law enforcement

Madison's State Street - Wasting over $3 Million a Year

Waxing America's picture

This week's Isthmus features an article, Chronic pains detailing the problems of a few dozen offenders who accounted for almost 400 police contacts in the State Street area during a five month period.

The two men were no ordinary criminals...Each person on the list of 24 had 10 or more contacts with police in the first five months of 2008. Lindsey, 41, was one of the worst: From January to June, he had 42 recorded police contacts, including being sent to Dane County's detox center 16 times...

The study group found that 98 people were responsible for nearly 800 police contacts downtown during this brief period.

An examination of the repeaters shows that almost all of them were either homeless, suffered from mental illness, or had a drug-alcohol dependency problems.

What is so shocking is that a similar study was done over ten years ago.

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On Traffic Checkpoints, Part Two, Or, When Does Safety Become Siege?

Uppity Wisconsin's picture

We gathered yesterday, Gentle Reader, for a discussion of the constitutionality of highway sobriety checkpoints.

In yesterday’s episode we learned that the Fourth Amendment, according to the Supreme Court, can be ignored if the challenges of enforcing the law seem too burdensome for the Government...and we learned that despite a history stretching all the way back to the 1700s and the British case Entick v. Carrington, the Court was, for the first time, willing to allow general search warrants on American soil.

Today we take the history a bit further...and then we talk about what happens when freedom is given away...and sadly, we need look no further than a few miles from the Capitol Building, in Washington DC itself, to see exactly what happens when freedom is suddenly gone and a community is placed under siege by the police—all, we suppose, for the community’s own good.

We have a lot of ground to cover, so we best get out on the proverbial road—and let’s see if we can avoid our own roadblocks along the way.

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The Next Cheney

The DNC has updated its site The Next Cheney to educate voters on McCain's running mate.
With John McCain and his new running mate offering more of the same lies and distortions on the campaign trail, the Democratic National Committee today relaunched its website www.TheNextCheney.com. Since McCain chose Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate, the American people have learned that she suffers from ethics problems, held secret Cheney-style energy hearings, and relied on the same old crowd of Republican lobbyists to steer earmarks back to Alaska. Since McCain and his campaign have refused to run on the real McCain-Palin record, the DNC is setting the record straight at www.TheNextCheney.com.
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AG Special Election: Cordray continues to impress; Crites continues to depress (the GOP)

Hey, let's not forget that there's a special election this Novemeber for the Ohio Attorney General.  Although, with news like this, it's hard to avoid getting complacant.

The Columbus Dispatch reported on the latest fundraising numbers for the Attorney General special election.  Let's just say that Crites has failed to impresss:

Democratic state Treasurer Richard Cordray is sitting on nearly 30 times as much campaign cash as his Republican opponent for attorney general, former federal prosecutor Mike Crites, campaign reports released yesterday show.

Candidates with a 30 to 1 cash-on-hand advantage don't lose elections.  Period.

In the month of August, Cordray raised over $299k; Crites raised $75k.  That means that Cordray raised almost four times the amount Crites did in the same period.  And worse yet, Crites $75k is inflated.  Nearly half of the money Crites "raised" came in the form of donations made by the Ohio Republican Party.  Without his state party bankrolling his campaign, Crites' campaign would look even weaker.

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