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By delaying any investigation or prosecution of Trump until almost two years after he became attorney general, Garland hamstrung Jack Smith, the dogged and beleaguered special counsel, leaving little time for the predictable unpredictabilities of two high-stakes prosecutions. Both were as solid as federal cases get, and now neither has any chance of being completed before the election, leaving voters without clear legal conclusions about Trump’s responsibility for the Jan. 6 riot and the highly classified documents he took from the White House.

Archived at https://ghostarchive.org/archive/QGUMD

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Kind of hard to tl;dr this one, but here are the six general areas that get discussed

  1. Neither candidate centered human rights in their comments on border and immigration policy

...

2.The debate over access to abortion has changed since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022

...

  1. On the issue of phasing out fossil fuels, Harris said, “I will not ban fracking,” and Trump said, “I got the oil business going like nobody has done before.”

...

  1. Harris said it was time to “stand for our democracy” and Trump said that “they’re [the Democratic party] the threat to democracy.”

...

  1. On housing, Harris said, “We know that we have a shortage of homes and housing, and the cost of housing is too expensive for far too many people.”

...

  1. On Gaza, Harris said “Israel has a right to defend itself … and how it does so matters. Because it is also true far too many innocent Palestinians have been killed.” Trump said, “If I were president it would have never started

Archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20240914173037/https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/09/11/six-human-rights-takeaways-us-presidential-debate

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago

Yeah, and Harris's endorsement of that horrifying border security bill is a pretty big deal too. Say what you will about these candidates approaches to immigration but there's no way you can say they're not talking about it.

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago

Campaigners say further physical and mental harm could be inflicted under Labour home secretary Yvette Cooper’s plan to increase deportations to 2018 levels – with a goal to remove thousands of migrants and refused asylum seekers by the end of the year.

I hate how many people seem to be fighting for this title

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 29 points 3 days ago

Speaking to CBS, DeWine said: “This is something that came up on the internet, and the internet can be quite crazy sometimes.

It didn't just come up "on the internet" you cowardly shit stain, it came out of the mouth of the presidential candidate you said you'd be voting for

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 10 points 4 days ago

Yeah, it really sucks how both sides have decided to go all in on this racist bullshit recently instead of standing up for asylum rights when global climate change is only going to be making them more vital

Even Harris’s immigration policies reflect this shift in rhetoric. Her focus on border enforcement and deterrence over more comprehensive immigration reform echoes Trump’s approach to securitize the border. Her controversial comments during a 2021 trip to Guatemala, where she told migrants, “do not come,” reinforced narratives that criminalize migration rather than address its root causes.

Harris’s campaign manager, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, has said if elected, she would continue Joe Biden’s crackdown on asylum claims. Harris has also promised to revive a border security deal that collapsed in Congress earlier this year after Trump told Republicans to reject it. If passed, the legislation would have implemented permanent restrictions of asylum.

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It’s a high-stakes job: Two- or three-member board panels determine the fates of thousands of incarcerated people every year. They decide cases at a rapid pace, historically spending mere minutes on each one.

And there aren’t enough commissioners. For at least a decade, the board has been several down from its full capacity of 19, according to available state reports. As a result, each commissioner hears, conservatively, nearly 1,000 release cases annually — on top of hundreds of other types of administrative meetings — according to the limited available data. Parole commissioners in most other states have far smaller caseloads.

As part of her first State of the State policy agenda in 2022, Hochul promised to fully staff the board. Her efforts have resulted in one mishap after another.

Three of Hochul’s seven known parole board nominations have crashed and burned. One of her picks didn’t make it through the confirmation process after state senators, who vote to confirm or reject the governor’s nominees, grilled him over his role in violent protest crackdowns during his time as a top police official. After that, Hochul tapped Stradford — a local bureaucrat and failed politician — at the legislative schedule’s last minute, giving senators mere hours to vet him. Later, around the time of Stradford’s ouster, Hochul nominated another candidate — only to have senators dismiss him because they surmised that she had nominated him as a political favor.

In the aftermath of the nomination chaos, most of which has not been previously reported, the Board of Parole remains understaffed. What’s more, 11 of the parole board’s 16 current members are serving on expired terms — so-called zombie commissioners — including three whose terms expired over five years ago. Hochul hasn’t sought to renominate or replace them.

Archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20240912120436/https://nysfocus.com/2024/09/10/hochul-parole-board-new-york

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submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world to c/news@lemmy.world
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Earl Gage was a helpful witness for the state in its prosecution of Victor Malavet — the first person brought to trial on criminal charges in the massive child abuse scandal within New Hampshire’s youth detention system.

Malavet is accused of repeatedly raping a 16-year-old girl in 2001 while he worked as a counselor at the Youth Detention Services Unit (YDSU) in Concord, a now defunct facility for children in state custody.

Gage was a police officer who investigated Malavet in 2002, and who also worked overtime shifts as a counselor at another state-run youth detention center in Manchester.

On the witness stand, Gage implied Malavet got away with a crime.

Asked by a prosecutor if he had recommended criminal charges against Malavet back in 2002, Gage testified, “Unfortunately, at that point I could not,” before being cut off by a defense attorney’s objection.

The Malavet trial ended in a hung jury the following the week, putting more scrutiny on the attorney general’s criminal investigation into the historic flood of child abuse allegations, which has so far yielded no convictions five years after it began.

But what escaped scrutiny — or even mention — during Malavet’s trial was the fact that Gage is himself accused of repeatedly raping a child in his role at the former Youth Development Center (YDC) in Manchester.

The revelation, first reported here, highlights the sprawling nature of the YDC abuse scandal, where hundreds of former state employees have been implicated by nearly 1,300 alleged victims, and where parallel civil and criminal efforts at accountability have generated millions of pages of discovery. The allegations range from severe physical and sexual abuse to forcing children to endure long periods of isolation and preventing them from attending school.

Archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20240912120327/https://www.nhpr.org/nh-news/2024-09-10/in-prosecuting-alleged-child-abuser-nh-called-witness-who-faces-his-own-accusations

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 2 points 5 days ago

Close, but she's not being sued, she's actually being criminally prosecuted on six felony charges

Isn't that fucking special.

In-fucking-deed it is

What are they going to do about the bad cops?

They all already got a variety of punishments (generally not harsh enough imo, but their conduct runs all the way from rigging an intramural athletic competition to driving drunk with a loaded firearm, so it's a bit of a complicated picture and worth reading the full article for those details). She was looking them up after the fact so the prosecutor's office she works for now (Los Angeles county) didn't call on them to testify in court (or, if they had to call them for whatever reason, so her office knew to let defense attorneys know about this as theoretically required under the Brady opinion (but exactly what things are Brady material and what can be ignored is something attorneys will be fighting over until the end of time and something I believe LA county and the CA attorney general have argued over in recent history)).

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 13 points 5 days ago

When you are charged as a juvenile your records are expunged upon turning 18

A lot of people think this but it isn't true. In Georgia (and most other states) you have to ask a judge to expunge your record and they have to give the prosecutor's office an opportunity to respond before the judge can decide if the person with the juvenile record has been rehabilitated and their record should be expunged. There's nothing automatic about the process.

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 5 points 6 days ago

That sounds more like how people have always used social media (e.g. bragging about any accomplishments they can, hiding any difficulties they're going through, etc.) and how US based marketers have always used American Dream bullshit to pressure people into spending themselves into debt than any kind of coordinated foreign disinfo campaign to me

Beyond that, the fact that "people can come to the US and find prosperity and stability" is a lie seems to be the bigger underlying problem here

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 9 points 6 days ago

tl;dr, the local racists get big mad and protest a bit while the reasonable make arrangements and gather supplies, and then the migrants settle in and life moves on like it was all never any big deal to begin with (because it wasn't)

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 238 points 4 months ago

A spokesperson for SpartanNash, the parent company of Family Fare, said store employees responded “with the utmost compassion and professionalism.”

“Ensuring there is ample safe, affordable housing continues to be a widespread issue nationwide that our community needs to partner in solving,” Adrienne Chance said, declining further comment.

Warren said the woman was cooperative and quickly agreed to leave. No charges were pursued.

“We provided her with some information about services in the area,” the officer said. “She apologized and continued on her way. Where she went from there, I don’t know.”

I feel like there's very few opportunities these days to say this, but the cops and business owners in this situation actually seem to have behaved in a very humane and decent way here, so that's a nice surprise

[-] gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world 212 points 4 months ago

Wowza, they actually went through that whole article without mentioning that the university ordered an NYPD raid on student protesters last week and issued suspensions against a bunch of them.

But, no, that couldn't have anything to do with these increased tensions, it's definitely 100% because this is the first day of Passover /s

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gAlienLifeform

joined 1 year ago