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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
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?
Keep going...
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3/17/25 An investigation by the Chicago Sun-Times reveals that only six percent of the city’s 2,300 non-fatal
shootings in 2024 have (so far) led to an arrest. Its analysis suggests that assigning more detectives to investigate shootings would
help. But although the mayor has promised to hire more cops, the number of detectives has grown fewer; those assigned to handle
shootings plunged twenty percent between 2023 and 2024. It’s thought that the slim risk of getting caught - only one out of four
Chicago murders is cleared by an arrest - has emboldened criminals and made violence worse.
Related post
Last November a 34-year old woman wielding a kife reportedly cornered an Independence, Missouri police officer who was in her
residence on a domestic disturbance call. He opened fire, killing Maria Pike and, accidentally, her three-month old infant.
Police had been summoned by the
child’s grandmother, who reported that Ms. Pike “attacked” her when she went to see the child. Ms. Pike was
visited by police before; she was also the subject of a Child Services inquiry. Prosecutors just announced that they will not file
charges against the officer, whose reaction they consider “reasonable.” Related posts
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On the one hand, the 11th. Circuit ruled 8-4 that Florida law that bars persons under 21 from buying long guns - it was enacted
after the Marjorie Stoneman High School massacre - is Constitutional. On the other, Florida’s Attorney General announced that
his office would not defend the statute should it be appealed to the Supreme Court. AG James Uthmeiert agrees with the NRA and other
pro-gun groups that the law violates the Second Amendment. “Men and women old enough to fight and die for our country should be
able to purchase firearms to defend themselves and their families,” he said. Related posts
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Last September a jury convicted D.C. police officer Terence D. Sutton Jr. and Lt. Andrew Zabavsky of covering up their roles in the
death of Karon Hylton-Brown, 20, a reckless moped rider who was killed in a crash while fleeing. Both drew prison terms: Sutton, who
was also convicted of 2nd. degree murder, got 5 1/2 years; Zabavsky got four years. But they were recently pardoned by President Trump. What’s more, D.C. Police
Chief Pamela A. Smith just announced that an internal affairs inquiry has cleared both of the cover-up. So they’ve been
reinstated.
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“Over 250”
alleged members of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang stepped off a plane in El Salvador. They were sent by the U.S., which is
paying to have them housed in a Salvadoran prison. Accompanying them were 23 members of El Salvador’s own MS-13 gang,
“to face justice in El Salvador.” A Federal judge had blocked the Administration from using the Alien and Sedition Act of 1798 to summarily deport members of groups,
including Tren de Aragua, whom the U.S. considers particularly dangerous. Venezuela also condemned the forced relocation of its
citizens. But the plane to El Salvador was supposedly already in the air.
Immigration updates
Related post
3/14/25 In 1996 Brittany Holberg was a 23-year old sex worker when she visited an elderly customer at his Amarillo, TX
residence. Holberg later claimed that he started beating her, and she killed him in self-defense. She was arrested, and at her trial a
cellmate testified that she admitted killing him for his money. Holberg was convicted and got the death penalty. But her lawyers
weren’t told that the cellmate was a paid police informant. That just led a Federal appeals court to toss the conviction and
send the matter back to a lower court. Holberg has served more than a quarter century. For now, she remains in custody.
Related post
Trumpeting its accomplishments, ICE
announced that it made nearly as many “enforcement” arrests (32,809) during its first 50 days under the new Administration
as during the whole of FY 2024 (33,242). Of the new batch, 14,111 were “convicted criminals,” 9,980 had pending criminal
charges, and 1,155 were “criminal gang members.”
Immigration updates
Related post
3/13/25
L.A. Times reporters who pored over 350 instances where LAPD officers fired their weapons during the past decade found that
innocent citizens or fellow cops were often in the line of fire. In over 100 cases instances shots were fired “in crowded areas,
or struck occupied buildings or vehicles.” And in 21 episodes, an innocent person was shot. Three died. LAPD’s civilian
overseers, though, give LAPD officers “great leeway” in deciding when to shoot. Most shootings are adjudged
“in policy,” and discipline over missteps is rare. Related posts
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Inmate-on-inmate killings beset California prisons. A recent “surge” - there were seven such episodes during the
first nine weeks of 2025 - has led to severe restrictions on prisoner movement and visitations. Some “lifers” seemingly
feel immune to sanctions. A prisoner was murdered in January by two “lifers,” each of whom had previously killed a fellow
inmate. One had told a prison psychologist that given his existing life term, that attack, in which he “strangled, beat and
slashed his cellmate,” was in effect a “freebie.”
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3/12/25 One-hundred
twenty million dollars. That’s what a Chicago Federal jury just awarded to John Fulton and Anthony Mitchell, who were
respectively 18 and 17 when they were convicted of murder for brutally beating and setting fire to an 18-year old. After
protracted, intense interrogations over week-long periods, both ultimately confessed and implicated each other. But there were no
witnesses nor any physical evidence. In 2019, after they had served 15 years, a judge reviewed compelling evidence of their presence
elsewhere and granted them a new trial. And the D.A. dismissed the case. Innocence Project
Related post
As part of a move by the new Administration
to restore gun rights to persons whose prior convictions needlessly prohibited them from possessing firearms, DOJ lawyer and
pardons specialist Elizabeth G. Oyer helped draft a list of nine deserving candidates for a Presidential pardon. Her superiors then
asked that she add in well-known Trump acolyte Mel Gibson, who was barred from having guns over a 2011 misdemeanor domestic violence
conviction. Her probe of Mr. Gibson, though, left her unsure that he was worth the risk, and that’s what she reported. And soon
after that she was fired.
Related post
Two D.C. teens, now ages 16 and
17, face murder charges for the brutal robbery and beating of a 39-year old man last October. At the time, the 16-year old had six
“active” robbery/assault cases pending, while the 17-year old was on probation for an undisclosed offense. Police said the
pair had been involved in three other assaults and robberies on that day as well. They will now remain in custody.
Related post
3/11/25
Dismayed by the racist and sexist chatter of his colleagues in the recruitment unit, an LAPD officer secretly recorded hours of it
on tape. Then filed a complaint with superiors. These recordings captured slurs directed at virtually every gender and ethnicity, made
by officers of virtually every gender and ethnicity. And while the abysmal jabber has spurred the reassignment of the unit’s
boss and several subordinates, the complainant is also under investigation, for violating his coworkers’ privacy.
Related post
Shortly after leaving the Chicago courthouse where he was pending trial on gun charges, Eric Vaughn, 28, was
ambushed and slain. His alleged killer, Marquez Robinson, 25, is on Federal parole for a drug conviction. However, his parole has been
in question because of a recent arrest for burglary. And while he’s yet to be charged with murder, Robinson is back in Federal
custody facing ex-con with a gun charges in connection with Vaughn’s killing. Related posts
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3/10/25 On Friday
evening, March 9, Newark PD Detective Joseph Azcona, 26, was shot and killed and his partner was wounded by a 14-year old
boy who was wielding “an automatic weapon.” The officers were part of a joint local-Federal team that drove up to
a group of youths who reportedly had illegal firearms. Return fire wounded the shooter. He was arrested and charged with
murder and gun violations, and five companions were detained. Related posts
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In February a distraught Los
Angeles woman called 911 and said that she was being held in a motel room and forced to perform sex work. Multiple LAPD
officers arrived and interacted with Linda Moran, 30. She claimed to have been beaten; they examined her but found no sign of
injuries. Moran soon became angry and ordered the officers to leave. They backed away and clustered at the door. Moran then
slowly advanced on them with a large knife in hand. An officer opened fire, inflicting an ultimately fatal wound. LAPD released
graphic, highly detailed clips from the officer bodycams. Video
Related post
In Police Chief magazine, two German academics propose the KODIAK model of de-escalating officer-citizen
encounters. It’s comprised of five sequential stages - Safety, Relationship, Calmness, Situation Clarification, and
Solution Search - and the essentials of each should be largely accomplished before advancing to the next. Assuring the safety
of officers and citizens is critical throughout. That may require the use of force. But its application should be
proportional. Patience is important, and if necessary a temporary withdrawal can be considered.
Related post
In January 2024 three academicians
administered a survey to a representative sample of 10,000 U.S. adults. Seven percent of respondents reported having been
present at the scene of a mass shooting, defined as four or more persons being shot. Two percent said they sustained an
injury, by gunfire or other means. Mass shootings were most common in neighborhoods, and those present were more often
younger, male and Black. No racial differences were found as to the injuries sustained.
Related post
In 1995 a
Virginia woman was viciously stabbed to death in her home. Her assailant’s identity remained a mystery until 2023,
when a private lab used DNA to build the killer’s family tree. And shortly after police paid him a visit to ask for a
cheek swab, software engineer Stephan Smerk, 53, soulfully confessed. A recovered alcoholic, he had became well educated,
married, had children, and enjoyed a seemingly ideal life. Smerk recently pled guilty and just drew seventy years. As for his
motive: he had none. Smerk said that he had felt compelled to kill, and was “a serial killer who’s only killed
once.”
Related post
“For the
past four years, our brave men and women of ICE were barred from doing their jobs—ICE needs a culture of accountability
that it has been starved of under the Biden Administration.” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem thus announced the
appointment of veteran ICE agent and manager Todd Lyons as Acting ICE Director, and Madison Sheahan, head of the Louisiana
Dept. of Wildlife (and a reportedly strong backer of law enforcement) as Deputy Director. Lyons replaces Caleb Vitello, who
held the position for only one month. “Lagging immigrant arrest numbers” apparently did him in. Immigration updates
Related post
Columbia
University graduate student Mahmoud Khalil, a leading pro-Palestinian voice, once drew the school’s sharp rebuke for
leading an unauthorized march that “glorified” Hamas’ incursion into Israel. And Khalil, who holds a student
visa and a green card, is now in ICE custody and pending an appearance at an immigration court. If a judge rules that Khalil
actively supported Hamas, which was designated a terror group
in 1997, his green card could be revoked and he would be deported. Immigration updates
Related post
3/7/25 In Glendale, AZ, patrol officers need not wait for dispatch to send them on a call. New technology allows them
to set their patrol car’s GPS so they can listen in, live, to all 911 calls that originate within one-half to three
miles away. That enables catching evildoers literally “in the act.” In one example, a nearby cop’s near-
instant response to a 911 call about a man trying to burglarize vehicles led to his arrest well before the officers actually
dispatched on the call arrived.
Related post
In 2018, a California Appellate decision
required that San Francisco judges set bail based on the accused’s ability to pay. A 2021 California Supreme Court decision later extended this rule to the whole State.
Just published in Criminology & Public Policy, a study of the rule’s effects found that defendants who benefited from these decisions and gained pre-trial
release became less likely to plead guilty and suffer a conviction. But the liberalization did not significantly affect the
likelihood that they would be arrested or convicted in the future.
Related post
Adnan Syed’s
infamous conviction for the 1999 murder of his high school girlfriend - it became a hit in the “Serial” podcast
- was overturned by a lower court in 2022. He was released after serving 22 years. But one year later an appellate court
reversed the reversal, again making him a murderer, and the Maryland Supreme Court affirmed that decision. But instead of
another trial, a judge just applied a special provision of State law and reduced Syed’s sentence to time served. He
remains a convicted killer and will be on five years probation. And, yes, Syed continues to maintain his innocence.
Related post
3/6/25 Typically crime-beset
Minneapolis (of George Floyd infamy) is bragging about its drop in serious and violent crimes, including robberies,
carjackings and aggravated assaults. According to the mayor and police chief, the improvement is due to “police
initiatives, task forces and programs focused on these specific crimes.” Summing up robberies, agg. assaults and murders
during the first two months of the year, our quick tally from the city data portal showed 502 in 2023, 610 in 2024 and 450 this year.
Related post
A recent journal article in Preventive
Medicine, “Perceptions of neighborhood disorder and gun carrying during adolescence: The indirect effect of
exposure to violence,” examines the reasons why adolescents bring guns to school. It concludes that while neighborhood
disorder is an important factor, the exposure of violence is the most proximate cause. According to the authors, providing
“mental health resources” would benefit youths who live in disorderly, violence-stricken neighborhoods.
Related post
Two illegal
immigrants from Guatemala are under arrest for running a criminal group that smuggled twenty-thousand persons from
Guatemala to the U.S. over five years. They charged $15,000 to $18,000 dollars per person, and those who couldn’t pay up
got “held hostage in a stash house” in the Los Angeles area until they did. In 2023 one of their immigrant convoys
crashed in Oklahoma, killing seven immigrants. Eduardo Domingo Renoj-Matul and Cristobal Mejia-Chaj are being held without
bond. They face up to life in prison.
Immigration updates
3/5/25 Darrell Moore was
sixteen when he participated in a 2020 murder that an accomplice committed during a group robbery. Moore didn’t have
a gun then but aggressively wielded a knife. He drew 66 years but thanks to D.C.’s 2016
Incarceration Reduction Amendment Act only served twenty-six. And he’s again been convicted of murder, for a killing
he committed with a gun six months after his release. Related posts
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Vowing to “make D.C. safe
again,” Ed Martin, President Trump’s interim U.S. Attorney, announced he would prosecute gun-toting felons in
U.S. District Court on Federal charges instead of letting them be dealt with in Superior Court. A dozen extra ATF agents are
enroute to help out. His strategy is a re-do of the approach taken during President Trump’s first term. USA Martin
castigated the Capitol riot cases as distractions from the fight against violence and recently demoted seven lawyers who
worked on those cases. But two, according to the Post, also specialized in gun cases. Related posts
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3/4/25
Calling it “unjust” and disproportionate, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin commuted the three-year prison term just
handed down to former Fairfax County (Va.) police sergeant Wesley Shifflett for shooting and killing Timothy McCree Johnson in
2023. Shifflet will, however, remain convicted of felony reckless handling of a firearm. Johnson’s mother disparaged the
commutation as “validating” the killing.
Related post
Robert E. Crimo
III pled guilty to committing the massacre at the July 4th., 2022 parade in Highland Park, Illinois, where he used an
assault rifle to murder seven spectators and wound over two dozen. He will draw multiple consecutive life terms; it seems
certain that he will never be released.
Related post
In a message he just
delivered to coworkers, James Dennehy, the head of the FBI’s New York City office, said that he had been ordered to
retire but not told why. So he would. “I will never stop defending this joint. I’ll just do it willingly and
proudly from outside the wire.” Dennehy, an agent since 2002, had openly “resisted” the directive to
identify agents who participated in the Capitol investigation. He had then written colleagues that he would “dig in.
Capitol updates
Related post
3/3/25 Mexico transferred twenty-nine wanted members of drug trafficking cartels to U.S. cutody. They’re charged
with participating in vast criminal enterprises that trafficked large amounts of drugs into the U.S. and committed numerous
murders and kidnappings to accomplish their ends. Among the accused are Rafael Caro Quintero, who allegedly murdered DEA
agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena forty years ago while he was stationed in Guadalajara. Among the others are Vicente
Fuentes, 62, a leader of the Juarez Cartel, and Miguel Angel and Oscar Morales, two reputed Zetas. All drug cartels have been
officially declared “terrorist organizations” by the new Administration. DOJ news release
Related post
According to
persons “close to the office,” seven seasoned D.C. prosecutors with “senior roles” in the office
have been involuntarily reassigned to perform duties handled by newcomers. They were reportedly demoted because of concerns
about their loyalty. Each had played a significant role in prosecuting an associate of President Trump (i.e., Stephen K.
Bannon and Peter Navarro) or a leading figure in the Capitol riot (i.e. Oath Keeper Stewart Rhodes and Proud Boy Enrique
Tarrio.)
Capitol updates
Related post
“For
years” the IRS has encouraged illegal immigrants to file tax returns and assured them that their information would
be kept confidential. According to a document reviewed by the Washington Post, DHS recently asked the IRS to supply
residence addresses for 700,000 illegal immigrants who are being targeted for expulsion. Citing privacy rules, the IRS turned
them down. For the same reason it’s also turned down a request to help probe businesses across the U.S. that knowingly
hire illegal immigrants.
Immigration updates
Related post
To combat illegal immigration 3,000 active-duty troops are being sent to the Southern border. They will join the 4,200 active
-duty soldiers and 5,000 State-dispatched National Guard troops already there. But the New Administration’s vigorous
response to illegal immigration is drawing pushback. “Operation Return to Sender, ” a Border Patrol initiative
that targets farm workers illegally in the U.S., is being sued by the United Farm Workers for sending agents on “fishing
expeditions” that dispense with legal niceties such as “reasonable suspicion” and selects targets based on
their race and occupation.
Immigration updates
Related post
Two years ago former Fairfax County (Va.) police sergeant Wesley Shifflett shot and killed a shoplifter who “reached
for his waist” during a foot chase. Timothy McCree Johnson, 37, turned out to be unarmed. At trial, then-Sgt. Shifflett
was acquitted of manslaughter but convicted of felony reckless handling of a firearm. He was just sentenced to three years
imprisonment. Bodycam video
Related post
2/28/25 DOJ filed lawsuits during the previous Administration accusing four agencies, including the Maryland State Police,
of discriminatory hiring because they selected proportionately fewer female and Black applicants. But the new Administration
contends that police and fire departments had become targets of a “DEI Agenda” for using “standard aptitude
tests” to screen candidates for critical public-safety provisions. So the lawsuits have been dropped. DOJ Press
Release
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