Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202581805349&rss=rss_nlj
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Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202581805349&rss=rss_nlj
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Hey, younger drivers are going to make mistakes, especially after they've had something to drink. Here's the latest installment of "Yikes" as reported by The Hamilton Spectator (Ontario):
A Burlington teen faces careless driving charges after crashing into a home. Halton police say ‘miraculously’ no one was injured when the 19-year-old left the roadway at 10 p.m. Wednesday night.You've got to see the pictures. (Click here.)
The novice driver in a Ford Taurus and a male passenger left the west side of the roadway before crossing the front lawns of two homes. The car struck the front of a house with such impact police say the vehicle’s entire front end was lodged inside.Think the homeowner was pissed?
“I ran right to the guy (driver) and started yelling at him,” homeowner Kathy Thring told the Burlington Post. “He kept telling me he was sorry. I told him he could have hurt someone.” Thring, her husband Darrin, and two daughters, Taylor, 13, and Sutherlin, 10, were home at the time.
The car remained in the house Thursday morning. Police say main support systems of the home looked to be significantly compromised.The charges?
Mitchell Bolduc, 19 is charged with careless driving and having a blood alcohol concentration above zero. The accused is a novice driver which under the Highway Traffic Act of Ontario, restricts drivers from having any alcohol at all.Here's the source.
Source: http://rss.justia.com/~r/LegalJuiceCom/~3/_CKrqCN7My4/post_545.html
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As recently noted, the new diagnosis whenever someone dies following a tazing is "excited delirium," which Steve Tuttle from Taser International advised me was not their invention, even if they seized upon it as an awfully facile excuse. But there is another word in the lexicon of force to note: superhuman.
Who doesn't think it sounds pretty darned cool to be described as a "man of steel"? Except the word gets trotted out not as a compliment, but a rationalization. From Work Without Dread:
Bartholomew Williams, the unarmed African-American graduate student shot dead on Sunday night by Cal State San Bernardino campus police, showed "superhuman strength" as he struggled with them, according to police. If that sounds familiar, that's because superhumanity is a lot more common than has been thought. Roberto Laudisio-Curdi, an unarmed student killed by police in Sydney in October, also had "superhuman strength." A man on a stolen motorcycle who resisted arrest in South Carolina last September had "superhuman strength" too, although it seems to me that it was more to his advantage that he had a gun, which the deputy through superhuman strength of his own got control of. Last summer in Maryland, a guy in a shootout with police "held on to his gun" after being hit by a bullet, which led a police spokesperson to remark, "The PCP just provokes superhuman strength." And at about the same time, police in Georgia said that a delirious man that they arrested "had superhuman strength and admitted being high on bath salts." (See also State of North Carolina v. Jonathan Howard Norton, No. COA10–1544, June 2011.)
The post goes on to argue that the use of the characterization "superhuman" is the new means of dehumanizing the target of police violence.
You don't have to be Foucault to see that superhumanity functions as subhumanity; it allows the nonhuman to be eliminated while releasing the perceiver from having to answer for seeing someone as nonhuman. Like last spring's "bath salts" hysteria itself, the phrase "superhuman strength" reflects police discomfort with mental illness--or even just "irrationality"--on the one hand, and with the unaccountable phenomenon of resisting arrest on the other.
While this explanation delves deeply into the police psychology of viewing non-cops, the us-and-them mentality, as lesser humans unworthy of concern or compassion, my sense is that the description isn't so much a tacit reflection of their dehumanization as it is another in the long list of convenient words that can provide a ready excuse for the use of force. It's easy, quick and immediately explains why they had to shoot, taze, beat a person whose conduct otherwise compelled no need for force.
As is often the case, the word is used in conjunction with the underlying criminal accusation, such as the use of PCP or bath salts, playing upon public hysteria and ignorance. After all, how many people are going to rush to the aid of the dead man claiming they use PCP all the time and never had superhuman strength? On the other side, the mythology surrounding crazy, wild things that happen to people who do demon drugs plays right into a claim like this. As Judy Tenuta liked to say, "it can happen."
While police are frequently uncomfortable with mental illness or irrationality, though the latter usually reflects the peculiar police perspective that failure to immediately comply with their commands constitutes irrationality per se, the use of force isn't limited by any stretch to those who suffer from some mental impairment. With increasing frequency, it's just a matter of time and convenience, where they have the means to end an incident now, and use it, or don't feel much like chasing down a perp and just shoot instead. It's quick and easy, the only thing needed is an excuse.
The beauty of characterizing a person as having "superhuman" strength is that it not only provides a justification for the use of force that would otherwise be inexcusable, but it can't be tested later for veracity. Much like the beloved "furtive gesture," it happened only because the police officer said so, and then it's gone. In the case of furtive gesture, the result is a search. In the case of superhuman strength, there's usually a dead body.
Does anybody actually have this "superhuman" strength? No and yes. No, there is no such thing as Superman, and no one suddenly manifests abilities beyond those of mere mortals, regardless of whether they're wearing a cape. But drugs do cause disinhibition, where a person will exert his very human strength to its fullest, without any reluctance, despite doing so in the face of police force. The fact is that a person on PCP may well beat a cop in fight; cops don't necessarily have secret cop-fu that allows them to come out on top in hand-to-hand combat. They can be beaten. They can be hurt. They are not inclined to let that happen.
At the same time, use of such shorthands as "superhuman" strength build a mythology that's hard to resist. It becomes a mantra, where just saying the magic words makes whatever comes afterward perfectly understandable. What could the cop do in the face of this drugged up guy with superhuman strength? He had no choice but to shoot. And another unarmed person lies dead on the street, and there is no way to dispute it. Except it isn't real.
H/T FritzMuffKnuckle
Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/12/14/shooting-superman.aspx?ref=rss
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/legal-toolkit/2012/02/online-reputation-management-for-lawyers/
Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202581425827&rss=rss_nlj
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Ed makes suggestions about what to consider when approaching the end of your lease.
Source: http://feeds.lexblog.com/~r/LawBizBlog/~3/4u1N1tzZkt0/
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Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2012/12/judge-approves-settlement-in-pa-juvenile-sentencing-suit.php
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Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2012/12/bangladesh-war-crimes-tribunal-judge-resigns.php
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/ringler-radio/2012/04/tony-coelho-fighting-for-the-disabled/
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This is pretty cool.
EEOC briefs are now on line. [Here]
They cover briefs filed in the US Circuit Courts of Appeals in which the EEOC was a party, plus amicus briefs filed in the US Circuit Courts of Appeals, District Courts, and state courts.
And there is a user-friendly search function.
Briefs filed in the US Supreme Court are not in this collection, and can be found through the US Solicitor General's collection [here].
Source: http://www.lawmemo.com/blog/2012/06/eeoc_briefs_on.html
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Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2012/12/jurist-the-us-court-of-1.php
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/gone-clio/2012/10/gone-clio-with-attorney-anthony-reeves/
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2012/06/texting-while-driving-and-the-law/
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/digital-detectives/2012/10/special-masters-in-e-discovery/
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NLRB Member Terence F. Flynn submitted his resignation to the President and to NLRB Chairman Mark Gaston Pearce on May 26.
His resignation is effective July 24, 2012. He has immediately recused himself from all agency business and has asked that the President withdraw his nomination for Board Member of the NLRB.
The NLRB’s Inspector General recently issued two reports on allegations of improper conduct by Member Flynn during the period when he was serving as a Chief Counsel to Member Peter Schaumber.
Flynn was sworn in as a Board Member on January 9, 2012, following a recess appointment by the President.
Flynn's resignation leaves the Board with four Members - three Democrats and one Republican.
Source: http://www.lawmemo.com/blog/2012/05/nlrb_member_ter.html
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The lone “no” vote was cast by Representative Louie Gohmert, Republican of Texas, who said in a statement that “not only should we not eliminate the word ‘lunatic’ from federal law when the most pressing issue of the day is saving our country from bankruptcy, we should use the word to describe the people who want to continue with business as usual in Washington.”
Yes, the word "lunatic" has been stricken from the laws of the United States of America, the Senate having approved the measure last May. No longer is anyone in America a federal lunatic. Your state may vary.
This comes on the heels of the eradication of the phrase "mental retardation," eliminated two years ago because of its hurtful connotation, where school boys called each other "retard" and neo-conservative media personalities figured out the if you replaced "re" with "lib," they could get a belly laugh out of their followers. At the same time, 58% of Republicans believe that man was created by God less than 10,000 years ago, when they walked the earth alongside dinosaurs.
Given the meaning and derivation of the word "lunatic," that people would suffer transitory insanity based on movement of the moon, it's just as well that it's gone. But the meaning of mental retardation, that a person's intelligence, based upon IQ, was below a score of 70, is more of a problem. A medical phrase was eliminated because it was abused by jerks and turned into an epithet. When this happened, there were two options. The first was to speak out and return it to its original meaning. The second was to make it disappear. The first required people to think. The second did not. The second prevailed.
A while back, there was a huge dispute, a very angry dispute, about the word "niggardly." On the one hand, reasonably well-educated folks understood its meaning to be "cheap" or "miserly." On the other, it was just too damn close to a hated word to ignore. David Howard, D.C.'s head of the Office of Public Advocate, was forced to resign for using this "racist" word, not because it was racist but because people felt it was. It had no connection whatsoever with the racial slur, but so what? It's gone.
As lawyer and blawger, I use a lot of words. They are useful to convey the correct meaning whenever possible, in the hope that readers or listeners will get the message that I am trying to send. Each day, it gets more difficult to accomplish.
Political correctness has caused us to eliminate words from our lexicon that hurt people's feelings or have taken on disparaging meanings or connotations. In the process of eradicating "hate speech" from the language, we ignore definitions in favor of how words make us feel. But it hasn't stopped at the edge of hurtfulness. It's dribbled over to positive characterizations, empowering people to ascribe attributes and credibility to themselves at will.
In a recent exchange, a marketer argued his "belief" about why he was a professional. His argument was that he felt entitled to do so, and at no time did a definition of the word come into play.
There have been similar arguments about one of our favorite words, "justice," a word of such vague meaning that we can all embrace it, own it, define it to support whatever we believe.
"When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean - neither more nor less."
"The question is," said Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many different things."
"The question is," said Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be master - that's all."
—Through the Looking Glass, Lewis Carrol (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson)
We cannot communicate with each other if each of us is a Humpty Dumpty to ourselves. The problem is not solved by the elimination of words because they cause some people to feel badly, especially when the feeling bears no actual connection to the word. As we eliminate hurtful words, a new word will be adapted to its use, as we still need words to denigrate each other. Then that word will be eradicated from the lexicon as well.
Some people think that we can achieve an Orwellian Utopia by only having happy, supportive words, and thereby end that branch of language that can be used to hurt people's feelings or express ideas that some believe should never be expressed. My guess is that will never happen, even if you think it's a good idea.
What may well happen in the process, however, is that the sharp edges of definition will be dulled and rounded, so that the precision of words gives way to an amorphous mass of nice-sounding utterances that are interpreted by each of us in whatever way suits our desires and beliefs. We will be able to talk among ourselves and agree or disagree without every having the slightest clue if we are talking about the same thing or making any headway in explaining our position.
There doesn't appear to be any harm in the elimination of the word "lunatic" from the United States Code. It was probably a poor choice of words in the first place, reflective of common usage rather than definition. If it were up to me, however, the word "justice" would also be on the chopping block, as it's one of the most hurtful words around to the wrongly convicted.
Yes, you know exactly what justice means. You and Humpty Dumpty. You lunatic.
Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/12/09/the-last-word.aspx?ref=rss
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/un-billable-hour/2012/03/hiring-your-first-employee/
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The books and topic will be discussed by "an exciting group of scholars," five words I never expected to see. I tried to leave a comment to that effect, but it appears I remain banned from commenting at Co-Op as an undesirable.Along with Garrett’s book, we will be discussing three new books that intersect well with the problems he tackles in Convicting the Innocent: Stephanos Bibas’s The Machinery of Criminal Justice (Oxford University Press 2012), Daniel S. Medwed’s Prosecution Complex: America’s Race to Convict and its Impact on the Innocent (New York University Press 2012), and Dan Simon’s In Doubt (Harvard University Press 2012).
Few would argue that the criminal justice system is a well-oiled machine, but Bibas' solution is to make it more transparent and democratically accountable for its failures. Not leveling the playing field, nor invigorating constitutional protections, but increasing the "quality of convictions" by exposing factual and moral injustices.In short, our criminal justice system is a broken machine running almost on auto-pilot. It needs to be more transparent and democratically accountable for its failures. We cannot abolish plea bargaining, as we need its ability to handle staggering caseloads. But we can hope that the exposure of factual and moral injustices can prompt rethinking, forcing us to slow down the assembly line, to increase the quality of convictions and punishments even if that means reducing the quantity and doing more triage. Books like Brandon’s, Dan’s, and Dan’s can, I hope, prompt more oversight and public involvement to ensure both factual and moral justice.
In reading Garrett’s book, it was hard for me to shake my own memories of the Central Park Jogger trial in 1990-91. I was a trial preparation assistant at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office for the bureau next to the one in charge of prosecuting the case. In the mornings when delivering files to the various courtrooms, we’d witness the march to the courthouse: prosecutor Liz Lederer’s team, the defendants’ family members, their lawyers, activist Al Sharpton, and Bill Tatum, editor of the New York Amsterdam News. Public conversation was divisive. The mainstream media cast the defendants as a “wilding” mob of black teenagers who descended on the petite white jogger; the Amsterdam News decried the arrest and prosecution as racial injustice. Even though forensic evidence exonerated the defendants (the FBI lab conclusively ruled out the semen found on the victim’s sock did not belong to any of the defendants), the jury convicted them. The justice system failed us: we convicted the innocent.
Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/12/10/convicting-the-innocent-a-symposium.aspx?ref=rss
Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/tech-experts/2012/10/experience-user-friendly-systems/
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/legal-toolkit/2012/07/the-legal-trade-show-survival-guide/
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/ringler-radio/2012/04/tony-coelho-fighting-for-the-disabled/
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Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/tech-experts/2012/08/accelerate-your-use-of-metrics/
Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/suffolk-law/2012/03/sjc-ruling-on-foreclosures/
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The Juice yearns for the good old days, when robbers and burglars used to just rob and burgle. Alas, it appears we shan't be returning to those days. Previously, we learned about the Beanie Baby robber. Today, it's the fish-killing robbers. Per the TribLocal:
Three goldfish were killed when a burglar poured hot sauce, mustard, ketchup and spices into a fish tank and stole a BB gun among other items from an Arlington Heights apartment, police said Wednesday.You bastards! You killed ... the goldfish! [South Park reference]
The front door of an apartment on the 2100 block of South Goebbert Road was pried open sometime between Jan. 22 and Jan. 24, and burglars made off with a Nintendo game system, CD player, 30 games, 30 DVDs, a Daisy BB gun with extra BBs, jewelry and a 50-pound fire safe containing personal papers and pictures, police said.Here's the source.
Source: http://rss.justia.com/~r/LegalJuiceCom/~3/C1_F8yoV_E8/no_you_couldnt_just_burgle_the.html
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