The World Around You

“We need to internalize this idea of excellence. Not many folks spend a lot of time trying to be excellent.” - Barack Obama

Entries for July 10th, 2003

Kinsley and Joyner

James gives an intelligent take on Michael Kinsley’s latest piece. James’s conclusion that an ideal system would pay compensatory damages to make the victim financially whole, a similar amount to each victim for pain and suffering and punitive damages handled in criminal court doesn’t work for me.

Compensation for pain and suffering and punitive damages serve an important purpose. What is the point of trial by jury if the jury is given almost no discretion as to what is adequate compensation in a particular set of circumstances? Sure, they are going to err at times, but there are remedies for that, the same as when jurors convict a criminal in error. I much prefer the error of 12 citizens deciding unanimously over the errors and bias of one man or woman. I don’t need an ideal system, I just need a system that works as fairly as human fallibility will allow.

The Glories of Nature

This picture is just too good for words. Savor and enjoy.

Righteous Outrage?

The Smoking Gun has posted some of the letters that the FCC received resulting from the Clay Aiken/Ruben Studdard American Idol controversy. Good for a laugh if you need one today.

In case you missed my take on this particular phenomenon. Ruben is the man!

Pryor Vote Delayed

The Tuscaloosa News reports that the Pryor vote has been delayed.

Give this man a Pepsi!

Hacker at NoNewTaxesforAlabama

Mac at War Liberal links to a story from the Decatur Daily on the website we publicized on our websites. I am not the hacker either, but I would love to know who did it.

Please continue to vote YES at

http://nonewtaxesforalabama.netlinkwireless.com/

Watch Judiciary Committee Vote on Pryor

The Judiciary Committe of the Senate meets live beginning at 8:30am Alabama time. Follow this link to watch the LIVE WEBCAST. The committe is scheduled to vote today on Attorney General Bill Pryor’s nomination to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Friends in High Places

Never say that it doesn’t pay to have friends (or in this case, relatives) in high places. The Birmingham News reports this morning:

An Irondale City Councilman’s son was neither arrested nor charged with a crime because he led investigators to a man they believe is a significant drug dealer, Irondale’s acting police chief said Wednesday.

Irondale police found Matthew Chandler Jackson on April 28 with several gallon-size bags of marijuana in his car, Acting Chief Norman Stapp said, but the 19-year-old Jackson avoided arrest because he provided information that led to the arrest of Mario Bustos, 37, who is suspected of drug dealing.

The reporter, Anita Debro, does a good job of getting differing professional opinions on what the normal procedure would be in such a case:

Don Cochran, a Cumberland School of Law professor and former state and federal prosecutor, said the standard procedure is to arrest a suspect even if he is willing to cooperate.

But a former Jefferson County narcotics investigator and current instructor at the county Law Enforcement Academy said it is not unusual for drug investigators to hold off on arresting a suspect if he is willing to provide information that would lead to the arrest of a higher-up.

Lost at the bottom of the column however, is the additional circumstance that Jackson is still going to prison, without the arrest on the drug charges.

Jackson reported to St. Clair Correction Facility earlier this week to serve three years of a 20-year sentence on armed robbery convictions unrelated to the drug case.

It would seem that a plausible explanation is that, since he was going to prison for three years anyway, they didn’t want to waste the resources to try to tack some more years on, when they could move up the chain and get the bigger fish. I am adamant about taking drug arrests seriously, and this case merits further investigation, but the portrayal up to this point may not be entirely fair. There are good reasons not to prosecute certain cases, but let it not be because of who your relatives are.