kctv5 | On Friday, Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas announced that people will now be required to wear masks when at any “place of public accommodation.”
The change will officially take place on Monday, June 29.
The verbiage from the city says: “All employees or visitors to any place of public accommodation must wear face coverings in an area or while performing an activity which will necessarily involve close contact or proximity to co-workers or the public where six feet of separation is not feasible.”
This order will remain in place until at least Sunday, July 12. Kansas City, Kansas is expected to roll out a similar requirement soon.
The mayor said business owners should refuse service to people who are not wearing masks.
Public Health Director Dr. Rex Archer did point out there should be an adjustment period for the first few days for businesses and citizens to get masks.
“There's a reason we're making a business focus on this,” the mayor said. “We don't want someone stopped on the street.”
Enforcement of the rules will be handled by the health department through complaints. Officers will not be stopping people inside businesses.
“This is the change that will help our economy,” said Dr. Archer. “It will save lives. We're in the second wave in Kansas City.”
Additionally, the percentage capacity limits that were previously required by the mayor’s eighth amended order will be eliminated, except for taverns and bars. This is because the mayor has now issued a ninth amended order as part of his announcement on Friday.
“Our country’s leading health and scientific experts have indicated in no uncertain terms that mask-wearing is the most effective way to curb the spread of COVID-19,” said Mayor Lucas. “Case numbers in Kansas City continue to rise, and we are taking all steps we can to ensure public health and safety. I know wearing masks can be uncomfortable, but this is a necessary step to ensure we can save lives and keep our economy open. We wear masks to protect our loved ones, those around us, and their loved ones.”
facebook | Today, the public was made aware of the misconduct of Missouri State Representative District 36, Mark A. Sharp. After an investigation was conducted by the Texas Education Agency, Representative Mark Sharp was terminated from his teaching position by the Caddo Mills Independent School District for searching for firearms using school resources when the district asked him not to and for sharing inappropriate videos with students in 2017 (link below). Not only that, Representative Sharp exhibits homophobic, antisemitic, and sexist ideals in remarks/posts still on his social media (link below). Words cannot describe how embarrassed and insulted I am as a Kansas Citian that this individual represents the great people of District 36.
Out of respect for the office, Missouri State Representative Mark Sharp must resign and suspend his re-election campaign effective immediatley. If he fails to do so, I call on the Missouri Democratic Party, Missouri House Democrats, Missouri Senate Democrats, and the Missouri Legislative Black Caucus, Inc. to step in because this inappropriate behavior is simply not acceptable for a state representative to exhibit. I have great respect for leaders of color, but make no mistake, homophobia, sexism, antisemitism, and predatory behavior have no place in the Missouri Democratic Party.
Not even a tempest in a teapot among grown folks, but for the ruthlessly amoral sock-puppet cancel culture, it's conceivable that this "tea" might actually sting.
kansascity | Sharp, who faces one challenger in the Aug. 4 primary, was nominated
by local Democrats and won a special election last year to replace state
Rep. Daron McGee. McGee resigned while being investigated by a bipartisan House committee for alleged sexual harassment of a former staffer.
Sharp’s
past came to light Tuesday through multiple posts by an anonymous
Twitter account titled “Time’s Up - Missouri,” which was created this
month and has tweeted exclusively about Sharp.
The anonymous
Twitter posts were shared by several, including Rachel Gonzalez, a
Kansas City activist and member of state party executive committee.
The Facebook posts tweeted by the anonymous account still exists on
Sharp’s personal page and date back to posts Sharp made in 2011 and
2012.
Two posts objectified women as “meat.”
“Question:
women are you a piece of meat that any stray dog has a chance at, or
are you a lady that only an established man has a shot at?” Sharp
posted.
“Dogs need meat...MEN need a lady in the streets and u kno the rest,” he posted.
In
talking about national news about coaches being accused of molesting
young men, Sharp posted in 2011, “sports used to be a sure way to get
away from that homo shyt.”
“When I was 24-25, I said things on Facebook that were stupid, dumb, uninformed and politically incorrect,” Sharp said.
Sharp said the posts do not reflect who he is now and didn’t know the posts still existed.
Read more here: https://www.kansascity.com/news/politics-government/article243766872.html#storylink=cpy
Read more here: https://www.kansascity.com/news/politics-government/article243766872.html#storylink=cpy
kcur | Kansas City currently has a highly unusual setup for its police
department. The department gets its funding largely from the city of
Kansas City, but it is not directly controlled by the mayor or city
council as other departments are.
Instead, since the late 1930s,
it has been under state control and the governor appoints a five-member
board to oversee it. Mayor Quinton Lucas is part of that board. The
police chief reports to the board, not to the city council or to the
city manager.
Over
the years there have been periodic calls to return the department to
local control, in line with the way most big-city police departments are
governed.
Supporters say local control would be one way to hold
the police department accountable and more directly address the city’s
serious violent crime and homicide problem.
Emanuel Cleaver III,
who was among several local Black leaders who stood behind Lucas as he
spoke, said he hadn't seen a movement like this in his lifetime.
"I'm extremely hopeful and believe that we're going to see significant change," Cleaver said.
Cleaver
said local control could open the door to other reforms — particularly
the establishment of an independent police review board that would
handle police complaints.
Pastor Ronald Lindsay of Concord
Fortress of Hope Church in south Kansas City said it's time for Kansas
City residents to have a voice in the debate.
"I think that this
is a transformative moment to rethink what community is and what being
engaged in a health community and culture really looks like," Lindsay
said. "It's hard work, it's ugly, but it's absolutely necessary."
Still, local control remains a controversial proposal.
Opponents
fear that it would make the police department vulnerable to political
interference. And local control has often been opposed by the Fraternal
Order of Police in Kansas City.
Lucas said while Kansas City
Police Chief Rick Smith was informed of Thursday's announcement, they
had yet to sit down and talk about it.
On Thursday, several groups applauded the mayor’s announcement. The Metro Organization for Racial and Economic Equity, or MORE2, said it was pleased with Lucas’ support of a ballot measure this year to garner voter support.
blackagendareport | Despite the breathtaking size, intensity and multi-racial character
of this month’s protests, and the record-breaking popularity of the
insurgent movement, the corporate electoral duopoly – not the loathsome
persona of Donald Trump, but the Democrat-Republican tag-team-- remains
the greatest impediment to social transformation. They are the institutional enemy.
That most emphatically includes the Black political class, virtually
all Democrats, who have overseen the steady deterioration of the Black
economic condition, managed much of the local workings of the Mass Black
Incarceration State, and supported a U.S.war machine that has
slaughtered millions of non-whites in the two generations since Dr. King
called this country “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world,
today.”
The bigger the Congressional Black Caucus gets (it now stands at 50
full-voting members in the House), the more servile to party corporate
leadership it becomes. By wide margins, the Black Caucus has opposed ending militarization of the police (80 percent “nay,” in 2014); supported elevating the police to a “protected class”
and making assault on police a federal “hate” crime (75 percent, in
2018); and voted to further empower the FBI to spy on citizens (two-thirds of the Black Caucus, in 2020). Nearly half the Black members of Congress supported the bombing of Libya and
NATO’s invasion of Africa in 2011, and the vast bulk of them have
signed off on every escalating war budget put forward by Presidents
Obama and Trump. In short, the Black Caucus is a bulwark of systemic
racism and U.S. imperial warfare. Not one serving Black congressperson
has raised a peep about the ongoing slaughter in the Democratic Republic
of Congo, where more than six million have died under four U.S.
presidents.
“The Black Caucus is a bulwark of systemic racism and U.S. imperial warfare.”
The biggest luminaries of the Black Caucus, including “Auntie” Maxine
Waters, of California, South Carolina’s James Clyburn, and New York’s Hakeem Jeffries and Greg Meeks, are today rallying around New York Democratic incumbent Rep. Eliot Engel to beat back progressive Black challenger Jamaal Bowman,
a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement. The Black Caucus has
slavishly followed every directive of House Democratic leader Nancy
Pelosi since she ordered them to refrain from holding hearings on Katrina, in 2005. They are collaborators in the duopoly’s greatest crimes against Black America, and the world.
The “street power” that has been so dramatically manifested over the
past month will be dissipated and ultimately wasted if organizers put
forward demands that leave the levers of power in the hands of local
Democrats, of whatever color. The demand to defund the police is
unassailable, in principle. However, if in practice it devolves to
endless and debilitating dickering with local legislatures over funding
that will inevitably be cut across the board due to collapsing tax
rolls, no lasting transformation will be achieved, and the movement will
splinter and fade. That’s why we at BAR support community control of
the police – the institutionalization of grassroots people’s power to
shape and oversee the mechanisms of their own security and end forever
the armed occupation of our communities by hostile forces.
littlesis | As calls to defund the police gain traction, bloated police budgets
are coming under scrutiny for siphoning public resources away from black
and brown communities. While police budgets are typically public
documents that must be approved by elected officials, there are other
institutions in place with the sole purpose of funneling even more
resources toward law enforcement.
Police foundations across the country are partnering with
corporations to raise money to supplement police budgets by funding
programs and purchasing tech and weaponry for law enforcement with
little public oversight. Annual fundraising events and parties like the
St. Paul Police Foundation’s “Blue Nite Gala” and the Chicago Police Foundation’s “True Blue” event are huge moneymakers. The NYC Police Foundation reported that it raised $5.5 million from its annual benefit in 2019.
If police departments already have massive budgets – averaging 20% to 45% of a municipal budget – why do these organizations exist? Police foundations offer a few unique benefits to law enforcement.
First, these foundations can purchase equipment and weapons with
little public input or oversight.
The Houston Police Foundation has an entire page
on its website showcasing the equipment it purchased for the police
department, including SWAT equipment, LRAD sound equipment, and dogs for
the K-9 unit. The Philadelphia Police Foundation purchased long guns, drones, and ballistic helmets. The Atlanta Police Foundation helped fund a major surveillance network of over 12,000 cameras.
In Los Angeles, the police used foundation funding to purchase controversial surveillance software
from Palantir. If the LAPD purchased this technology through its public
budget, it would have been required to hold public meetings and gain
approval from the city council. By having the foundation purchase it for
them, the LAPD was able to bypass that oversight.
Second, these foundations provide a public-private structure wherein
the corporate elite can overtly support police departments through
direct donations, sponsorships, special programs, and by serving as
directors on foundations’ boards. The ongoing protests have emphasized
that police exist to enforce a racist social order that protects
corporations, capital, and buildings rather than black and brown lives.
Police foundations are a key space for orchestrating, normalizing, and
celebrating the collaboration between corporate power and the police.
The corporate interests backing police foundations across the country
cover a wide range of industries. We profile some of these industries
and corporate actors below.
focalabs.co.uk | Amnesty International used open-source intelligence (OSINT) research
techniques to obtain and verify all of the media assets included on the
incidents of police violence map. Videos were sourced from social media
platforms, including, but not limited to, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube,
and Twitter. To document these violations, Amnesty International’s
Crisis Evidence Lab, working with its Digital Verification Corps hubs at
the University of California, Berkeley and the University of Cambridge,
gathered nearly 500 videos of incidents from social media platforms.
This digital content was then verified and geolocated. The verified
content was analyzed by investigators with expertise in weapons, police
tactics, and international and US law governing the use of force.
Where
necessary, videos were edited to protect the identity of the persons
involved and a review was conducted to ensure that videos are not listed
that could incriminate protesters, that could expose the identity of
minors, or that could lead to possible re-traumatisation.
Note on Vicarious Trauma Protection
Monitoring
human rights abuses is traumatic at the best of times. Amnesty
International took steps to protect the wellbeing of the research teams
throughout the project.
Following tips and guidelines from
organizations such as the DART Centre, First Draft News, Amnesty
International’s Citizen Evidence Lab, and the Human Rights Resilience
Project, we worked to ensure that only those who needed to view the
worst of the content did so, that all members of the research teams were
able to receive any support they needed, and built a team atmosphere
which allowed each member of the team to share their experiences.
Any
investigation looking at abuses of international human rights law or
international humanitarian law should consider the potentially traumatic
impact on the investigation team – regardless of whether they are in
the field or researching from afar, and should take steps to ensure
appropriate support structures are in place.
counterpunch | Calls for de-militarization of law enforcement have gained new
momentum in the wake of nationwide protests against police brutality.
That process won’t be easy in a nation where nearly one fifth of all
cops are military veterans — including Derek Chauvin, George Floyd’s
killer in Minneapolis and Robert McCabe, one of two officers charged
with felony assault for knocking down a 75-year-old protester in
Buffalo.
When loaded down with cast-off Pentagon gear, police officers from
any background are more likely to regard peaceful protestors as enemy
combatants, particularly when the Pentagon’s own top official refers to
their protest scenes as “battle space.” But studies show that employing
people with experience in war zones abroad has not been a boon to
“community policing” either. Getting police departments to stop acting
like an occupying army will require many fundamental changes, including
much closer screening of job applicants who are veterans and ending
their preferential hiring treatment.
Policing is currently the third most common occupation for men and
women who have served in the military. It is an option widely encouraged
by career counsellors and veterans’ organizations like the American Legion. As
a result, several hundred thousand veterans are now wearing a badge of
some sort. Although veterans comprise just 6 percent of the US
population, they represent 19 percent of all law enforcement personnel.
This disproportionate representation is due, in part, to preferential
hiring requirements, mandated by state or federal law. In addition,
under the Obama Administration, the Department of Justice provided local
police departments with tens of millions of dollars to fund
veterans-only positions.
As noted [EF1] by the Marshall Project, in its 2017 report, “When
Warriors Put On the Badge,” this combination of hiring preferences and
special funding has made it harder to “build police forces that resemble
and understand diverse communities.” The beneficiaries have been
disproportionately white, because 60 percent of all enlisted men and
women are not people of color.
HuffPost |American police officers have already been tied to the spread of extremist content on social media. A Reveal News investigation last June found that hundreds of active-duty and retired officers, from every level of U.S. law enforcement, had quietly joined private Confederate, anti-Islam, misogynistic or anti-government militia Facebook groups full of racist memes and conspiracy theories.
The investigation was a rare glimpse at the culture behind the blue wall. As Reveal News noted, disciplinary records and investigations into police misconduct “are kept secret in a majority of states, meaning most American cops enjoy a blanket of protection that can cover up biases.”
But the recent unrest has provokedsome law enforcement officials to openly broadcast their tolerance for police misconduct online, outside of these closed or little-known groups. In a Facebook post earlier this month, the Brevard County, Florida, chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police offered to rehire police officers from other areas who are charged with using excessive force against protesters.
“Lower taxes, no spineless leadership, or dumb mayors rambling on at press conferences,” promised the now-deleted Facebook post, for which Brevard County FOP President Bert Gamin has claimed responsibility. “Plus.... we got your back!”
Certainly not all police officers believe the wild stories pushed by Law Enforcement Today and circulated on pro-police social media groups. But right-wing media and many police labor leaders are heavily invested in the idea of presenting police as hard-right defenders of law and order.
Outlets such as Fox News and OAN often provide a safe space for former officers and labor officials to defend law enforcement’s conduct without challenge. One such voice has been police union leader Ed Mullins, head of the NYPD’s Sergeants Benevolent Association, who in February announced the NYPD was “declaring war” on de Blasio and accused the mayor of fomenting anti-cop sentiment. Mullins has recently appeared on Fox News hosts Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity’s shows, as well as far-right outlets Newsmax and OAN, where he called for military support to quell the protests.
Levin, from theCenter for the Study of Hate & Extremism, said police and city officials nationwide need to pay attention to what some cops are reading and writing online, and get a handle on it.
“We can’t have that in policing today,” he said. “We’re now in an era where police are so detached from many segments of the community that they serve that we don’t have the luxury of having this kind of garbage being tolerated within departments.”
fivethirtyeight | On its surface, large majorities of Americans
support “police reform.” But “reform” is vague and gets complicated
fast. For one thing, the police aren’t a single entity. There are more
than 15,000 law enforcement agencies
scattered throughout the U.S., which means that any change has to be
piecemeal. And it’s also hard to figure out what departments are
actually doing, or how to compare them. Within a single metro area,
multiple departments could be operating under different rules or
different standards of rule enforcement, and even using different definitions of particular buzzword-heavy reforms like “community policing.”
That lack of uniformity makes it difficult to compare police
departments that have implemented similar policies. “To understand if a
police reform is actually working the way you want, you need to be able
to see what officers do in the field and figure out whether the reform
you’re looking at changed that,” said Emily Owens,
a criminology professor at the University of California, Irvine. “We
don’t really have the data or the studies right now for me to say with
confidence, ‘We know that these reforms work and these don’t.’”
What’s more, the data that exists is full of holes — and bias. Even
when researchers try to document whether the police are doing a good job
or how departments might improve, they’re often conducting those
studies using metrics that help tell only part of the story. Policing
data is imperfect. Due to a lack of systematic or reliable data on
police misconduct, the fact that the data we do have is mostly
from police departments themselves, and an emphasis on crime and police
presence, it’s liable to miss important variables such as nature
of police interactions with the public, or the fact that plenty of
illegal or violent behavior happens in places and populations where
police aren’t looking for it.
opendemocracy | The only thing we know for sure is that both lockdown and social
distancing cannot be applicable in India, if we think of the tens of
millions living in the slums. Take for example Dharavi, the largest slum
in Asia in the heart of Mumbai: almost one million people in two square
kilometers, one toilet for several hundred people, what does quarantine
or social distancing mean in such conditions?
Instead of
testing, monitoring, stopping public gatherings and shutting down, say,
restaurants and malls, at a time when there were only a few hundred
cases, they brought the hammer down on the whole country. They smashed
an economy already in a deep crisis and that is now obviously in a
massive recession. Hundreds of millions of jobs have been lost.
The
cases are rocketing up, and now number 280,000. As the graph climbs the
lockdown has been lifted. Having broken everything, the government has
now absolved itself of all responsibility, and is telling us that we
have to learn to live with the virus. People who should have been
allowed to go home two months ago, are now reaching their villages,
carrying the virus with them.
It is only Modi’s hubris, his
unchallenged power and his complete lack of understanding of the country
he rules that could have resulted in such a mighty disaster. He is
cunning, but unintelligent. That is a dangerous combination.
Add
to all this, the Modi Government’s overt Islamophobia, amplified by a
shameless, irresponsible mainstream media – that overtly blamed Muslims
for being spreaders of disease. You have whole TV shows dedicated to
“COVID jihad” etc... All this came off the back of the unconstitutional
dismantling of Kashmir’s special status (leading to a 10 month
on-and-off lockdown and internet seige of 6 million people in the
Kashmir valley – a mass human rights violation by any standards), the
new anti-Muslim citizenship law, and the pogrom against Muslims in North
East Delhi in which the Delhi Police were seen actively participating.
Young
Muslims, students and activists are being arrested every day for being
“conspirators” in the massacre. While ruling party politicians who
actually came out on the streets calling for “traitors” to be shot,
remain in positions of power and high visibility.
You have been criticized foran interview
that you gave to Deutsche Welle, in which you describe this rampant
Islamophobia as something that could be a prelude to genocide. Can you
help us to understand the escalation of this situation?
Yes. I
said that the language being used by the mainstream media against
Muslims was designed to dehumanise them. To paint an entire community as
“corona jihadis” during this pandemic, when there is a pre-existing
atmosphere of violence against Muslims is to create a genocidal
climate.
Over the last couple of years we have had so many
instances of mob lynchings and George Floyd-type killings – the
difference in India being that Hindu vigilante mobs do the killing and
the police, the legal system and the political climate help them to get
away with it.
KHN | Sara Wittner had seemingly gotten her life back under control. After a
December relapse in her battle with drug addiction, the 32-year-old
completed a 30-day detox program and started taking a monthly injection
to block her cravings for opioids. She was engaged to be married,
working for a local health association and counseling others about drug
addiction.
Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
The virus knocked down all the supports she had carefully built
around her: no more in-person Narcotics Anonymous meetings, no talks
over coffee with a trusted friend or her addiction recovery sponsor. As
the virus stressed hospitals and clinics, her appointment to get the
next monthly shot of medication was moved back from 30 days to 45 days.
As best her family could reconstruct from the messages on her phone,
Wittner started using again on April 12, Easter Sunday, more than a week
after her originally scheduled appointment, when she should have gotten
her next injection. She couldn’t stave off the cravings any longer as
she waited for her appointment that coming Friday. She used again that
Tuesday and Wednesday.
“We kind of know her thought process was that ‘I can make it. I’ll go
get my shot tomorrow,’” said her father, Leon Wittner. “‘I’ve just got
to get through this one more day and then I’ll be OK.’”
But on Thursday morning, the day before her appointment, her sister
Grace Sekera found her curled up in bed at her parents’ home in this
Denver suburb, blood pooling on the right side of her body, foam on her
lips, still clutching a syringe. Her father suspects she died of a
fentanyl overdose.
However, he said, what really killed her was the coronavirus.
“Anybody that is struggling with a substance abuse disorder, anybody
that has an alcohol issue and anybody with mental health issues, all of a
sudden, whatever safety nets they had for the most part are gone,” he
said. “And those are people that are living right on the edge of that
razor.”
Sara Wittner’s death is just one example of how complicated it is to
track the full impact of the coronavirus pandemic — and even what should
be counted. Some people who get COVID-19 die of COVID-19. Some people
who have COVID die of something else. And then there are people who die
because of disruptions created by the pandemic.
statista | Out of America's eight biggest coronavirus outreaks, seven are in jails or correctional facilities. That's according to a list from the New York Times
which shows that the biggest national cluster is in the Marion
Correctional Institution in Ohio which has 2,439 cases as of June 16,
2020. Another facility in Ohio, the Pickaway Correctional Institution,
has 1,791. The third largest cluster was identified in the Trousdale
Turner Correctional Center in Hartsville, Tennessee.
Even though
prisons account for the largest outbreaks in the U.S. with deaths within
their walls increasing 73 percent in the past month alone, the vast
majority of outbreaks have occurred in U.S. nursing homes
and long-term care facilities. The toll on inmates has still been
heavy, however, with 600 estimated to have died during the pandemic so
far.
plsonline | By the mid-1960s police officers had responded with an aggressive and
widespread police unionization campaign. Aided by court rulings more
favorable to the organizing of public employees; fueled by resentment of
the authoritarian organization of departments; and united in a common
resistance to increasing charges of police brutality, corruption and
other forms of misconduct, nearly every large-city police department had
been unionized by the early 1970s. Police officers struck in New York
City in 1971; in Baltimore in 1974 and in San Francisco in 1975. "Job
actions" such as "blue flue" and work slowdowns (i.e. not writing
tickets, making few arrests) were common in other cities.
Initially, the response to this union activity was to reduce
centralization in the police bureaucracy and to include officers in
discussions of rules, procedures and departmental practices. What had
been the exclusive fiefdom of the police executive was now subject to
negotiation with a union. But reduced municipal tax bases, caused
primarily by the exodus of white, affluent executives and professionals
to the suburbs in the 1970s; a prolonged economic recession in the 1970s
and early 1980s; and fiscal mismanagement in many cities, led to
layoffs of police and other municipal workers, and rollbacks in
benefits. In fact, unions became an attractive scapegoat for municipal
problems. Politicians, administrators and the media all blamed demands
by public workers for the financial straits in which the cities had been
floundering. Despite the fact that the fiscal crisis had been caused by
much larger social and economic trends, blaming police and other
workers allowed police administrators and politicians to once again
reorganize the police. This reorganization has been dubbed the
"Taylorization of the police" by historian Sydney Harring (1981).
Under the "Taylorization" reforms, police departments reduced the
size of their forces; went from two-person to one-person patrol cars;
and increased the division of labor within police departments. Police
work was broken down into ever more specific, highly specialized tasks;
patrol became more reactive; technology was used to restore the control
of police administrators (i.e., 911 emergency lines; computerization);
and some traditional police tasks were turned over to civilian
employees. All of this served to further isolate the police from the
citizenry; to further reduce the effectiveness of police practices; and
to continually justify ever more "Taylorization" as a response to
increasing inefficiency.
Concurrent with reform efforts aimed at professionalization, was an
increased reliance on technology and scientific aspects of police
investigation. The idea of police as scientific crime fighters had
originated with August Vollmer as early as 1916, with the introduction
of the crime laboratory. By 1921 Vollmer was advocating the widespread
use of lie detectors and the establishment of a database for collecting
national crime data (Crank and Langworthy 1992). Over the years science
became synonymous with professionalism for many police executives. The
use of fingerprints, serology, toxicology chemistry and scientific means
for collecting evidence were emphasized as part of a professional
police force. In terms of technological advancements, new ways of
maintaining police record systems and enhancing police communications,
such as the police radio, became priorities.
The emphasis was on
efficiency and crime-fighting, with the social work aspects of policing
deemphasized and discouraged. The hope was also that the professional,
scientific crime-fighters would be less susceptible to corruption. It is
therefore a further irony of policing that in Philadelphia new
communications technologies were put to use in establishing what is
arguably the first "call girl" system in the United States, calling out
for prostitutes using police communications systems.
On Friday of last week, the
Juneteenth holiday, a leak-focused activist group known as Distributed
Denial of Secrets published a 269-gigabyte collection of police data
that includes emails, audio, video, and intelligence documents, with
more than a million files in total. DDOSecrets founder Emma Best tells
WIRED that the hacked files came from Anonymous—or at least a source
self-representing as part of that group, given that under Anonymous'
loose, leaderless structure anyone can declare themselves a member. Over
the weekend, supporters of DDOSecrets, Anonymous, and protesters
worldwide began digging through the files to pull out frank internal
memos about police efforts to track the activities of protesters. The
documents also reveal how law enforcement has described groups like the
antifascist movement Antifa.
"It's the largest published hack of
American law enforcement agencies," Emma Best, cofounder of DDOSecrets,
wrote in a series of text messages. "It provides the closest inside look
at the state, local, and federal agencies tasked with protecting the
public, including [the] government response to COVID and the BLM
protests."
The Hack
The
massive internal data trove that DDOSecrets published was originally
taken from a web development firm called Netsential, according to a law
enforcement memo obtained by Kreb On Security.
That memo, issued by the National Fusion Center Association, says that
much of the data belonged to law enforcement "fusion centers" across the
US that act as information-sharing hubs for federal, state, and local
agencies. Netsential did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Best declined to comment on whether the information was
taken from Netsential, but noted that "some Twitter users accurately
pointed out that a lot of the data corresponded to Netsential systems."
As for their source, Best would say only that the person
self-represented as "capital A Anonymous," but added cryptically that
"people may wind up seeing a familiar name down the line."
DDOSecrets
has published the files in a searchable format on its website, and
supporters quickly created the #blueleaks hashtag to collect their
findings from the hacked files on social media. Some of the initial
discoveries among the documents showed, for instance, that the FBI
monitored the social accounts of protesters and sent alerts to local law
enforcement about anti-police messages. Other documents detail the FBI
tracking bitcoin donations to protest groups, and internal memos warning
that white supremacist groups have posed as Antifa to incite violence.
NYPost | They may be New York’s Bravest, but they sure aren’t New York’s brightest.
In a Brooklyn neighborhood overrun with nightly illegal fireworks, one resident found out that some of the amateur pyrotechnic aficionados are none other than local FDNY firefighters.
The 33-year-old Crown Heights resident said he and his wife were
passing by Ladder 123 on St. John’s Place near Schenectady Avenue at
about 11:30 p.m. Tuesday when he saw a group of firefighters ignite what
appears to be a fountain firework display.
“I thought it was young kids lighting it. And there are. But then I
see the firefighters doing it — they should know better,” the man, a
father of five children who asked that his name not be used, told The
Post.
Video he recorded at the scene shows the firework spray sparks into the night air from a device on the street.
The man said one of the firefighters confronted him about filming the
display — causing him to question whether they actually knew what they
were doing was “absurd,” he said.
“As public servants, I feel like they should know better than to
light fireworks at 11:30 at night. It’s completely brazen wantonness,”
the man said.
“It’s like they didn’t understand why what they were doing is so
absurd. It’s late at night, there are kids. You have to be responsible
and set an example,” he added.
Slate | Everyone in my neighborhood in Boston—not just the narcs and NIMBYs on
my local NextDoor—is convinced they’re hearing way more fireworks this
year. It turns out we’re not imagining it: Boston police recorded 1,445
fireworks complaints in the first week of June, compared with just 22 in
the same week last year, the Boston Herald reported last week.
This seems to have started when the weather began warming up—complaints
in May were also up by more than 2,300 percent compared with May
2019—and it’ll only continue as we near a July 4 in which organized
fireworks displays are yet another casualty of this semi-reopened
pandemic summer.
To go by the complaints cities are registering, it appears way more
people are spending their free time dabbling with pyrotechnics this
year. The mayor of Syracuse, New York, vowed action after a rash of 911
calls about fireworks last Tuesday night, and Syracuse police claim a 335 percent increase in fireworks complaints since the beginning of the year. Looking at New York City’s 311 data,
I calculated a 920 percent year-over-year increase in fireworks
complaints for the month of May. (The city made it easier to submit
these complaints last June, when it began accepting reports online—but
that by itself doesn’t appear to explain the May increase. The NYPD did
not respond to a request for further comment.) More anecdotally, in
Baltimore, “longtime residents” say individual fireworks use is noticeably more prevalent this year. In other parts of the country, Facebook and Twitter are full of complaints that it’s the worst year ever. As my colleague Ben Mathis-Lilley put it:
Everyone in my neighborhood in Boston—not just the narcs and NIMBYs on
my local NextDoor—is convinced they’re hearing way more fireworks this
year. It turns out we’re not imagining it: Boston police recorded 1,445
fireworks complaints in the first week of June, compared with just 22 in
the same week last year, the Boston Herald reported last week.
This seems to have started when the weather began warming up—complaints
in May were also up by more than 2,300 percent compared with May
2019—and it’ll only continue as we near a July 4 in which organized
fireworks displays are yet another casualty of this semi-reopened
pandemic summer.
To go by the complaints cities are registering, it appears way more
people are spending their free time dabbling with pyrotechnics this
year. The mayor of Syracuse, New York, vowed action after a rash of 911
calls about fireworks last Tuesday night, and Syracuse police claim a 335 percent increase in fireworks complaints since the beginning of the year. Looking at New York City’s 311 data,
I calculated a 920 percent year-over-year increase in fireworks
complaints for the month of May. (The city made it easier to submit
these complaints last June, when it began accepting reports online—but
that by itself doesn’t appear to explain the May increase. The NYPD did
not respond to a request for further comment.) More anecdotally, in
Baltimore, “longtime residents” say individual fireworks use is noticeably more prevalent this year. In other parts of the country, Facebook and Twitter are full of complaints that it’s the worst year ever. As my colleague Ben Mathis-Lilley put it:
It’s true that Americans always complain more about fireworks in the run-up to July 4. And a pandemic alone can’t explain why Americans are generally setting off more explosives than they used to; we can also thank a liberalization of laws
in a slew of states over the past two decades. These factors make it
challenging to establish just how extraordinary 2020 is in terms of DIY
fireworks displays and whether the apparent boom (sorry) is a local or
national phenomenon.
BaltimoreSun | Baltimore-area residents may not always agree, but when it comes to the
spate of fireworks popping off all night across town, many have
suddenly found themselves on the same page.
From Poppleton and Carrollton Ridge to Patterson Park, Hampden and
Locust Point, the barrage of crackles, booms and pows has united much of
Baltimore around a common set of concerns, ranging from fears about
accidental fires to frustrations about interrupted sleep.
“It’s mayhem. It’s a lack of understanding about what it means to live
in civil society,” said Janet Miller, who lives near Hollins Market and
has seen fireworks go off until the wee hours of the morning since
Memorial Day weekend. “It’s hard to continue to live here and feel
safe.”
While the run-up to Independence Day usually sparks some amateur
fireworks displays in Baltimore, longtime city residents say this year’s
showings feel different in presentation, tone and timing.
Residents all over the city — and in other major U.S. cities such as
New York, Boston, Los Angeles and San Francisco — have taken to
Facebook, Reddit and other online neighborhood bulletins to vent and
share opinions, with some posts receiving more than 150 replies and
dozens of likes and shares. Parents of young children, military veterans
and local politicians have weighed in.
There
have been more fireworks going off over the last 10 nights than I've
heard in the last three July 4th holidays combined. Some special
fireworks sale going on that I don't know about?
Pigtown resident Cat Wall has counted 17 nights in a row of audible
fireworks, starting as early as 7 p.m. and continuing as late as 4 a.m.
Her dog, Halas, a 12-year-old chocolate Lab, has taken to hiding in the
basement and refusing outdoor walks when it gets dark, she said.
NYTimes | Federal
officials charged today that a group mostly made up of police officers,
firefighters and private security guards set the string of fires three
years ago that brought Boston the nationally reported title of ''arson
capital of the world.''
The fires
were set, according to United States Attorney William Weld, to scare the
public into supporting more positions for the Police and Fire
Departments after property tax reductions had reduced their ranks.
Federal
agents arrested six people in three states this morning, and a seventh
surrendered in Boston this afternoon. Two of the defendants were armed
when arrested. The five arrested in the Boston area pleaded not guilty
at a hearing here today. More charges and arrests were expected, Federal
and state officials said.
Largest Arson Case
Mr.
Weld said the 83-count Federal indictment announced today was believed
to be ''the largest single arson case in history, state or Federal, in
terms of the number of fires involved.''
The indictment alleges that beginning
sometime after July 1981, as the effect of a statewide tax-cutting
measure forced layoffs of many police officers and firefighters in
Massachusetts, the members of the group set 163 fires in Boston and nine
surrounding cities and towns. The outlying fires were set to divert
investigators away from Boston, the indictment said.
It also said that defendants who worked for a security company burned a client's building to distract attention from themselves.
The buildings burned included houses,
churches, factories, restaurants, a Marine Corps barracks and the
Massachusetts Fire Academy. A total of 281 firefighters were injured in
the fires.
The fires listed in the
indictment grew in frequency and number over the months. They stirred
deep public apprehension here, generated local and national news
accounts, and two years ago resulted in the Federal investigation that
produced the indictments.
The
indictments and arrests were announced by an assembly of Federal and
state officials that included the District Attorneys of five counties,
officials of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Stephen E. Higgins,
director of the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
thediplomat | The protests in the United States have sparked a debate about the
militarization of American police forces. Much attention has been paid
to the literal usage of military hardware because it is the most obvious
manifestation of this phenomenon. But there is a much deeper history
that goes beyond just American police choosing to take on military garb
and ride Armored Personnel Carriers: American military adventures abroad
have long fueled a broader militarization that shapes norms, processes,
mentalities, and the relationship between the local police and the
citizenry.
There was a significant amount of concern in early
America and up to the late 1800s about the prospect of the U.S. military
being used as a means of controlling the public. The founding fathers
were suspicious of the idea of
a standing army, in part, for this reason. A number of laws including
the Militia Acts passed in the decades following American independence
and the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 tried to limit the ability of the president to use the military in domestic circumstances.
That
being said, scholars have been mapping the relationship between wars
and the evolution of domestic policing for some time. Christopher J.
Coyne and Abigail R. Hall’s work on the matter is
particularly informative. They posit that a “boomerang effect”
contributes to the incorporation of intrusive and aggressive means used
to subdue foreign populations in domestic civilian settings. Other
scholars have looked at the impact of specific conflicts or the mindsets
that govern police conduct.
The Domestic Legacy of the Philippines War
Despite
the formal end of the Philippine War in 1902, American colonial rule
faced an aggressive insurgency seeking independence. The insurgency in
the Philippines against the U.S. occupation authority provided the
opportunity to experiment with new concepts involving the use of
military entities to pacify a civilian population. The U.S. military
formed a constabulary manned primarily by sympathetic locals that
blurred the line between police and military. Rather than having two
distinct forces, one protecting the country from foreign threats and the
other providing security services to the populace, the Philippine
Constabulary (PC) was a hybrid of both, with a comfortable revolving
door between it and various other military and policing structures.
Many
U.S. veterans who had been at the forefront of establishing these
social control systems in the Philippines returned the United States
after the war, where they sought work in local law enforcement and
changed the structure of police departments, unleashing a torrent of
militarization. These veterans, many of whom were involved with the PC,
initially used the techniques they had mastered abroad to target
out-groups like foreign workers or prostitutes. Over time, the success
of these measures would open the door to a more widespread
militarization of the police and a shift in organizational and cultural
norms within police departments and public opinion shifted to
accommodate it. As historian Alfred McCoy notes:
[T]he
U.S. military, thrust into these crucibles of counterinsurgency,
developed innovative methods of social control that had a decidedly
negative impact on civil liberties back home. As the military plunged
into a fifteen-year pacification campaign in the Philippines, its colonial
security agencies fused domestic data management with foreign police
techniques to forge a new weapon—a powerful intelligence apparatus that
first contained and then crushed Filipino resistance. In the aftermath of
this successful pacification, some of these clandestine innovations
migrated homeward, silently and invisibly, to change the face of
American internal security. … Empire thus proved mutually transformative
in ways that have arguably damaged democracy in both the Philippines
and the United States.
The notion that returning
servicemen would seek employment in the civilian policing sector is not
inherently harmful, but as Coyne and Hall explain, rather than these
servicemen being mentored to adapt their skills for civilian service,
they became agents of importation for military tactics — especially as
they climbed the ranks of their respective departments:
wikipedia | According to the official website, "the church was designed in a
monumental Russian style, organically incorporating modern architectural
approaches and innovations unique to the Orthodox church creation". The
facades of the building are finished with metal, the arches are glazed. The walls of the church, decorated with murals, include battle scenes from military history and scripture texts. The decoration of the lower (small) church is made of ceramics and is decorated with Gzhel painting, with pieces of glass smalt used in the manufacture of mosaic panels. The central apse dedicated to the Resurrection of Christ is made in the form of a metal relief. The decoration of the church, the icon and the iconostasis (icon wall) are made of copper with enamels, as was done on the marching military icons. The image of the Saviour-Not-Made-by-Hands in the central dome of the church is the largest image of the Christ's face executed in mosaic.
Some of the sizes are symbolic. The height of the church along with the cross is 95 meters. The diameter of the drum of the main dome
is 19.45 meters, symbolizing the year when the Great Patriotic War
ended – 1945. The height of the belfry is 75 meters, a reference to the
75 years that passed in 2020 since the end of World War II. The height
of the small dome is 14.18 meters – 1418 days and nights hostilities
lasted in Great Patriotic War. The area of the church complex is 11,000 m². The capacity of the interior of the church is up to 6,000 people.
Bells
The bells
are made at the Voronezh Foundry. The decoration of the bells repeats
ornaments decorating the cathedral. The bells reflect the theme of
Victory in the Great Patriotic War, icons of patrons of the Russian
Army. The main bell-evangelist was decorated with bas-reliefs depicting
key events of the Great Patriotic War. Work on the manufacture of bells
was carried out for six months. The ensemble weighs more than 20 tons,
it includes 18 bells, the largest of which weighs 10 tons.[7]
17 of the 18 bells are dedicated to the types and arms of the troops.
On the one hand the emblem is applied to the bell, on the other, the
image of the patron saint.[7] On 23 August 2019, bells are set on the belfry of the cathedral.
Dome
On 15 November 2019, a 80-ton central dome was erected on the cathedral, the height and diameter of which are 12 meters.[8]
In total, the cathedral has six domes, four of which are identical,
each of which weighs 34 tons, the central one is the largest and one is
on the belfry. The design has a high alloy steel frame with a strength
factor from 300 to 1500 years.
gatestoneinstitute | Moscow sent a spectacular message last month to the world's other
Arctic powers: Russia is determined to dominate the region. Russian
transport aircraft, breaking the record for the highest altitude jump
ever, parachuted a group of their Spetsnaz
(Special Forces) over the Arctic from a height of almost 33,000 feet
(Mt. Everest is 29,000 feet). Russian paratroops then executed a
military exercise operation before reassembling at the Nagurskoye base, the northernmost military facility in Russia.
Any rival's attempt to catch up and surpass Moscow's head start in
the Arctic is unlikely to succeed. Russia has a geopolitical advantage
in that its sovereign land abuts over half of the Arctic's territorial
waters. Historically, Russia's czars and commissars were frustrated in
their attempts to secure warm-water ports, which would have benefited
commerce and military force projection. Now, with environmental warming
and subsequent accelerating ice-melt in the Arctic Ocean, Moscow appears
poised to control the newest maritime corridor, "the Northeast
Passage." This waterway will unite Russian Europe with Russia's Far East
provinces adjacent to Pacific waters. The "Northeast Passage" could shorten the transshipment of goods from Asian countries to Europe by two weeks, rather than shipping goods through the Suez Canal route.
For centuries, ships could navigate only sections of the Arctic a few
months of the year. If present climatic warming trends continue,
however, and probably even if they do not, Russia seems to be expecting
exclusively to exploit the region's vast energy, mineral and fishing
resources, at least within the legal limits of its 200 nautical mile
exclusive economic zone beyond its land borders.
Russia's northwestern Arctic territory of the Kola Peninsula accounts for large portions of the country's nickel and copper output, as does Norilsk in East Siberia. The Arctic region also accounts for most of Russia's tin extraction. Russian mining centers within the Arctic Circle produce valuable minerals, such as diamonds in the Yakutia Republic in Russia's Far East, as well as palladium, platinum, selenium and cobalt. Probably the most famous minerals are the area's legendary gold deposits in the Kolyma area.
Russia's claim of exclusivity, or at least its special ties, to the Arctic are of long-standing. Moscow first claimed sovereignty over all the islands in the Arctic Sea north of its Eurasian land mass as early as 1926, and repeated this claim in 1928 and again in 1950. Russia's claim of sovereign control of these islands, along with its nearly 25,000 kilometers of Arctic coastline, is considered part of the country's historical patrimony and, therefore, its ownership supposedly non-negotiable.
WaPo | Sam Greenlee was underappreciated, disgruntled, professionally disemboweled and perpetually agitated.
NewYorker | Ivan Dixon’s 1973 film, “The Spook Who Sat by the Door,”
which is playing at Metrograph from Friday through Sunday (it’s also on
DVD and streaming), is a political fiction, based on a novel by Sam
Greenlee, about the first black man in the C.I.A. After leaving the
agency, the agent, Dan Freeman (Lawrence Cook) moves to Chicago, and
puts his training in guerrilla warfare to use: he organizes a group of
black gang members and Vietnam War veterans into a fighting force and
leads a violent uprising against the police, the National Guard, and the
city government. The film’s radical premise was noticed outside of
Hollywood: produced independently, the film was completed and released
by United Artists, but it was pulled from theatres soon after its
release. Its prints were destroyed; the negative was stored under
another title; and Greenlee (who died in 2014) claimed that the F.B.I. was involved in its disappearance, citing visits from agents to theatre owners who were told to pull the movie from screens. (No official documentation of these demands has emerged.)
On
these grounds alone, a viewing of “The Spook Who Sat By the Door” would
be a matter of urgent curiosity. But the movie is also a distinctive
and accomplished work of art, no mere artifact of the times but an
enduring experience. A supreme aspect of the art of movies is tone—the
sensory climate of a movie, which depends on the style and mood of
performance as much as the plot and the dialogue, the visual
compositions as well as the locations, costumes, and décor, the editing
and the music (often a sticking point), all of which are aligned
with—and sharpen and focus—the ideas that the movie embodies. Dixon—who
starred in one of the greatest of all independent films, Michael
Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man,”
from 1964 (and then spent five years on “Hogan’s Heroes”)—begins with a
tone bordering on sketch-like satire that soon crystallizes into a
sharp edge of restrained precision. A senator (a white man, played by
Joseph Mascolo) campaigning for reëlection finds that he needs the black
vote and decides to criticize the C.I.A. for having no black agents.
Even in his office, the senator speaks in a pompous, stentorian voice
seemingly inflated to a constant podium bluster.
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