truesee's Blog

Judge fired for issuing arrest warrant for overdue DVD

Littleton fires judge who issued warrant for overdue DVD

Carlos Illescas
The Denver Post

04/07/2010 01:00:00 AM MDT
           

LITTLETON — The City Council fired longtime Municipal Judge James Kimmel on Tuesday night after he issued an arrest warrant for a teenager who had an overdue $30 DVD from a local library.

Council members had offered Kimmel a chance to resign and receive a severance package. But when he refused, they said they had little choice but to let him go.

"I'm disappointed and saddened the situation has reached this stage," Councilman Bruce Stahlman said.

Kimmel, a municipal judge for almost 30 years, was not at Tuesday's meeting. He refused a request for comment from The Denver Post on Monday about his possible removal.

Aaron Henson, 19, checked out the DVD, "House of Flying Daggers," from the Bemis Public Library last year. He failed to return it in proper time after it got mixed in with boxes as he moved from Littleton to Lakewood.

On Dec. 23, Kimmel ordered that Henson appear in court Jan. 14 regarding the DVD. The summons was returned as undeliverable because Henson had moved, and he was never properly served.

When he failed to show, Kimmel issued a bench warrant for Henson's arrest.

On Jan. 25, Henson was pulled over in Jefferson County for speeding, and when the outstanding warrant came up, he was hauled off to jail, where he spent almost eight hours before his dad bailed him out.

Turns out, he returned the DVD to the library Jan. 7 — a week before Kimmel issued the warrant. The library sent a letter to the judge that same day notifying him that it had been returned.

That point concerned council members, as did the fact that Kimmel issued the warrant without Henson having been officially served with a summons to appear in court.

When city officials looked into prior cases, they found 71 similar incidents in which a warrant had been issued but had not been properly served.

Earlier Tuesday, Henson took blame for not returning the DVD and hoped his actions would not cost Kimmel his job.

"He's a great judge," Henson said. "I heard a lot of good things about him. I honestly don't want them to fire him over this."

In a joint statement read at Tuesday's meeting, the council said Kimmel's "lack of good judgment" in the Henson case and the other cases caused it to lose confidence in his ability to serve as municipal judge.

 

LINK TO ORIGINAL STORY

http://www.wmur.com/news/22752515/detail.html

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James S. Kimmel
Entry #2,090

After arguing man torches neighbor's cars and home

Man Torches Neighbor's Cars And Home

Shaun Chaiyabhat

 

9:15 PM CDT, April 9, 2010

 

Man Torches Neighbor's Cars And Home

FAST FACTS:
  • Tevin Streeter, 29, charged with two counts of aggravated arson
  • Streeter and victim had on-going argument
  • Neighbors accuse Streeter of setting two fires

(Memphis 4/9/10) A not-so-neighborly feud ended with one family's house torched while they slept inside.

There wasn't just one fire, but two. Now, one man is behind bars facing two counts of aggravated arson. The hot tempers flared up near Sherwood Elementary in the 37-hundred block of Briar Rose Drive.

Police arrested 29 year-old Tevin Streeter. He's an ex-con whose mother lives right next door to the torched house. Neighbors say Streeter and the family who lived at the charred house had been arguing for months. Police finally got involved on March 9th when firefighters hosed down two burning cars and the corner of the house. It was obvious to investigators that someone had set the cars on fire. The police Affidavit of Complaint says, "This was the second time [the victim's] car was set on fire within ten days."

Many neighbors were aware of the on-going arguments, but others can't believe Streeter would torch the home knowing children were sleeping inside.

"They were feuding, but I don't think that [Tevin] had anything to do with it," says one neighbor who questions what evidence police have on the crime.

Police say the victim saw Streeter running from the scene just before four in the morning. Not everyone can believe that story, but most agree peace is finally returning to their block. The family moved out just days after the last incident and Streeter remains in jail.
Entry #2,088

Granny busted with crack, cash and guns

Memphis Police Bust Drug Dealing Granny

Woman had crack in her pocket, big cash and guns

Stephanie Scurlock

 

5:45 AM CDT, April 11, 2010

 

Memphis Police Bust Drug Dealing Granny

FAST FACTS:
  • 71 year old woman arrested for drug operation in her home
  • Since 1991 more than a dozen drug arrests
  • Neighbors see her as matronly figure
(Memphis 04/10/2010) - A Mid-South granny is in jail after police bust her on gun and drug charges. Police served a warrant on her home last night in the 1400 block of Davis in North Memphis.

Ms. Gus, that's what the neighbors on Davis Street call 71 year-old Jean Robinson. However, when undercover police officers served a warrant at her home they found she wasn't the average little old lady. According to police, the neat duplex surrounded by flowers and wind chimes on the outside was filled with crack cocaine, pills and guns on the inside.

"It threw me off for a minute because she's quiet. She's kept to herself and she's been in this neighborhood for many years," said one neighbor.

That neighbor didn't want to be identified but she saw police when they had to force their way into Robinson's home Friday night. They found Robinson with five bags of crack cocaine in her jacket pocket, 66 Oxycodone pills stuffed under the pillows on her couch. $4,000 in cash in her purse and $2,300 stashed underneath the living room couch. A 12 gauge shotgun with one round in the chamber and a .22 caliber revolver with two live rounds were also close by.

"Wow, I wouldn't think her. Like I said, she's always to herself. She's just a normal old lady so I wouldn't think her," said Keyarrow Gooden, neighbor.

Although some neighbors are surprised at Ms. Robinson's arrest, others are not. They say officers have raided the house before. Since 1991 we found the lady many thought of as the matronly figure in the neighborhood has picked up more than a dozen drug related charges. While we are there doing this story, a woman stops by, unaware of Robinson's arrest. She says she came to borrow money. We asked if she knew if drugs were inside the home. She said no and left.

Shocked or not this granny will be in court Monday morning. She has a $150 bond.

Robinson is charged with drug possession with intent to deliver crack cocaine, Oxycodone and two counts of possession of a dangerous weapon while committing a felony.
Entry #2,087

Michael Steele To Republicans: 'I've Made Mistakes'

Michael Steele To Republicans: 'I've Made Mistakes'

LIZ SIDOTI | 04/10/10 07:09 PM | AP

 

Michael Steele Mistakes

NEW ORLEANS — In damage control mode, GOP national chairman Michael Steele on Saturday sought to quell the furor over his management of the Republican National Committee by acknowledging errors and vowing to learn from them.

"I'm the first here to admit that I've made mistakes, and it's been incumbent on me to take responsibility to shoulder that burden, make the necessary changes and move on," Steele told GOP activists and party leaders, drawing a standing ovation.

"The one mistake we cannot make this November is to lose," he added, and the crowd cheered in agreement.

Saturday's speech to the Southern Republican Leadership Conference was Steele's first public appearance since the disclosure of questionable spending – including a $2,000 tab at a sex-themed California night club – resulted in top advisers cutting ties with him and North Carolina's state party chief calling for his resignation.

Normally a bombastic showman, Steele struck a contrite tone before the supportive audience in the half-full hotel ballroom. He did not address the specific complaints. And even though he acknowledged his errors, he also blamed others.

"We can't coast into the majority, nor can we assume it's a sure thing. The liberal media are looking for any possible alternative narrative to tell," Steele said. "They are looking for those distractions, and Lord knows I've provided a few." He added: "The Democrats also know that they have some explaining to do, and they'd love nothing more than for us to keep pointing fingers."

Outspoken and brassy, Steele is not a traditional buttoned-down GOP chairman and he's been a target of criticism since he was elected last year. The complaints reached a fever pitch over the past week, causing both embarrassment and distraction for a GOP looking to take advantage of a troubling political environment for Democrats ahead of this fall's midterm elections.

Still, for all the angst in the GOP over Steele, it's unlikely he will be fired. Ousting a chairman is a complicated, messy process that requires votes of two-thirds of the 168-member RNC. And, while there are both hard-core Steele opponents and fierce Steele allies, several Republican officials at the New Orleans conference said that most committee members and party chairman simply seem to want to move on from the controversy so Republicans can focus on November.

Attended by roughly 3,000 GOP activists and party leaders, the three-day conference wrapped up Saturday with speeches by prominent Republicans considering running for president in 2012 against President Barack Obama.

Story continues below

Conference attendees voted in a "straw poll" for their top 2012 choice; the results were hardly predictive and meant little. Many Republicans considering a bid were left off the list while others like Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour asked that their names not be included. Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney didn't attend the conference but won by a single vote over Texas Rep. Ron Paul, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

Those who gave speeches downplayed talk of the next presidential election.

"We have got to stay focused on the election of 2010. Don't worry about 2012 ... We can't wait until 2012 to start taking our country back," Barbour told the crowd. Despite that message, he sounded every bit the presidential candidate and spoke after running a slick video that promoted his role as the chairman of the Republican Governors Association.

Barbour also urged unity as the GOP wrestles with what to do about Steele and as the tea party's emergence highlights divisions among Republicans.

"The wind is at our back. How are we going to make sure it continues to fill up our sails?" Barbour said. "We stick together." He said Republicans should focus on the 80 percent of issues that unite them, not the 20 percent that may divide them. "We've got to let the things that unite us be the things that guide us," he said. "We cannot let ourselves by torn apart by the idea of purity."

Earlier, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who is looking for a political comeback, took on the Republican Party, saying that when Republicans controlled Congress and the White House before Democrats won control: "We let America down."

"Conservatism didn't fail America, conservatives failed conservatism," Santorum said, prompting huge cheers. "Let's be honest: we were guilty of more government when we were there."

Seeking to raise his national profile, Indiana Rep. Mike Pence – a darling of the party's right flank – introduced himself as "a Christian, a conservative and a Republican." And, eying another run after his 2008 failed bid, Paul told activists that "the American people have awoken" because Washington won't address the nation's fiscal crisis.

Still, for all the appearances by likely 2012 candidates and excitement over the midterms, the RNC's woes hovered over event.

"In life, you realize very quickly that you can't please everyone. But you can certainly make them all made at you at the same time," Steele said. "And that is a lesson well-learned. It is an opportunity as well. Because folks have been mad at us in the past and we have learned from that past, and we are now ready to move on to a brighter future."

Entry #2,086

The car of the future: no driver necessary

The car of the future: no driver necessary

Autonomous technology faces Pikes Peak test

No hands required

Graduate student Mick Kritayakirana shows the computer system inside a driverless car at Stanford University. (Paul Sakuma, Associated Press / April 1, 2010)

Associated Press April 10, 2010
SAN JOSE, Calif. —

It can traverse rough terrain, accelerate quickly and negotiate sharp turns like other high-performance sports cars, but there's one thing that sets this Audi coupe apart: It doesn't need a driver.

The car, named Shelley, is the latest creation by Stanford University researchers who are developing technology that could help make driving safer and one day allow ordinary vehicles to drive on their own.

The self-driving car will face its biggest test this fall at Colorado's Pikes Peak, home of the world-famous International Hill Climb that has bedeviled professional drivers with its steep grades and treacherous switchbacks since 1916.

Automotive researchers have designed experimental vehicles that can drive long distances or navigate city streets without a driver. With Shelley - named after Michelle Mouton, the first woman to win the Pikes Peak race - the Stanford team is developing a car that can drive at high speeds under extreme conditions.

"What we're trying to do is create an autonomous race car, an autonomous rally car, so a car that can drive itself up to the very limits of handling," said Christian Gerdes, a Stanford engineering professor who directs the university's Center for Automotive Research.

It might be years before someone can send the minivan out to pick up the kids from soccer practice, but autonomous car technology has already led to features such as automatic parallel parking and adaptive cruise control, which lets a car handle stop-and-go traffic on its own.

The U.S. Department of Defense has been developing driverless technology that allows unmanned vehicles to perform military missions without endangering soldiers. Its research arm, the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, has been sponsoring autonomous vehicle contests since 2004 with the goal of making one-third of the military's ground combat vehicles driverless by 2015.

Volkswagen AG, which makes Audi vehicles and is working with Stanford on the Shelley project, has set a goal of creating fully autonomous vehicles by 2028, said Marcial Hernandez, a senior engineer at Volkswagen's electronics research lab in Palo Alto.

"You're tired at the end of the day. You just want to relax on your way home. Push the button, and the car gets you home," Hernandez said.

Shelley is an Audi TTS that has been equipped with GPS receivers and can be programmed to follow any route using a digital map. The research team has developed computer algorithms that let the car make real-time adjustments to the terrain and calculate how fast it can go without spinning out of control.

That technology could one day be used to create smarter cars that help motorists avoid accidents when they're driving fast, said Stanford's Gerdes.

"We hope this will be inspiration for future safety systems, for cars that will help a driver drive up to the capabilities of the car," Gerdes said. "So if you're suddenly on a slippery road, the car should be able to react and keep you safely in the lane, pointed in the direction you want to go."

At Pikes Peak, Shelley will climb 4,721 feet up the 14,110-foot mountain on paved and gravel roads as it covers the 12.4-mile race course and its 156 turns at high speeds. The feat has never attempted by an autonomous vehicle.

Nearly 200 cars, trucks and motorcycles are expected to take part in the 88th annual "Race to the Clouds" on June 27, but Shelley will have the road to itself when it attempts the course in September. Once the team hits the start button, Shelley will make all the driving decisions on its own.

"This really represents the ultimate challenge," Gerdes said.

Shelley is the latest autonomous car designed by Stanford's automotive research center, which is working with major automakers and Silicon Valley tech firms to develop car technology.

Entry #2,085

Tiger Woods' profanity aired live on CBS

Devil Ball Golf - Golf

Sat Apr 10, 2010 4:36 pm EDT

Tiger Woods' profanity aired live on CBS

Chris Chase

 

 

In his February public apology, Tiger Woods vowed he would show more respect to the game of golf. No more fist pumping, no more club tossing and no more profanity-laden outbursts after bad shots.

He made it about 42 holes.

During Saturday's third round of The Masters, Woods repeatedly cursed at himself loudly enough for television microphones to pick it up and air it live on CBS. The mini-temper tantrums came during a stretch on the front nine when Woods made three bogeys in four holes.

After a poorly-struck tee shot on the par-3 6th hole, Tiger closed his eyes in disgust and loudly said, "Tiger Woods, you suck." He followed that with a Commandment-breaking expletive and a shake of the head.

With impeccable timing, CBS announcer Verne Lundquist chimed in, "I don't think he's pleased."

Woods' shot failed to stay on the top slope of the green and trickled 70 feet away from the pin. He ran his birdie putt nearly 20 feet past the hole and ended up with a bogey four. On the next hole, Woods cursed again after a wayward approach shot. He would go on to card another bogey.

It seems that Tiger still can't control his emotions on the golf course, which isn't too big of a deal. It was silly that he ever thought he would be able to instantly change years of reflexive golf habits or that doing so would have any bearing on his other issues.

It's also silly that television networks continue to put live microphones on athletes and expect them to speak like choirboys. To their credit, Jim Nantz and Nick Faldo of CBS Sports later addressed Tiger's outburst during a sit down in Butler Cabin. Nantz, in particular, seemed embarrassed, while Faldo attributed the salty language to Tiger's usual on-course temper.

Entry #2,083

Is GOP a party of yes, no or maybe so?

Analysis: Is GOP a party of yes, no or maybe so?

April 10, 2010

RON FOURNIER
Associated Press Writer

NEW ORLEANS – Socialist. Secularist. Liar. National security naif. Republican leaders are calling President Barack Obama all that and more as they jockey early for the party's 2012 nomination. But name-calling alone won't beat the Democratic incumbent.

Even a firebrand like Newt Gingrich concedes that the GOP must be more than naysayers to reclaim control of Congress in November and to seize the White House two years later.

"What the left wants to do is say we're the party of 'no,'" Gingrich told the Southern Republican Leadership Conference, a conservative convention that gave several Republican presidential leaders a chance to audition for the 2012 nomination fight. "I think we should decide we're going to be the party of 'yes.'"

"Republicans can say yes to a balanced budget," he said — and yes to more jobs through tax cuts and yes to getting tough on terrorists.

But, it turns out, saying yes is no easy task. The former House speaker and his fellow GOP presidential aspirants struggled at the conference to articulate a winning vision. Theirs is a delicate balance: Offer voters a positive, concrete agenda while defining Obama in a negative light — something conservative voters expect, or even demand, of their candidates.

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, a former lobbyist and strategist who may seek the presidency, said it will take some time for the Republican Party to iron out its two-sided message.

"It is important to give people something to vote for. I believe that very sincerely," Barbour told state party chairmen and GOP activists Saturday, the conference's closing day. "There are some people who act like that means we've got to have something like that today."

For now, Republican leaders can't even agree on whether the GOP is the party of yes or no.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry voted no, insisting that Republican congressional candidates must be against Obama and government itself to win in November.

"It's going to take men and women going to Washington, D.C., and saying no," he said, urging GOP candidates to say to voters, "Elect me and I'm going to Washington, D.C, and will try to make it as inconsequential on your life as I can make it."

Despite speculation to the contrary, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal told the crowd he's not interested in a 2012 bid. Still, he took a side in the yes-versus-no debate.

When it comes to bad ideas, Jindal said, "shame on us for not saying so" and for not saying no.

On that, Gingrich agreed, and he spelled out what he considers the bad ideas offered by Obama, particularly the health care overhaul bill. An hour or so before his conference address, Gingrich unloaded on Obama.

Calling him a terrible president, Gingrich accused Obama of running a "socialist, secularist machine." Speaking of Democrats, he quickly added, "They lie about" the so-called machine.

As is often the case with political hyperbole from the left and right, Gingrich didn't support his accusation.

He also called Obama "the most radical president in American history."

The crowd favorite, former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, delivered a speech filled with sound bites and invectives. Whatever passing stabs she made outlining fresh policies or vision may have gotten lost in the chorus of negativity.

"There is no shame in being the party of no," she said to loud applause. "When they're proposing an idea that violates our values, violates our Constitution, what's wrong with being the party of no? We're the party of hell no!"

And so she mocked Obama's national security credentials, pointing dismissively to the "vast nuclear experience that he acquired as a community organizer."

Some in the crowd responded with a "Run, Sarah, Run" chant. She didn't say whether she would seek the presidency, but Palin left little doubt where she stands on the definitive issue of yes or no.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE — Ron Fournier is Washington bureau chief for The Associated Press.

Entry #2,082

Man arrested for driving drunk to prison to serve a DUI

Sudbury man nabbed for driving drunk to prison

Laura Crimaldi 
Thursday, April 8, 2010 
Boston Herald

Timothy Carney

Timothy Carney

A Sudbury, Mass. man is facing another drunk driving charge after he allegedly drove under the influence to a Vermont prison to serve a two-day sentence for an earlier drunk driving offense.

Timothy Carney, 42, appeared Tuesday between 4 and 5:30 p.m. in the Windsor District Court, where a judge imposed the sentence and ordered him to report to the Southern State Correctional Facility in Springfield by 5:30 p.m., said Deputy State Attorney David Cahill.

“Mr. Carney came to court knowing that he was going to jail that day,” Cahill said.

Authorities said Carney drove himself to the jail and arrived intoxicated at the facility, where prison staff called the Vermont State Police. The jail is located about 30 miles away from the court, Cahill said.

Carney is due back in court later this month.

He was initially charged with drunk driving on Sept. 4 after he was stopped at a sobriety checkpoint in Weathersfield, Cahill said.

On March 31, a judge suspended his right to drive in Vermont. The suspension, however, had not gone into effect when Carney drove to the prison on Tuesday, Cahill said.

Associated Press material was used in this report.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1245702

                                 

                                UPDATED STORY

 

OUI rap for man on way to jail

Laura Crimaldi 
Friday, April 9, 2010 
Boston Herald 

A Sudbury an with a seven-page driving record is facing another drunken driving charge after allegedly being legally stewed as he dutifully drove himself to a Vermont prison to serve a two-day drunken driving sentence.

Timothy Carney, 42, appeared Tuesday afternoon in Vermont’s Windsor District Court, where a judge sentenced him for failing a checkpoint sobriety test Sept. 4, and ordered him to report to the Southern State Correctional Facility 30 miles away in Springfield, Vt., by 5:30 p.m., a prosecutor said.

Authorities said Carney arrived inebriated, and prison staff called the Vermont State Police.

Carney is due back in court in Vermont later this month. His Bay State driving record includes a 2004 charge for drunken driving and 14 citations for speeding.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1245802

Entry #2,081

Elena Kagan Emerging As Supreme Court Front-Runner

Elena Kagan Emerging As Supreme Court Front-Runner

First Posted: 04- 9-10 03:48 PM   |   Updated: 04- 9-10 04:25 PM

Elena Kagan

Elena Kagan, President Obama's solicitor general, is rapidly emerging as a frontrunner to replace retiring Chief Associate Justice John Paul Stevens. Kagan is widely praised as an accomplished and intelligent attorney, but is far more conservative than Stevens and could shift the political dynamic of the high court.

Conservatives are responding favorably to the potential of a Justice Elena Kagan while liberals worry that, by choosing her, the administration would miss the opportunity to elevate a genuine progressive.

John Manning, a conservative professor at Harvard Law School, where Kagan served as dean, told HuffPost that he would firmly support a Kagan nomination. Professor Charles Fried, a Reagan administration solicitor general, also said that he'd support a Kagan pick.

"She is a supremely intelligent person, really one of the most intelligent people I have encountered, and I have met a lot of them, as one does in this business. She is very adroit politically," said Fried. "She has quite a strong personality and a winning personality. I think she's an effective, powerful person and a very, very intelligent person, and a very hardworking and serious person."

Fried served on the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts from 1995-1999 and is now at Harvard Law School. He said that Republicans would be well-advised to get behind her, but may decide to oppose just for the sake of opposition.

"Let's put it this way: she should be [backed by Republicans]. But it depends on the politics," he said. "Republicans may just decide that: 'We're going to say no to what Obama comes up with the first time and we'll come up with a reason why after we've decided that we're going to say no.' I can't predict that that's what they'll do or not. But she should be, she should be."

Fried has known Kagan for years and said he may even have had her as a student. He first met her when she was a visiting professor at Harvard. He was on the board that approved her for tenure and also on the selection committee that tapped her to be dean.

Stevens is known as a sharp political tactician and a persuasive jurist, the leader of the court's "liberal wing." Fried doesn't expect Kagan to be an ideological warrior, but, he points out, neither was Stevens when he came to the court.

"I don't think she's a heavily ideological person," says Fried. "But, you know, when John Paul Stevens was put on the court neither was he. And, in fact, though he never admits it, because he never admits anything, Stevens switched his position on a number of very important things as time went on and he became kind of the replacement for Bill Brennan. So, you know, you can't tell. But she is not an ideological person."

That kind of post-ideological posture certainly appeals to Obama, who presents himself as someone who wants to "move beyond" disputes between competing interests. Obama has recently moved beyond such disputes by making major concessions to his opponents, as he recently did with offshore drilling and nuclear energy.

Kagan, who knew Obama as a Harvard student and also went to Chicago after graduating, had a similar approach at Harvard, hiring a number of conservative professors.

"The faculty had been divided politically on left-right grounds and had difficulty making [faculty] appointments," said Harvard Professor Mark Tushnet. "But she was able to break the logjam by explaining to people that the law school was stagnating and that it could move forward only if it overcame these issues."

Fried was on that board. "I was on her appointments committee when we were choosing large numbers of people to bulk up the faculty. And she was fabulous in that position. And not ideological. Not ideological," he said.

The praise from conservatives may sound <snip>ing to those who worry that the court is too close to corporate interests and too willing to accommodate the radical expansion of executive power. Kagan has been criticized by civil libertarians for her expansive stance on detainee policy.

Glenn Greenwald wrote Friday that "replacing Stevens with Kagan... would shift the Court substantially to the Right on a litany of key issues (at least as much as the shift accomplished by George Bush's selection of the right-wing ideologue Sam Alito to replace the more moderate Sandra Day O'Connor)."

The 5-4 majority that has attempted to keep the executive branch in check could be in jeopardy. "Over the past decade, the Court has issued numerous 5-4 decisions which placed at least some minimal constraints on executive power. Stevens was not merely in the majority in those cases, but was the intellectual leader justifying those limits," Greenwald wrote.

Her writing on detainee policy and executive authority is perhaps her most controversial work.

"Kagan is unique in that, like Justice John Roberts, she's universally respected but hasn't written on divisive topics that could make confirmation difficult," says University of Pennsylvania Law Professor Theodore Ruger.

Kagan's adoration from conservatives could give her what one Supreme Court watcher described as "the easiest and more logical path forward." Her current position as solicitor general rebuts the critique that, unlike the other sitting justices on the court, she has never held a bench seat. And at 49 -- though, by the end of the month, 50 -- her age is tempting for a president looking to leave a stamp on the court. The fact that she was confirmed by the Senate for her current post just one year ago, by a 61 to 31 vote, adds to the thinking that Republicans will have a difficult task mounting a serious campaign against her now.

There has been some superficial concern over Kagan's religion -- not because she's Jewish but because without Stevens there will be no Protestants on the court. And chatter long ago surfaced about her sexual orientation, which some conservative figures have already floated as a potential issue.

But these are distractions not speed bumps, strategists predict, if Obama chooses to go with Kagan. When her name was floated as a nominee following the retirement of Justice David Souter, Republicans in the Senate couldn't deny how impressed they were with her potential.

"You have to admit Elena Kagan is a brilliant woman," Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah.) said during an interview on conservative North Dakota radio last May. "She is a brilliant lawyer. If he picks her, it is a real dilemma for people. And she will undoubtedly say that she will abide by the rule of law."

For Obama, perhaps the most alluring element of a Kagan selection is that the work for the president would be minimal. The White House did an extensive vetting of her record during the last court opening. The president even met privately with her to discuss the opening. Since then, she's served in his administration. Were she to be nominated, the surprises in her confirmation process should be minimal.

 

Shriram Harid contributed reporting

Entry #2,079

Robber Who Terrorized Elderly Women Arrested

Robber Of Elderly Women Arrested in California

Shaun Chaiyabhat

 

10:06 PM CDT, April 8, 2010

 

Robber Of Elderly Women Arrested in California

FAST FACTS:
  • Cassandra Henry arrested in Claremont, California
  • Henry accused of robbing elderly women across Mid-South
  • Authorities also arrested Corry Henry, but searching for Tiffany Upkins

(Memphis 4/8/10) After more than a year terrorizing and robbing elderly women across the Mid-South, Cassandra Henry is behind bars.

Henry has been on the run since bonding out of jail in December. Since then, she took her crimes across country until police in Claremont, California arrested Henry early Thursday morning. Henry's crime spree tore through Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee, Missouri, Kentucky and California. The entire time, one U.S. Marshal in Memphis was tracking her.

Authorities say Henry's victims are elderly women who sometimes were in nursing homes. Often dressed as a nurse, Henry earned their trust, talked her way inside their homes and robbed them blind. She stole their cash and credits cards and spent it all. Sometimes, she hurt her elderly victims. Authorities feared the violence would escalate.

"Only God knows that this lady is dangerous and she's going to harm one of these elderly people," says Deputy Bailey Phillips with the US Marshals Service who spent months tracking Henry down.

Phillips says after months on the run, Henry grew arrogant. At one point, she called his cell phone to taunt him.

Quoting the phone conversation, Phillips says Henry told him, "You will never catch me. I'm too smart. You might as well give it up."

But early Thursday morning, Henry's criminal life unraveled, thanks to one dumb move. Henry never ditched her car and police tracked her tags. While in California, she attacked and robbed three women -- including an 89 year-old.

It's not just her victims she hurt. Phillips says her own mother is distraught because authorities learned Henry is pregnant.

"She had no clue that her daughter was three months pregnant," says Phillips. "She knew what she was doing and she stated that she had begged her to stop doing it and turn herself in."

Police in California also arrested her husband, Corry Henry. Phillips says he's a career criminal with an outstanding federal warrant. Authorities are still looking for friend and accomplice, Tiffany Upkins. Upkins is from Memphis, but could be anywhere. If you know where Upkins may be hiding, call the U.S. Marshals Service.
LINK TO STORY
Entry #2,078

Gingrich: Obama is 'most radical president ever'

Gingrich: Obama is 'most radical president ever'

 



Newt Gingrich
AP – Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich addresses the Southern Republican Leadership Conference in …

Ron Fournier

Associated Press Writer – Thu Apr 8, 10:47 pm ET

NEW ORLEANS – Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a potential presidential candidate in 2012, called Barack Obama on Thursday "the most radical president in American history" who oversees a "secular, socialist machine."

Gingrich reminded conservative activists why he was one of the nation's most polarizing leaders in the 1990s, opening the Southern Republican Leadership Conference with a biting assessment of Obama's policies.

"The most radical president in American history has now thrown down the gauntlet to the American people: 'I run a machine. I own Washington and there's nothing you can do about it,'" Gingrich said. He urged his fellow Republicans to stop what he called Obama's "secular, socialist machine."

Highly charged words, for sure. But that's standard fare at the three-day GOP gathering that is drawing several presidential hopefuls. Friday's headliner is former Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.

Gingrich has not declared his intentions for 2012, but his appearances in New Orleans had all the trappings of a fledging presidential campaign, from an intimate meeting with tea party activists — his staff photographer took grip-and-grin pictures of Gingrich posing with every activist — to his wade-through-the-crowd entrance at the GOP conference, with the thumping beat of Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger" drawing the crowd to its feet.

He said Obama's policies — particularly health care and economic stimulus legislation — have put the United States on the road to socialism. The former speaker did not specifically explain why he thought Obama is a secularist, though he did say the GOP wasn't afraid of recognizing faith's role in American society.

Gingrich offered Republicans an antidote to Democratic accusations that GOP leaders do little more than oppose policies — the so-called party of no. He said Republicans should underscore the policies they favor — yes on tax cuts, a lower deficit, fewer regulations and a sensible energy plan.

"The point is there are many things we can say yes to," Gingrich said.

Will he say yes to a presidential campaign?

"That will be up to God," he said, "and the American people."

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