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Cameras for the win: drug suspect turns tables on NYPD

Posted on June 14th, 2009 at 10:10am by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://news.yahoo.com/…

When undercover detectives busted Jose and Maximo Colon last year for selling cocaine at a seedy club in Queens, there was a glaring problem: The brothers hadn’t done anything wrong.

But proclaiming innocence wasn’t going to be good enough. The Dominican immigrants needed proof.

“I sat in the jail and thought … how could I prove this? What could I do?” Jose, 24, recalled in Spanish during a recent interview.

As he glanced around a holding cell, the answer came to him: Security cameras. Since then, a vindicating video from the club’s cameras has spared the brothers a possible prison term, resulted in two officers’ arrest and become the basis for a multimillion-dollar lawsuit.

The officers, who are due back in court June 26, have pleaded not guilty, and New York Police Department officials have downplayed their case.

But the drug corruption case isn’t alone.

On May 13, another NYPD officer was arrested for plotting to invade a Manhattan apartment where he hoped to steal $900,000 in drug money. In another pending case, prosecutors in Brooklyn say officers were caught in a 2007 sting using seized drugs to reward a snitch for information. And in the Bronx, prosecutors have charged a detective with lying about a drug bust captured on a surveillance tape that contradicts her story.

Elsewhere, Philadelphia prosecutors dismissed more than a dozen drug and gun charges against a man last month when a narcotics officer was accused of making up information on search warrants.

The revelations in New York have triggered internal affairs inquiries, transfers of commanders and reviews of dozens of other arrests involving the accused officers. Many drug defendants’ cases have been tossed out. Others have won favorable plea deals.

The misconduct “strikes at the very heart of our system of justice and erodes public confidence in our courts,” said Bronx District Attorney Robert Johnson.

Despite the fallout, authorities describe the corruption allegations as aberrations in a city where officers daily make hundreds of drugs arrests that routinely hold up in court. They also note none of the cases involved accusations of organized crews of officers using their badges to steal or extort drugs or money for personal gain — the story line of full-blown corruption scandals from bygone eras.

Peter Moskos, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, agrees the majority of narcotics officers probably are clean. But he also believes the city’s unending war on drugs will always invite corruption by some who don’t think twice about framing suspects they’re convinced are guilty anyway.

Prohibition creates a black market and a black market creates a distorted market situation waiting to be exploited. And those who are most incentivized to exploit it are those closest to it with the most power to cover up their actions.

 

Philly narcotics officers raid bodega for mini Ziplock bags, disables surveillance system. Bodega left trashed, $10K missing.

Posted on April 5th, 2009 at 1:59pm by laur Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 1 Comment »

http://www.philly.com/

THE NARCOTICS officers knew they were being watched on video surveillance moments after they entered the bodega.

Officer Jeffrey Cujdik told store owner Jose Duran that police were in search of tiny ziplock bags often used to package drugs. But, during the September 2007 raid, Cujdik and fellow squad members seemed much more interested in finding every video camera in the West Oak Lane store.

“I got like seven or eight eyes,” shouted Officer Thomas Tolstoy, referring to the cameras, as the officers glanced up. “There’s one outside. There is one, two, three, four in the aisles, and there’s one right here somewhere.”

For the next several minutes, Tolstoy and other Narcotics Field Unit officers systematically cut wires to cameras until those “eyes” could no longer see.

Then, after the officers arrested Duran and took him to jail, nearly $10,000 in cash and cartons of Marlboros and Newports were missing from the locked, unattended store, Duran alleges. The officers guzzled sodas and scarfed down fresh turkey hoagies, Little Debbie fudge brownies and Cheez-Its, he said.

What the officers didn’t count on was that Duran’s high-tech video system had a hidden backup hard-drive. The backup downloaded the footage to his private Web site before the wires were cut.

Although Duran has no video of the alleged looting, he has a 10-minute video that shows the officers using a bread knife, pliers, milk crates and their hands to disable the surveillance system.

The officers didn’t “touch the money with the system looking,” said Duran, who came to the United States from the Dominican Republic 15 years ago and has no prior criminal record in Philadelphia.

They touched “the money after they destroy all the system,” he said.


Read More…

 

NJ proposing ban on genital waxing

Posted on March 18th, 2009 at 10:24pm by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://www.philly.com/…

Things could get hairy in New Jersey this summer for women who sport revealing bikinis or a little bit less.

The painful Brazilian wax and its intimate derivatives are in danger of being stripped from salon and spa menus if a recent proposal to ban genital waxing is passed by the state’s Board of Cosmetology and Hairstyling.

Cherry Hill salon owner Linda Orsuto said that women would “go ballistic” if the proposal passed. She said that some women would resort to waxing themselves, visiting unlicensed salons or traveling to other states, including Pennsylvania, in a quest to remain bare down there.

“The clients are going to freak,” said Orsuto, who owns 800 West Salon & Spa, on Route 70. “It’s a hot issue, and we’re going to have to do something.”

New Jersey statutes allow waxing of the face, neck, arms, legs and abdomen, but officials say that genital waxing has always been illegal, although not spelled out.

Regardless, almost every salon in South Jersey, from Atlantic City casinos to suburban strip malls, has been breaking the law for years by ridding women, and some men, of their pubic hair for $50 to $60 a session.

Jeff Lamm, a spokesman for New Jersey’s Division of Consumer Affairs, said that the proposal would specifically ban genital waxing, and was prompted by complaints to the board from two women who were injured and hospitalized. One of them sued. Lamm said that the state only investigates infractions if consumers complain.

Two South Jersey hospitals and a handful of dermatologists didn’t return requests for comment, and another hospital declined.

Dr. Eric Bernstein, a Philadelphia dermatologist, said that genital waxing could irritate or tear the skin and result in infections.

“But you can get an infection from almost anything,” he added. “The state is probably just looking out for the residents’ best interest, but they’ll have to enforce it.”

As if requiring a license to do it in the first place wasn’t bad enough?! Why?! What could they possibly gain from this?

 

American Militia Leader Speaks to The US Senate : Why are militias growing? You!

Posted on October 23rd, 2008 at 6:32am by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 3 Comments »

UPDATE:

I went to the YouTube user’s page illchemist07 to see what other videos they had. While watching NEW WORLD ORDER THIS IS WAR ! – American Resistance/Militia Rise I noticed at 2:12 a photo of the back of a jacket which read “DEATH TO THE NEW WORLD ORDER” and had an all seeing eye with a circle and bar through it. It looks like a Ron Paul Rally. Looks like the Philladelphia Ron Paul rally. Looks like the photo Laur or I took. Because it is.

I’ve no problem with people using anything from this site… but I’d appreciate being informed in its use.

 

A list of those leading the way toward fascist slavery

Posted on July 29th, 2008 at 11:42am by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://www.bethechangeinc.org/…

ServiceNation Summit Co-chairs:

  • Vartan Gregorian, President, Carnegie Corporation of New York
  • Caroline Kennedy, Vice-Chair, New York City Fund For Public Schools
  • Bill Novelli, CEO, AARP
  • Alma Powell, Chair, America’s Promise Alliance
  • Rick Stengel, Managing Editor, TIME Magazine

ServiceNation Leadership Council:

  • Andi Bernstein
  • Tom A. Bernstein, President and Co-founder, Chelsea Piers
  • Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor, New York, NY; Chairman, National September 11 Memorial and Museum
  • Cory Booker, Mayor, Newark, NJ
  • Richard H. Brodhead, President, Duke University
  • Neil Bush, CEO, Global XS
  • Geoffrey Canada, President and CEO, Harlem Children’s Zone
  • Mortimer Caplin, Former Commissioner, Internal Revenue Service
  • Vice Admiral Richard Carmona, Former U.S. Surgeon General
  • Jean Case, CEO, The Case Foundation
  • Richard Celeste, President, Colorado College
  • Ray Chambers, Amelior Foundation
  • Richard Cizik, Vice President, National Association of Evangelicals
  • Glenn Close, Actress
  • William Cohen, Former Secretary of Defense; Former U.S. Senator
  • Janet Langhart Cohen, Author; Founder, Citizen Patriot Organization
  • Scott Cowen, President, Tulane University
  • Tom Daschle, Former U.S. Senator
  • John J. DeGioia, President, Georgetown University
  • Manny Diaz, Mayor, Miami, FL
  • John Dilulio, Former Director, Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives; Author, The Godly Republic
  • Melinda Doolittle, Recording Artist
  • Paul Fireman, Founder, Reebok
  • Al From, Founder and CEO, Democratic Leadership Council
  • Susan Fuhrman, President, Teachers College, Columbia University
  • Mark Gearan, President, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
  • David Gergen, Professor of Public Service and Director, Center for Public Leadership, Harvard University
  • Michael Gerson, Columnist, The Washington Post
  • Stephen Goldsmith, Former Mayor, Indianapolis, IN
  • Jennifer Granholm, Governor, Michigan
  • Rabbi Irving Greenberg, Theologian; Author, The Jewish Way; Founding President, Jewish Life Network
  • Amy Gutmann, President, University of Pennsylvania
  • Lee Hamilton, Former Congressman; Former Co-chair, 9/11 Commission and Iraq Study Group
  • Jenny Chin Hansen, President, AARP
  • Gary Hart, Former U.S. Senator
  • Admiral James R. Hogg, USN (Ret), Director, Strategic Studies Group, Naval War College
  • James J. Jensen
  • Martin Luther King, III, Chairman, Realizing the Dream
  • Joel Klein, Chancellor, New York City Public Schools
  • Sherry Lansing, Founder, The Sherry Lansing Foundation
  • Jim Leach, Former Congressman; John L. Weinberg Professor of Public and International Affairs, Woodrow   Wilson School, Princeton University
  • Anthony Marx, President, Amherst College
  • Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, Chairman, American Red Cross
  • Sam Nunn, Former U.S. Senator
  • Michael Nutter, Mayor, Philadelphia, PA
  • Martin O’Malley, Governor, Maryland
  • Lt. General Dave R. Palmer, USA (Ret), Former Superintendent, U.S. Military Academy at West Point; Author
  • David Paterson, Governor, New York
  • Kal Penn, Actor
  • Gregg Petersmeyer, Former Assistant to the President; Director, Office of National Service under George H.W. Bush
  • Peter G. Peterson, Founder and Chairman, Peter G. Peterson Foundation; Co-founder, Blackstone Group Management
  • Rob Portman, Former Congressman; Former Director, Office of Management and Budget
  • Samantha Power, Anna Lindh Professor of Practice of Global Leadership and Public Policy, Harvard University; Author
  • Marc Racicot, Former Governor, Montana
  • Susan Rice, Foreign Policy Advisor, Obama for America
  • Bill Richardson, Governor, New Mexico
  • David Shaw, Managing Partner, Black Point Group
  • Rodney Slater, Former Secretary of Transportation; Chair, United Way of America
  • Laurie M. Tisch, President, Laurie M. Tisch Illumination Fund
  • Paul Vallas, Superintendent, New Orleans Recovery School District
  • David Walker, President and CEO, Peter G. Peterson Foundation
  • Silda Wall, Founder, Children For Children
  • Rick Warren, Senior Pastor, Saddleback Church; Author, A Purpose Driven Life
  • Harris Wofford, Former U.S. Senator; Former CEO, Corporation for National & Community Service

Is it surprising that a large portion of those in support are directly or indirectly government bureaucrats?

 

McCain: “You know the economists?”

Posted on June 24th, 2008 at 7:30pm by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://news.yahoo.com/…

John McCain’s model for ginning up the economy isn’t Keynesian or Milton Friedmanite. It’s EBay Inc.

The presumptive Republican presidential nominee regularly asserts that 1.3 million people worldwide “make a living off EBay.” He holds up the figure as evidence the world’s largest Internet auctioneer is a model for job and economic growth.

McCain, seeking to address voter anxiety about the economy, uses EBay to signal that he is “fundamentally optimistic about the capacity of the U.S. economy to innovate, for that innovation to give new opportunities for jobs,” said Doug Holtz-Eakin, the candidate’s senior economic adviser. “We shouldn’t be obsessed with looking backwards all the time, and saying, `Gee, where did those jobs go?”’

This affection for EBay as an engine for job creation, however, confounds economists such as Betsey Stevenson, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business in Philadelphia.

“In terms of jobs, there’s no net increase in GDP that comes from trading stuff that’s already made,” said Stevenson, author of a study on the Internet and employment levels. “New people selling stuff out of their closet on EBay isn’t growing the economy.”

“It’s an example of good old-fashioned U.S. ingenuity, but selling used products is a limited business model,” said Ethan Harris, the chief economist at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in New York. San Jose, California-based EBay transformed what was an “incredibly inefficient market for junk and turned it into a very efficient market for junk.”

McCain may not accept such criticism. He has shown increasing disdain for any economist who questions his policy prescriptions. Earlier this month, he lashed out at critics of his proposal for a summer gas-tax holiday.

“You know the economists?” McCain said June 12 at Federal Hall, near the New York Stock Exchange. “They’re the same ones that didn’t predict this housing crisis we’re in. They’re the same ones that didn’t predict the dot-com meltdown. They’re the same ones that didn’t predict the inflation that’s staring us in the face today.”

You know the economists? The ones that claimed we aren’t in a recession.

Oh wait!!! You aren’t an economist.

You just surround yourself with them. The ones who are fully versed in kindergarten level economic theory. Not to insult kindergartners.

Not that you aren’t well read. (skip to 2min 30 seconds in)

John, you do realize that there were economists who predicted the housing crisis and the dot-com meltdown and the inflation “that’s staring us in the face today.” They come from the Austrian school of economics and you had one of them on stage with you. Ron Paul is his name and if you’d like to start looking into this school of thought I’m sure he’d be more then happy to help you out.

 


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