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Gun Control? What's That? (#465, 4/1/25)
Ideological quarrels beset gun laws. And gun law-making. And gun law-enforcing.
Forewarned is Forearmed (#464, 3/19/25)
Killings of police officers seem inevitable. What might help?
Who's Under the Gun? The ATF, That's Whom (#463, 3/6/25)
Going after gun controllers, for the usual reasons
Who's Under the Gun? The FBI, That's Whom (#462, 2/14/25)
Going after the FBI for going after the Capitol rioters
Point of View (#461, 1/30/25)
Do scholars really “get” the craft of policing?
All in the Family (Part II) (#460, 1/6/25)
A decade after Part I, domestic killings remain commomplace
Acting...or Re-acting? (#459, 12/8/24)
An urgent response proves tragically imprecise
Citizen Misbehavior Breeds Voter Discontent (#458, 11/20/24)
Progressive agendas face rebuke in even the "Bluest" of places
A Matter of Facts (#457, 11/3/24)
Did flawed science place an innocent man on death row?
Want Brotherly Love? Don't be Poor! (#456, 10/12/24)
Violence is down in Philly, L.A. and D.C. Have their poor noticed?
Prevention Through Preemption (#455, 9/16/24)
Expanding the scope of policing beyond making arrests
Switching Sides (#454, 8/30/24)
St. Louis’ D.A. argues that a condemned man is in fact innocent
"Distraction Strike"? Angry Punch? Both? (#453, 8/11/24)
When cops get rattled, the distinction may ring hollow
Bringing a Gun To a Knife Fight (#452, 7/30/24)
Cops carry guns. Some citizens flaunt knives. Are poor outcomes inevitable?
"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
Keep going...
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4/24/25 Oscar Ortega-Anguiano accumulated four criminal convictions between 2005-2022: burglary, vehicle theft, spousal battery
with kidnapping, and most recently, vehicular manslaughter while drunk. That episode, which took the lives of two innocent 19-year
olds, earned him ten years. But he’s served three, and will presumably soon be released. Presumably, into the hands of ICE. They
claim that Ortega-Anguiano re-entered multiple times after deportation, and that charge could earn him twenty years. Related posts
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Just published
by the Washington Post, a damning resignation letter just filed by three suspended Federal prosecutors who rebuffed entreaties
to drop the Federal bribery case against NYC Mayor Eric Adams. According to former Asst. US Attorneys Celia V. Cohen, Andrew Rohrbach
and Derek Wikstrom, they were offered reinstatement if they “express regret and admit some wrongdoing by the Office” over
its (initial) refusal to drop the charges. In their view, that would have required they “abdicate our legal and ethical
obligations in favor of directions from Washington.” And that, they wrote, “is wrong.”
Capitol updates
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4/23/25
An unforgettable image depicts the widow of a man whom Patrick Crusius murdered during the 2019 Walmart massacre hugging the killer
in a Texas courtroom. Adriana Zandri was one of several relatives of Crusius’ twenty-three victims who accepted the opportunity
to interact with the shackled gunman at his plea hearing. “Pain and devastation” aside, several said they had no option
but to forgive and move on. Related posts
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Last year, in Worth V. Jacobson (No. 23-2248,
7/16/24,) the Eight Circuit affirmed a lower court decision that Minnesota law which prohibited persons under 21 from obtaining
licenses to carry handguns in public violated the historical tradition test imposed by Bruen. And the Supreme Court just refused, without comment, to review the Circuit’s
ruling. So at least for now, 18-20 year olds will be able to apply for CCW permits, at least in Minnesota. Supreme Court order list
Related post
AP’s detailed
review reveals that nineteen States and D.C. allow driver licenses to be issued to persons who lack proof that they’re
legally present in the U.S. Two of these States - Connecticut and Delaware - mark licenses to that effect. On the other side, Florida
and Wyoming prohibit driving by persons unlawfully present in the U.S., whether they’re “licensed” or not. And
that’s the direction that Tennessee House Majority Leader William Lamberth wants to go. “The sign says, `Welcome to
Tennessee, illegal immigrants are not welcome.’”
Immigration updates
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4/22/25 “You came to inflict terror, to take innocent lives, and to shatter a community
that had done nothing but stand for kindness, unity and love. You slaughtered fathers, mothers, sons and daughters...” With
these words Texas State Judge Sam Medrano accepted the guilty plea of Patrick Crusius to the August 2019 murder of twenty-three
persons at an El Paso Walmart. Crusius, who is already serving multiple life terms in Federal prison, will automatically draw life
without parole. He pled guilty after prosecutors, who wished to ease the burden on survivor families, offered to forego the death
penalty. Related posts
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4/21/25 FSU mass shooter Phoenix Ikner
was a deeply troubled child who took meds for “mental issues.” When he was ten his biological mother spirited him away
to Norway. A court ordered his return, and she was jailed over the episode. His father remarried, and Ikner, whose birth name was
Christian Eriksen, changed his name. Although he did well academically, his “white supremacist, alt-right views” worried
classmates, as did his fondness for guns. His stepmother, whose handgun he used, had purchased it from the Leon County
Sheriff’s Dept., where she is employed as a deputy. She’s presently on leave.
Related post
A late-evening shooting in the front yard of a Chicago residence wounded three teens, ages 17, 18 and 19, one critically. The
shooter, with whom they reportedly had an argument, fled in an SUV. He has not yet been identified. It happened on April 18 in the
city’s poverty-stricken Austin neighborhood (Zip 60644, pov. 29.7%).
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Agreeing with
Massachusett’s argument that “States have routinely regulated, and sometimes outright banned, specific weapons once
it became clear that they posed a unique danger to public safety,” a panel of the 1st. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the
state’s ban on assault weapons as consistent with the “historical tradition” requirement of the Bruen decision. Along the way, the Justices also remarked that the
appellants offered “a single instance where the AR-15 -- or any other banned weapon -- has actually been used in a self-
defense scenario.”
Related post
Concerns that the Administration might invoke the Alien Enemies Act to summarily deport Venezuelans held by ICE in a Texas
detention center led the ACLU to sue. In response, the Supreme Court just issued a summary order (Justices Thomas and Alito
dissented) prohibiting any such expulsion pending a forthcoming ruling by the Fifth Circuit. And even then, it barred any removal
“until further order of this Court.”
Order
Immigration updates
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4/18/25 When 20-year old student
Phoenix Ikner stepped out of his car at Florida State University, he took out a shotgun. But it jammed. So Ikner reached in and
got a handgun. It was an old service weapon once used by his mother, a long-time deputy sheriff. Ikner walked to the area of the
student union building and opened fire, killing two non-students and badly wounding five other persons. Officers soon arrived; they
shot and wounded Ikner when he didn’t comply with their commands. Ikner was a member of the sheriff’s “Youth
Advisory Council” and participated in its training programs. In 2014 a former student opened fire in the FSU library, wounding three. Myron May, 31, was killed by police.
Related post
In November 2018 Hoover, AL police officer David Alexander shot and killed Emantic Bradford, Jr. Officer Alexander and a partner were
patrolling a mall and heard gunshots. They zeroed in on Mr. Bradford, an innocent citizen who had drawn his legal gun to help out.
Assuming he was the shooter, Officer Alexander didn’t verbally warn Mr. Bradford and quickly fired, killing him. (The real
shooter, who wounded two, was prosecuted.) Officer
Alexander was cleared by prosecutors. Mr. Bradford’s family nonetheless sued. But an 11th. Federal Circuit panel
just granted officer Alexander qualified
immunity from civil liability.
Related post
4/17/25 According to a news update, four students, ages 15-18, were shot at Wilmer-Hutchins High School on April 15th. None was
critically wounded. A fifth student was hospitalized for anxiety. Tracy Denard Haynes Jr., the 17-year old suspect, surrendered to
police. He apparently brought the gun in during the early afternoon when another student let him in through an unsecured door.
Haynes promptly opened fire, shooting "indiscriminately."
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Minnesota law enforcement
agencies began adopting encrypted radio communications in 2019. Minneapolis has just joined the trend. While the system is tested
and tuned up, radio traffic between dispatch and patrol, and between patrol cars, will be encrypted four to six hours a day. And
24-hour encryption is around the corner. Police scanners will no longer work. But MPD promises it will promptly post general
information about radio calls, including incident locations, on its “online dashboard.”
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According to
Virginia’s Law Enforcement Assistance Program, officers are twice as likely to die by suicide than to be feloniously
killed. With that in mind, the program offers seminars and guidance to cops before and after they experience the “traumatic
life events” that are so commonplace to policing. With the loss of one of its own by suicide last month, the Giles County
Sheriff’s office is welcoming VALEAP’s help. One of its tools, peer support, will “try to help normalize the
trauma that comes after a critical event, and give people tips and tricks to move past these events.”
Related post
4/16/25 Three high-school students, ages 15-18, were shot and a fourth was injured when a fellow student opened fire on the
campus of Wilmer-Hutchins High School in Dallas, TX. None of the injuries are life-threatening. Police have the shooter in custody.
Students must enter the school through metal detectors, so it’s thought that the student somehow acquired the gun later.
According to a student,"We were in class. I heard like six shots and the teacher ran to the door and closed it and told us to
hide in the corner." Last year, a student was shot in the leg at the same school.
Related post
In 2016 a divorced California woman obtained a restraining order against her
ex-husband. According to her petition, he had told friends that he wanted to commit suicide and kill their child. One year later the
ex-husband nonetheless bought a pistol at a gun store. And in 2020 he carried through on his plans. That restraining order, which
would prevented the gun sale, wasn’t in the database used to screen gun buyers. A new California law that requires Courts to
speedily pass on the identities of persons named in restraining orders is in the works.
Related post
Four years ago a Colorado gunman used an
assault weapon to commit a massacre at a Covid vaccination line. Colorado has just enacted a ban, to take effect next year, on
assault-style weapons that can accept detachable magazines. Their manufacture will be prohibited. And unless a small-capacity fixed
magazine is permanently attached, their purchase will require an eligibility card. That requires passing a background check and
completing a special firearms course. It’s good for five years, but can be renewed. Rapid-fire devices such as
“bump stocks” are outlawed altogether. Related posts
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4/15/25
South L.A.’s fetchingly entitled “Green Meadows” neighborhood suffered yet another violent weekend, with three
shootings that killed two persons and wounded one. A 13-year old girl who was inside her home when a dispute broke out nearby was
struck in the head by a gunshot and fatally wounded. And two early-morning vehicle-to-vehicle shootings left a woman dead and a man
critically wounded. So far, no arrests have been announced. Related posts
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Former Colorado
deputy sheriff Andrew Buen was sentenced to three years imprisonment for the 2022 shooting death of a deeply disturbed motorist
who had called police. Christian Glass flashed a knife when officers approached, and Buen promptly fired. In 2024 a jury convicted
him of misdemeanor recklessness, but jurors hung up on murder. When retried, Buen was convicted on the lesser offense of criminally
negligent homicide. At sentencing Buen, who has been in jail, apologized to the victim’s family and agreed that he was fully
to blame.
Related post
“Operation Take Back America” continues to tout its accomplishments. DOJ’s April 14 news release announced that
its prosecutors in Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas charged “more than 1,020 illegal aliens” with immigration-
related crimes during the second week of April. Most cases involved re-entry after deportation. Some were for making false statements.
Charges were also preferred for human smuggling and firearms violations. Many of the defendants reportedly have local criminal records.
Immigration updates
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4/14/25 Approved last year, San Francisco Prop. E authorized police to deploy high-tech tools such as drones and license plate
readers. SFPD promptly established a “Real Time Information Center” (RTIC) “where teams of analysts monitor live
surveillance feeds, license plate readers, and drone footage” to helps officers promptly respond to calls and solve
crimes. Chief Bill Scott credits the RTIC for the city’s substantial drop in crime. But skeptics worry about the
technology’s effects on civil liberties. Related posts
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"Criminals are taking advantage of
irresponsible American gun laws, and their weak border enforcement, to bring illegal guns into Canada." With those words,
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s announced a plan to fight crime by getting “tough on guns.” Proposed
measures include extending Canada’s ban on assault-style weapons, automatically barring persons convicted of violent
domestic crimes from having guns, and toughening gun purchase and licensing laws.
Related post
Four Guantanamo prisoners are scheduled
to be tried on April 23 over their roles in the 9/11 assault. Among them is Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who reportedly led the
attack. Another is Ali Abdul Aziz Ali (aka Ammar al-Baluchi.) Problem is, a military judge just threw out Aziz Ali’s
confession, as it was made under extreme physical and mental duress during the early stages of his captivity. A fifth accused,
Ramzi bin al-Shibh, has been removed
from the proceedings as the long-troubled man was found mentally unfit to stand trial.
Related post
Philadelphia murders are reportedly down.
But shootings by youths have bucked a seemingly favorable trend. Between 2010-2024 223 juveniles were charged with murder. In 2010
the number was 26; by 2018 it was “only” three. But killings then rose, reaching a stunning 39 in 2022. That dropped
to a still-considerable 26 in 2024, the same as in 2010. Charges in nonfatal shootings are way up; there were twice as many
(49) last year as in 2010 (24). Among other things, authorities blame teens’ exposure to and glorification of violence, a
lack of opportunities, and the ready availability of guns. Related posts
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On April 8 CBP
revoked the temporary parole status granted to about 6,300 immigrants who were allowed to enter the U.S. by the prior
Administration. These immigrants have been notified of their revocations and ordered to self-deport. To impede their employment
prospects, use of financial services, and receipt of local and State government benefits, their social security numbers were
purged from the regular list and placed in the “Death Master File.”
Immigration updates
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Now seventeen,
Nikita Casap immigrated from Ukraine with his mother. He lived with her and his stepfather in Waukesha, Wisconsin. Until about
two months ago, when he shot them both dead. Casap lived with their bodies for two weeks, then took the family cash and a car and
ran off. He was soon arrested in Kansas. According to the Feds, Casap, a Nazi sympathizer, had been plotting with others to murder
the President, and used the stolen money to buy a drone and explosives. A deep probe into Casap’s motivations was just
published by Psychology Today.
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4/11/25 Criminal
investigations only. No civil immigration cases. That’s the requirement that NYC Mayor Eric Adams says he’s
imposed on ICE in exchange for letting them open an office at the city’s Rikers Island jail complex. Immigration agents will
be joining other Federal agencies who collaborate with city authorities on drug and gang investigations. But fans of NYC’s
2014 “sanctuary city” law say it’s payback to President Trump, who had Federal corruption charges against the
Mayor dismissed.
Immigration updates
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Former Torrance, CA police
officers Christopher Tomsic and Cody Weldin pled guilty to felony vandalism for spray-painting a swastika in a
citizen’s car in 2020. They will be on probation for two years and will lose their state peace officer certifications.
Their prosecution arose from a major State inquiry into a trove of Torrance officers who “championed violence against
minorities, joked about beating up folks, and derided internal investigations.”
Related post
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