Author: Michael Rushford

LA Police Shooting Suspect Identified

A 36-year old habitual criminal was charged today with the September 12, ambush shooting of two Los Angeles police officers.  CBS News reports that detectives identified Deonte Lee Murray as the man caught on video running up to a parked patrol car and firing multiple times at the two officers inside, seriously injuring them both.  Murray was arrested three days after the shooting, for the September 1 armed carjacking of the same Mercedes he used to flee the police shooting scene.  During the carjacking Murray shot the car owner in leg with a rifle.  Murray, who police say is affiliated with a street gang, has priors for drug trafficking, burglary, illegal firearm possession and terrorist threats.  I wonder how many times he has been arrested and released under California’s compassionate sentencing reform laws.

Buying A District Attorney

For the last three election cycles, ultra liberal hedge fund billionaire George Soros has been bankrolling the campaigns of district attorneys across America.  In 2016 he financed progressive, pro-criminal Kim Foxx’s election to Cook County State’s Attorney, the top prosecutor in Chicago.  Two years later his Illinois for Safety and Justice group underwrote  Larry  Krasner’s takeover of the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office.  Crime in both cities has skyrocketed.  As reported by Katie Grimes in the California Globe, this summer Soros dropped $2.5 million into the Los Angeles District Attorney’s race to put an anti-law enforcement progressive in  Office.  The candidate, former San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon, presided over that city’s transformation into an open air sewer, with thousands of drug-addicted homeless sleeping and going to the bathroom on the streets.

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Poll: Public Strongly Supports Police

A poll of 10,000 people conducted in July by The Democracy Fund and UCLA found that fairly large majorities of both Democrats and Republicans oppose defunding police departments.  Lynn Vavreck and

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Double Murderer Executed

The federal government executed double-murderer Christopher Andre Vialva last Thursday.  Jolie McCullough of the Texas Tribune reports that Vialva was convicted of the 1999 carjacking, robbery and murder of an Iowa couple on their way home from church.   Because  the murders occurred on federal land (Fort Hood) Vialva was prosecuted under federal law.   During the carjacking, Vialva forced the young couple into the trunk of their car, then tried to withdraw money from their bank accounts and pawn the woman’s wedding  ring.  Eventually, Vialva shot both victims while they lay in the trunk, killing the husband, but the wife was still alive when he and his accomplices set the car on fire.   In his appeal for clemency Vialva did not deny his guilt, but said that he was a redeemed man.  His execution was uneventful.

Media Lies About The Rioting

Since the televised George Floyd killing in late May,  a well-organized and funded army of thousands of activists have invaded scores of U.S. cities to protest against what Black Lives Matter leaders characterize as systemic racism infecting every facet of American society.  While much of the mainstream media has told the public that these protests were peaceful, or mostly peaceful, local news outlets and independent on-site reporters have confirmed that, in many if not most cases, these protests turned violent, destroying millions of dollars of property, and injuring or killing dozens of law enforcement officers, property owners and occasionally a random bystander.   On May 28, MSNBC reporter Ali Velshi won the “Baghdad Bob” award for standing in front of burning buildings in Minneapolis while telling viewers “this is mostly a protest. It is not generally speaking unruly.  But fires have been started.”

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Arsonists Arrested on the West Coast

With huge swaths of Washington, Oregon, and California suffering from raging wildfires, five people have been arrested in the three states for intentionally setting fires.   Peter Aitken of Fox News reports that the Police Chief in Ashland, Oregon believes that there is good reason to believe that the Almeda fire, which has killed two and destroyed hundreds of homes, was intentionally set.  Police have arrested 41-year-old Michael Bakkela after witnesses reported seeing him set fires near homes.  In California a woman was arrested for setting  fires along the coast highway near Monterey.   In separate incidents, two unidentified men were arrested in Washington for setting fires near state highways.

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The Cost of Legalized Pot

Seven people were found shot to death Monday at an illegal marijuana grow in the small rural town of Aguanga, California.  The Associated Press reports that police responded to a call reporting  gunshots at a home in the one stop-sign town, and found a woman suffering from gunshot wounds, who later died, and six other victims who were dead.   Officers found over 1,000 pounds of processed marijuana and several hundred plants.  In February police arrested four people in the same community and seized nearly 10,000 plants and 400 pounds of pot.   After recreational marijuana became legal in 2018, illegal grows have actually increased in the state.

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Stay Blocking Federal Law Enforcement Lifted

A federal district judge’s July 23, order restricting federal law enforcement agents from removing journalists and observers from restricted areas around federal buildings and the federal courthouse during violent protests in Portland was lifted last week by a divided panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.  Sam Simon of Politico reports that the court’s 2-1 ruling held that preventing federal agents from removing everyone, including journalists, from areas around federal buildings they are trying to protect undermines the objective and threatens their safety.

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10th Circuit Overturns Panhandling Law

A unanimous panel of the 10th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals has held an Oklahoma City ordinance prohibiting panhandling on traffic medians unconstitutional.  The Associated Press reports that in an earlier ruling, a federal District Judge had upheld the ordinance.  The case of McGraw et al. v. City of Oklahoma City involves a lawsuit by two panhandlers, two joggers and an activist, all claiming that they had a  constitutional right to use traffic medians to solicit money, sell newspapers, jog and chat with friends, hand out leaflets and display political signs.

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Lying About Voter Fraud

Every election year some candidates argue that voter fraud might have determined the outcome of close races.  The President has made the claim several times.  The mainstream media’s response has consistently been to label such claims as baseless, often quoting Secretaries of State saying that there is no evidence of fraud.  One recent example is Danielle Echeverria’s story in The San Francisco Chronicle “Trump recycles evidence-free charge of California voter fraud.”  She checked with Alex Padilla, the Democrat Secretary of State in one-party governed California, who made it clear, “Trump’s lies about voter fraud are patently untrue.”  Is it possible that Mr. Padilla has never really looked into it, because his party always wins?  This blanket denial squares poorly with a Monday story in MyNewsLA about two criminals who have plead guilty to submitting hundreds of ballots with forged signatures in Los Angeles.  Seven other co-defendants have either plead no-contest or guilty, while an eighth awaits trial.  No telling how many others in California were submitting fake ballots but have not yet been caught.

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