ReportWire

Tag: Violence

  • ‘The free market is handling it just fine’: How left and right responded to Charlie Kirk’s murder

    [ad_1]

    The assassination of Charlie Kirk is reorienting the policies of the conservative movement, with major Trump administration leaders such as Vice President J.D. Vance and Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller vowing to launch a vast crackdown on left-wing groups that they say are implicitly responsible for inspiring political violence. Some members of the conservative movement are also conducting a campaign of mass cancellation against people who have justified the murder of Kirk on social media.

    In the latest episode of Free Media, I discussed with Amber Duke the responses to Kirk’s shocking death from conservatives, the Trump administration, and the mainstream media—as well as our own personal reactions. For her part, Duke was understandably dismayed by the sheer number of people she saw on social media who seemed to approve of Kirk’s demise.

    “It’s very disheartening, because I obviously shared a lot of Charlie’s views, as did many people in the conservative movement,” says Duke. “To know so many average people would celebrate our death if that happened to us is quite terrifying.”

    Duke said that while she didn’t think people should be canceled for merely criticizing Kirk, people who evince support for his assassination are in a separate category; this is materially different from the kinds of cancellations spearheaded by woke progressives, she says.

    While I agreed that I’ve seen far too many pro-murder takes from random and obscure people, I noted that the response from major figures, including people who clearly did not agree with Kirk, was overwhelmingly to condemn the violence as appalling. I also questioned whether it was fair to blame the infrastructure of the left—activist groups, wealthy liberal donors, academia—for the actions of a lone figure who does not seem particularly connected to any broader movement.

    “It was online radicalism, not brainwashed by a professor, or brainwashed by George Soros,” I say. “There’s a kind of, maybe conspiratorial thinking is too unfair, but it’s, ‘They’re out to get you…the billionaires are out to get you.’ That sounds itself like leftist thinking. This person was radicalized by his peer group online, probably.”

    Duke and I definitely agreed, however, on the foolishness of Attorney General Pam Bondi’s response to the tragedy, which was to vow to take legal action against so-called hate speech.

    “She just used the left’s favorite turn of phrase to criminalize free speech,” says Duke. “We don’t need the DOJ to arrest people for not celebrating Charlie Kirk. The free market is handling it just fine.”

    Watch the full episode here, and subscribe to both the ReasonTV and Free Media YouTube channels.

     

    [ad_2]

    Robby Soave

    Source link

  • Trump crackdown on ‘radical left’ after Charlie Kirk’s death targets Soros, Indivisible despite evid | Fortune

    [ad_1]

    President Donald Trump is escalating threats to crack down on what he describes as the “radical left” following Charlie Kirk’s assassination, stirring fears that his administration is trying to harness outrage over the killing to suppress political opposition.

    Without establishing any link to last week’s shooting, the Republican president and members of his administration have discussed classifying some groups as domestic terrorists, ordering racketeering investigations and revoking tax-exempt status for progressive nonprofits. The White House pointed to Indivisible, a progressive activist network, and the Open Society Foundations, founded by George Soros, as potential subjects of scrutiny.

    Although administration officials insist that their focus is preventing violence, critics see an extension of Trump’s campaign of retribution against his political enemies and an erosion of free speech rights. Any moves to weaken liberal groups could also shift the political landscape ahead of next year’s midterm elections, which will determine control of Congress and statehouses across the country.

    “The radical left has done tremendous damage to the country,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday morning when leaving for a state visit to the United Kingdom. “But we’re fixing it.”

    Trump has sometimes made similar threats without following through. But now there’s renewed interest fueled by anger over the killing of Kirk, a conservative activist who was a prominent supporter of Trump and friends with many of his advisers.

    More than 100 nonprofit leaders, representing organizations including the Ford Foundation, the Omidyar Network and the MacArthur Foundation, released a joint letter saying “we reject attempts to exploit political violence to mischaracterize our good work or restrict our fundamental freedoms.”

    “Attempts to silence speech, criminalize opposing viewpoints, and misrepresent and limit charitable giving undermine our democracy and harm all Americans,” they wrote.

    White House blames ‘terrorist networks’

    Authorities said they believe the suspect in Kirk’s assassination acted alone, and they charged him with murder on Tuesday.

    However, administration officials have repeatedly made sweeping statements about the need for broader investigations and punishments related to Kirk’s death.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi blamed “left-wing radicals” for the shooting and said “they will be held accountable.” Stephen Miller, a top policy adviser, said there was an “organized campaign that led to this assassination.”

    Miller’s comments came during a conversation with Vice President JD Vance, who was guest-hosting Kirk’s talk show from his ceremonial office in the White House on Monday.

    Miller said he was feeling “focused, righteous anger,” and “we are going to channel all of the anger” as they work to “uproot and dismantle these terrorist networks” by using “every resource we have.”

    Vance blamed “crazies on the far left” for saying the White House would “go after constitutionally protected speech.” Instead, he said, “We’re going to go after the NGO network that foments, facilitates and engages in violence.”

    Asked for examples, the White House pointed to demonstrations where police officers and federal agents have been injured, as well as the distribution of goggles and face masks during protests over immigration enforcement in Los Angeles.

    There was also a report that Indivisible offered to reimburse people who gathered at Tesla dealerships to oppose Elon Musk’s leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency. Sometimes cars were later vandalized.

    Indivisible’s leadership has said “political violence is a cancer on democracy” and said that their own organization has “been threatened by right-wingers all year.”

    Nonprofits brace for impact

    Trump’s executive actions have rattled nonprofit groups with attempts to limit their work or freeze federal funding, but more aggressive proposals to revoke tax-exempt status never materialized.

    Now the mood has darkened as nonprofits recruit lawyers and bolster the security of their offices and staff.

    “It’s a heightened atmosphere in the wake of political violence, and organizations who fear they might be unjustly targeted in its wake are making sure that they are ready,” said Lisa Gilbert, co-president of the government watchdog group Public Citizen.

    Trump made retribution against political enemies a cornerstone of his comeback campaign, and he’s mobilized the federal government to reshape law firms, universities and other traditionally independent institutions. He also ordered an investigation into ActBlue, an online liberal fundraising platform.

    Some nonprofits expect the administration to focus on prominent funders like Soros, a liberal billionaire who has been a conservative target for years, to send a chill through the donor community.

    Trump recently said Soros should face a racketeering investigation, though he didn’t make any specific allegations. The Open Society Foundations condemned violence and Kirk’s assassination in a statement and said “it is disgraceful to use this tragedy for political ends to dangerously divide Americans and attack the First Amendment.”

    Sen. Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut, wrote on social media that “the murder of Charlie Kirk could have united Americans to confront political violence” but “Trump and his anti-democratic radicals look to be readying a campaign to destroy dissent.”

    White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said “it is disingenuous and false for Democrats to say administration actions are about political speech.” She said the goal is to “target those committing criminal acts and hold them accountable.”

    Republicans back Trump’s calls for investigations

    Trump’s concerns about political violence are noticeably partisan. He described people who rioted at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as “hostages” and “patriots,” and he pardoned 1,500 of them on his first day back in the Oval Office. He also mocked House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi after an attack on her husband.

    When Trump condemned Kirk’s killing in a video message last week, he mentioned several examples of “radical left political violence” but ignored attacks on Democrats.

    Asked on Monday about the killing of Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman over the summer, Trump said “I’m not familiar” with the case.

    “Trump shrugs at right-wing political violence,” said Ezra Levin, the co-executive director of Indivisible, in a newsletter.

    Some conservative commentators have cheered on a potential crackdown. Laura Loomer, a conspiracy theorist with a long record of bigoted comments, said “let’s shut the left down.” She also said that she wants Trump “to be the ‘dictator’ the left thinks he is.”

    Katie Miller, the wife of Stephen Miller and a former administration spokeswoman, asked Bondi whether there would be “more law enforcement going after these groups” and “putting cuffs on people.”

    “We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech,” Bondi said. “And that’s across the aisle.”

    Her comments sparked a backlash from across the political spectrum, since even hate speech is generally considered to be protected under the First Amendment. Bondi was more circumspect on social media on Tuesday morning, saying they would focus on “hate speech that crosses the line into threats of violence.”

    Trump is getting more support from Republicans in Congress. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and others proposed legislation that would enable the Justice Department to use racketeering laws, originally envisioned to combat organized crime, to prosecute violent protesters and the groups that support them.

    Rep. Chip Roy of Texas wants the House to create a special committee to investigate the nonprofit groups, saying “we must follow the money to identify the perpetrators of the coordinated anti-American assaults being carried out against us.”

    ___
    Associated Press writer Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Chris Megerian, Lisa Mascaro, Alanna Durkin Richer, The Associated Press

    Source link

  • What the Video of Charlie Kirk’s Murder Might Do

    [ad_1]

    How many of your children saw the assassination of Charlie Kirk on their phones? Did they seek it out, or did it just roll in unannounced on their feeds? If they had never heard of Kirk before they watched his gruesome murder, how did they make sense of what they saw? Did the horrific image—I won’t describe it, because you have probably already seen it—sear itself into their memories?

    I ask because I have two young children and spend most of my time around other parents. In the days after the videos of Kirk’s death spread across social media, I realized that most children with phones, as far as I could tell, had viewed at least one unedited version. This was likely not the first disturbing video these children had encountered, of course, nor the first act of political violence that had appeared on their feeds. These same children, who are mostly between the ages of eleven and eighteen, saw the President’s bleeding ear and dozens, maybe even hundreds, of images of unfathomable trauma in Gaza. How will these already infamous scenes fall into order in their minds and coalesce into something resembling history?

    Widely dispersed photos and video—the stuff we all see—are the closest thing we have to a collective, democratized history, but the connections between memories and their associated images wear thin and become increasingly unreliable. For baby boomers, those images include people standing and pointing in the direction of gunshots at a motel in Memphis, Kennedy’s exploding head, the documentary footage of crowds at Woodstock, the girl in the picture in Vietnam, the bodies at Jonestown, and so forth. As boomers have aged, those images have become a bit unmoored from their place in time, and more evocative of a feeling of rebellion and change, or whatever. I’m sure many members of that generation would tell you that they watched Kennedy get shot live on television, and would describe the terrible movement of his head, without realizing that what they were describing was the Zapruder film, which first aired to the public in 1975, more than a decade after Kennedy’s motorcade drove through Dealey Plaza. Maybe they will also tell you that they saw the photos of the My Lai massacre—and they very well may have, but perhaps the image they are recalling is that of the naked girl running from a napalm attack in Trảng Bàng.

    My generation—I am forty-five years old—seemingly grew up with far fewer public images of violence. One of the texts I’ve grappled with and referenced before in my column is Jean Baudrillard’s “The Gulf War Did Not Take Place,” which argues that Operation Desert Storm was a conflict designed specifically for a new media landscape in which most people would be following the war on cable news. Americans watched Patriot missiles light up the night sky, but, in contrast to those watching TV during the war in Vietnam, we did not see casualties, or much destruction, nor did we tune in every night to hear a litany of the names of dead servicemen. Until 9/11, the violence that we did see on TV was mostly poor quality and from a distance: the shaky shots of the burning Branch Davidian compound, in Waco; the remains of the federal building in Oklahoma City. (One notable exception was the images of starving children during the 1983-85 famine in Ethiopia, which inspired a worldwide effort marked by the release of the charity single “We Are the World.”)

    So here’s a series of questions:

    If exposure to images of violence changes a generation of children, how are boomers different from my generation—and how will my own children, who will be exposed to far more evidence of political violence than I have been, be different from me?

    Is the effect of seeing carefully selected images of violence through the evening news or newspapers different from that caused by the chaos of violent images children see today through their phones?

    If we agree that history is formed through these images, what does history look like when there are thousands of different choices, camera angles, interpretations, and even fakes? How would we understand the massacre at Kent State if it happened today? What would it look like? What happens when, rather than all of us seeing an image of a young woman in the throes of shock and mourning kneeling over a dead body, we see hundreds of cellphone videos that capture the terror as it unfolds in real time?

    I don’t have any satisfying answers to these questions, nor do I have a particularly strong opinion on whether children should see these scenes or not. There have been years of studies on the effects that violence on television and in video games has on young minds, and some authors have suggested that they desensitize children and might even lead to copycat acts. I have always been a bit skeptical of these claims, and particularly of the way that they are invoked during that emotional period after a tragedy has taken place, when people are looking around for someone or something to blame. And, of course, such studies do not fully explain why some kids can watch gore or play violent video games without any problems, and other kids allegedly turn into killers because of them.

    [ad_2]

    Jay Caspian Kang

    Source link

  • A taboo worth keeping

    [ad_1]

    Call their employer? “If we want to stop political violence like what happened to Charlie Kirk, we have to be honest about the people who are celebrating it and the people who are financing it,” wrote Vice President J.D. Vance on X, promoting his guest hosting of Kirk’s show, following Kirk’s killing. “When you see someone celebrating Charlie’s murder, call them out. And hell, call their employer,” he said on the program.

    “I’m desperate for our country to be united in condemnation of the actions and the ideas that killed my friend,” Vance added. “I want it so badly that I will tell you a difficult truth. We can only have it with people who acknowledge that political violence is unacceptable.”

    At East Tennessee State University, two faculty members were placed on administrative leave, allegedly due to comments such as “you reap what you sow” and “[Kirk’s killing] isn’t a tragedy. It’s a victory.” Oklahoma’s state superintendent is investigating at least one middle school teacher for her posts (calling Kirk a “racist, misogynist piece of shit,” which seems nasty, but not actually advocating political violence). The Texas Education Agency is reviewing 180 complaints filed against teachers for comments related to Kirk; some of those are surely murder cheerleading, while others are scathing criticism that should probably be tolerated. Four different high school teachers were placed on leave in Massachusetts for their commentary. One elementary school teacher in that same state has been placed on leave for her TikTok video mocking Kirk’s death. Both Delta and American Airlines have axed a few employees each for social media posts on Kirk. Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and the University of Miami’s health care system fired one worker each. An Office Depot worker at a store in Michigan was fired after allegedly refusing to print flyers about a Kirk vigil for a paying customer—which makes an awful lot of sense, given that printing flyers is literally their job. These cases are all different, and some seem like they do actually call for or celebrate political violence, whereas others are just tasteless expressions of hatred for Kirk that don’t violate that norm.

    So let’s back up for a moment. Why did cancel culture of the 2010s strike so many of us as so bad and wrong?

    Some of it surely had to do with proportionality: The punishment rarely fit the “crime” (which was almost always debatable).

    Some of it surely had to do with changing sensibilities and sensitivities, and a sense that the orthodoxy being enforced was invented yesterday, not a reflection of prevailing sentiments. Thus it was unpredictable: You couldn’t really be sure you weren’t running afoul of the new tyrannical enforcers, because the shift in pieties (or language) had happened practically overnight.

    But there was something undergirding it that felt especially stupid: The kids were the enforcers, overthrowing the adults. Not because the adults had exercised bad judgment or shown themselves to be incapable of faithfully executing the roles they’d been given. In some cases, they were canceled as they exercised good judgment: Consider the case of Mike Pesca, a Slate journalist (and, disclosure: my friend) who had been discussing how the publication ought to cover the firing of New York Times writer Donald McNeil, who referred to a racial slur in context on a trip to Peru with high schoolers; could a white person ever write or say nigger in context? Don’t we make a use/mention distinction? Some vocal portion of his workplace apparently disagreed, and he was dismissed after he’d worked there for seven years. It was never about morals, it was never about quality of product being produced; it was about power in the workplace, wrapped up in something that, to the young, resembled morals enough to give them plausible deniability.

    Now, something a little different is happening, for which people are using the same name. Professors, teachers, nurses, and doctors who have celebrated the assassination of Kirk are being purged from their workplaces. It’s conservatives swarming this time, phoning employers, making them aware of the misdeeds, asking for their scalps.

    Most of me thinks it’s wrong and bad on principle—since I don’t ever want to be fired for my own speech (and thus want to maintain a very wide sense of what we societally tolerate)—but also as a strategy, since I don’t believe conservatives gain very much by weeding out the people with dumb beliefs who are in positions of relatively little power and importance. People have little impulse control and use social media like a diary; I’ll never understand the crying-in-a-car TikTok woman genre, but I’m fine living in a society with people who get off on that. (Also: What even is a position of relatively little power and importance? Teachers and professors are entrusted with impressionable minds. Isn’t this extreme power?)

    But a not-that-tiny piece of me sees this as substantively different: Cancel culture grievances were mostly petty and minor, issues that could have been resolved if participants were willing to be 10 percent more charitable toward their perceived opponents, and if bosses were willing to instruct their inferiors to get over themselves. James Damore’s Google memo about heritability of certain traits and brain differences between genders and how to reduce the gender gap among engineers is a good example; anyone who claims to have felt threatened was being an opportunist, looking to amass power and get the hit of collective effervescence that comes from vanquishing an opponent.

    Of course, there were also the “offensive” acts that were not really relevant to the workplace, but that the 2010s cancelers implied indicated something about the tainted souls of the powerful: Adam Rapoport, the Bon Appetit editor in chief, who in 2020 handed in his resignation after colleagues dug up a boricua (Puerto Rican)/durag Halloween costume from 2013. Rapoport’s photo was “just a symptom of the systematic racism that runs rampant within Conde Nast as a whole,” said one chef/editor who worked at the magazine, while others alleged black women had been systemically mistreated under Rapoport’s leadership.

    With Kirk’s killing, the posters who lose their jobs are saying something actually bad, something that society has long seen as beyond a crossed line; we don’t cheer the killing of people with whom we disagree. This isn’t the Cultural Revolution. We don’t flog people. We don’t put them in stocks in the town square. And we don’t get titillated when a bullet flies into their neck and they spurt out blood and crumple to the ground; it’s gruesome and awful and it happened as a thousand impressionable young people looked on. Looked at one way, this was an insane person committing an extrajudicial act of violence. Looked at another, this was a public execution for the crime of being conservative—which is, apparently, judging by their reactions, what a lot of people had been wanting.

    When a working professional can’t manage to exercise self-control and refrain from posting in public about how grateful they are that the assassin had the balls to shoot their shot, you have to wonder about their judgment. It’s perhaps especially odd for professors to say as much. (Don’t they spend their time…speaking their mind…in public?) And is there perhaps some value in maintaining or enforcing a consensus of what types of things lie beyond the pale? I don’t want pedophilia apologists as kindergarten teachers, to use an extreme example; I also probably don’t want a doctor treating me who cheers on the murder of people who think like Kirk.

    In general, I trust that reputable employers have done some amount of quality/maturity/professionalism/judgment vetting. Surely celebrating political violence runs afoul of these basic expectations, and that’s what they’re responding to when they fire someone who posted gleefully about Kirk, which is materially different than the made-up social justice dogma that was being enforced before. (It would be better if employers self-policed rather than succumbing to the demands of angry mobs.) We’ve always had taboos, and the taboo against political violence is a strong one worth keeping, not one we should constantly have to renegotiate.


    Scenes from New York: Gov. Kathy Hochul, a sort of forgettable, generically bad Democrat who inherited the spot when Andrew Cuomo left in a hurry, endorsed Zohran Mamdani; nobody followed her lead. lol.


    QUICK HITS

    • Meanwhile, Attorney General Pam Bondi is saying utterly wrong things about hate speech. “There’s free speech and then there’s hate speech, and there is no place, especially now, especially after what happened to Charlie, in our society…We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech.” Does Bondi need a reminder?
    • “President Donald Trump approved a National Guard deployment to Memphis, expanding the federal government’s efforts to crack down on what he has cast as out-of-control crime in Democratic-run cities,” reports Bloomberg. And Chicago will probably be next after Memphis, signaled the president.
    • The U.S. military struck a second boat carrying Venezuelan narcotraffickers, killing at least three. The first strike of this variety was ordered and carried out earlier this month, killing 11. More strikes are planned; congressional approval has not yet been sought.
    • Inside the deal reached between the U.S. and China for the sale of TikTok, courtesy of The Wall Street Journal.
    • “Israel unleashed a long-threatened ground assault on Gaza City on Tuesday, declaring ‘Gaza is burning’ as Palestinians there described the most intense bombardment they had faced in two years of war,” reports Reuters. “An Israel Defence Forces official said ground troops were moving deeper into the enclave’s main city, and that the number of soldiers would rise in coming days to confront up to 3,000 Hamas combatants the IDF believes are still in the city.”
    • The Washington Post fired journalist Karen Attiah; Attiah claims it was for her social media posts on Kirk, including one in which she says Kirk once said, “Black women do not have the brain processing power to be taken seriously. You have to go steal a white person’s slot.” This was a botched quote. From Reason‘s Robby Soave: “What he said was that the achievements of four specific black women—former First Lady Michelle Obama, former MSNBC host Joy Reid, Supreme Court Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, and former Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D–Texas)—were suspect because of affirmative action; the existence of racial preferences casts a pall over their selections for various positions. One can certainly criticize the point or disagree with how he worded it (Michelle Obama, diversity hire?), but he did not say the words attributed to him by Attiah. And she put it in quotes, which is journalistic malpractice.”

    [ad_2]

    Liz Wolfe

    Source link

  • Social media didn’t kill Charlie Kirk

    [ad_1]

    In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, a new cottage industry of rage has arisen. And while anger and horror at this act of violence are understandable, they’re also taking Americans to some dark places, where retribution must be had against anyone who said negative things about Kirk after his death and politicians posture about punishing people who (crassly, but nonviolently) celebrated Kirk’s death. A lot of this seems to hinge on the idea that hateful “rhetoric” is responsible for Kirk’s killing; one particularly prevalent strain of this specifically indicts online speech and social media.

    It’s social media that led to Kirk’s assassination, the refrain goes, and it’s social media that’s driving all sorts of political violence.

    But social media platforms don’t kill people. People kill people.

    That seems banal to point out, I know. Reductive, perhaps. But so much discourse right now attributes an almost supernatural influence to social media and to online speech and communities. And that’s reductive, too—in addition to being pretty unmoored from reality.

    “I believe that social media has played a direct role in every single assassination and assassination attempt that we have seen over the last five, six years,” said Utah Gov. Spencer Cox on Meet the Press yesterday. Social media companies “have figured out how to hack our brains” and “get us to hate each other,” Cox said.

    It’s not just politicians spewing a mind-control theory of political violence. “I think the main problem here isn’t this killer’s ideology,” posted the pundit Noah Blum on Friday. “It’s that the internet radicalizes people to do increasingly greater violence on a scarily regular basis and nobody really knows what to do about it.”

    We hear some version of this in the aftermath of many tragic or senseless events. It’s not enough for people to blame disturbed or immoral individuals who do bad things. It’s not even enough to blame the dubious influence of “right-wing extremism” or “left-wing extremism” or “political polarization.” People blame tech companies, sometimes even suggesting they’re directly responsible because they failed to stop hateful speech—or misinformation, or divisive rhetoric—on social media.

    But the idea that people—especially young men—would not be radicalized if it weren’t for social media belies most of human history.

    I’ve been listening recently to a podcast called A Twist of History. One episode details Adolf Hitler’s attempt to overthrow the Weimar Republic in 1923. Another episode features a riot during a Shakespearean performance in New York City in 1849, fomented by Ned Buntline, a nativist newspaper pundit with ambitions of fame and notoriety. Both instances featured fringe political elements, violence, and deaths.

    History is littered with examples like these: men driven to violence by people in close physical proximity, sometimes with the help of inflammatory political rhetoric printed in pamphlets and newspapers.

    The type of violence that people engage in does seem somewhat era-dependent. Sometimes it was more likely to be large group violence, acting as part of political movements or criminal gangs. Sometimes it was more likely to be small group violence, committed by racist clubs, radical activist groups, and so on. (And, surely, many manically violent men throughout history have been killed in wars or bar fights before they had a chance to do other damage.)

    Ours is an era of lone-wolf violence, though it is not the first one.

    Because of our hyper-connected world, and because of the sensationalistic nature of public shootings, it can feel like things are worse than ever. In another time, we wouldn’t have have heard of every racist lynching, every street gang fight, and so on.

    But even from what we can glean, looking back, it seems clear that we’re not living in some exceptionally violent time.

    Is the internet capable of radicalizing people?

    On some level, the answer is yes, of course. But this is simply because the internet, and social media, are such huge parts of our lives. They are where people spend time, spread ideas, and consume ideologies. They are locusts of just about everything good, and everything bad, about our offline world.

    “The internet is culture now, the way television once was for our parents, our grandparents, maybe even us,” Katherine Dee wrote on her Substack this week. “Every aspect of our lives flows through it. There’s no such thing as ‘very Online’ or ‘not Online.’ It’s all of us, all the time, always.”

    People will point to algorithms and profit motives, epistemic closure and endless scroll—all sorts of things that supposedly make social media or the internet generally a unique breeder of polarization and radicalism and misinformation. But we have an ever-growing body of research suggesting that, for the average person, being on social media isn’t making things worse (and, in some ways, could be making it better).

    We live in ideologically charged and politically polarized times. A lot of our media and our political debates and our discussions with each other reflect this. But the fact that so much of this comes seeping out on social media may simply be a symptom.

    Online speech is the most visible manifestation of any rot in our system or culture. But it does not mean that Facebook, or TikTok, or X, or any of the countless niche forums out there are the cause of the rot.

    Yes, the shooter was steeped in internet meme culture, as evidenced by messages printed on his bullets: “an internet-specific brand of trollish nihilism adopted by many recent shooters,” as my colleague C.J. Ciaramella put it. But I think it’s foolish—a combination of determined presentism, tech panic, and lack of imagination—to suggest that Kirk’s shooter pulled the trigger only because of ideas or attitudes that he encountered online.

    For one thing, we can’t actually say what spawned the shooter’s idea that assassinating someone was a good idea, or his belief that Kirk was an appropriate symbolic target for his agenda. Maybe people around him offline encouraged it. Maybe voices in his head told him to. At this point, we don’t know.

    But if he encountered bad ideas online, it’s because the internet is now where we encounter ideas. If he cloaked his violence in the language of internet memes, it’s because that’s where culture is these days.

    In another era, he may have encountered bad ideas at a town hall and dressed up his horrific act in different slogans. But a man with a capacity for such premeditated and dramatic violence is a man with a capacity for such things in any era. And conversely, countless billions of people encounter the same online ecosystem without committing assassinations.

    Reaching for modern technology as the explanation reeks of an ideological agenda of its own.

    None of this is to say that particular vectors of online radicalization shouldn’t be identified. People can and should study such routes, and consider ways to combat them, just as their predecessors tried to stop people from being sucked into the Ku Klux Klan, the mob, and so on. But looking for particular pathways here (if such a thing can be done) is different from condemning social media and the internet universally. We might as well have blamed the buildings where extremists gathered, or the paper and ink that allowed them to communicate.

    “Social media is simply the way we talk and communicate in this day and age, for better or worse,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said yesterday on ABC’s This Week. “What I would focus on is condemning the act of violence. It’s not the free speech that led to this. It’s not the fact that people can talk and communicate online. It’s the actions of an unhinged, evil individual.”

    More Sex & Tech News

    @seungminkim/X

     

    • Kaytlin Bailey, founder and executive director of the sex worker rights group Old Pros, will be debating Melanie Thompson of the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women about whether paying for sex should be a crime. The debate, part of the Soho Forum, is happening live tonight in Manhattan and will also be livestreamed on Reason’s YouTube channel.

    • The Trump administration is referring to birth control as an abortifacient (that is, something that causes abortion). “President Trump is committed to protecting the lives of unborn children all around the world,” a United States Agency for International Development spokesperson told The New York Times when asked about birth control pills, IUDs, and hormonal implants that had been slated for low-income countries. “The administration will no longer supply abortifacient birth control under the guise of foreign aid.”

    • “Federal regulators and elected officials are moving to crack down on AI chatbots over perceived risks to children’s safety. However, the proposed measures could ultimately put more children at risk,” writes Reason‘s Jack Nicastro.

    • Korean “comfort women” are suing the U.S. military.

    • “OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, is supporting a California proposal to impose age verification requirements on app stores and device-makers, adding to the chorus of tech giants praising the measure hours before state lawmakers’ deadline to approve bills for this year,” reports Politico.

    • A new study pitted some researchers against humans in debates and some against artificial intelligence chatbots. Can you guess who fared better? (The answer is not as straightforward as one might expect.)

    Today’s Image

    Turning Point USA booth at CPAC | 2014 (ENB/Reason)

    [ad_2]

    Elizabeth Nolan Brown

    Source link

  • FBI blunders and internet panic: How the search for Charlie Kirk’s killer went off the rails

    [ad_1]

    Authorities announced on Friday morning that they made progress in solving a mystery that has gripped the nation for two days: who murdered conservative activist Charlie Kirk with a rifle during a crowded event at Utah Valley University.

    Utah Republican Gov. Spencer Cox told reporters that 22-year-old Tyler Robinson had been turned in by his family after he “confessed to them or implied” his guilt in the assassination. A roommate also showed police Discord chat messages from Robinson about hiding a rifle, according to Cox, who said that Robinson acted alone.

    Without those tips, it’s hard to know how long the manhunt would have gone on for. The night before, authorities had signaled that they were completely stumped. Officials pleaded with the public for information based on a few grainy surveillance stills on Thursday night, and Utah Public Safety Commissioner Beau Mason told NBC News that authorities had “no idea” where the shooter was.

    Progressive critics—as well as conservative consigliere Chris Rufo—have accused FBI Director Kash Patel of bungling the investigation. Patel had caused major confusion by implying on social media that the FBI had caught the shooter, only to announce that the “subject” had been released after interrogation. That man, who was completely innocent, suffered a flood of threats after his name and photo were publicized.

    Adding to the confusion, police were also filmed escorting a local elderly gadfly out of the event while the crowd blamed him for the shooting. And to make matters worse, internet sleuths misidentified him as yet another innocent person who was nowhere near Utah at the time.

    Of course, chaos and mistakes are an unavoidable part of crises. Thankfully, none of these mistakes led to anyone’s death, as they have in the past. It will take a while for the full story behind the Kirk investigation to come out, to understand which errors were understandable and which were inexcusable.

    At the very least, the manner of Robinson’s arrest throws cold water on the idea that mass spying and heavy-handed police powers are the solution to dramatic crimes. In his post lambasting Patel’s leadership, Rufo also called for “a campaign to disrupt domestic terror networks” and “to investigate, infiltrate, and disrupt the violent movements—of whatever ideology—that threaten the peace in the United States.”

    But it’s not clear that more aggressive political surveillance would have stopped or caught the suspected assassin. The photos that identified him came from old-fashioned security cameras in a hallway, which captured him walking up a stairway and then jumping off the roof after the assassination. Robinson’s father, a longtime sheriff’s deputy, reportedly recognized his son from the photos and told him to turn himself in.

    Meanwhile, the release of the surveillance photos had led to a flood of tips that wasted the authorities’ time. At the Thursday night press conference, Cox said that authorities were sifting through 7,000 tips from the public.

    “It is clear they do not know the name of the suspect, that they don’t have a cellphone track, they don’t have fingerprints, DNA, or digital footprint,” journalist John Solomon, who is close to Patel, told Fox News after the press conference. “And that’s why they’re putting so much personally identifying information up, to try to help get the public to find something that’s there.”

    And the assassination did not come out of an organized political network that could be infiltrated. Although there are signs pointing to a left-wing motive—Cox said that a family member told police that Robinson was angry about Kirk coming to Utah because of his political beliefs—Robinson seems to be, like many other shooting suspects, a lone wolf who spent too much time on the internet.

    An internal law enforcement bulletin, leaked to the press, initially reported that the shooter had written messages about “transgender and anti-fascist ideology” on bullet casings. Those turned out to be a mix of references to the video game Helldivers 2 (which features killing fascists) and lewd jokes. “If you read this you are gay LMAO,” one of the casings read. Another mocked the “furry” fetish subculture.

    An eccentric personality with no criminal record who plays lots of video games and dislikes conservatives is a pretty broad profile, one that covers potentially millions of people. Most of them are neither violent nor members of organized political “networks” that could be disrupted. If the past few days are any indication, encouraging mass online reporting of anyone suspicious can actually make the police’s job harder.

    Using Kirk’s murder to tighten government restrictions would not only be ineffective at preventing more incidents like it. It would also be an unfortunate rebuke to Kirk, who often preached freedom over control.

    [ad_2]

    Matthew Petti

    Source link

  • Peabody police hosting 20th Citizens Academy

    [ad_1]

    PEABODY — The Peabody Police Department is accepting applications for its 20th session of its Citizens Academy.

    Classes for this session will be held each Wednesday from 6-9 p.m. starting on Oct. 15 and running through Dec. 17.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmpAA=:42E:@?D 2C6 5F6 @? ~4E] g] $62ED 2C6 =:>:E65 2?5 H:== 36 7:==65 😕 E96 @C56C 2AA=:42E:@?D 2C6 C646:G65[ E96 A@=:46 56A2CE>6?E D2:5]k^Am

    kAm“(6 9@A6 2?5 6IA64E E92E A2CE:4:A2?ED H:== 8C25F2E6 7C@> E96 r:E:K6?D p4256>J H:E9 2 ?6H7@F?5 2AAC64:2E:@? 7@C H92E H6 2D A@=:46 @77:46CD 5@[” AC@8C2> 5:C64E@C r2AE] $4@EE #:492C5D D2:5 😕 2 DE2E6>6?E]k^Am

    kAm“!2CE:4:A2?ED H:== 7:?:D9 H:E9 2 8@@5 562= @7 7:CDE92?5 @H=6586 @7 9@H E96 56A2CE>6?E @A6C2E6D 2?5 E96 492==6?86D E92E A@=:46 @77:46CD 7246 52:=J] xE H:== 36 2 C62= 6J6@A6?6C]”k^Am

    kAm%@A:4D E92E H:== 36 4@G6C65 😕 E96D6 4=2DD6D :?4=F56[ 3FE 2C6 ?@E =:>:E65 E@[ A@=:E:4D 😕 A@=:4:?8[ E6CC@C:D>[ E96 =682= AC@46DD[ >@E@C G69:4=6 =2H[ A2EC@= AC@465FC6D[ 5@>6DE:4 G:@=6?46[ 4C:>:?2= :?G6DE:82E:@?D 2?5 4@>>F?:EJ A@=:4:?8]k^Am

    kAm$EF56?ED H:== 92G6 56>@?DEC2E:@?D 😕 zh FD6 2?5 5C@?6D 2?5 H:== E2<6 2 7:C62C>D 4=2DD 2E E96 !623@5J !@=:46 $E2E:@?’D @FE5@@C 7:C:?8 C2?86] %96J H:== 2=D@ E@FC E96 DE2E:@? 2?5 E96 |:55=6E@? w@FD6 @7 r@CC64E:@?D[ 2?5 A2CE:4:A2E6 😕 >@E@C G69:4=6 DE@A D46?2C:@D]k^Am

    kAmx?DECF4E@CD :?4=F56 >6>36CD @7 E96 !623@5J !@=:46 s6A2CE>6?E[ tDD6I r@F?EJ s:DEC:4E pEE@C?6J’D ~77:46 2?5 tDD6I r@F?EJ $96C:77’D ~77:46]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    By News Staff

    Source link

  • Assessing the Extent of Political Violence in America

    [ad_1]

    NA

    The awful murder of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has stimulated interest in the nature and extent of political violence in the United States. We do not yet know the identity and motive of the killer; but there is at least a substantial likelihood the motive was political in nature. My Cato Institute colleague Alex Nowrasteh has a great overview of the available data on political violence since 1975. He finds that the overall incidence of such violence is much lower than many assume. The 9/11 attacks dominate the stats, accounting for 83% of total deaths. Setting that aside, right-wing violence is significantly more prevalent than the left-wing variety.

    It should, perhaps, go without saying. But I condemn the murder of Charlie Kirk without reservation. It is utterly indefensible, and I hope the killer is caught and severely punished. I was no fan of Kirk and his ideology. His organization, TPUSA, even once put me on its “Professor Watchlist” (they apparently removed me from the list a few months later, without explanation). But no one should be attacked or killed for their political beliefs. The murder is all the more tragic in light of the fact that Kirk left behind a wife and two small children. They did nothing to deserve this.

    Now for Alex’s summary of the data on violence:

    A total of 3,599 people have been murdered in politically motivated terrorist attacks in the United States from January 1, 1975, through September 10, 2025. Murders committed in terrorist attacks account for about 0.35 percent of all murders since 1975. Only 81 happened since 2020, accounting for 0.07 percent of all murders during that time, or 7 out of 10,000. Terrorism is the broadest reasonable definition of a politically motivated murder because it is the threatened or actual use of illegal force and violence by a nonstate actor to attain a political, economic, religious, or social goal through coercion, fear, or intimidation….

    Eighty-three percent of those murdered since 1975 were committed by the 9/11 terrorists…. The Oklahoma City Bombing accounts for about another 5 percent. Those murdered since 2020 account for just 2 percent. Terrorists inspired by Islamist ideology are responsible for 87 of those murdered in attacks on US soil since 1975…. Right-wingers are the second most common motivating ideology, accounting for 391 murders and 11 percent of the total. The definition here of right-wing terrorists includes those motivated by white supremacy, anti-abortion beliefs, involuntary celibacy (incels), and other right-wing ideologies.

    Left-wing terrorists murdered 65 people, or about 2 percent of the total. Left-wing terrorists include those motivated by black nationalism, anti-police sentiment, communism, socialism, animal rights, environmentalism, anti-white ideologies, and other left-wing ideologies. Those murders that are politically motivated by unknown or other ideologies are a vanishingly small percentage, which is unsurprising because terrorists typically want attention for their causes.

    “Right” and “left” are somewhat arbitrary and incoherent categories. Thus, people can argue about some of Alex’s coding choices here. For example, I am not sure black nationalists really qualify as “left” and incels as “right.” Nonetheless, the coding here mostly tracks the way these terms are generally used in current US political discourse. Thus, Alex is right to conclude that right-wing violence is more prevalent than the left-wing kind, even though one can quarrel with the classification of a few specific perpetrators at the margin.

    Given the outsize weight of the 9/11 attacks in the data, partisans will be tempted to categorize radical Islamists with their political opponents. Thus, left-wingers might argue that Islamists are on the right, due to their extreme social conservatism (they hate LGBT people, want women to be subordinated to men, and so on). On the other hand, one could also argue that they are actually left-wing, due to their hatred of Israel and opposition to American influence in the world. These latter attitudes are more prevalent on the far left, though there are elements of them on the nationalist/MAGA right, as well. In my view, al Qaeda and its ilk don’t really fit on the US right-left political spectrum, and thus Alex is right to group radical Islamists in a separate category from either.

    Regardless of the source, it is reassuring that political violence is relatively rare. The average American is vastly more likely to die in a car accident than be a victim of politically motivated murder. And, as Alex notes, such attacks account for only a tiny percentage of all murders. Prominent political figures are probably more at risk. Nonetheless, the overall level of danger is low, even for most of them.

    For understandable reasons, Alex’s data does not include death threats, which are surely far more common than actual murders or attempts. While the vast majority of such threats aren’t acted on, they still cause pain and fear to those they target. I have reason to know, having gotten several myself, over the years, including one that turned out to be from “mail bomber” Cesar Sayoc. Better-known activists and political commentators likely get a lot more than I do. The increasing prevalence of social media and other forms of electronic communication have, I suspect, made such threats more common.

    I am not aware of any good data on the relative prevalence of death threats by ideology (as opposed to actual attacks). But I suspect that right-wing ones are more common here, as well.

    One person’s experience isn’t necessarily indicative. But over twenty years of libertarian commentary on law and public policy issues, I have said many things that annoy people on both right and left. With one arguable exception (a Russian nationalist angered by my condemnations of Vladimir Putin’s regime), every single one of the threats I have gotten was from right-wingers, mostly related to the issue of immigration. By contrast, I have never gotten threats for things like criticizing affirmative action, condemning socialism, opposing “defunding the police,” or attacking student loan forgiveness. Some of these have generated other types of online nastiness. But never any threats of violence.

    As already noted, more systematic data is needed here. Perhaps my experience will turn out to be atypical.

    I don’t see any ready solution to the problem of politically motivated death threats. Given how easy they are to make, it is probably unrealistic to expect the authorities to track down more than a small fraction of them. Social media firms may be doing a better job of combating them then a few years ago. But that, too, is difficult. All I can say is that we should condemn them, and avoid being intimidated by them.

    As for actual political violence, it is good that it remains relatively rare. But we should be wary of the danger that it might become worse.

    [ad_2]

    Ilya Somin

    Source link

  • MAGA Reacts to the Assassination of Charlie Kirk

    [ad_1]

    Late last summer, I spent the early hours of a weekend morning walking through suburban Phoenix with volunteers for Turning Point Action, Charlie Kirk’s political-advocacy organization. Donald Trump had just been in town for a huge rally, during which Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.—a surprise guest—endorsed him. Gold streamers made to look like they were on fire exploded from the stage. Many in the crowd were there to see Kirk, who spoke first. “You know you are part of something bigger than yourself,” he said. “You are part of the most exciting, diverse, powerful movement in the history of this country.” He went on, “This movement is about all of us against them.” The next time I saw Kirk, in January, Trump had won the election, and Kirk was hosting an Inauguration Eve party in the basement of a hotel in Washington. Giddy supporters danced under a disco ball. But, even at the height of the exuberance, there were a lot of discussions about the battlefield ahead, and references to how narrowly Trump had escaped death on the campaign trail. On Wednesday, after Kirk was assassinated onstage in Utah, it felt, to many, like the war was here. “People warned him, ‘Hey, Charlie, you’re the most exposed person than anybody in this movement,’ ” Steve Bannon said on his streaming show. “Charlie Kirk’s a casualty of war. We’re at war in this country.” On the House floor, Speaker Mike Johnson interrupted votes to hold a moment of silence for Kirk. Lauren Boebert shouted that they should be praying out loud: “Silent prayers get silent results.” Anna Paulina Luna yelled, at Democrats, “Y’all caused this!”

    I decided to go out. There was a vigil for Kirk at St. Joseph’s, a Catholic church near the Capitol. The service lasted twelve minutes. By the time I arrived, the pews were empty; in the dark hallway outside the nave, I ran into a Senate staffer, who had heard about the vigil in an e-mail blast. “He represented a lot of people, whether you agreed with him or not,” he said, of Kirk.

    Outside, two men were talking under a street lamp, holding printed programs. “The vigil used the Sermon on the Mount as a direct comparison between Kirk and Jesus,” one of them, whose name was Ethan, told me. “You could think about him going around the country as a controversial truthteller, spreading the Gospel. Some people will call him a provocateur, and others will call him a prophet.”

    “He was one of the nicer people on the right,” the other man, who wouldn’t give his name, said. “I’m concerned about what may follow.”

    Ethan responded, “Some people are straight up celebrating this guy’s death right now.”

    “It validates the idea that the right is under attack,” the other man said. “Maybe the quiet majority will grow bigger. I could see people saying, ‘I’m not going to put my face out there, because that guy did and he got killed for doing it.’ ”

    “I think the real question is whether or not things start online or in real life,” Ethan said.

    The other man asked Ethan if he had seen the video of the assassination. Ethan hadn’t. “Fuck that,” the man said. “You should watch it. Do you want to watch it right now?”

    Joe Allen, a correspondent for Bannon’s show, happened to be crossing the street alone in the dark. I walked with him toward Pennsylvania Avenue. I thought people might gather at Butterworth’s, a sort of informal MAGA clubhouse, to mourn Kirk. One of the restaurant’s owners told me that he planned to hire armed security the next day. The jubilance of the Inauguration felt like a long time ago. “Be safe out there,” one of the vigilgoers had told me. “I hope this doesn’t turn into a hot civil war.” Allen said, “I feel a dark foreboding. The swelling negative energy . . . and then this, and the constant replay online. Yeah, we’re going to be watching these people die for days, weeks, I don’t know, over and over again. There’s so much callousness and cruelty, and I can already see it building momentum for bloodlust—for revenge, too. If you feel like your tribe is under attack, you draw blood.” He added, “I’m concerned about a strengthening of state power, from Trump all the way down. But, more immediately, potential copycats.”

    We paused in front of a storefront where a TV was playing CNN. Trump was onscreen, speaking from the Oval Office. “My Administration will find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity and to other political violence, including the organizations that fund it and support it, as well as those who go after—” The video faded out. “Certainly the President is not sort of calling for calm on all sides,” Anderson Cooper said. Kara Swisher was his guest. “There’s never an opportunity not to have an opportunity to hate,” she replied. “It’s a real weaponization of words.”

    Outside Butterworth’s, a man in a suit paced the sidewalk. I overheard snippets of his call: “We’re gonna put a text out. . . . The Democrats . . . ” A group was smoking near the door. “Charlie did everything fucking right,” a person close to the Administration told me. “The entire point was, I’m going to sit down and talk to people and try to change their minds. If you don’t like my ideas, come sit down with me. To quote Charlie, ‘When the discourse stops, the violence starts.’ When someone believes in the system as much as he does, if you’re going to kill him . . .” He went on, “There are malignant parts of the right begging for an excuse. Charlie was the bulwark against that. You have an absolutely fucking handicapped political structure in the U.S.”

    [ad_2]

    Antonia Hitchens

    Source link

  • Utah college where Charlie Kirk was killed is a lesser-known school but the state’s largest

    [ad_1]

    THE EVENT. LISA. SO WE ARE HEARING FROM MORE PEOPLE WHO WERE AT THAT RALLY TODAY. KCRA 3’S ANAHITA JAFARY IS IN THE NEWSROOM WITH WHAT THEY SAW. YEAH. CURTIS. LISA, FEAR IS THE WORD ECHOING ACROSS UTAH VALLEY UNIVERSITY. STUDENTS TELL ME THEY NEVER THOUGHT THEY’D EXPERIENCE SOMETHING LIKE THIS AT THEIR SCHOOL. ONE STUDENT TELLS US SHE FELT THE EVENT WASN’T VERY SECURE, SAYING SHE DIDN’T NOTICE MANY SAFETY MEASURES IN PLACE. ESPECIALLY WITH HOW PACKED IT WAS NOT ONLY WITH STUDENTS, BUT FAMILIES, LARGE CROWDS, AND EVEN PROTESTERS. ONE COUPLE WE SPOKE WITH SAYS THE LOUD BANG DIDN’T SOUND LIKE A GUNSHOT AT FIRST, BUT ONCE PEOPLE STARTED SHOUTING AND RUNNING, THEY KNEW SOMETHING WAS WRONG. HERE’S WHAT THEY REMEMBER FROM THOSE TERRIFYING MOMENTS. WE’RE JUST TALKING FOR A LITTLE BIT, AND WE HEARD A BIG LOUD. WE HEARD A LOUD NOISE. AND AT FIRST I DIDN’T THINK IT WAS A GUNSHOT. I THOUGHT IT MIGHT BE LIKE A SOMEONE. I DON’T KNOW, SETTING OFF LIKE A FIREWORK OR SOMETHING. I DON’T KNOW. BUT EVERYONE STARTED RUNNING AND WE HEARD PEOPLE SAY THAT THEY SAW BLOOD. AND SO THAT’S WHEN IT STARTED TO GET SCARY. SO WE WERE RUNNING OUT OF THERE. IT WAS KIND OF LIKE A SKETCHY ENVIRONMENT BECAUSE THERE WAS NO LIKE METAL DETECTORS OR ANYTHING. LIKE PEOPLE COULD JUST WALK IN. AND SO THERE WERE A LOT OF FAMILIES THERE TO. BUT AFTER WE HEARD IT, I WAS SO SCARED. I DIDN’T THINK, I DIDN’T WANT TO THINK IT WAS A GUN OR A SHOOTING. BUT I REALIZED, LIKE, THERE WAS NO WAY IT WASN’T GOING TO BE, THAT. STUDENTS SAY THEY’RE NOW UNEASY ABOUT RETURNING TO CAMPUS AND UNCERTAIN ABOUT WHAT THE UNIVERSITY WILL DECIDE FOR UPCOMING CLASSES. LIVE IN THE NEWSROOM. I’M ANAHITA JAFARY KCRA THREE NEWS. THANK YOU. AND HERE IS MORE ABOUT CHARLIE KIRK, THE CONSERVATIVE ACTIVIST WAS 31 YEARS OLD, A FATHER OF TWO. HE FOUNDED TURNING POINT USA IN 2012. THE NONPROFIT ADVOCATES FOR CONSERVATIVE POLITICS ON HIGH SCHOOL, COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY CAMPUSES, AND PRESIDENT TRUMP CREDITED KIRK AND HIS GROUP FOR GALVANIZING A

    Utah college where Charlie Kirk was killed is a lesser-known school but the state’s largest

    Updated: 10:29 PM PDT Sep 10, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    The Utah college where conservative activist Charlie Kirk was fatally shot Wednesday is the state’s largest public university after years of rapid enrollment growth, but is lesser known than other colleges in the state.Related video above: Utah Valley University students recount terror after the assassination of Charlie KirkUtah Valley University was founded under a different name in 1941 as a vocational school focused on providing war production training. It didn’t begin offering four-year degrees until the 1990s, a move that fueled a fivefold increase in enrollment over the next three decades. It now has nearly 47,000 students, according to the university website.Nearly nine out of 10 students at the school in Orem are from Utah, and 18% of students are 25 years old or older. Business and psychology are among the most popular majors.Utah Valley University’s campus is right off a major highway about 40 miles south of Salt Lake City, where the state’s flagship school, the University of Utah, is located.Utah Valley is also just a few miles away from Brigham Young University, which is owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known widely as the Mormon church.Related video below: Witness to assassination of Charlie Kirk recounts chaosUtah is one of 14 states that allow some level of concealed carry of firearms on public college and university campuses. FBI Director Kash Patel initially said on social media that a “subject” had been taken into custody, only to later say that the person had been released after being questioned.A person of interest in Wednesday’s shooting was in custody, officials said, but no information has been released about whether that person was legally carrying a weapon.The Utah Valley University Wolverines have several athletic teams, including men’s and women’s basketball teams that play in the Western Athletic Conference.Related video below: Utah officials give first news conference after Charlie Kirk shooting

    The Utah college where conservative activist Charlie Kirk was fatally shot Wednesday is the state’s largest public university after years of rapid enrollment growth, but is lesser known than other colleges in the state.

    Related video above: Utah Valley University students recount terror after the assassination of Charlie Kirk

    Utah Valley University was founded under a different name in 1941 as a vocational school focused on providing war production training. It didn’t begin offering four-year degrees until the 1990s, a move that fueled a fivefold increase in enrollment over the next three decades. It now has nearly 47,000 students, according to the university website.

    Nearly nine out of 10 students at the school in Orem are from Utah, and 18% of students are 25 years old or older. Business and psychology are among the most popular majors.

    Utah Valley University’s campus is right off a major highway about 40 miles south of Salt Lake City, where the state’s flagship school, the University of Utah, is located.

    Utah Valley is also just a few miles away from Brigham Young University, which is owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known widely as the Mormon church.

    Related video below: Witness to assassination of Charlie Kirk recounts chaos

    Utah is one of 14 states that allow some level of concealed carry of firearms on public college and university campuses. FBI Director Kash Patel initially said on social media that a “subject” had been taken into custody, only to later say that the person had been released after being questioned.

    A person of interest in Wednesday’s shooting was in custody, officials said, but no information has been released about whether that person was legally carrying a weapon.

    The Utah Valley University Wolverines have several athletic teams, including men’s and women’s basketball teams that play in the Western Athletic Conference.

    Related video below: Utah officials give first news conference after Charlie Kirk shooting

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Charlie Kirk, who became a media titan because he wasn’t afraid of disagreement, assassinated at 31

    [ad_1]

    An assassin’s bullet struck down Charlie Kirk, the prominent conservative commentator and founder of Turning Point USA, while he was speaking at an event at Utah Valley University on Wednesday. He was 31.

    Graphic video footage of the killing, which occurred as Kirk addressed a large outdoor crowd of students and supporters, showed him being shot in the neck. He was rushed to the hospital but did not recover.

    The shocking tragedy has prompted an outpouring of lamentations from Kirk’s many friends in conservative media and Republican politics. Announcing his death on Truth Social, President Donald Trump wrote that Kirk was “Great, and even Legendary.”

    “No one understood or had the Heart of the Youth in the United States of America better than Charlie,” wrote Trump.

    Kirk was influential among young people. He launched Turning Point USA in 2012, with financial backing from Tea Party activist Bill Montgomery. The organization’s stated goal was to foster a conservative movement on college campuses, following in the footsteps of past groups such as Young Americans for Freedom. He was adept at creating catchy slogans and useful talking points for conservative students to deploy against leftwing thinkers; he popularized the phrase “Socialism Sucks” and added it to t-shirts, posters, and banners. He took advantage of dramatically increased interest in crazy campus happenings among the broader American public, and he encouraged dissenting kids to challenge their liberal professors, form right-leaning organizations, and invite Republican speakers to campus. Under Kirk’s leadership, the group became the undisputed king of conservative campus activism, helping turn thousands of non-liberal students into fans of the Republican Party and its rising stars: Candace Owen, Tucker Carlson, Ben Shapiro, Matt Walsh, and of course Trump.

    Kirk too became a prominent star, known for his debate-me-bro persona. He did not confine himself to the company of the already converted, and he seemed to enjoy venturing into the fray and arguing with liberals and leftists—the more of them at once, the better. Indeed, at the time of his death, Kirk was scheduled to debate the leftist commentator Hasan Piker.

    Kirk was also at the forefront of conservative movement’s conquest of independent, alternative media spaces. He hosted his own podcast, racking up millions of views, listeners, and downloads on YouTube, Spotify, and other platforms where conservative media personalities have thrived. While he is far from the only right-wing figure to take advantage of the changing media landscape, it would be hard to overstate his impact on the overall trajectory of the Republican Party, youth activism, and conservative communications. The current crop of MAGA influencers on TikTok, Instagram, and X—some of whom now regularly appear at White House press briefings, displacing more traditional media figures—are the inheritors of the ecosystem he built.

    The murder of an extremely influential political figure is usually an occasion for reckless commentary from all sides of the political spectrum. One MSNBC commentator odiously implied that Kirk brought this on himself by employing hateful rhetoric. Meanwhile, some right-wing figures clearly see his assassination as an opportunity to launch a broad assault against all sorts of political enemies.

    It is during moments like this, when the temptation for ghoulish overreach is most appealing to political figures, that it is helpful to keep one thing in mind: In the U.S., political violence is blessedly rare. People do not generally kill one another because they disagree about politics. That’s a good default status, and one worth preserving. There would be no better way to honor Kirk’s love of debate than to remind everyone that Americans should settle their differences with words, not violence.

    [ad_2]

    Robby Soave

    Source link

  • ‘Botched’ Drug Raids Show How Prohibition Invites Senseless Violence

    [ad_1]

    When Alecia Phonesavanh heard her 19-month-old son, Bou Bou, screaming, she thought he was simply frightened by the armed men who had burst into the house in the middle of the night. Then she saw the charred remains of the portable playpen where the toddler had been sleeping, and she knew something horrible had happened. 

    Phonesavanh and her husband, Bounkham, had been staying with his sister, Amanda, in Cornelia, a small town in northeastern Georgia, for two months. It was a temporary arrangement after the couple’s house in Wisconsin was destroyed by a fire. They and their four children, ranging in age from 1 to 7, occupied a garage that had been converted into a bedroom. 

    Around 2 a.m. on May 28, 2014, a SWAT team consisting of Habersham County sheriff’s deputies and Cornelia police officers broke into that room without warning. One of the deputies, Charles Long, tossed a flash-bang grenade, a “distraction device” that is meant to discombobulate criminal suspects with a blinding flash and deafening noise, into the dark room. It landed in Bou Bou’s playpen and exploded in his face, causing severe burns, disfiguring injuries, and a deep chest wound. 

    After the grenade exploded, the Phonesavanhs later reported, the officers forcibly prevented them from going to Bou Bou’s aid and lied about the extent of his injuries, attributing the blood in the playpen to a lost tooth. The boy’s parents did not realize how badly he had been hurt until they arrived at the hospital where the police took him. Bou Bou, who was initially placed in a medically induced coma, had to undergo a series of reparative surgeries that doctors said would continue into adulthood.

    Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell said his men never would have used a flash-bang if they knew children were living in the home. They were looking for Wanis Thonetheva, Amanda’s 30-year-old son, who allegedly had sold $50 worth of methamphetamine to a police informant a few hours earlier. But Thonetheva, who no longer lived in his mother’s house, was not there. Nor did police find drugs, drug money, weapons, or any other evidence of criminal activity. 

    “The baby didn’t deserve this,” Terrell conceded. “The family didn’t deserve this.” Although “you try and do everything right,” he said, “bad things can happen. That’s just the world we live in. Bad things happen to good people.” He blamed Thonetheva, who he said was “no better than a domestic terrorist.” 

    As is often the case with drug raids, the initial, self-serving police account proved to be inaccurate in several crucial ways. Although Thonetheva supposedly was armed and dangerous, he proved to be neither: He was unarmed when he was arrested later that night at his girlfriend’s apartment without incident (and without the deployment of a “distraction device”). Although Terrell claimed police had no reason to believe they were endangering children, even cursory surveillance could easily have discovered that fact: There were children’s toys, including a plastic wading pool, in the yard, where Bounkham frequently played with his kids. In the driveway was a minivan containing four child seats that was decorated with decals depicting a mother, a father, three little girls, and a baby boy.

    Four months after the raid, a local grand jury faulted the task force that executed it for a “hurried” and “sloppy” investigation that was “not in accordance with the best practices and procedures.” Ten months after that, a federal grand jury charged Nikki Autry, the deputy who obtained the no-knock warrant for the raid, with lying in her affidavit. “Without her false statements, there was no probable cause to search the premises for drugs or to make the arrest,” said John Horn, the acting U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Georgia. “And in this case, the consequences of the unlawful search were tragic.”

    The negligence and misconduct discovered after the paramilitary operation that burned and mutilated Bou Bou Phonesavanh are common features of “botched” drug raids that injure or kill people, including nationally notorious incidents such as the 2019 deaths of Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas in Houston and the 2020 death of Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky. But beyond the specific failures detailed in the wake of such outrages is the question of what these operations are supposed to accomplish even when they go as planned. In the vain hope of preventing substance abuse, drug prohibition authorizes police conduct that otherwise would be readily recognized as criminal, including violent home invasions that endanger innocent bystanders as well as suspects and police officers.

    ‘A Pattern of Excess’

    Bou Bou Phonesavanh before and after the drug raid that nearly killed him
    Bou Bou Phonesavanh (actionnetwork.org)

    Although Terrell initially said the government would cover Bou Bou’s medical bills, which according to his family exceeded $1 million, the Habersham County Board of Supervisors reneged on that promise. A federal lawsuit that Alecia and Bounkham Phonesavanh filed on their son’s behalf in February 2015 ultimately resulted in settlements totaling $3.6 million. But no one was ever held criminally liable for the raid.

    The Habersham County grand jury decided not to recommend criminal charges against anyone involved in the operation. The grand jurors “gave serious and lengthy consideration” to possible charges against Autry, who conducted the “hurried” and “sloppy” investigation that resulted in the search warrant. But after she resigned “in lieu of possible termination” and “voluntarily surrendered” the certification that authorized her to work as a police officer, the jurors decided that resolution was “more appropriate than criminal charges and potential jail time.”

    A federal investigation, by contrast, found evidence that Autry had broken the law. A July 2015 indictment charged her with willfully depriving Bou Bou, his parents, Thonetheva, and his mother of their Fourth Amendment rights under color of law. That crime is generally punishable by up to a year of imprisonment, but the maximum penalty rises to 10 years when “bodily injury results” from the offense, as it did in this case.

    In her search warrant affidavit, Autry claimed a confidential informant who was known to be “true and reliable” had bought methamphetamine from Thonetheva at his mother’s house. Autry also said she had personally confirmed “heavy traffic in and out of the residence.” None of that was true.

    The informant on whom Autry ostensibly relied was “brand new” and therefore did not have a track record demonstrating his trustworthiness. It was not the informant but his roommate who supposedly bought the meth. And Autry did not monitor the house to verify that a lot of people were going in and out. 

    Without those inaccurate details, Magistrate Judge James Butterworth testified during Autry’s federal trial, he would not have approved the warrant she sought. Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill McKinnon argued that Autry, whom he described as “an overzealous police officer” with “no respect for the people she’s investigating,” made up those key details to manufacture probable cause for a search. “If there had never been a search warrant, Bou Bou would’ve never been injured,” McKinnon said in his closing argument. “There’s a direct causation.” 

    Autry testified that the affidavit was prepared by a supervisor but acknowledged that she had reviewed it and had not suggested any changes. Her attorneys portrayed that failure as unintentional. They argued that Autry, the only officer to face charges as a result of the raid, became a scapegoat for other people’s errors. They noted that Long, the deputy who threw the grenade that nearly killed Bou Bou, had violated protocol by failing to illuminate the room before using the explosive device. “There’s a pattern of excess in the ways search warrants are executed,” defense attorney Michael Trost told the jury. “That’s what led to the injuries to this child.”

    The jurors, who acquitted Autry in December 2015, may have been swayed by that argument, which also figured in the local grand jury’s report. “While no member of this grand jury condones or wishes to tolerate drug dealers and the pain and suffering that they inflict upon a community, the zeal to hold them accountable must not override cautious and patient judgment,” it said. “This tragedy can be attributed to well intentioned people getting in too big a hurry, and not slowing down and taking enough time to consider the possible consequences of their actions.”

    Like Trost, the Habersham County grand jury perceived “a pattern of excess” in drug law enforcement. “There should be no such thing as an ’emergency’ in drug investigations,” it said. “There is an inherent danger both to law enforcement officers and to innocent third parties in many of these situations….No amount of drugs is worth a member of the public being harmed, even if unintentionally, or a law enforcement officer being harmed.”

    The grand jury recommended that suspects be “arrested away from a home” whenever that is “reasonably possible” without creating “extra risk” to police or the public. “Going into a home with the highest level of entry should be reserved for those cases where it is absolutely necessary,” the grand jurors said, noting the risk that cops will be mistaken for robbers. “Neither the public nor law enforcement officers should be in this dangerous split second situation unless it is absolutely necessary for the protection of the public.”

    Failure Begets Persistence

    A SWAT team prepares to enter buildingA SWAT team prepares to enter building
    Martin Brayley/Dreamstime.com

    The implications of that critique are more radical than the grand jurors, who took for granted the righteousness of the war on drugs, probably realized. If “no amount of drugs” justifies a risk of injury to police or bystanders, enforcing prohibition at gunpoint is inherently problematic. And if drug dealing does not constitute an “emergency” that requires extraordinary measures, the rhetoric and tactics that police and politicians routinely employ against that activity are fundamentally misguided.

    Leaving aside those deeper questions, what are police trying to achieve when they mount an operation like this one? As the grand jury implicitly conceded, busting one dealer has no measurable impact on the availability of drugs: If police nab someone like Thonetheva, someone else will surely take his place. But from 1995 through 2023, police in the United States arrested people for producing or selling illegal drugs millions of times. Did that massive undertaking make a dent in the drug supply big enough to reduce consumption?

    Survey data suggest it did not. The federal government estimated that 25 percent of Americans 12 or older used illegal drugs in 2023, up from 11 percent in 1995. Meanwhile, the age-adjusted overdose death rate rose more than tenfold

    The economics of prohibition explain why drug law enforcement does not work as intended. Although politicians frequently promise to “stop the flow” of illegal drugs, the government has never managed to do that and never will. Prohibition sows the seeds of its own failure by enabling traffickers to earn a hefty “risk premium,” a powerful financial incentive that drives them to find ways around any roadblocks (literal or figurative) that drug warriors manage to erect. The fact that the government cannot even keep drugs out of prisons suggests the magnitude of the challenge facing agencies that try to intercept drugs before they reach consumers. 

    Realistically, those agencies can only hope to impose additional costs on traffickers that will ultimately be reflected in retail prices. If those efforts substantially raise the cost to consumers, they might have a noticeable effect on rates of drug use. But that strategy is complicated by the fact that illegal drugs acquire most of their value close to the consumer. The cost of replacing destroyed crops and seized shipments is therefore relatively small, a tiny fraction of the “street value” trumpeted by law enforcement agencies. As you get closer to the retail level, the replacement cost rises, but the amount that can be seized at one time falls. 

    Given that dilemma, it is not surprising that throwing more money at source control and interdiction never seems to have a substantial, lasting effect on drug prices in the United States. From 1981 to 2012, the average, inflation-adjusted retail price for a pure gram of heroin fell by 86 percent. During the same period, the average retail price for cocaine and methamphetamine fell by 75 percent and 72 percent, respectively. In 2021, the Drug Enforcement Administration reported that methamphetamine’s “purity and potency remain high while prices remain low,” that “availability of cocaine throughout the United States remains steady,” and that “availability and use of cheap and highly potent fentanyl has increased.”

    Undaunted by this losing record, law enforcement agencies across the country continue to invade people’s homes in search of drugs. The clearer it becomes that blunt force is ineffective at preventing substance abuse, it seems, the more determined drug warriors are to deploy it.

    SWAT teams, originally intended for special situations involving hostages, active shooters, or riots, today are routinely used to execute drug searches. Examining a sample of more than 800 SWAT deployments by 20 law enforcement agencies in 2011 and 2012, the American Civil Liberties Union found that 79 percent involved searches, typically for drugs. Research by criminologist Peter Kraska has yielded similar numbers. SWAT teams proliferated between the 1980s and the first decade of the 21st century, Kraska found, becoming common in small towns as well as big cities. Meanwhile, he estimated, the annual number of SWAT raids in the United States rose from about 3,000 to about 45,000, and 80 percent involved the execution of search warrants.

    Even when drug raids do not technically involve SWAT teams, they frequently feature “dynamic entry” in the middle of the night. Although that approach is supposed to reduce the potential for violence through surprise and a show of overwhelming force, it often has the opposite effect. As the Habersham County grand jury noted, these operations are inherently dangerous, especially since armed men breaking into a home after the residents have gone to bed can easily be mistaken for criminals, with potentially deadly consequences.

    ‘Somebody Kicked in the Door’

    Breonna TaylorBreonna Taylor
    Breonna Taylor (selfie)

    The March 2020 raid that killed Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old EMT and aspiring nurse, vividly illustrated that danger. Like the raid that sent Bou Bou Phonesavanh to the hospital, it involved a dubious search warrant that was recklessly executed.

    Louisville police had substantial evidence that Taylor’s former boyfriend, Jamarcus Glover, was selling drugs. But the evidence that she was involved amounted to guilt by association: She was still in contact with Glover, who continued to receive packages at her apartment. Joshua Jaynes, the detective who obtained the search warrant, said he had “verified through a US Postal Inspector” that packages had been sent to Glover at Taylor’s address. But Jaynes later admitted that was not true. Rather, he said, another officer had “nonchalantly” mentioned that Glover “just gets Amazon or mail packages there.” A postal inspector in Louisville said there was nothing suspicious about Glover’s packages, which reportedly contained clothing and shoes. But to obtain the search warrant, Jaynes intimated that they might contain drugs or drug money. 

    That was not the only problem with the warrant. Jaynes successfully sought a no-knock warrant without supplying the sort of evidence that the Supreme Court has said is necessary to dispense with the usual requirement that police knock and announce themselves before entering someone’s home. In 1997, the Court unanimously held that the Fourth Amendment does not allow a “blanket exception” to that rule for drug investigations. Rather, it said, police must “have a reasonable suspicion that knocking and announcing their presence, under the particular circumstances, would be dangerous or futile, or that it would inhibit the effective investigation of the crime by, for example, allowing the destruction of evidence.” While Jaynes made that general assertion in his affidavit, he did not include any evidence to back it up that was specific to Taylor. 

    Despite their no-knock warrant, the three plainclothes officers who approached Taylor’s apartment around 12:40 a.m. on a Friday in March 2020 banged on the door before smashing it open with a battering ram. They said they also announced themselves, but that claim was contradicted by nearly all of Taylor’s neighbors. Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, was in bed with her at the time. He later said he heard no announcement and had no idea that the men breaking into the apartment were police officers. Alarmed by the banging and the ensuing crash, he grabbed a handgun and fired a single shot at the intruders, striking Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly in the thigh. 

    The three officers responded with a hail of 32 bullets, including six fired by Mattingly, 16 fired by Detective Myles Cosgrove, and 10 fired by Detective Brett Hankison, who was standing outside the apartment. Hankison fired blindly through a bedroom window and a sliding glass door, both of which were covered by blinds and curtains. Six of the rounds struck Taylor, who was unarmed and standing near Walker in a dark hallway. Investigators later concluded that Cosgrove had fired the bullet that killed Taylor.

    Walker called his mother and 911 about the break-in that night. “Somebody kicked in the door and shot my girlfriend,” he told a police dispatcher. He initially was charged with attempted murder of a police officer, but local prosecutors dropped that charge two months later, implicitly conceding that he had a strong self-defense claim. An investigation by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron concluded that Mattingly and Cosgrove also had fired in self-defense, a judgment that reflects the dangerously chaotic situation the officers created by breaking into the apartment in the middle of the night. The only officer to face state criminal charges was Hankison, who was fired three months after the raid because of his reckless shooting. He was charged with three counts of wanton endangerment that September but acquitted by a state jury in March 2022.

    Taylor’s family, which sued the city of Louisville the month after the raid, announced a $12 million settlement in September 2020. Three months later, Louisville’s interim police chief, Yvette Gentry, fired Cosgrove, saying he had fired “in three distinctly different directions,” which indicated he “did not identify a target” and instead “fired in a manner consistent with suppressive fire, which is in direct contradiction to our training, values and policy.” Gentry also fired Jaynes, saying he had lied in his search warrant affidavit about the source of information concerning Glover’s packages.

    The fallout continued in August 2022, when the U.S. Justice Department announced charges against two former and two current officers who were involved in the raid or the investigation that preceded it. Hankison was charged with willfully violating the Fourth Amendment under color of law by blindly firing 10 rounds through “a covered window and covered glass door,” thereby endangering Taylor, Walker, and three neighbors in an adjoining apartment. Jaynes was charged under the same statute based on his affidavit, which the Justice Department said “contained false and misleading statements, omitted material facts, relied on stale information, and was not supported by probable cause.” Prosecutors filed the same charge against Sgt. Kyle Meany, who approved the affidavit. 

    Jaynes and Meany were also accused of trying to cover up the lack of probable cause for the warrant by lying to investigators, which was the basis of several other charges. Jaynes, for example, was charged with falsifying records in a federal investigation and with conspiracy for “agreeing with another detective to cover up the false warrant affidavit after Taylor’s death by drafting a false investigative letter and making false statements to criminal investigators.” The other detective, Kelly Goodlett, was accused of “conspiring with Jaynes to falsify the search warrant for Taylor’s home and to cover up their actions afterward.” 

    Goodlett, who pleaded guilty a few weeks after she was charged, said Jaynes had never verified that Glover was receiving “suspicious packages” at Taylor’s apartment. Hankison’s federal prosecution ended with a mistrial in November 2023 because the jury could not reach a verdict. A year later, another federal jury convicted Hankison of willfully violating Tayor’s Fourth Amendment rights. Because the charge “involved the use of a dangerous weapon and an attempt to kill,” he faced a maximum sentence of life. In July 2025, he was sentenced to 33 months in federal prison.

    In August 2024, a federal judge dismissed two felony counts that enhanced the penalties Jaynes and Meany faced for aiding and abetting a violation of Taylor’s Fourth Amendment rights. U.S. District Judge Charles R. Simpson III emphasized that it was “the late-night, surprise manner of entry” that precipitated the exchange of gunfire. Even if the warrant had been valid, he reasoned, the outcome would have been the same. 

    ‘A Pattern of Deceit’

    Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena NicholasDennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas
    Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas (HPD)

    The Breonna Taylor shooting, which involved a black woman killed by white police officers, became a leading exhibit for the Black Lives Matter movement. But something similar happened a year earlier in Houston, and in that case it was a black police officer who lied to justify a drug raid that killed a middle-aged white couple. That same officer, it turned out, also had a history of framing black defendants. Whatever role racial bias plays in policing, it clearly is not the only incentive for the abuses that the war on drugs fosters. 

    On a Monday evening in January 2019, plainclothes Houston narcotics officers broke into the home of Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas without warning. One of the cops immediately used a shotgun to kill the couple’s dog. Police said Tuttle, who according to his relatives was napping with his wife at the time, picked up a revolver and fired four rounds, hitting one cop in the shoulder, two in the face, and one in the neck—an impressive feat for a disabled 59-year-old Navy veteran surprised by a sudden home invasion. The officers responded with dozens of rounds, killing Tuttle and Nicholas, who was unarmed.

    After that deadly raid, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo put the blame squarely on Tuttle and Nicholas, whom he portrayed as dangerous drug dealers. They were operating a locally notorious “drug house,” he claimed, and “the neighborhood thanked our officers” for doing something about it. Based on a tip from a resident who “had the courage” to report that “they’re dealing dope out of the house,” he said, the Houston Police Department’s Narcotics Division “was able to actually determine” that “street-level narcotics dealing” was happening at the house, where police “actually bought black-tar heroin.”

    Acevedo praised the officers who killed Tuttle and Nicholas as “heroes,” paying special attention to Gerald Goines, the 34-year veteran who had conducted the investigation that led to the raid. Goines had been shot in the neck and face after breaching the door and entering the house to assist his wounded colleagues. “He’s a big teddy bear,” Acevedo gushed. “He’s a big African American, a strong ox, tough as nails, and the only thing bigger than his body, in terms of his stature, is his courage. I think God had to give him that big body to be able to contain his courage, because the man’s got some tremendous courage.”

    Acevedo’s story began to unravel almost immediately. Neighbors said they had never seen any evidence of criminal activity at the house, where Tuttle and Nicholas had lived for two decades. Police found personal-use quantities of marijuana and cocaine at the house but no heroin or any other evidence of the drug dealing Goines had described in his application for a no-knock search warrant. Nor did the search discover the 9mm semiautomatic pistol that Goines claimed his confidential informant had seen, along with a “large quantity of plastic baggies” containing heroin, at the house the day before the raid, when the informant supposedly had bought the drug there. And although Goines said he had been investigating the alleged “drug house” for two weeks, he still did not know who lived there: He described the purported heroin dealer as a middle-aged “white male, whose name is unknown.” 

    Within two weeks of the raid, it became clear that Goines had invented the heroin sale. Later it emerged that the tip he was investigating came from a neighbor who likewise had made the whole thing up. Those revelations resulted in state and federal charges against Goines, the neighbor, and several of Goines’ colleagues on Narcotics Squad 15, including Steven Bryant, who had backed up the account of a heroin purchase that never happened. 

    The scandal prompted local prosecutors to drop dozens of pending drug cases and reexamine more than 2,000 others in which Goines or Bryant had been involved. The investigation by the Harris County District Attorney’s Office, which revealed a “pattern of deceit” going back years, led to the release or exoneration of drug defendants who had been convicted based on Goines’ plainly unreliable word. One of them, Frederick Jeffery, had received a 25-year sentence for possessing 5 grams of methamphetamine. The house search that discovered the meth was based on a warrant that Goines obtained by falsely claiming an informant had bought marijuana at that address. It was the same informant who supposedly bought heroin from Tuttle. 

    In addition to fictional drug purchases, Goines’ search warrant applications frequently described guns that were never found. Over 12 years, the Houston Chronicle reported, Goines obtained nearly 100 no-knock warrants, almost always claiming that informants had seen firearms in the homes he wanted to search. But he reported recovering guns only once—a suspicious pattern that no one seems to have noticed.

    More than five years after police killed Tuttle and Nicholas, a state jury convicted Goines on two counts of felony murder for instigating the deadly raid by filing a fraudulent search warrant affidavit. During the trial, Goines’s lawyers sought to blame the victims, arguing that the couple would still be alive if Tuttle had not grabbed his gun. The prosecution argued that Tuttle did not realize the intruders were cops and reacted as “any normal person” would to a violent home invasion. The jury, which sentenced Goines to 60 years in prison, clearly favored the latter narrative.

    After the state murder charges were filed in 2019, Acevedo said Goines and Bryant had “dishonored the badge.” But he remained proud of the other officers who participated in the raid. “I still think they’re heroes,” he said. “I consider them victims.” Acevedo argued that Goines’ colleagues had “acted in good faith” based on a warrant they thought was valid. He even asserted that “we had probable cause to be there,” which plainly was not true.

    Three months later, Goines and Bryant were charged with federal civil rights violations. The indictment also charged Patricia Ann Garcia, the neighbor whose tip prompted Goines’ investigation, with making false reports. Bryant and Garcia later pleaded guilty.

    “We have zero indication that this is a systemic problem with the Houston Police Department,” Acevedo said after the state charges were announced. “This is an incident that involved the actions of a couple of people.” He reiterated that take after the federal indictment, dismissing “the chances of this being systemic.”

    Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg saw things differently. “Houston Police narcotics officers falsified documentation about drug payments to confidential informants with the support of supervisors,” she said in July 2020. “Goines and others could never have preyed on our community the way they did without the participation of their supervisors; every check and balance in place to stop this type of behavior was circumvented.”

    On the same day that Ogg announced charges against three narcotics supervisors, Acevedo released the results of a long-overdue internal audit of the Houston Police Department’s Narcotics Division, which found widespread sloppiness, if not outright malfeasance. Given “the number and variety of errors,” criminologist Sam Walker told The Houston Chronicle, the Narcotics Division “looks like an operation completely out of control.”

    A federal civil rights lawsuit that Nicholas’ mother and brother filed in January 2021, which named Acevedo as a defendant, described Narcotics Squad 15 as “a criminal organization” that had “tormented Houston residents for years.” According to the complaint, the narcotics officers’ crimes included “search warrants obtained by perjury,” “false statements submitted to cover up the fraudulent warrants,” “improper payments to informants,” “illegal and unconstitutional invasions of homes,” “illegal arrests,” and “excessive force.” 

    An Invitation to Abuse

    Former Houston narcotics officer Gerald GoinesFormer Houston narcotics officer Gerald Goines
    Gerald Goines (HPD)

    The abuses in Houston came to light only because of a disastrous raid that killed two suspects and injured four officers. If Goines had not been shot during the police assault on Tuttle and Nicholas’ home, he could have planted evidence to validate his false claims, in which case most people would have believed the story that Acevedo initially told, and Goines would have been free to continue framing people he thought were guilty. Although several drug suspects had accused him of doing that over the years, their complaints were not taken seriously. 

    How often does this sort of thing happen? There is no way to know. Prosecutors, judges, and jurors tend to discount the protestations of drug defendants, especially if they have prior convictions, and automatically accept the testimony of cops like Goines, who are presumed to be honest and dedicated public servants. Yet the Houston scandal and similar revelations in cities such as New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco suggest that police corruption and “testilying” are more common than people generally think. 

    “Police officer perjury in court to justify illegal dope searches is commonplace,” law professor Peter Keane, a former San Francisco police commissioner, observed in 2011. “One of the dirty little not-so-secret secrets of the criminal justice system is undercover narcotics officers intentionally lying under oath. It is a perversion of the American justice system that strikes directly at the rule of law. Yet it is the routine way of doing business in courtrooms everywhere in America.” 

    Acevedo insisted that the problem in Houston was not “systemic.” Yet the evidence collected by local prosecutors indicated that supervisors abetted the misconduct of dishonest narcotics officers. Meanwhile, prosecutors and judges overlooked red flags in Goines’ warrant applications and testimony. Similar problems were evident after the raids that killed Breonna Taylor and injured Bou Bou Phonesavanh. These are systemic issues.

    So are the incentives created by the war on drugs. When a crime consists of nothing but handing a police officer or an informant something in exchange for money, the evidence often consists of nothing but that purported buyer’s word, along with drugs that easily could have been obtained through other means. This situation invites dishonest cops to invent drug offenses and take credit for the resulting arrests, as Goines did for years with impunity. When your job is to create crimes by arranging illegal drug sales, it is not such a big leap to create crimes out of whole cloth, especially if you are convinced that your target is a drug dealer.

    The underlying problem, of course, is the decision to treat that exchange of drugs for money as a crime in the first place. By authorizing the use of force in response to peaceful transactions among consenting adults, prohibition sets the stage for the senseless violence that periodically shocks Americans who are otherwise inclined to support the war on drugs. But like the grand jurors in Habersham County, they typically do not question the basic morality of an enterprise that predictably leads to such outrages.

    This article is adapted from Beyond Control: Drug Prohibition, Gun Regulation, and the Search for Sensible Alternatives by permission of The Globe Pequot Publishing Group (Prometheus Books). © Copyright 2025.

    [ad_2]

    Jacob Sullum

    Source link

  • Today, College Kids Get Ridiculously Drunk. In Medieval England, They Got Ridiculously Murderous

    [ad_1]

    What words come to mind when you think of the Middle Ages, also known as the medieval period? If you’re thinking “violence,” you’re not wrong (though I would have added “smelly”).

    To investigate the spread of medieval violence, researchers in the U.S. and U.K. developed medieval “murder maps” of London, Oxford, and York by mapping out 355 murders between 1296 and 1398. They studied historic jury investigations into strange deaths, which describe when the attack took place, the location of the body, the murder weapon, and occasionally the reason behind it.

    This approach revealed insightful patterns of 600- to 700-year-old urban violence—including the fact that university students were even more ridiculously troublesome than college kids today.

    Armed, murderous students

    “Homicides were highly concentrated in key nodes of urban life such as markets, squares, and thoroughfares,” in addition to such hotspots as waterfronts and ceremonial spaces, the researchers explained in a study published earlier this summer in the journal Criminal Law Forum. In terms of timing, Sundays were the most murderous days, especially around curfew. Church in the morning was frequently followed by drinking, sports, and fights later in the day.

    Each of the three cities had very different local patterns of violence, however. Oxford, for example, had a homicide rate three to four times higher than London or York. While this might seem to be at odds with the posh university city you’re probably imagining, the posh university is actually the exact reason behind those surprising rates.

    “The medieval university attracted young men aged between 14 and 21, many living far from home, armed and steeped in a culture of honour and group loyalty,” University of Hull’s Stephanie Brown and University of Cambridge’s Manuel Eisner, two criminologists and co-authors of the study, wrote for The Conversation. “Students organised themselves into ‘nations’ based on their regional origins and quarrels between northerners and southerners regularly erupted into street battles.”

    To make matters worse, students were often considered above the common law, so their violence could go unpunished. In fact, Oxford’s homicides were concentrated in or near the university quarter, also as a result of conflicts between students and townspeople.

    The more public, the better

    In London, the medieval homicidal hotspots included Westcheap, the “commercial and ceremonial heart of the city,” according to Brown and Eisner, as well as the Thames Street waterfront. The former was the site of murders associated with guild rivalries, professional feuds, and public revenge attacks, while the latter saw violence among sailors and tradespeople.

    York saw significant levels of homicide in one of its main town entrances, an area that hosted significant commercial, civic, and social life as well. The concentration of travellers, locals, and merchants would have naturally caused some conflict. Stonegate, an esteemed street in York that made up part of a ceremonial route, also experienced much violence. Perhaps unexpectedly, such wealthy areas provided opportunities for competition, vengeance, and public displays of honor.

    In fact, “in all three cities, some homicides were committed in spaces of high visibility and symbolic significance,” the team wrote in the study. Such public spectacles could have solidified an individual’s reputation and/or made a gruesomely compelling point. Interestingly, there were fewer murder inquests in medieval England’s poorer, marginal neighborhoods—though it’s worth considering the possibility that there wasn’t much pressure to investigate unusual deaths in less privileged communities in the first place.

    Nevertheless, “the study also raises broader questions about the long-term decline of homicide,” the researchers concluded in the study, “suggesting that changes in urban governance and spatial organization may have played a crucial role in reducing lethal violence.”

    [ad_2]

    Margherita Bassi

    Source link

  • Timeline of events in Fitzsimmons case

    [ad_1]

    A timeline for the case of North Andover police officer Kelsey Fitzsimmons, 28.

    Feb. 16: Fitzsimmons gives birth to her son with fiance Justin Aylaian, a North Andover firefighter, and takes maternity leave.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmkDEC@?8m|2C49 hik^DEC@?8m }@CE9 p?5@G6C A@=:46 C6DA@?5 E@ u:EKD:>>@?D’ 9@>6 2E `ad !9:==:AD qC@@2=6 92G:?8 2 >6?E2= 962=E9 6A:D@56]” $96 😀 7@F?5 😕 E96 9@FD6 2?5 H:==:?8 E@ 8@ E@ 2 9@DA:E2=] u:EKD:>>@?D H2D EC2?DA@CE65 E@ {2HC6?46 v6?6C2= w@DA:E2= H96C6 D96 H2D 96=5 @? 2 $64E:@? `a @C56C 7@C >6?E2= 962=E9 :DDF6D 2?5 5:28?@D65 H:E9 A@DEA2CEF> 56AC6DD:@?]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m|2C49 `_ik^DEC@?8m u:EKD:>>@?D 😀 5:D492C865 7C@> E96 9@DA:E2= 2?5 G@=F?E2C:=J 4@?E24E65 E96 }@CE9 p?5@G6C !@=:46 s6A2CE>6?E E@ EFC? @G6C 96C A6CD@?2= 2?5 56A2CE>6?E:DDF65 7:C62C>D[ 244@C5:?8 E@ 4@FCE 5@4F>6?ED]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m|2C49 `bik^DEC@?8m }@CE9 p?5@G6C !@=:46 s6A2CE>6?E DFDA6?5D 96C 8F? A6C>:E 27E6C E96 56A2CE>6?E 56E6C>:?65 D96 H2D F?DF:E23=6 E@ 42CCJ 2 H62A@?] p3@FE E9:D E:>6[ u:EKD:>>@?D 😀 A=2465 @? 25>:?:DEC2E:G6 =62G6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m|2J eik^DEC@?8m u:EKD:>>@?D 7:=65 2 A6E:E:@? 2AA62=:?8 }@CE9 p?5@G6C A@=:46 r9:67 r92C=6D vC2J’D 564:D:@? E@ DFDA6?5 96C 8F? A6C>:E] $96 2C8F6D :E H2D C6G@<65 5F6 E@ 2 `a9@FC >6?E2= 962=E9C6=2E65 9@DA:E2=:K2E:@?[ 244@C5:?8 E@ 4@FCE 5@4F>6?ED]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF?6 `gik^DEC@?8m }@CE9 p?5@G6C A@=:46 {E] |:4926= s2G:D D6?E 2 =6EE6C E@ {2HC6?46 s:DEC:4E r@FCE DE2E:?8 u:EKD:>>@?D H2D 4=62C65 3J 2 >65:42= AC@76DD:@?2= E@ C6EFC? E@ 5FEJ] w6 D2:5 96C =:46?D6 E@ 42CCJ 7:C62C>D H2D C6:?DE2E65 3J E96 56A2CE>6?E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF?6 agahik^DEC@?8m p=J2:2?’D 277:52G:E 2==686D 96 H2D 😕 |2:?6 H:E9 u:EKD:>>@?D 7@C E96 H66<6?5] ~? yF?6 ag[ pJ=2:2? D2:5 u:EKD:>>@?D A9JD:42==J 23FD65 9:> 3J DEC:<:?8 9:> E9C66 E:>6D 😕 E96 7246 H:E9 2 4=@D65 7:DE]k^Am

    kAmw6 D2:5 E96 A9JD:42= 23FD6 E@H2C5 9:> =67E 9:> 😕 762C 7@C 9:D =:76 2?5 😕 762C @7 D6C:@FD A9JD:42= 92C> E@H2C5 9:> 2?5 9:D 323J E92E A@E6?E:2==J 4@F=5 36 :?7=:4E65 3J u:EKD:>>@?D] x? E96 4@>A=2:?E[ pJ=2:2? 4=2:>D 2 A2EE6C? @7 4@?46C?:?8 3692G:@C @? E96 A2CE @7 u:EKD:>>@?D 2?5 96 D66@?E9@=5 49:=5]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF?6 b_ik^DEC@?8m pJ=2:2? 7:=65 2? 23FD6 AC6G6?E:@? @C56C C6BF6DE 😕 tDD6I !C@32E6 2?5 u2>:=J r@FCE] pE cib` A]>][ E96 C6DEC2:?:?8 @C56C H2D :DDF65 E@ }@CE9 p?5@G6C A@=:46]k^Am

    kAmpJ=2:2? 2==6865=J >@G6D @FE[ 244@C5:?8 E@ 2 4@FCE 5@4F>6?E] $E2E6>6?ED 7C@> u:EKD:>>@?D 2?5 96C 2EE@C?6J[ %:>@E9J qC25=[ D2J D96 H2D :?G:E65 E@ 2 =@42= A2C< 3J pJ=2:2? 😕 E96 27E6C?@@? E@ H@C< @? E96:C AC@3=6>D] u:EKD:>>@?D 4=2:>65 D96 C6EFC?65 9@>6 27E6C pJ=2:2? 5:5 ?@E D9@H FA]k^Am

    kAmp3@FE e A]>][ E9C66 }@CE9 p?5@G6C A@=:46 @77:46CD 2CC:G65 2E 96C 9@>6 E@ D6CG6 96C 2 C6DEC2:?:?8 @C56C E92E :?4=F565 u:EKD:>>@?D EFC?:?8 @G6C 4FDE@5J @7 E96 49:=5]k^Am

    kAmp? 2C>65 4@?7C@?E2E:@? @44FCC65 H96? u:EKD:>>@?D H2D 36:?8 6D4@CE:?8 3J 2 C6DA@?5:?8 @77:46C 2?5 D96 H2D DECF4< 3J 2 8F?D9@E[ 2FE9@C:E:6D D2:5] u:EKD:>>@?D C646:G65 >65:42= 2DD:DE2?46 367@C6 D96 H2D 7=@H? E@ 2 q@DE@? 9@DA:E2=]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF=J `ik^DEC@?8m pJ=2:2? 7:=65 7@C D@=6 4FDE@5J @7 E96 49:=5 😕 tDD6I !C@32E6 2?5 u2>:=J r@FCE]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF=J `ik^DEC@?8m tDD6I r@F?EJ s:DEC:4E pEE@C?6J !2F= %F4<6C 2?5 }@CE9 p?5@G6C A@=:46 r9:67 r92C=6D vC2J 96=5 2 AC6DD 4@?76C6?46] %F4<6C D2:5 E9C66 @77:46CD[ :?4=F5:?8 2 DFA6CG:D@C[ 2?5 u:EKD:>>@?D H6C6 😕 E96 9@FD6] w6 D2:5 u:EKD:>>@?D H2D DE23=6 😕 2 q@DE@? 9@DA:E2= 2?5 DE2E6 A@=:46 56E64E:G6D 7C@> 9:D @77:46 H6C6 92?5=:?8 E96 :?G6DE:82E:@? 2?5 =@@<:?8 E@ D66 :7 G:56@ 7@@E286 6I:DE65] vC2J D2:5 9:D 56A2CE>6?E 5@6D ?@E H62C 3@5J 42>6C2D]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF=J bik^DEC@?8m ~77:46C !2EC:4< }@@?2?[ H9@ D9@E u:EKD:>>@?D[ H2D AFE @? 25>:?:DEC2E:G6 =62G6[ 244@C5:?8 E@ s2G:D]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF=J `_ik^DEC@?8m %96 s:DEC:4E pEE@C?6J’D ~77:46 4@?7:C>65 u:EKD:>>@?D H2D 492C865 H:E9 2C>65 2DD2F=E H:E9 :?E6?E E@ >FC56C 2?5 EH@ 4@F?ED @7 2DD2F=E H:E9 2 5625=J H62A@?]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF=J hik^DEC@?8m %:>@E9J qC25= 😀 9:C65 2D 5676?D6 2EE@C?6J 7@C u:EKD:>>@?D]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF=J `dik^DEC@?8m %96 |2DD249FD6EED !6246 ~77:46C $E2?52C5D 2?5 %C2:?:?8 r@>>:DD:@? @C56C65 u:EKD:>>@?D E@ DFCC6?56C 2?J H@C<:DDF65 862C 2?5 96C 8F?]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8myF=J `fk^DEC@?8mi u:EKD:>>@?D :DDF65 2 AF3=:4 DE2E6>6?E 7C@> 96C 9@DA:E2= 365[ 4=2:>:?8 D96 2EE6>AE65 E@ <:== 96CD6=7 2?5 ?6G6C A@:?E65 E96 8F? 2E 2? @77:46C]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mpF8] fik^DEC@?8m u:EKD:>>@?D 😀 2CC2:8?65[ 7C@> E96 9@DA:E2=[ 😕 {2HC6?46 s:DEC:4E r@FCE @? E9C66 492C86Di 2C>65 2DD2F=E H:E9 :?E6?E E@ >FC56C 2?5 EH@ 4@F?ED @7 2DD2F=E H:E9 2 5625=J H62A@?] %96 ;F586 @C56C65 96C 4@>>:EE65 2?5 96=5 H:E9@FE 32:=]k^Am

    kAmp DE2E6 A@=:46 C6A@CE 😀 >256 AF3=:4 😕 {2HC6?46 s:DEC:4E r@FCE] %96 C6A@CE :?4=F56D :?E6CG:6HD 7C@> E96 E9C66 C6DA@?5:?8 @77:46CD 2?5 2==686 u:EKD:>>@?D A@:?E65 96C 8F? 2E ~77:46C !2EC:4< }@@?2?] %96 C6A@CE 2==686D EH@ @77:46CD H6?E FADE2:CD H:E9 u:EKD:>>@?D 2D D96 82E96C65 4=@E9:?8 7@C 96C 49:=5] (96? pJ=2:2? 2?5 u:EKD:>>@?D’ >@E96C D9@H65 FA[ 2? @77:46C H6?E 5@H?DE2:CD[ =62G:?8 96C 2=@?6 H:E9 }@@?2?] u:EKD:>>@?D 😀 D2:5 E@ 92G6 =F?865 369:?5 2 5@@C 2?5 2:>65 2 8F? 2E }@@?2?] (96? D96 H6?E E@ C6=@25 E96 8F?[ }@@?2? D2:5 96 D9@E 96C]k^Am

    kAm%96 C6A@CE 2=D@ 56E2:=D 9@H u:EKD:>>@?D C6A@CE65=J E@=5 E96 @77:46CD 2== 96C 7:C62C>D H6C6 D64FC65 😕 E96 32D6>6?E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mpF8] “ik^DEC@?8m u:EKD:>>@?D 2?5 qC25= 7:=65 2 32:= A6E:E:@? @7 E96 {2HC6?46 s:DEC:4E r@FCE ;F586’D 564:D:@?]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mpF8] `cik^DEC@?8m p? tDD6I r@F?EJ $FA6C:@C r@FCE ;F586 96=5 2 52?86C@FD?6DD 962C:?8 E@ E2<6 96C 32:= A6E:E:@? F?56C 25G:D6>6?E] u:EKD:>>@?D 2AA62C65 7C@> 96C |2DD249FD6EED v6?6C2= w@DA:E2= 365]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mpF8] `dik^DEC@?8m %96 tDD6I r@F?EJ $FA6C:@C r@FCE ;F586 56?:65 96C 32:= 2AA62=] u:EKD:>>@?D C6>2:?65 96=5 H:E9@FE 32:=]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mpF8] `gik^DEC@?8m u:EKD:>>@?D 7:=65 2 D64@?5 32:= 2AA62=] $96 😀 5:D492C865 7C@> E96 9@DA:E2= >:5H66<[ 244@C5:?8 E@ qC25=[ 2?5 4@>>:EE65 E@ E96 (6DE6C? |2DD249FD6EED #68:@?2= (@>6?’D r@CC64E:@?2= r6?E6C 😕 r9:4@A66]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mpF8] adik^DEC@?8m %96 D2>6 tDD6I r@F?EJ $FA6C:@C r@FCE ;F586 56?:65 E96 32:= C6BF6DE 282:?] p 8C2?5 ;FCJ :?5:4E65 u:EKD:>>@?D @? 2 4@F?E @7 2DD2F=E 3J >62?D @7 2 52?86C@FD H62A@?]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mpF8] agik^DEC@?8m u:EKD:>>@?D 2AA62CD 😕 tDD6I r@F?EJ $FA6C:@C r@FCE 7@C 2CC2:8?>6?E] yF586 @C56C65 96C C6=62D6 E@ 96C A2C6?ED’ 4FDE@5J H:E9 v!$ >@?:E@C65[ ac^f 9@>6 4@?7:?6>6?E H:E9 ?@ 4@?E24E H:E9 96C 49:=5] %96 C6=62D6 :?4=F565 `_ 4@?5:E:@?D E@ 6?DFC6 E96 4@>>F?:EJ’D D276EJ[ A6?5:?8 2 9@>6 :?DA64E:@? 2?5 4C:>:?2= 324<8C@F?5 4964>@?D 😀 D6E E@ 36 C6=62D65 uC:52J]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Angelina Berube | aberube@eagletribune.com

    Source link

  • New trial for 3 Memphis ex-officers convicted in connection with the beating death of Tyre Nichols

    [ad_1]

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A judge ordered a new trial Thursday for three former Memphis police officers who were convicted of federal charges in the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols, after defense lawyers argued that another judge who presided over their trial was biased against the men.

    U.S. District Judge Sheryl H. Lipman issued the order for a new trial for Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley and Justin Smith, who were found guilty in October 2024 of obstruction of justice through witness tampering in the beating death of Nichols after he fled a traffic stop.

    Two other officers, Emmitt Martin and Desmond Mills Jr., also were charged, but they pleaded guilty before the federal trial.

    Lipman took over the case in June after U.S. District Judge Mark S. Norris, who presided over the case and the trial, recused himself days before the sentencings for the five officers.

    In a statement shared by his judicial office Thursday, Norris said, “Because of the code of judicial conduct, I cannot make a statement on this matter.”

    On Jan. 7, 2023, officers yanked Nichols from his car and then pepper-sprayed and hit the 29-year-old Black man with a Taser. Nichols fled, and when the five officers, who also are Black, caught up with him, they punched, kicked and hit him with a police baton. Nichols called out for his mother during the beating, which took place steps from his home.

    He died three days later.

    Video of the beating captured by a police pole camera also showed the officers milling about, talking and laughing as Nichols struggled with his injuries.

    It prompted intense scrutiny of police in Memphis, nationwide protests and renewed calls for police reform.

    Norris was confirmed as a U.S. district judge in West Tennessee in October 2018 after being nominated by President Donald Trump.

    The Collierville Republican had served as the Tennessee Senate majority leader since 2007. He was first elected to the body in 2000, and his district included Tipton County and part of Shelby County.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Father stabbed leaving ‘Dadurday’ family event Saturday in Lawrence

    [ad_1]

    LAWRENCE — Master barber Joe Terilli spent Saturday afternoon giving free haircuts to kids at a back-to-school and family fun event on the Campagnone Common.

    But as he left the common, he was stabbed in the back, an unprovoked assault that collapsed one of his lungs and sent him into emergency surgery at Lawrence General Hospital, he said.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    [ad_2]

    By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

    Source link

  • Father stabbed leaving ‘Dadurday’ family event Sunday in Lawrence

    [ad_1]

    LAWRENCE — Master barber Joe Terilli spent Sunday afternoon giving free haircuts to kids at a back-to-school and family fun event on the Campagnone Common.

    But as he left the common, he was stabbed in the back, an unprovoked assault that collapsed one of his lungs and sent him into emergency surgery at Lawrence General Hospital, he said.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    [ad_2]

    By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

    Source link

  • Judge orders new trial for Alabama man who has been on death row for 31 years

    [ad_1]

    MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A federal judge has ordered a new trial for an Alabama death row inmate after tests showed it was another man’s DNA on the victim’s body.

    Chief U.S. District Judge Emily C. Marks last week ruled that Christopher Barbour must get a new trial.

    Barbour, now 56, was convicted of the 1992 stabbing death of Thelma Bishop Roberts in Montgomery. Barbour initially confessed that he killed Roberts after helping another man rape her, but he later recanted and said his confession was coerced by police. He has maintained that he is innocent.

    New DNA testing done in 2021 revealed that semen on the victim’s body didn’t belong to either man. It belonged to Roberts’ neighbor who is now incarcerated for an unrelated murder.

    His attorneys argued in an earlier court filing that “Mr. Barbour’s innocence is patently clear.”

    Marks said that Barbour’s conviction was tainted because prosecutors did not turn over bench notes from the initial forensics report that excluded Barbour, as well as the man he said raped the victim, as the source of the DNA. That information, Marks said, could have used to cast doubt on Barbour’s confession, which was the primary evidence against him at trial.

    “Barbour has shown that the prosecution’s knowing use of false evidence may have had an effect on the outcome of the trial,” Marks wrote.

    The state had argued that the DNA results do not exonerate Barbour. A spokesman for Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall said the state plans to appeal the decision.

    The ruling came in a civil case that Barbour filed challenging his conviction on the grounds that his rights were violated. Marks gave the state 90 days to begin preparations for a new trial.

    Marks did not rule on Barbour’s innocence claim but wrote that he can now “argue as much to a jury.” Marks wrote in a ruling last year that the new DNA information “is powerful evidence that Barbour’s confession is false, and that Mrs. Roberts’ murder did not occur as the prosecution presented it at trial.”

    Barbour has been on Alabama’s death row since 1994.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Trump extends control over Washington by taking management of Union Station away from Amtrak

    [ad_1]

    Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says his department is taking management of Washington’s main transportation hub away from Amtrak, in another example of how the federal government is exerting its power over the nation’s capital

    WASHINGTON — Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced Wednesday that his department is taking management of Union Station, the main transportation hub in Washington, away from Amtrak, in another example of how the federal government is exerting its power over the nation’s capital.

    Duffy made the announcement in a statement before he was to join Amtrak President Roger Harris at Union Station for the launch of the NextGen Acela, the rail service’s new high-speed train.

    The secretary said Union Station, located within walking distance of the U.S. Capitol, had “fallen into disrepair” when it should be a “point of pride” for the city.

    “By reclaiming station management, we will help make this city safe and beautiful at a fraction of the cost,” Duffy said.

    Duffy’s words echoed President Donald Trump, who said last week he wants $2 billion from Congress to beautify Washington as part of his crackdown on the city. The Republican president has sent thousands of National Guard troops and federal law enforcement officials into Washington in a bid to fight violent crime he claimed had strangled the city.

    Local police department statistics show violent crime in Washington has declined in recent years, but Trump has countered, without offering evidence, that the numbers were fudged.

    National Guard troops have been on patrol inside and outside of Union Station after Trump launched the anti-crime effort earlier this month. Vice President JD Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth were shouted down by opponents of the federal intervention when they visited with troops there last week.

    During Wednesday’s train unveiling, Duffy will also talk about what the administration is doing to turn Union Station into a world class transit hub, according to a Transportation Department news advisory.

    Duffy had pressed Amtrak about crime at Union Station in a March letter to its chief operating officer and requested an updated plan on how it intended to improve public safety there.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Trump’s threat to deploy troops to Chicago sparks fear, defiance

    [ad_1]

    CHICAGO — President Donald Trump’s threats to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago sent ripples through America’s third-largest city as many residents defended their home against Trump’s escalating rhetoric toward its violent crime, including claims it is a “killing field.”

    The threat of federal troops stirred a mix of fear, frustration and defiance for residents as they pointed to historic drops in violent crime. Groups constantly pressing for police reform said sending troops who lack training in de-escalating violence or any knowledge about the nuances of neighborhoods still grappling with violent crime would undo progress made in recent years.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm%96 D6?E:>6?E H2D 649@65 3J A6@A=6 8@:?8 23@FE E96:C 52J — 4@>>FE6CD 9625:?8 E@ H@C<[ 4J4=:DED H62G:?8 E9C@F89 EC277:4[ 2?5 7C:6?5D A2FD:?8 E@ E2<6 A9@E@D 2=@?8 |:49:82? pG6?F6 — H9@ D2:5 E96 AC6D6?46 @7 EC@@AD H@F=5 @?=J 96:89E6? E6?D:@?D[ ?@E 62D6 E96>]k^Am

    kAm“xE’D 2 5:C64E 277C@?E E@ E96 AC@8C6DD @FC 4@>>F?:E:6D 92G6 >256[” D2:5 qC25=J y@9?D@?[ H9@ =625D q&x{s r9:428@] %96 2?E:G:@=6?46 @C82?:K2E:@? 7@4FD6D :ED 677@CED @? ?6:893@C9@@5D @? E96 4:EJ’D (6DE $:56 E92E 92G6 D66? A6CD:DE6?E 4C:>6[ 6G6? 2D C2E6D @G6C2== 92G6 72==6?]k^Am

    kAm“xE’D ?@E 2 H2C K@?6[” y@9?D@? D2:5] “%96J’C6 G:3C2?E C6D:=:6?E 4@>>F?:E:6D H96C6 J@F?8 A6@A=6 56D6CG6 @AA@CEF?:E:6D 2?5 ?@E :?E:>:52E:@?]”k^Am

    kAm~? %F6D52J[ %CF>A 42==65 r9:428@ 2 “96== 9@=6” 2?5 C6A62E65 E92E r9:428@2?D 2C6 2D<:?8 “%CF>A E@ 4@>6 :?” E@ C65F46 4C:>6 😕 E96 4:EJ] %96 DE2E6>6?ED 649@65 4@>>6?ED 62C=:6C E9:D >@?E9 H96? %CF>A :?5:42E65 r9:428@ >2J 36 ?6IE 7@C 2 7656C2= 4C24<5@H?[ 4=2:>:?8 r9:428@ 😀 “2 >6DD” 2?5 C6D:56?ED 2C6 “D4C62>:?8 7@C FD E@ 4@>6]”k^Am

    kAm%CF>A 92D k2 9C67lQ9EEADi^^2A?6HD]4@>^2CE:4=6^ECF>A56A@CE2E:@?D49:428@:>>:8C2E:@?2CC6DED473a_2b6c`accb22a42e4e65c5`_f_5cQm=@?8 D:?8=65 @FE r9:428@k^2m[ >2<:?8 :E 2 C64FCC:?8 E96>6 @? E96 42>A2:8? EC2:= 😕 3@E9 a_`e 2?5 a_ac] w6 92D 5C2H? 4@?EC@G6CD:2= 4@>A2C:D@?D 36EH66? E96 4:EJ 2?5 H2C K@?6D =:<6 p7892?:DE2?[ 2?5 😕 a_`f[ 96 G@H65 E@ “D6?5 😕 E96 765D” 😕 C6DA@?D6 E@ 8F? G:@=6?46]k^Am

    kAmqFE 52E2 A2:?ED 2 >@C6 ?F2?465 A:4EFC6 @7 4C:>6 — @?6 E92E G2C:6D 5C2>2E:42==J 3=@4< 3J 3=@4< 2?5 E92E 92D D66? C646?E AC@8C6DD]k^Am

    kAm’:@=6?E 4C:>6 😕 r9:428@ 5C@AA65 D:8?:7:42?E=J 😕 E96 7:CDE 92=7 @7 E96 J62C[ C6AC6D6?E:?8 E96 DE66A6DE 564=:?6 😕 @G6C 2 564256[ 244@C5:?8 E@ 4:EJ 52E2] $9@@E:?8D 2C6 5@H? bfT[ 2?5 9@>:4:56D 92G6 5C@AA65 3J baT[ H9:=6 E@E2= G:@=6?46 4C:>6 5C@AA65 3J @G6C aaT]k^Am

    kAm“%96 6>A:C:42= 52E2 😀 G6CJ 4=62C E92E E96 r9:428@ EC6?5 😀 6IEC6>6=J A@D:E:G6[” D2:5 y@9? #@>2?[ H9@ 5:C64ED E96 r6?E6C @? !F3=:4 $276EJ 2?5 yFDE:46 2E E96 &?:G6CD:EJ @7 r9:428@] ”]]] r9:428@ 😀 5@:?8 36EE6C E92? E96 C6DE @7 E96 4@F?ECJ @? 2 =@E @7 C62==J :>A@CE2?E >62DFC6D]”k^Am

    kAm$E:==[ E96 4:EJ’D >@DE 2C56?E 5676?56CD 24@H=6586 8F? G:@=6?46 DE:== A=28F6D A2CED @7 E96 4:EJ 😕 C646?E J62CD[ A2CE:4F=2C=J 😕 H2C>6C >@?E9D] r9:428@ D2H 23@FE df_ 9@>:4:56D 😕 a_ac[ 244@C5:?8 E@ 4:EJ 52E2] $9@@E:?8 =6E92=:EJ — E96 C2E6 2E H9:49 D9@@E:?8 G:4E:>D 5:6 7C@> 36:?8 D9@E — 92D :?4C62D65 😕 C646?E J62CD[ 2D 92D E96 ?F>36C @7 9:8942A24:EJ >282K:?6D C64@G6C65 3J r9:428@ A@=:46 2E D9@@E:?8 D46?6D[ 244@C5:?8 E@ E96 &?:G6CD:EJ @7 r9:428@ rC:>6 {23]k^Am

    kAmrC:>6 😕 r9:428@ C6AC6D6?ED A6CD:DE6?E[ =@42=:K65 492==6?86D[ D2:5 z:>36C=6J $>:E9[ 5:C64E@C @7 ?2E:@?2= AC@8C2>D 7@C E96 &?:G6CD:EJ @7 r9:428@ rC:>6 {23] %96 ?6:893@C9@@5D H:E9 E96 9:896DE 9@>:4:56 C2E6D 6IA6C:6?46 23@FE eg E:>6D >@C6 9@>:4:56D E92? E9@D6 H:E9 E96 =@H6DE C2E6D]k^Am

    kAm#6?6 r2C5@?2[ 2 >2:?E6?2?46 H@C<6C 3@C? 2?5 C2:D65 😕 r9:428@[ 24@H=65865 E96D6 :?6BF:E:6D 😕 6IA@DFC6 E@ G:@=6?E 4C:>6 H9:=6 >2:?E2:?:?8 E92E 96 766=D D276 😕 r9:428@ 86?6C2==J]k^Am

    kAm“xE 56A6?5D H96C6 J@F’C6 2E 2?5 H92E E:>6 :E :D[” 96 D2:5] “~G6C2==[ r9:428@’D 2 AC6EEJ 8@@5 A=246 E@ =:G6 ]]] %96C6’D >@C6 8@@5 A6@A=6 E92? 325 A6@A=6 96C6]”k^Am

    kAm$>:E9 2EEC:3FE6D >F49 @7 E96 5C@AD 😕 G:@=6?E 4C:>6 E@ 2 7@4FD 😕 r9:428@ @? E96 DJDE6>:4 5C:G6CD @7 G:@=6?46[ C2E96C E92? E96 >:=:E2C:DE:4 2AAC@249 k2 9C67lQ9EEADi^^2A?6HD]4@>^2CE:4=6^42A:E2=:?E6CG6?E:@?ECF>A?2E:@?2=8F2C5D49@@=5bh4bc5b6e2a64befega7`bhae3b6_3gQm%CF>A 92D E@FE65 😕 (2D9:?8E@?[ s]r]k^2m $96 6?4@FC2865 >@C6 7656C2= :?G6DE>6?E 😕 C6D62C49:?8 E96D6 EJA6D @7 G:@=6?46AC6G6?E:@? DEC2E68:6D[ 42==:?8 r9:428@ “2 9F3 7@C :??@G2E:@? 😕 8F? G:@=6?46 AC6G6?E:@?]”k^Am

    kAmy29>2= r@=6[ 7@F?56C @7 E96 4@>>F?:EJ @C82?:K2E:@? |J q=@4<[ |J w@@5[ |J r:EJ[ D2:5 %CF>A’D 4@>>6?ED “6C2D6 E9:D H@C< 36:?8 5@?6 @? E96 8C@F?5 3J =@42= =6256CD[ 4@>>F?:EJ @C82?:K2E:@?D 2?5 C6D:56?ED E96>D6=G6D” E@ 4@>32E 8F? G:@=6?46]k^Am

    kAm“pD 7@C %CF>A’D C6>2C6>36C:?8 E92E C96E@C:4 2=@?6 5@6D?’E :>AC@G6 AF3=:4 D276EJ[” 96 D2:5] “(6 ?665 D>2CE[ 4@>>F?:EJ7@4FD65 :?G6DE>6?ED[ ?@E D6?D2E:@?2=:D>]”k^Am

    kAmpD 2 D9@H @7 F?:EJ 282:?DE E96 >@G6[ x==:?@:D v@G] yq !C:EK<6C[ 2 A@E6?E:2= k2 9C67lQ9EEADi^^2A?6HD]4@>^2CE:4=6^AC:EK<6C56>@4C2ED?6H92>AD9:C6:==:?@:D8@G6C?@CAC6D:56?E7a2ae64f`bhahg6`d7dcgfh2c7a_6e7`Qma_ag AC6D:56?E:2=k^2m 4@?E6?56C[ k2 9C67lQ9EEADi^^2A?6HD]4@>^2CE:4=6^42A:E2=:?E6CG6?E:@?ECF>A?2E:@?2=8F2C5D49@@=5bh4bc5b6e2a64befega7`bhae3b6_3gQm4@?G6?65 C@F89=J `__k^2m 6=64E65 @77:4:2=D[ A2DE@CD[ 3FD:?6DD =6256CD 2?5 24E:G:DED 2E 2 DA=2D9J ?6HD 4@?76C6?46 282:?DE E96 324<5C@A @7 8=62>:?8 D &]$] $6?] s:4< sFC3:?[ E96 $6?2E6’D }@] a s6>@4C2E[ E@ E96 #6G] |:4926= !7=686C[ 2 H6==@H? r2E9@=:4 AC:6DE 😕 E96 4:EJ]k^Am

    kAm“%2<6 E96 H2DE65 >@?6J 😕 D6?5:?8 E96 }2E:@?2= vF2C5 2?5 E96 H2DE65 >@?6J FD65 @? E9C62E6?:?8 4@>>6C4:2=D 3J J@FC w@>6=2?5 $64FC:EJ D64C6E2CJ 2?5 FD6 :E @? C62= G:@=6?46 2?5 AC6G6?E:@? AC@8C2>D E92E H:== 3C:?8 A6246[” !7=686C D2:5]k^Am

    kAmpCE y2CC6EE[ 2 3FD:?6DD @H?6C ;FDE D@FE9 @7 5@H?E@H?[ 2=D@ A@:?E65 E@ %CF>A’D 3FD:?6DD AC6D6?46 😕 E96 4:EJ[ D2J:?8i “w6 42?’E E9:?< :E’D E92E 3:8 2 <:==:?8 7:6=5j 96 H@F=5?’E 92G6 3F:=E 2 3F:=5:?8 96C6]”k^Am

    kAm“w6’D 7F== @7 4C2A[” D2:5 y2CC6EE[ H9@ 92D 76=E D276 😕 E96 df J62CD 96 92D =:G65 😕 r9:428@]k^Am

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    [ad_2]

    By CHRISTINE FERNANDO, SOPHIA TAREEN and OBED LAMY – Associated Press

    Source link