Late Night Open Thread: Clean Up After Your Pooch, or Else!
Posted: July 1, 2011 Filed under: just because, open thread | Tags: Deborah Violette, dog DNA, dog owners, dog poop, New Hampshire, pets, pooper scoopers 1 CommentI heard about this a few days ago, and now the NYT has picked up the story. Deborah Violette, manager of an apartment complex in Lebanon, New Hampshire, has begun requiring every tenant with a dog to provide their pet’s DNA.
Everyone who owns a dog in her complex, Timberwood Commons in Lebanon, N.H., must submit a sample of its DNA, taken by rubbing a cotton swab around inside the animal’s mouth.
The swab is sent to BioPet Vet Lab, a Knoxville, Tenn., company that enters it into a worldwide database. If Ms. Violette finds an unscooped pile, she can take a sample, mail it to Knoxville and use a DNA match to identify the offending owner.
Is that really necessary?
Ms. Violette said that at her complex, which opened in December and has a designated building for pet owners, unwanted surprises have sometimes been found on lawns.
“We had a little bit of a problem,” Ms. Violette said. “Enough that I wanted to try to nip it in the bud.”
I can understand Violette’s concerns, but I sure wouldn’t want to have the job of collecting those samples for testing.
Late Night: Ohio Woman Sprays Cops with Breast Milk
Posted: June 28, 2011 Filed under: Crime, just because | Tags: alcoholism, breast milk, Breasts of fury, crime, domestic violence, lactating mothers, law enforcement, Ohio 18 CommentsThis is too much! Stephanie Robinette had a bit too much to drink at a wedding reception; at some point she hauled off and hit her husband “with a closed fist” and then locked herself in her car.
Deputies who arrived at the scene said Robinette was yelling profanities and refused to get out of the car, with the door open.
“Then she took out one of her breasts and literally started pumping her breast to spray the milk on officers,” said Sheriff Walter Davis II.
Deputies got Robinette out of her car but said that she attempted to break out the left rear window of a deputy’s cruiser with her feet before she was taken to jail, Strickler reported.
“Alcohol makes you do things you don’t normally do under normal circumstances and obviously she had way too much to drink,” Davis said.
Robinette, who was charged with multiple offenses, later apologized for her behavior.
She was…charged with domestic violence, assault, obstructing official business, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct, authorities said.
Robinette, who pleaded not guilty to the charges, was released from custody on her own recognizance following a video arraignment on Monday, 10TV News reported.
Before her release, Robinette, a teacher employed at a charter school, apologized for what occurred.
“I have no criminal record; I take these charges very seriously and I absolutely intend to seek help for substance abuse with alcohol because alcoholism does run in my family,” Robinette said.
Robinette teaches second and third grades at a charter school for children with developmental disabilities.
Late Night: What is the “Legal Issue” that Shut Down Saturday Testimony in the Casey Anthony Trial?
Posted: June 26, 2011 Filed under: children, Crime, just because | Tags: Casey Anthony, Cheney Mason, death penalty, Geraldo Rivera, Jean Casarez, Jose Baez, Judge Belvin Perry, Lee Anthony, legal issue, mistrial, plea deal, Ray Kronk, The Hinky Meter, under seal, Valhall, Vinnie Politan 23 CommentsChief Judge Belvin Perry and the attorneys met outside the courtroom and discussed matters that are “under seal” and not part of the public record, according to a court-system spokeswoman.
Perry emerged from the conference and announced aloud in court that a “legal matter” had come up, requiring court to be recessed.
His announcement came about 9:40 a.m. on a day he had expected to hear testimony until about 3:30 p.m. Instead, Perry announced that Anthony’s trial in the 2008 death of her daughter, Caylee, will resume Monday morning.
In the absence of an explanation, speculation soared that a plea deal might be in the making or that another call for mistrial had emerged or that there might be legal issues involving testimony by Lee and Cindy Anthony — the defendant’s brother and mother.
Those are the possibilities that first occurred to me too. But I really don’t think Casey would take a plea, and the prosecution has said they wouldn’t accept one after the trial began. Since it was Cheney Mason who asked to discuss something, I also wondered if the defense wanted to claim that Lee Anthony had perjured himself, but that would normally wait till the end of the trial wouldn’t it? If it were a mistrial, wouldn’t Jose Baez have just brought it up in open court?
Of course I have no idea what the “legal issue” is, but I thought I’d share some speculations I’ve seen from “experts” and court followers around the ‘net.
Vinnie Politan of True TV and HLN tweeted yesterday that he received confirmation from Cheney Mason that it definitely isn’t a plea deal.
@VinniePolitan
NO PLEA DEAL… My pal Jean Casarez spoke with Cheney Mason to confirm! RT to end the speculation!
Hal Boedeker, the TV Guy at the Orlando Sentinel has more detail from Jean Casarez:
Here’s what Casarez reported last night: “Cheney Mason, attorney for Casey Anthony, confirms with me that ALL of the media speculation surrounding Judge Belvin Perry’s dismissal of court this morning is false. This speculation would include plea deal, mistrial, Roy Kronk’s telephone records and issues with Dr. Bill Rodriguez testifying for the defense.
Boedeker also reported that Geraldo {gag} Rivera, who is friends with defense attorney Jose Baez,
…called the delay shocking. But he also cited ”an unimpeachable source” who said the legal issue “is expected to have no long-term impact on the trial, and further, it is still possible this contentious case could be wrapped up before July 4.” And Rivera added that the trial is “expected to resume Monday as if nothing happened, legally speaking. There is no harm, no foul.”
No foul except for Baez maybe leaking sealed info to his pal Geraldo….
The Christian Science Monitor brought up a possibility I hadn’t thought of. They cited an issue relating to testimony on Friday by lead detective Yuri Melich:
During testimony on Friday, Detective Melich revealed that investigators had obtained the cell phone records of Roy Kronk, the man who called police after discovering a small child’s skeletal remains in a wooded area not far from the Anthony’s home.
Melich said police obtained Mr. Kronk’s phone records from June to December 2008….That six-month date range is important for two reasons. It suggests that, at least initially, investigators suspected Kronk might be more than an innocent bystander who merely stumbled upon the gruesome scene.
Second, that date range suggested to Baez that state prosecutors had failed to turn those phone records over to him as court rules require.
Kronk is a big part of the defense case, and if the prosecution deliberately failed to turn the records over it would be a serious problem and could possibly lead to a mistrial. However, Baez has accused the prosecution of this kind of thing before and it has always turned out that he was mistaken. Still, it’s an interesting possibility.
The most intriguing speculation I found was at the blog The Hinky Meter in a comment by one of the bloggers, Valhall. He or she thinks that Cheney Mason wants out, because this trial is is “swan song,” and he’s embarrassed by all of Jose Baez’s grandstanding and underhanded tactics. Mason is the only attorney on the defense team with experience in death penalty cases. That would surely throw a wrench into the defense’s plans. Read the whole comment to get a sense of Valhall’s reasons for thinking this.
What do you other Trial followers think?
Right Wing Wisconsin Supreme Court Judge David Prosser Assaults Female Justice
Posted: June 25, 2011 Filed under: just because 18 CommentsWisconsin Supreme Court Justice David Prosser allegedly grabbed fellow Justice Ann Walsh Bradley around the neck in an argument in her chambers last week, according to at least three knowledgeable sources.
Details of the incident, investigated jointly by Wisconsin Public Radio and the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, remain sketchy. The sources spoke on the condition that they not be named, citing a need to preserve professional relationships.
They say an argument that occurred before the court’s release of a decision upholding a bill to curtail the collective bargaining rights of public employees culminated in a physical altercation in the presence of other justices. Bradley purportedly asked Prosser to leave her office, whereupon Prosser grabbed Bradley by the neck with both hands.
If this is true, Prosser should be arrested and prosecuted.
If these allegations prove true, Prosser is guilty of a very serious crime. Under Wisconsin law, “[w]hoever intentionally causes bodily harm or threatens to cause bodily harm to the person or family member of any judge…is guilty of a Class H felony,” except with certain exceptions that don’t apply here.
Sadly, this is not the first time Prosser stands accused of a sexist attack on one of his fellow justices — although it appears to be the first allegation where he actually laid hands on one of his colleagues. Last year, during an argument with Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson, Prosser called her a “bitch” and threatened to “destroy” her.
What a guy. BTW, Prosser is a close ally of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker. According to John Nichols at The Nation,
Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice David Prosser, who mentored controversial Governor Scott Walker when both served as Republican legislators, has positioned himself as the primary defender of Walker’s radical anti-labor and anti-local democracy agenda on the court.
And it appears that the justice, whose unstable behavior and violent language has been highlighted in media reports, is willing to go to any length to protect Walker from legal accountability.
Nichols says that Justice Bradley is “widely seen as one of the court’s most congenial member. This isn’t the first time Prosser has lost it and behaved abusively toward a female colleague.
The state’s largest newspaper, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, reported in March that: “As the deeply divided state Supreme Court wrestled over whether to force one member off criminal cases last year, Justice David Prosser exploded at Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson behind closed doors, calling her a ‘bitch’ and threatening to ‘destroy’ her.”
Justice Prosser acknowledged to the newspaper the basic description of the incident but corrected one detail, saying: “In the context of this, I said, ‘You are a total bitch.’”
At the time of the previous incident, Justice Bradley wrote Justice Prosser, urging him to “end these abusive temper tantrums.”
I seems as if Prosser just plain doesn’t like women, and didn’t care for being chastised by Bradley. But nothing happened after that incident. Will anything be done this time?











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