The County's first murder was
the fatal stabbing of 48-year old Arthur G. Brown Jr. in Landsdowne.
Got a babydaddy in jail and want to
show off his mug shot? There's a place on the
"Prison Talk" forum.
And ANOTHER shooting: a
juvenile shot in the head on Belnord Avenue near Patterson Park in the southeastern has died (homicde number four).
1.
Leon Nelson, 17, China Garden2. Man, early 20's at Windsor Forest apt. complex, 4900 Challedon Road
3. Woman in 2000 W. North Avenue Rowhouse (see link above)
4. Another 17-year-old on Belnord, SE
A man
shot in April who died in November became 2006's homicide #275 (and police still haven't called his family).
Two-seventy-five for the City,
350 for the Metro Area in '06-- such tidy numbers!
Dick Irwin reports on the juvenile
shot in the head and also an unID'd man in the Eastern shot in the chest. And a carjacking in the Central, and lots of theft.
The 20-year-old man found
shot dead in the Edgewood flowerbed was ID'd as Walter Antonio Overton.
Hamm:
let's spend state $ treating cracky.
Your tax $ at work: An ongoing ACLU
lawsuit against the city and the federal government on behalf of black public-housing residents has cost the city $6.6 million so far.
Harold Singfield Jr., 22, got
a new trial when a judge ruled another judge should have asked potential jurors if they could be fair. Why this warrants a whole story is beyond me. I guess procedural slip-ups like that are usually frosted over, but this time an appeals judge put his foot down?
Update: Wrote someone from Luke Broadwater's mailbox,
There's a growing amount of case law that says judges must ask jurors direct questions about certain types of cases to determine whether the very nature of those cases elicit strong feelings, thereby resulting in bias.
Maybe it's only an interesting story to me -- I don't know. But, at least to some degree, I think it illustrates the difficulty prosecutors face in successfully convicting accused murderers.
Gregory Kane reveals that
his cousin, Uncle George Floyd's boy Louis, was a bit of a black sheep; advocates "good" prisoners beating down the "dangerous" ones.
Er, wouldn't that
make the good prisoners into dangerous ones by definition?
Hate those hit-and-run drivers! Eg. Jason Dehn, 24, who
drunkenly killed two dialysis patients.
Phony $20s are showing up in Somerset County (sub req.).
"Meet the New Boss"--
CP has a Q & A with Ms. Dixon.
On Crime:
"I'm not making any bold promises as relates to a number [of murders] and reducing crime. What I want to see is that the State's Attorney's office and the police department have a better working relationship."
About as modest a goal as it gets, as it's all uphill from here!
A hypothetical question to Mrs. J and the BPD:
"Are we all in the business for reducing crime? ... what is it going to take from your department and what is it going to take from the police department? We need to have a frank, honest conversation, because there are weaknesses on both sides."
On fingers:
"Instead of pointing the fingers, recognizing that and really asking--like at the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council I asked that question, as City Council president. I ask that every time I go to the meeting, to the judges and parole and probation office, the governor's office, etc. I ask: Are we really in this to reduce crime or are we just here because of your titles and it's a job? Because that's kind of the sense I have from some of the individuals who serve."
But she's not pointing any fingers!
Meet the New Old Status Quo!
(Wonder whappened to that
Urban Blight project of hers?)
Dan Rodricks' column reminds me of a lady I saw wailing on her kid at the mall, screaming, "you know better than to hit your brother!"
Like it would help anything to try to have a parenting discussion with a bitch crazy enough to take toddlers to the mall!
(How
should a concerned citizen handle the public-child-abuse spectacle? WWJM*D?
(*Judith Martin)