Today is Election Day, time to vote in the most consequential election of our lifetime!
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
Monday, November 4, 2024
Trump’s 'evidence-free rhetoric' on crime was intended to deceive voters
Her is an excerpt from Ashley Rubin, a social scientist at the University of Hawaii, recent article posted on Radley Balko’s The Watch:
Donald Trump’s evidence-free rhetoric [on crime] has managed to convince
his supporters that violent crime is a major problem. A recent Gallup poll found that three of the five most
important issues according to Republican and Republican-leaning independent
voters—crime, immigration, and terrorism and national security—are connected to
the broader issue of crime. But it’s not just Trump’s supporters—voters in
general now care more about crime, even as the crime rates are falling
and remain low, historically speaking.
As sociologist Katherine Beckett has demonstrated, the more politicians talk about crime, the
more the media talks about crime, and the more citizens become concerned about
crime—even when actual crime rates show crime is not the problem citizens think
it is.
Trump’s promise to “stop crime and restore safety” sounds good to those voters
who believe the hype that violent crime is at historically high levels (it’s
not) and that we are in the middle of a crime wave (we’re not), and who believe
that Harris plans to gut police departments in order to let
violent criminals run free (she doesn’t). The effect is that those who
challenge Trump’s depiction of a dangerous America get characterized as being
soft on crime or enabling criminality.
Ultimately, by convincing the public that crime is a
real threat, Trump isn’t just trying to delegitimize his opponents. He’s also
paving the way for the public to accept unnecessary and harmful policy changes
that don’t meaningfully bring the crime rate down but help him purge
society—whether through deportation or incarceration—of the people he believes
shouldn’t be in it.
To read more CLICK HERE
Sunday, November 3, 2024
South Carolina executes man despite calls for clemency by judge
The 21st Execution of 2024
Richard Moore was executed Friday, November 1, 2024 by
lethal injection, despite calls for clemency from three jurors and the
judge who sent him to death row 23 years ago, reported the South Carolina Daily Gazette.
Gov. Henry McMaster denied Moore’s request for clemency. The
governor was Moore’s last chance at avoiding the death chamber after the U.S.
Supreme Court declined
Thursday to halt the execution.
“I have carefully reviewed and thoughtfully considered the
application, matters of record, including transcripts, briefs, and judicial
decisions,” he wrote in his denial, noting he’d also spoken to family members
of Moore’s victim, James Mahoney.
Moore was pronounced dead at 6:24 p.m., 23 minutes after
pentobarbital began flowing into his arm.
Moore kept his eyes closed and his face pointed toward the
ceiling. He took several deep, loud breaths that sounded almost like snores,
followed by short, shallow breaths. He seemed to stop moving around 6:04 p.m.,
said the three media witnesses who watched the execution.
He did not show any outward signs of pain, they said.
Moore’s attorney, Lindsey Vann with Justice 360, cried and
held a small cross. His spiritual advisor held her hand after Moore appeared to
take his last breath. Two unnamed members of Mahoney’s family and 7th Circuit
Solicitor Barry Barnette watched stoically, media witnesses said.
Moore, 59, was sentenced to death in 2001 for killing
Mahoney, a gas station clerk, in Spartanburg County two years prior. He was the
second death row inmate to die since executions resumed
in September.
In his final statement, Moore apologized to Mahoney’s family
and told his children he loved them.
“To the family of Mr. Mahoney, I am deeply sorry for the
pain and sorrow I caused you all,” Moore’s last statement read, said prison
spokeswoman Chrysti Shain. “To my children and granddaughters, I love you, and
I am so proud of you. Thank you for the joy you have brought to my life. To all
of my family and friends, new and old, thank you for your love and support.”
Media witnesses did not hear his statement read.
Two jurors, the trial judge, and the state’s former
corrections director were among more than two dozen people who wrote letters to
McMaster as part of a clemency
application, submitted
Wednesday, asking the governor to instead give Moore life in prison.
A third juror joined their calls Friday, saying Moore
“appears to be a positive influence on his peers” while in prison, according
to an email provided by Moore’s attorneys.
“I understand that Mr. Moore has shown much regret, and
changed his life,” juror Jennifer Stone wrote. “I also see that he has children
that love him and want him in their life.”
Four
more inmates have exhausted their appeals processes, making them
eligible for death warrants. Executions in the state are expected to
continue every
five weeks through March.
Moore entered Nikki’s Speedy Mart in Spartanburg around 3 a.m. on Sept. 16, 1999. He went first to the store’s cooler, then to the counter, where 42-year-old clerk Mahoney was watching the news for information on a hurricane, according to court documents.
Terry Hadden, a regular customer playing video poker nearby,
testified during Moore’s trial that he turned after hearing Mahoney say, “What
the hell do you think you’re doing?” Hadden, who was blind in one eye, told
jurors that when he turned, he saw Moore holding both of Mahoney’s hands in one
of his own, with a gun in the other hand.
What happened between Moore and Mahoney that night remains
unclear. Prosecutors said Moore, who entered the store unarmed, took the gun
the store owner kept behind the counter. Moore, who had just lost his job,
wanted to rob the store to get money to buy crack cocaine, prosecutors argued.
Moore didn’t testify at his original trial, but in a later
appeals hearing, he said he and Mahoney got into an argument because Moore was
a few cents short on his purchase. Mahoney took out his gun, which he kept in
his waistband for protection. Moore managed to get the other gun from behind
the counter and shot Mahoney in self-defense, his attorneys have said.
Moore fired at Hadden, who fell to the floor and played
dead, Hadden testified. He didn’t see what happened next. At some point,
Mahoney shot Moore in the left arm, and Moore shot Mahoney through the heart.
Before he left, Moore stepped over Mahoney’s body and took a
blue vinyl bag containing $1,408, according to court documents.
Moore, still bleeding, drove to his drug dealer’s house and
asked to buy cocaine, or for his dealer, George Gibson, to take him to the hospital,
Gibson testified. When Gibson refused, Moore drove off.
On his way out, he hit a pole, attracting the attention of a
police officer. The officer came over, and Moore got out of the car, allegedly
saying, “I did it. I did it. I give up. I give up,” the officer later
testified.
The stolen money, covered in blood, sat in the front seat of
Moore’s truck, alongside an open pocket knife, the officer testified.
Moore, who is Black, was convicted two years later, in 2001,
by a jury with no Black members.
His attorneys have argued repeatedly and unsuccessfully that
prosecutors struck potential Black jurors because of their race.
The state’s prosecutors have maintained the attorneys in
that trial did not consider race in removing jurors. The U.S. Supreme Court
agreed Thursday in an order declining to halt Moore’s execution.
Moore’s attorneys claim they can prove Mahoney fired the
first shot, which struck the wall above Hadden. The placement of shell casings
found at the crime scene supports Moore firing in self-defense, private
forensic investigator Robert Tressel said in a statement included with Moore’s
clemency application.
But no court ever agreed to hear that evidence because the
rules around appeals are so strict, said Vann, Moore’s attorney.
Retired Circuit Court Judge Gary Clary, who oversaw Moore’s
2001 trial and death sentence, called for Moore to receive clemency in a letter
submitted to the governor Wednesday.
“In no way do I quibble with the jury’s verdict, and I make
no excuse on behalf of Mr. Moore for his actions that resulted in the death of
James Mahoney,” wrote Clary, a Republican who was elected to the state House
after he retired from the bench.
“Over the years, I have studied the case of each person who
resides on death row in South Carolina,” his letter continued. “Richard Bernard
Moore’s case is unique, and after years of thought and reflection, I humbly ask
that you grant executive clemency to Mr. Moore as an act of grace and mercy.”
Clary, who represented part of Pickens County for three
terms, did not elaborate on what he felt made Moore’s case unique.
To read more CLICK HERE
Saturday, November 2, 2024
U.S. in heightened threat environment heading into Election Day
The United States is in a heightened threat environment heading into Election Day, with multiple extremist factions threatening to disrupt the electoral process, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. Two prominent assassination attempts on former President Trump have occurred against a backdrop of myriad disrupted plots and a record high number of threats to public officials, as violent political rhetoric raises the stakes. Both foreign adversaries and Salafi-jihadist extremists have sought to take advantage of this fractious moment by inspiring or launching acts of violence in the United States.
The days (or weeks) following the election could prove the
most consequential, particularly if a clear winner has not emerged for the
presidency. Such uncertainty gives conspiracy theories greater space to develop
and circulate and can significantly increase political unrest or even violence
within local communities. In 2020, for instance, vote-tallying centers in swing
counties and cities—including Maricopa County in Arizona, Philadelphia, and
Detroit—were targeted by extremist protests or terrorist plots.
This year, violent far-right extremists likely pose the
greatest threat, given the January 6, 2021, precedent of violence within a
political transition, as well as violent rhetoric repeatedly
issued by the Republican Party’s candidate. The Department of Homeland Security
has even warned that the “heightened risk” of violence might include extremists
attempting to sabotage ballots—a step that, if successful, could launch the
country into a constitutional crisis. Recent arson attacks on ballot
boxes in Vancouver, Washington, and Portland, Oregon, remain unsolved.
Meanwhile, anti-government militia groups remain active on Facebook—the social
media platform appears to have allowed its
artificial intelligence (AI) systems to auto-generate pages for the
groups—and continue to coordinate over the platform to conduct vigilante
monitoring of ballot boxes to prevent “ballot stuffing,” a move better suited
to intimidating voters than illuminating electoral irregularities.
The unrest could continue up to Inauguration Day on January
20, 2025, and even beyond.
To read more CLICK HERE
Friday, November 1, 2024
House Speaker Mike Johnson vows to repeal the Affordable Care Act stripping coverage from 45 million Americans
Heather Cox Richardson reported on Halloween this frightening plan:
House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has responded to
news stories about his plan to get rid of the Affordable Care Act (or
Obamacare) by claiming his comments at the closed-door campaign event on Monday
were taken out of context. But they weren’t. The tape is clear. Johnson said
that Republicans want “massive reform” to the Affordable Care Act, also known
as “Obamacare.” When an attendee asked, “No Obamacare?” Johnson laughed and
agreed: “No Obamacare. The ACA is so deeply ingrained, we need massive reform
to make this work, and we got a lot of ideas on how to do that.”
45 million Americans are covered under the Affordable Car Act.
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
Creators: Homicides Are Down but More Murderers Are Walking the Streets
Creators Syndicate
October 29, 2024
In September, The New York Times declared that
"the number of murders reported in the United States dropped in 2023 at
the fastest rate on record."
The FBI reported that there were about 2,500 fewer
homicides in 2023 than in 2022, a decline of 11.6%. According to Jeff Asher, a
crime data analyst who publishes on Substack, the data suggests "the
largest year-to-year decline since national record-keeping began in 1960."
However, the picture is not all rosy. In the criminal
justice system, "clearance rate" is a term used to measure the rate
at which law enforcement agencies solve crimes. In the FBI's Uniform Crime
Reporting Program, law enforcement agencies can clear, or "close,"
offenses in one of two ways: by arrest or by exceptional means.
Clearance by exceptional means could include the death
of a suspect or the reluctance of the victim or witnesses to cooperate in an
investigation.
Declining clearance rates are a problem. A murder in
America has a 50% chance of being solved.
Clearance rates have declined precipitously over the
last 60 years. In 1965, clearance rates for murder hovered above 90%. According
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2022, the last year of
available data, the clearance rate nationwide was 52.3%.
Although homicides have declined, solving murders has
become more difficult. Even with modern investigative techniques, more
homicides than ever remain unsolved.
The scope of the problem is enormous. For instance, in
2022, according to the FBI, there were 24,849 homicides. Based on the clearance
rate for homicides in 2022, there are approximately 11,853 unsolved murders.
That means there are probably more than 10,000 murderers walking the streets
from 2022.
If you take the total number of murders over the last
10 years and divide that number by the average clearance rate, the result is
more than 80,000 unsolved murders.
More than half of America's major police departments
are struggling to solve homicides at the same level of success they enjoyed
just a decade ago, according to a 2010 study of federal crime records by the
nonprofit Murder Accountability Project.
The study focused on the nation's 160 police
departments that investigate at least 10 homicides a year and annually report
crime data to the FBI's Uniform Crime Report. Fifty-four percent of those
departments reported less success in solving murders committed during the 10
years prior to the report than in the previous 10 years.
The problem is about more than police work. The MAP
study found most departments with declining murder clearance rates also
experienced an increase in homicides. These departments often are located in
areas with declining tax bases or facing other kinds of fiscal challenges.
Some crime analysts have also cast doubt on FBI data.
According to Newsweek, the concerns stem from the suggestion that the data
"only covers 77 percent of the U.S. population and should be considered
preliminary, given that state and local law enforcement agencies have months to
report their data and correct any errors."
In addition, participating in the FBI's Uniform Crime
Report is voluntary. If a police department refuses to provide data, it is
extremely difficult, if not impossible, to replicate the data.
This summer, the FBI said the first three months of
2024 saw a "historic" drop in rates of violent crime and murder
across the country. That is good news, but is it accurate?
Asher wrote, "Crime almost certainly declined
nationally in the first three months of 2024 compared to the first three months
of 2023, but the FBI's data is almost certainly overstating that decline."
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg,
Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book "The Executioner's Toll,
2010" was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at
www.mattmangino.com and follow him on X @MatthewTMangino).
To visit Creators CLICK HERE
Tuesday, October 29, 2024
Go to the state capital and 'confront' lawmakers with 'evidence of the illegitimate steal'
In the weeks after the 2020 election, retired Gen. Michael T. Flynn, Donald J. Trump’s former national security adviser, was a key figure in efforts to subvert the election outcome. In recent interviews and speeches, he and an associate are warning that this year’s election will be stolen from Mr. Trump, advising supporters to take action to prevent a theft and vowing retribution once Mr. Trump is back in power, reported The New York Times.
At the Rod of Iron Freedom Festival, a far-right event
in Pennsylvania this month, Mr. Flynn told the crowd that after a Trump
victory: “Katie, bar the door. Believe me, the gates of hell — my hell — will
be unleashed.”
At the same event, Ivan Raiklin, a close associate of
Mr. Flynn’s who serves on the board of directors of Mr. Flynn’s organization
America’s Future, urged Trump supporters in Pennsylvania to go to the
state capital, Harrisburg, and “confront” their state representatives with
“evidence of the illegitimate steal” after the election if Mr. Trump loses.
Mr. Raiklin also called on Republican-held state
legislatures to withhold their electors in the event of a Trump loss that
Republicans consider illegitimate.
“We run the elections,” he said. “We try to play it
fair. They steal it, our state legislatures are our final stop to guarantee a
checkmate.”
The maneuver Mr. Raiklin laid out appears to defy the
Electoral Count Reform Act, the bipartisan law passed in 2022. The law was
meant to prevent a repeat of Mr. Trump’s attempt to exploit the Electoral
College vote to overturn his defeat in 2020. It states that only state
executives, not state legislatures, can certify the slates of electors that
determine the winner.
But the notion of withholding electors has been
circulating in some corners of the right. Mr. Raiklin laid out similar plans
days later in North Carolina and at a county
Republican Party event in Maryland. He argued that North Carolina’s
legislature should preemptively allocate its electoral votes to Mr. Trump, even
before the state’s ballots were counted, on account of hurricane-related
disruptions.
Appearing at the Maryland event with Mr. Raiklin,
Representative Andy Harris, the Maryland Republican who chairs the right-wing
House Freedom Caucus, said the plan “makes a lot of sense,” before backtracking
on Friday and saying in a statement that “every legal vote should be
counted.”
Mr. Flynn and Mr. Raiklin, neither of whom responded
to requests for comment, have been prominent exponents of false claims and
conspiracy theories about the 2020 election for years. But they have recently
focused on specific tactics to avoid what they predict will be the theft of the
2024 election.
The extent of Mr. Flynn’s current relationship with
Mr. Trump is unclear. The former president fired him less than a month into his
presidency for lying to Vice President Mike Pence and to federal agents about
his contacts with Russia’s ambassador to the United States. But in his last
months in office, Mr. Trump granted Mr. Flynn a full federal pardon.
On Dec. 18, 2020, Mr. Flynn and several associates met
with Mr. Trump at the White House and tried to persuade him to use federal law
enforcement and military personnel to seize voting machines in an effort to
hold onto power, a meeting that has been a focus of investigations into the
Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.
To read more CLICK HERE