Monthly Archive: June 2020

L.A. Mayor Wants Less Police

After more than a week of rioting, looting, vandalism and violence, the Mayor of Los Angeles announced yesterday that he intends to defund the city’s police department.  Apparently taking a cue from “Black Lives Matter” leaders who have said publicly that police should be abolished, Eric Garcetti suggested cutting LAPD funding by $100 to $150 million in order to “end racism in our city.”   Hans Bader in Liberty Unyielding notes that Hillary Clinton’s former national press secretary, Brian Fallon has also called for cutting police budgets across the country.   Bader then explains why such calls make zero sense.  “Cutting police funding will leave the police without the manpower needed to investigate and arrest many criminals. When that happens, it is disproportionately minorities themselves who will suffer.”

Oh Where, Oh Where Has the Defense Bar Gone? Oh Where, Oh Where Can It Be?

Remember Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the Boston Marathon bomber who blew up an eight-year-old?  Remember John Allen Muhammad, the Beltway sniper, who used random shoppers for target practice?  Remember Zacarias Moussaoui, the Jihadist 20th hijacker on 9-11?  There was no credible doubt about either their factual guilt when they were arrested or about the mind-bending hideousness of their crimes. But what did the defense bar, finger as ever in the air, tell us then?

“The presumption of innocence is the cornerstone of our system.”  “Take a deep breath and wait for all the facts to come out.”  “Don’t rush to judgment.”  “We don’t know what the prosecution is hiding.”  “The DA wants to tack another scalp to his wall for political gain.”  “Even the most despised defendant deserves fair play.”  Etcetera.

Question:  Have you heard any of that about Derek Chauvin, who now is certainly the most despised defendant in America?  I sure haven’t.  Next question:  Why not?  Well, one might speculate that Chauvin is identified with the true Untouchable Caste in this country  —  no, not a child killer or a gleeful mass murderer.  A former cop.  No wonder the defense bar is on vacation.

Abolish the Police, Part II

The last substantive post on the old version of Crime and Consequences was this one by Kent, titled “Abolish the Police?”  It noted that doing away with police forces  —  although it sounds like a lunatic fringe idea  —  isn’t, and is creeping its way into mainstream liberalism.

Today came further proof of this startling reality. Continue reading . . .

Systemic Racism?

“George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis has revived the Obama-era narrative that law enforcement is endemically racist. On Friday, Barack Obama tweeted that for millions of black Americans, being treated differently by the criminal justice system on account of race is “tragically, painfully, maddeningly ‘normal,’ ”  writes Heather MacDonald in today’s Wall Street Journal.  In his piece in California Political Review, James V. Lacy notes “Liberal officials and the media focus on what they call “systemic racism” as causing the death of Floyd and other people of color at the hands of scoflaw police officers.”  Liberal/progressive politicians and their mouthpieces in the mainstream media have become boringly predicable.  News anchors, politicians and endless array of pundits have been for years engaged in nonstop hectoring that virtually everything happening in the United States, including sports and weather events, is the result of racism.  Maintaining this narrative requires ignoring the inconvenient truth.

Continue reading . . .

Nothing Positive About Riots

Someone at the Fairfax County, Virginia Democratic Party tweeted on the organization’s account, “riots are an integral part of the country’s march towards progress.” The tweet was deleted, but not before it was noted by Josh Kraushaar of the National Journal. This is utterly abhorrent.

Continue reading . . .

Enabling Chaos

The week of national rioting following the killing of George Floyd by a depraved Minneapolis police officer has escalated into a “pandemic of civil violence more widespread than anything seen during the Black Lives Matter movement of the Obama years,” noted Manhattan Institute scholar Heather MacDonald in a piece in today’s City Journal.  She points to the weak response by Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, who ordered police to abandon a precinct attacked and torched by rioters and then Minnesota Governor Tim Walz’s reluctance to mobilize the national guard to avoid appearing “oppressive.”   This politically correct posturing in the face of widespread violent chaos in major U.S. cities demonstrates the successful marketing of blacks as victims of white privilege by academia, progressives and the national media.  Under this narrative anything the mob does to protest injustice, including beating innocent store owners and burning their businesses to the ground is justified. Continue reading . . .

Supreme Court Further Bogs Down Habeas Corpus Cases

The U.S. Supreme Court this morning took a small step further down a road it has already traveled too far–bogging down federal habeas corpus cases by making them more like regular civil litigation in federal courts. The direct effect of Banister v. Davis, No. 18-6943, will not be large, but the overall problem it contributes to is huge.

Continue reading . . .