truesee's Blog

D.C. voting rights proponents' faith in Obama sinks

D.C. voting rights proponents’ faith in Obama sinks

 

Washington Post

Paul Schwartzman and Nikita Stewart

Saturday, April 16, 8:59 PM

 

President Obama’s arrival in the White House two years ago inspired unabashed optimism among civic leaders in the District, who had long yearned for an ally to trumpet their quest for statehood and voting rights in Congress.

As the country’s first black president, Obama’s words and biography suggested an innate appreciation for political disenfranchisement. If anyone could understand the plight of a second-class citizenry, it had to be a former community organizer on Chicago’s South Side.

That Obama has not met those expectations is disappointing enough for those who view the District’s status as nothing less than the deprivation of a basic civil right. But their frustration is magnified by who Obama is and what they wanted from an African American president residing in the nation’s most prominent and predominant black city.

“The expectations were very high that, since he had made human rights an important part of his platform, he would speak out for D.C.,” said Philip Pannell, a former member of the D.C. Democratic State Committee and longtime advocate for statehood. “It seems that President Obama’s heart and his conscience are missing in action.”

Obama is no different than his predecessors. No president has rushed to invest political capital in a city that Republicans have mocked as a symbol of urban dysfunction. What benefit could there be in championing the rights of 600,000 residents of a city with a sordid history of crime and political corruption?

Yet what distinguished Obama from his predecessors was the anticipation his arrival generated. In the past week, the same people who saw hope in Obama’s jaunts across the city just before his inauguration — remember that half-smoke he ate at Ben’s Chili Bowl? — have excoriated him for relegating the District to the status of bargaining chip in a broader budget game with House leaders.

“John, I’ll give you D.C. abortion,” Obama reportedly told House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) before reaching a deal, effectively trading away the city’s right to fund abortions for low­income women.

The District’s political leadership was infuriated.

In a city in which Obama won 93 percent of the vote, a D.C. Council member threatened to withhold her support in the next presidential election. The city’s congressional delegate shouted an invective on television. The mayor and six council members were handcuffed in a protest on Constitution Avenue.

After his release, Mayor Vincent C. Gray (D) called Obama’s stance on the abortion issue disheartening. “The District should not be a bargaining chip in budget negotiations at the national level,” he said.

A once iron-clad bond was now frayed.

“This is personal,” said Donna Brazile, a Democratic political strategist. “I believe the president is sincere when he says that he believes in D.C. voting rights and home rule. But, as you know, D.C. residents like proof.”

Mark Plotkin, a WTOP political commentator who has made District statehood something of an obsession, said he sees little to distinguish Obama from his Republican predecessor, George W. Bush. Bush angered voting rights advocates by refusing to place the D.C. “Taxation Without Representation” license plate on the presidential limousine. Obama also has not added the plate to his limousine.

“The greatest assault is indifference, and he has the hubris to take us for granted,” Plotkin said of Obama. “He went to Cairo to talk about democracy. He won’t go to Brentwood or Deanwood. He has not made one utterance about D.C. to D.C. in D.C.”

Asked about Obama’s relationship with the District, Hannah August, a White House spokeswoman, said: “Given the severe impact of a government shutdown on the Washington, D.C., economy, the president is confident that the budget agreement that he reached with congressional Republicans is not just in the best interests of the American people, but also the best interests of District residents.”

In North Michigan Park, among the city’s most politically active neighborhoods, the feeling is the budget compromise left the District in a “bad position,” said Ernest Harris, a retired federal employee.

“I didn’t expect him to just be able to do everything that we might want him to do. I understood that he wasn’t just the black president,” said Harris, 74. “But in terms of D.C., he’s throwing us under the bus. He caved too easily. He should have stood up. I know statehood and full representation is a long way off, but he’s taking us for granted. And he can’t do that anymore. . . . I’m not sure if I’m going to vote for him again over this.”

Shaky relationship

Presidents have long had a tenuous relationship with their host city. Richard M. Nixon ventured into the District in the early days of his first term, when he went to inspect the remnants of the 1968 riots along Seventh Street NW. Bill Clinton, as president-elect, went for a stroll along Georgia Avenue and then spent most of his next eight years here inside the White House. For a rare night on the town, George W. Bush preferred a Mexican restaurant in Virginia.

Beyond the marbled monuments, the District has not always provided an illustrious backdrop, whether it was when Marion Barry was caught smoking crack on videotape or when the city’s homicide rate earned it the title “Murder Capital,” or when the government fell into bankruptcy and Congress ordered its spending monitored by a financial control board.

Even as memories linger, the District is not the same city it was a generation ago. Since moving to the White House, Obama and first lady Michelle Obama have gone about town, whether to their daughter’s soccer games or to eat in restaurants or visit public schools.

The president has expressed support for the District’s cause, his strongest statement uttered as a Democratic candidate when he said, “Residents of Washington, D.C., shouldn’t be treated as tenants, fortunate enough to share the same space as our government.”

Obama was more cautious after his victory, describing himself as a “strong proponent” of voting rights even as he added that “this takes on a partisan flavor, and, you know, right now I think our legislative agenda is chock- full.”

A year ago, while commemorating D.C. Emancipation Day, Obama issued a statement that said in part: “I urge Congress to finally pass legislation that provides D.C. residents with voting representation and to take steps to improve the Home Rule Charter.”

That’s not enough for Robert Jenifer, 76, a Brookland resident who said he thinks that the District’s overwhelming support of Obama has not paid any dividends.

“He probably looks at the District and sees us as automatically supporting him because he’s our first black president,” Jenifer said. “But if you look, on many things, he doesn’t seem like he’s for us. So you have to look at it like your wife says to you: ‘What have you done for me lately?’ ”

A high demand

If D.C. civic leaders want more from Obama, they might be setting a demand that’s impossible to meet in this highly partisan town and for a president managing a full slate of national and international affairs, including two wars.

Even when Democrats held the White House and majorities in the House and Senate, advocates for the District were unable to advance their voting rights agenda.

“Nothing runs more deeply in American ideals than the promise of self-government and voting rights,” said American University law professor Jamie B. Raskin, a Maryland state senator from Montgomery County. “But nothing runs more deeply in American politics than the idea of keeping some people from voting and participating.”

What might be required to enact change, Raskin said, is a “mass movement of protest to test the conscience of the nation. It’s clear that President Obama does not intend to be the personal leader of a liberation struggle. He’s dealing with multiple crises. . . . This is not a crisis until the people of Washington make it one.”

Yet, Raskin added, the city’s traditional role and demographics “make it tricky.” While longtime residents make up a sizable portion of the population, many are transients, as has been the case since the District was established as the nation’s capital.

That complicated reality hasn’t stopped the District’s quest for autonomy, which reached a historic milestone in the early 1970s with Congress’s enactment of home rule. D.C. voters could choose their mayor and council, but the District could not enact a budget or other significant legislation without congressional review.

The quest for self-determination endures. A voting rights proposal died in Congress two years ago when Republicans made its passage contingent on repealing the city’s gun-control laws.

“Historically, it’s not an easy road, regardless of who’s in the White House,” said Douglas Patton, a former D.C. deputy mayor. “It’s just the history of presidents. Not second-class citizens.”

Entry #4,398

Seniors' sex lives are up- and so are STD rates

Seniors' sex lives are up — and so are STD rates

 

Marni Jameson, Orlando Sentinel

April 16, 2011

 

Across the nation, and especially in the Sunshine State, the free-love generation is continuing to enjoy an active — if not always healthy — sex life.

At a stage in life when many would expect sexually transmitted diseases to be waning, seniors are noticeably ahead of the national curve.

In the five years from 2005 to 2009, the number of reported cases of syphilis and chlamydia among those 55 and older increased 43 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

In Central Florida, the rise is even more dramatic. Among those 55 and older, the reported cases of syphilis and chlamydia increased 71 percent in that same five-year period. That puts Central Florida ahead of the state, which saw a 62 percent rise in those two sexually transmitted infections among the same age group.

The rates at which syphilis and chlamydia increased among older adults outpaced the nation's average. Among all age groups nationwide, reported cases of syphilis increased 60 percent between 2005 and 2009; among those in the 55 to 64 age group, it went up 70 percent. Meanwhile, the incidence of chlamydia rose 27 percent among all ages, and double that among the older group.

As a result of the national trend among seniors, Medicare is considering providing coverage for STD screenings for seniors. Last month, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid office announced that it was looking into adding STD exams to the national health insurance program, which already pays for HIV screenings. Medicare also is weighing the benefits of paying for behavioral counseling for sexually active seniors.

The factors driving the rise of STDs in the older set include Americans living longer, healthier lives and a new class of medications, which include Viagra, that's making more sex possible. Many older adults didn't get the safe-sex messages that younger generations received, say experts, so their condom use is lower. In addition, more seniors are living in group retirement communities where there's more socializing.

"These seniors may lose a spouse, then get lonely," said Dr. Jason Salagubang, a geriatrician on staff at Florida Hospital Apopka. "They're living in retirement communities with others in the same boat, and sparks fly."

Julia Gill, director of the division of disease control for the Florida Department of Health, says the heavy marketing for sex-enhancing pharmaceuticals aimed at seniors and Florida's lure as a retirement destination are likely causing the state's seniors — particularly those in Central Florida — to lead the trend.

"Certainly we've noted the change and will adjust our outreach, testing and marketing efforts to reflect that," Gill said.

Besides Viagra, other medications such as hormone replacements are helping seniors remain sexually active longer. Progesterone and estrogen creams help make sex more comfortable for women, while testosterone replacement drugs give libido a boost in both men and women.

Finally, a more open sexual attitude has contributed to the rising infection rate. "The flower children who were in their 20s back in the 1960s are now in their 70s," said Salagubang. "They're the make-love-not-war generation, and old habits die hard."

Not just for kids

Just because seniors are older and wiser, doesn't mean they're not susceptible to the same diseases as everyone else, Salagubang said. In fact, they're more susceptible.

As people age, their immune systems tend to weaken, and other health problems make them more prone to infection. Medications for heart disease, hypertension and diabetes also cause seniors to be more likely to pick up what's going around.

Because STDs often have no symptoms, they frequently go untreated and make seniors more prone to other infections, said Salagubang. And these infections will make other conditions, such as diabetes or heart disease, worse.

"If I think a patient may be sexually active, I suggest he or she gets screened," said Salagubang. "I let patients know that STDs and HIV are on the rise among seniors, and are a lot more common than many seniors think."

Although older Americans account for a relatively small proportion of new STD diagnoses overall, providing them education and services to help protect them from infection is critical, said Rachel Powell, CDC spokeswoman.

"Many older Americans face unique prevention challenges, including discomfort in discussing sexual behaviors with physicians and partners, and discomfort discussing condom use," she said.

Given the changing sexual climate for seniors, Dr. Connie Micklavzina, a gynecologist at Winnie Palmer Hospital in Orlando has started asking her older patients more questions, including whether they would like to be screened for sexually transmitted diseases.

"Often I see a huge look of relief on their faces, because they are too embarrassed to ask," said Micklavzina, who's been in practice 25 years. "The responsibility of bringing this up should be on the practitioner, not the patient, to make the conversation easier."

Practitioners should not make any assumptions based on a patient's age, or social or marital status, Micklavzina added. "It has nothing to do with it."

She also broaches the subject of condom use. "I'm surprised by the number of women in their 50s and 60s who aren't insisting that their partners use condoms."

A study conducted by sex researchers at Indiana University found that in the United States, condom use was lowest among men over age 50. Men in their 50s reported using a condom only 28 percent of the time with a casual partner. By comparison, men in the 18 to 39 age-range used a condom with casual partners at least 50 percent of the time.

"We often assume that younger people are at greater risk for sexual health challenges like HIV and STD," said Michael Reece, director of the Center for Sexual Health Promotion, at Indiana University. "However, these data suggest that younger Americans are using condoms more consistently than older Americans."

The fact that older Americans aren't worried about preventing pregnancy accounts for some of the lower condom use, but this age group clearly needs more education about the risks of unsafe sex, Reece said.

According to a 2007 study reported in the New England Journal of Medicine, 67 percent of men and 39 percent of women aged 65 to 74 surveyed reported having had sex in the previous year; 38 percent of men aged 75 to 85 reported the same.

"We should not be profiling people based on their age, and making assumptions about their sexual activity," said Dr. Stacey Landau, ob-gyn at the University of Chicago and author of the study. "Removing age-based profiling with respect to STD screenings is a good idea."

Entry #4,397

Woman freed from pet python

Woman freed from pet python

 

City to recognize Lyons police officer who saved owner from snake attack.

John Green - The Hutchinson News

LYONS - City officials here are preparing two citations after a pet 8-foot albino python attacked its owner earlier this week.

The first will recognize a part-time city police officer who reached into the jaws of the massive reptile and pried it from the neck of its owner.

The second, for the snake owner, is a ticket for harboring a vicious animal.

The incident began Tuesday when the homeowner pulled the snake from its cage to feed it, said Lyons Police Chief Chris Detmer.

"It grabbed her by the neck and latched on," Detmer said. "Her kids called 911."

Officer Max Bryant responded to the call.

"I was glad it was him," Detmer said. "Not too many guys will grab one of those."

Bryant grasped the snake by its snout and lower jaw and forced its mouth open.

The snake didn't wrap itself around the woman, Detmer said, so she was freed once the snake's jaws were opened.

The snake owner, a woman in her 20s, moved to the community late last year, the chief said.

She was treated at the local hospital for scratches to her neck and released.

"They don't have fangs," Detmer said of the python. "They've got small gripping teeth."

Detmer would not release the woman's name pending issuance of the citation.

The News was unable to reach Bryant for comment.

The chief and city attorney reviewed local ordinances and determined the snake is a vicious animal because of its propensity to commit an unprovoked attack.

Officials didn't require the snake be destroyed, but did demand it be removed from the home where there were children, Detmer said. A friend of the owner took the snake in.

"It's a little different deal in that it doesn't run around, like with a pit bull," Detmer said. "We don't really have to worry about it getting loose or going after little kids."

The chief noted it was the third albino python the department has had contact with, for various reasons, over the past several years. There is no prohibition against the snakes in city code.

"Some can get to 20-feet" long, Detmer said. "They can get big."

Bryant, who also works part-time at the Rice County jail, will receive a citation from the city, noting his bravery, during an upcoming City Council meeting, said City Manager John Sweet.

"That was a quick response," Sweet said. "I'm a retired Marine and I'm not sure I could do that."

Entry #4,396

Ex-judge reports to prison on drug-related charges

Ex-judge reports to prison on drug-related charges

 

National / World News 10:01 a.m. Friday, April 15, 2011

The Associated Press

ATLANTA — A former federal judge from Georgia who was sentenced to 30 days in prison for drug-related crimes involving a stripper has reported to a federal prison in Oklahoma.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons said Jack Camp reported Friday to the Federal Correctional Institute in El Reno, Okla.

Camp was arrested in a sting in October after authorities say he and the stripper made a drug buy from an undercover officer. The judge was sentenced in March after pleading guilty to three criminal charges in November.

The ex-judge said in court filings that his decades-long battle with depression and a bicycling accident in 2000 caused brain damage that led him to use drugs and start seeing the stripper.

 
Former Senior U.S. District Judge Jack T. Camp Jr. had no comment for the media as he exited federal court Friday, March 11, 2011, when he was sentenced.
 
Brant Sanderlin, AJC Former Senior U.S. District Judge Jack T. Camp Jr. had no comment for the media as he exited federal court Friday, March 11, 2011, when he was sentenced.
 
 
Whifield County Jail The former federal judge was charged with buying cocaine and other drugs from exotic dancer Sherry Ann Ramos and consuming them with her. She is shown here in a 2005 mug shot, before she went to prison for three years on a drug conviction.
 
Entry #4,395

Student handcuffed in fight over spilled milk

School lesson: Don't yell, run over spilled milk

 

Jeff Burton

Northwest Indiana Times

Thursday, April 14, 2011 8:16 pm

 

VALPARAISO | A 12-year-old student at Benjamin Franklin Middle School could face juvenile probation after a Tuesday altercation with the school resource officer.

According to Valparaiso police, the officer was monitoring the sixth grade lunch period Tuesday when a boy began arguing with a staff member who wanted the boy to clean up milk spilled across his table.

The officer said as he approached the boy, he kept yelling at the staff member. The officer said he repeatedly asked the boy to calm down and help clean the mess he created, but the boy started yelling at him.

After exhausting every warning, the officer told the boy he had to go with him to the principal's office. As he began escorting the boy, the officer said the boy continued yelling at him and tried pulling away from him a few times.

The officer said the boy eventually got away from him and began running through the hallways, nearly running into students.

Catching up with the boy, the officer said he wrapped his arms around him to stop him. The boy continued trying to pull away, the officer said, and eventually both wound up on the floor near the school's gymnasium, where the boy was handcuffed.

The officer took the boy to the school's office, where a teacher helped calm him down.

The boy was released to his father, police said. The matter was referred to the Juvenile Probation office for review.

Entry #4,392

Man Gets 6-12 Months After Yelling At Walmart Greeter Who Asked To See Receipt

Musician Loses Temper at Walmart Greeter, Sentenced to Year in Prison

 April 14, 2011

Bethleham, PA – James Maurice Barker, 45, was sentenced to six months to a year in prison at the Northampton County Prison and fined $750 for yelling, berating and threatening a Wal-Mart greeter who asked to see his receipt.

“I’m only a human being. I’m flawed, I made mistakes,” Barker said as he cried during his sentencing. “I just want to live my life.”

Barker claims he was working on an album with the Motown record label, and was visiting from the West Coast when he decided to take his two teenage sons shopping.

They drove around in a limo. Barker purchased around $1,000 worth of electronics from Wal-Mart and were taking the purchases out in a shopping cart when the store greeter approached them and asked to see the receipt.

Feeling “disrespected”, Barker started yelling and used expletives 20 to 30 times during his tirade.

After the confrontation, Barker and his sons left in the limo, which police eventually tracked down and found cocaine and a glass bong in the vehicle.

 

 LINK TO FOLLOW-UP STORY:

http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/bethlehem/index.ssf/2011/04/man_pleads_guilty_to_yelling_a.html#incart_hbx

Entry #4,391

Day Care Worker Charged With Assaulting Children

Day Care Worker Charged With Assaulting Children

Posted: 5:44 pm EDT April 14, 2011 Updated: 6:20 pm EDT April 14, 2011

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. -- Police arrested and charged a Kannapolis day care worker with assaulting children on Thursday.

 

Investigators said Whitney Belk was seen on day care surveillance video "manhandling" five different children at the Kids Korner day care in Kannapolis."
Police said they were alerted to the incidents after a parent complained.

The day care's administrator, Danielle Mauldin, told Eyewitness News the parent approached the staff last week.

"We were made aware of it, we watched the video tape and it did occur," Mauldin said.

Mauldin said Belk was immediately fired, and the day care fully cooperated with investigators.

The staff met with parents about the incident on Thursday.

One parent told Eyewitness News he was happy the day care acted so quickly, and intended to keep his son at the day care.

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.wsoctv.com/news/27549659/detail.html

 

Entry #4,389

Obama tells Republicans "You think we/re stupid"

Obama not embarrassed by unguarded comments

Christi Parsons

Tribune reporter

1:50 PM CDT, April 15, 2011

 

President Barack Obama said today he was not embarrassed by remarks made in Chicago and unintentionally released to the media in which he called some government workers “slugs” and said he told Republicans: “You think we’re stupid?”

The remarks, made at a Thursday night fundraiser at MK Chicago restaurant, came after reporters had been escorted from the room. But the comments were piped back to the White House press room, where a couple of reporters heard them and took notes.

The disclosure had some White House officials a bit red-faced, but when the president returned to Washington he said that his private remarks reflected what he has said in public, and that he is not embarrassed about anything he said.

Wire reports and Twitter updates of Obama's remarks show the president in casual mode, a rare thing to slip through his highly disciplined and scripted operation.

According to veteran newsman Mark Knoller, of CBS radio, Obama ridiculed GOP efforts to whittle away at health care reform “by nickel-and-diming me in the budget.”

Entry #4,388

It has come to this: Kid arrested for playing with toy gun

 

Johnson: It has come to this: Kid arrested for playing with toy gun

Bill Johnson
Denver Post Columnist
Posted: 04/15/2011 01:00:00 AM MDT

Amother's story . . .He still cries about it, mostly at night, when he appears at his mother's bedside and asks whether he can climb in.

He still does not know, exactly, what he did wrong. At odd times he will hug his brother, sister and mother so tightly that it hurts. He is in therapy now.

"What has happened will affect him for the rest of his life," his mother said.

Her name is Paula. She is 38, and the director of purchasing for a long-term care facility. Every night she cries, too.

Her son is 10. He was arrested April 1 for playing police officer with a broken BB gun he had found in the gutter and took onto the playground of his Lafayette elementary school, long after classes were over.

It happened March 31.

This is Paula's side of it. Authorities will not discuss the case because it involves a juvenile, the same reason we will not use Paula's last name here — to shield the boy's identity.

He was playing with a friend a little after 5 p.m. at Alicia Sanchez Elementary School, which sits across the street from the apartment where Paula moved after her divorce about a year ago.

Her son's friend had spotted the gun. It was a broken plastic Airsoft gun with soft plastic, yellow pellets inside.

Two boys on skateboards came over. They asked if it was a real gun. It is not real, Paula's boy told them. The boys rolled away on their skateboards and continued their play.

Paula could not believe it when the principal called her the next day. Police were on their way. Her son was being arrested.

"Mommy, please, no. Help me," he cried to her when the officer's handcuffs came out. It is the law, the officer told the woman when she protested.

"I'll get you out as soon as I can," she told her son. "You are going to have to be strong. We'll get through this."

It was a Friday. The boy was put in a juvenile detention center. There would be no bail because he was being held on two juvenile, felony-equivalent menacing charges. He would remain there until court on Monday.

Paula cried when she saw her boy being walked into court, handcuffed, a chain wrapped around his waist leading to shackles around his ankle.

"It screamed to me 'failed system,' " she recalled. "It was sickening. I mean, where were we? In a Third World nation?"

The judge set bail at $2,000 but allowed the boy to be released into a probation program under which he must check in with an officer twice a day. He can never be without adult supervision.

Social-services workers seemed embarrassed when they arrived to do a check at Paula's home. They also went to the home of her ex-husband, a retired military man.

"We both demanded it, and we were cleared," Paula said.

It's her fault, she sometimes thinks. Other times she burns with anger and the worry that others will think she is a bad mother.

She did not know the rules, she said. Maybe she should have sat her son down, told him of the Columbine massacre that spawned the rules. Goodness, she told herself, he wasn't even born then.

Maybe the schools, too, should have educated the kids in their care, that if they bring even a squirt gun to school on a hot day, it means police and handcuffs.

Paula learned that one just the other day while waiting for her boy in court.

Her son has been suspended from school. Proceedings are underway to expel him. His father's sister, a teacher, is home-schooling the boy.

And so everyday he looks through the sliding glass door at the school playground and the kids playing on it, understanding nothing of why he cannot play, too — only that he cannot.

Yes, this is where we are now.



Read more: Bill Johnson - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/billjohnson#ixzz1JeO78hxD
Entry #4,387

Police charged with slapping cuffed man

Chcago Tribune
Staff report

2:16 p.m. CDT, April 15, 2011

Brutality charges have been filed against a Chicago police sergeant caught on video slapping a handcuffed man -- but an attorney says the officer was justified because the suspect tried to spit on him.

“If I tried to spit on you, wouldn’t you find that offensive?” asked Robert Kuzas, who is representing Sgt. Edward Howard Jr., 48, a 24-year veteran of the police department. Howard is charged with aggravated battery and official misconduct.

The incident took place on Oct. 11, when Gregory Jeffries, 19, and two friends were arrested about 10:15 p.m. on charges of criminal trespass after walking out of a fast-food restaurant at 7904 S. Vincennes Ave., prosecutors said.

After Jeffries was handcuffed, Howard came on scene and walked up and hit Jeffries in the face three times with his open hand, prosecutors said. The final blow was strong enough to knock the man against a squad car, they said.

Jeffries suffered cuts, bruises and swelling to his face, prosecutors said. He and his mother reported the incident to the Independent Police Review Authority, and the case was referred to the state's attorney's office.

"Videotaped footage recovered from the restaurant's surveillance system corroborates both the victim and other eyewitness accounts of the defendant's abuse use of force against the handcuffed victim," the Cook County state's attorney's office said in a statement.

Shortly after the incident, Supt. Jody Weis stripped Howard and six officers of their police powers: Howard for the beating and the other officers are failing to report it.

Two of the officers were later cleared of wrongdoing after GPS proved they weren't at the scene. The two then filed a libel lawsuit against Weis, alleging they were falsely accused. Though Weis never identified Meuris and Vanna by name to the news media, he published their names in an internal communication sent to others in the Police Department, their attorney said.

Last month, Jeffries filed a federal lawsuit against the city and police officers. In it, he claimed he was hit several times by a sergeant, causing Jeffries to spit up blood.

During a bond hearing today, Assistant State’s Attorney Lauren Freeman said the video shows Jeffries was “fully compliant from the beginning to the end during his detention and arrest.”

“It show that he never acts in a physically provocative manner before the defendant strikes him each time,” Freeman said.

But Kuzas said Jeffries provoked the sergeant by clearing his throat and attempting to spit at Howard.

Asked if it gave the officer had a right to react the way he did, Kuzas said, “I definitely think it does.

“I don’t care who you are, if someone is trying to spit on you, of course you have a right to defend yourself,” he said.

Kuzas said Howard has been married for 24 years and has three children, and added that his friends and family are devastated by the allegations.

“This is truly a tragedy for him,” Kuzas said after court. “This is not at all reflective of the type of human being he is, the type of man he is or the type of police officer he is.”

Howard posted a $2,000 cash bond and walked out of the Criminal Courts Building at about 1:30 p.m., flanked by several supporters.

When a TV reporter backed into a fire hydrant and fell over, Howard said, “You OK, man?” He got into a waiting silver SUV without commenting to reporters on the charges against him.

LINK TO VIDEO: 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/videobeta/4fbeda68-14c3-4de6-b711-e37b885c1fd7/News/Unedited-Video-Police-Brutality-Case

Entry #4,386

Man Invents Can that Runs on Bourbon

Kentucky Man Invents Car that Runs on Makers Mark

April 14, 2011

The Daily Load 

 
Inventor Nilsson shows off bourbon powered vehicle

LOUISVILLE  - 62 year old Mickey Nilsson of Bardstown Kentucky, finally found a way to make his tinkering hobby pay off.  Inspired by the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Nilsson transformed a collection of “junk” into a motor vehicle that does not rely on foreign oil as it’s fuel source. His car is entirely powered by Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey.

“I was always a fan of Caractacus Potts (the Dick Van Dyke character) from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” said Nilsson. “He was pretty good at re-purposing junk. Always admired that”.  Nilsson had his fair share of junk too. Most of it was just rusting when last October he had a knock at his door.

“Them two knuckleheads from that TV show American Pickers (Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz) stopped by here trying to steal from me. Offering me $200 for my old still. Said I had no use for it since making moonshine was illegal. After that smart-mouthed remark, I shot at em” declared Nilsson. “Although I did sell the chubby one with the beard an old oil can for $40 before they ticked me off.”

The visit did motivate Nilsson. “After I’d run them off, I kept thinking about what they kept saying to me, ‘what are you going to do with all this stuff, you might as well sell it to us’. Well that left me pondering. Folks around these parts do a lot of pondering, so it wasn’t really nothing new for me as I ponder about something almost everyday. But this time my pondering gave me an idea, watch Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.”

Inspired and motivated by the film, Nilsson spent the next 6 months, in his workshop turning his one-time still and collection of junk into a whiskey sipping motor vehicle. “The car will run on almost any bourbon, but she really purrs on Maker’s Mark” said Nilsson.

With Maker’s Mark currently at an average selling price of $24 a fifth it’s likely most owners of the new vehicle would fill her up with Old Crow or even Old Grand Dad. Either way, it’s still a pricier fuel option, but before long it may be a bargain. Gasoline prices have been skyrocketing, jumping 50% in the past year. This week the cost for regular gas eclipsed milk and the popular Arnold Palmer Iced Tea-Lemonade beverage per gallon.

The Obama administration has recognized Nilsson’s achievement as “the type of ingenuity that makes this country great. With brilliant minds such as Mr. Nilsson at work, we will soon purge our dependence on the middle east for oil”. But they cautioned our nation still has a large number of winos so securing access to the fuel tanks on these vehicles will be essential, especially in certain urban neighborhoods.

A deal to produce a consumer version of the Nilsson concept car was brokered Wednesday with automobile manufacturer Nissan. Nissan expects to release the vehicle to the public by 2014.  Currently referred to as the Nissan Nilsson, several names are being considered for the new model. The Nissan Alky, the Lush or the sporty sounding Inebriator.

Nissan hopes to add a new feature to this model that will incorporate a breathalyzer that will actually generate a small fuel reserve for drunk drivers who run out of gas, ah um, bourbon.

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