NEWS of the Day - January 10, 2012 |
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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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Florida man charged with plotting attacks to avenge Muslims
A naturalized American citizen who was born in the former Yugoslavia has been charged with plotting to use explosives against heavily populated areas as part of a campaign for vengeance for misdeeds he says were committed against Muslims, federal officials say.
Sami Osmakac, 25, of Pinellas Park, Fla., near Tampa, was arrested Saturday. On Monday, in his first appearance in federal court, he was charged with one count of attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction. He was kept in custody after he waived a hearing and bond, said Amy Filjones, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office, in a telephone interview with The Times.
If convicted, Osmakac faces a maximum sentence of life in prison and a $250,000 fine.
According to the criminal complaint, Osmakac, who was born in Kosovo, recorded an eight-minute video explaining why he was planning the attacks.
Sitting cross-legged on the floor of a hotel room, the document says, Osmakac describes Muslim blood as more valuable than that of those who are not adherents of Islam, and he says he wants “payback” for wrongs done to Muslims. He is holding a pistol and has an AK-47 behind him, according to the complaint.
In a statement, U.S. Atty. Robert E. O'Neill thanked all of those who worked on the investigation, including unnamed members of the Muslim community.
“This investigation was also predicated, in part, by assistance from the Muslim community,” O'Neill said without giving details. “I would like to thank them as well.”
According to the complaint, Osmakac was arrested after he allegedly bought inoperable explosive devices and firearms from an undercover agent. The investigation began in September when a confidential source contacted federal authorities after Osmakac entered the source's business looking to buy Al Qaeda flags, officials say. Later contacts between the two were recorded by law enforcement officials.
Two months later, Osmakac allegedly asked the source for help in obtaining firearms and explosives for an attack.
The source put Osmakac in touch with an undercover FBI employee who said he was willing to sell automatic weapons, grenades and an explosive belt. Osmakac gave the undercover agent a $500 down payment for the weapons, officials say.
In a Jan. 1 meeting, officials say, Osmakac told the undercover agent he wanted to bomb nightclubs, the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office and a business in Tampa. He said he wanted to detonate a car bomb and use the explosive belt to go somewhere “where there's a lot of people” and even take hostages.
Osmakac also suggested he would bomb bridges that link Tampa to neighboring Pinellas County, according to officials.
During the Jan. 1 meeting, officials say, the undercover FBI employee noted that Osmakac could change his mind and back out of the plot.
According to the complaint, Osmakac shook his head no and said, “We all have to die, so why not die the Islamic way?”
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/nationnow/
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Washington, D.C., pushes bid to become New Columbia, the 51st state
With the nation's attention focused on New Hampshire, officials in Washington, D.C., are headed to the Granite State to publicize their bid to make the District of Columbia the 51st state.
A delegation led by Mayor Vincent C. Gray will appear Jan. 12 before a New Hampshire legislative committee in their first stop at state capitols across the country to build support for giving the district voting representation in Congress.
Washington's lack of a vote in Congress has been a long-standing gripe.
"Taxation without representation" appears on D.C. license plates. And a D.C. councilman recently polled residents on the idea of renaming Pennsylvania Avenue to perhaps Free D.C. Avenue, 51st State Way, Let D.C. Vote Way or another name.
The district's 600,000 residents pay federal taxes and can vote for president but have a nonvoting delegate in the House and no representation in the Senate.
"We in the district have spent enough time talking to ourselves about the issue of statehood," said Councilman David Catania. "For our efforts to be successful, we must expand the conversation. Our trip to New Hampshire marks the start of that expanded dialogue about self-determination and self-respect.
Councilman Michael Brown said in an interview that he has talked with officials in other states, from Alaska to Florida, about securing their support for resolutions supporting statehood.
Legislation to provide for "the admission of the state of New Columbia into the Union" has languished in Congress.
A constitutional amendment calling for one voting member of the House and two senators for the city won approval of only 16 of the required 38 states before expiring in 1985.
The House in 1993 rejected a bill to make the district a state. The idea faced resistance from a number of Republicans because the strongly Democratic district would probably elect two Democratic senators and a Democratic member of the House if it became a state.
A bill that would have added two seats to the House: one for the strongly Democratic District of Columbia and another for Republican-leaning Utah died in 2010 after a measure was attached to it that would have weakened D.C. gun laws.
A delegation of about 20 Washingtonians plans to visit New Hampshire to attend a hearing on a resolution expressing support for making the district a state.
"We cannot achieve our goal of statehood without the support of the states," D.C. Council Chairman Kwame Brown blogged, calling New Hampshire a logical starting point considering its motto: “Live Free of Die.” Washingtonians made a similar visit to New Hampshire in 2008.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/nationnow/
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From Google News
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LA Crime Stats: Can You Trust the Spin Doctors?
RETHINKING LA - LA's Mayor Villaraigosa and Police Chief Beck have taken the city's 2011 crime stats on the road, holding them aloft and touting the fact that the crime in Los Angeles continues to decline and is currently as low as it was in the 50's.
As Villaraigosa and Beck take a victory lap around the city in anticipation of the upcoming budget hearings, Beck humbly acknowledged that LA's decade of annual crime rate reductions is a combination of police doing their job well and the “informal social standards' set by communities, a soft analysis that begs the question “Says who?”
Villaraigosa's exclamation that “The numbers are mind-boggling!' only serves to stir the embers of an old unresolved debate over the factors that play a role in crime rates.
The larger overarching issue is one of simple data collection and analysis within LA's City Hall.
The City of LA is the largest city in the most populated state in the most powerful country in the world, and yet we allow City Hall to run itself without the accountability that comes from solid statistical analysis, conducted by professionals who challenge assumptions of causality.
If this seems like a harsh charge to level at the Mayor while he's still conducting his press tour, consider the fact that the FBI is currently examining, revising and reevaluating its crime definitions, data collection, and statistical analysis.
If the FBI's ego will allow for introspective analysis and evaluation, surely Los Angeles can ask a few hard questions about the pencils it uses to collect data, the procedures it uses to compile data, the innovative strategies it uses to analyze the data, and the actions it takes based on that data.
If this process seems routine and self guiding, consider the experience of Pfizer, the largest pharmaceutical company in the world. In 2006 the CEO announced to the world that they were on the edge of developing “one of the most important compounds of our generation,” one that would “redefine cardiovascular treatment.”
Two days later the same CEO made a sudden reversal, announcing the termination of clinical trials due to the fact that the drug appeared to be killing people.
Pfizer's value dropped by $21 billion in just week.
Pfizer's experience is a clear demonstration of the fallacy of causation, the assumption that the presence of two or more factors implies that one causes the others.
It also demonstrates that even the most skilled professionals operating with vast resources can master the information but still fail to understand the relevant factors or identify any cause and effect relationships.
Trusting the professionals isn't always the best way to go, as was demonstrated in a study conducted by a cardiologist named Lee Goldman.
Using only four factors, Goldman developed a decision tree that evaluates the likelihood of heart attacks better than trained cardiologists in Chicago's Cook County Hospital emergency room. Malcolm Gladwell, in his book Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking, offers other examples of the difficulty professionals encounter as they collect information but struggle with decisions over what to discard and what to keep.
While Villaraigosa's befuddlement is understandable, it is hardly acceptable, especially in light of the stakes.
Even more disturbing is the City of LA's habit of collecting data as if it was simply fodder for the assumption machine, obligatory elements that were part of an old civic process recipe that continues to churn out the same results.
The City of LA has long held the title of the Capital of Homelessness, yet when it comes to collecting data, it's a volunteer driven process that clearly lacks the commitment that it deserves.
Contrast this with the work of University of Pennsylvania's Dr. Dennis Culhane who has used incisive data collection and analysis to identify effective and efficient tools for eradicating homelessness.
Professor Culhane was featured in the 2005 Genius Edition of Esquire magazine as one of the brightest minds in our country for his work developing and promoting long term solutions to habitual homelessness.
As Culhane works with other large cities, Los Angeles continues to use volunteers to collect homelessness data. Critics contend that this scenario allows for overcounts by those angling for HUD funds and undercounts by politicians who are protecting neighborhood reputations.
The City of LA has also long held the title of the Capital of Busted Streets, yet when it comes to qualifying for funds and allocating resources, again, it's a volunteer driven process.
When voters approved Measure R, the half cent sales tax that would fund regional transportation improvements over the next decade, few realized that the $40 billion initiative would rely on traffic mode analysis performed by volunteers with a vested interest in the outcome.
The City of Los Angeles deserves better than a mind-boggled Mayor in charge of a team that continues to collect data without being held responsible for determining cause and effect.
Rick Cole, while Mayor of Pasadena, used hard data to determine the value of a parking space, its ability to generate revenue that could be invested in the immediate neighborhood, and its role in the regeneration of the local economy.
LA, on the other hand, continues to allow debates over everything from public safety to parking to potholes to be driven by emotion and fueled by fear. Then it gets put through the cost-recovery spin cycle so that it turns into a revenue opportunity for the Mayor who can only express honest befuddlement at he looks at the city adrift.
Meanwhile, Long Beach can analyze the value of a single parking space, its anticipated revenue, the appropriateness of its location and its relationship with the local economy, all from City Hall.
While the ongoing decline in LA's crime rate is a cause for celebration, the fact that we don't know why things are improving is cause for alarm. If community policing is a big factor in the ongoing reduction in crime rates, why is LAPD militarizing the old Rampart station instead of building a new community center?
The ongoing budget crisis in the City of LA demands that hard questions be asked of all department heads and of all departments, yet without reliable data and analysis, the people of LA are deprived of an essential and effective oversight tool.
Now is the time for the City of LA to prioritize data collection and analysis in all that it does, from public safety to public works to public policy, and to do what counts while counting what matters.
(Stephen Box is a grassroots advocate and writes for CityWatch. He can be reached at: Stephen@thirdeyecreative.net)
http://www.citywatchla.com/lead-stories/2693-la-crime-stats-can-you-trust-the-spin-doctors
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