Rick Perry officially burst onto the presidential scene just days ago, but he already “clings to an ice floe of diminishing credibility,” writes Richard Cohen in the Washington Post : Perry has quickly established himself as “intellectually unqualified to be president,” most pointedly when he sided with the 2% of climate…
Continue reading …Dominique Strauss-Kahn is a free man, and that leaves Henry Blodget of Business Insider with one question: “Are prosecutors going to apologize … for destroying his life?” Kahn was thrown in jail for months, including a stint in solitary, and the accusations basically destroyed his shot at being president of…
Continue reading …The injustice! King Arthur Uther Pendragon cannot reclaim 5,000-year-old remains that were dug up at Stonehenge, a British judge has ruled. But don’t get too riled up: Pendragon isn’t actually related to the legendary kind of yore, although he is chief of the Loyal Arthurian Warband Druid order. No,…
Continue reading …As if this morning’s quake in Colorado wasn’t odd (and historical) enough , a 5.9-magnitude quake struck Virginia today. The USGS reports that it struck four miles south of Louisa, Virginia, which is about 30 miles from Charlottesville. Reuters reports that it could be felt as far north as Boston;…
Continue reading …No reports of deaths but from Manhattan to Washington DC, aeroplanes were grounded and offices evacuated As natural disasters go, it was hardly a catastrophe, but the earthquake felt across parts of America on Tuesday certainly had an impact. As buildings swayed from Manhattan to Detroit to Washington DC, aeroplanes were grounded and offices
Continue reading …There’s no way around it: Medicare will be cut. But that doesn’t have to be a bad thing for patients, write experts and former White House advisers Ezekiel J. Emanuel and Jeffrey B. Liebman in the New York Times . “Smart cuts eliminate spending on medical tests, treatments, and procedures that…
Continue reading …A baby is in critical condition after he fell from the fourth story of a parking structure in California last night—and police accuse his own mother of tossing the seven-month-old over the edge. Police say Sonia Hermosillo, 31, threw her own son from the Children’s Hospital garage then drove…
Continue reading …Women tend to sleep longer and deeper than men, awakening less often in the night—but men are more likely to be satisfied with the quality of their sleep, reports the Wall Street Journal in an overview of the sleeping habits of the sexes. Because sleep plays such an important…
Continue reading …James Clappison’s comments follow disclosure of Scotland Yard’s decision at height of riots to deny bail to all those charged People arrested on riot-related offences could face “rushed justice” because of the pressure on police and the courts after the UK riots, the Conservative MP and senior member of the Commons home affairs committee James Clappison has warned. His comments follow the disclosure that Scotland Yard adopted a policy of remanding in custody everyone arrested in relation to the riots, regardless of the severity of the charges they face or their criminal record, and comes as a Guardian poll reveals there is public support for the tough stance taken by the courts. The Metropolitan police said the policy was necessary to prevent further public disorder as violence spread through the capital. But the document also acknowledged that the force was so stretched at the height of the riots that it was “impractical” to bail people while they conducted “protracted” investigations, suggesting that investigating officers use special rules to fast-track cases to the courts with less evidence than is normally required. Clappison said: “There has to be firm, deterrent sentencing but rushed justice will be bad justice particularly when you’re trying to sort the professional repeat offenders and organisations from the weak followers.” Referring to the report of the leaked document, he said: “The situation is tough for the police, but we can’t have short cuts to justice. In every case we have to have normal high standards of justice for determining guilt and innocence and the right sentence.” The Met said that though it had advocated remanding people in custody it did not amount to a policy of not issuing cautions or denying people bail without reasonable cause. It said that of the 1,881 arrests, 1,063 resulted in charges. Some 623 were bailed to return pending further inquiries, 17 cautioned and 125 released with no other action. Overall some 62% of people arrested on riot-related offences were remanded in custody compared with 10% in comparable cases at other times, government figures show. The Guardian/ICM poll found that about 70% of respondents thought people convicted of riot-related offences should get a tougher than normal sentence, compared with 25% who opposed the idea and 5% who didn’t know. • ICM Research interviewed a random sample of 1,004 adults aged 18+ by telephone on 19-21 August 2011. Interviews were conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults. ICM is a member of the British Polling Council. UK riots Conservatives Police Crime UK criminal justice Metropolitan police London Polly Curtis Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk
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