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by: Sduclos • November 20, 2012 • no comments

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==='''Release Your Elders'''===
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===What Should NY Do About the Central Park Jogger Case?===
  
The ACLU just released a [http://www.aclu.org/files/assets/elderlyprisonreport_20120613_0.pdf new report] that found that states would save an average of more than $66,000 per year for each low-risk inmate over 50 released early, even when post-release costs are accounted for. The report also details how prisoners over 50 are likely to cost more than younger inmates and are less likely to re-offend after release. Read the summary on [http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/13/12207601-aclu-states-could-save-billions-by-releasing-some-elderly-prisoners?lite MSNBC].
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"For nine years, New York City has fought a civil rights suit[http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/09/nyregion/3-of-5-in-jogger-case-sue-city-charging-a-wide-conspiracy.html  ] by five men whose convictions in the 1989 rape of the woman known as the Central Park jogger were [http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/20/nyregion/convictions-and-charges-voided-in-89-central-park-jogger-attack.html overturned]. Officials have even tried to subpoena information from Ken Burns, whose [http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Trailer-Ken-Burns-Documentary-Central-Park-Five-Arrives-33719.html documentary] about the case opens Friday. The district attorney said DNA evidence and a review of the investigation showed that the confessions of the defendants, who were teenagers at the time, were false and that another man was the lone attacker. Police say that they did nothing wrong and that they still believe the five men were involved in the attack.
  
==='''Pennsylvania PDs Sue the County'''===
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Should the city acknowledge mistakes in the case and settle this lawsuit?"
  
Luzerne County Pennsylvania is a classically underfunded, understaffed, and overworked public defender's office. After a series of complaints and concerns from his PDs that they might let something slip or violate someone's right to effective assistance of counsel, Chief Public Defender Al Flora, Jr. decided to stop it. First, his office began refusing new case assignments to catch up. Three months later, he filed a class-action suit seeking an injunction and asking for more resources for his office. Read more in [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/30/pennsylvania-public-defenders_n_1556192.html?ref=topbar#s=1105050 HuffPo].
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The New York Times posted several opinions from various commentators from former mayors to ministers and law professors.
  
'''Stop and Frisks' Disproportional Impact on LGBTQ Community'''
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- Room for Debate, "[http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/11/19/justice-and-the-central-park-jogger-case/?ref=opinion Justice and the Central Park Jogger Case]," NYT, Nov. 19, 2012.''' '''
  
As protests against NY stop and frisk policies grow, new voices are joining the fold to show how the practice disproportionally impacts marginalized groups. A [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/15/stop-and-frisk-gay-blacks-latinos-transgender-nypd_n_1599470.html?utm_hp_ref=black-voices new article] in the Huffington Post details the discrimination and abuse faced by LGBTQ Blacks and Latinos. Unlike other targeted groups, transgender and gender-nonconforming people are profiled as sex workers, sexually harassed, and suspected of giving fake identification when their IDs do not conform to their gender.
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===Lawsuit Filed Against PPB For Failing to Provide Sign Language Interpreters===
  
==='''Rodney King - Famous Drug Addict, WHAT?!'''===
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"A deaf Portland man who reported he was the victim of a domestic assault said police and 9-1-1 operators failed to respond with a sign language interpreter, hampering the police inquiry and putting him at risk.
  
The reports on Mr. King's death are eye-opening about how the media (and presumably the public, the jury pool) view people living with addiction. These were within the first few sentences reported on Mr. King's death by NYT and LA Times:
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Philip Wolfe, 39, is suing the city of Portland in federal court, alleging the city violated the Americans With Disabilities Act, which prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in state and local government services.
  
"He was a drunk, unemployed construction worker on parole when he careened into the city's consciousness in a white Hyundai early one Sunday morning in 1991" - [http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0618-rodney-king-20120618,0,4523043.story LA Times]
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Wolfe's allegations highlight a gaping hole in Portland Police Bureau policy: Twenty-two years after the ADA was enacted, the bureau lacks any protocol on how to respond to people who are hearing impaired.
  
"Mr. King, whose life was a roller coaster of drug and alcohol abuse, multiple arrests and unwanted celebrity, pleaded for calm during the 1992 riots." - [http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/18/us/rodney-king-whose-beating-led-to-la-riots-dead-at-47.html?pagewanted=all NYT]
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Wolfe is seeking a court order requiring the city to adopt uniform policies for police and emergency dispatchers to ensure sign language interpreters are supplied when a deaf crime victim or witness makes a report, requests assistance or is interviewed by police.
  
Surprisingly, [http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/17/us/obit-rodney-king/index.html%20 CNN ]was the first article I saw that did not preface Mr. King's story by harping on addiction issues and criminal history. They addressed the issue later in the piece. Is having a criminal history really that inconsistent with having valuable civil rights?
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'During Plaintiff's contact with the police, he was overwhelmed, disoriented and hurt,' his attorney Daniel Snyder wrote in the suit. 'Plaintiff was unable to understand the police officers clearly.' "
{{wl-publish: 2012-06-18 09:25:27 -0700 | sduclos }}
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- Maxine Bernstein, "[http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2012/11/portland_police_and_9-1-1_fail.html Lack of Portland Police, 9-1-1 Policies for Interpreters Discriminates Against People Who Are Deaf, Lawsuit Alleges]," The Oregonian, nov 16, 2012.
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==='''Portland Police Car Rolls Over Man Stopped for Jaywalking'''===
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"A police car accidentally rolled over a man stopped for jaywalking in downtown Portland Monday night, according to Portland Police.
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A police press release said that Jimmy Miles Duffey, 31, ran from officers when they tried to stop him for jaywalking near Southwest 12th Avenue at Columbia Street. They pursued Duffey and eventually caught him at Southwest Park Avenue at Main Street.
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While taking Duffey into custody, officers had him lie on the ground, police said. When more police arrived on the scene, an officer got out of a police car but left it in gear. The vehicle ran over Duffey where they lay on the ground, police said."
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- Courtney Sherwood, "[http://www.opb.org/news/article/police-car-rolls-over-man-stopped-for-jaywalking/ Police Car Rolls Over Man Stopped for Jaywalking]," OPB News, Nov. 20, 2012.
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===State Judicial Elections Increasingly Funded by Special Interest PACs===
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"This year's round of state judicial elections broke previous records for the amounts spent on judicial campaigns around the country. The dominant role played by special-interest money - including money from super PACs financed by undisclosed donors - has severely weakened the principle of fair and impartial courts. ***
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This year's experience should at least hasten state efforts to revise rules for judicial recusal to take campaign contributions into account. Mandatory disclosure of all donations to a judicial race is also essential. Litigants cannot know when they should request that a judge step aside if they cannot tell whether their case involves a party that supported the judge's campaign."
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- Editorial, "[http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/19/opinion/judicial-elections-unhinged.html?ref=todayspaper&_r=0 Judical Elections, Unhinged]," NYT, Nov. 18, 2012''' '''
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{{wl-publish: 2012-11-20 12:45:12 -0800 | sduclos }}

Latest revision as of 19:12, December 21, 2012

Contents

What Should NY Do About the Central Park Jogger Case? [edit]

"For nine years, New York City has fought a civil rights suit[1] by five men whose convictions in the 1989 rape of the woman known as the Central Park jogger were overturned. Officials have even tried to subpoena information from Ken Burns, whose documentary about the case opens Friday. The district attorney said DNA evidence and a review of the investigation showed that the confessions of the defendants, who were teenagers at the time, were false and that another man was the lone attacker. Police say that they did nothing wrong and that they still believe the five men were involved in the attack.

Should the city acknowledge mistakes in the case and settle this lawsuit?"

The New York Times posted several opinions from various commentators from former mayors to ministers and law professors.

- Room for Debate, "Justice and the Central Park Jogger Case," NYT, Nov. 19, 2012.

Lawsuit Filed Against PPB For Failing to Provide Sign Language Interpreters [edit]

"A deaf Portland man who reported he was the victim of a domestic assault said police and 9-1-1 operators failed to respond with a sign language interpreter, hampering the police inquiry and putting him at risk.

Philip Wolfe, 39, is suing the city of Portland in federal court, alleging the city violated the Americans With Disabilities Act, which prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in state and local government services.

Wolfe's allegations highlight a gaping hole in Portland Police Bureau policy: Twenty-two years after the ADA was enacted, the bureau lacks any protocol on how to respond to people who are hearing impaired.

Wolfe is seeking a court order requiring the city to adopt uniform policies for police and emergency dispatchers to ensure sign language interpreters are supplied when a deaf crime victim or witness makes a report, requests assistance or is interviewed by police.

'During Plaintiff's contact with the police, he was overwhelmed, disoriented and hurt,' his attorney Daniel Snyder wrote in the suit. 'Plaintiff was unable to understand the police officers clearly.' "

- Maxine Bernstein, "Lack of Portland Police, 9-1-1 Policies for Interpreters Discriminates Against People Who Are Deaf, Lawsuit Alleges," The Oregonian, nov 16, 2012.

Portland Police Car Rolls Over Man Stopped for Jaywalking [edit]

"A police car accidentally rolled over a man stopped for jaywalking in downtown Portland Monday night, according to Portland Police.

A police press release said that Jimmy Miles Duffey, 31, ran from officers when they tried to stop him for jaywalking near Southwest 12th Avenue at Columbia Street. They pursued Duffey and eventually caught him at Southwest Park Avenue at Main Street.

While taking Duffey into custody, officers had him lie on the ground, police said. When more police arrived on the scene, an officer got out of a police car but left it in gear. The vehicle ran over Duffey where they lay on the ground, police said."

- Courtney Sherwood, "Police Car Rolls Over Man Stopped for Jaywalking," OPB News, Nov. 20, 2012.

State Judicial Elections Increasingly Funded by Special Interest PACs [edit]

"This year's round of state judicial elections broke previous records for the amounts spent on judicial campaigns around the country. The dominant role played by special-interest money - including money from super PACs financed by undisclosed donors - has severely weakened the principle of fair and impartial courts. ***

This year's experience should at least hasten state efforts to revise rules for judicial recusal to take campaign contributions into account. Mandatory disclosure of all donations to a judicial race is also essential. Litigants cannot know when they should request that a judge step aside if they cannot tell whether their case involves a party that supported the judge's campaign."

- Editorial, "Judical Elections, Unhinged," NYT, Nov. 18, 2012