6.10.2016
Gunfire At Love Field! Video!
Holy... RT @BradfordPearson: There was just a shooting at Dallas' Love Field airport. Video (not graphic): https://t.co/Co8p8EGmjl— Alice Wolke (@alicewolke) June 10, 2016
#BREAKING @wfaachannel8 video of vehicle outside @DallasLoveField widows shot out,rocks on hood. pic.twitter.com/cV7UaM9nBz— Cody W Marcom (@WfaaCody) June 10, 2016
The Government Do Take A Bite Out
So how does this work?Texas Supreme Court rules that civil-asset forfeiture is OK even if evidence of a crime was illegally seized: https://t.co/bzdjOwKssT— Chuck Lindell (@chucklindell) June 10, 2016
Example: Cops make traffic stop of you in your $25,000 paid off car. They find a minuscule amount of dope after illegally searching the vehicle without probable cause or consent. Cops arrest you and refer case to prosecutor. Prosecutor notices the illegal search but files a lawsuit to take the car.
Criminal case = Thrown out since dope cannot be used against you. You're free.
Forfeiture case = Government takes your car despite the illegal search.
(I'll give credit to the tweeting judge Willett who concurred in the opinion but dropped a huge hint in a footnote suggesting that the Court needs to be presented with a "clean constitutional challenge" to the Texas forfeiture system. It's technical, but he's saying "Don't argue whether the exclusionary rule applies to civil forfeiture cases. Instead, attack the whole system on Due Process grounds.")
Random Friday Morning Thoughts
- Mark Cuban was on CNN last night and Fox News this morning giving his opinions about the Presidential campaign. Why not have Jerry Jones on? They are equally qualified.
- A name of a person who attended Ali's memorial service yesterday which I had not heard of in quite some time: Louis Farrakhan.
- I had to swerve to miss hitting a huge feral hog this morning on 380.
- Heck of a fire yesterday in a high tone Dallas neighborhood:
- I wrote about this yesterday: "On Wednesday, a Tarrant County grand jury declined to indict McIver on the attempted capital murder and drug possession charges. Prosecutors quickly refiled the same two charges against McIver." One thing I didn't mention is the odd statement that prosecutors had "refiled" the charges. True, they can get the case before a grand jury again but there is no "refiling" to be done. To get a case initially started, 99 times out of 100 law enforcement just hands their report over to the DA. It becomes nothing more than a physical file in the DA's office and not available to the public and no "charges" are filed with any clerk at that time. It can be presented to the grand jury, but it doesn't have to be "filed" anywhere first. If a grand jury indicts the case, it is then "filed" with the district clerk and the case receives a public cause number. So if a case is no-billed, how exactly is the case "re-filed" by the DA? (The guy is still in jail by the way even thought the grand jury said the evidence was insufficient.)
- Texas man says he was choked because he smiled during a book in photo. Ok, buddy. You got any proof? . . .
- OK.
- With all this talk about Ali, I recalled an equally famous boxer during his day: Galveston's own Jack Johnson. Ken Burns did a fantastic documentary on him once called "Unforgivable Blackness." He was married three times -- all to white women, and was sentenced to prison for a trumped up violation of the Mann Act (" The Mann Act prohibited the transfer of women across state lines for immoral purposes" which I presume means more than taking a girlfriend to Vegas.) And look at this crowd at a match in 1908 -- in Australia.
- Last night I watched the first 40 minutes of Episode 1, Season 1 of Game of Thrones. Pretty, pretty good.
- Disturbing: A 42 year old guy at a Shell Station near DFW Airport sees some guys trying to steal his rent car, he tries to stop them, and ends up kidnapped and murdered. Intriguing: He was followed to the gas station.
- Ferris Bueller's Day Off was released thirty years ago tomorrow. (Other big films of 1986: Top Gun, Stand By Me, Platoon, Pretty In Pink, Peggy Sue Got Married, 9 1/2 Weeks, The Money Pit, and Three Amigos. Notice the lack of super heroes and explosions.)
- Idiocracy: The fact the WFAA has a cop in full uniform named "Sgt. Nick" doing the traffic in the mornings.
- Arlington PD seized 72,000 pills of Xanax. They wanted to know "what you could do" with them.
- Big story yesterday: "Officials within the Obama administration believe that at least a dozen former detainees from Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba are responsible for attacks that killed roughly six Americans in Afghanistan." Buried within the story: "[A]ll the former detainees involved were released during the George W. Bush administration."
6.09.2016
Presidential Twitter Wars!
Hillary Clinton to Donald Trump:https://t.co/5cToeuS00C— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) June 9, 2016
Gun News
BREAKING—9th Cir. says there's no 2A right for the general public to carry concealed firearms in public. ⚖ #SCOTUShttps://t.co/OoIEcAvvma— Justice Don Willett (@JusticeWillett) June 9, 2016
So what's the bottom line? If that decision were to apply to the whole country then the States have all the power. A State wants to ban all concealed carry? Fine. A State wants to put extreme limits on concealed carry? Fine. A State wants to let everyone conceal carry without any regulation? Fine.
This is a perfect example of a court case which will get groups like the Tea Party up in arms when it really supports their basic philosophical tenet: State's rights.
A Chain Is Only As Strong As . . .
When your boy trips on the 1-yard line... 😩😩😩https://t.co/rSGdtK2Siv— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) June 9, 2016
Blurred Lines Indeed
- Ok, this post has nothing to do with the sentence. This has to do with how you, the public, are being pandered to by a Congressman.
- First, the Congressman is Ted Poe from Texas and a former prosecutor and district judge. He isn't dumb.
- Or is he? The case he is arguing about is a California state prosecution. It was not a federal case. Congress has nothing to do with state prosecutions. It's high school Civics 101.
- And even if it were a federal case, he's out of order to even have an official opinion on a criminal judgment and sentence. He only makes laws. He has nothing to do with how they are enforced or interpreted or applied. He would lose on "Are You Smarter Than A Fifth Grader?" if the question concerned Separation of Powers.
- The defendant idiotically appealed (unless he is seeking an acquittal instead of a retrial) the case. But Poe shows a complete misunderstanding for the basic framework of criminal law: "Poe also said he is 'glad this arrogant defendant has appealed his case,' adding that this appeal will give the court an opportunity to give the former Stanford swimmer a harsher sentence." That's just flat wrong. An appellate court can reverse a case but Poe seems to think they can just change a sentence and make it higher on appeal. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.
- He is grandstanding about an issue he has nothing to do with. And he knows it.
Random Thursday Morning Thoughts
- If you ever wanted proof that a grand jury serves no purpose read this story: "A Tarrant County grand jury on Wednesday rebuffed prosecutors and declined to indict a 21-year-old Parker County man accused of participating in the shooting of Fort Worth police officer Matt Pearce in March. Prosecutors quickly refiled charges of attempted capital murder and possession of a controlled substance against Ed Russell McIver Jr. of Weatherford." There is no double jeopardy issues. The prosecutor will simply just wait until there's a new grand jury and keep trying until they get an indictment. Fair?
- If you can't get passed your own grand jury, how do you expect to get past an impartial jury who must be convinced of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt?
- I heard they had released a few tickets to Muhammad Ali's funeral to the public. Members of the public then turned around and tried to sell them online.
- Anyone think the NBA playoffs are fixed to get as many games in as possible?
- Disturbing pic of the morning: One car fatality accident shuts down I-35 in Dallas.
- Whatever happened to my nemesis Ann Curry?
- Heard in the Wise County district courtroom yesterday morning: "The only thing I listen to are the imaginary voices in my wife's head."
- Random football program cover: The TCU vs. SMU cover from 1970 was very flamboyant.
- I got a replacement credit card the other day. New for me: No raised numbers on the front. In fact, the numbers are just printed on the back. And it also has a chip which I think means "You'll be confused as to whether the merchant wants you to slide it on the scanner or insert it underneath, and it will take 30 seconds to approve once you've figured that part out."
- There has been an ongoing debate on The Ticket about whether the "Chewbacca Mom" was faking the laugh. After hours of deliberation, my verdict is: Absolutely guilty.
- In the newest "no body" murder case, a judge has been hearing pre-trial motions in the Enrique Arochi prosecution in Collin County. Watch for this: The defense filed for a change of venue with supporting affidavits (a requirement). The State, I believe, didn't file controverting affidavits (which, unbeknownst to them, is also a requirement). If the judge doesn't move the trial, it is automatic error. (Or at least it used to be.)
- The valedictorian of Boyd High School (in McKinney, not Boyd) is an undocumented alien. She has a full scholarship to Yale. Would Trump send her back?
- Oh, and an honors graduate from an Austin high school, who is also an undocumented alien, has received a full ride to the University of Texas.
6.08.2016
This Is A New One For Me
If placed on probation, there is often some type of "class" to take. It might be alcohol education, a drug class, batterer's intervention, or even a theft class. Now one county (not Wise) is sometimes mandating a "Moral Reconation Therapy" class.
I had to look up "Reconation". That didn't help. I don't think it's a word. But the therapy, according to the Internet, "is a cognitive-behavioral counseling program that combines education, group and individual counseling, and structured exercises designed to foster moral development in treatment-resistant clients." I'm still not sure what that means.
Side note: I wonder how much the class costs.
Random Wednesday Morning Thoughts
- Well, we officially have a female on the presidential ballot this Fall.
- Go back in time less than 100 years: Many states didn't even allow women to vote. It was only in 1920 that the U.S. Constitution was finally amended and ratified to force all states to get with the program. 1920 wasn't that long ago.
- If you drive over the "old dam" at Lake Bridgeport, you'll see about 15 small whirlpool-like movements in the water. What are they?
- The Messenger lists 60 new indictments. My quick count revealed 39 of them being for drugs.
- Ever think softball is boring? In the college world series last night, Auburn came back from a 7-0 deficit to tie it, robbed OU of a game winning home run in one of the most fantastic catches you'll ever see (photos below), and then won it with a grand slam walk off home run in extra innings. A winner take all game is tonight.


- "Video captured a mother wrestling her daughter from the arms of a would-be kidnapper." Ok, that's weird. It was in the middle of a store.
- This seems to be the most volatile time for Trump. Up until now, he's been able to say things that would destroy any conventional candidate. But now he's finally catching some very strong blow back with his "Mexican judge" comments. First crack in the armor or is this a rallying point? (Side note: Angering Hispanics is no way to win an election.)
- I'm not sure I have ever talked to a single person who watches Game of Thrones.
- The NBA first game of the season was on October 27, 2015. The season is still going on. For comparison, the Cowboys were only six games into their season on October 27th - a season that ended over five months ago.
- Conversation in the courthouse yesterday: Doesn't being a long haul trucker sound like a pretty interesting job? You don't have to jack with people, could listen to audiobooks or anything in the world you find interesting, and you get to see the country.
- “When Sting died, Sting, according to them, had no will and was worth 300 million dollars or 280 million dollars or something, and had over 1,000 songs that he had not released that he had written. He had all this music to be released!” - New York talk show host Mike Francesa yesterday.
6.07.2016
But He Wants You To Vote For Him?
Flashback to February:BREAKING: U.S. House Speaker Ryan says Trump comments on Hispanic judge are 'textbook definition of a racist comment'— Reuters Politics (@ReutersPolitics) June 7, 2016
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