Craven County arrests and citations for Jan. 1

The following are arrests and citations recently issued in Craven County:

New Bern Police Department:

David Lee Tompkins, 32, 300 Backwoods Road, Vanceboro, Dec. 30, misdemeanor larceny. Officer: F.D. Hix.

DaShon Maurice Henry, 20, 1412 Mockingbird Lane, Dec. 30, second-degree trespassing. Officer: S.C. Brown.

William Bradley Manning, 58, 207 Nydegg Road, Dec. 29, possession with intent to manufacture, sell or deliver a schedule II controlled substance. Officer: W. Hollowell.

Albra Stocks, 48, 115 Guinea Mill Road, Ernul, Dec. 29, misdemeanor larceny, possession of stolen goods or property. Officer: D. Welch.

Craig Alan Taylor, 52, no known address, Dec. 25, possession of marijuana up to 1/2 ounce, possession of drug paraphernalia. Officer: R.A. Hopper.

Laura Ann Wilson, 50, 1711 Asheville St., Dec. 28, misdemeanor larceny. Officer: J.A. Guches.

Deslaseis Joshua Blakemore, 30, 4322 Camden Square Drive, Dec. 28, driving while license revoked. Officer: S.J. Williams.

Gerald Cornelius Brown, 56, 1618 Colonial Way, Dec. 28, driving while license revoked, driving wrong way on one way street or road. Officer: E.D. Santiago.

See the rest here:

Craven County arrests and citations for Jan. 1

Edward Snowden – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edward Snowden Born Edward Joseph Snowden (1983-06-21) June 21, 1983 (age30) Elizabeth City, North Carolina, United States Residence Russia (temporary asylum) Nationality American Occupation System administrator Employer Booz Allen Hamilton[1] Kunia, Hawaii, US (until June 10, 2013) Knownfor Revealing details of classified United States government surveillance programs Home town Wilmington, North Carolina Criminal charge Theft of government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information, and willful communication of classified intelligence to an unauthorized person (June 2013). Awards Sam Adams Award[2] Signature

Edward Joseph Snowden (born June 21, 1983) is an American computer specialist, a former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) employee, and former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor who disclosed classified NSA documents to several media outlets, initiating the NSA leaks, which reveal operational details of a global surveillance apparatus run by the NSA, its Five Eyes partners, and numerous commercial and international partners.[3]

Snowden's release of classified material was called the most significant leak in US history by Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg. A series of exposs beginning June 5, 2013 revealed Internet surveillance programs such as PRISM, XKeyscore and Tempora, as well as the interception of US and European telephone metadata. The reports were based on documents Snowden leaked to The Guardian and The Washington Post while employed by NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton. By November 2013, The Guardian had published one percent of the documents, with "the worst yet to come".

A subject of controversy, Snowden has been variously called a hero,[4][5][6] a whistleblower,[7][8][9][10] a dissident,[11] a traitor,[12][13] and a patriot.[14][15] According to Snowden, his "sole motive" for leaking the documents was "to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them."[16] The disclosures have fueled debates over mass surveillance, government secrecy, and the balance between national security and information privacy.[17] Seven months after the NSA revelations began, Snowden declared his mission accomplished, citing the international debate sparked by his leaks.

A federal judge in December 2013 ruled that the government had "almost certainly" violated the US Constitution by collecting metadata on nearly every phone call within or to the United States. Ten days later, a different federal judge ruled the surveillance program was legal, raising the likelihood that the constitutionality of the program would ultimately be decided by the Supreme Court.[18]

Snowden is considered a fugitive by American authorities who have charged him with espionage and theft of government property.[19][20] He is currently living in Russia under temporary asylum.

Edward Joseph Snowden was born on June 21, 1983,[21] in Elizabeth City, North Carolina[22] and grew up in Wilmington, North Carolina.[23] His father, Lonnie Snowden, a resident of Pennsylvania, was an officer in the United States Coast Guard,[24] and his mother, a resident of Baltimore, Maryland, is a clerk at the United States District Court in Maryland.[23][25] His parents are divorced, and his father has remarried.[26] Friends and neighbors described Snowden as shy, quiet and nice. One longtime friend said that he was always articulate, even as a child.[25] Speaking in an interview, Snowden's father described his son as "a sensitive, caring young man", and "a deep thinker".[27]

By 1999, Snowden had moved with his family to Ellicott City, Maryland.[23] He studied at Anne Arundel Community College[23] to gain the credits necessary to obtain a high-school diploma but he did not complete the coursework.[28][29] Snowden's father explained that his son had missed several months of school owing to illness and, rather than return, took and passed the tests for his GED at a local community college.[16][27][30]

Snowden worked online toward a Master's Degree at the University of Liverpool in 2011.[31] Having worked at a US military base in Japan, Snowden was reportedly interested in Japanese popular culture, had studied the Japanese language,[32] and also worked for an anime company domiciled in the US.[33][34] He also said he had a basic understanding of Mandarin Chinese and was deeply interested in martial arts and, at age 19 or 20, listed Buddhism as his religion on a military recruitment form, noting that the choice of agnostic was "strangely absent".[35] Snowden told The Washington Post that he was an ascetic, rarely left the house and had few needs.[36]

Before leaving for Hong Kong, Snowden resided in Waipahu, Hawaii, with his girlfriend.[37] According to local real estate agents, they moved out of their home on May 1, 2013.[29]

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Edward Snowden - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Snowden ‘an aberration’: Booz Allen CEO

Published: Thursday, 2 Jan 2014 | 2:33 PM ET

No measurable impact from Snowden: Booz Allen CEO

Ralph Shrader, Booz Allen Hamilton CEO, discusses former employee Edward Snowden and the impact the negative press had on its business. Shrader also weighs in on the challenges of potential defense cuts.

Former security contractor Edward Snowden did not hurt business at the defense contractor where he collected the domestic surveillance secrets he leaked to several media outlets, setting off a global uproar over digital privacy, Booz Allen Hamilton's CEO told CNBC on Thursday.

"Actually it hasn't been as tough as one might imagine," CEO Ralph Shrader said on "Squawk on the Street." "Edward Snowden was a 10-week interval in a 100-year history of our firm. Our firm is much stronger than that. He doesn't represent us. He was just an aberration."

AP

National Security Agency building in Fort Meade, Md.

Shrader's comments came a day after The New York Times published an editorial asking the U.S. government to grant Snowden clemency and treat him as a whistle-blower. Several months ago, Snowden leaked droves of confidential documents to The Guardian and other media outlets that called into question the legality of the NSA's massive data collection operations.

(Read more: ACLU sues US govt over surveillance program)

Snowden faces a possible life sentence if he returns to U.S. from his exile in Russia. Shrader wouldn't discuss how authorities should treat Snowden if he returns to U.S. soil.

More:

Snowden 'an aberration': Booz Allen CEO

What to do about Snowden: The NY Times gets it right

commentary I think Edward Snowden deserves a medal -- but even if you disagree, there's no longer a good argument why he ought to remain a fugitive.

Edward Snowden.

This fugitive NSA whistle-blower did break the law, but that doesn't explain why so many still insist that the US government treat him like the notorious Cold War double-agent who betrayed his country's secrets to the Soviets. This morning's long-overdue New York Times editorial calling for clemency for Snowden, whose leaks revealed the stunning extent of the modern surveillance state, may suggest that the stale conversation in Official Washington about what to do about Snowden is starting to change.

That's the crux. Snowden, who still sits on a trove of documents that the government obviously doesn't want publicized, remains on the lam because he's understandably afraid of serving a long prison sentence should he return to the US. And as long as he can reach places like China or Russia, which will summarily ignore extradition demands, the stalemate will continue. Unfortunately, the increasingly barren debate over Snowden has led nowhere since he revealed himself last June as the person who leaked secret NSA documents to The Washington Post and Guardian. The folks baying for Snowden's head will never forgive his original sin, but had he not revealed state secrets, we likely would still be in the dark about the massive extent of government snooping. I think the guy deserves a medal, but even if you disagree, he deserves more leniency from the US.

"I wanted to give society a chance to determine if it should change itself," Snowden said in a recent interview with the Post.

I know. That's not going to mollify critics, like Business Insider's Josh Barro, who claim a clemency deal would set a "terrible precedent." At some point, though, we've got to break out of this endless loop. As the Atlantic's Conor Friedersdorf smartly points out, no less than our first president, George Washington, granted a pardon to the farmers who violently protested a tax on whiskey. "He wouldn't have granted those pardons had he thought that he was making a radical case against the legitimacy of the US government or setting a precedent for anti-tax insurrections," Friedersdorf writes.

Unfortunately, the precedent argument often gets trotted out as a substitute for creative thinking. I suppose the government can hew to the "my way or the highway" position indefinitely, and that would mean Snowden lives out the rest of his years as a fugitive. Again, we need some context. This is nothing like a Kim Philby situation, and the argument that a plea bargain "or some form of clemency" as the Times puts it, would set off waves of similar intelligence leaks just is not credible.

It's time to let him come home. I'll let The New York Times have the last word:

"It is time for the United States to offer Mr. Snowden a plea bargain or some form of clemency that would allow him to return home, face at least substantially reduced punishment in light of his role as a whistle-blower, and have the hope of a life advocating for greater privacy and far stronger oversight of the runaway intelligence community."

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What to do about Snowden: The NY Times gets it right

Hero Edward Snowden?

NSA leaker Edward Snowden attends a news conference at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport with Sarah Harrison of WikiLeaks, left, Friday, July 12, 2013.

Bring him home. Thats what The New York Times' and The Guardians editorial pages say about NSA leaker, Edward Snowden. In other words, hes a hero, not a villain, for breaking the law and disclosing top secret documents.

The Times editorial board is arguably the most influential in the nation, and its typically pro-Obama views usually shine brightly on the White House. Thats why, when the Times takes an anti-Obama position, Twitter goes crazy.

Should Obama forgive him? These pundits say youbetcha.

Former high-ranking Obama official, now Atlantic writer, Anne-Marie Slaughter, surprised many with her endorsement.

Journalist Glenn Greenwald, who broke the story for The Guardian, and published Snowdens leaked documents, finds the pronouncement remarkable, and predicts Slaughters endorsement will be confusing for talking heads.

The tweet from a Washington correspondent for the Huffington Post drips in irony:

Top strategist for Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign, Stuart Stevens, finds fault with more than just the Snowden editorial.

While Blake Hounshell, deputy editor of Politico Magazine, finds fault with one word:

And it seems no matter what the controversy, all roads lead to Hillary. Radio host, Tammy Bruce:

Originally posted here:

Hero Edward Snowden?

Napolitano Says No Clemency for Edward Snowden

The former head of the Department of Homeland Security said Edward Snowden doesnt deserve clemency for exposing the broad reach of U.S. surveillance programs.

Janet Napolitano, who left the post in August to become president of the University of California system, said on NBCs Meet the Press that Snowdens leaks had hurt the U.S. She rejected calls made in editorials by the New York Times and Londons Guardian newspapers that Snowden, now living under temporary asylum in Russia, be granted clemency.

The U.S. has charged Snowden with theft and espionage for leaking documents to various publications last year that unveiled the breadth of the spying managed by the National Security Agency, where he worked as a contractor.

I think Snowden has exacted quite a bit of damage and did it in a way that violated the law, Napolitano said. I think hes committed crimes and I think that the damage well see now and well see it for years to come.

The New York Times wrote in a Jan. 1 editorial that Snowden deserved some form of clemency or sharply reduced charges because he had essentially served as a whistle-blower to government abuse of its anti-terrorism surveillance powers.

Senator Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican who has been critical of the NSAs activities, said today that Snowden should return to the U.S. to face trial for his actions.

I think personally, he probably would come home for some penalty of a few years in prison, Paul said on ABCs This Week program. In the end, history is going to judge that he revealed great abuses of our government and great abuses of our intelligence community.

Napolitano will lead a U.S. delegation to Russia for the 2014 Olympic Games in Sochi. Two bomb attacks last month in Russia raised fears that terrorists will target the games.

Russian authorities have said they are deploying 30,000 police officers in and around the Olympic site. Some analysts have suggested that could leave other areas vulnerable.

Napolitano said she shared that concern, and that the U.S. would work with Russia and the International Olympic Committee as closely as we can to ensure the safety of the games.

Originally posted here:

Napolitano Says No Clemency for Edward Snowden