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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Cabinet minister Cheryl Gillan sells home near route of HS2

Cabinet minister Cheryl Gillan sells home near route of HS2

A Cabinet minister sold her home close to the proposed High Speed 2 rail link just two months before the Government gave the go-ahead to the controversial proje
ct.


Cheryl Gillan, the Welsh secretary, sold the house in Amersham, Bucks, last November for £320,000 – just weeks before the Government gave the go-ahead to the £32 billion scheme.

The 17th century terraced house lies 500 yards from the proposed Birmingham to London train route.

Mrs Gillan had been one of the leading opponents to HS2 on the Tories’ benches and had previously threatened to resign if the project was given the green light.

However, after the government signalled its intention to press ahead with the scheme last Tuesday, Gillian emphasised the “good progress” that has been made in mitigating the effects of the new rail route in her constituency with longer tunnels.

Details of the property transaction this weekend angered her constituents. George Allison, 71, the treasurer of the HS2 Amersham Action Group, said: “Mrs Gillan should not be selling her house and she should be fighting HS2.

“I would imagine, like many MPs, she is quite wealthy so she probably didn’t think much about the potential fall in property prices.

“But you might wonder whether she wants to be so accessible to her constituents now.”

This weekend banners and posters have appeared in her constituency that read: “Cheryl, you let us down. Go now.”

The sale of the property in Amersham’s attractive old town leaves Mrs Gillan without a house in her constituency. Her main home is located more than 30 miles away in Epsom, Surrey.

A spokesman for the Welsh Secretary confirmed that the house was sold in November last year for 20% below the asking price after being on the market for 18 months.

He said that Mrs Gillan had decided to sell the property because she and her 84-year-old husband have difficulty climbing stairs.

As opposition to HS2 grew last year Mrs Gillan warned that “many” properties would be blighted by HS2 “for a long period of time”.

Seb Berry, an independent councillor for the nearby town of Great Missenden, said: “We now have an MP who sits in the Cabinet that has approved a policy that will blight many homes in her own constituency – and yet she no longer owns a property here.

“That will make local people – many whom were in tears over the HS2 decision – very angry.”

It is possible that Mrs Gillan would have obtained a significantly lower price for her Amersham home after Justine Greening, the transport secretary, gave the go-ahead for HS2 last Tuesday.

The 2010 ministerial code stipulates that “minister must ensure that no conflict arises, or could reasonably be perceived to arise, between their public duties and their private interests, financial or otherwise”.

It stipulates that ministers “should be guided by the advice given to them by their Permanent Secretary and the independent adviser on Ministers’ interests.”

Mrs Gillan’s spokesman said that she did not directly inform the most senior civil servant at the Wales Office that she was selling property, but said: “On taking office Mrs Gillan disclosed her private interests with the permanent secretary at the Ministry of Justice and the independent adviser on ministers’ interests.

“She has always fully complied with the ministerial code.”

Comment: It sounds a bit like insider trading.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Judge publicly reprimanded over driving ban

Judge publicly reprimanded over driving ban

Lord Justice Thorpe did not tell judicial authorities when he was banned for eight weeks after going through a red light



One of Britain's most senior appeal court judges has been publicly reprimanded for receiving a driving ban and failing to inform judicial authorities that he was facing traffic offences.

Lord Justice Thorpe, 73, who is also head of international family justice, was caught going through red lights on the Victoria Embankment in central London by a police camera.

He was banned from driving for eight weeks after totting up 12 penalty points over the course of the previous 18 months. The judge pleaded guilty at Westminster magistrates court to failing to stop at a red signal.

Court officials only became aware of the case after reading about it in a newspaper. A statement from the Office for Judicial Complaints released on Friday said: "The lord chancellor [the justice secretary, Ken Clarke] and the lord chief justice [Lord Judge] have issued Lord Justice Thorpe with a reprimand for receiving a driving ban and for failing to adhere to the guidance regarding the reporting of traffic offences."

Thorpe faced a six-month ban when he appeared before magistrates last August but the sentence was reduced because he said he needed to run a farm in Wiltshire. He was fined £250 and ordered to pay another £250 in costs.

According to the report, which appeared in the Evening Standard in August last year, Thorpe told the court he needed to be able to drive to herd and feed his 80 cattle.

"It is going to be difficult for me to cope without a licence," he explained. "Of course I recognise that these circumstances must be exceptional and maybe these are not but I still wish to present them for your consideration."

District judge Daphne Wickham reduced the ban to 56 days. "I am prepared to concede that the six months would be a long time for this defendant to be disqualified," she said.

As the first head of international family law, Thorpe is one of the country's leading experts on divorce, parenting and the breakdown of marriage.

He has responsibility for liaising with judges over divorce cases in foreign jurisdictions.

MPs' £275,000 wine and champagne bill

MPs' £275,000 wine and champagne bill

The House of Commons has spent £275,000 over the past two years on taxpayer-subsidised wine and champagne.



The Commons wine cellar was filled with 44,000 bottles for MPs and their staff to enjoy in the Palace of Westminster’s unlicensed bars and restaurants
.

It includes £28,000 on 1,838 bottles of champagne and £11,100 on 1,470 bottles of sparkling wine.

The wine was bought by the House of Commons catering and retail service, which has received a state subsidy of £11.5m over the past two years.

It amounts to a top-up of 42 per cent - meaning the taxpayer contribution to the wine bill was the equivalent of £115,000, or £176 per MP.

No fewer than 69 different wines were bought, including 47 bottles of the highly-rated Chateau de Fonbel 2003, at a cost of £932; 144 bottles of Joseph Drouhin Cote de Nuits-Villages, costing £1,854; and 204 bottles of Sancerre Domaine de Raimbault, costing £2,455.

The authorities also spent more than £40,000 on 7,300 bottles of sauvignon blanc and £24,000 on 5,000 bottles of Merlot.

The taxpayer subsidy means MPs can enjoy drinks at prices far lower than those found in high street wine bars, with wine from £2.35 a glass.

Concerns have been raised over Parliament’s drinking culture. Last year Dr Sarah Wollaston, MP for Totnes, said some MPs are too drunk to stand up in debates and have “no idea” what they are voting for.

Matthew Sinclair, Director of the Taxpayers' Alliance, said: "In most workplaces a subsidised bar would be unthinkable. It is particularly unfair when politicians have been making it steadily more expensive for the rest of us to enjoy a drink with ever higher taxes. This needs to end."

A Commons spokesman said wines are sold to MPs for more than the wholesale purchase price. “The prices of wines sold in the House of Commons bars and restaurants are broadly in line with those charged in local pubs and restaurants,” he said.

Comment: It is time to put an end to this fiddle!

Friday, January 13, 2012

I don't mind taking part but...(part 2)

I don't mind taking part but...(part 2)

Hi John -

Thanks for your email. The background info and the links you sent through earlier are useful.

As discussed on the phone this programme is a documentary, so able to dig deeper than a soundbite on the news.

Thus, in the course of the programme we will be covering issues such as the lack of a written constitution in the UK and the question of UK compliance with decisions of the ECHR. However, as I am sure you appreciate a programme for a general audience can never go into the level of detail that a specialist such as yourself might wish.

I can assure you we will be making clear that you won your case in Strasbourg and that the issue now is that a reluctant British Government has to comply or face sanctions from the ECHR.

As we also talked about on the phone the format of the programme is such that - unlike most news reports - we don't have two people on opposite 'sides' talking about the same issue. Instead with each of our contributors Andrew necessarily has to ask questions that challenge the interviewees standpoint - the audience would expect nothing less.

But I can assure you he will be equally challenging with Phillip Davies MP and Geoffrey Robertson QC, who are we also interviewing next week, as he will with you. Again, as discussed you will understand that we can't omit discussion of your background - which is clearly highly pertinent to the issue - but I can assure you that in your conversation with Andrew you will have ample opportunity to put your views forward as you did very forcefully when we spoke.

We would like to film at 11-30 on Tues (17th Jan). It will be a location in central Hull. I know you are not well at the moment - would you like us to book you a cab ?

Let me know.

Thanks for your help.

Hi Matthew

I am aware that I am a specialist and that this is a specialist area and that the general audience would have difficulty grasping the esoteric points.

You miss the point, it’s not just the British Government which has to comply but the State, that is, the Executive, Parliament and Judiciary.

I don’t have a problem with Andrew asking questions that challenge my standpoint. Playing the ball is acceptable , fouling the player is not. I still await your assurance in this respect. A probation officer emails me “I saw your last interview with Andrew Neil and it was most unedifying. I think you are very wise in being extremely cautious of a 'rematch' with Andrew as I'm fairly sure you are being 'setup' - and I speak as someone not at all sympathetic with the cause of giving prisoners the right to vote. In my view if you take part in the proposed interview it will only serve to strengthen public opinion against prisoner voting rights. But I can fully understand that the offer of further media exposure is extremely tempting indeed.....”. As you can see there is a lack of trust in your motives.

Phillip Davies MP and Geoffrey Robertson QC I fit into the those who are clowns category. I don’t mind you telling them I said that.

My background is not only not highly pertinent to the issue of convicted prisoners human right to the vote, it is irrelevant under English law see the Wednesbury principle. Any deviation from the 2 quoted passages in Hirst v UK (No2) printed below, will, in my view, be totally unacceptable and susceptible to judicial review. The BBC is a public authority and any attempt to abuse my human rights will be challenged in court see s.6(1) HRA 1998. I suspect that you will not be discussing the backgrounds of Phillip Davies MP and Geoffrey Robertson QC.

12. On 11 February 1980, the applicant pleaded guilty to manslaughter
on ground of diminished responsibility. His plea of guilty was accepted on
the basis of medical evidence that the applicant was a man with a gross
personality disorder to such a degree that he was amoral. He was sentenced
to a term of discretionary life imprisonment.

13. The applicant’s tariff (that part of the sentence relating to retribution
and deterrence) expired on 25 June 1994. His continued detention was based
on considerations relating to risk and dangerousness, the Parole Board
considering that he continued to present a risk of serious harm to the public.

I do put my views across very forcefully, I am a heavy hitter who does not pull his punches. It is no good you saying I will have ample opportunity to respond to Andrew’s unjustified attacks upon me. That eats into my time to get my message across. I have no time for distraction politics. I will need to see these so-called background questions beforehand.

The doctor has passed me fit and well, although I have to go for a blood test and chest X-Ray next week.

Nevertheless, I will need a cab both to and from the location. I am 20-30 minutes walking distance from the city centre.

Best wishes

John


I don't mind taking part but...

Cameron talking out of his arse

Cameron talking out of his arse

Japan's first prison break in decades as inmate flees Hiroshima prison in his underwear

Japan's first prison break in decades as inmate flees Hiroshima prison in his underwear

Japanese police have captured an inmate who escaped from a prison in Hiroshima dressed only in his underwear.

Li Guolin was sentenced to 23 years in 2005 for breaking into a house and shooting at a police officer

A nationwide manhunt was launched after Li Guolin, from China, who was serving a 23-year-sentence for attempted murder managed to break out of the prison in southern Japan.

Japan's judicial system is famously efficient, with the country's last escape from a penitentiary occurring more than 20 years ago and Li's break out the first to take place from the Hiroshima prison.

Following an extensive manhunt, police found the escaped convict, who had been behind bars since 2005, in Hiroshima city only two days after he broke out in his white prison-issued underwear.

Footage broadcast by NHK, Japan's national broadcaster, showed Li wearing a jacket and ski cap, believed to have been stolen, as he was escorted back into custody by officers.

It was on Wednesday that Li was believed to be exercising in the prison yard when he shed his uniform and used scaffolding to surreptitiously scale a 16-foot wall surrounding the prison, according to local media reports.

"[Li] fell on his rear and turned over. Then he ran off at a steady trot," one security guard who reportedly witnessed his break out told Kyodo news agency.

His escape resulted in the mobilisation of 800 police officers who scoured the streets of Hiroshima looking for the convict, as well as distributing his description to alert members of the public.

While Li was still on the run, officials advised residents to lock their front doors and bring their washing indoors, while children were also recommended to travel in supervised groups.

Li, believed to be a burglary gang leader, was sentenced to 23 years in prison in 2005 after he was found guilty of breaking into a house, shooting at a police officer and stealing a squad car.

Officers at the Hiroshima prison have apologised to the nation for the escape of the convict amid reports that a number of sensor-activated alarms were switched off due to on-going repair work at the site.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

I don't mind taking part, but...

I don't mind taking part, but...

Hi John -

Thanks for agreeing to do an interview for our programme.

The programme is an hour long documentary for BBC Two provisionally entitled 'Human Rights Gone Wrong?'. As you know it is presented by Andrew Neil who will be doing the interview with you.

The idea of the programme is to look behind the headlines at the range of issues which arise from both the European Convention on Human Rights and the UK Human Rights Act.

One of those is votes for prisoners which is why we want to talk to you, as someone who has been pivotal in campaigning to use human rights law to overturn the British ban on votes for prisoners.

The format of the programme is that Andrew goes on a journey to talk to different people in different places about their take on the issue.

So Andrew will ask you why you think prisoners should be give the vote?; why you think human rights laws should enable this to happen; how you would respond to those uncomfortable with human rights laws being used on this issue etc.

As we discussed on the phone we are doing interviews in public locations to give the film a sense of energy so what we have in mind is to do your interview in a cafe in Hull.

If you can bear with me I will get back to you with exact details when we have secured a location. Just to remind you that we want to film this coming Tuesday 17th January 2012 and that we aim to film the interview late morning - again the exact time subject to the location.

I hope this explains what we want to do.

Thanks again for your help.

MATTHEW LAZA
BBC Current Affairs

Hi Matthew

I have not yet agreed to be interviewed for the programme.

I don’t believe that human rights have gone wrong. The evidence is that some elements of the media and some politicians have been engaged in misinformation in relation to the issue of human rights.

You may be aware that on two previous occasions when Andrew Neil has interviewed me his style was to attack the player and not the ball. I seek an assurance that this will not happen on this occasion, and that Andrew Neil will play it straight and fair and not engage in fouling me?

The idea sounds good. For example, the day following my ECtHR victory The Sun comment advised the government to ignore the judgment. In effect, this is what the Labour government did for 5 years! I think Murdoch was wrong to give such advice, and if the Labour government acted upon this advice then it does not say much for our so-called liberal democracy. According to Laffin, in relation to democracy “The only safeguards are a free press, a vigorous parliamentary opposition and an alert public”. My case shows no free press, HMG in opposition (Tories) failed to challenge the Labour administration (nor did the LibDems very much, I suspect a conspiracy of silence), compared with the public in the Netherlands, for example, the British public are asleep! Professor Paul Mason, Cardiff University, did a very good study called Lies, Distortion and What Doesn’t Work: Monitoring Prison Stories in the British Media. He covers the Prisoners Votes Case under the heading Misrepresentation, Distortion And Silence. I agree with his conclusions. His criticisms of the media, in my view, will shortly have an impact if not on the level of hackgate then at least high up. Already the Council of Europe and the courts have sent out warnings to the media about its reporting. I am getting an injunction to ensure media coverage of my case in future reflects the judgment.

If you look behind the headlines on the ECHR and HRA and my case, it is worth understanding the basics otherwise you will miss the whole point. The obvious which appears to get missed is the difference between a criminal prosecution in our courts, and an application by an individual to the ECtHR at Strasbourg. In the former it is a case of R v Hirst (the State prosecuting the individual on behalf of the public) and applying English law. In the latter it is a case of the Individual v the State (that is, my challenge against the Executive, Parliament and Judiciary) at the highest court in Europe and applying European law. The UK was found guilty of a human rights violation. The UK is required to remedy the breach. This entails individual measures and general measures to prevent further breaches. Because the UK ignored the judgment in my case, it went from a single human rights violation to over 100,000 human rights violations. Because of this the UK is in big trouble in Europe. Strasbourg sees the UK as a failing State, that is, there is a systemic failure in relation to human rights, democracy and rule of law. Europe is demanding reform of the Executive, Parliament and Judiciary. This is why my case is so important. It is worth pointing out that the public are not part of the State. This is between myself and the State. In my case the UK had tried to shield behind public opinion but the Court dispatched that argument in 2 paragraphs. And yet, some politicians and media still harp on about the irrelevancy of public opinion. The UK is in big trouble because the political landscape in Europe has changed since the Labour administration. The Lisbon Treaty gave the Council of Europe, ECtHR and Committee of Ministers more powers, in particular, Protocol 14 of the ECHR. For the first time in the ECHR’s 60 years history an individual can take Rule 11 ‘infringement proceedings’ against a State, my case may be referred back to the ECtHR for a ruling that the UK has failed to provide a remedy following Hirst v UK (No2). Europe can apply sanctions against the UK to force compliance. The Interlaken process was dreamt up by the UN to force rogue or pariah States to toe the line or face sanctions. The Council of Europe adopted this model and all 47 Member States in February 2010 attended the Interlaken Conference. All 47 Member States were required to reaffirm their commitment to abide by the Convention and abide by the Court decisions. Baroness Scotland, the then Attorney General, signed for the UK. The Interlaken Declaration was adopted and agreed by all 47 Member States. Once laid before both Houses of Parliament it became part of English law. It was a ticking time bomb left for Dominic Grieve. The Interlaken Conference was concerned with reform of the ECtHR, but, in my view, more importantly reform of Member States. “Our legal system has been unable to protect people in the 50 cases in which the European Court has found a violation of the convention by the United Kingdom. That is more than any other country except Italy" (Vera Baird QC, MP, Solicitor General, 12 November 2008). The Interlaken Declaration agreed that the European law principle of subsidiarity must be applied in all Member States. This has implications for the English law doctrine of Supremacy of Parliament. Neither the media nor politicians have referred to this nor grasped the significance. European law does not recognise sovereignty/supremacy of Parliament, rather it recognises the doctrine of the sovereignty of the people. This will upset those MPs and Lords who think they are superior to the people. I started a democratic revolution. The changes, unless the UK leaves Europe, will mean the biggest thing since King Charles the First lost his head to Parliament.

We have no written constitution. Ironically, Rabinda Singh QC, (Matrix Chambers) who lost Hirst v UK (No2) has since advocated we have a written constitution. Europe is demanding, as part of the UK’s reform, that the UK fully incorporates the Convention into domestic law. In effect, it will be a written constitution. Tony Blair left out Articles 1 and 13 of the ECHR when he brought rights home. Article 1 guarantees all the human rights under the ECHR to all citizens in Member States, and Article 13 provides for an effective remedy by a national authority for any breaches of the ECHR. According to Alex Bailin QC, (Matrix Chambers) if Hirst v UK (No2) is the measure then the HRA is toothless. Another reform being demanded by Europe is that our system of a fusion of powers must be replaced by a true Separation of Powers between the Executive, Parliament and Judiciary. My case exposes the structural failure. It will mean that the UKSC (or a new constitutional court) will have the jurisdiction to strike down primary legislation, for example, s.3 of ROPA 1983 which denies all convicted prisoners the vote. Kenneth Clarke, Dominic Grieve and David Cameron have all spoken out about the Interlaken Conference and the need to reform the ECtHR, but all remain mute about the reforms being forced upon the UK. They have talked about the need for reform in the UK, but they have not been truthful with the media and public over the issue. I studied English law, but at the same time I studied European law and recognised where the power is (for example, by the Council of Europe getting Russia to ratify Protocol 14, after about 10 years, it left the UK exposed to my assault). When Charles Falconer studied English law, European law did not exist therefore this gap in his knowledge led him to play into my hands. He failed to appreciate that it is the European law interpretation of my case and not an English law one which prevails. It was a big mistake for him to go on The World at One and tell the public what the judgment did not say when I know for a fact he had not read it first to see what it did say. Whilst I do not agree with much of what Jonathan Aitken has to say, he was right in this respect: "The Lord Chancellor on The World at One gave a dangerous hostage to fortune when he said yesterday, "Not every convicted prisoner is in the future going to get the right to vote … we need to look and see whether there are any categories that should be given the right". In effect, the Executive, Parliament and Judiciary are my hostages. To date, a prisoner convicted of manslaughter, murder, rape, and paedophilia have all won the human right to vote. That’s the 4 worst categories according to English criminal law, it does not leave the UK much room for movement. In fact, in my case the Court did give a couple of examples where, exceptionally, the principle of universal suffrage might be curtailed, for example, in the case of someone convicted of electoral fraud or abuse in a public office (MPs expenses fiddling?). In Frodl v Austria this was referred to as the Hirst test. The UK accused the ECtHR of moving the goalposts, but the reality is it was laid down in my case and the UK either ignored it or missed the point. I suspect that the UK has been trying to cover up the mistakes made by Charles Falconer and compounded by Jack Straw. The starting point is all convicted prisoners will get the vote because the leading case in Europe has so judged this will be the case. It is for the electorate to choose the elected and not for the elected to choose the electorate. Charles Falconer has much to answer for. Whilst we both studied law, I did so from a different approach to the traditional black letter of the law teaching. I found that to be too narrow. For example, Law in context or ‘living law’, according to Phil Harris, states “that law can be properly understood only by examining the ways in which it actually operates in society, and by studying the often extremely complex relationship between a social group and its legal code...The perspective taken in this present book is that an understanding of law cannot be acquired unless the subject-matter is examined in close relationship to the social, economic and political contexts in which it is created, maintained and implemented”. I would also add the historical context. Some call this the Sociology of law, its a long way from Eton, Harrow and Oxbridge. I adopted this approach when I formed my own school of thought called Prison Law Inside Out. At best a lawyer or academic can only approach the subject from an outside in perspective. I am the foremost expert on prison law in the country. The UK underestimated the monster it had created.

After 10 years of trying to control me and failing, the Home Office approached me and said it was prepared to negotiate. I was asked what I wanted. I replied “ further education”, I already knew it is high on the IRA wish list. “And, a transfer” I added. Grey suit asked where I had in mind? I replied “Hull Prison Special Unit”. Grey suit said, “The Governor here states that no other Governor will take you because of your reputation”. I replied, “the Governor of Hull Prison, Phil Wheatley, (former DG of NOMS) will take me. He left me to walk around the cage whilst he made some phone calls. The prison Governor then approached me with relief all over his face, Phil Wheatley has agreed to take you. I simply said, “I knew he would”. I knew Phil from previously (he drank in the same pub I worked as a waiter back in the 1960s, The Skyrackrack in Leeds). I wrote to Phil and asked him what his terms were? He replied simply “No unwarranted violence”. We entered into a contract. I thought it was good of him to leave it to my discretion as to the interpretation of warranted, especially as the inmates of Special Units were officially described as “the mad and the bad, the difficult and dangerous”. When he was Deputy Governor of Gartree Prison we got on well together and he said he found a nugget of gold in me. I saved his life once. During the IRA ceasefire a top IRA man (The Brighton bomber) unofficially approached me with a contract to kill Phil Wheatley whom the IRA prisoners were in a running battle. I was a sympathiser, but he had underestimated me and was not aware of my loyalty to Phil. Without going into too much detail, I tipped off Phil to the contract I had been offered. Unfortunately, when I knocked unconscious 3 prison officers the screws union the POA demanded that I be transferred so Phil was unable to work with me. Hull gave him a second bite at the cherry. Section 47 of the Prison Act 1952 states that all prisoners 24/7 are in the control of the Secretary of State. A flaw in this is that it requires the good will of the prisoner to be controlled, the majority the majority of the time go along with this. I challenged it simply by saying “No”. Shades of Gandhi. This put the onus upon the prison authorities to control me. Prison is all about security and control. I had my price and held out for it. Originally the Special Units were called Control Units but the Guardian exposed them and their regimes and the Home Office closed them. Special Units reopened but with different regimes in different prisons and safeguards added and academic scrutiny. Hull Prison Special Unit was education based. The educationalist Ron Cooper was a firm Leftie and very committed to improving education in prison. I asked for a social skills tutor and Phil told him to find me someone appropriate. He brought his friend Lucy who is a feminist, and she helped me with empowerment. She also introduced her partner to me who is a LLM and a Adult Education specialist. Not long after he put 10 questions too me and I shot him down on all 10. He said “Some people will resent your knowledge”. When I had a legal problem and 6 solicitors proved fruitless, Lucy introduced me to her friend Humphrey a solicitor at the Humberside Law Centre. He admitted his ignorance of prison law and simply said “Teach me”. The Home Office settled on the court steps. We took another case and the barrister Tim Owen was ignorant of prison law. He later wrote in Prison Law: Text and Materials (which I helped him write) “most lawyers, even those whose work in criminal practice frequently involves them in decisions about who should go to prison, know comparatively little about the law relating to prisons”. I then had to educate the judges. Politicians and the public are proving more difficult. Lord Justice Sedley wrote: “It should not be forgotten that it takes not only awareness but a degree of courage on a prisoner’s part to take his or her custodians or their departmental superiors to court”. When we entered into the contract the authorities did not say to me “Don’t use these law books to sue us”. The catalyst was meeting Stephen Shaw (the former Director of the Prison Reform Trust), who advised me that violence only begets force and that the authorities know how to deal with this. He gave me a copy of the Prison Rules: A Working Guide published by the PRT. He said, “They don’t understand the law”. I thought, all I had to do was learn the law and I could beat the system. We were taught nobody beats the system. No? I did. The irony is that the system gave me the weapons, that is, the law books. Originally subjects such as sociology, psychology, criminology and the law were banned in prison. I studied all of these in the Special Unit. I could read up to 6 books a day. I was like a sponge soaking up knowledge. I knew that knowledge is power. The law is a double-edged sword, it serves both to punish and to protect. I simply grabbed it and turned it around. Whilst most students will start off with a ‘O Level’ text and progress to ‘A Level’ text, my first text book on law was a degree level text book. It fell open at page 168 a chapter called Power and its use. The author used s.47 of the Prison Act 1952 as an example. I was gripped. The next chapter was called Abuse of power. I thought, this is what prisons is all about. Politics is about power. When an offender kills or rapes, for example, its about power or to be more precise abuse of power. I specialised in prison law first rather than studied law and then decide which area to specialise in. It’s a Topsy-Turvy world, I dived in at the deep end and then learnt to swim. Or, to put it another way, I started from the centre of a maze and took the one way out.

I was a guinea pig in a government experiment in behaviour modification. The files are secret save for those with Home Office and MoJ approval to study them. The regime played down the negatives and played up the positives. The Barlinnie Special Unit was a success witness Jimmy Boyle. I regularly had talks with Dr Peter Bennett the Governor of the Special Unit (and Phil’s protégé) and Phil himself. Pete would run off to seek Phil’s advice when I got him in a bind. Phil said, “would you rather he made the wrong decision?” I replied “No”. Phil was the first to recognise what they had unleashed. It was a bit like The Six Million Dollar Man “We can rebuild him”. Unlike a robot I retained control. Phil’s law degree taught him that he knew I knew what I was talking and writing about, and in such a short period of time. My autism in this instance was not a disability but an ability, my Aspergers Syndrome meant I am good at details and the devil is in the detail. Sometimes I would study for 3 days and nights without sleep. I was a man on a mission. First I had to reform myself, then reform the system. I could not get the key to the door, but I could put my hand on the hand with the key to the door and turn it. The law changes from Strasbourg helped. As did the Strangeways Prison riot of April 1990, and subsequently meeting Lord Justice Woolf as he conducted his inquiry. He concluded that there was a lack of justice in prisons which led to the riot. He recommended an inmate grievance procedure. Hull Prison was one of those chosen to pilot the study. I tested the system, when it failed to deliver I took the case to court. I challenged the absence of power points in the cells. When I won, it destroyed the argument for not having in-cell TVs. I challenged the practice of removing the bed and bedding of prisoners undergoing punishment and won. Success followed success, and I just waited for the HRA to come into force. I had read the Home Office lawyers views on the impact the Act would have, but they had not taken into account prisoners. I won prisoners right of access to phone the media, but wrapped up in the case was the right to form a trade union or association if you like under Article 11 of the ECHR. This caught the Prison Service with its pants down. The judge, Elias J, gave me both points and his judgment was so tight it did not allow for any appeal. It was panic stations. I formed a prison union along with 9 other inmates, they elected me General Secretary and we drafted a constitution. It was decided that obtaining the vote had to be a priority because politicians are only interested if you have a vote, and it would mean we could lobby Parliament for reforms. I became famous not for my crime but because of the case in Strasbourg, and I made history. I transformed from a law breaker to a law-maker, and the State went from law-maker to law breaker. The UK has been in denial, not accepting it was wrong and that I was right.

In a nut shell, that’s my take on the issue.

I am bored with this approach “So Andrew will ask you why you think prisoners should be give the vote?; why you think human rights laws should enable this to happen; how you would respond to those uncomfortable with human rights laws being used on this issue etc”. like I said on the phone, in relation to the first part, simply because the highest court in Europe has ruled prisoners are entitled to the human rights to the vote. Secondly, because all humans are entitled to human rights and this includes prisoners. I don’t respond to those uncomfortable with human beings having human rights, that’s their problem and perhaps they should seek psychiatric help? Might I suggest a rethink on the line of questions, particularly if you do not want to waste time and footage asking irrelevant questions? The BBC should inform and start with an open mind and not have a hidden agenda. Leave it to politicians to go for the populist vote.

Best wishes

John

Potential medieval village among Western Isles 'finds'

Potential medieval village among Western Isles 'finds'

By Steven McKenzie BBC Scotland Highlands and Islands reporter


An aerial photograph of the site of the possible medieval fishing village

Archaeologists' chance encounter with an islander has led them to the site of a possible medieval fishing village on the Western Isles.

The site is among potential new historic finds made along the islands' coasts following tip offs from members of the public.

Archaeologists said they were told about the village after bumping into local man JJ MacDonald.

A diver also alerted the experts to 5,000-year-old pottery from a loch.

Last year, fishermen, beachcombers, divers and islanders in the Hebrides were asked for information on where archaeologists might find ancient sites along shorelines.

The project involves the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS), WA Coastal and Marine, Historic Scotland and Comhairle nan Eilean Siar.

The experts are now working on confirming, dating and analysing the sites and relics they were alerted to, along with aerial photographs of the locations.

Finds included Neolithic pottery found by a diver in Loch an Duna, on Lewis.

A previously unknown complex of fish traps and evidence of occupation south of Lochboisdale on South Uist have also been found.

The possible fishing station was discovered near Loch Euport, on North Uist.

The project team said on Ordnance Survey maps the area is called Havn, the Norse word for harbour.

'Incredible knowledge'

Archaeological investigator at RCAHMS, Dr Alex Hale, said it was among the most promising tip offs.

"Meeting JJ MacDonald was one of those fortuitous moments that can only happen when you are in the field," he said.

"We bumped into JJ at his boat shed, by chance, and the amount of knowledge he has of the local environment is incredible.

"He's obviously very knowledgeable about the area of South Uist where he lives and was able to help us identify sites that we'll now be able to investigate further, such as the fishing station."

Dr Jonathan Benjamin, of WA Coastal and Marine, said local knowledge was key to the first major study of the Western Isles' marine archaeology.

He said: "As full-time archaeologists we don't have the benefit of observing the shoreline between the low and high tides, day in and day out, year after year.

"That's why we're relying on the knowledge of people who live and work on or near the sea, and who might have noticed something out of the ordinary, either in a fishing net, or at an especially low tide.

"We're also explaining to people the sorts of things that we're interested in, because they may have seen or noticed things in the past, but disregarded them as not important."

The Western Isles' coasts have been a rich source of archaeology in the past.

The 12th Century Lewis Chessmen were found beneath a sand dune near Uig on the west coast of Lewis at some point before 1831.

More recently, in 2007, ancient coins were discovered on a beach, giving new clues to the far-reaching influence of the Roman Empire.

Archaeologists believed the pieces of copper alloy dated from the middle of the 4th Century.

Like the chess pieces, they were found in a sand dune, but the location in the Uists has been kept secret to protect the site.

Russia needs to change – but by evolution not revolution

Russia needs to change – but by evolution not revolution

I hope Russia can avoid a bumpy – and perhaps bloody – phase as it moves to become a full partner of Europe's democracies

By Mikhail Prokhorov


Protesters in Bolotnaya Square, Moscow, demonstrate against violations in the parliamentary elections on 10 December 2011. Photograph: Epsilon/Getty

I'm not a man given to emotional outbursts. In fact, in my many years as a businessman, I've always tried to remain a little detached and not let my feelings get in the way of pragmatism. But in witnessing the changes going on in Russia today, I cannot help but feel a little stirring even in this hardened heart.

In the last six months we have become a bit unrecognisable to ourselves. As Russians, we have always loved to sit in the kitchen and criticise this and that and philosophise. But what we are seeing now is a true awakening, when all of us are feeling we have a part to play in the evolution of our nation. Citizens are on the streets demanding fair elections. Social media is buzzing with commentary. All of a sudden, the policies and plans that seemed to be set in stone have come into question, and the government is being pulled into dialogue with its people.

Twenty years ago, many Russians were out on the barricades defending the course of reform against the threat of regression. People who had no experience of living in a democratic society or a market economy were fighting tooth and nail for it. In the years that followed, a lot of people lost not only their life savings, but their faith in the power to effect positive change. Words like democracy and change became dirty words among a large part of our population and turned people off to the idea of participating in the political process.

Many of those who are now playing leading roles in expressing their dissatisfaction are too young to remember that time. They have grown up without portraits of Lenin on the walls. They are free to travel, or leave the country altogether, which many are doing. They can read whatever they like. They go to the market and they see they have a choice of what flavour of ice cream to buy, what brand of coffee to drink, but they do not have this same choice of political leadership, and they want it. The market economy has brought new values. Only now do we have a generation of Russians ready to enact true reforms and with an idea of why democracy and liberalism are values that belong to all of us. The genie is out of the bottle and it's not going back in. The era of "managed democracy" is over.

It is true that we are better off materially now, and have seen a period of relative economic prosperity on the back of high oil prices. But nothing is immutable. What worked for us yesterday will not work for us tomorrow. It is time to focus on writing the next chapter.

We need a nation that allows its citizens to realise their potential, where the government is not a barrier to development. Our next chapter will include strong independent institutions: the judicial system, a free press, direct elections of governors, increased public oversight of government.

We also need to change our economic course. Our present model will lead to catastrophe as soon as oil prices drop. State and private monopolies, social obligations that outweigh budget revenue, dependence on commodities and an antiquated tax system must be replaced by efficiency, transparency, and competitiveness. To achieve these goals, tough decisions will have to be made. Unpopular decisions. We do not need to reinvent the wheel, but to adopt best practice. We should get the government the heck out of the way of individual initiative and focus on educating professionals and workers suited to the demands of today's world. Most importantly, we must enact systemic changes that will uncoil the serpent of corruption that is suffocating our development.

At last, we need to decide once and for all that we are a part of greater Europe, and that we share the values of European democracies. For too many years we have been obsessed with the notion that Russia has its own "special" fate, separate and distinct from everyone else. And, as a result, we are often regarded with mistrust and as somehow separate by everyone else. For the first time in a long time, we are not under any threat of attack from outside enemies. Let us take our seat at the table of developed nations as a fully fledged partner, and choose the path of democratic development and respect for inalienable human rights that is our rightful heritage.

There is no question in my mind that we are heading in this direction. The only question now is will our road be bumpy and perhaps bloody, or will we avoid some of the pitfalls we've seen in our region and in others and pull off a gradual transition before things reach the boiling point? I, for one, am for the latter. Evolution, not revolution.

The will to change is what we need now. And, above all, common sense.

Mikhail Prokhorov is running for the office of president of the Russian Federation

Torture prosecutions against MI5 and MI6 unlikely to be pursued

Torture prosecutions against MI5 and MI6 unlikely to be pursued

Police inquiry expected to say intelligence agents should not be charged over collusion in torture of terror suspects


Binyam Mohamed and Jamil el-Banna, two of the British Guantánamo detainees whose treatment sparked torture allegations against UK intelligence services. Photograph: Press Association

Comment: I wonder if this result has anything to do with covering up the involvement of Jack Straw and David Milliband when they were both Foreign Secretary?

Pardon? Governor sparks outcry by letting off 200 criminals

Pardon? Governor sparks outcry by letting off 200 criminals

Rapists and murderers benefit as former Mississippi hardliner has extraordinary conversion



During his time in office, Haley Barbour, the conservative Governor of Mississippi, signed off the execution of nine residents on the state's Death Row.

That was then. Freed from the burden of having to seek elected office, the one-time Republican presidential contender, appears to have undergone a sudden, Damascene conversion with regard to crime and punishment.

In the final days of his second and last spell in the governor's mansion, Mr Barbour decided to issue formal pardons to no less than 200 convicted criminals, including more than two dozen court-certified killers. His enthusiastic use of clemency laws has sparked huge controversy among both the families of crime victims and his core supporters, who point out that the list of pardoned convicts released on Tuesday includes a selection of rapists, murderers, and child sex offenders.

"I'm totally disgusted," said Glenda Walker, whose son, Randy was shot by one of the freed men, David Gatlin. "One man can't put you in jail. I don't think it's right for one man to remove you from jail." Randy died in 1993 alongside his friend Tammy Ellis Gatlin, David's estranged wife, who was holding a small child at the time of her death. "He left that little baby on his dead mother's body," added Ms Walker. "It was a horrendous murder."

Previous Mississippi governors have granted only a tiny handful of pardons; Mr Barbour's most recent predecessor, Ronnie Musgrove, issued just one during his term. Governor Barbour has so far refused to comment on the motives underpinning his decision to announce 200 pardons, telling reporters who tracked him down at the investiture of his successor, Republican Phil Bryant, that, "it's Phil's day".

At least four of the pardoned murderers on his list were personal acquaintances, however. They worked at the Governor's mansion as part of a prisoner "trustee" programme designed to reward inmates for good behaviour.

Also there was Azikiwe Kambule, a former death-row inmate convicted of a car-jacking in 1996. A teenager at the time, he initially protested his innocence, but eventually agreed to confess in exchange for a 35-year sentence. Meanwhile Karon Irby, a socialite believed to share mutual friends with Barbour, was freed just two years into an 18-year sentence. She had been convicted of manslaughter for killing two people in a drink-driving accident. Another beneficiary of his largesse was Earnest Scott Favre, the brother of Brett Favre, an American football star. He had been found guilty in 1997 of killing a close friend by accidentally driving in front of a train while drunk.

Like many (but not all) of the pardoned convicts, Favre has long ago served his sentence, so Barbour's decision to grant clemency is purely symbolic. However his vigorous use of the powers has focused an awkward light on the tradition of granting powers of clemency to governors and presidents.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Clubbing of fingers

Clubbing of fingers


The term clubbed fingers is used to describe a relatively rare deformity in which the fingertips look like tiny clubs. The fingernails curve downward and the tips become bulb-shaped and somewhat flattened. In severe cases, the cuticles seem to disappear and the fingertips look something like an overturned spoon or a spatula.

In some instances, the oddly shaped fingers may be due to an inherited trait, but more often, the clubbing is a symptom of a serious lung or heart disease. Sometimes the toes also may be affected. What actually causes the clubbing is unknown, but if your fingertips begin to take on this unusual appearance, you should see your doctor for a complete checkup to rule out a serious underlying medical problem.

Causes of clubbing of fingers

Aortic valve disease

Blood that is pumped from the heart to circulate through the body passes from the left ventricle (the heart's main pumping chamber) through the aortic valve and into the aorta, the body's largest artery which branches off into smaller blood vessels. If the aortic valve becomes diseased and unable to allow enough blood to pass through it, aortic insufficiency results. The problem may be congenital, or it may be due to rheumatic fever, infection, or other diseases. Symptoms include shortness of breath, fatigue, chest pains, and clubbing of fingers.

Arthritis

Arthritis in the first finger joint can deform the tip, giving the fingers a clubbed appearance. Heberden's nodes, a type of osteoarthritis that causes enlargement of the first finger joint, is the most common example. Strictly speaking, the finger deformity caused by Heberden's nodes is not true clubbing of the fingers, but the appearance may be similar.

Bronchiectasis

This disease often follows a severe bronchial infection or pneumonia and is characterized by infection and abnormal dilation of the bronchi. The air passages become inflamed, causing increased mucus production and progressive destruction of lung tissue. Symptoms may be similar to those of chronic bronchitis, including clubbed fingers in advanced or persistent cases. Antibiotics usually clear up the infection, but there may be permanent lung damage.

Chronic bronchitis

In bronchitis, the tubes that carry air from the windpipe to the lungs (bronchi) become inflamed and congested. When the condition persists for several months, the bronchitis is considered chronic. Symptoms include coughing, wheezing, and production of large amounts of phlegm; in long-standing cases, the fingers also may become clubbed.

Congestive heart failure

Congestive heart failure occurs when the heart is unable to fully perform its pumping function. The blood backs up into the lungs, causing them to become congested with excess fluid. Shortness of breath, swelling (edema), and clubbing of fingers all are signs of possible congestive heart failure.

Cystic fibrosis

Cystic fibrosis is a serious genetic disease in which the body's secretions are abnormally thick and profuse. Many organs are affected, but the lungs are particularly vulnerable. They become filled with thick mucus, which makes breathing difficult and also increases the likelihood of infection. Clubbed fingers are common in advanced cystic fibrosis.

Emphysema

This disease is characterized by progressive loss of elasticity of the air sacs (alveoli). The person can breathe in fresh air but is unable to fully exhale. As a result, stale air becomes trapped in the lungs and the body suffers from a lack of oxygen. In addition to clubbing of fingers, symptoms of advanced emphysema include shortness of breath, fatigue, and development of a distended, barrel-shaped chest.

Tuberculosis

At the turn of the century, tuberculosis — or consumption as it was commonly called—was our leading cause of death. Today, this infectious lung disease is relatively rare, thanks to antibiotics that can kill the causative bacteria. But even though tuberculosis is no longer a major cause of death in this country, there has been a recent resurgence of the disease, especially among the homeless and drug abusers. Symptoms include a chronic cough that produces blood-specked phlegm, weight loss, shortness of breath, pain upon taking a deep breath, and, as the disease progresses, clubbing of the fingers.

Advice about clubbing of fingers

Sometimes clubbing of fingers may be a family characteristic. If other members of your family have flat, oddly curved fingertips and are healthy, chances are you have inherited the finger shape and are not suffering from a serious disease.
Swollen or deformed fingertips from Heberden's nodes, a type of osteoarthritis, is not a serious disorder. At first, there may be some pain and inflammation, but this usually subsides and there are no further problems.

This article was last reviewed October 17, 2005 by Dr. James Krider.
Reproduced in part with permission of Home Health Handbook.


Comment: I did not need the doctor to tell me that I have clubbed fingers. It was pointed out to me years ago by a prison doctor. He said I would be susceptible to a heart attack...

Prisons inspector condemns Long Lartin's 'cages' and slopping out

Prisons inspector condemns Long Lartin's 'cages' and slopping out

Nick Hardwick says exercise areas for segregated prisoners are 'not fit for purpose' but conditions in whole unit are 'reasonable'


The US schools with their own police

The US schools with their own police

More and more US schools have police patrolling the corridors. Pupils are being arrested for throwing paper planes and failing to pick up crumbs from the canteen floor. Why is the state criminalising normal childhood behaviour?

Inmates or school children?

The charge on the police docket was "disrupting class". But that's not how 12-year-old Sarah Bustamantes saw her arrest for spraying two bursts of perfume on her neck in class because other children were bullying her with taunts of "you smell".

"I'm weird. Other kids don't like me," said Sarah, who has been diagnosed with attention-deficit and bipolar disorders and who is conscious of being overweight. "They were saying a lot of rude things to me. Just picking on me. So I sprayed myself with perfume. Then they said: 'Put that away, that's the most terrible smell I've ever smelled.' Then the teacher called the police."

The policeman didn't have far to come. He patrols the corridors of Sarah's school, Fulmore Middle in Austin, Texas. Like hundreds of schools in the state, and across large parts of the rest of the US, Fulmore Middle has its own police force with officers in uniform who carry guns to keep order in the canteens, playgrounds and lessons. Sarah was taken from class, charged with a criminal misdemeanour and ordered to appear in court.

Each day, hundreds of schoolchildren appear before courts in Texas charged with offences such as swearing, misbehaving on the school bus or getting in to a punch-up in the playground. Children have been arrested for possessing cigarettes, wearing "inappropriate" clothes and being late for school.

In 2010, the police gave close to 300,000 "Class C misdemeanour" tickets to children as young as six in Texas for offences in and out of school, which result in fines, community service and even prison time. What was once handled with a telling-off by the teacher or a call to parents can now result in arrest and a record that may cost a young person a place in college or a job years later.

"We've taken childhood behaviour and made it criminal," said Kady Simpkins, a lawyer who represented Sarah Bustamantes. "They're kids. Disruption of class? Every time I look at this law I think: good lord, I never would have made it in school in the US. I grew up in Australia and it's just rowdy there. I don't know how these kids do it, how they go to school every day without breaking these laws."

The British government is studying the American experience in dealing with gangs, unruly young people and juvenile justice in the wake of the riots in England. The UK's justice minister, Crispin Blunt, visited Texas last September to study juvenile courts and prisons, youth gangs and police outreach in schools, among other things. But his trip came at a time when Texas is reassessing its own reaction to fears of feral youth that critics say has created a "school-to-prison pipeline". The Texas supreme court chief justice, Wallace Jefferson, has warned that "charging kids with criminal offences for low-level behavioural issues" is helping to drive many of them to a life in jail.

The Texas state legislature last year changed the law to stop the issuing of tickets to 10- and 11-year-olds over classroom behaviour. (In the state, the age of criminal responsibility is 10.) But a broader bill to end the practice entirely – championed by a state senator, John Whitmire, who called the system "ridiculous" – failed to pass and cannot be considered again for another two years.

Even the federal government has waded in, with the US attorney general, Eric Holder, saying of criminal citations being used to maintain discipline in schools: "That is something that clearly has to stop."

As almost every parent of a child drawn in to the legal labyrinth by school policing observes, it wasn't this way when they were young.

The emphasis on law and order in the classroom parallels more than two decades of rapid expansion of all areas of policing in Texas in response to misplaced fears across the US in the 1980s of a looming crime wave stoked by the crack epidemic, alarmist academic studies and the media.

"It's very much tied in with some of the hyperbole around the rise in juvenile crime rate that took place back in the early 90s," said Deborah Fowler, deputy director of Texas Appleseed, an Austin legal rights group, and principal author of a 200-page study of the consequences of policing in Texas schools. "They ushered in tough, punitive policies. It was all part of the tough-on-crime movement."

Part of that included the passing of laws that made the US the only developed country to lock up children as young as 13 for life without the possibility of parole, often as accomplices to murders committed by an adult.

As the hand of law and order grew heavier across Texas, its grip also tightened on schools. The number of school districts in the state with police departments has risen more than 20-fold over the past two decades.

"Zero tolerance started out as a term that was used in combating drug trafficking and it became a term that is now used widely when you're referring to some very punitive school discipline measures. Those two policy worlds became conflated with each other," said Fowler.

In the midst of that drive came the 1999 Columbine high school massacre, in which two students in Colorado shot dead 12 other pupils and a teacher before killing themselves. Parents clamoured for someone to protect their children and police in schools seemed to many to be the answer.

But most schools do not face any serious threat of violence and police officers patrolling the corridors and canteens are largely confronted with little more than boisterous or disrespectful childhood behaviour.

"What we see often is a real overreaction to behaviour that others would generally think of as just childish misbehaviour rather than law breaking," said Fowler. Tickets are most frequently issued by school police for "disruption of class", which can mean causing problems during lessons but is also defined as disruptive behaviour within 500ft (150 metres) of school property such as shouting, which is classified as "making an unreasonable noise".

Among the more extreme cases documented by Appleseed is of a teacher who had a pupil arrested after the child responded to a question as to where a word could be found in a text by saying: "In your culo (arse)", making the other children laugh. Another pupil was arrested for throwing paper aeroplanes.

Students are also regularly fined for "disorderly behaviour", which includes playground scraps not serious enough to warrant an assault charge or for swearing or an offensive gesture. One teenage student was arrested and sent to court in Houston after he and his girlfriend poured milk on each other after they broke up. Nearly one third of tickets involve drugs or alcohol. Although a relatively high number of tickets – up to 20% in some school districts – involve charges over the use of weapons, mostly the weapons used were fists.

The very young are not spared. According to Appleseed, Texas records show more than 1,000 tickets were issued to primary schoolchildren over the past six years (although these have no legal force at that age). Appleseed said that "several districts ticketed a six-year-old at least once in the last five years".

Fines run up to $500. For poorer parents, the cost can be crippling. Some parents and students ignore the financial penalty, but that can have consequences years down the road. Schoolchildren with outstanding fines are regularly jailed in an adult prison for non-payment once they turn 17. Stumping up the fine is not an end to the offending student's problems either. A class-C misdemeanour is a criminal offence.

"Once you pay it, that's a guilty plea and that's on your record," said Simpkins. "In the US we have these astronomical college and university expenses and you go to fill out the application to get your federal aid for that and it says have you ever been arrested. And there you are, no aid."

In Austin, about 3% of the school district's 80,000 pupils were given criminal citations in the 2007/8 school year, the last date for which figures are available. But the chances of a teenager receiving a ticket in any given year are much higher than that because citations are generally issued to high-school pupils, not those in kindergarten or primary school.

The result, says the Appleseed report, is that "school-to-prison pipeline" in which a high proportion of children who receive tickets and end up in front of a court are arrested time and again because they are then marked out as troublemakers or find their future blighted by a criminal record.

From her perch on the bench in an Austin courtroom, Judge Jeanne Meurer has spent close on 30 years dealing with children hauled up for infractions, some serious, others minor. Some of the difficulties faced by teachers can be seen as Meurer decides whether a parade of children should be released to await trial or held in custody. Meurer switches between motherly and intimidating depending on what she makes of the child before her.

"Some of them are rough kids," she said. "I've been on the bench 30 years and you used to never have a child cuss you out like you do now. I appreciate the frustrations that adults have in dealing with children who seem to have no manners or respect. But these are our future. Shouldn't we find a tool to change that dynamic versus just arresting them in school and coming down with the hard criminal justice hammer?"

Many of those who appear in front of Meurer have learning problems. Children with disabilities are particularly vulnerable to the consequences of police in schools. Simpkins describes the case of a boy with attention deficit disorder who as a 12-year-old tipped a desk over in class in a rage. He was charged with threatening behaviour and sent to a juvenile prison where he was required to earn his release by meeting certain educational and behavioural standards.

"But he can't," she said. "Because of that he is turning 18 within the juvenile justice system for something that happened when he was 12. It's a real trap. A lot of these kids do have disabilities and that's how they end up there and can't get out. Instead of dealing with it within school system like we used to, we have these school police, they come in and it escalates from there."


Sometimes that escalation involves force. "We had one young man with an IQ well below 70 who was pepper-sprayed in the hallway because he didn't understand what the police were saying," said Simpkins. "After they pepper-sprayed him he started swinging his arms around in pain and he hit one of the police officers – it's on video, his eyes were shut – and they charged him with assault of a public servant. He was 16. He was charged with two counts of assault of a public servant and he is still awaiting trial. He could end up in prison."

Austin's school police department is well armed with officers carrying guns and pepper spray, and with dog units on call for sniffing out drugs and explosives.

According to the department's records, officers used force in schools more than 400 times in the five years to 2008, including incidents in which pepper spray was fired to break up a food fight in a canteen and guns were drawn on lippy students.

In recent months the questionable use of force has included the tasering of a 16-year-old boy at a high school in Seguin, Texas, after "he refused to cooperate" when asked why he wasn't wearing his school identification tag. He then used "abusive language". The police said that when an officer tried to arrest the boy, he attempted to bite the policeman. The youth was charged with resisting arrest and criminal trespass even though the school acknowledges he is a student and was legitimately on the grounds.

Such cases are not limited to Texas. In one notorious instance in California, a school security officer broke the arm of a girl he was arresting for failing to clear up crumbs after dropping cake in the school canteen. In another incident, University of Florida campus police tasered a student for pressing Senator John Kerry with an awkward question at a debate after he had been told to shut up.

Sometimes the force is deadly. Last week, Texas police were accused of overreacting in shooting dead a 15-year-old student, Jaime Gonzalez, at a school in Brownsville after he pointed an air gun, which resembled a real pistol, at them outside the principal's office. The boy's father, also called Jaime, said the police were too quick to shoot to kill when they could have wounded him or used another means to arrest him. "If they would have tased him all this wouldn't have happened," he told the Brownsville Herald. "Like people say there's been stand-offs with people that have hostages for hours … But here, they didn't even give I don't think five minutes. No negotiating." The police say Gonzalez defied orders to put the gun down.

Meurer says she is not against police in schools but questions whether officers should regard patrolling the playground the same way they go about addressing crime on the streets.

"When you start going overboard and using laws to control non-illegal behaviour – I mean if any adult did it it's not going to be a violation – that's where we start seeing a problem," she says. "You've gradually seen this morphing from schools taking care of their own environments to the police and security personnel, and all of a sudden it just became more and more that we were relying on law enforcement to control everyday behaviour."

Chief Brian Allen, head of the school police department for the Aldine district and president of the Texas school police chiefs' association, is having none of it.

"There's quite a substantial number of students that break the law. In Texas and in the US, if you're issued a ticket, it's not automatically that you're found guilty. You have an opportunity to go before the judge and plead your case. If you're a teacher and a kid that's twice as big as you comes up and hits you right in the face, what are you going to do? Are you going to use your skills that they taught you or are you going to call a police officer?"

But Allen concedes that the vast majority of incidents in which the police become involved are for offences that regarded as little more than misbehaviour elsewhere.

"Just like anything else, sometimes mistakes are made." he said. "Each circumstance is different and there's no set guideline. There's also something called officer discretion. If you take five auto mechanics and ask them to diagnose the problem of a vehicle, you'll come up with five different solutions. If you ask five different doctors to diagnose a patient, a lot of times you'll have five different diagnoses. Conversely, if you ask five different police officers if they would write a ticket or not for the same offence, you possibly have five different answers."

Parents who have been sucked into the system, such as Jennifer Rambo, the mother of Sarah Bustamantes, wonder what happened to teachers taking responsibility for school discipline.

"I was very upset at the teacher because the teacher could have just stopped it. She could have said: OK class, that's enough. She could have asked Sarah for her perfume and told her that's inappropriate, don't do that in class. But she did none of that. She called the police," she says.

Politicians and civil liberties groups have raised the same question, asking if schools are not using the police to shift responsibility, and accountability, for discipline.

"Teachers rely on the police to enforce discipline," says Simpkins. "Part of it is that they're not accountable. They're not going to get into trouble for it. The parent can't come in and yell at them. They say: it's not us, it's the police."

That view is not shared by an Austin teacher who declined to be named because he said he did not want to stigmatise the children in his class.

"There's this illusion that it's just a few kids acting up; kids being kids. This is not the 50s. Too many parents today don't control their children. Their fathers aren't around. They're in gangs. They come in to the classroom and they have no respect, no self-discipline. They're doing badly, they don't want to learn, they just want to disrupt. They can be very threatening," he says. "The police get called because that way the teacher can go on with teaching instead of wasting half the class dealing with one child, and it sends a message to the other kids."

The Texas State Teachers Association, the state's main teachers union, did not take a position on ticketing at the recent debate in the legislature over Whitmire's proposal to scrap it. But the association's Clay Robison says that most teachers welcome the presence of police in schools.

"Obviously it looks as if some police officers are overreacting at some schools. I'm a parent and I wouldn't want my 17-year-old son hauled in to court if he and another student got in to an argument in a cafeteria. Police officers need to exercise a little bit of common sense but the police are what they are. They enforce the law," he says. "At the same time, years ago, at a school in one of the better neighbourhoods of Austin, a teacher was shot to death in his classroom. It's still a very rare occurrence but it does happen. Anything that increases the security of the teacher is good so they don't have to worry about personal safety and they can concentrate on teaching the kids. We get complaints from some teachers that the police aren't aggressive enough at moving against some of the older juveniles, those that they feel actually do pose a danger to the teachers or the other students."

Because of Sarah Bustamentes's mental disorders, a disability rights group took up her case and after months of legal battles prosecutors dropped the charges. Ask her how she feels about police in schools after her experience and she's equivocal.

"We need police in school. In my school it can get physical and it can turn out very bad," she says. "But they should stop issuing tickets. Only for physical stuff or bullying. Not what you do in class."

Comment: Hey teacher and police leave them kids alone!

Another David Cameron aide lands job at lobbying firm

Another David Cameron aide lands job at lobbying firm


DAVID Cameron was blasted for breaking his vow to clean up Westminster yesterday, after revelations another aide has joined a lobbying firm.

The PM pledged to end the influence of public affairs firms which look to influence Government policy for ­corporate clients.

But James O’Shaughnessy, former Tory director of policy, now works for Portland Communications.

Last night the Cabinet Office said Mr O’Shaughnessy’s acceptance of the commission by Portland “was in line with advice” given to him.

Shadow Cabinet Office minister Jon Trickett said: “David Cameron’s hypocrisy over his lobbyist friends beggars belief.

“He used to complain about ‘ex-advisors for hire’, but now he’s silent as another of his ex-advisors takes a job with a top lobbying firm.”

Campaigner Tamasin Cave, of the Alliance for Lobbying Transparency, said that despite Mr Cameron’s promises “lobbying has got out of control under this Government”.

Portland appoints Downing Street's James O'Shaughnessy as chief policy adviser

James O'Shaughnessy: joins Portland

Cameron in difficulty...

Cameron in difficulty...

Calm down dear...

Calm down dear...

Israeli politician throws water at colleague in parliament

Israeli MP Anastassia Michaeli has thrown a glass of water over her counterpart Raleb Majadele during a heated debate in parliament.


Saturday, January 07, 2012

In ill health...

In ill health...

Yesterday I had to ask my doctor to make a home visit as I was almost totally incapacitated. I was not surprised he diagnosed a severe chest infection. He prescribed Co-amoxiclav 500/125mg, which contains penicillin, and Paracetamol 500mg tablets. He said my blood pressure is normal, but that my heart is racing. If there is no improvement in 3 days he said I should be hospitalised.

Some improvement this morning...

Calif. lawmaker gets probation in shoplift case

Calif. lawmaker gets probation in shoplift case

TERENCE CHEA

Associated Press= SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A judge sentenced a California lawmaker to three years of probation after she pleaded no contest to stealing leather pants and other merchandise, thefts that her attorney blamed on a benign brain tumor.

Assemblywoman Mary Hayashi was arrested on Oct. 23 after surveillance cameras at a Neiman Marcus store at Union Square showed her walking out the doors with unpaid merchandise in her shopping bag. She was accused of stealing nearly $2,500 worth of clothing.

She entered the plea in San Francisco Superior Court Friday after the judge reduced a theft charge against her from a felony to a misdemeanor at a prosecutor's request.

In addition to probation, Judge Gerardo Sandoval ordered her to pay $180 in fines and court costs, and told her to stay at least 50 feet away from the Neiman Marcus store.

Shortly after her arrest, a spokesman for Hayashi had explained that she was distracted by a cellphone call and forgot to pay for the merchandise.

Hayashi declined to speak to reporters after Friday's court hearing, but her attorney, Douglas Rappaport, said Hayashi was diagnosed with a benign brain tumor that contributed to the shoplifting incident.

"Now that Ms. Hayashi's medical condition resulting in her arrest has been taken care of, she decided that she would resolve the case as well," Rappaport said.

"It is being treated," he added. "It's no longer affecting her concentration or her judgment."

Ross Warren, a spokesman for Hayashi, said Friday the Democratic lawmaker "acknowledges that she did accidentally walk out of the building with unpaid merchandise."

"She admitted that she made a mistake, and today she is accepting the consequences of that mistake," said Warren, adding that her condition "can lead to some absentmindedness."

Hayashi has no plans to resign from office, Warren said.

If she had been convicted of a felony, Hayashi would have lost her pay but not necessarily her job in the Legislature.

Assembly rules do not say what happens if a lawmaker is convicted of a misdemeanor.

Hayashi, 44, who is married to Alameda County Superior Court Judge Dennis Hayashi, has represented Castro Valley since 2006 but can't run for re-election because she is termed out of office after this year.

Prosecutors said they agreed to reduce the charge to a misdemeanor because Hayashi was willing to enter the no-contest plea and had no prior criminal record.

"Her condition never factored into our decision," said Stephanie Ong Stillman, a spokeswoman for the district attorney's office.

Speaking at a news conference before the court hearing, District Attorney George Gascon said his office would accept the judge's decision.

"She is a first-time offender. She has no criminal record. So while what she did is inexcusable and she needs to be held accountable for her actions, I think it's appropriate to examine and explore all the different possibilities," Gascon said.

Assembly Speaker John Perez, D-Los Angeles, said Friday that he's confident Hayashi will "continue to ably serve her constituents."

"While she made a serious mistake, she has owned up to her actions and taken responsibility for them," Perez said in a statement.

Barbara O'Connor, a communications professor at California State University, Sacramento, said Hayashi's conviction is another example of bad behavior by politicians whose public standing has plummeted.

"It doesn't make people feel better about their elected officials," she said.

The Daily Cartoon

The Daily Cartoon

Friday, January 06, 2012

Murderer John Hodson found dead at Frankland prison

Murderer John Hodson found dead at Frankland prison


A prisoner serving life for murder has been found hanging in his cell.

John Hodson, 29, who killed 64-year-old David Gard in 2008, was pronounced dead at 05:55 GMT on Thursday at category A Frankland prison in County Durham.

Hodson battered Mr Gard, who was deaf and had learning difficulties, in his home in Adelaide Road in Liverpool before setting fire to his house.

He was ordered to serve a minimum of 32 years when he was sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court in January 2009.

Mr Gard was pulled from his home in Adelaide Road, Liverpool, on 13 March 2008 by firefighters after neighbours saw smoke billowing from a broken kitchen window. They were unable to resuscitate him.

At the trial the jury heard he had suffered at least 49 external injuries, but was so badly beaten it was impossible to say how many bones in his face had been broken.

A Prison Service spokesman confirmed staff found Hodson.

The spokesman said: "As with all deaths in custody, the independent Prisons and Probation Ombudsman will undertake an investigation."

Thursday, January 05, 2012

31 dead in Mexico prison knife brawl

31 dead in Mexico prison knife brawl

Gulf and Zetas drug gang members clashed when one group stormed into other's section of jail, according to accounts


A fight among inmates armed with makeshift knives, clubs and stones left 31 of them dead in a Mexican prison that holds many members of drug cartels, authorities said.

Another 13 prisoners were wounded in the brawl in the Gulf Coast city of Altamira, Tamaulipas state's public safety department said in a statement. The fight started when a group of inmates burst into a section of the prison from which they were banned and attacked the prisoners housed there.

Local media said the fight was between members of the rival Gulf and Zetas drug cartels but authorities would not confirm the reports. Tamaulipas state has been the scene of bloody turf battles between the two former allies.

Tamaulipas officials said many of the dead were killed with makeshift knives. A state official who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the investigation said several were beaten to death with clubs or stones.

Soldier and marines managed to take control of the prison, the official said.

The public safety department said 22 of the inmates killed had been serving sentences for state crimes and nine for federal offences. It gave no other details.

The port of Altamira in southern Tamaulipas, near the border with the state of Veracruz, is in a region that has seen a spike in drug violence in the last two months. Authorities say the port is used to bring cocaine and precursor chemicals used to make methamphetamine into Mexico.

In 2010 four inmates at the Altamira prison were killed when an armed gang stormed in during a prisoner transfer. Authorities did not confirm reports that the raid was an attempt to free prisoners. Gang raids on prisons are common in Tamaulipas.

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Stephen Lawrence killers entitled to the vote

Stephen Lawrence killers entitled to the vote


Gary Dobson and David Norris, the Stephen Lawrence killers, are entitled to the human right to the vote. Even if they would probably vote for the BNP. I noticed that it took Doreen and Neville Lawrence the same amount of time, 18 years, as it took the Birmingham 6 to get justice. Whilst I can understand the need to treat juveniles as such, there was the absurd situation when the Jamie Bulger killers were tried as adults, Dobson and Norris are clearly adults even though the offence occured when they were teenagers, therefore they should get Life with a 25 years tariff instead of only a 12 years tariff.

R v Gary Dobson and David Norris sentencing remarks by trial judge.

Sunday, January 01, 2012

Last British resident held in Guantánamo Bay faces another year's captivity

Last British resident held in Guantánamo Bay faces another year's captivity

Campaigners step up efforts to release charity worker Shaker Aamer, now held for a decade without charge


Campaigners are fighting for the release of Briton Shaker Aamer from Guantanamo Bay, above, where he has been held for 10 years. Photograph: John Moore/Getty

The last British resident being held in Guantánamo Bay faces at least another year in detention because of wrangling in a US presidential election year. Senior White House sources have said the Obama administration will not risk releasing Shaker Aamer before November. "We've taken enough hits from the right; we can't risk any more," one said. Another said: "There will be no rocking of boats from now on in."

As the 10th anniversary of the opening of the detention camp in Cuba approaches, it is believed that the foreign secretary, William Hague, has called an urgent meeting early in the new year to discuss what more the British government can do to bring Aamer home.

He will complete his 10th year in Guantánamo on 14 February, although he has never been charged or faced trial. His British wife, Zin, last saw her husband when she was pregnant with their fourth child. Aamer has never met his son, Faris.

Campaigners are stepping up efforts to draw attention to Aamer's case, after his British lawyer, Clive Stafford-Smith, found the 43-year-old former charity worker in poor health during a visit to the prison in November.

"I do not think it is stretching matters to say he is dying in Guantánamo Bay," said Stafford-Smith, director of the human rights charity Reprieve. Although Aamer was cleared for release by the US authorities in 2007 there have been no further moves to return him to the UK. He was first picked up in Afghanistan in 2001 where he said he worked for an Islamic charity. But the US suspected him of both Taliban and al-Qaida connections, accusing him of being a translator for Osama bin Laden.

New US legislation has also proved to be a stumbling block to his release with the US defence secretary, Leon Panetta, now responsible for certifying that Britain is a safe place for him to return to, and that he will commit no crimes there – something Panetta has been unwilling to do.

Stafford-Smith said: "Britain has the best record of any country with former Guantánamo prisoners, with nobody released committing any offence, and Shaker Aamer has never committed a crime of any kind. Why does Britain pretend it has a special relationship if a British resident is still in this shameful position?" He said Aamer had suffered "unfathomable abuse".

Jane Ellison, Tory MP for Battersea, where Aamer's wife and children live, is writing to Barack Obama to urge his immediate release. "People forget that behind this is a family in deep distress and a man in poor health," she said. This is a human tragedy as much as a political embarrassment. The family of Shaker Aamer are hurting and they need him home."

She has tabled several questions in the Commons drawing attention to Aamer's plight and believes the UK Government is committed to bringing him home but is up against a lack of political will in the US.

"After 10 years, the bottom line should be that if they aren't going to charge him, they should release him. That is the way we have conducted ourselves in Britain since the Magna Carta."

But Aamer's own campaigning spirit may be working against him. "The irony is that Shaker may be the victim of what he has done inside Guantanámo rather than anything he might be suspected of doing previous to his captivity. He has been a thorn in the side of the prison authorities, organising hunger strikes and fighting for prisoners' rights. By all accounts he is a charismatic and eloquent man," said investigative journalist and author Andy Worthington.