Monthly Archive: May 2024

Attacks on Cops Highest in Decade

The FBI reports that in 2023 over 79,000 law enforcement officers were attacked, the most since 2014.  As reported by the Associated Press, over the same ten year period the number of officers who were shot increased by 113%, from 200 in 2014 to 466 last year.  Fatal attacks on officers totaled 60 last year compared to 61 in 2022.  Seventy three officers died in the line of duty in 2021.  During the national George Floyd riots in 2020, groups including Black Lives Matter, several civil rights leaders and progressive politicians spoke openly about their belief that police were racists, justifying the attacks on officers.  As that trend has continued, it is no mystery why fewer young men and women are choosing careers in law enforcement.  Update:  On May 17 the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution condemning violence against police officers.  61 democrats voted against it.

Ban-the-Box Busted

Among released criminals, there is a substantial connection between employment and going straight. That is, those who find employment are less likely to commit new crimes. The “ban the box” movement seeks to forbid employers from asking about criminal convictions. A related effort is to expunge criminal convictions. The theory is that by removing this information from employers, more past offenders will find employment, and fewer will return to crime.

But does it work?

This study has recently been posted on the National Bureau of Economic Research site. “We find consistent evidence that removing an existing record does not improve labor market outcomes, on average.”

Add another example to the list of confirmations of H.L. Mencken’s famous observation: “There is always a well-known solution to every human problem—neat, plausible, and wrong.” Continue reading . . .

Insufficient SCOTUS Cases

The WSJ has this article by Jess Bravin on comments by Justice Kavanaugh that the Supreme Court is not taking enough cases. The majority of his colleagues evidently do not agree.

As if on cue, the Court today announced yet another Monday orders list taking no new cases for full briefing and argument.

We now have a working majority on the Court who believe in enforcing the Constitution actually ratified by the people, not one made up later by judges twisting the original words out of shape to fit their own policy preferences. In criminal procedure, there are huge piles of pseudo-constitutional muck violating the people’s right of self-government and needing cleaning up. So far, though, we do not seem to have enough justices interested in doing so. Continue reading . . .

Pennsylvania Joins Blue State Search For Racial Profiling

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro is expected to sign legislation into law that prohibits drivers from using cellphones as reported by Fox 29.  While most states have adopted similar laws to reduce distracted driving, the new PA law also requires police departments to document and report the race of drivers detained for traffic stops. The purpose of this new requirement, according to the legislature’s black caucus, is to expose racial profiling by police. In doing so, Pennsylvania joins other Democrat-controlled states in the effort to characterize law enforcement as “systemically racist,” a narrative advanced by Black Lives Matter, the ACLU and race hustlers such as Al Sharpton. The irrefutable fact that different races commit crimes at different rates, unrelated to their proportion of the population, is an inconvenient truth that progressive politicians and the mainstream media prefer to ignore. As Pennsylvania traffic officers shy away from stopping a black motorists using smartphones to avoid being tarred as a racist, the new distracted driver’s law will become merely symbolic.

Report Finds California Best Place for Cops

A report released yesterday by WalletHub ranked California as the best state in the country for police officers. The report compared training, salaries and job hazards among the states to establish the ranking.  However, the surveyors did not actually take the time to talk to police officers. Josh DuBois of KTLA reports that the state’s police officer associations are having none of it.

“We don’t see any of these metrics in this ‘study’ but that is the reality law enforcement officers face in California,” he added. The unions also took issue with the report’s findings on officer compensation, saying WalletHub failed to consider the high cost of living in the state, especially where housing is concerned,” said the President of the Los Angeles Police Protective League.”

Continue reading . . .

Fatal Drunk Driving Accidents Increase as DUI Arrests Decrease

Another example of the effect of reducing the consequences for criminal behavior is playing out across America.  Over the past several years, as part of the progressive criminal justice reform movement, the penalties for drunk driving have been reduced.  Like commercial burglary, shoplifting, simple assault and drug dealing, drunk driving is considered a “low level” crime in most states.  Scott Calvert of the Wall Street Journal reports that while the number of fatal accidents involving drunk drivers are the highest in 20 years, arrests for drunk driving have plummeted.

“Though the risk of arrest is widely considered a key deterrent to drunken driving, DUI arrests in recent years have sunk to multidecade lows, Federal Bureau of Investigation figures show. They dropped from just over a million in 2019 to about 780,000 in 2020. The FBI said there were 788,000 such arrests in 2022, the latest data available.” Continue reading . . .

Alvin Bragg’s New York is Not Safe For Women

In New York City, under District Attorney Alvin Bragg, a repeat offender who randomly attacks women is more than likely going to be released without bail just a few hours after his arrest.  The charge against him is likely to be dropped, or if he is convicted he will be sentenced to probation.  Bragg, who was elected with financial support from pro-criminal socialist George Soros, considers most assaults which do not involve weapons as non-violent crimes.  In late March New York’s ABC affiliate reported on multiple random attacks of women including a man who punched a 27-year-old woman in the face in Greenwich Village at 2 p.m. on March 25, and on the same day, a 36-year-old woman was punched in the back.  Shortly after noon on March 26, a 24-year-old woman was slugged in the head. On the 23rd a 23-year-old woman was slapped in the head on West 42nd street.  On the 19th a 30-year-old woman was slugged on Delancey Street.

Continue reading . . .