Month: May 2014

This will not end well: A Tweet to Miami PD is officially a Police Report

Twitter is rife with crude jokes — but Miami police say a teenager crossed the line when he tweeted the department that “I’m bout to rape a lil girl.”

“You guys I’ve been out here taking little girls and I hear no sirens? Um my avi doesn’t scare you?” the user @5kurrr wrote to Miami’s Twitter page, @MiamiPD.

Cops were not amused. The 15-year-old Miramar boy was arrested and charged with making a false police report, a first-degree misdemeanor, police said Friday.

via Twitter rape joke to Miami police leads to Miramar teen’s arrest – Miami-Dade – MiamiHerald.com.

Here is a copy of the complaint/arrest affidavit. My question: Is there a legal basis or guidelines in which a police department decides which Twitter post is a report? I can see it as evidence, but as the actual definition of police report? I see it as a ripe and fertile space for abuse but I might be wrong.

In any case, I leave the forum open to those who may have an answer.  Until I have a clear answer, I am not planning on Twetting, Facebooking or doing initiating any kind of content with a Law Enforcement agency via Social Media. You never know how it will be treated.

And yes, the little jackass was a jackass and you just don’t play stupid games with stuff like that.

 

Media move trying to regain absolute control over the news.

Some sites have responded by devoting substantial time and effort to monitoring and editing comments, but we’d rather put our resources into the journalism that brings readers to National Journal in the first place. So, today we’ll join the growing number of sites that are choosing to forgo public comments on most stories.

via Why We’re Changing Our Comments Policy – NationalJournal.com.

I had been noticing that more news websites were suddenly without comment sections or did not have them to begin with. It seemed silly since a good and active comment section meant more hits which means a site for profit can earn more income, but I went Occam and figured it was just plain stupidity rather than an active way to suppress the free flow of ideas. It seems now that it was that indeed.

It is quite indicative that certain political inclinations define debate as a monologue on their side which everybody is allowed to shut up and take it. That places like Gun Controls Organizations like Moms Demand, Brady, etc will ban anybody who even hints at supporting the Second Amendment is not new and we get our good kicks out of it. But when News organizations, alleged bastions of Free Speech decide that contrary opinions and even hateful speech is a no-no just because it hurts their pretty ears and make writers feel unloved, what we are seeing is an attempt to return to the old days of having to send letters to the editor via Pony Express and a basically unchallenged propaganda machine that sides with one political side of the equation.

But as with Dead Tree Media, this strategy will also fail and bring less revenue, something that very few News organizations can afford. I really do not mind seeing them collapse and fade away as they have failed their readership by not doing what they are supposed to do in an era where information comes from many sources and can be fact-checked by thousands of people.

The era of monopolized media enterprises is over. The Robber Barons of The News are as much gone as the old owners of railroads. Just as the car killed the locomotive, the Internet killed the newspapers and its culture of controlling the masses.

Hat Tip Legal Insurrection.

A Deadly Game of “Gotcha.”

28-year-old Henry Magee is no longer charged in the shooting death of Burleson County Sheriff’s Deputy Adam Sowders.

A grand jury decided there wasn’t enough evidence for him to stand trial on the capital murder charge.

McGee admitted to shooting Sowders before sunrise on December 19th while the deputy and other investigators were serving a no knock search warrant for drugs at McGee’s mobile home near Snook.

Magee’s Defense Attorney Dick DeGuerin says his client thought someone was breaking into his home and fired to protect his pregnant girlfriend and himself.

via Man Charged With Killing Burleson County Deputy No Billed by Grand Jury.

This is a case you probably did not hear about and will not receive much publicity, but it is a tectonic shake in the legal system.

Henry Magee had a marijuana hydroponic mini lab, there is no doubt as the evidence presents it. He also had guns which the police informant said at least one was stolen.  But after the raid, the amount of pot found did not even come close to the six-foot tall plants that the informer said ( barely inches tall) and the guns were all legally owned.  The police applied and got a warrant on the unconfirmed information given by an informant who had been arrested and was obviously trying to make some sort of deal. The police seems to be  immune from doing due diligence and conform that the place was indeed a dangerous place ran by a dangerous man. The raid occurs and one officer dies when the homeowner uses his firearm to fend off what he thinks is a break in.

Now, this happened in Texas where they are not shy of sending people to prison or to the Needle Room. That a Grand Jury returned with a No-Bill for murder of a police officer is monumental and is announcing that raids of this style are losing favor among the population.

Police officers are told many times never to trust informants as they are unreliable and will lie to get themselves out of a situation. yet, too many investigators fall prey of a sweet-talker who like a great seducer, tells them exactly what they want to hear. Couple that with a department who convinced the local politicians of the need for a SWAT team with all the guns, gadgets and tacticool clothing which need to be funded every year and the only way to guarantee that funding is to show they are using it a lot.

Beside the militarization of the police force, we are also seeing an increased use of unnecessary escalation of violent methods to “control” arrested suspect. It is a brave new world with cameras in every corner and every phone and which will share the video of a bad arrest all over the internet before the cop has time to start the paperwork.

Police, as any big enterprise has a tough time changing the status quo. But they must change training and fast or risk having more officers killed and counties sued. Politicians will also turn on them the second they feel police actions are costing them votes. If push comes to shove, they will even come up with legislation to reduce qualified immunity making the job of policing much harder.

So, we need to bring back the concept of Peace Officer rather than Law Enforcement Officer. Make sure SWAT teams are used for the truly dangerous customers and not to check and make sure barber shops are violating state code. Also, SWAT commanders and the entity or subject that requests a SWAT raid, must be held responsible for botched raids or ones performed at the wrong address. If innocent people die, they both should be brought up on charges and prosecuted: One for not doing due diligence on researching the intended target and the other for going along without checking if everything was on the level and making sure a raid was needed in the first place. In the above case, they could have waited for the house to be alone and enter to secure the evidence while having Magee arrested anywhere else. Both the narcotics detective and the SWAT commander should have been the ones having their rights read on the way to local jail and charged at least with Manslaughter.

 

 

‘Stand Your Ground’ law kills case…. Damn it!

“An argument ensued, during which time Bowles approached Collins’ vehicle and reached through the driver’s side window. Collins pushed him away and grabbed his gun to scare Bowles. During the altercation, the gun went off,” according to the court document.

via salina.com – Stand Your Ground Law Kills Case – an online service of the Salina Journal.

The “victim:, one Desmond Bowles was a former worker who had been told to stay the hell away from the property. The day of the incident, Desmond Bowles got drunk, got in a three-wheeler, drove to the property he had been told not to go, started to argue with the “attacker” (David Collins) who was inside his vehicle. The “victim” reached inside the vehicle and proceeded to attack the David Collins at which time the firearm was produced and a shot was fired injuring Desmond Bowles.

So my question is: Why even bring charges against David Collins? He was in his property, inside his vehicle, was attacked, defended himself and yet he gets charged only for the prosecution never getting around to present the evidence of his alleged culpability to the judge. 

It might be my perception, but I see an ugly trend here. Prosecuting Attorneys seem to automatically charge anybody who uses a gun in self-defense just because they can. It is like they are saying: “I can’t take your guns away but I am sure as hell make your life miserable if you have to use them.”

It might be our new battlefront.

Quote of the Day: Tom McHale

A number of folks seem concerned about the sale of ammunition near homes and a restaurant that sells alcohol. I for one was glad to hear someone raise this issue because before now I didn’t realize that ammunition, left unsupervised, was prone to multi-day drinking benders. Heads up people!

via The Chicken Little Diaries: A Shooting Range Zoning Saga – Bearing Arms.

I am laughing to hard to make sense. Go enjoy the rest of the article.