Ex-CIA officer says she’s being forced to testify in Italy on ‘rendition’ 

A former CIA officer spared jail time in Italy tells Fox News that despite her commutation, she may be forced to testify to Italian lawmakers about the secret post-9/11 “rendition” program – and warns the testimony could be extremely damaging.

Ex-CIA officer says she’s being forced to testify in Italy on ‘rendition’ | Fox News

hmmm

Georgia officials dismiss 89 cases linked to fired officers shown kicking, punching motorist 

Georgia officials dismiss 89 cases linked to fired officers shown kicking, punching motorist – ABC News

Not that it should be anything out of the ordinary at all but, when taken in context of how these things usually play out, it is actually impressive to see a dept. take such swift and decisive action against its own members.

United Airlines incident: What went wrong? 

One of the security officers involved in the incident was suspended on Monday afternoon, pending a review, said the Chicago Department of Aviation in a statement.

The actions of the officer were “obviously not condoned by the Department”, the statement said.

United Airlines incident: What went wrong? – BBC News

A glimmer off reality peeks into the minds of the powers that be.

United finds a new way to make itself — and the U.S. airline industry — look awful 

United CEO Oscar Munoz then made things worse with statement of Orwellian doublespeak. “This is an upsetting event to all of us here at United,” he said. “I apologize for having to re-accommodate these customers,” whatever that means.

…What sort of training United offers its personnel to manage such episodes isn’t known, but plainly it stinks.

What’s even more important is what this episode says about the terms and conditions of air travel in the United States. It’s in a bad way.

…How many businesses do you know of that can sell you a good or service, accept payment, and then withdraw that good or service unilaterally for their own purposes — much less by force?

…The airline decided to cheap out by not offering passengers payment that would be enough to free up more seats. Instead of paying the true value of moving its crew, it decided to impose that cost on one unfortunate passenger.

Then, as though to prove beyond doubt that it considered its passengers the expendable players in this drama, it summoned the Chicago police to do its dirty work. Something’s wrong with the intellects running United Airlines, and if there’s any justice in the world, now they’ll really pay.

United finds a new way to make itself — and the U.S. airline industry — look awful – LA Times

Yup. And the Chicago police need to rethink their draconian policies and behavior as well. HEre’s hoping every officer involved goes to jail for the inhumane  injustice they perpetrated to protect money over people.

Why Should Police Help United Airlines Cheat Its Customers? 

While United’s customer service policies in this case are clearly heinous and absurd, let’s not forget to also cast blame on the police officers who actually committed the brutality on United’s behalf. NPR reports that the cops attacking the man “appear to be wearing the uniforms of Chicago aviation police.

“While there may be something to be said for the ability for private businesses to summon the help of the police to remove people from their premises if they refuse to leave peacefully and their presence is unwanted, there is no excuse for the police to cooperate when the reason their presence is unwanted is not “causing a disturbance” or being violent or threatening to other customers, or stealing goods or services, or doing anything wrong at all, but rather wanting to peacefully use the service they legitimately paid for.

Shame on both United for calling the cops on a passenger to make the lives of their employees and business easier, and shame on the police for having any part of it.

Why Should Police Help United Airlines Cheat Its Customers? – Hit & Run : Reason.com

Indeed. Apparently the Chicago PD are no different than thugs-for-hire by gangsters and organized crime. Fuck justice, reason, protecting the citizenry, and doing what is right. They’ll be violent with someone for no other reason than someone with a lot of money told them to.

Scum.

Jeff Bonar resigns: Flagstaff officer caught on camera punching woman 

The Flagstaff Police Department found that Jeff Bonar violated policies on unreasonable and excessive force, and it will be turned over to prosecutors for review for criminal charges

Jeff Bonar resigns: Flagstaff officer caught on camera punching woman – CBS News

Hope they convict his swine ass, throw him in jail, and throw away the key. It really, really should be an aggravated charge and immediate loss of both job and pension every single time an officer of the law is violent with a civilian. Every single time. Anything else is just permission for the officers to piss all over the laws they are supposed to uphold,.

Louisiana Officer Gets 40 Years for Killing Autistic Boy 

Derrick Stafford was convicted of killing 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis in 2015

Louisiana Officer Gets 40 Years for Killing Autistic Boy | Time.com

Baby-steps towards progress. Hope this little piggy cries himself to sleep every night and receives the same mercy from he cell mates (none) that he displayed when he murdered a child. For the entire 40 year sentence.

U.S. Man Is Suing After ICE Holds Him in Jail for 3 Weeks While Trying to Deport Him

Guatemalan-born Rony Chávez Aguilar tried to tell agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Chicago Field Office (ICE) that he has been a U.S. citizen for 16 years, but they didn’t believe him.

U.S. Man Is Suing After ICE Holds Him in Jail for 3 Weeks While Trying to Deport Him

While a criminal is not the most sympathetic victim, this is still sort of insane. ICE is an out of control gestapo.

ACLU Report Details Horrors Suffered by Orleans Parish Prisoners in Wake of Hurricane Katrina 

The report documents the experiences of thousands of men, women and children who were abandoned at Orleans Parish Prison (OPP) in the days after the storm. “The prisoners inside the Orleans Parish Prison suffered some of the worst horrors of Hurricane Katrina,” said Eric Balaban, a staff attorney for the National Prison Project. “Because society views prisoners as second-class citizens, their stories have largely gone unnoticed and therefore untold.”

…The ACLU report describes a history of neglect at Orleans Parish Prison, one of the most dangerous and mismanaged jails in the country. This culture of neglect was evident in the days before Katrina, when the sheriff declared that the prisoners would remain “where they belong,” despite the mayor’s decision to declare the city’s first-ever mandatory evacuation. OPP even accepted prisoners, including juveniles as young as 10, from other facilities to ride out the storm. As floodwaters rose in the OPP buildings, power was lost, and entire buildings were plunged into darkness. Deputies left their posts wholesale, leaving behind prisoners in locked cells, some standing in sewage-tainted water up to their chests.

…Prisoners went days without food, water and ventilation, and deputies admit that they received no emergency training and were entirely unaware of any evacuation plan. Even some prison guards were left locked in at their posts to fend for themselves, unable to provide assistance to prisoners in need.

Among the people profiled in the ACLU report are:

– Ivy Gisclair, who was being held at OPP for $700 in traffic violations (mostly parking tickets) and had never been in any serious trouble with the law. After days in OPP following the storm, Ivy was transferred to Hunt, where he witnessed stabbings, rapes and countless fights. Ivy was finally transferred to Bossier Parish Maximum Security Prison. His release date came and went. When he asked a guard about it, he was pepper sprayed, repeatedly shocked with a Taser, beaten by multiple guards, and put in solitary confinement with no clothes. Ivy was released in an orange prison jumpsuit at a gas station by the side of the road, three weeks after his scheduled release date. It was the day of Hurricane Rita.

– Renard Reed, a guard at OPP’s psychiatric ward who reported to work before the hurricane out of a sense of camaraderie and shared responsibility. Like many other guards, Renard was locked in during his shift to prevent desertion, and was then ordered to go to the roof with a shotgun and shoot anyone trying to leave one of the flooded buildings. He was still stranded at the prison long after the prisoners were evacuated.

– Ashley George, a 13-year-old girl housed in OPP’s Youth Center, who was moved to an area adjacent to an adult male holding area where the men watched her use the toilet. As the building began to flood, Ashley spent days in water up to her neck. Adult prisoners rescued Ashley and the other children from the waters. After being taken to the bridge for evacuation, Ashley was lucky enough to be given a bag of potato chips and water. She reports again being forced to relieve herself publicly and that pregnant girls received no assistance or treatment.

ACLU Report Details Horrors Suffered by Orleans Parish Prisoners in Wake of Hurricane Katrina | American Civil Liberties Union

All these years later it still sickens me to think of how few people faced any consequences for the inhumane and dangerous treatment of others during the storm.

White House Addresses Trump’s Unorthodox Call to Preet Bharara 

Two days before the prosecutors were dismissed, Mr. Sessions held a conference call with them on a Justice Department initiative and offered no hint that they would soon be forced out.

Almost all of the 46 United States attorneys asked to resign on Friday have now done so, a Justice Department official said. The balance of the nation’s 94 United States attorneys had already resigned.

Career prosecutors are running most of the United States attorneys’ offices until the White House nominates successors for Senate confirmation.

Mr. Bharara announced on Saturday on Twitter that he had been fired after refusing to turn in his resignation. His public defiance came two days after he received the White House call.

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Former North Carolina police chief says he was detained at JFK Airport because of his name 

A retired police chief says he was detained at John F. Kennedy International Airport and held for 90 minutes earlier this month because of his name.

Former North Carolina police chief says he was detained at JFK Airport because of his name – Orlando Sentinel

Homeland security/border & customs are starting to sound as ignorant and incompetent as Trump.

Bharara was investigating Trump cabinet member before he was sacked 

Fired US Attorney Preet Bharara was investigating a key member of President Trump’s cabinet, a new report Friday revealed. Bharara was looking into allegations that Tom Price, he health and human services secretary and the administration’s point man on efforts to repeal and replace ObamaCare, improperly traded health care stocks while he was a member of the House of Representatives, ProPublica reported.

Bharara was investigating Trump cabinet member before he was sacked | New York Post

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California judge seeks to prevent immigration arrests inside state courts 

The chief justice of California’s Supreme Court on Thursday asked the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump to prevent immigration agents from arresting undocumented immigrants inside the state’s courthouses.

Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye said she was gravely troubled by recent reports that federal agents were “stalking undocumented immigrants in our courthouses to make arrests,” in a letter addressed to U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly.”

Courthouses should not be used as bait in the necessary enforcement of our country’s immigration law,” Cantil-Sakauye wrote.

California judge seeks to prevent immigration arrests inside state courts | Reuters

hmmmm