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NEWS of the Day - July 14, 2011
on some NAACC / LACP issues of interest

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NEWS of the Day - July 14, 2011
on some issues of interest to the community policing and neighborhood activist across the country

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following group of articles from local newspapers and other sources constitutes but a small percentage of the information available to the community policing and neighborhood activist public. It is by no means meant to cover every possible issue of interest, nor is it meant to convey any particular point of view ...

We present this simply as a convenience to our readership ...

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From Los Angeles Times

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Repeal the death penalty

Each execution costs taxpayers $308 million, a colossal waste.

by George Skelton

Capitol Journal

July 14, 2011

From Sacramento

Waste, fraud and abuse — also known as California's death penalty.

It's a colossal waste of money for arguably the state's most inefficient program.

California has spent an estimated $4 billion to administer capital punishment over the past 33 years and executed only 13 people. That's about $308 million per execution.

It's a shameless fraud on the public. Californians have consistently supported the death penalty and been led to believe that it exists. It really doesn't.

We just stack up more and more killers on death row. There's now a backlog of 714.

It's an abuse of California resources — property and personnel, public and private.

San Quentin's death row occupies valuable land on San Francisco Bay that is better suited for economic development. Meanwhile, far too many brainy lawyers and academicians test their wits on death penalty issues rather than productively debating projects and policies needed to improve the state.

Don't misread me. You won't find any arguments here about the death penalty being unfair, immoral or barbaric. I don't buy it.

Far as I'm concerned, these characters — once proven guilty beyond a shadow of doubt — should be immediately removed from our planet. Some creeps should be appropriately tortured first.

But the issue here is not about the merits of the death penalty. It's about inefficiencies and priorities. As we raise university tuitions out of sight, whack the poor and lay off cops, do we really want to be spending $308 million to snuff out one individual?

What California has been doing for the past 33 years is insane: piling murderers into death row with little prospect of executing them.

There the condemned get their own single cells. They have access to free lawyers and personal TVs.

A recent extensive study of California's death penalty cited the case of a white supremacist who killed a fellow gang member. He asked his attorney to get him sentenced to death, researchers reported, "because, as his attorney explained, 'living conditions at San Quentin prison's death row will be better than if he serves a life term at Pelican Bay.'"

The report added: "By any measure, it is beyond dispute that 'the strongest, most effective death penalty law in the nation' that was promised to California voters in 1978 has not been realized. Instead, California has the most expensive and least effective death penalty law in the nation."

The study was conducted by U.S. 9th Circuit Judge Arthur L. Alarcon and Loyola Law School professor Paula M. Mitchell. Alarcon, who long ago served as Gov. Pat Brown's chief advisor on death penalty cases, does not oppose capital punishment. Mitchell, Alarcon's longtime law clerk, does oppose it.

Some of their findings:

Death row prisoners cost $184 million more per year than if they had been sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.

The average lag between conviction and execution is more than 25 years. There hasn't been an execution since 2006, and none is scheduled as attorneys battle over the state's proposed new lethal injection procedures.

A condemned man in California is more likely to die of old age than an execution. Although 13 have been executed, 78 have died of natural or other causes.

The long delays are largely because there's a shortage of death penalty-qualified attorneys to handle appeals.

Fully implementing California's death penalty would cost an extra $85 million annually. Or, the state could reduce the number of eligible crimes and save perhaps $55 million. Third option: abolish the penalty completely and pocket about $1 billion over five or six years.

"Unless California voters want to tolerate the continued waste of billions of tax dollars on the state's now-defunct death penalty system," the report concludes, "they must either demand meaningful reforms…or, if they do not want to be taxed to fund the needed reforms, they must recognize that the only alternative is to abolish the death penalty and replace it with a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole."

Ah, the dreaded "T" word.

Republicans used to be the crime-fighting party. Now they're Johnny one-notes about lower taxes. So we can't expect them to help raise money to resurrect capital punishment in California.

"We don't think you can put a price on justice," says Cory Salzillo, legislative director for the California District Attorneys Assn. "If this is a penalty society wants — and every poll shows clearly that it is — there's a responsibility to pay for it."

Michael Rushford, president of the pro-death penalty Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, argues that the study offered "false choices." There are plenty of qualified attorneys in California, he contends. More should be made eligible for capital cases. And the entire appeals process should be placed on a fast track.

But former U.S. Atty. Don Heller, who wrote the California death penalty law 33 years ago, said he has turned against capital punishment, believing it is too costly and is administered unfairly and too slowly..

Anyway, he says, "some of these guys should be left out in the general prison population. Then someone can take capital punishment into their own hands, particularly with a baby rapist."

State Sen. Loni Hancock (D-Berkeley) is pushing a bill to abolish the death penalty and substitute life in prison without parole.

The measure would go to the ballot if it passed the Legislature, which seems doubtful.

Too many politicians are afraid of being judged soft on crime.

"Would people rather have teachers in the classrooms, police on the street or death penalty lawyers in court?" she asks.

Hancock and her bill make sense.

California doesn't punish depraved killers. It punishes the innocent: school kids, university students, the elderly poor, the taxpayers.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-cap-death-penalty-20110714,0,5030234.column?track=rss

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From Google News

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Villaraigosa heading to San Francisco

KPCC wire services

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa is scheduled to be in San Francisco today to speak to a group of lawyers supporting gun control and meet with the San Francisco Chronicle's editorial board and former Mayor Willie Brown.

Villaraigosa is scheduled to deliver the keynote speech at the 18th anniversary dinner of the Legal Community Against Violence, a public interest law center whose members assist city, county and state governments in drafting laws involving gun use.

Villaraigosa will discuss Los Angeles' efforts at combating gun and gang violence, such as the Summer Night Lights and gun buyback programs and the Los Angeles Police Department's focus on community policing, an aide said.

Villaraigosa also will join San Francisco Mayor Edwin Lee in a meeting with the San Francisco Chronicle's editorial board to win support for increased federal transportation funding, including high-speed rail between the two cities, the aide said.

Villaraigosa is scheduled to return to Los Angeles tonight, the aide said.

The trip is Villaraigosa's eighth outside Southern California since late April.

Villaraigosa was:

in Chicago April 28-29 for the National Summit on City Design;

in Washington, D.C., May 3-4 for meetings on education and transportation;

in Sacramento May 11 to meet with legislative leaders of both parties to discuss education funding;

in Chicago May 14-16 for Rahm Emanuel's inauguration as mayor;

in Sacramento May 19 to give a keynote address at the Education Trust-West summit;

in Baltimore and Washington June 17-20 for the four-day U.S. Conference of Mayors;

a four-day trip to Chicago and Aspen, Colo., for a Clinton Global Initiative America meeting and the Aspen Ideas Festival.

http://www.scpr.org/news/2011/07/14/villaraigosa-heading-san-francisco/

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From the Department of Homeland Security

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Protect Yourself Against Social Engineering Attacks

Posted by Stop. Think. Connect.

Recently there's been a reported rise in the number of cyber incidents suspected to be the result of social engineering, a tactic which involves approaching an individual, either online or in person, and manipulating them into providing personal information that can be used to break into a computer network or assume someone's identity.

Such schemes can be as brazen as tricking you into handing over a password or as seemingly harmless as asking what kind of software you use or the name of the person responsible for maintaining your computer network. Perpetrators may pose as coworkers, repair men, IT staff or other outsiders with an apparent legitimate need to know such information.

To avoid becoming a victim of a social engineering attack:
  • Be suspicious of unsolicited contacted from individuals seeking internal organizational data or personal information.

  • Do not provide personal information or passwords over email or on the phone.

  • Do not provide information about your organization.

  • Pay attention to website URLs that use a variation in spelling or a different domain (e.g., .com vs. .net).

  • Verify a request's authenticity by contacting the company directly.

  • Install and maintain anti-virus software, firewalls, and email filters.
If you think you are a victim of a social engineering attack:
  • Report the incident immediately.

  • Contact your financial institution and monitor your account activity.

  • Immediately change all of your passwords.

  • Report the attack to the police, and file a report with the Federal Trade Commission (http://ftc.gov) and US-CERT (http://www.us-cert.gov/) .
Stop. Think. Connect. Protect yourself and help keep the web a safer place for everyone. For more information on the Stop.Think.Connect. Campaign, please visit www.dhs.gov/stopthinkconnect .

http://blog.dhs.gov/2011/07/protect-yourself-against-social.html
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