Thursday, August 25, 2011

Tasers . . .

Taser deaths investigated by police watchdog 

Police restraint tactics are under fresh scrutiny after a third member of the public died following the use of either a Taser stun gun or pepper spray by officers.
Amnesty International said the number of fatalities over the past eight days had reaffirmed its concerns that Tasers were "potentially lethal" weapons.  Read more . . .
 "potentially lethal" weapons . . .

Some doubt 'excited delirium' condition cited in Taser-related deaths 
. . .
You won't find excited delirium listed as a recognized condition or diagnosis by the American Medical Association, the American Psychiatric Association or the World Health Organization. Nor is it listed as a validated diagnostic entity in either the International Classification of Diseases or the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Medical Disorders.
Some human rights groups say that's because it doesn't exist.
Eric Balaban, senior staff council for the National Prison Project of the American Civil Liberties Union, calls excited delirium a "catch-all" diagnosis police and forensic pathologists use to whitewash cases of excessive police force, inappropriate restraint or brutality that leads to in-custody deaths.  Read more . . .
What they said . . .

Police Department Tasers a Mentally Ill man 11 times in the span of 4 minutes, resulting in his death
Officer Glen Felton fired his Model X26 Taser at Graham and held the trigger for 13 seconds, attempting to administer a shock of 50,000 volts. Graham fell to the ground but continued to kick violently, the report says. He removed the wired probes and rose to his feet to attack police.
Sgt. Thomas Cossette, who is now a lieutenant, attempted to “drive stun” Graham with his Taser by placing it directly against Graham’s body. Cossette deployed the device 10 times over a span of about four minutes, with shocks lasting between five and 11 seconds, according to the report.  
However, “other than further agitating him it had no noticeable effect” on Graham, the report says.
The report concluded that both Felton and Cossette, who is the chief’s brother, used the devices properly. Although Felton’s shock was long and Cossette’s were frequent, “it is not definitively known” whether there was enough contact through Graham’s clothing to render the shocks, reads the state’s attorney’s report. 
A fourth officer assisted at the scene and then four more came to relieve the first responders, who were treated for various injuries at MidState Medical Center and released.
It took five sets of handcuffs to restrain Graham’s arms and legs. Once that was done his “breathing and pulse were getting shallow,” the report says. 
Emergency personnel attempted CPR and he was taken to MidState, but he could not be resuscitated.  Read more . . .
Maybe if someone trained police that if it doesn't work the first time, shoot, this young man would still be alive.  One assumes, of course, that the police didn't INTEND to kill him.


Helena mother questions taser-related death of son
The mother of a man who died following an altercation with police last week says she's still trying to make sense of what happened that night. 
Lois Mitchell said she called 9-1-1 on the evening of Aug. 14 out of concern for her son, 41-year-old Roger Chandler. Mitchell said she never imagined that her son would end up dead in a Great Falls hospital three days later. 
The exact cause of Chandler's death is still unknown.  Read more . . .
Man dies after Oklahoma City police use Taser to arrest him
A man died early Sunday in Oklahoma City police shortly after officers shot him with a Taser to take him into custody.

Oklahoma City Police Capt. Patrick Stewart dicusses the investigation of man who later died after officers used a Taser to take him into custody Sunday. 
Montaleto McKissick, 37, who was fleeing from police investigating a fight at a nightclub, was taken to OU Medical Center where he was pronounced dead.
There's some light reading for you . . .


In Texas schools, a criminal response to misbehavior


By Donna St. George, Published: August 21
SPRING, TEX. — In a small courtroom north of Houston, a fourth-grader walked up to the bench with his mother. Too short to see the judge, he stood on a stool. He was dressed in a polo shirt and dark slacks on a sweltering summer morning.
“Guilty,” the boy’s mother heard him say.
He had been part of a scuffle on a school bus.
In another generation, he might have received only a scolding from the principal or a period of detention. But an array of get-tough policies in U.S. schools in the past two decades has brought many students into contact with police and courts — part of a trend some experts call the criminalization of student discipline.
Now, such practices are under scrutiny nationally. Federal officials want to limit punishments that push students from the classroom to courtroom, and a growing number of state and local leaders are raising similar concerns.  Read more . . .


Friday, August 19, 2011

TSA Guard: “Get used to radiation”
Going through the line that approaches the security check at Seattle airport, I asked a TSA guard lady if I have to go somewhere else if I want to avoid the scanners.  She said, “Just tell them when you get up there.  You might want to get used to radiation because Seattle airport will not have any other options very soon.”  I said, “Get used to radiation?”  She confirmed, “Yes”.  I said, “I don’t know about that.”
We need to end the TSA!

Monday, October 11, 2010

Israeli Rabbi Blesses Honeytrap Sex For Female Spies

An Israeli rabbi has blessed the use of female spies in "honeytrap" or "honeypot" stings against terrorists, according to a study called "Illicit Sex for the Sake of National Security."

The ruling by Rabbi Ari Schvat, contained in a study published by the Zomet Institute, was first reported by the news agency DPA and published by Haaretz.com.

Israeli officials confirmed the rabbinical ruling and the gist of the study for ABC News.

The Zomet Institute studies the intersection of religion and modernity. It examined whether it was acceptable for female agents of Israel's foreign secret service, Mossad, to have sex with the enemy in so-called "honeypot" or "honeytrap" sting missions.

Read more . . .

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Lords debate airline liquids ban

Exploding Marmite threat revealed

Who remembers the deadly liquid bomb airliner plot? Most of you, we're guessing, as there are still a lot of fairly mindless restrictions on taking liquids aboard planes - no matter that the plot was actually rather far-fetched.

But fear not, UK readers, as your unelected representatives are alert to your interests. Yesterday saw the liquid ban debated in the House of Lords, as ordinary legislative nobles grilled government mouthpiece Baron Bassam of Brighton. The good Baron, raised to the peerage from among the common herd after more than a decade's trusty service on Brighton council, didn't seem to have been furnished with a very comprehensive brief. Here are a few of the pearls he offered:

Read more . . .

Quite humorous if a bit scary.


Thursday, August 23, 2007

Scientist says tests back Russia Arctic claim

MOSCOW (Reuters) - A Russian scientist said on Thursday that fresh test results back his country's legal bid to take control of the Arctic, just weeks after a submarine planted the Russian national flag on the North Pole's seabed.

The race to claim ownership of the Arctic, home to vast untapped gas and oil reserves, has intensified with Canada, Denmark, Norway and the U.S. all vying with Russia to build their political and legal case to claim jurisdiction.

Read more . . .


Monday, January 29, 2007

STOP ABUSING OUR MARINES!

We realize that when it comes to freedom of the press, the USA has fallen to Number 53 in the world — tied with our fascist homies in Croatia and the islanders of the Kingdom of Tonga! — but do we have to make is so damned obvious?

Another Marine stationed in Iraq has sent us a screenshot of what happens when you need some hot news on Macaca and Foley:
forbidden, this page (http://www.wonkette.com) is categorized as (Personal Pages) ALL SITES YOU VISIT ARE LOGGED AND FILED.
Nice little threat at the end, too. Asswipes.

Notice the other browser tabs. Two actual “personal pages” that rah-rah for Bush (What’s her name, the wannabe Coulter, and Hugh Hewitt) show up just fine, as our Marine Operative confirms. But “Talking Points Memo,” which is apparently one of the “left leaning” sites one hears so much about these days, is prohibited.

Writes the Corporal: “I think that this kind of censoring is a big deal. I can understand blocking porn, music and movies, and blatantly illegal sites, but blocking sites that some higher up just doesn’t agree with is disgusting. They are blocking a huge portion of voters from information that will help them determine which side to vote for. Because of this, the only news we get is from the big corporations or conservative based sites.”

EARLIER: BREAKINGU.S. MILITARY IN IRAQ MAYBE BLOCKS WONKETTE

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Pa. Man's Letter Brings Secret Service

BETHLEHEM, Pa. -- An elderly man who wrote in a letter to the editor about Saddam Hussein's execution that "they hanged the wrong man" got a visit from Secret Service agents concerned he was threatening President Bush.

The letter by Dan Tilli, 81, was published in Monday's edition of The Express-Times of Easton, Pa. It ended with the line, "I still believe they hanged the wrong man."

Tilli said the statement was not a threat. "I didn't say who _ I could've meant (Osama) bin Laden," he said Friday.

Two Secret Service agents questioned Tilli at his Bethlehem apartment Thursday, briefly searching the place and taking pictures of him, he said.

The Secret Service confirmed the encounter. Bob Slama, special agent in charge of the Secret Service's Philadelphia office, said it was the agency's duty to investigate.

The agents almost immediately decided Tilli was not a threat, Slama said

"We have no further interest in Dan," he said.

Tilli said the agents appeared more relaxed when he dug out a scrapbook containing more than 200 letters that he has written over the years, almost all on political topics.

"He said, 'Keep writing, but just don't make no threats,'" Tilli said of one of the agents.

It wasn't Tilli's first run-in with the federal government over his letter writing. Two FBI agents from Allentown showed up at his home last year about a letter he wrote advocating a civil war to unseat Bush, he said.

Source: Washington Post