Archive for July, 2010

Statesman Eye for the Killer Guy (part 2).

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Irving Davis is appealing his death sentence again.

Mr. Davis was convicted in 2007 of killing a 15-year old girl and sentenced to death. However, that sentence was thrown out, and Mr. Davis got a new sentencing hearing. He’s upset because, during that hearing, the prosecution brought up his religion. Mr. Davis feels that this unfairly infringes on his right to freely exercise his religion, as well as prejudicing the jurors against him. The prosecution argues that it was okay to introduce this evidence in order to refute claims by the defense that Mr. Davis was “nothing but a pacifist” while on Death Row; and anyway, if it’s appropriate to introduce affiliations with violent gangs, why isn’t it appropriate to introduce religious affiliations? Especially if the religion in question “condones and encourages human sacrifice and other illegal acts.”

Oh, by the way, the particular religion Mr. Davis has chosen to practice is Satanism.

Jurors were shown, over defense objections, Davis’ drawings depicting satanic symbols, books removed from his cell that included “The Satanic Bible” and a pentagram tattoo on his chest. Prosecutors also introduced a grievance form that showed Davis complaining about being denied a gong, candles, chalice, black robes, a vial of blood and other items he said were needed to practice his religion.

What, no goat?

Fat bottomed guys make the rotten world go round.

Monday, July 5th, 2010

There’s a very brief article in this morning’s NYT about Japan’s sumo scandal.

One wrestler (Keiji Tamiya, who wrestled under the name Kotomitsuki) has been banned for life because he bet on baseball games, and apparently paid $35,000 in blackmail money to a gangster.

A coach, Tadashige Naya, was also banned; if I understand the NYT article correctly, he was a coach in the same stable as Kotomitsuki, and was also involved in gambling.

The NYT article is frustratingly short; it alludes to other scandals involving drugs and rigged matches, and mentions an issue with sales of front-row seats to gangsters, but doesn’t go into much detail. Google turned up a CSM article from late last week that goes into a bit more detail about the current scandals and some of the past ones. There’s also a WSJ article from a few weeks ago that covers some of the same ground. I vaguely recall reading something about the Asashoryu scandal, but I must have been distracted by shiny objects at the time.

Question for my readers: is anyone aware of a good English-language source for sumo coverage and information?

Another gosh-darn shame.

Saturday, July 3rd, 2010

We previously mentioned the sentencing retrial of Laura Hall. Ms. Hall, as you may recall, was convicted of evidence tampering and hindering apprehension for allegedly helping her convicted murderer boyfriend, Colton Pitonyak, cut up his victim’s body and flee to Mexico. Ms. Hall was previously sentenced to a five year bit, but the sentence was overturned on appeal.

During the course of the trial, the prosecution played some interesting tapes of Ms. Hall’s phone calls from jail, in which she badmouthed the victim, the victim’s mother, the jury that convicted her, and pretty much everyone else she could think of, without ever showing any remorse.

Ms. Hall’s sentencing retrial concluded on Friday. That five year sentence? Now it is a ten-year sentence, the maximum possible for the crimes Ms. Hall was convicted of.

Someone’s going down, honey-bunch, but it isn’t Jennifer Cave’s mother.

Poor, poor, pitiful Maywood.

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

There’s an article in the LAT this morning about the last days of the city of Maywood (at least, as an independent entity) and the Maywood Police Department.

At 12:01 a.m. Thursday, the 86-year-old Police Department was disbanded, most city employees were let go and the day-to-day detail work of running the working-class city southeast of L.A. was handed over to neighboring Bell.

How sad.

“It’s really sad knowing that I’ll never come back to this place,” Saavedra said as he drove through the city’s streets. “Last Saturday a man called me over and asked me if his brother’s murder case was still going to be investigated. That was really a sad moment. We’re worrying about losing our jobs, and [he’s] worrying about his brother’s murderer.”

Isn’t that awful?

A sign at the entrance to City Hall read, “…the City Council has requested that from this date forward, no media will be permitted inside city hall…”

Well, that seems kind of odd. (Oh, did I mention that “Only the city manager, city attorney and elected officials remain on the payroll.”?)

Those who came to City Hall on business said they noticed little difference. Jose Lopez rode his green bike to City Hall with a pistol tucked in his belt to get a senior bus pass, just as he’s always done the first day of every month.

“…with a pistol tucked in his belt, to City Hall”? In California? Say what?

Oh, and why did this happen?

Maywood officials said they had no choice because the city could not obtain insurance

A city couldn’t get insurance? Interesting.

the consequence of too many lawsuits in the past, many involving the Police Department, which also patrolled the nearby city of Cudahy.

You don’t say? Let’s look into that a little more, why don’t we? Much of the information in this post originated from a post at Pro Libertate; I think that article is slightly biased and a little strident in tone, so I’ve attempted to verify it independently, and provide links to other sources.

A good starting point is a 2007 investigation by the LAT itself:

The Maywood Police Department — a 37-man force that patrols a gritty square-mile city south of downtown Los Angeles — has become a haven for misfit cops who have been pushed out of other law enforcement agencies for crimes or serious misconduct.

Among those on the job: A former Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy terminated for abusing jail inmates; a onetime Los Angeles Police Department officer fired for intimidating a witness; and an ex-Huntington Park officer charged with negligently shooting a handgun and driving drunk.

In all, at least a third of the officers on the force have either left other police jobs under a cloud or have had brushes with the law while working for Maywood. Several officers in recent years have left Maywood after being convicted of crimes.

Even the newly appointed police chief has a checkered past: He was convicted of beating his girlfriend and resigned from the El Monte Police Department before he could be fired. His conviction was later overturned on appeal because the defense was not allowed to exclude a juror who had previously worked with domestic violence victims. He was ultimately convicted of a lesser charge of making a verbal threat.

Maywood’s finest:

Maywood Officer Brent Talmo was hired in 1998 after being terminated from the county sheriff’s department in 1986 for displaying a pattern of “bizarre behavior and unprofessional conduct,” records show:

Talmo poured dirt into the gas tank of a county vehicle; placed a dead gopher in a prisoner’s pocket as an apparent prank, then lied about it and tried to get another deputy to lie on his behalf;

A dead gopher? Harlan Ellison, call your office, please.

tipped over the bed of a sleeping prisoner, causing him to fall face first onto the floor and bloodying his nose; and telephoned a fellow jail guard and referred to him as a snitch and used a racial slur.

When Talmo was fired, then-Sheriff Sherman Block publicly singled him out as “the primary culprit” in a campaign of harassment aimed at prisoners.

(Here’s a link to what I believe is a California Court of Appeals decision upholding Talmo’s firing from the LA County Sheriff’s Office.)

But after all, isn’t Talmo entitled to a chance to redeem himself? Was it wrong for Maywood to give Talmo a second or third chance? (After leaving LACSO, Talmo was hired by the Los Angeles Housing Authority Police, and was actually commended while on the job with them. I haven’t been able to find out why Talmo left that job for Maywood. If the LAT is to be believed, the Maywood PD paid a lot less than other area departments.)

Perhaps Talmo was entitled to a shot at redemption, although he is named as a defendant in at least one civil rights suit I’ve found, along with the city itself and what I believe to be other officers. But it seems that there were deeper cultural issues in Maywood:

  • at the time of the LAT investigation, officers were allowed to accept free meals from restaurants. (I know that seems like small potatoes, but that’s not something larger departments let their officers get away with. For example, the Austin Police Department’s Code of Conduct states “Employees shall not intentionally use their affiliation with the Department to influence another into offering a gift, gratuity, free or discounted service, reward, or special consideration.” Letting your officers accept free meals strikes me as being a symptom of something larger, as well as fostering an “us vs. them” mindset.)
  • Officers were also allowed to carry saps. In 2007. Long after most police departments had stopped allowing them.
  • Also quoting from the LAT investigation, “…supervisors at the department don’t always see the need for documenting citizens’ complaints, a practice mandated at other agencies. In a recent deposition, the lieutenant in charge of internal affairs said complaints were often “resolved casually” in the lobby of the police station.” (I suspect that “resolved casually” is a short version of “You want to file a complaint? Tell you what; you leave the station now, and we don’t throw your ass under the jail for whatever charge we can think of.”)

Surely there were good cops in Maywood? Yes, yes there were.

A judge ruled Tuesday that four Maywood policemen who allege they were put on leave and told to take mental exams for exposing serious misconduct within the department will have to file separate lawsuits.

(Note that this case is still ongoing, and the allegations made by the Maywood officers are just allegations by one side in the case.)

The California Attorney General stated

…the Civil Rights Enforcement section was unable to secure the interviews of several Maywood Police Department police officers who repeatedly were reported by witnesses interviewed to be “good guys”. The refusal of these officers to be interviewed evidences a code of silence that substantially contributes to the deficiencies found in the Maywood Police Department’s organizational culture, systems, policies, and practices that will be discussed in this report.

Here’s a link to the California Attorney General’s report on the Maywood PD. I love this document; it’s one of the most strongly worded bits of writing I’ve read in a long time.

For example, there’s the story about the two guys who were leaving a night club when they were “assaulted” (California AG’s words) by Maywood’s finest, who Tasered one in the groin while he was handcuffed. Both men were released at the scene and not charged with any crime, even though one of the officers got on his radio and said his life was in danger.

Or this: “There were a number of allegations concerning consensual sexual encounters by several Maywood officers while on duty.” Note that Al Hutchings, who was named chief in 2008, previously resigned from the department “after being told a videotape had been made of him allegedly having an on-duty liaison with the female owner of a local doughnut store.” (Speaking of jokes that write themselves.)

Probably the best part of the sad Maywood story is the Maywood PD’s “stop and impound” policy. The department aggressively stopped people in the city and impounded their vehicles: 17,773 of them between 2/1/2002 and 4/30/2007, at a minimum of $200 an impound.

(If you were wondering, that averages out to a little over nine six impounds a day every day just in Maywood (excluding the ones in Cudahy; adding the Cudahy impounds back in gives a figure of a little over nine per day), in a city with an estimated population of 28,083 people based on 2000 Census figures. (Cudahy’s 2000 Census population was 24,208.) Maywood apparently has a large undocumented population, and there are estimates that the true and current figure is closer to 45,000 people.  I would like to know how that impound rate compares with other California cities of similar size to the combined cities; that’s one thing missing from the AG report. Worth pointing out is that Maywood elected a new city council in 2005; the new city council ordered the police to tone down traffic enforcement, and there was a significant reduction in impounds after that. So the per day average may actually be even higher, if you throw out the post-2005 period. Also worth mentioning, though I’m not really sure it relates to the Maywood PD issues, is that the new city council declared Maywood a “sanctuary city” around the same time.)

Oh, by the way, the towing company that the Maywood PD had an exclusive contract with? They allegedly paid for trips to Vegas for officers, allowed officers to purchase impounded cars, and provided catering services for officers while they worked checkpoints.

It shouldn’t come as a shock to any of my readers that many of the people targeted by the Maywood PD’s aggressive impounding program were illegal aliens. (After all, it’s no fun being an illegal alien.) More interestingly, there seems to have been a pattern of stopping and impounding drivers who didn’t have California driver’s licenses, but had valid licenses from other states or Mexico. In one case, they stopped a guy with a valid Oregon license for an expired registration; even though he presented proof that he had renewed the registration, they cited him for an expired registration and driving without a California license, confiscated the valid Oregon license, impounded the car (which was parked in an apartment complex parking lot at the time) for 30 days, and required the driver to pay $1,500 to get the car back. “The two officers involved failed to appear in court for the citations and the case was dismissed.”

If it was just the Maywood PD that was the problem, couldn’t they have shut the department down, let LA County take over policing, and maintain the city government? (As I recall, this is what Compton did.) According to the LAT in a June 25th article:

Maywood officials were put on notice last summer that the city would lose its insurance coverage unless they met a list of 20 conditions, which included hiring a permanent city manager.

[Interim City Manager Angela] Spaccia said that after checking with the nine major municipal insurance agencies, she learned that the city would have annual premium payments of $1.3 million and a deductible of $2 million.

Even if the Police Department were disbanded, Spaccia said, Maywood employees were considered such a risk that the insurance cost would remain the same.

Wow. How bad were things that even the non-police municipal employees were considered a risk? Were the guys in the building code department beating up people? Did they give Tasers to the fire department?

I shared the Pro Libertate link with Lawrence while I was writing this, and his comment was “this piece brings the words ‘New Rome‘ to mind”. Indeed. This isn’t about the budget crunch, or citizens being unwilling to pay for services, or Proposition 13; this is about a corrupt city government getting what was coming to them.

Edited to add: Lawrence asked a good question when he was reviewing a draft of this post: “Did the Maywood PD have a union?” I can’t find an answer to that question: Google turns up a lot of police unions around and in the area of Maywood, but no union specific to Maywood. However, in the process of searching, I did find the City of Maywood web site. Sure, the cops are thugs, crooked, or both. Sure, the city has trouble getting insurance. But hey!

The City of Maywood offers a free WiFi network service to residents, businesses and visitors.

How cool is that?

The coverage is highly dependent upon location and proximity to wireless access points along Atlantic Blvd. and Slauson Ave.

Oh. And here’s the Maywood PD web site. (.info?)

Random notes: July 2, 2010.

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Department of “The Jokes, They Just Write Themselves”:

Substance abuse research into Ozzy Osbourne’s DNA will cost genetics experts in Massachusetts $40,000 and take them three months to map out.

Today’s NYT has a followup article on the Ronell Wilson case, going into more detail on the legal issues. Basically, the death penalty sentence was overturned because prosecutors hammered that Wilson had not pled guilty, had refused to testify, but was claiming remorse. Several people in the article are quoted as wondering how the prosecution could have made “such a simple procedural mistake”. But I’m actually a little bit sympathetic to the prosecution: before the prosecution made their statements, Wilson was allowed to read a “statement of remorse” to the jury, without being cross-examined by the prosecution.

…in a penalty phase trial, “the defendant had the burden of proof of establishing that he was remorseful and that he accepted responsibility. When he argued that his unsworn, uncross-examined statement proved he was remorseful, the government should be allowed to say, ‘Don’t credit it because it wasn’t tested through cross-examination.’”

Loser update: Astros still hanging on to fifth place. Baltimore at 24-54, for a .308 (God’s caliber) winning percentage, projected to win 49.896 games over the 162 game season. Put another way, roughly 112 losses. Remember, though: we’re closing out the first half of the season. Things can change for the better (worse?) during the second half.

Push my buttons some more, please.

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

The French Culinary Institute has a blog, “Cooking Issues“, which they describe as a “Tech’N Stuff Blog”.

Boy howdy, they’re right. This seems to be the blog for Ferran Adrià fans.

For example, check out this post, in which the author describes the use of rotary evaporators in the kitchen.

Because rotovaps distill gently at low temperature under vacuum, they happen to also be good at preserving flavors — much better than traditional distillation.

Note that these machines were originally designed to be used in labs, for evaporating off solvents.

Fed up, I bought an early 80’s EL131 Buchi rotary evaporator on eBay the next year (they’re cheap at auction – check it out).

  1. I did check it out. The cheapest one I found was $1,500, and I’m not sure that was a complete unit. I’ll admit the 20-liter one is probably overkill for kitchen use. (Edited to add: Lawrence pointed out some cheaper ones that came up using different search terms, but many of those looked incomplete or non-functional.)
  2. I wonder if these would be legal in Texas without a permit. My reading of the DPS site suggests that these would fall under “distilling apparatus”.

Or you could make “stretchy chewy ice cream“. That actually sounds like a fun summer project for those of you who have kids.

I got a kick out of this quote:

We’ve been using our centrifuge to make cured olive oil.

Because, you know, everyone has a centrifuge in their kitchen. (But they seem to be much cheaper on eBay than rotovaps.)

TJIC actually tipped me off to this when he noted their post on using liquid nitrogen in the kitchen. Short version: be careful, this stuff will kill you dead.

Art, damn it, art! watch (#12 in a series).

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

I haven’t gone fishing in a long time, so let’s dig up some stinky old bait from the cooler and see what we can catch.

Vanity Fair asked a bunch of architects (as well as some architecture critics and “deans of architecture schools”) two questions:

  • what are the five most important buildings, bridges, or monuments constructed since 1980?
  • what is the greatest work of architecture thus far in the 21st century?

Here are the answers. Here is a slideshow (Warning! Slideshow!) of the top 21 buildings. Here’s a special slideshow (Warning! Slideshow!) of the work of one architect in particular. And here’s an article about that architect and his work.

Random notes: July 1, 2010.

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Happy Canada Day, everyone. I hope you’re able to celebrate in the traditional way, with beer and back bacon.

The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has overturned the death sentence for Ronell Wilson. Mr. Wilson was convicted of shooting two NYPD detectives, James Nemorin and Rodney Andrews, who were engaged in a gun purchase sting. According to the NYT, Mr. Wilson was the only defendant sentenced to death by a jury between “1988 through March 2008” (?), though prosecutors asked for the death sentence 19 times during that period.

In this case, the court just overturned the sentence, not the conviction:

The Court of Appeals’ ruling centered on two arguments that prosecutors made to the jury about Mr. Wilson’s remorse and acceptance of responsibility for the killings during the penalty phase of his trial. The judges noted that prosecutors used Mr. Wilson’s demand for a trial and his failure to plead guilty as evidence that he lacked remorse and refused to accept responsibility. The judges said prosecutors had argued to the jury that Mr. Wilson’s statement of remorse should be discredited because he failed to testify.

The WP is reporting that serious consideration is being given to awarding the Medal of Honor to a living person. That person is not named in the WP article, and the nomination is still being reviewed by the White House. This is significant because every Medal of Honor awarded since Vietnam has been posthumous.

Edited to add: Florida has banned ownership of “Burmese pythons and six other large, exotic reptile species” effective today. As noted in this space previously, the state has a bit of a python problem:

Many of the creatures have escaped or been set loose by pet owners and that’s upsetting Florida’s ecology as they prey almost unchecked on native birds and animals.

Apparently, existing owners will be able to keep their snakes. This is amusing:

The ban applies as well to reticulated, northern African, southern African and Amethystine pythons, green anacondas and Nile monitor lizards, but the main focus is on Burmese pythons.

Estimates of their presence in the wild have ranged as high as 100,000, but the state’s first python hunting season ended in April without a single snake reported caught. Conservation officials said unseasonably cold weather, instead, may have killed up to half the pythons.

No snakes caught? Darn. (I was actually discussing the possibility of getting together a python hunting expedition with some of my co-workers, but none of us owns the proper weapon.)