Monthly Archive: February 2020

NY to Eliminate Bail, VA to Expand Parole

Articles in the New York Times and the New York Daily News provide more evidence that criminal justice reform has become a top issue, especially in Democrat controlled communities.  The shift in majorities in the Virginia Legislature has sparked bills to allow the early release of murderers over 50-years-old and expand parole opportunities for criminals convicted of violent crimes.  The state had eliminated parole for most offenders in the 1990s to keep serious offenders off the streets but as Democrat Senator David Marsden notes, “People are now more likely to believe that people deserve a second chance.”

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California Empties Out Death Row

Part of a 2016 California ballot measure adopted by the voters to speed the death penalty process is now being enforced, but it won’t result in any executions.  Louis Casiano of Fox News reports that the provision of Proposition 66 that allows the state to house condemned inmates in other prisons rather than keeping them on Death Row at San Quentin, will be implemented this year.  Inmates on Death Row must request a transfer and be evaluated to determine if they can be moved to another prison.  One of the initiative’s authors, CJLF Legal Director Kent Scheidegger, told reporters “One of the arguments made against the death penalty was it cost too much to house them at San Quentin, which is an antique facility.”

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Oklahoma to Resume Executions

Melissa Scavelli reports for KOKH:

According to officials, the state has found a reliable supply of drugs to resume executions by lethal injections.

The state said they will use an updated version of the previous protocol based on recommendations by the 2016 multicounty grand jury.

Midazolam, vecuronium bromide, and potassium chloride will once again be used officials said.

Midazolam is not the optimum choice. Resort to it is needed only because the “guerilla war against the death penalty” has succeeded in intimidating suppliers into cutting off the supply of barbiturates. Continue reading . . .

Dr. Drew: Prop. 47 Is Murder

Mary Stringini reports for Fox 11 in L.A.:

Dr. Drew Pinsky is calling on lawmakers to modify Prop 47, which he says is enabling individuals with mental health issues to deny treatment.

“The fact is — (Prop) 47 is murder. It is murder,” Dr. Drew told FOX 11 during a Good Day LA interview Monday morning. Continue reading . . .

Feds File Three More Suits v. State & Local “Sanctuary” Policies

Michelle Hackman reports for the WSJ:

The U.S. Justice Department filed three lawsuits against California, New Jersey and a Washington county late Monday over their laws and policies limiting local cooperation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, escalating a Trump administration battle against liberal states and localities that adopt so-called sanctuary policies.

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News Scan

NY Cops At War With de Blasio:  Following the enactment of several measures keeping criminals on the streets and last weekend’s shooting of two New York police officers by a repeat violent offender,  one police union has declared war on the city’s Mayor.  Greg Norman of Fox News reports that a fiery tweet from the head of the Sergeant’s Benevolent Association declared “NYPD cops have been assassinated because of you.”   The most recent shootings targeted police in a patrol vehicle, injuring one officer, then the same suspect walked into the precinct and began firing, injuring a lieutenant, only to surrender when he ran out of bullets.  The suspect, habitual felon Robert Williams, was free on parole after a 2002 attempted murder conviction, and had been rearrested in 2018 for fighting with police, and was released from custody pending trial.

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House Bill Would Protect Criminal Illegal Aliens

A largely unnoticed bill introduced last December in the House of Representatives (H.R.5383) called the “New Way Forward Act” would repeal federal laws which punish illegal immigration and protect illegal alien criminals from deportation.  Katy Grimes of the California Globe reports that the bill, which is sponsored by 44 House Democrats including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Karen Bass of California, “rolls back harmful immigration laws that, for decades, have led to racial profiling and disproportionately resulted in incarceration….” according to proponents.  As Rep. Jesus Garcia of Illinois noted the bill would break the “prison to deportation pipeline.”  While this measure has no chance of passage, some might be concerned that 10% of the members of the House of Representatives would like to see this bill become law.  With the exception of Fox News, no national news organization has bothered to report on this measure.

OSJCL Death Penalty Symposium Issue

I received the hard copies of the Fall 2019 issue of Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law, v. 17 no. 1, yesterday. It includes a symposium on capital punishment. My contribution is online here.

Mine is the sole pro-death-penalty contribution, but one is vastly better than none, and none is the norm for politically incorrect viewpoints in academia. I thank Doug Berman, who genuinely cares about diversity of viewpoint, for the invitation.

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Mass Murderer Seeks SCOTUS Stay Over Video Spat

Yesterday’s News Scan noted the case of Texas quintuple murderer Able Ochoa. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied his stay request Monday. Now he has gone to the U.S. Supreme Court, case No. 19-7572, stay application 19A876.

The reason that the highest court of the land should stop the execution of long overdue justice for a man who murdered five people in his own family, including his two baby daughters, is that the prison wouldn’t let him make a video for his clemency application. Really, I’m not making that up.

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Preliminary Semiannual Uniform Crime Reports

The FBI released the Preliminary Semiannual Uniform Crime Report in late January. See the press release. For several years now, I have been comparing the one-year changes in California to the rest of the country for cities over 100,000, the only data released that lets us compare by state. See this post two years ago and this post four years ago.

The latest data are consistent with the overall trend, i.e., California is not sharing proportionately in the national drop in crime.

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