to remove an extensive report from its website that pertains to the rise of Islamic extremists in the West and counter-terrorism efforts as part of a settlement reached earlier this month with Muslim community advocates. Adam Kredo of the Free Beacon reports that the case, spearheaded by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) since 2013, focused heavily on NYPD's 2007 radicalization report from its website. The report examined how radical individuals make their way to the U.S. and carry out terror attacks, in an effort to provide local law enforcement with information about domestic terrorists and their operations. Several legal and national security experts are critical of the court decision, noting that it will not only diminish officers' understanding of how terrorists organize and operate, but is also "part of a larger campaign by Muslim advocacy organizations in the United States to dismantle surveillance programs on that community."
U.S. Begins Screening Refugees' Social Media Accounts: The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the agency that screens refugees, announced Sunday that they are now permitted to probe the social media accounts of Iraqi and Syrian refugees. Stephen Dinan of the Washington Times reports that USCIS director Leon Rodriguez says that though the agency will now be able to screen refugees' social media accounts for potential terrorism-related clues, it is likely improbable that they will be able to check the accounts of all 8 million immigration applications the agency receives each year, forcing them to prioritize and target only specific programs or countries. The agency has been faced with recent scrutiny following several high-profile events, such as last month's terror attacks in San Bernardino when it was reported that the jihadist couple responsible for the attack had posted online swearing allegiance to the Islamic State, and the arrest earlier this month of a man who traveled to Syria to fight after being admitted as a refugee in 2012. The Senate will vote Wednesday on whether to require President Obama's chiefs of intelligence, Homeland Security and the FBI to certify every refugee is low-risk before being admitted to the U.S.
Parole Blocked for Killer of CA Man Buried Alive: California Gov. Jerry Brown has blocked parole for the man responsible for the murder of a developmentally delayed man in 1980, who was beaten and buried alive. Don Thompson of the AP reports that Brown ignored a state panel recommendation for 52-year-old David Weidert's parole, deeming him too dangerous to be released. Initially sentenced to life without parole, an appeals court reduced Weidert's sentence in 1984 to 25 years to life with the chance of parole after striking down two special circumstances.
Unmonitored, Undocumented Sex Offenders Roam Freely: Eleven convicted sex offenders living in the country illegally are residing in several western Washington neighborhoods without being monitored by authorities. KIRO 7 reports that despite efforts to deport them, a Supreme Court ruling requires them to be released from custody if their home countries refuse to take them back. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement admit that they do not track these criminals once they're released onto American streets.
Raise the Age NY Campaign Fails: New York lawmakers were unable to reach a decision regarding changing the age of criminal responsibility in the state in legislation which sought to raise the age of criminal responsibility from ages 16 and 17 to age 18. Jackie Davis of the Legislative Gazette reports that Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who proposed the legislation in his State of the State address, plans to take executive action to remove 16-and 17-year olds from state prisons and into separate facilities. The 'Raise the Age NY' campaign advocates that changing the age of criminal responsibility would produce results that echo those of an Illinois study, which concluded that when teens are charged as juveniles the adolescent crime rate goes down.
Richard W. Matt, one of the convicted murderers who staged an elaborate escape from New York's largest prison nearly three weeks ago, was shot and killed on Friday by a federal agent, two people with knowledge of the situation said.
The authorities encountered Mr. Matt after the inmate, who was on foot, tried to carjack a camper vehicle near Malone, N.Y., a third person with knowledge of the situation said. The driver sped away and called 911, and law enforcement officers responded.
There was a report of a second episode of gunfire as officers pursued David Sweat, the other inmate. The officers did not see Mr. Sweat, but they heard him running. His whereabouts was unclear.
            