Former Detroit city law chief John E. Johnson Jr. testified this morning that he didn't need to read the proposed court filing containing explosive text messages that led to a sudden settlement of the police whistle-blower lawsuit -- and that doing so would have made it available to the public under the state Freedom of Information laws.
Johnson, testifying at the professional misconduct trial of former mayor Kwame Kilpatrick's lawyer Samuel McCargo, said he didn't ask for details or "even ask about it" because that could trigger the FOIA and lead to release of the text messages.
He said the document might have been already subject to FOIA laws, but added that he believed his reading the document would guarantee it.
Johnson said he was told that the motion from the police officers' lawyer, Michael Stefani, contained excerpts of the messages but he did not push the matter further. He said the city had opposed the release of messages because they would reveal embarrassing comments about public figures and divulge confidential government information and strategy.
In fact, the excerpts showed that Kilpatrick and his aide and lover Christine Beatty lied under oath in the case. An $8.4-million settlement was quickly struck calling for the messages to remain secret.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/31/2009 00:00 ||
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Detroit City Council President Ken Cockrel Jr. sent a memo to his council colleagues detailing more than $21,000 worth of city-owned office equipment missing from former City Council President Pro Tem Monica Conyers' office. Cockrel listed 29 items missing including computers, printers, a camcorder, a digital camera and software. He tallied the total purchase prices of the items at $21,300.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/31/2009 00:00 ||
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Screaming constituents, protesters dragged out by the cops, congressmen fearful for their safety welcome to the new town-hall-style meeting, the once-staid forum that is rapidly turning into a house of horrors for members of Congress.
On the eve of the August recess, members are reporting meetings that have gone terribly awry, marked by angry, sign-carrying mobs and disruptive behavior. In at least one case, a congressman has stopped holding town hall events because the situation has spiraled so far out of control. I had felt they would be pointless, Rep. Tim Bishop (D-N.Y.) told POLITICO, referring to his recent decision to temporarily suspend the events in his Long Island district. There is no point in meeting with my constituents and [to] listen to them and have them listen to you if what is basically an unruly mob prevents you from having an intelligent conversation.
In Bishops case, his decision came on the heels of a June 22 event he held in Setauket, N.Y., in which protesters dominated the meeting by shouting criticisms at the congressman for his positions on energy policy, health care and the bailout of the auto industry.
Within an hour of the disruption, police were called in to escort the 59-year-old Democrat who has held more than 100 town hall meetings since he was elected in 2002 to his car safely. I have no problem with someone disagreeing with positions I hold, Bishop said, noting that, for the time being, he was using other platforms to communicate with his constituents. But I also believe no one is served if you cant talk through differences.
Bishop isnt the only one confronted by boiling anger and rising incivility. At a health care town hall event in Syracuse, N.Y., earlier this month, police were called in to restore order, and at least one heckler was taken away by local police. Close to 100 sign-carrying protesters greeted Rep. Allen Boyd (D-Fla.) at a late June community college small-business development forum in Panama City, Fla. Last week, Danville, Va., anti-tax tea party activists claimed they were refused an opportunity to ask Rep. Thomas Perriello (D-Va.) a question at a town hall event and instructed by a plainclothes police officer to leave the property after they attempted to hold up protest signs.
The targets in most cases are House Democrats, who over the past few months have tackled controversial legislation including a $787 billion economic stimulus package, a landmark energy proposal and an overhaul of the nations health care system. ...
Posted by: Frank G ||
07/31/2009 19:13 Comments ||
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Gee, they fail Cause and Effect 101. Their followers have been doing this for decades to Trunks and they just smirked. You get what you tolerate. What goes around.. By allowing their agents to set the tone for this for so long, they get to inherit the consequence when they arouse the usual inattentive non-voters into true demos of the political process.
Four of the most powerful business leaders in America arrived at the White House one day last month for lunch with President Barack Obama, sitting down in his private dining room just steps from the Oval Office.
But even for powerful CEOs, there's no such thing as a free lunch: White House staffers collected credit card numbers for each executive and carefully billed them for the cost of the meal with the president. Are you sure you wanted to give out your credit card numbers?
Around the table with Barack Obama that afternoon were Ursula Burns, CEO of Xerox Corporation; Muhtar Kent, CEO of The Coca-Cola Company; AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson; and Honeywell International CEO Dave Cote. They also helped to clear the table and fold chairs before they left.
#1
I've had working lunches with government attorneys where the gov't people have insisted on paying for their own lunch in order to avoid the appearance of impropriety. That I understand.
This is just plain forgot-my-Haldol-and-I'm-decompensating goofy.
Posted by: Mike ||
07/31/2009 14:30 Comments ||
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I'd have been outta there. Cheap prick can't even buy lunch? He's not serious. Bye-bye.
The National Republican Congressional Committee is targeting 80 Democratic-held House districts in 2010, according to Texas Rep. Pete Sessions, chairman of that GOP campaign unit.
Sessions, who discussed his party's plans for the midterm elections with reporters Wednesday, said the figure includes 54 traditionally Republican seats that his party will try to wrest away from current Democratic occupants.
The core strategy, Sessions said, will be to paint the Democratic moderates who represent many of those districts as enablers of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat who Republicans define as staunchly liberal.
"We're going to work that angle that it is ... Democratic members that support Nancy Pelosi and empower her to do business the way she is," Sessions said. "These members have a chance on the floor on a regular basis to say, 'No, slow it down, let's look at the process.' And they have refused to do that."
Republicans would regain the House majority if they were to make a net gain of 40 seats. "To get to 40, we're going to have to field at least 80 good candidates," Sessions said.
Sessions did not go so far as to predict, though, that his party would recapture control of the House in the 2010 election.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/31/2009 00:00 ||
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#1
80? Not gonna happen. 40? Not gonna happen. 20 or 30...that could happen. And that would be good enough.
20 or 30 more Republican members of the house means that the Dems throw Pelosi out on her butt... and replace her with someone that I didn't see marching with a founder of NAMBLA in an SF Gay Day Parade. That's change I can believe in.
#2
I think 20 is more likely than 40, particularly if the economy begins to tick upwards in early 2010 as some predict. I'm not sure the Pubs have yet learned their lessons from 2006 and 2008.
Posted by: Steve White ||
07/31/2009 8:12 Comments ||
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we're going to have to field at least 80 good candidates
Nope. you're going to need to field at least 80 good Republican candidates. The last national election should have told you what happens when you field RINOs and a whole block of otherwise supportive voters found no reason to vote at all.
#8
The again if you can think 'outside the box' 20 to 30 additional seats can get you a rational Donk Speaker if you're willing to back a separate/reform block within the House.
"The biggest problems that we're facing right now have to do with George Bush trying to bring more and more power into the executive branch and not go through Congress at all. And that's what I intend to reverse when I'm president of the United States."
-- Sen. Barack Obama, March 31, 2008
To say President Obama failed to follow through on this promise is an understatement. By appointing a virtual army of "czars" -- each wholly unaccountable to Congress yet tasked with spearheading major policy efforts for the White House -- in his first six months, the president has embarked on an end-run around the legislative branch of historic proportions.
To be sure, the appointment of a few special officers to play a constructive role in a given administration is nothing new. What is new is the elevation of so many czars, with so much authority on endless policy fronts. Vesting such broad authority in the hands of people not subjected to Senate confirmation and congressional oversight poses a grave threat to our system of checks and balances.
At last count, there were at least 32 active czars that we knew of, meaning the current administration has more czars than Imperial Russia.
The administration has a Mideast peace czar (not to be confused with the Mideast policy czar), a Sudan czar and a Guantanamo closure czar. Then there's the green jobs czar, sometimes in conflict with the energy czar, who talks to the technology czar, who sometimes crosses paths with the urban affairs czar. We mustn't forget the Great Lakes czar or the WMD czar, who no doubt works hand in hand with the terrorism czar. The stimulus accountability czar is going through a rough time right now, as is the TARP czar -- but thankfully they have to answer to the government performance czar. And seemingly everyone falls under the auspices of the information czar. In a government full of duplicative bureaucracies, adding more layers with overlapping responsibilities hardly seems the way to go.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/31/2009 00:00 ||
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And a Czar Czar to oversee them all. A one Mr. Binks.
Posted by: ed ||
07/31/2009 1:29 Comments ||
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There are obvious second order effects should Barry ever decide to leave the presidency. These patronage vermin, their staffs, and holder-ons will infest the next administration similar to the Clinton loyalists who haunted "W" throughout his tenure.
Since the 1970s, some radical environmentalists have argued that trees have legal rights and should be allowed to go to court to protect those rights. Honest to Gawd, we don't make this stuff up...
The idea has been endorsed by John P. Holdren, the man who now advises President Barack Obama on science and technology issues. Good dope back in the 70s...
Giving "natural objects" like trees standing to sue in a court of law would have a "most salubrious" effect on the environment, Holdren wrote the 1970s. How do you plead, Mr....Tree?...Mr. Tree?...Your plea, Mr. Tree? Sorry, your honor, but he seems kinda wooden. "Mr. Holdren? Care to make a plea for the tree?"
"Don't mind if I do, yer Honor."
"One change in (legal) notions that would have a most salubrious effect on the quality of the environment has been proposed by law professor Christopher D. Stone in his celebrated monograph, 'Should Trees Have Standing?'" Holdren said in a 1977 book that he co-wrote with Paul R. Ehrlich and Anne H. Ehrlich. Ah, those great 70's "visionaries" mentioned two days in a row...
"In that tightly reasoned essay, Stone points out the obvious advantages of giving natural objects standing, just as such inanimate objects as corporations, trusts, and ships are now held to have legal rights and duties," Holdren added
Posted by: Fred ||
07/31/2009 00:00 ||
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So if a tree falls in the forest and kills a mime...........................................
does anybody care?
Posted by: Alaska Paul ||
07/31/2009 0:16 Comments ||
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Could these same trees have sued Holden for killing several of their fellow trees while writing a book made of paper?
Posted by: Scott R ||
07/31/2009 1:43 Comments ||
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Cass Sunstein the new "regulatory czar" (I suppose he would be the czar czar) has discussed at length the necessity of allowing your pets to sue you for abuse and believes that in the very near future animals will testify in court. Really. I couldn't possibly make this stuff up.
#7
I should probably also mention that Sunstein believes in assigning a quality of life measure to all living things and equating their worth thereby. Thus a particularly young happy border collie might well be considered as having more worth and merit than grandma if the latter tends to spend a lot of time sittin around drooling. Again, this is not a joke.
#13
As a friend said to me recently ... "Is there NO end to the idiotic bulls$$t these people can dream up? ... And then I reminded him he was referring to extreme left wingnut democratic liberals. 'Nuff said.
AP story via Breitbart: House Dems have decided not to subpoena VIP mortgage loan records from Countrywide Financial. These are the same kind of loans currently heating the water around Senators Chris Dodd (Conn.) and Kent Conrad (N. Dakota). Republicans say they're willing to take the risk some of them will be identified as "Friends of Angelo." But Rep. Edolphus Towns (D-N.Y.), chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, sez he's got other things to do. California Rep. Darrell Issa, the senior Republican on Towns' committee, has been trying to get Towns to subpoena Bank of America for Countrywide's records. Daniel Frahm, a Bank of America spokesman, said the bank is ready to turn over the Countrywide VIP documents if it receives a subpoena. I'm guessing none will be forthcoming.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/31/2009 00:00 ||
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If it was Republican crooks trying to stay hidden and Democrats demanding (and not getting) a subpoena, you can bet the New York Times would be publishing leaked records.
Video from the meeting showed mugs of beer being delivered to the men, who sat at a round table at the edge of the White House's Rose Garden, munching peanuts and pretzels from silver bowls.
The kitchen staff must be in melt-down from frustration -- not even veggies and dip (never mind calling them crudites) or Buffalo wings? I'm sorry, you don't summon people several hours from home and only pop open a couple of tins of Planter's honey roasted from the grocery store.
The president was drinking Bud Light,
like the true Man O' The Peepul that he is,
Biden was drinking Buckler (a nonalcoholic beer), this hideous stuff is made in the Netherlands by Heineken
Gates was drinking Samuel Adams Light
also reported was that Gates had Red Stripe a pale ale made in the Caribbean
and Crowley was drinking Blue Moon. a Belgian style beer made in Colorado
Posted by: Lord garth ||
07/31/2009 08:24 ||
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I would have thought that Sam Adams Boston Lager would be the right choice. And Biden (Oy Vey) everyone loves that guy that comes to the party and drinks NA beer. Kind of like a Vegan that brings Tofu Burgers to a cookout.
Posted by: Frank G ||
07/31/2009 19:11 Comments ||
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Halliburt -- thanks for that bit of info -- didn't know that! Class act, that Sgt. and I did see an interview when he said, "I didn't vote for Obama." I'm thinking, that interview got pulled, quickly!
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.