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Inside MAGA’s game plan if Harris wins
When around 14,000 Philadelphians packed Temple University's Liacouras Center for 2024 Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris' first campaign rally with her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the vice president made a point of describing herself as an "underdog" — a word she went on to use again in subsequent rallies. Harris' use of that word is quite strategic: For all the campaign's energy, she wants to make sure that her Democratic supporters don't become complacent.
Nonetheless, many of the polls released in early August have found Harris with small single-digit leads over GOP nominee Donald Trump.
Although Trump leads Harris by 2 percent in a CNBC poll released on August 8, Harris is ahead by 4 percent in a Morning Consult poll and 3 percent in polls from NPR/PBS/Marist and Survey USA. A Marquette University poll released on August 7 showed Harris with a 6 percent lead.
But in an article published by the conservative website The Bulwark on August 8, journalist A.B. Stoddard warns that if Harris wins in November, an "entire army of Republicans" is "ready to block certification of the election at the local level."
"Trump is no longer on track to win the election — which he has been for more than six straight months," Stoddard explains. "Instead, the momentum, money, voter registration, volunteering, grassroots organizing, polling, and online engagement all favor the Democrats, and it looks now like Trump could easily lose. But that won’t happen, because Trump doesn't lose.…. No need to worry about mayhem on January 6, 2025 when Congress meets in joint session; the election deniers plan to stop a result right away if it looks like Harris is winning."
Stoddard continues, "Their goal: Refuse to certify anywhere — even a county that Trump won — and prevent certification in that state, which prevents certification of the presidential election. A Harris victory could become a nightmare."
Stoddard notes that according to Rolling Stone, "pro-Trump election conspiracists" in key swing states like Arizona, Pennsylvania and Georgia are working as "county election officials" and plan to refuse to certify the election results if Harris wins.
Democratic election lawyer Marc Elias, publisher of Democracy Docket, told Rolling Stone, "I think we are going to see mass refusals to certify the election…. Everything we are seeing about this election is that the other side is more organized, more ruthless, and more prepared."
Stoddard warns that "there are more than enough such individuals in these key posts to bring us to a constitutional crisis."
"So Trump knows there are millions among us who believe him when he says Democrats can only win if they cheat and who believe dark forces are at work to thwart him again," Stoddard explains. "And Trump needs to be president again. He wants to get his criminal cases thrown out, and to stay out of jail. There is nothing he won't try."
#politics#donald trump#joe biden#potus#democrats#scotus#democracy#trump#republicans#heritage foundation#trump derangement syndrome#fuck trump#trump 2024#traitor trump#2024 election#biden#jd vance#trump is a coward#vote kamala#kamala harris#kamala 2024#kamala for president#harris#presidential#president#democratic#defeat trump#usa news#usa#usa politics
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Post 1040
Luke Schirmer Kreider, Michigan inmate 761814, born 2003, incarceration intake in August 2023 at age 20, earliest release date August 2037, Full release date August 2067
Homicide
Marks, Scars and Tattoos:
Body Piercing- Left Ear Body Piercing- Nose Body Piercing- Right Ear Scar- Left Arm - Scar- Left Thigh Scar- Left Wrist Scar- Right Thigh Tattoo- Left Arm - Skull with knife, theatre mask, skull with tongue, "Scott", "He's great than I" Tattoo- Left Finger - "Love", "Insane", "Crazy", "Ego" Tattoo- Right Arm - "Euphoria", symbol for sulfur, Hands on head, Happy face with teeth Tattoo- Right Bicep - Sun with eye
“The court will follow the plea agreement. Minimum term is imposed of 15 years, and a maximum term of 45 years.”
That sentence was handed down by Probate Judge Timothy Brennan to 20-year-old Luke Kreider in the Houghton County Circuit Court in August 2023. Kreider was sent to prison for the second-degree murder of 24-year-old Caleb Lynum.
A plea agreement was reached in June 2023 where Kreider plead guilty to second-degree murder, allowing his second charge of open murder to be dismissed. A separate case against Kreider for criminal sexual conduct was also dropped as part of the plea agreement.
On Sept. 1, 2022, Kreider, then 19, attacked Lynum at the townhouses on Arbor Way in Houghton Michigan. Lynum was alive when taken to UP Health System Marquette but later died due to his injuries.
Brennan says that Kreider was under the influence when the assault occurred.
“This was a crime that was fueled by alcohol in combination with marijuana,” continued Brennan.
He will be given credit for the 345 days he already spent in jail.
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Estos son los 8 condados que tienen la 287(g)
El pasado mes de abril U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) publicó una lista de 62 agencias en 11 estados en USA que han firmado los entrenamientos en el programa ICE 287(g). Pero qué es la 287(g)? En 1996, la Ley de Reforma de Inmigración Ilegal agregó la sección 287(g) a la ley de Inmigración y Nacionalidad (INA) que autoriza al Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduana (ICE) a delegar a los oficiales de los estados o de las ciudades, la autoridad para cumplir como oficiales de inmigración. El 287(g) es programa que les permite a las autoridades ser aliados en los procesos de deportación con es ERO (Enforcement and Removal Operations). La forma como funciona opera en 2 modelos: El modelo de Aplicación en la Cárcel, que esta diseñado para identificar y procesar a los no ciudadanos deportables, con cargos penales o acciones legales pendientes, que son arrestados por agencias que hacen cumplir la ley. El modelo Warrant Service Officer que permite a ICE capacitar y autorizar a los agente del orden estatales y locales para entregar y ejecutar órdenes administrativas con no ciudadanos en la cárcel de su agencia. En Wisconsin, 8 condados han firmado el contrato : WISCONSIN Brown County Sheriff's Office Warrant Service Officer 2020-10-16 link WISCONSIN Fond du Lac County Sheriff's Office Warrant Service Officer 2020-06-05 link WISCONSIN Lafayette County Sheriff's Office Warrant Service Officer 2020-08-21 link WISCONSIN Manitowoc County Sheriff's Office Warrant Service Officer 2020-06-05 link WISCONSIN Marquette County Sheriff's Office Warrant Service Officer 2020-05-21 link WISCONSIN Sheboygan County Sheriff's Office Warrant Service Officer 2020-02-27 link WISCONSIN Waukesha County Sheriff's Office Jail Enforcement Model 2020-06-10 link WISCONSIN Waushara County Sheriff's Office Warrant Service Officer 2020-06-08 link FUENTE: ICE. Read the full article
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Shocking arrest in Marquette County: felony "assault of an employee at a place of confinement" – State prison inmate due to be released today from Marquette Branch Prison – was booked into the county jail for assaulting a guard – not sure at which facility – but apparently at the prison
Shocking arrest in Marquette County: felony “assault of an employee at a place of confinement” – State prison inmate due to be released today from Marquette Branch Prison – was booked into the county jail for assaulting a guard – not sure at which facility – but apparently at the prison
URGENT URGENT – U.P. Breaking News Bulletin – 1-16-18 – 3 p.m. ET
“Bull Dog” Bell charged with assaulting his guards – he is lodged at Marquette County Jail Felony “assault of an employee at a place of confinement“
By Greg Peterson Upper Peninsula Breaking News Owner, News Director 906-273-2433
(Marquette, MI) – Few details are know about charges filed in an apparent attack on a corrections…
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#arrest#arrested#assault#Assault and battery#assault of an employee at a place of confinement#corrections officer assaulted#felonious assault#felony#Lenawee County#Marquette#Marquette Branch Prison#Marquette County#Marquette County Jail#Marquette County Prosecutor&039;s Office#Marquette County Sheriff&039;s Department#Marquette Police Department#Michigan Corrections Officers#Michigan Department of Corrections#Milton “Bull Dog” Walter Bell#Prison#prisoner#state prison#Upper Peninsula#Upper Peninsula of Michigan
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“Windsor Man To Serve Jail Term,” Border Cities Star. May 5, 1930. Page 05. ---- Sentenced to 75 Days for Illegal Entry by U.S. Judge --- Emerson Orr, 26, giving his address at 471 Langlois avenue, Windsor, was today sentenced to 75 days in the county jail at Port Huron by Judge Edward J. Miine, in Detroit. He was found guilty of illegal entry, and at the end of his term will be deported to Canada.
Orr told officers that he was picked up in Windsor as a suspect in the Capitol Theatre robbery early this year, but was released.
The actual charge facing him in Detroit was that of entering the country after having been deported. Records sow that Orr, in 192, was arrested in Detroit for stealing an automobile, and sentenced to a term of from five to ten years at Marquette. he was later moved to Jackson Prison, and at the end of his term was sent back to Canada.
On April 9 f this year, he was arrested at the Detroit ferry dock wen two quarts of liquor wre found in his possession. Investigation revealed the fact of his previous deportation.
The man ha sa criminal record in Canada, having served two terms in Burwash Reformatory.
He stated that the Windsor address he ave is that of Mrs. Irene Girard, a sister of his sister-in-law.
#detroit#port huron#windsor#illegal entry#deportation to canada#border crossings#marquette reformatory#jackson state prison#burwash industrial farm#ex-convict#jailbird#sentenced to prison#county jail#crime and punishment in canada#history of crime and punishment in canada#great depression in canada
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I posted 1,163 times in 2021
33 posts created (3%)
1130 posts reblogged (97%)
For every post I created, I reblogged 34.2 posts.
I added 912 tags in 2021
#hannibal - 238 posts
#fanart - 200 posts
#hannigram - 89 posts
#us politics - 79 posts
#photography - 73 posts
#pretty places - 65 posts
#meta - 57 posts
#will graham - 47 posts
#lol - 36 posts
#signal boost - 28 posts
Longest Tag: 109 characters
#it only becomes about politics because republicans would rather suppress voters than let them elect democrats
My Top Posts in 2021
#5
The Pornbots are Evolving
I've been followed by three different pornbots today. In every case, the first one or two posts in their dash were inocuous - landscapes or kittens. You had to scroll down to the second or third post to find the naked women fingering themselves or shoving their arses in your face. A new cunning plan is afoot!
11 notes • Posted 2021-07-28 04:48:24 GMT
#4
Amyiah described her experiences, first telling followers she was forced to “self-quarantine” due to “having the Covid-19 virus”. Hospitalised overnight because she had difficulty breathing, she posted again, this time a selfie in an oxygen mask. After receiving calls from members of the public, county health officials referred the matter to the sheriff’s office. It sent a deputy to the Cohoon household, where Amyiah’s parents were told to have her remove the post or the deputy would issue disorderly person’s citations “if not start taking people to jail”. In his ruling, issued on Friday, Ludwig wrote: “Defendants may have preferred to keep Marquette county residents ignorant to the possibility of Covid-19 in their community for a while longer, so they could avoid having to field calls from concerned citizens, but that preference did not give them authority to hunt down and eradicate inconvenient Instagram posts.” Good going, Wisconsin. So has the judge now ordered the arrest of the sheriff and the deputy for massive abuse of power and threatening innocent people with false arrest? If these people still have their jobs, WHY do they still have their jobs???
11 notes • Posted 2021-09-28 04:46:54 GMT
#3
New Year, new fic! Or maybe it's more of an old fic. It's both! War and Peace. Fandom: Gundam Wing Pairing: Duo/Heero, or 1x2x1 if we're going old style. That's two teenagers shagging each other, for those who don't care for that sort of thing. Summary: Duo Maxwell looks back on the war. And on Heero Yuy. Turns out he spends a lot of time thinking about Heero… This is the fic I started back in 2003, and then went back to and finished in 2020. It's also by far the most rambling, info-dumpy, monologue-y story I've ever written. Duo likes to talk and I never found a way to stop him. Canon compliant for the series, AU for Endless Waltz. It follows the story and emotional arc of the series, so you know what you're getting! Only the first chapter's up so far, I'll be adding more as I work through the final editing pass. Happy New Year!
14 notes • Posted 2021-01-01 17:16:43 GMT
#2
Title: Fulcrum Fandom: Tenet Word count: 3000 Rating: General Summary: He goes back. He builds Tenet. He recruits Neil. The ending is nearer than you think, and it is already written. All that we have left to choose is the correct moment to begin. Here on AO3.
16 notes • Posted 2021-06-01 14:37:23 GMT
#1
Hi. Ok do you know why Will imagines himself killing Molly (and even Alana in one scene) while taking the Red Dragon case? This never happened before with other cases, like in other seasons he slipped into killers mindsets but he never looked at people and imagined killing them. Seems like a plot point to make Will give up on his family, I wish his return to Hannibal was more organic and not just because other people were poisoned to him :/
I’m sorry it took me a while to get to answering this, Anon, I had a very busy week.
Season three wasn’t actually the first time we see Will imagining himself killing someone he cares about. Back in just episode three, he dreams of slitting Abigail’s throat, when earlier he’s been to visit her in the hospital trying to reassure her. Then he visits her house with her because she wants to go and needs to have people with her. Alana and Hannibal seem like entirely adequate emotional chaperones for that visit. There’s no need for Will to be there too, but he still goes, because he wants to help Abigail.
At that point, Will is showing the first signs of his encephalitis, waking covered in sweat, and we could perhaps attribute his imagining killing Abigail to a simple nightmare, if it wasn’t a thing that recurs again later, as you say, long after his encephalitis is cured.
So I think the question more realisitcally becomes, ‘Why does Will Graham sometimes imagine himself killing people he cares about?’ There’s never going to be a definitive answer for that, all we can do is speculate, so here I go, speculating away! I’m going to leave Hannibal out of my speculations, because Will does imagine himself killing Hannibal during the honey trap phase of season two, when we know he’s already falling in love with him, but at the same time he still hates Hannibal for framing him and having him dumped in a mental institution. The internal conflict there thoroughly muddies the waters, so I’m going to stick with Will’s visions of killing people like Abigail and Molly, people he only wants to protect.
I would say from the start that stress seems to be a triggering factor for it. Will imagines killing Abigail not long after the first time he kills someone, in the form of her father. We know from what Jack says that Will has been actively trying to avoid killing people, that he left the police because he didn’t want to use his gun. He’s long suspected that killing a person would unleash something within him, and now he’s done it. When Abigail says that she’s worried about nightmares, Will replies, ‘I’m worried about nightmares too.’ The thing that Will had been trying to avoid for at least a decade has finally happened, and he’s scared of where it will lead him. And sure enough, he’s dreaming of murder.
In the Red Dragon arc, the thing that Will has been trying to avoid for three years is Hannibal. He’s put that life behind him - he moved away, stayed out of law enforcement, married a lovely woman, and worked so hard at being ‘normal’. And then the thing he’s been avoiding happens - Hannibal is back in his world. Will tells Molly he’ll be different if he goes; once again he’s scared of where he’s headed. So there’s an obvious parallel there - Will imagines killing Abigail, and later Molly, when he’s having to face up to a reality that he’s been trying to ignore.
On the most basic level, Will imagines killing people because he wants to kill people. He’s known that about himself for a long time, which is why he was so determined never to do it. After he kills Hobbs, it’s not just a theory any more, he knows he likes it, and then the temptation to do it again becomes so much worse.
But in the real world, Will only wants to kill bad people. He wants to kill the murderers, the people who threaten and harm the innocent. He wants to be a protector and an avenger. He would never harm Molly, or Abigail. And I think the fact that he imagines himself doing that is a sign of his internal conflict.
Will Graham is scared of what he wants. He doesn’t want to enjoy killing people, even bad people. He was lecturing in a classroom to avoid any risk of violent situations, because he’s worried about the slippery slope. If he kills one person, he’ll want to kill more (he isn’t wrong about that). And I think that decent, moral part of Will is terrified of how far he might eventually go. If he starts off killing bad people, might he eventually end up killing less bad people? What if his urge to kill keeps increasing and he becomes one of the bad people who hurts innocents? I think it’s all part of his struggle with accepting the reality of who he is.
So any time Will Graham knows himself to be starting down the path of the killer - after he shoots Hobbs, when he goes back to investigating murders and discussing them with Hannibal - his mind shows him the worst case scenario, the thing he fears most in the world. The potential monster inside himself. And in Molly’s case, there’s the added guilt that Will knows he’s placing her in danger, because of Hannibal, a guilt that manifests in her imagined death at Will’s hands.
And so I come to the last part of your ask: I wish his return to Hannibal was more organic and not just because other people were poisoned to him
This takes us back to what is really the over-arching theme of Hannibal. It's clear that Will would never have chosen Hannibal as the love of his life. Will doesn't want to love Hannibal, any more than he wants to love killing people. But the facts don't change because they're inconvenient for Will's moral compass.
The world has effectively been poisoned for Will his whole life. He speaks to Hannibal of his isolated childhood, the boy who never fit in. He lives his adult life alone, surrounded by dogs, with acquaintances, not friends, because everyone around him considers him somewhat odd. His potential 'normal' romantic partner, Alana, has been avoiding being alone with him. With time, he learns to 'pass' as normal better, to the point where he can marry Molly and appear to be a typical family man. But that's what it is - an appearance. Will isn't fulfilled in that life. He wants to be, but he's not.
Hannibal is right for Will because neither of them fit in the 'normal' world, and the way they don't fit is the same. Hannibal isn't a show about Will accepting that he loves Hannibal - it's a show about Will accepting that he is who he is. And when he accepts the things he doesn't like about himself, only then can he accept that he loves someone who shares those traits.
Hannibal isn't the consolation prize for Will, because nobody else will have him any more. Hannibal has always been the only person who can understand him, and Will has known that for years. He just has to stop hating them both for it before he can decide to live with it.
(And it was all written by a gay man, and it's an obvious metaphor for growing up ostracised for being gay, and hating yourself for being gay, and having to accept and embrace gayness before you can accept loving another man, but that can go off on a very long tangent!)
58 notes • Posted 2021-02-15 15:42:20 GMT
Get your Tumblr 2021 Year in Review →
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Protests Across U.S. Call for End to Migrant Family Separations
Protesters marched into Lafayette Square opposite the White House on Saturday and chanted “families belong together” to counter President Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigration policy, and were joined in declaring that message by dozens of other rallies from New York to California. While the occupant of the White House was away for the weekend at his Bedminster, N.J., golf club, images of the rallies were broadcast by cable news networks throughout the day.
Animated by what they view as the cruel treatment of migrants seeking refuge in the United States from violence in their home countries, the crowds turned out Saturday bearing homemade signs that read “Abolish ICE” — the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency — and “Zero tolerance for family separation.”
For two sisters, Claudia Thomas and Monica Escobar, the sight of immigrant children being taken from their parents hit close to home. When they were young, they immigrated to the United States from Guatemala, one of several Central American countries that is a source of migrants today. They said they were out at Saturday’s protest in the nation’s capital to stand up for “human decency.”
“No human being should be going through what they’re going through,” Ms. Escobar said. “God bless those families.”
While Washington was the political epicenter of the protests, similar scenes unfolded in cities around the country, including large, border cities like El Paso, state capitals like Salt Lake City and Atlanta, and smaller, interior towns like Redding, Calif. In total, organizers anticipated more than 700 protests, in all 50 states and even internationally.
The protesters were largely peaceful as they descended on statehouses and Immigration and Customs Enforcement buildings, and gathered in plazas and in parks, where they danced, chanted and sang. Many clutched signs in one hand with messages berating Mr. Trump and his immigration policies. And, given the summer heat, many clutched water bottles in the other hand, as they sweltered under temperatures that across much of the United States crept into the 90s.
In Chicago, all police stations, fire departments and hospitals opened as cooling stations, and in Washington fire trucks misted attendees with water, to cheers.
Celebrities like Kerry Washington, star of the hit ABC series “Scandal,” and the comedian Amy Schumer joined the protests in New York, and politicians like Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, joined the demonstration in Boston.
Mr. Trump signed an executive order on June 20 meant to quell outrage over the separation of families by housing parents and children together, for an indefinite period, in ad hoc detention centers. The order explicitly states that the authorities will continue to criminally prosecute adults who cross the border illegally.
Many of the more than 2,300 children separated from their migrant parents remain at makeshift shelters and foster homes. Although a federal judge in San Diego issued an order on Tuesday calling for the reunification of families separated at the border within 30 days, White House officials have said that following the ordered timetable would be difficult.
“We don’t want a situation where we’re replacing baby jails with family camps,” said Karthik Ganapathy, a spokesman for MoveOn, a progressive advocacy organization that helped organized the protest.
The Washington rally was in many ways a festive affair, a moment of unification under a scorching sun. One protester arrived dressed as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg; another wore a shirt saying “It’s Mueller time,” a reference to the special counsel leading the inquiry into Russian meddling in the election.
Adam Unger, a local software engineer, wore a five-gallon bucket turned into a drum, with a felt covering depicting an American flag with the insignia of the Rebel Alliance from “Star Wars” replacing the stars. “This drum has gotten its use over the last year and a half,” Mr. Unger said. He first used it to protest Mr. Trump’s travel ban on people from several predominantly Muslim countries when it was announced in January 2017.
Some showed up because they said they were angry; others, because they said they had not been angrier sooner. Maggie Mason, a new mother, said that for two weeks she could not go on Facebook because of news stories about children in detention centers, such as the audio published by ProPublica of immigrant children crying after being separated from their parents. Now, with her 7-week-old baby sleeping in the stroller next to her, she said it was time to come out.
Over the past month, marches across the country have cropped up, adding to the pressure on the Trump administration to yield to calls to end the practice of splitting up or detaining families.
“The idea of kids in cages and asylum seekers in prisons and moms being separated from breast-feeding children, this is just beyond politics, it really is just about right and wrong,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal, a Democrat from Washington State. On Thursday, she was arrested with more than 500 other women who occupied a Senate office building as part of a Women’s March protest against Mr. Trump’s immigration policy.
Ms. Jayapal said she has visited a federal prison just south of Seattle and met with 174 women and several dozen men who had been transferred from the Texas border. She said she was moved by the stories of asylum seekers and parents — stories of family members killed, of children left behind, of violent physical attacks and domestic abuse.
“I promised them that I would get their stories out and I promised them I would do everything I could to reunite their families,” Ms. Jayapal said.
In New York, protesters overflowed Foley Square in Lower Manhattan and filled the surrounding sidewalks. At every intersection on the way to the central march location, clusters of people chanted, “When children are under attack, what do we do? Stand up fight back!”
Crowds also inched across the Brooklyn Bridge, a little more than a mile long, for more than two hours. On one side, in Brooklyn, protesters filed into Cadman Plaza, where people stood in the center or sat in the shade, displaying colorful signs and listening to speakers onstage.
“We were walking by cars and all the people driving were honking, giving us the peace sign, shaking fists,” said Laura Rittenhouse, who lives in Manhattan and walked across the bridge. “The most important question is what is the process to reunite these families?” she asked.
Carmela Huang, from Brooklyn, brought her two young children to the march. Both children were carrying rectangular cardboard signs they had made this morning that read “REUNITE” in large sharpie letters.
Ms. Huang said they had not been to a protest yet in 2018. “But today feels really important,” she said. “I’ve had my head in the sand, just feeling tremendously sad.” She described the march as “reassuring, energizing and rejuvenating.”
Some protesters carried rainbow umbrellas and blew bubbles, while a trombone player accented chants of activists.
Sadatu Mamah-Trawill, a community organizer with the group African Communities Together, brought her 9-year-old son to the protest. A Muslim woman, Ms. Mamah-Trawill said she still had family in Ghana, her place of birth, and could not imagine being separated from her children.
“I’m hoping our government hears us very clearly,” she said. “This is big. I don’t think anybody should miss it.”
A small group of mostly women and children rallied in Marquette, Mich., in one of the few counties in the state that voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election. Silke-Maria Weineck, a German studies and comparative literature professor at the University of Michigan, dressed her service dog, Meemo, with an “Abolish ICE” sign for the occasion.
“It’s certainly a conservative part of the country,” she added, “but people feel very strongly about their children.”
Outside the Bedminster country club where Mr. Trump was spending the weekend, a few protesters could be seen. “My civility is locked in a cage,” said one sign. “Reunite families now.”
Alexandra Yoon-Hendricks reported from Washington and Zoe Greenberg from New York. Mihir Zaveri contributed reporting from New York.
#warren#elizabeth#Donald Trump#Immigration#Latin America#Politics#Immigrants#Familiesbelongtogether#DACA#Dreamact#Hispanic
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Amyiah Cohoon had just gotten home from the hospital in March 2020 when a sheriff’s sergeant arrived
Amyiah Cohoon had just gotten home from the hospital in March 2020 when a sheriff’s sergeant arrived, warning of possible charges and even jail time. The high school student’s offense: posting on Instagram that she had “beaten the corona virus.” It was early in the pandemic, and her county in Wisconsin had yet to record any cases of covid-19, court documents say. “Concerned citizens” started calling local officials and school administrators. “If doesn’t come down, the sheriff has directed me to issue disorderly conduct citations, if not start taking people to jail,” the Marquette County, Wis., sergeant told Cohoon’s father, according to dash-cam video obtained by The Washington Post. The post came down, but Cohoon’s family filed a federal lawsuit the next month against the sheriff’s office over the threat. A federal judge recently ruled that the sheriff’s office violated the student’s right to free speech. The Marquette County Sheriff’s Office, the sergeant and a lawyer representing them did not respond to requests for comment Sunday. Their attorney, Samuel Hall, told the New York Times this spring — before the dash-cam footage surfaced as part of the court case — that law enforcement denied threatening Amyiah Cohoon with arrest.
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Dangerous Crazy Driver in a Black Sedan: Police seek driver, passengers of speeding sedan that took cops on a dangerous 60 mph chase through the campus, hospital and other areas of Marquette
Dangerous Crazy Driver in a Black Sedan: Police seek driver, passengers of speeding sedan that took cops on a dangerous 60 mph chase through the campus, hospital and other areas of Marquette
URGENT URGENT – U.P. Breaking News Bulletin – 3-24-18 – 4:55 a.m. ET
Wild Saturday morning police chase in Marquette – as driver of dark sedan gets away – for now
By Greg Peterson U.P. Breaking News Owner, News Director 906-273-2433
(Marquette, MI) – Marquette Police are searching for a car and its occupants who led them on a chase through city streets early today.
The car is described as a…
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#black sedan#chase#children#closing in#crazy#dangerous#dark colored sedan#drugged#drunken#Google#handcuffs#high speed chase#investigation#issues#Jail#manhunt#Marquette#Marquette County#Marquette County 911 Central Dispatch#Marquette County Jail#Marquette County Prosecutor Matt J. Wiese#Marquette County Prosecutor&039;s Office#Marquette County Sheriff&039;s Department#Marquette General Hospital#Marquette Police Department#media#Michigan State Police Negaunee Post#mobile#money#news
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“21 Further Charges Laid Against Three,” Toronto Globe. February 13, 1930. Page 03. ---- All Counts Arise From Welland and Haldimand Robberies ---- (Special Despatch to The Globe.) St. Thomas, Feb. 12. - Twenty-one additional charges, all arising from robberies that have taken place in Welland and Haldimand Counties within the last few weeks, were presented today against Michael Zubovich, John Toth [TOP] and George Unis or Lazoz, prisoners in the county jail. Thirteen charges had already been laid against the three, and it is understood that several more many be pressed by railway police officers, who suspect the men of being implicated in the robbery of Michigan Central, Pere Marquette and Wabash freight cars at the Niagara border. Magistrate C. F. Maxwell was unable to proceed with the arraignment of the prisoners of the fresh charges today, as he must have the formal consent of the Welland and Haldimand County Magistrates to change the venue. The 21 charges are laid by Provincial Constables H. O. Finger and H. . Peel and Chief of Police George Crow of Welland. Zubovich and Unis were caught here during an alleged attempt to rob the warehouse of National Grocers Company, Limited, while Toth was caught in Dunnville after stealing an automobile in Tilsonburg.
In the information laid today Zubovich and Toth are each charged with the following offenses: Stealing three calves and half a pig from the slaughter house of L. Sherk, in Stamford Township; breaking into Reck’s refreshment booth in Wainfleet Township and stealing a radio, automobile tires, candles, etc.; stealing three hams, three sides of bacon and an eight-gallon can of cream from N. B. Shaver, Canboro’ Township; stealing an automobile from Kristo Kristoff, Crowland Township; stealing a power pump and about 60 feet of suction hose from the Herron Construction Company; breaking into the garage of Percy Horton at Cook’s Mills, and stealing a welding outfit valued at $235; stealing robes and other goods from Oliver Henderson. Wainfleet Township; stealing robes from an automobile belonging to Christian Siders, which had been left parked in front of the Tunker Church, Wainfleet.
Unis is charged with five of the offenses.
[AL: Zubovich (#1635) was sentenced to 4 years total on all the charges. He was transferred in late 1931 to Collin’s Bay penitentiary, the work camp, and released in 1934.
Toth was married with an infant daughter at the time. Toth was also sentenced to 14 charges of theft, burglary and car theft. He went first to Guelph Reformatory and there tried to escape, in June 1930. He was given two more years. In February 1931 he was transferred to Kingston Penitentiary upon finishing his reformatory term. He was put to work in the Blacksmith shop at the penitentiary, and ended up working alongside many of the ringleaders of the 1932 riot. He was injured from a spark during a moulding pour, and was generally unimpressed by the poor quality of the machinery and training and lack of safety. He worked on horseshoes for two years, and saw lazier men than him, who were suck-ups to the guards, get better jobs. He was frustrated at the lack of parole - believing only the rich broker’s could get released early by buying their freedom. In general, he was opposed to the prison system in toto and eagerly joined the riot. During the riot, it was him who used the blowtorch to cut through the locked doors of their workshops, and carried a heavy hammer during the riot - threatening a number of officers and forcing them to serve as a human shield during the last stage of the riot. Afterwards, he was tried in outside court and given six months additional for riotous destruction of property. He was a frequent agitator and was kept in segregation for some time with other men like him. He was released in June 1934.
Unis worked in the blacksmith shop, too, but apparently got along too well with Toth and some of the other agitators. He got a report and was transferred to the engineer dept. and then the masonry gang. He wanted a transfer back to the blacksmith shop, to learn a trade, but was denied this - he was much aggrieved by this. He joined the riot in 1932 and supported their demands. He was released in June 1933.]
#st. thomas#welland#burglary gang#burglary#break and enter#warehouse#stealing from warehouses#stealing from railway cars#car theft#tilsonburg#dunnville#crime wave#hungarian immigration to canada#hungarian canadians#sentenced to the penitentiary#kingston penitentiary#john toth#great depression in canada#crime and punishment in canada#history of crime and punishment in canada#michigan central railway#sentenced to prison#guelph reformatory
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Sheriff Sued After Threatening To Arrest A High School Student Over Her Coronavirus-Related Instagram Posts
Sheriff Sued After Threatening To Arrest A High School Student Over Her Coronavirus-Related Instagram Posts
(Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Law enforcement officers and officials are given a considerable amount of discretion. Too bad they so rarely use it.
The sheriff of Marquette County, Wisconsin decided to exercise his considerable discretion by threatening a teenager’s parents with jail over her Instagram posts. And for that misuse of his discretion, Sheriff Joseph Konrath is being sued.…
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Illegal Legal Mail Search by Columbia County Deputy Austin Marquette
Columbia County Sheriff's Deputy Austin Marquette admitted to illegally searching inmate legal mail outside the presence of the inmate in a write-up last year. I have since lost the second page, but I have uploaded the first. In the lost page Marquette described going into my cell when I was not there, noticing several envelopes clearly marked legal mail, and feeling them to see if he could feel anything that was obviously not paperwork. When he found my coffee and radio, which I technically was not supposed to have, he wrote me up for contraband. The law at the time in the jurisdiction of the Ninth Circuit already clearly established that inmates have a legal right to be present whenever legal mail or work product is inspected. See Mangiaracina v. Penzone 849 F.3d 1191 (9th Cir. 2017): "We recently addressed prisoners legal mail rights in Nordstrom, 762 F.3d 903. In that case, a prisoner alleged that he had written a letter to his criminal attorney and that a correctional officer, instead of inspecting the letter in Nordstroms presence before sealing and sending it, stood in front of him and read the letter. We held that this event, though isolated, sufficiently alleged a violation of Nordstroms Sixth Amendment right to counsel.Although the case concerned improper reading rather than improper opening of legal mail, we noted that the practice of requiring an inmate to be present when his legal mail is opened is a measure designed to prevent officials from reading the mail in the first place. Id. at 910 (citing Wolff, 418 U.S. at 577)...We therefore now clarify that, under Nordstrom, prisoners have a Sixth Amendment right to be present when legal mail related to a criminal matter is inspected...Defendants argue that this case is distinguishable from Nordstrom because Mangiaracina does not allege that jail officials ever read his mail. But indeed, how could he? If the practice of opening legal mail in the presence of the prisoner is designed to prevent correctional officers from reading it, then the natural corollary is that a prisoner whose mail is opened outside his presence has no way of knowing whether it had been (permissibly) inspected or (impermissibly) read." My practice of hiding my contraband in my legal material had a couple of purposes. First, legal material is less likely to be inspected if the inmate is removed from his cell for a shakedown because inspecting it out side of his presence is illegal. Second, if an unlawful inspection results in an incident report the inmate then has written proof that the officer broke the law. In this case I lost my contraband but I gained knowledge that my legal material was being illegally searched while I was not in the cell.#austinmarquette #columbiacountyjail #searchandseizure #legalmail http://dlvr.it/R9zJxQ
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World: Protests across U.S. Call for end to migrant family separations
WASHINGTON — Protesters marched into Lafayette Square opposite the White House on Saturday and chanted “families belong together” to counter President Donald Trump’s zero-tolerance immigration policy.
Animated by what they view as the cruel treatment of migrants seeking refuge in the United States from violence in their home countries, the crowds turned out bearing homemade signs that read “Abolish ICE” — the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency — and “Zero tolerance for family separation.”
For two sisters, Claudia Thomas and Monica Escobar, the sight of immigrant children being taken from their parents hit close to home. When they were young, they immigrated to the United States from Guatemala, one of several Central American countries that is a source of migrants today. They said they were out at the protest in the nation’s capital to stand up for “human decency.”
“No human being should be going through what they’re going through,” Escobar said. “God bless those families.”
While Washington was the political epicenter of the protests, similar scenes unfolded in cities around the country, including large, border cities like El Paso, Texas; state capitals like Salt Lake City and Atlanta; and smaller, interior towns like Redding, California. In total, organizers anticipated more than 700 protests, in all 50 states and even internationally.
The protests were largely peaceful, although there were a few arrests.
In Huntsville, Alabama, police said one man was arrested after he got into a scuffle with protesters and pulled out a handgun; no one was injured. In Columbus, Ohio, one person was arrested on a charge of obstructing official business, police said. And the Dallas Police Department said five people were arrested during a protest outside of an ICE building.
Otherwise, protesters caused few disturbances as they descended on statehouses and Immigration and Customs Enforcement buildings, and gathered in plazas and in parks, where they danced, chanted and sang. Many clutched signs in one hand with messages berating Trump and his immigration policies. And, given the summer heat, many clutched water bottles in the other hand, as they sweltered under temperatures that across much of the United States crept into the 90s.
In Chicago, all police stations, fire departments and hospitals opened as cooling stations, and in Washington firetrucks misted attendees with water, to cheers.
Celebrities like Kerry Washington, star of the hit ABC series “Scandal,” and comedian Amy Schumer joined the protests in New York, and politicians like Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., joined the demonstration in Boston. Lin-Manuel Miranda, the creator of “Hamilton,” and Alicia Keys, the singer-songwriter-pianist, performed in Washington.
Trump signed an executive order June 20 meant to quell outrage over the separation of families by housing parents and children together, for an indefinite period, in ad hoc detention centers. The order explicitly states that the authorities will continue to criminally prosecute adults who cross the border illegally.
Many of the more than 2,300 children separated from their migrant parents remain at makeshift shelters and foster homes. Although a federal judge in San Diego issued an order Tuesday calling for the reunification of families separated at the border within 30 days, White House officials have said that following the ordered timetable would be difficult.
“We don’t want a situation where we’re replacing baby jails with family camps,” said Karthik Ganapathy, a spokesman for MoveOn, a progressive advocacy organization that helped organized the protest.
The Washington rally was in many ways a festive affair, a moment of unification under a scorching sun. One protester arrived dressed as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg; another wore a shirt saying “It’s Mueller time,” a reference to the special counsel leading the inquiry into Russian meddling in the election.
Adam Unger, a local software engineer, wore a 5-gallon bucket turned into a drum, with a felt covering depicting an American flag with the insignia of the Rebel Alliance from “Star Wars” replacing the stars. “This drum has gotten its use over the last year and a half,” Unger said. He first used it to protest Trump’s travel ban on people from several predominantly Muslim countries when it was announced in January 2017.
Some said they showed up because they were angry; others, because they had not been angrier sooner. Maggie Mason, a new mother, said that for two weeks she could not go on Facebook because of news stories about children in detention centers, such as the audio published by ProPublica of immigrant children crying after being separated from their parents. Now, with her 7-week-old baby sleeping in the stroller next to her, she said it was time to come out.
Over the past month, marches across the country have cropped up, adding to the pressure on the Trump administration to yield to calls to end the practice of splitting up or detaining families.
“The idea of kids in cages and asylum seekers in prisons and moms being separated from breast-feeding children, this is just beyond politics, it really is just about right and wrong,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash. On Thursday, she was arrested with more than 500 other women who occupied a Senate office building as part of a Women’s March protest against Trump’s immigration policy.
Jayapal said she has visited a federal prison just south of Seattle and met with 174 women and several dozen men who had been transferred from the Texas border. She said she was moved by the stories of asylum seekers and parents — stories of family members killed, of children left behind, of violent physical attacks and domestic abuse.
“I promised them that I would get their stories out and I promised them I would do everything I could to reunite their families,” Jayapal said.
In New York, protesters overflowed Foley Square in Lower Manhattan and filled the surrounding sidewalks. At every intersection on the way to the central march location, clusters of people chanted, “When children are under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight back!”
Crowds also inched across the Brooklyn Bridge, a little more than a mile long, for more than two hours. On one side, in Brooklyn, protesters filed into Cadman Plaza, where people stood in the center or sat in the shade, displaying colorful signs and listening to speakers onstage.
“We were walking by cars and all the people driving were honking, giving us the peace sign, shaking fists,” said Laura Rittenhouse, who lives in Manhattan and walked across the bridge. “The most important question is what is the process to reunite these families?” she asked.
Carmela Huang, from Brooklyn, brought her two young children to the march. Both children were carrying rectangular cardboard signs they had made this morning that read “REUNITE” in large sharpie letters.
Huang said they had not been to a protest yet in 2018. “But today feels really important,” she said. “I’ve had my head in the sand, just feeling tremendously sad.” She described the march as “reassuring, energizing and rejuvenating.”
Some protesters carried rainbow umbrellas and blew bubbles, while a trombone player accented chants of activists.
Sadatu Mamah-Trawill, a community organizer with the group African Communities Together, brought her 9-year-old son to the protest. A Muslim woman, Mamah-Trawill said she still had family in Ghana, her birthplace, and could not imagine being separated from her children.
“I’m hoping our government hears us very clearly,” she said. “This is big. I don’t think anybody should miss it.”
A small group of mostly women and children rallied in Marquette, Michigan, in one of the few counties in the state that voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election. Silke-Maria Weineck, a German studies and comparative literature professor at the University of Michigan, dressed her service dog, Meemo, with an “Abolish ICE” sign for the occasion.
“It’s certainly a conservative part of the country,” she added, “but people feel very strongly about their children.”
Outside the Bedminster country club where Trump was spending the weekend, a few protesters could be seen. “My civility is locked in a cage,” said one sign. “Reunite families now.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Alexandra Yoon-Hendricks and Zoe Greenberg © 2018 The New York Times
source https://www.newssplashy.com/2018/07/world-protests-across-us-call-for-end_2.html
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Meth Distribution, attack, theft and sexual offender violation suspects appear in court Monday
A Hutchinson woman arrested early Saturday morning on meth distribution charges is being held on a quarter million dollar bond. Amanda Swinney appeared in Reno County District Court this morning on suspicion of distribution of meth and distribution and drug use paraphernalia. According to information given during her first appearance officers executed a search warrant after officers had observed Swinney allegedly making various stops around town...she also was reported to have been seen in Wichita at locations of known drug activity from where she allegedly obtained meth to sell. During the search officers found over 113 grams, or a quarter pound, of suspected metn. Swinney will be back in court October 23rd.
An early Friday morning incident led to arrest of a man ordered held on a 104 thousand dollar bond on charges including aggravated battery, child endangerment, criminal damage and DUI. Christopher Bertram’s request for a bond reduction was denied during his initial appearance in Reno County District Court. According to information given during his appearance a woman reported she and Bertram were in an argument... he left and came back twice, on the latter time he entered a residence through a window... she and two children fled the home and got into a vehicle with one other persno... Bertram allegedly followed them and on Ford he put his vehicle in reverse and went after her vehicle striking it... acceleration marks were found at the scene of that accident... when he was arrested reports indicate Bertram had a blood alcohol content of .298. He will be back in court October 23rd.
An incident on the south edge of Hutchinson early Sunday led to arrest of a Hutchinson man on aggravated assault and domestic batter charges among other things. Terry Gant is accused of pulling a knife during a dispute inside the home of his girlfriend where he pulled a knife of her ex-husband who she had invited into the home. During the incident the woman was shoved, had the knife blade put against her neck, and was head butted. Jailed on a 7750 dollar bond Gant will be back in court October 23rd.
A Hutchinson man faces multiple felony charges from incidents early Saturday. Charles Cooprider was arrested on North Lorraine after being found unconscious in a vehicle which was in drive with the engine still running. After some difficulty he was woke up by police who found a couple of pipes, one with suspected marijuana in it. Also found in the vehicle was a power washer and in the trunk tools... while this was going on another officer was taking a report of theft of such items, the victim there coming to the vehicle location and identifying same as his. The vehicle in question had been stolen from another residence which he entered by taking a screen off a window and taking keys and an iPad. Footprints found at that scene matched those of Cooprider. He’s also suspected in a hit and run involving a mailbox. Among charges he faces are aggravated burglary, felony theft, criminal damage, leaving the scene of an accident, and charges involving the drugs. Bond was set at 31 thousand 500 dollars and he will return to court October 23rd.
Charges are pending against a man arrested Friday afternoon for multiple violations of the offender registration act. Shawn Vculek (VA-cul-ik) is required to register as a sex offender from a juvenile conviction from Marquette, Michigan... He moved to Hutchinson earlier this year, where he obtained employment and leased a residence... According to an arrest report Vculek did not register his employment or residence as required, and also failed to meet registration requirements for several months. Vculek, is being held on a 25 thousand dollar bond pending filing of charges expected to be read October 23rd.
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