Tag Archives: department

Obama Forgot "New Direction" In Drug Policy; Sticks With DEA Nominee Michele Leonhart Despite Criticism of Raids

Obama is confident that Leonhart is the right choice, the White House staffer said, and that as of Friday the president wasn’t considering anyone else for the position. In other words, the response from 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. to a chorus of concerns boils down to: Leonhart or bust. In response to this message, critics have pointed out that Obama is shifting his stance on marijuana policy. “It’s unfortunate — and outright baffling — that the Obama administration would choose someone for this post whose resume is so strongly at odds with the ‘new direction’ this administration had promised for drug policy in general and medical marijuana in particular,” the Marijuana Policy Project’s Mike Meno told The Daily Caller. “During the election campaign, and again through the Department of Justice memo in October, President Obama vowed to stop the outrageous Bush-era practice of raiding and prosecuting medical marijuana patients and providers who operate under state law. If change is what they seek, why would the administration nominate a Bush holdover under whom the DEA continues to raid the private property of citizens obeying state law? It makes no sense.” MPP and other marijuana activists have pointed to a series of raids the DEA conducted in California as recently as last month as evidence that Leonhart is continuing the Bush-era strategy of cracking down on medical marijuana dispensaries and growers, even if they are operating legally under California law. They say this conflicts directly with statements Obama made on the campaign trail, such as this one from April 2008: “When it comes to medical marijuana, I have a practical view more than anything. My attitude is that if it’s an issue of doctors prescribing medical marijuana as a treatment for glaucoma or a cancer treatment, there really is no difference between that and a doctor prescribing morphine, or anything else.” But the White House and the Justice Department both told TheDC that Holder’s memo does not give dispensaries carte blanche to grow or sell marijuana, and that recent raids don’t conflict with what Obama expressed while campaigning. “I wouldn’t say the memo ‘discourages’ certain raids,” a DOJ offical told TheDC. Rather, “it talks about prioritizing resources most efficiently.” And both the White House and the DOJ argued that the gist of the Holder memo was that the DEA would “not focus its limited resources on individual patients with cancer or other serious diseases.” Critics see the distinction between cancer patients who take medical marijuana and the people who sell them medical marijuana as hair-splitting. “Attorney General Eric Holder was crystal clear last year when he directed officials within his department not to waste federal resources interfering with state medical marijuana laws,” wrote FireDogLake’s Jane Hamsher in the open letter distributed by the Marijuana Policy Project. “Yet throughout the tenure of President Obama’s administration, the DEA’s raids have continued in a manner wholly inconsistent with the spirit of that directive. What part of ‘not a priority’ does Michele Leonhart not understand?” added by: Omnomynous

Lindsay Lohan — Time Is On Her Side

Filed under: Lindsay Lohan , Celebrity Justice Lindsay Lohan will not be prosecuted over a $35,000 Rolex that went missing … law enforcement sources tell TMZ. As we first reported … the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department considered Lindsay a suspect in the disappearance of the Rolex that one of… Read more

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Lindsay Lohan — Time Is On Her Side

US Military incapable to Fight China’s CyberWarfare Teams

The Department of Defense released a report detailing its fears and that its incapable to counter Chinese cyber warfare experts. The report also details its fears and … http://itgrunts.com/2010/08/17/us-military-incapable-to-fight-chinas-cyberwarfar… added by: itgrunts

Oregon Measure 74 Backed by Medical Marijuana Advocates

Oregon Measure 74 – Safe, Regulated, Non-Profit Medical Marijuana Supply System Hear Oregon Medical Marijuana Advocates Stormy Ray and Madeline Martinez talk about the need for a safe, regulated medical marijuana supply system. Stormy Ray is President of the Stormy Ray Foundation. Madeline Martinez is Executive Director of Oregon NORML. Ballot Measure 74 changes state law by directing the Oregon Health Authority (OHA), formerly part of the Department of Human Services, to establish an OHA regulated medical marijuana supply system as an additional component to the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act. The supply system will be funded through program fees; no General Fund revenue may be used and additional revenue, if any, would fund other OHA programs added by: ProfessorWit

Please ponder this plea from Pleas: A continuing story of corruption in Kentucky – Lexington courts | examiner_preview

I make my return to writing here with some rather intriguing news of criminal harassment by the Lexington Police on several levels. My 'vacation' was not by choice but rather by cyber-attack. After my campaign bringing up implications of murder committed by Lexington Police officers and the coincidental death of an officer on the job during that time I was sent a virus. The virus and a key-logger attack were done to my computer by way of a Facebook invite by a member of the slain officer's family and the key-logger attack came straight from the Lexington Police Department forensics department. More recently, my articles here bringing attention to racism and corruption in the local court system invited more cyber-attacks. I will continue to fight against corruption in government and to bring you all of the information; the truth no matter where that leads. Recently, I received a letter I had requested from Pleas Lucian Kavanaugh describing the police corruption and harassment he has gone through in Lexington. His story is identical to mine and others. The stories just take place with different people in different places but the patterns are the same. Lexington has a fraternity type of police force that has gotten away with too much for too long and now believes it can do as it pleases to anyone it chooses. Please listen to this plea from Pleas Lucian Kavanaugh and do what you can to help him. Feel free to contact me with any information you might have to help his case, my past cases or the murder of Deborah Wardlaw. Confidentiality, as always, is assured. Pleas Lucian Kavanaugh: While it might be beyond my ability to convey a respectable version of my dilemma in this small allotment, I wish to emphasize from the onset that the affects of what has happened to me cannot be understated and that if this account is somewhat beyond the standard length, it is so for the depth of the actions taken against me by a power well beyond my capacity to contend with. As such, I would implore that my circumstance be given attentive and thorough consideration as I am, quite literally, under the most oppressive and sweltering attack at the hands of the Lexington Police Department; an attack which I fear will not end until either I have been unjustly incarcerated, murdered or until such time as responsible parties are held accountable for a most egregious affront to liberty, justice and all things idealized by civilized humanity. Let the facts be submitted to an impartial eye. Please continue reading at the link: Christopher Hignite Lexington Courts Examiner Monkey Films on Current TV added by: Monkey_Films

Gay Cop’s Porn Past Complicates Job, Revives Sexual Policing | Gay Rights | Change.org

Homophobia has many faces, many forms and many nameless companions. What looks like purely anti-gay activity may in fact be something far more insidious and complex, a fact made crystal clear by the murky case of openly gay police officer Michael Verdugo, who's currently fighting to keep his police certification after being booted for appearing in a gay porn. Verdugo maintains that his peers at the Hollywood, Florida Police Department were motivated by gay hate. Hollywood officials insist they felt misled by Verdugo's secrecy. Either way you cut it, however, we're seeing how sexual policing remains alive and well in the United States, and often arises on its own accord. Thirty-six year old Verdugo's woes began in 2008, when his stint on a reality show, HDTV's Design Star, led to the revelation that he had made a brief appearance in a skin flick called Rope Rituals, which came out five years before Verdugo became a cop. His superiors were not impressed. Though Verdugo had served on the force for seven years, and that scene — him tied up, naked and alone — was relatively vanilla when compared to the rest of the video, his higher-ups still put Verdugo on administrative leave. They claimed he had misled them by neglecting to tell them about Rope Rituals. Because, you know, you would include a porn made five years prior on a resume to become a cop. The suspended officer sees the situation very differently. “A one day job is not a job,” 36-year old Verdugo said of his involvement in the movie, which he filmed when he was 22-years old. “The film was just their way of dismissing me and getting rid of their gay officer.” He also contends that Hollywood police are working behind the scenes to keep him benched for good. Verdugo's allegations of homophobia seem plausible, especially since another out officer, Christina Rodriguez, has also come forward with charges of anti-gay attitudes on the Hollywood force. “It's difficult sometimes to keep [strong] when you don't have that strength behind you from within your safe haven of your own police department walls,” she said of how discrimination hindered her job performance. Even if Floridian officials do reinstate Vergudo's certification, and he can go on to fight crime in another part of the pan handle, they're still recommending that he attend “ethics training.” Journalist Tiffani Helberg reports, “The [Florida Department of Law Enforcement] said staff members recommended a 30-day suspension of Verdugo's certification and a probationary period of a year, plus ethics training.” No matter what happens with Verdugo's career, he's still being maligned as unethical. But let's pretend that this situation wasn't born from straight-up homophobia. Verdugo's private gay life has nothing to do with the firing; it was motivated simply by the sudden revelation that he had kept his cinematic history a secret. That doesn't mean, however, that his sex life hasn't influenced, however subconsciously, his colleagues' actions. There's no separating gay rights from gay sex. It's just impossible. Conservatives and other opponents too often cite the “ick factor” when lambasting same-sex love. “Don't hate the sinner, hate the sin,” they say. Verdugo's sexuality, and what he does with it, becomes even more “offensive” when coupled with another “sinful” commodity, pornography. Police and the public have historically and consistently clumped pornography and homosexuality, among other things, into one convenient category: “vice.” Such sexual outbursts offended the “normal” morals of a heterosexist society and were therefore worthy of repression. After many hard-fought battles, the restrictions on these activities have been relaxed somewhat; society, of course, doesn't shift so easily, and remnants of these straight-laced ways run deep in contemporary America. “The Rule of Law” has long gotten off on policing private sex lives, and it did a number on Verdugo. Supposing that Verdugo's colleagues were alright with his gay ways, the sudden realization of his sexuality, in video form, may have been too much to handle. Even if he had been straight and also in a “bondage” movie, such “deviant” behavior may still have rubbed Hollywood police the wrong way. If the Hollywood Police Department wants to prove they're not only LGBT inclusive, but that they're beyond 50s era sexual policing and moral judgments, they should grant Verdugo his wish: “I still want to be a cop. My goal — not a practical one — is to go back to Hollywood.” added by: toyotabedzrock

DEP: Delaware Bay scene of major wash-up of dead fish

Dead creatures of the sea are washing ashore up and down the east coast of the United States as officials scramble to find a cause. Hundreds of thousands of dead fish are washing ashore, possibly as a result of low dissolved oxygen levels in the water caused by hot summer temperatures. In the latest incident the Department of Environmental Protection is investigation a major wash-up of dead fish along the Delaware Bay in Cape May County. The cause of the die-off is not known and is under investigation. A Growing Problem Just this Monday, beach residents awoke to a foul smell when thousands of dead fish washed ashore on a small island on the east side of Fairhaven, Massachusetts. Officials explained that the fish were killed due to a lack of oxygen caused by warm waters. All of the fish were Menhaden, which are especially sensitive to such changes, and they may have been dead for days prior to washing up on the beach. READ WHOLE STORY: http://morichesdaily.com/2010/08/dep-delaware-bay-scene-major-wash-up-dead-fish/ added by: MorichesDaily

Schultz Mocks Rove Radio Work, But Can’t Pronounce ‘Cousteau’

From the Department Of People In Glass Houses . . . Early in his MSNBC show this evening, Ed Schultz mocked Karl Rove’s performance in filling in for Rush Limbaugh today.  In particular, Schultz slammed Rove for his brief problem in providing the show’s call-in number.   But later in the show, Ed himself ran head-first into a rhetorical roadblock, stumbling badly when it came to pronouncing the most famous name in the world of ocean studies: Cousteau. ED SCHULTZ: And in Psycho Talk tonight, Karl Rove filled in for the Drugster [Schultz’s nasty nickname for Rush] on his radio show today, and I think old Turd Blossom should probably stick to his day job across the street over at Fox . . . Rove’s debut as a radio host was a total disaster. Right off the bat he had a hell of a time finding the call-in number, even though it was right on the screen in front of him. But later, it was Ed’s turn to pronounce a name so famous it’s the first one that comes up in Google search when you type in Jacques.  Here was Ed’s heroic struggle as he sought to introduce Phillipe, grandson of the famous oceanographer. SCHULTZ:  Coming up . . . world-renowned environmental expert Philippe Castoo, Cas–, Coh-stow will join us, coming up here in just a moment.  Give Phillipe credit for his French sang froid in–just–managing to suppress a smirk at poor Ed’s problems. Note: Ed also let some professional jealousy creep into his roasting of Rove/Limbaugh. Schultz spoke sarcastically [longingly?] of “that high-impact, totally-entertaining, right-wing radio on five million stations across America that we just can’t live without.”

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Schultz Mocks Rove Radio Work, But Can’t Pronounce ‘Cousteau’

Mel Gibson Case Headed to D.A.’s Office

Filed under: Oksana Grigorieva , Mel Gibson , Celebrity Justice TMZ has learned the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department will turn the Mel Gibson domestic violence case over to prosecutors in 2 weeks. L.A. County Sheriff’s Department spokesman Steve Whitmore tells TMZ investigators are “nearing the end of the… Read more

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Mel Gibson Case Headed to D.A.’s Office

James Cameron Says Government Ignored His BP Oil Spill Advice

‘The source of the report was contaminated in their minds because there was a Hollywood guy involved,’ he says. By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Josh Horowitz James Cameron Photo: Jason Merritt/ Getty Images Although he’s known for staging elaborate film productions versus resolving massive environmental crises, James Cameron has been vocal about fixing the BP oil spill that has ravaged the Gulf Coast. The “Avatar” filmmaker even assembled a team of experts in the field to figure out how to fix the largest oil spill in U.S. history. However, Cameron said that when it came to reviewing the strategy developed by his collective of engineers and scientists, government officials failed to take the plan seriously. “We worked [on] the problem for a couple of weeks … and submitted a 25-page report to the Department of Energy and … to the [U.S.] Coast Guard that said what to do,” Cameron told MTV News. “It was promptly ignored by everyone and guess what? At the end of the day, they did exactly what we recommended. I’m not saying they did it because we recommended it. I think they did it because it was the right thing to do. But they basically did exactly what we said should be done.” Cameron said he was motivated to assist the cleanup effort because he felt analysts outside of the oil giant should have a say. “If you’re relying on BP for imagery, you’re basically relying on the criminal’s video of the crime scene,” he asserted. Cameron maintained that officials ignored the report because of his status as an entertainment figure. “I think because BP was giving them a line of sh– every single day and they were believing it. I also think it’s because the source of the report was contaminated in their minds because there was a Hollywood guy involved,” Cameron said. “[Officials] tend to shy away from media if they can’t control it, which completely obviated the valuable contribution of the other 23 people on the team, who are all the cr