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by: Sduclos • November 20, 2012 • no comments

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==='''Boston District Judge Orders Prison to Provide Sex-Reassignment Surgery for Inmate'''===
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===PPB Chief Mike Reese Responds to DOJ Findings===
  
"BOSTON - State prison officials must provide taxpayer-funded sex-reassignment surgery to a transgender inmate serving life in prison for murder, because it is the only way to treat her "serious medical need," a federal judge ruled Tuesday.
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"Portland Police Chief Mike Reese says his office is already responding to [http://www.opb.org/news/article/qa-doj-critical-of-portland-police-over-use-of-force/ the findings] of U.S. Department of Justice investigation that found his officers have engaged in a pattern of excessive force, especially with people with mental illness. He also says the DOJ report highlights the gaps in the mental health care system and that officers need more information:
  
"Michelle Kosilek was born male but has received hormone treatments and now lives as a woman in an all-male prison. ...U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf is believed to be the first federal judge to order prison officials to provide sex-reassignment surgery for a transgender inmate."
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<blockquote>
  
''<span class="entry-title">[http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/apnewsbreak-federal-judge-orders-sex-change-surgery-for-mass-inmate-convicted-of-murder/2012/09/04/786b7e5a-f6af-11e1-a93b-7185e3f88849_story.html "Judge: Mass. must provide sex-reassignment surgery for murder convict who now lives as woman]" </span>''<span class="entry-title">by Assoc. Press, Washington Post - Sept. 4, 2012.</span>
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There's a lot of information that health care providers have, that we don't have access to, and in a moment of crisis I think we should have access to that information if we're going to provide a better service to that person. Conversely, we have a lot of information we would be happy to share with mental health providers so that they know this person is interacting with police frequently. There are things we can do in terms of dispatch protocols. So when dispatchers take that 911 call from a citizen, and they ask, police, fire or medical, we want them to ask mental health."
  
===Washington County Investigates Shooting of Jeffrey Holmes===
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</blockquote>
  
"Jeffrey Holmes, 49, was shot at least once after he attacked a deputy with a knife, said Sgt. Vance Stimler, a Washington County Sheriff's Office spokesman. The sheriff's office isn't releasing the number of times Holmes was shot or the number of rounds the deputy fired.
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- [http://www.opb.org/thinkoutloud/shows/chief-mike-reese-excessive-force-report/ ''Chief Mike Reese on Excessive Force Report '']on'' ''OPB's "Think Out Loud" | Sept 17, 2012
  
When deputies arrived, they spoke with Holmes through his door at the apartment complex and urged him to come outside and speak with them. Stimler said when Holmes opened his door, he attacked one of the deputies with a knife.
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===Oregon Elected Officials Quiet on Measure 80===
***
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Holmes was taken to Legacy Emanuel Medical Center in Portland with life-threatening injuries, said Sgt. Bob Ray, another sheriff's office spokesman."
+
  
''"[http://www.oregonlive.com/north-of-26/index.ssf/2012/09/washington_county_authorities.html Washington County authorities continue to investigate deputy-involved shooting that injured Bethany man]''" by Rebecca Woolington, The Oregonian - Sept 9, 2012.
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"Oregon's Measure 80 would [allow adults to buy marijuana at state-licensed stores], and allow people to grow their own pot.
  
===Montana Judge Strikes Down Lethal Injection Procedure as Cruel &amp; Unusual===
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Few elected officials in Oregon have taken a public position on the initiative. Democratic Representative Peter Buckley is one of them. He co-chairs the legislature's budget-writing committee.
  
"[State District Court Judge Jeffrey Sherlock] ruled... that the state's three-drug execution procedure differs from a two-drug protocol spelled out in law, which he said "increases the likelihood of confusion and error in the process."
+
Buckley says he supports legalization, but understands why many Oregon politicians don't want to talk about it.
  
Sherlock also faulted a practice in Montana that allows a prison warden with no medical training or execution experience to determine whether a prisoner is unconscious before a fatal drug is administered. ***"
+
'I think there's a certain stigma that's been part of marijuana for many, many decades. I think if we're actually honest about it, we have to get past that.' "
  
''<span class="entry-title">"[http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/montana-judge-strikes-down-state-execution-method/2012/09/08/4f34505a-f9e0-11e1-8398-0327ab83ab91_story.html Montana judge strikes down state execution method]" </span>''<span class="entry-title">by Laura Zuckerman, Washington Post - Sept 8, 2012.</span>
+
- [http://www.opb.org/news/article/n3-oregon-politicians-mostly-mum-on-marijuana-legalization-measure/ ''Oregon Politicians Mostly Mum On Marijuana Legalization Measure '']by Northwest News Network on OPB | Sept. 17, 2012
  
===<span class="entry-title">Former Hunger Striker Dies in GTMO Custody</span>===
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===Dalles Police Fatally Shot Man Suspected of Rape===
  
"WASHINGTON - A detainee at the American prison at <span class="meta-loc">Guantánamo Bay</span>, Cuba, died over the weekend, the United States military announced on Monday.
+
"THE DALLES -- A 50-year-old man was fatally shot in a late night encounter with two The Dalles police officers, Oregon State Police said this morning.
  
The military said that guards discovered the man unconscious in his cell on Saturday afternoon and that efforts to revive him were unsuccessful.
+
The incident took place late Monday inside a residence in the 700 block of Hostetler Street, where police were dispatched to investigate a rape, said the state police, the agency investigating the shooting. When police arrived, the victim and rape suspect were in the home. Police accompanied the victim to the hospital, while other officers stayed behind with the suspect.
  
He was the ninth detainee known to have died while imprisoned at Guantánamo. ***
+
Police said the suspect initially cooperated with them, but about midnight the man went into a bathroom and emerged with a kitchen knife. Police said he threatened them, prompting two officers to fire their weapons at the man. The man was pronounced dead at the scene. A person described by police as "an independent witness" was at the scene of the shooting."
  
[The detainee] was a former hunger striker who had "declared himself to be no longer a hunger striker on June 1," the captain said, and he weighed 14 pounds more than he did when he arrived at the prison. The detainee was being held in "disciplinary status" in Camp 5, a maximum-security wing of the prison, because he had recently splashed a guard with bodily fluids."
+
''[http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2012/09/rape_suspect_fatally_shot_by_t.html Rape suspect fatally shot by The Dalles police]'' by The Oregonian | Sept 18, 2012.
  
- ''[http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/11/us/detainee-dies-at-guantanamo-prison.html?_r=1&ref=us Guantánamo Detainee, a Former Hunger Striker, Dies],'' by Charlie Savage, NYT - Sept. 10, 2012.
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==='''Should the FBI Collect Biometric Data?'''===
{{wl-publish: 2012-09-11 09:35:41 -0700 | sduclos }}
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 +
"The FBI plans to move forward with a facial recognition system that's set to be fully implemented by 2014. Facial recognition is just one part of many biometric tools the FBI eventually plans to use to gather and store intelligence information, including fingerprint searches and iris scans."
 +
 
 +
Talk of the Nation panelists comment on the privacy challenges of biometric data. "[http://www.npr.org/2012/09/18/161355293/the-pros-and-cons-of-gathering-biometric-data?ft=1&f=5 The Pros And Cons Of Gathering Biometric Data]." | <span class="date">September 18, 2012</span>
 +
{{wl-publish: 2012-09-18 13:10:40 -0700 | sduclos }}

Revision as of 19:11, December 21, 2012

Contents

PPB Chief Mike Reese Responds to DOJ Findings

"Portland Police Chief Mike Reese says his office is already responding to the findings of U.S. Department of Justice investigation that found his officers have engaged in a pattern of excessive force, especially with people with mental illness. He also says the DOJ report highlights the gaps in the mental health care system and that officers need more information:

There's a lot of information that health care providers have, that we don't have access to, and in a moment of crisis I think we should have access to that information if we're going to provide a better service to that person. Conversely, we have a lot of information we would be happy to share with mental health providers so that they know this person is interacting with police frequently. There are things we can do in terms of dispatch protocols. So when dispatchers take that 911 call from a citizen, and they ask, police, fire or medical, we want them to ask mental health."

- Chief Mike Reese on Excessive Force Report on OPB's "Think Out Loud" | Sept 17, 2012

Oregon Elected Officials Quiet on Measure 80

"Oregon's Measure 80 would [allow adults to buy marijuana at state-licensed stores], and allow people to grow their own pot.

Few elected officials in Oregon have taken a public position on the initiative. Democratic Representative Peter Buckley is one of them. He co-chairs the legislature's budget-writing committee.

Buckley says he supports legalization, but understands why many Oregon politicians don't want to talk about it.

'I think there's a certain stigma that's been part of marijuana for many, many decades. I think if we're actually honest about it, we have to get past that.' "

- Oregon Politicians Mostly Mum On Marijuana Legalization Measure by Northwest News Network on OPB | Sept. 17, 2012

Dalles Police Fatally Shot Man Suspected of Rape

"THE DALLES -- A 50-year-old man was fatally shot in a late night encounter with two The Dalles police officers, Oregon State Police said this morning.

The incident took place late Monday inside a residence in the 700 block of Hostetler Street, where police were dispatched to investigate a rape, said the state police, the agency investigating the shooting. When police arrived, the victim and rape suspect were in the home. Police accompanied the victim to the hospital, while other officers stayed behind with the suspect.

Police said the suspect initially cooperated with them, but about midnight the man went into a bathroom and emerged with a kitchen knife. Police said he threatened them, prompting two officers to fire their weapons at the man. The man was pronounced dead at the scene. A person described by police as "an independent witness" was at the scene of the shooting."

Rape suspect fatally shot by The Dalles police by The Oregonian | Sept 18, 2012.

Should the FBI Collect Biometric Data?

"The FBI plans to move forward with a facial recognition system that's set to be fully implemented by 2014. Facial recognition is just one part of many biometric tools the FBI eventually plans to use to gather and store intelligence information, including fingerprint searches and iris scans."

Talk of the Nation panelists comment on the privacy challenges of biometric data. "The Pros And Cons Of Gathering Biometric Data." | September 18, 2012