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![](https://policeissues.org/assets/images/Recent posts8.jpg)
"Numbers" Rule – Everywhere (#451, 7/2/24)
Production pressures degrade what's "produced" – and not just in policing
Is Crime Really Down? It Depends... (#450, 6/20/24)
Even when citywide numbers improve, place really, really matters
Kids With Guns (#449, 6/3/24)
Ready access and permissive laws create a daunting problem
De-Prosecution? What's That? (#448, 4/27/24)
Philadelphia's D.A. eased up on lawbreakers. Did it increase crime?
Ideology (Still) Trumps Reason (#447, 4/9/24)
When it comes to gun laws, “Red” and “Blue” remain in the driver’s seat
Shutting the Barn Door (#446, 3/19/24)
Oregon moves to re-criminalize hard drugs
Houston, We Have (Another) Problem (#445, 2/28/24)
Fueled by assault rifles, murders plague the land
Wrong Place, Wrong Time, Wrong Cop (#444, 2/8/24)
Recent exonerees set "records" for wrongful imprisonment
America's Violence- Beset Capital City (#443, 1/20/24)
Our Nation's capital is plagued by murder
Are Civilians Too Easy on the Police? (II) (#442, 12/18/23)
Exonerated of murder, but not yet done
Warning: (Frail) Humans at Work (#441, 11/29/23)
The presence of a gun can prove lethal
See No Evil - Hear No Evil - Speak No Evil (#440, 11/14/23)
Is the violent crime problem really all in our heads?
Policing Can't Fix What Really Ails (#439, 10/18/23)
California's posturing overlooks a chronic issue
Confirmation Bias Can be Lethal (#438, 9/21/23)
Why did a "routine" stop cost a man's life?
When (Very) Hard Heads Collide (II) (#437, 9/5/23)
What should cops do when miscreants refuse to comply? Refuse to comply?
What Cops Face (#436, 8/24/23)
America’s violent atmosphere can distort officer decisions
Punishment Isn't a Cop's Job (III) (#435, 8/1/23)
Some citizens misbehave; some cops answer in kind
San Antonio Blues (#434, 7/20/23)
What poverty brings can impair the quality of policing
Keep going...
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![](https://policeissues.org/assets/images/Updates5.jpg)
7/15/24 Thomas Matthew Crooks, the 20-year old who opened fire at the Trump rally
in Butler, Pennsylvania, was a high-school grad who worked at a nursing home in nearby Bethel Park, where he
lived with his parents. Crooks used an “AR-15 style” rifle that his father purchased months
earlier.
Pennsylvania law allows persons 18 or older to buy and possess handguns and long guns. It does not restrict assault weapons.
Crooks supposedly wore a gun-themed T-shirt during the assault. A past fellow student described him as a loner
who wore “hunting outfits” to school and was chronically bullied. Crooks had no adult criminal
record. Authorities found “bomb-making materials” in his vehicle and residence. Related posts
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In 2009 a major NAS report
strongly criticized the scientific accuracy of bite-mark evidence. Its conclusions, though, came too late for Charles McCrory, whose
1985 Alabama murder conviction was largely based on bite marks. But even though the Supreme Court just turned away his appeal, Justice Sotomayor
strongly urged that Alabama follow the lead of Texas, California and several other States and implement a
process for “addressing wrongful convictions that rest on repudiated forensic testimony.”
Related post
After a four-month
trial that featured video surveillance, text messages and testimony from more than one-hundred witnesses,
a D.C. jury convicted Tyiion Freeman, 24, Koran Jackson, 23, and Stephen Nelson, 33, of murder, conspiracy and
weapons violations. In 2020, their two-week “turf war”, waged in retaliation for the 2019 killing
of an associate, wounded ten persons and killed Malachi Lukes, an innocent thirteen-year old who was walking
by with his friends. Two other accused are pending trial.
Related post
During opening statements in Alec Baldwin’s trial for involuntary manslaughter, a prosecutor
berated him for violating “the cardinal rules of firearm safety.” But Baldwin’s lawyer said
that safety “has to occur before a gun is placed in an actor’s hand.” He blamed the armorer,
who had been convicted, and the assistant director, who pled guilty. During the second day a Sheriff’s
technician testified she found live bullets “all over” the set, but none in weapon supplier Seth
Kenney’s truck. He denied bringing any in. Then on the third day a handful of live ammo that a private citizen gave
to the Sheriff’s Dept. in connection with the armorer’s prosecution came into evidence. Although
prosecutors insisted that this previously undisclosed evidence had no bearing on the case, several rounds
matched the live ammunition that was recovered on set. An exasperated judge dismissed the case, with
prejudice. It cannot be refiled.
Related post
7/12/24 Since 2015 sixteen cities and counties that form “a diverse cross-
section of jails in the U.S.” have participated in CUNY’s Safety + Justice Challenge, which
promotes reform-minded strategies to reduce incarceration. Its most recent report about arrests and rebookings
of arrested persons, which includes data thru April 2023, reveals that “local violent crime rates varied
regardless of changes to the jail population.” Only about two percent of releasees were rebooked for
another violent crime, providing reassurance that “the pandemic-era increase in violent crime was
not caused by jail reduction reforms.”
Related post
During the evening hours of July 10 Alameda, Calif. resident Shane Killian, 54, shot and killed
his wife, father-in-law, mother-in-law, and 6-year-old son. He also shot and critically wounded his one-year
old son. Before succumbing, the father-in-law alerted a neighbor, who called police. Officers arrested Killian
and recovered “multiple firearms.” According to neighbors, the “friendly and outgoing” family had recently moved
into their home. Photographs depict it as a single-family residence in an upscale area.
Related post
7/11/24 Leroy Ernest McCrary and two associates face
murder charges for fatally running over the wife of a visitor from New Zealand while the couple shopped at
Newport Beach, California’s tony Fashion Island. McCrary, who allegedly wanted the husband’s fancy
watch, was on probation for stealing a Rolex in 2020. He also had convictions in 2023 for gun possession and
robbery. These also led to probation. Prosecutors claim that the dispositions were influenced by evidentiary
problems. But police vehemently disagree. According to progressive D.A. George Gascon’s forthcoming
election opponent, “malpractice appears to have cost another life.” McCrary court record
Related post
From its origins in El Salvador, MS-13 took root in Southern California. It then spread throughout the U.S.
Alexi Saenz, 29, a New York City-area shot-caller, just pled guilty to a sweeping Federal indictment charging
him and his associates with a litany of murders in and around the Big Apple. Among the victims were six teens,
both male and female, who had “disrespected” or otherwise come into conflict with the gang. Saenz
is expected to draw 40 to 70 years. His brother, the second-in-command, still faces charges.
Related post
7/10/24 “Rust” set armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed is serving 18
months in a New Mexico jail on her conviction for felony involuntary manslaughter in the death of
cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. Alec Baldwin, the film’s star, is now on trial for that crime. Although
he denies pulling the trigger (Baldwin said the gun fired when he cocked the hammer), crew members blame him
for rushing things. Might that have contributed to the failure to detect that the gun had a live round? Neal
W. Zoromski, who reportedly has thirty years’ experience as a set armorer, rejected working on “Rust”
because “corners were being cut.” However, the judge has prohibited prosecutors from introducing
evidence that Baldwin was one of the producers or showing videos where he “profanely” pushed the
crew to accelerate production. So evidence of his influence may be lacking.
Related post
On July 4th. 2023 then-Northwoods, Missouri police sergeant Michael Hill dealt with an alleged
problem-maker at a local Walgreens by having then-officer Samuel Davis haul him off to another town, deliver
a frightful beating, and dump him on the side of the road. A passer-by soon came across the bloodied man, who
told her what had just happened. He also sued. Both
officers were promptly fired and charged with State crimes. They then lied to the FBI about what had
taken place. DOJ has now stepped in with Federal civil-rights indictments that carry a potential life term.
Related post
7/9/24 An inquiry by the Los Angeles Times reveals that so far this year LAPD officers have shot
six mentally-afflicted persons who were flaunting “a sharp object”, killing four. There were a
total of 11 such shootings last year. This year’s outcomes were recently addressed by the Police
Commission’s vice president, who said “I want to make sure that all other efforts are exhausted
before lethal force is used.” But while the article’s tone is implicitly critical of the police,
it also conveys concerns about the effectiveness of less-lethal weapons such as projectile launchers.
Related post
More than one-hundred shot; nineteen killed. That’s
Chicago’s tally for the Thursday-Sunday July 4th. weekend. About forty-five shootings occurred on Friday
alone. Mayor Brandon Johnson attributed the toll to “generations of disinvestment.” Police Supt.
Larry Snelling’s reaction was less nuanced. “What we really have to think about is the brazenness
and the behavior of those who could walk into a home and see children and women and open fire.” But
both called for a stern response. “There will be consequences....We will not let criminal activity ruin
and harm our city” said Johnson.
Related post
7/8/24
It took two hours for an L.A. jury to agree that four years ago Justin Arteaga, 23, tried to prove his
worthiness as a gang recruit by shooting and killing a 29-year old local resident who had
“disrespected” a member of the Gardena-13 street gang. His victim, Evan Campbell, 29, was the son
of retired Federal agent Lester Campbell. The elder Campbell ran out of their nearby home. He was fired on by
another gang member and shot back, killing his assailant. A third gang armed member is serving a nine-year
prison sentence for ex-con with a gun. Arteaga faces life without parole.
Related post
A surge of gun violence over the July 4th. weekend left at least 33 dead across the U.S. More than one-third of the
casualties were in Chicago, where at last count thirteen were killed. And in Detroit, an early-a.m. Sunday bloc party was
convulsed by gunfire, killing two and wounding “more than a dozen.” But it’s not just the
holidays. According to criminologists, “the gathering, the free time, the drinking” have always
made summer months the most lethal. School’s out. With little else to do, teens easily come into
conflict. Tempers also flare with the heat. That’s especially a problem in poorer areas, where
“there’s nowhere to cool down and tensions rise.”
Related post
“We know it’s going on throughout the nation, but this is the first time that we’ve had a
mass shooting in Florence.” In a heartfelt news conference, Florence, Kentucky Police Chief Jeff Mallery
described the horrors perpetrated by 21-year old Chase Garvey, who burst into a birthday party and opened
fire, killing a 44-year old householder and three guests and seriously wounding three others. Garvey, a local
resident, committed suicide while being pursued. He had been convicted of felony rape and felony sodomy in 2021.
Related post
Twenty-nine States allow individuals otherwise entitled to have guns to carry
concealed firearms without a permit. Louisiana, the most recent “permitless carry” State, came
aboard July 4th. That drove New Orleans P.D. Supt. Anne Kirkpatrick to designate
the French Quarter’s police station as a “vocational training school”, since it’s used
for officer training. Doing so activates a State law that forbids concealed carry within 1,000 feet of a school
or training site. Legislators had refused to exempt New Orleans or the French Quarter from the new law, and
they’re wary of the Superintendent’s move.
Related post
7/5/24 Denver resident Kevin Bui, 20, just drew
sixty years for setting a house fire that killed five members of a Senegalese family four years ago. Bui, a
drug dealer, had used an online app to track his cell phone, of which he had been robbed, to the victims’
home. Bui and his two accomplices were identified by police who had Google provide IP numbers that searched for
the home’s address shortly before the arson. Bui admitted that he and the others set the fire. As it turns
out, it had been the wrong home.
Related post
Gunfire broke out in Corryville, a Cincinnati neighborhood, during the early
morning hours of July 1st. Three persons were shot dead and a fourth, who was wheelchair-bound from a prior
shooting, was wounded. An unidentified armed man ran into a nearby home and was arrested. Those killed include
Shawn McDaniel Sr., 45 and his son, Shawn McDaniel Jr., 22. A convicted drug dealer, McDaniel Sr. authored two
graphic novels, Cincinnati
Jack Boy$ and
80’s Baby, about life, drugs and death on Cincinnati streets.
Related post
Suspects armed with a handgun and rifle jumped out of a car and opened fire on a home in
Chicago’s poor, violence-beset Grand Crossing neighborhood. Two females, ages 42 and 22 were killed, and
three children, ages 5, 7 and 8 were critically wounded. “Y’all don’t get no cool points for
coming to shoot up a crib at six o’clock in the morning where nobody in the house gang affiliated, none
of that,” said the older woman’s son, who was awakened by the gunfire but unhurt. A police
commander suggested that the shooting stemmed from a “personal dispute.” No arrests have yet been
made.
Related post
As Founder of Mothers Against Senseless Killings (MASK), Tamar Manasseh has watched over her corner of Chicago’s violence-beset
Englewood neighborhood for a decade. But her “unspoken agreement” with gangs to hold their fire
while children are about recently broke down in a hail of bullets. With city officials ignoring requests to
install speed bumps and surveillance cameras, and her alderman strangely silent, she’s ready to call MASK
and its Peace Academy quits. Her recent comments to Block Club Chicago did spur some calls from the
Mayor’s Office. But hope for real action remains dim.
Related post
7/3/24 In the 1984 Chevron case the Supreme
Court unanimously ruled that judges must defer to Federal regulatory decisions that reasonably interpret the
law. That decision was just overruled by
Loper Bright v. Secretary of Commerce. According to the Court, even when statutes are
“ambiguous,” courts must “exercise their independent judgment” when deciding whether an
agency acted legally. So far, the Court has returned gun-law challenges to lower courts for more work. But
gun-
control advocates fear that Loper Bright will foster moves to invalidate State and Federal gun laws
and ATF regulations.
Related post
Situated on an ocean bluff, it doesn’t get any “tonier” than Newport Beach, Calif.’s
“Fashion Island”. Nor, as shoppers discovered during a “tranquil afternoon”, more lethal.
Robbers accosted an elderly couple strolling outside the exclusive stores. Shots were fired, and the assailants
dragged the woman to the parking lot and fatally struck her with their car. Four suspects were arrested after a
protracted air-and-ground pursuit. “This doesn’t happen in Newport Beach,” said the Mayor.
“Fashion Island is an incredibly safe place. This is a tragedy, and I’m furious.”
Related post
7/2/24 AR-15 style assault rifles are in the news. Santa Rosa, Calif. police officers stopped a car
Saturday night for no lights. Its driver was
wearing a “Jason” mask that fully covered his face. An unloaded, California-illegal Eagle Arms
Eagle-15 5.56 mm. assault rifle was on the back seat. Adonay Efriem, 27, was booked for felony possession of an
unregistered assault weapon. And in Illinois, the family of Eduardo Uvaldo sued Smith & Wesson, manufacturer of the M&P-15 assault rifle
that Robert Crimo used in the 2022 Highland Park massacre. Mr. Uvaldo was one of seven persons who suffered fatal
wounds. According to the suit, Smith & Wesson knew that their AR-15 style rifle was being used in massacres,
and their sale thus constituted a “negligent entrustment” under Illinois law.
Related post
7/1/24 In a new decision, the Supreme Court ruled that 18 USC 1512(c)(2), which prohibits obstructing official
proceedings, is constrained by the language of section (c)(1), which applies only to someone who “alters,
destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object, or attempts to do so.” Merely
crashing the Capitol isn’t enough. While no Jan. 6 rioters were reportedly charged with only
(c)(2), it’s a felony, and more than two dozen are serving prison time for its violation. It also accounts
for two of the four Jan. 6-related charges against ex-president Trump. Split 6-3, the decision aligned with the
Court’s ideological divide, with conservatives in the majority. Fischer v. U.S.
Capitol updates Related posts
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In April 2019 DNA results that excluded Ricky Davis led an El
Dorado County, Calif. judge to reverse his 2005 murder conviction. Davis was released after serving twelve years.
His conviction had been enabled by testimony from a teen, Connie Dahl, that she was present when Davis, her
boyfriend, killed the victim. Her account, it turns out, was coerced by police. Dahl, who served a year in prison,
has since passed away. DNA identified Michael Green as the killer. He pled guilty to the murder in 2022.
Innocence Project
Related post
A Federal judge placed a
hold on Oklahoma HB 4156, signed by Gov. Kevin Stitt, which criminalized the presence in the State of persons
who illegally entered the U.S., and those who had been excluded but failed to leave. First offense is a
misdemeanor, punishable by a fine or jailing for up to one year. A second offense is a felony. That’s
occasioned a lawsuit by the Justice Dept., which is challenging the law as intruding into a matter of exclusively
Federal jurisdiction. Oklahoma bill
Immigration updates
Related post
Police patrolling a residential neighborhood of Utica (NY) encountered two 13-year old boys who matched the
description of robbers who had struck there on the preceding day. Bodycam video shows one boy running away, then
turning around with a gun in his hands and pointing it in the officers’ direction. One officer tackled the
youth; another opened fire, inflicting a fatal wound. The youth’s gun was a realistic duplicate of a Glock
17 pistol. But all it could fire were “pellets or bb’s”. Bodycam video
Related post
Detroit
PD’s missteps with facial recognition technology, which led to three wrongful arrests, have resulted in
a court settlement that binds the agency to implement new practices. Most importantly, images of persons
ID’d through facial recognition cannot be shown to witnesses or included in photo lineups unless they are
also linked to a crime in another way. Photospreads must also be shown by an officer not connected with the
investigation, and displayed not in a group but one picture at a time.
Related post
California has joined Colorado and New York in requiring that credit-card companies provide banks with
unique codes that identify purchases at gun stores. This will enable banks to discern when customers exhibit
unusual patterns, such as making large purchases at multiple gun stores during a brief period. They could then
alert police, and perhaps prevent a mass shooting. But Georgia, Iowa, Tennessee and Wyoming and thirteen other
“Red” states have passed laws to prohibit the practice.
Related post
6/28/24 A report by the Sacramento Grand Jury criticizes police for
sharing information from a county-wide network of 170 automated license plate readers. ALPR’s automatically
capture images of as many as 1,800 license plates per minute. But while State law prohibits it, this data was
being shared with other States and the Feds. That practice is now suspended. Police, though, say that
ALPR’s have been highly useful, leading to the recovery of 495 stolen vehicles in their first month of
operation. Report
Related post
Former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernandez, 55, will spend the next 45 years in an
American Federal prison. After being extradited from his native land, where he served two terms as its top
leader, Hernandez was convicted in March for drug importation and gun violations. Over two decades, Hernandez
and his heavily armed cartel compatriots smuggled 400 tons of cocaine into the U.S. Hernandez’s brother
and an associate have already drawn life in prison; several others are pending trial.
Immigration updates
Related post
A Texas grand jury indicted former Uvalde school police chief Pete Arredondo on ten counts of felony child
endangerment for “intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, and with criminal negligence” endangering the
lives of ten minors during the school shooting perpetrated by Salvador Ramos on May 24, 2022. Arredondo was
faulted for his failure to follow existing protocols for active shooter incidents. Former school police officer
Adrian Gonzales was also charged. Both were booked and released.
Related post
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