Quote from Ford’s testimony spray-painted on Yale Law School entrance

A quote from Christine Blasey Ford’s Senate testimony against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh was spray-painted outside the entrance to Yale Law School before being removed later on Monday.

…“Indelible in the hippocampus is the laughter …” was written on the concrete in paint.

Quote from Ford’s testimony spray-painted on Yale Law School entrance | TheHill

hmmm

Everyone saw the French Quarter attack. Few saw the mental health care failures behind it.

A review of Paul’s UMC medical records by NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune raised significant questions. Four hours after he was admitted, a doctor wrote that Paul was “having auditory hallucinations” and that he was “a potential threat to himself and other people as well as gravely disabled.” 

This assessment gave the hospital a legal right to involuntarily commit Paul for up to three days for observation and treatment, with the possibility of holding him an additional 12 days following a re-examination by the coroner. And yet doctors still chose to discharge him, just one day later.

Behavioral health experts said this is not uncommon, that people in need of psychiatric treatment are released on a regular basis, a result of the state’s gutting of its mental health care funding and infrastructure.

…Paul is one of hundreds of homeless kids who cycle through Covenant House and other outreach programs every year, Foots said, many suffering from the same mental health disorders as him, some more severe. If the level of care doesn’t improve, and if hospitals continue to turn away people in need because they lack the necessary beds and funding, she fears what happened to Paul and the men he injured could become more commonplace.

“I work with these kids every day and I know they are all very troubled,” Foots said. “I see their mental illness, but they rarely get the help they need. Just like Dejuan. Those damn voices in his head got ahold of him and he just lost it.” 

…He paced frantically while hitting himself and repeating, over and over again, that he needed his medicine. 

Then, as if someone pulled a string, he slumped to the floor near the kitchen. 

Foots knelt down, her face inches from Paul’s, and locked eyes with him. She said he needed to focus, that he was in control of his mind, no one else. Ignore the people in your head, she instructed him. Staff members told Foots to keep her distance. She refused. 

…“The police told me when they got him, ‘At least he’s going to emergency. They’re going to give him some medicine. He’s going to be better and everything is going to be good,’” Foots said. “And that’s what I told Dejuan, but that’s not what happened.”

…Paul was given 10 mg of Zyprexa, an antipsychotic typically prescribed to people with bipolar disorder or schizophrenia. A toxicology screen came back positive for marijuana. Paul confessed that he smoked marijuana every day since he was 15 and that over the past several weeks he had rarely slept more than four hours a night. 

…According to his medical records, Paul told the doctors at UMC he had “racing thoughts about everything and feels stuck in his own head.” If he could get some Vyvanse, a drug prescribed to people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, he said he would feel “much better and everything would be OK.”

…In this case, however, despite receiving confirmation of Paul’s diagnosis and prior care, UMC doctors refused to give him his medication, his medical records show. There was no explanation provided in the records. 

…Warden Perry Stagg, who was seated nearby, interjected to ask Paul if he had been given his medication at the prison. When Paul said no, that the nurse said they can’t prescribe it, Stagg said they would try to figure out potential substitutes “to get him back where he needs to be.”

Since former Gov. Bobby Jindal gutted the mental health care system, taking care of people like Paul has become part of the prison’s job, Stagg said. 

“Unfortunately, the Department of Corrections has become the de facto mental health hospital for the state,” he said. “We need to get these mental health services back available on the street and try to catch some of these guys before they commit a crime.”

…“I’m an old, conservative Republican, a lock‘em up and throw away the key kind of guy. Until I came to the Department of Corrections and realized that, hey, that’s not always the answer. There are reasons for some of this stuff and some of this stuff can be corrected.”

Everyone saw the French Quarter attack. Few saw the mental health care failures behind it. | NOLA.com

hmmmm

‘I don’t forgive this woman’: Black boy wrongly accused of grabbing white woman

With tears streaming down his cheeks, a 9-year-old black child spoke out at a community meeting in New York about being wrongly accused of grabbing a white woman’s backside in a corner store — an incident disproved by security-camera footage.

Footage from inside the store showed the boy’s book bag grazing Klein’s butt. His hands, which didn’t touch her, were in plain sight on the video.

…Jeremiah and his sister, dressed in school uniforms and carrying shopping bags, could be seen and heard crying and calling for their mother as she and other customers and residents tried to address Klein’s accusations.

…”I don’t forgive this woman, and she needs help,” he said.

‘I don’t forgive this woman’: Black boy wrongly accused of grabbing white woman | abc7ny.com

Good for you, young man. You shouldn’t and she definitely does.

The Lessons of ‘Golfcart Gail’

Of course, we as white people should be more conscious of our privilege and biases, but for a more immediate fix, I’ll say this — right now, if you are a white woman who sees someone black doing something, anything, think long and hard before you call the police. “Golfcart Gail” is taken, but there are a lot of alliterative nicknames still out there.

The Lessons of ‘Golfcart Gail’

yup

Golfcart Gail calls cops on black dad at his kid’s soccer game

‘Golfcart Gail’ calls cops on black dad at his kid’s soccer game

The Deputy was out of line for saying it was OK to waste tax payer resources with racist nuisance calls. It may be legal but it shouldn’t be.

BTW, here she is:
https://twitter.com/uterati_rampage/status/1053088845229711360 

Retired firefighter found guilty for shooting at lost black teen on doorstep

The ex-firefighter claimed he believed he was being robbed and the shotgun accidentally fired when he tripped. But police noted that home security footage of the incident — which was only shown to the jury this week — showed that Zeigler clearly aimed at Walker.

Retired firefighter found guilty for shooting at lost black teen on doorstep

hmmmm

The Five-Year-Old Who Was Detained at the Border and Persuaded to Sign Away Her Rights

Helen’s mother, Jeny, had migrated to Texas four years earlier, and Noehmi planned to seek legal refuge there. 

…Noehmi said that the official told her, “Don’t make things too difficult,” and pulled Helen from her arms. “The girl will stay here,” he said, “and you’ll be deported.” Helen cried as he escorted her from the room and out of sight. 

…The next day, authorities—likely from the Office of Refugee Resettlement (O.R.R.)—called to say that they were holding Helen at a shelter near Houston; according to Noehmi, they wouldn’t say exactly where. 

…According to a long-standing legal precedent known as the Flores settlement, which established guidelines for keeping children in immigration detention, Helen had a right to a bond hearing before a judge; that hearing would have likely hastened her release from government custody and her return to her family. At the time of her apprehension, in fact, Helen checked a box on a line that read, “I do request an immigration judge,” asserting her legal right to have her custody reviewed. But, in early August, an unknown official handed Helen a legal document, a “Request for a Flores Bond Hearing,” which described a set of legal proceedings and rights that would have been difficult for Helen to comprehend. (“In a Flores bond hearing, an immigration judge reviews your case to determine whether you pose a danger to the community,” the document began.) On Helen’s form, which was filled out with assistance from officials, there is a checked box next to a line that says, “I withdraw my previous request for a Flores bond hearing.” Beneath that line, the five-year-old signed her name in wobbly letters.

The Five-Year-Old Who Was Detained at the Border and Persuaded to Sign Away Her Rights | The New Yorker

Jeezus….

Deported parents may lose kids to adoption, investigation finds

It had been 10 weeks since Ramos had last held her 2-year-old, Alexa. Ten weeks since she was arrested crossing the border into Texas and U.S. immigration authorities seized her daughter and told her she would never see the girl again.

What followed — one foster family’s initially successful attempt to win full custody of Alexa — reveals what could happen to some of the infants, children and teens taken from their families at the border under a Trump administration policy earlier this year. 

…An Associated Press investigation drawing on hundreds of court documents, immigration records and interviews in the U.S. and Central America identified holes in the system that allow state court judges to grant custody of migrant children to American families — without notifying their parents.

And today, with hundreds of those mothers and fathers deported thousands of miles away, the risk has grown exponentially.

…Three days after their separation, court records show, the U.S. government labeled Alexa an “unaccompanied minor,” which meant she entered the bureaucracy for migrant youth, typically teens, who arrive in the U.S. alone. The toddler was issued a notice to appear on “a date to be set, at a time to be set, to show why you should not be removed from the United States.”

…It took 28 minutes for a judge in a rural courthouse near Lake Michigan to grant Alexa’s foster parents, Sherri and Kory Barr, temporary guardianship. Alexa’s mother and the little girl’s immigration attorney were not even notified about the proceedings.

…In Missouri, an American couple managed to permanently adopt a baby whose Guatemalan mother had been picked up in an immigration raid. That seven-year legal battle terminating the mother’s parental rights ended in 2014. In Nebraska, another Guatemalan mother prevailed and got her kids back, but it took five years and over $1 million in donated legal work.

Deported parents may lose kids to adoption, investigation finds

Jeezus…

Ohio boy’s business gets boost after neighbor calls cops on him for mowing lawn

“Who calls the police for everything? They should be glad the kids aren’t out here breaking their car windows out. They should be glad the kids aren’t out here stealing their cars. You called the police because the kids are out here cutting grass,” Lucille Holt says in the two-minute clip. “Who does that?”

The viral video has spawned a bunch of new business for Reggie, who said he is trying to save up money for new equipment to grow his business. Holt said her social media inbox has been overwhelmed with people looking to get their yards tended to by Reggie.

“Just give me a call,” the 12-year-old said. “I’ll be there on time.”

Ohio boy’s business gets boost after neighbor calls cops on him for mowing lawn – NY Daily News

Turned out way better than I thought it would…
Go, Reggie, go!

Laquan McDonald case: Jason Van Dyke takes the stand – CNN

Van Dyke faces two counts of first-degree murder, 16 counts of aggravated battery and one count of official misconduct in McDonald’s death. Van Dyke is white and McDonald was black. Prosecutors say Van Dyke fired unnecessarily within six seconds after arriving at the scene, striking McDonald 16 times.

…The teenager kept “advancing” on him, holding a knife, Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke testified Tuesday in his murder trial.

The 17-year-old had “huge white eyes, just staring right through me,” said Van Dyke, who is charged with killing McDonald in October 2014. Standing about 10 to 15 feet away, McDonald “turned his torso towards me,” the officer testified.

…Van Dyke said the dashcam video “may not show” McDonald trying to get up after he was shot.

…Van Dyke told Gleason he decided to stop shooting when he realized McDonald had hit the ground. He said he lowered his weapon, reassessed and continued firing “on my approach.”

“So, as you’re approaching him while he’s on the ground, you’re continuing to shoot him?” Gleason asked.

…”In that six seconds, he got a lot closer to me than I ever could have gotten away from him around the squad car,” he said.

“And you got a lot closer to him, too, didn’t you?” Gleason said.

Van Dyke said: “I know that now, yeah.”

Laquan McDonald case: Jason Van Dyke takes the stand – CNN

Being paranoid and delusional is not a defense for murder, even if you carry a badge.

Why the ACLU says Philly bail practices are unconstitutional

Conducted by video in a 24-hour courtroom in the basement of the Criminal Justice Center, the average preliminary arraignment hearing lasts less than 2½ minutes — during which defendants are typically warned not to speak. Bail commissioners almost never consider a defendant’s ability to pay, and routinely set money bail for people they’ve already identified as indigent. The result is, often, de facto pretrial detention.

That’s according to the Pennsylvania ACLU, which observed 650 bail hearings this year and summarized the findings in a searing Sept. 11 letter to the leadership of the Philadelphia courts, also known as the First Judicial District (FJD).

…Even as Philadelphia has invested in pretrial services to improve its court-appearance rate to 95 percent — part of a $6.1 million investment ignited by a MacArthur Foundation grant to reduce the jail population — ACLU observers reported that four out of the city’s six bail magistrates never referred defendants to such services, instead relying solely on money bail as a condition of release.

…People who are locked up pretrial are …more likely to commit future offenses, according to one analysis of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh bail systems. Researchers have found even a few days in jail can be destabilizing, causing people to lose jobs, housing, custody and benefits.

…A 2016 Inquirer analysis found that bail commissioners routinely set bail for teens facing adult charges far above guidelines, at an average of $248,000, without considering holding a full hearing or considering the youths’ ability to pay. In 2016, the U.S. Court of Appeals’ Third Circuit weighed in on the Lehigh County case of Joseph Curry, who was jailed for months on $20,000 bail for trying to scam a Walmart out of $130.27, and eventually took a plea deal so he could go home; the court described such bail practices as a “threat to equal justice under the law.”

Why the ACLU says Philly bail practices are unconstitutional

Yep.

Krasner Announces Big Shakeup in Homicide Unit of Philly DA’s Office

While the new memos are perhaps not so immediately attention-grabbing as the one he released shortly after taking office, which drastically curtailed prostitution and marijuana prosecutions — “Do not charge possession of marijuana regardless of weight,” the memo read — they do present Krasner, who has been knocked by political opponents for lacking administrative experience, as interested in doing significant bureaucratic business.

…Krasner’s marquee change is enlarging the scope of the office’s Homicide Unit to incorporate nonfatal shootings. He also announced the combination of several units, including the insurance and government fraud groups, into an office to prosecute economic crimes.

…Attorney Jonathan Mandel, a criminal defense attorney and former prosecutor in Los Angeles, says he loves the idea. There are often too many chiefs, he says, in a DA’s office. “You’re talking about taking the most violent crimes and putting them in one unit and prioritizing them,” Mandel says, “and that makes sense to me administratively and as a statement about priorities.”

…Krasner also cites the new unit as a potential boon to investigations, noting that the city experiences a lot of retaliatory shootings, cases in which an attempted murder or an aggravated assault leads to someone else being shot or killed. The new department will be better able to coordinate the office’s response, says Krasner, in connected cases.

Krasner Announces Big Shakeup in Homicide Unit of DA’s Office

hmmmm