Morning Links

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009
  • What happens to your keys and passwords after you die? Cory Doctorow looks at the various ways of giving loved ones access to your post-mortem online life.
  • On the topic of police dogs, someone in the comments posted this 2007 Grits for Breakfast post, in which a consultant expert on the use of K9s says the dogs are wrong about half the time. No idea how accurate that is, though it’s consistent with what cops from LEAP have told me.
  • Publishers Weekly interviews comic artist Peter Bagge, whose new book is a collection of the editorial comics he has written for Reason over the years.
  • Wired follows up on bCurtis Melvin’s work using Google Maps to annotate North Korea’s geography.
  • WalMart supports an employer health care mandate. Weirdly, this will likely win the company praise from its traditional critics. In truth, this really is an effort to impose expensive, government-enforced burdens on the company’s mom-and-pop competitors. Yet another example of how behemoth companies tend to welcome federal regulation, not shun it. More regs make it more difficult for upstarts to compete.
  • Stock up on Nyquil and Allerest now. The feds may ban them. Ridiculous. When you consider how many people benefit from the acetaminophen’s pain relief properties, 458 deaths per year sounds almost like a rounding error. (MORE: They want to ban Percocet and Vicodin, too.)
  • The Daily Show’s terrific reporting from Iran.
  • Husien Shehada, a 29-year-old unarmed Virginia man, was shot dead while vacationing in Florida this week. Police were apparently investigating reports of a man carrying a gun outside a nightclub. It doesn’t appear that he did anything wrong at all. The police bizarrely then interrogated the man’s brother and girlfriend about whether “they spoke Arabic,” then arrested the man’s brother for beating his girlfriend (he denies the charge). The cop who shot him was back on duty four days later, during which he was involved in a second fatal shooting. He’s now on paid desk duty. More here.

  • Sunday Links

    Sunday, June 28th, 2009
  • Straight Outta’ Moscow.
  • Others have done the celebrity Facebook page gag before, but this one is pretty well-executed.
  • New report casts fresh doubt on “shaken baby syndrome.”
  • Another bizarre autopsy case in Mississippi: “His body organs were missing and he was stuffed with bed sheets.” Yes, Dr. Hayne is involved, though it isn’t yet clear just where in the chain of custody his initial autopsy came.
  • Police officer once again treads onto private land, shoots and kills the owner’s dog. And once again, witness accounts of the incident differ sharply from officer accounts.
  • Sunday Afternoon Links

    Sunday, May 17th, 2009
  • Vigilante cops vs. Massachusetts politicians. Not sure who I’m rooting for, here. Or against.
  • My latest on Michael West got the green-light on Fark. Check out the comments from user RedThree in the discussion thread. Interesting.
  • Virginian-Pilot columnist Roger Chesley looks at the Cory Maye case, and says Ryan Frederick is lucky he doesn’t live in Mississippi. Neither man should be in prison, of course. But if Maye had gotten Frederick’s sentence, he’d be free by now.
  • Dear Keith Olbermann: Stop taking yourself so damned seriously. Really.
  • Op-ed in the Washington Post says it’s time to sacrifice the Internet at the altar of journalism. I’d like to think this site shows the two can coexist rather nicely.

  • Saturday Links

    Saturday, April 25th, 2009
  • Police captain fired after stealing from department fund for another fired police officer. Injustice in Seattle asks, will there be a fund for him, too?
  • Great piece on Law Enforcement Against Prohibition at the Washington Post. The comments are encouraging, too. At least those I read.
  • ACLU says former U.S. attorney, now candidate for New Jersey governor, was routinely tracking American citizens on the cell phones without a warrant.
  • The director of Omaha’s crime scene investigation unit has been charged with felony evidence tampering. I first wrote about this case last December. It includes a false confession from a mentally handicapped man after a police interrogator said that unless he admitted to the murder, he’d do “do my level best to hang your ass from the highest tree.”
  • I missed this when it came out: The Mercatus Center ranks the 50 states by freedom. New Hampshire, Colorado, and South Dakota finish at the top. Alaska is tops in personal freedom. New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and California bring up the rear.
  • Illinois man officially declared innocent after serving 26 years for a murder he didn’t commit.
  • Miami-Dade cop steals money and drugs from arrestees. Internal affairs tries in vain for three years to get him off the force. Doesn’t happen until he actually shoots and nearly kills a man.

  • LAPD Pressured Coroner to Change Findings in Police Shooting

    Thursday, January 8th, 2009

    From the L.A. Times:

    The Los Angeles Police Department waged an aggressive behind-the-scenes campaign to convince coroner’s officials to change their finding that a SWAT officer’s bullet killed a 19-month-old girl held hostage by her father three years ago, according to records reviewed by The Times.

    The intense lobbying effort, which involved one of the department’s highest-ranking officials, led to significant friction between the LAPD and coroner’s office. It also raises questions about whether the LAPD crossed an ethical line in pushing so hard, some medical and law enforcement experts said.

    The department rested its case on self-serving conclusions by a four-year ballistics investigator with no medical training, challenging a team of experienced medical examiners in the county coroner’s office.

    The department tried repeatedly to find a pathologist to review the case, according to the LAPD’s case log, which shows that Hudson tried to contact at least eight outside experts. One of the requests was made to the U.S. military’s pathology institute. When the institute refused to accept the case, Berkow formally appealed to the Department of Defense and was turned down again, records show.

    The LAPD’s search led eventually to Dr. William Oliver, a forensic pathologist at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. For a $2,000 consulting fee, Oliver agreed to review the case in the summer of 2006, according to the LAPD’s internal case log of the investigation. His conclusions, however, were not what the LAPD wanted to hear.

    “There is little or no good evidence that the wound is from . . . a handgun,” he wrote.

    I don’t agree with how often and under what circumstances LAPD deploys its SWAT team.  But it is worth noting that this incident aside, they are extremely well-trained, and have a near-spotless record.

    That said, while there’s nothing wrong with seeking an outside opinion, there’s plenty wrong with pressuring the coroner to change his findings before seeking an outside opinion. Kudos to the L.A. county coroner for holding his ground.

    Saturday Morning Links

    Saturday, November 1st, 2008
  • Mississippi death investigation system moves slowly, kicking and screaming, into the 1980s.
  • Cop tasers undercover alcohol control agent he mistook for a robber. Should be interesting to see whose side of this story comes out on top.
  • McCain campaign flack Michael Goldfarb gets flummoxed.
  • More bad Halloween costumes (link NSFW–or good taste).
  • Noted without comment.
  • The dog ate it.
  • So this is the kind of thing it’s helpful to keep in mind when some politician tells you why we need to track more things in government databases. Like health care records.
  • Finally…


    In The Know: Has Halloween Become Overcommercialized?

  • Morning Links

    Monday, September 22nd, 2008
  • The BBC somewhat surprisingly publishes the answer to the continuing tragedy of the commons that is the world’s fisheries: property rights!
  • Friend o’ the Agitator, former guest-blogger, and proprietor of the Crispy on the Outside food blog Baylen Linnekin will be guest-blogging at Overlawyered this week. Check him out.
  • Mississippi death row inmate and Hayne outrage Jeffrey Havard has exhausted his state appeals, and will now seek relief from the federal courts. I’ve written about Havard’s case here. Havard deserves a new trial. Executing him before he gets one would be a travesty.
  • Hip evangelicals get jiggy with it.
  • Virginian-Pilot columnist Kerry Dougherty seems to have changed her tune a bit since the last time she wrote about the Ryan Frederick case. When even the local law-and-order columnist starts to turn on the case, I think it means special prosecutor Paul Ebert has a problem on his hands.
  • Squalor!
  • Another case of puppycide, as a police officer in Mount Olive, North Carolina slaughters a vicious friendly yellow lab.

  • Morning Links

    Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008
  • Fascinating story in the Washington Post about the ancient, conquered viruses encased in the human genome.
  • Good op-ed in this morning’s Baltimore Sun about police raids.
  • Beautiful photos of London at night.
  • Female Iraq War vet found in a contractor’s tent beaten, raped, shot in the head, and partially burned, with lye poured on her vagina. Somehow, Army doctors ruled her death a “suicide.” Dr. Hayne must be doing autopsies for the federal government, now.
  • Tough guys and puppies.
  • An Atlanta judge arrested for drunk driving who refused to take a breath test will not lose his license after the cop who pulled him over “lost the paperwork” associated with the arrest. How convenient.

  • Your Humble Agitator on the Cory Maye Case

    Friday, May 9th, 2008

    Here’s the interview I did for reason.tv hashing out some of the broader issues of the case.

    Afternoon Links

    Thursday, March 27th, 2008
  • San Antonio “tactical unit” using routine traffic stops in high-crime areas as an impetus for drugs and weapons searches. Probably won’t surprise you to learn that (a) there have been complaints, (b) they’re much more likely to use force against brown-skinned people than white-skinned people. But hey, they’ve seized more than $1 million!
  • Yer’ typical alarmist article about all the money flowing into the presidential election. My typical response: So long as the office of president grows increasingly powerful and influential, people will be willing to pay more and more money to (a) make sure their candidate wins, or (b) make sure whoever wins knows who they are.
  • Anyone else wanna’ call bullshit on this article?
  • The latest from Chesapeake. I’m not sure this tells us much of anything right now. But note it. Might become relevant later. It’s also interesting (and encouraging) just how skeptical the comments threads at the V-P site have become of the police department’s story.
  • World’s oldest audio recording.
  • Oliver Stone, call your agent! Forensics experts say someone other than Sirhan Sirhan killed Bobby Kennedy.
  • California tax collectors are stuck between collecting taxes on medical marijuana sales and the DEA’s continuing crackdown on the drug.