Why is Mugabe Still in Power?!?!?

Filed under: Corruption, Crime, Darfur, Democracy, Europe, Feature, Freedom, Human Rights, Jimmy Carter, Politics, Robert Mugabe, UN, Zimbabwe — Chaim on July 8, 2008 @ 2:57 pm CEST

In a move that is reminiscent of Darfur and the Congo the just “reelected” President of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, has come up with a new tactic to assert the power he so blatantly stole:

Mugabe thugs raping teens: aid staff

DOZENS of teenage girls have been made pregnant after being taken into the bush and raped in torture camps by President Robert Mugabe’s youth militia operating near Mudzi, a town 160km northeast of Harare, human rights workers allege.

Read the rest on: Freedom’s Cost

Ertman & Pena’s Killer To Finally Die

Filed under: Crime, Death Penalty, Texas — marc moore on May 7, 2008 @ 3:27 am CEST

The horrifying murder of Jenny Ertman and Elizabeth Pena was my welcome home to Houston after living in Oregon for several years.  I remember the case like it was yesterday because their brutal, gang-related rape and strangulation happened only a short distance from where I worked at the time.  Now, after nearly 15 years of legal wrangling and international intrigue, justice will finally be served on the illegal immigrant who, along with the other animals in the Black and White gang, brutalized these two beautiful young girls.

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(more…)

Principal Busts Dope Dealing Delinquent

Filed under: Crime, Drugs, Education, Legal Matters — marc moore on April 19, 2008 @ 5:50 pm CEST

In New Hampshire, Concord High School principal Jean Barker turned the tables on a student arranging to sell drugs via text messages by setting up a mini-string operation that lead to the student’s arrest. 

That’s what I call excellence in education!  Unsurprisingly, there are plenty of frivolous people willing to to take the drug pusher’s side.

(more…)

"So you want attention, eh?"

Filed under: Chlidren, Crime, Media Criticism — marc moore on April 5, 2008 @ 2:29 am CEST

Kids these days - it’s all fun and games until someone loses an eye.  Turns out the 11-year-old boy who reported an abduction attempt in Houston earlier this week was making it all up.

"He admitted that he had been missing his mother who was at work a lot and and made up the story to get attention," [Houston Police Department spokesman John] Cannon said.

Here’s hoping little Johnny gets "the attention" he needs.

(more…)

Dangers of Politically Correct Reporting

Filed under: Crime, Feature, Media Criticism, Race — marc moore on April 1, 2008 @ 6:51 pm CEST

My favorite writer at The Moderate Voice is Polimom and it’s good to see that she’s back and blogging again! Today she writes that the Houston Chronicle’s policy of using “racial or ethnic identification only when it is clearly pertinent” went too far by failing to include important information about the at-large suspect: (more…)

Too Many Americans Behind Bars

Filed under: Crime, Drugs, Legal Matters — marc moore on March 17, 2008 @ 1:42 pm CET

KHOU in Houston reports that over 1% of the adults in America are in prison - more than China and, tellingly, more than Iran.  America is supposed to be the land of the free.  So why are so many of our citizens in the pokey?

Drugs, in a word.

KHOU says:

“After 15 years in the justice system, I can tell you undoubtedly what’s driving the train in our incarceration rates are drug offenders — and a lot of that is low-level drug offenders,” [District] Judge [Caprice] Cosper said.

(more…)

Spitzer’s Last Crusade?

Filed under: Crime, Eliot Spitzer, Feature — marc moore on March 11, 2008 @ 6:54 pm CET

Yesterday Eliot Spitzer admitted that he was a client of a prostitution ring, today he’s said to be considering whether or not to resign as Governor of New York.

America loves to build up and then tear down its idols. Witness Michael Jackson, Lindsey Lohan, Britney Spears, and others who were catapulted to fame and stardom all of of proportion to their talent and then destroyed in a fan and media frenzy after inevitably failing to live up to the hype. Eliot Spitzer is midway through the crash-and-burn process now.

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BREAKING: Holloway Case Solved

Filed under: Crime, Europe, General News, Lead Story, Netherlands — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on January 31, 2008 @ 5:58 pm CET

Dutch TV detective Peter R. De Vries has solved the Natalee Holloway case. Natalee’s family can finally have closure. (more…)

Brutal Murder in Chicago

Filed under: Crime, Feature, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on January 2, 2008 @ 5:47 pm CET

CNN reports that a Hindu inhabitant of Chicago (born in India), Subhash Chander, is accused of “setting an apartment fire — killing his pregnant daughter, her husband and their young child — because the son-in-law didn’t ask permission for the marriage.”

Well, that’s part of the story. Not only did the son-in-law forget to ask his monster-in-law for permission, he also belonged to a lower caste. (more…)

California to Release 22,000 Prisoners?

Filed under: Crime, Drugs, Feature — marc moore on December 22, 2007 @ 1:28 am CET

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The buzz at the Sacramento Bee is that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will soon ask the state legislature to approve a massive release of prisoners who are thought to be of low risk to the general population:

According to details of a budget proposal made available to The Bee, the administration will ask the Legislature to authorize the release of certain non-serious, nonviolent, non-sex offenders who are in the final 20 months of their terms. (more…)

Private Prisons

Filed under: Crime, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on December 18, 2007 @ 7:00 pm CET

“Not all prisoners in the US are housed by federal and state governments. Every year 40,000 illegal immigrants and 27,000 US citizens are held by private prisons in questionable conditions. Corporations like the Corrections Corporation of America earn enormous contracts to jail convicted felons. For the government’s part, private prisons alleviate overcrowding and save money. Critics argue that by outsourcing prisoner care the government shirks its responsibility to maintain decent living standards and that ultimate accountability is ambiguous.”

More, much more, here.

New Jersey Abolishes Death Penalty

Filed under: Crime, Legal Affairs, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on December 14, 2007 @ 4:12 pm CET

 In what will make many Americans who strongly oppose the death penalty very happy - and also quite some outside the US such as myself - very happy, “New Jersey lawmakers on Thursday became the first in the nation to abolish the death penalty since the Supreme Court restored it in 1976.”

NJ’s General Assembly, which is controlled by Democrats, voted “44 to 36 on Thursday to repeal the death penalty and replace it with life in prison without parole.” This vote followed a similar vote this last Monday by the state’s Senate. The Governor of New Jersey, a Democrat and opponent of the death penalty, will sign the legislation, he has said. (more…)

Deadly Force

Filed under: Crime, Feature, Justice, Lead Story, Legal Matters — marc moore on @ 4:11 am CET

The question of when or if deadly force can be used is an open one in the minds of many Americans. Not so in the case of Joe Horn. (more…)

A Modicum of Justice

Filed under: Christians, Crime, Feature, Indonesia, Islam — marc moore on December 12, 2007 @ 6:19 am CET

In Indonesia Muhammad Basri was convicted of beheading 3 Christian schoolgirls in 2005 and sentenced to a whopping 19 years in prison. He was also convicted of shooting two other students and a priest in 2004.

So that’s what a Christian’s life is worth in Indonesia? 5 years in the clink. Not much of a punishment when the killer will strut around like a banty rooster and be treated like a god for his heroic actions.

Talk about your cultural relativism. I suppose I should be glad the bastard was found guilty at all but it’s not in me to do so.

(more…)

Church Shooter Hated Christians

Filed under: Crime, Religion, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on December 11, 2007 @ 2:47 pm CET

 The man who shot and killed several Christians “hated Christians,” and the woman who shot him “was a parishioner armed with her own gun who confronted Murray–heroically, it’s fair to say–as he entered the church. She apparently was one of several people who volunteered to provide security after word spread of the first attack.”

In other words, a hate crime. John Hinderaker comments: “It is perhaps worth noting that the toll in Sunday’s shootings exceeded the combined total in all “hate crimes” against Muslims in the six years since September 11.” (more…)

Michael Vick Sentenced to Serve 23 Months

Filed under: Crime, Sports, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on December 10, 2007 @ 7:00 pm CET

Former - now former that is - NFL star Michael Vick has been sentenced to 23 months in jail. He was found guilty of organizing dogfights and illegal gambling practices.

Vick apologized for his crimes and said that he wants to take full responsibility. He can now do so.

In jail. (more…)

Hate Crime Legislation

Filed under: Crime, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on December 8, 2007 @ 9:47 pm CET

More on hate crime legislation here.

What are your thoughts on this subject? Frankly, I think that a murder should be treated as a murder, regardless of whether it’s committed out of, say, greed or bigotry.

Republican Chair of Orange County Pleads Guilty Molesting Boys

Filed under: Crime, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on @ 3:17 pm CET

Via Crooks and Liars comes the news that 37-year old Jeffrey Ray Nielsen, who was the Republican Chair of Orange County, CA and worked for Republican Rep. Dana Roherbacher, “agreed to two felony counts of lewd acts upon a child.”

He pleaded guilty to having molested two teenage boys. One of them “the 13-year-old son of a family with whom the staffer lived while working on Capitol Hill.” (more…)

From Kandahar to Carnegie

Filed under: Afghanistan, Canada, Crime, Drugs, Middle East, North America — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on December 7, 2007 @ 11:56 pm CET

At the OxBlog - a fascinating op-ed written by Taylor Owen and David Eaves, which was also published in the Toronto Star. The subject: opium abroad and opium at home.

Jorian van der Sloot To Be Released

Filed under: Crime, Europe, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on @ 6:25 pm CET

Jorian van der Sloot will be released later tonight, Aruban authories have said. The rechter-commissaris - a judge who decides whether a suspect can be held longer, among other things - said that he has rejected the request of the Dutch government to hold Van der Sloot in prison for additional 60 days, due to lack of evidence.

Van der Sloot was arrested two weeks ago because new evidence would’ve surfaced proving his involvement in the disappearance of all-American girl Natalee Holloway. (more…)

When Will Brazil Arrest Christina Hoerig?

Filed under: Crime, United States — Michael van der Galien, Editor-in-Chief on @ 12:12 pm CET

S.A. Torrence wrote a post for Wake Up America (cross posted at Digital Journal) about a woman called Claudi “Chris” Christina Hoerig. Chris Hoerig was married to an American doctor in the 1990s but they divorced after she ruined his finances and left him with a massive credit card debt. After that she married to an American soldier: Major Karl Hoerig - who served in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

It seems that she shot her husband three times in March of this year - “twice in the back and one point blank in the back of his head” - hid his body in the basement, “emptied his bank accounts which amounted to around $10,000 and wired $9,000 more to family in Brazil.” According to sources cited by Torrence she then “used her privilege as a pilot’s wife and procured a free flight to Sao Paulo, Brazil the same day.” (more…)

Justice for Ashton?

Filed under: Crime, Death Penalty — marc moore on September 22, 2007 @ 5:28 am CEST

Ashton Glover was 16 years old when she was murdered by two high school classmates last year. 

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After his arrest, Matthew McCombs, the trigger “man”, stated to police that he’d done it out of “morbid curiosity.” 

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The evidence agreed:

There was no fight or adversarial relationship between the girl and the two suspects that led to the killing, and the three had known each other for a long time. The sheriff also said none of the three students had been drinking.

McCombs and [ed. accomplice Sean] Brown left Glover’s body in the field where she’d been shot. “Afterwards, they went and had breakfast, then they buried the body, then they went to bed,” he said.

Her body was found around noon July 10, buried in a shallow grave at a construction site off Oilfield Road south of Sugar Land. About two hours later, law enforcement officials say, Brown and McCombs fled Sugar Land in a black Dodge pickup believed to belong to Brown’s father.

The pair fled to Port Huron, where they attempted to cross the border into Canada.

McCombs and Brown were brought back to Texas and the former today agreed to plead guilty to the crime in exchange for a 50 year sentence with the possibility of parole at the half way point, 25 years from now.  He had faced a life sentence before accepting the plea agreement.

From the article:

Ashton’s parents, Terry Glover and Sue Smith, were consulted by prosecutors about the plea arrangement before it was finalized and agreed to the terms. Both, along with other family and friends, were in court today.

Texas law allows for the death penalty under several different sets of circumstances, such as a murder committed during the commission of a secondary felony, the murder of a police officer, or a murder involving multiple victims.  None of the statutory reasons for a capital murder charge fit the circumstances of Glover’s death.

I’m glad for the parents that this ordeal is winding down and I hope they are content in their souls with the punishment meted out to the boy who killed their daughter.

As far as I am concerned it is a travesty of justice that Ashton’s killers will walk free someday, be it 25 or 50 years from now.  A young girl’s life was taken away simply to satisfy this scumbag’s curiosity.  What more despicable act is there?

Texas leads the U.S. in murders put to death.  Today one got off easy.  That should make the bleeding hearts happy.

Cross-posted at Black Shards.

Shah and the Case for Isolationism

Filed under: Crime, Islam, United States — marc moore on September 16, 2007 @ 4:27 am CEST

Syed Maaz Shah was sentenced to 6 and a half years in prison Friday after a Houston federal jury convicted Shah in May of two counts of unlawfully possessing a firearm while in the country on a student visa. 

Born in Pakistan, Shah, 20, was on full scholarship at University of Texas at Dallas last year when he attended firearms training sessions at a camp site in Willis, near Conroe. Other participants included three Muslim students from Houston, also charged in the so-called Houston Taliban case, as well as a government informant and an undercover FBI agent.

Prosecutors said Shah should receive a “terrorism bump” and serve a decade in prison because he was training to kill Americans to avenge what he perceived as the unjustified slaughter of Muslims by the U.S. in Iraq.

On the other side:

Shah said prosecutors twisted his words and, as outsiders, misunderstood Islamic concepts like “jihad.”

“Among Muslims, we discuss things and we know what they mean,” he said. “The government is picking and choosing and interpreting my comments to mean something else.”

This business of being misunderstood is a common enough refrain for Muslims when convicted of terror-related crimes.  Mere English-speakers are not capable of understanding their higher callings, just as we are not capable of understanding the Koran.

But is Shah’s case different? 

According to the CBS affiliate in Dallas:

The indictment accused the pair of “conducting firearms and paramilitary training to hone their skills… to fight with the Taliban to engage in a battlefield jihad.” And the indictment alleged that the men “viewed the United States and Coalition military forces on the ground in Afghanistan and Iraq as invaders.”

CBS 11 found a web posting on UTD’s Muslim Student Association forum in which Shah expressed similar views and praised a video of insurgents building roadside bombs in Iraq to kill American troops. The Association pulled the entire forum off their web page after being contacted by CBS 11. You can see the video by clicking here.

According to other blogs found by CBS 11, Shah was born in Karachi and had recently lived in Abu Dhabi and the United Arab Emirates. In a January 2003 posting on the Young Muslims of North America Forum Maaz Shah agreed with a blogger’s view about 9-11 who wrote, “I felt that America was getting wat (sic) was comin (sic) to them.(600,000 dead Iraqi children, forget the 3000 Americans)”

One damning piece of evidence, at least in the court of public opinion, is this:

In testimony before United States Magistrate Judge Jeff Kaplan, a FBI special agent assigned to the international counter-terrorism squad described 19-year-old Shah as a self-proclaimed terrorist bent on jihad.

“He held up his passport to the other members of the group and said, ‘Do you want to see the passport of a terrorist?’” the agent testified.

Another is that:

A third co-defendant, Kobie Diallo Williams, a 33-year-old U.S. citizen, will be sentenced in October after his November 2006 guilty plea to conspiracy charges related to raising money for the Taliban and gun charges.

Whatever evidence the government presented was compelling enough to result in a long sentence for a seemingly minor infraction.

Shah disagrees, naturally, and falls back on the defense that he is misunderstood.  In own words, from a letter he wrote to the UTD student newspaper while in prison awaiting trial, Shah says:

We live in interesting times, where word from a higher authority seems to reign as the truth amoung (sic) the people. For example, president George W. Bush who claimed Iraq had WMD’s and so forth. But in the end after the dust has settled we realize the real truth of the matter. That’s kind of how my case is.

Isn’t it mind boggling that someone can be placed in prison for merely going to a shooting range? That’s what was my crime. Just think about it for a moment. Let’s say me and you go to a shooting range, like any other normal Texan, mow down a few targets, and the next thing you know I am being arrested because I was on a non-immigrant visa? So where is my 2nd amendment right? Oh wait I don’t have it, hmm wonder if I even have the 1st? You see my point, and to be straight forward I was invited by my friends to go camping and have a good time, and thats (sic) what we had.

It’s really sad to see these sort of laws which are ridiculous. And you know what, IF I had known it would’ve been against the law I wouldn’t have fired that weapon. I mean for god’s sake we live in Texas for crying outloud (sic). If you don’t OWN a gun your (sic) not a Texan, forget even posessing (sic) it. I lived in Texas 10+ years of my life; men, woman (sic), even highschoolers (sic) who often went hunting all had guns from all different echelons of society. For different purposes, from hunting to self-defense, from sporting to collecting.

Looking at my record, ask people who actually know me then you get a more accurate picture of who I am. I have never done drugs or had even an ounce of alcohol. I loved working in community service projects when ever (sic) I got the chance. I never had a serious confrontation with anyone since middle school. I never violated the law, except occasional speeding tickets =). I mean thats (sic) me. I speak out against what I believe is wrong and injust (sic), for example the war in Iraq and US (sic) foreign policy for the past half a century (sic). This is all me because that is what my religion teaches me to be, not what the government is portraying me as now.

A lot of things were misconscrewed (sic), for example the passport comment was a joke merely poking fun at the fact I wasn’t stopped initially when I entered the US (sic)…

Another comment misunderstood was the one on weak leaders among Muslims, in specific I was speaking of those in Houston. You want to know what the whole conversation was around? Saudi Arabia, that’s right I was ranting against those leaders who refuse to acknowledge injust (sic) being done, in specific to Saudi Arabia. Where women can’t drive, vote or practically do anything normal. Where people are being thrown in prison and tortured for speaking out against these injustices and a removal of the monarchy and in it’s (sic) place a just democracy. Interesting how the fed’s (sic) leave all that out.

I could go on, but I don’t want to take much of your time. All I am saying is things aren’t portrayed as they seem. And generally what is apparrent (sic) isn’t the full truth in the matter; a good example is Iraq, oil, death, money, and etc.

Last but not least about my friends, all I can say is that it is a suprise (sic) to me and I cannot believe such accusations unless they are proven and since 1 has already pleaded guilty I really can’t believe it. It’s kind of like you knew someone for such a long time and you thought you knew them, but you didn’t … Goes to show what I said earlier “nothing is what it seems.”

Shah seems genuine and makes an interesting point about the gun culture in Texas which, as he points out, makes gun ownership quite common here.  Yet are we to take him at his word?  Do we dare?  A jury and a federal judge didn’t think so.

Perhaps that is not even the correct question.  Referring to Robert Spencer’s book Religion of Peace?—Why Christianity Is and Islam Isn’t, John Derbyshire says:

If what he has told us is true—and so far as the present state if Islam is concerned, I think it is—then the West should proscribe Islam, and the sooner the better. We should not allow Muslims into our countries, other than for necessary diplomatic or scholarly purposes. We should revoke the visas and permits of resident aliens who are Muslims, and ensure their departure. We should offer to purchase the citizenship of Muslim citizens, and bribe them to leave. Those who will not leave should be carefully watched by the police, and subjected to social disabilities—they should not, for example, be admitted to the armed forces, or allowed to proselytize in prisons. (Take a religion addled with violence and infused with a hatred of our society, and teach it in prisons to the most violent and antisocial of our people? Have we gone stark raving mad?) Mosques and madrassahs should be closed, or at the least punitively taxed.

For the U.S.A. there would be some constitutional niceties to be sorted out, but I am not speaking of any grave injustices here, still less of any cruelty or harm, which no civilized person wishes to a fellow human being who has done nothing wrong. Millions of harmless, peaceful Muslims will of course be inconvenienced, but life comes with no guarantee of uninterrupted convenience, and moving from one country to another is not especially arduous—I have done it myself several times. Nothing in such a program of “separationism” is immoral or improper, unless the first word in the phrase “sovereign nation” has lost all meaning.

But there, of course, is the rub. There, too, perhaps, is the real reason why Robert Spencer does not follow his analysis with the separationist prescription it so clearly implies: the reason being, that there is no chance whatsoever of such a prescription being applied in any western nation.

The west, Derbyshire says, needs to isolate itself from the influence of the new Islam.

About that he is correct, if such a thing were possible.  But there is zero chance of the U.S. or any other western nation expelling its Muslim citizens and, I think, rightly so. 

However, the same cannot be said about those who come to western democracies on student and work visas and those who sneak in illegally.  Among this group, Shah’s case is hardly unique.  Indeed, rarely does a week go by without news of a Muslim foreign national being arrested here on a terrorism-related charge. 

It is very nearly enough to make one agree with Derbyshire’s conclusion.  In the final analysis we will never know whether Syeed Maaz Shah was a man of peace or not.

Cross-posted at Black Shards.

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