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Monthly Archives: May 2023
Ken Paxton Impeached on 20 Charges Including Bribery … – The Texan
Posted: May 28, 2023 at 11:56 am
Austin, TX, 51 mins ago The Texas House of Representatives voted to impeach Attorney General Ken Paxton by a vote of 121 to 23 on 20 charges of disregard of official duty, misapplication of public resources, constitutional bribery, obstruction of justice, false statements in official records, conspiracy and attempted conspiracy, misappropriation of public resources, dereliction of duty, unfitness for office, and abuse of public trust.
On Thursday, the House General Investigating Committee unanimously adopted House Resolution (HR) 2377, which contains the articles of impeachment. The committee members are Chairman Andrew Murr (R-Junction) as well as Reps. Ann Johnson (D-Houston), Charlie Geren (R-Fort Worth), Oscar Longoria (D-Mission), and David Spiller (R-Jacksboro).
After he was impeached, Paxton released a statement on social media decrying the outcome of the vote, saying, I am beyond grateful to have the support of millions of Texans who recognize that what we just witnessed is illegal, unethical, and profoundly unjust. I look forward to a quick resolution in the Texas Senate, where I have full confidence the process will be fair and just.
Phelans coalition of Democrats and liberal Republicans is now in lockstep with the Biden Administration, the abortion industry, anti-gun zealots, and woke corporations to sabotage my work as Attorney General, including our ongoing litigation to stop illegal immigration, uphold the rule of law, and protect the constitutional rights of every Texan.
The following members voted against impeachment:
Two members voted present, not voting, Reps. Harold Dutton Jr. (D-Houston) and Richard Hayes (R-Denton). Rep. Tom Oliverson (R-Cypress) had an excused absence.
The Collin County GOP legislative delegation which consists of Reps. Jeff Leach (R-Plano), Matt Shaheen (R-Plano), Justin Holland (R-Rockwall), Candy Noble (R-Lucas), and Frederick Frazier (R-McKinney), all of whom voted in favor of impeachment released a statement on social media after the vote: It became clear to us that sufficient evidence indeed exists to vote to commend articles of impeachment to the Texas Senate for a full-trial.
An impeachment is similar to a criminal indictment. It must be followed by a trial in the Senate, Spiller said on the Floor, advising members that they were acting as a grand jury of sorts.
Johnson provided an overview of each article of impeaching, pointing out that many of the allegations constitute felonies punishable by years of imprisonment. For instance, more than one of the disregard of official duty charges could be chargeable as a third-degree felony punishable by 2 to 10 years in prison.
The last 72 hours has shown us why Ken Paxton is so desperate to keep his case in the court of public opinion, because he has no ability to win in a court of law, Johnson said.
Responding to questions from Rep. Matt Schaefer (R-Tyler), Murr agreed that witnesses were not placed under oath and were not cross-examined by members of the committee.
Rep. John Smithee (R-Amarillo) opposed the impeachment resolution on the grounds that he believes the process was flawed and the evidence is not enough, a theme throughout.
Im not here to defend Ken Paxton. Thats not my job, Ill leave that to someone else, Smithee said.
Smithee asserted the evidence presented to members was hearsay within hearsay within hearsay and would not be admissible in any court of law.
We do not need to be relaxing the fairness and due process concerns, Smithee said, discussing the precedent the House set with an indefensible process.
Smithee said the chamber was considering impeachment in the worst possible way.
What youre being asked to do is to impeach without evidence. It is all rumor, it is all innuendo, it is all speculation, Smithee said.
Rep. Terry Canales (D-Edinburg) later rebutted this argument by pointing to the grand jury analogy. There are exceptions to the hearsay rule, he explained.
Hearsay is never excluded from an investigation, and thats what this is, Canales said
Canales, a defense attorney, said he has never had a client invited by prosecutors to speak to a grand jury. He contended Paxton is not entitled to speak to the investigative committee and Murrs layout should be compared to prosecutor presenting a case to the grand jury, which does not involve a rebuttal by the defense team.
Rep. Tony Tinderholt (R-Arlington) pointed out that all of the investigators that testified before the committee were former Harris County employees and nearly all of them vote in Democratic primaries. Murr suggested he was uninterested in the political leanings of the investigators when considering the articles of impeachment.
This body gave more time to debating tampon tax relief than weve given to impeaching the chief law enforcement officer in our state, Tinderholt said.
Tinderholt said he was sorry Republicans in the House are being used to cram through an impeachment against a popular GOP official. He said it is imprudent at best and gross abuse of power at worst.
Rep. Brian Harrison (R-Waxahachie) spoke against impeachment, saying the allegations should be left to the courts and to the voters.
The only Democrat to come to Paxtons mild defense on the floor was Rep. Harold Dutton (D-Houston), who said he does not believe Paxtons due process rights have been respected.
I dont have enough evidence that (Paxton) did anything, Dutton said.
Dutton expressed concern that the chamber was asked to vote on the impeachment articles virtually in the dead of night.
Earlier in debate, Smithee made a similar point, saying Texans are focused on observing Memorial Day and not the Legislatures proceedings against Paxton.
Rep. Travis Clardy (R-Nacogdoches) said he is an absolute, staunch supporter of the Fifth Amendment and Seventh Amendment and would vote against impeachment because the record before them is predicated on hearsay upon hearsay upon hearsay.
Before Saturdays vote, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz came to Paxton defense on social media, calling Paxtons impeachment a travesty.
Virtually all of the information in the articles was public BEFORE Election Day, and the voters chose to re-elect Ken Paxton by a large margin. In my view, the Texas Legislature should respect the choice of the Texas voters, Cruz said.
The senator said the swamp in Austin dislikes Paxton because he is a fierce conservative. Cruz contended the courts should settle Paxtons legal troubles.
Former President Donald Trump, who is running for the White House in 2024, called the impeachment proceeding election interference.
The RINO Speaker of the House of Texas, Dade Phelan, who is barely a Republican at all and failed the test on voter integrity, wants to impeach one of the most hard working and effective Attorney Generals in the United States, Ken Paxton, who just won re-election with a large number of American Patriots strongly voting for him, Trump wrote on his social media platform.
Trump claimed that any issue would have been fully adjudicated by the voters of Texas and that Paxtons victory was conclusive.
Unlike in federal impeachments, Paxton will be removed from office pending his trial in the Texas Senate, where a two-thirds vote is required to convict him. State law gives Gov. Greg Abbott the authority to appoint Paxtons replacement.
The House impeached him on suspicion of corrupt dealings with Nate Paul, a real estate developer who donated $25,000 to Paxtons campaign in 2018. Paxton is accused of accepting bribes from Paul and using the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) to harm the Roy F. & JoAnn Cole Mitte Foundation, which had sued several companies Paul controlled.
Paul also hired a woman with whom Paxton has acknowledged having an extramarital affair, an act the House says constituted bribery.
The articles of impeachment allege that Paxton abused his office by appointing a special prosecutor to investigate a baseless complaint and issue dozens of grand jury subpoenas. It also outlines an allegation that Paxton warped the legal opinion process to prevent foreclosure on a number of Pauls properties by saying that foreclosure hearings violated the states then-in-place 10-person limit on gatherings. Paxton allegedly ordered one of his employees to alter the opinion from finding that the proceedings didnt violate the gathering limit to opining that they did.
Lawmakers say Paxton violated Texas whistleblower laws by terminating employees who reported their suspicions to federal authorities in good faith.
Four of those employees, David Maxwell, Ryan Vassar, Mark Penley, and Blake Brickman, filed a lawsuit against Paxton that has been making its way through Texas courts for years. Paxton reached a $3.3 million settlement agreement with the former employees, an amount he asked the Texas Legislature to pay.
Speaker Dade Phelan (R-Beaumont) said in February he did not believe the payout was a proper use of public funds and the appropriation was explicitly excluded from the state budget.
HR 2377 says Paxton abused the judicial process to thwart justice by acting to delay his trial on securities fraud charges that prosecutors filed against him in Collin County eight years ago. Paxton deprived the electorate of its opportunity to make an informed decision during the elections, they said.
The House also accused Paxton of lying to state officials about his personal finances and other matters.
While holding office as attorney general, Warren Kenneth Paxton used, misused, or failed to use his official powers in a manner calculated to subvert the lawful operation of the government of the State of Texas an obstruct the fair and impartial administration of justice, thereby bringing the Office of the Attorney General into scandal and disrepute to the prejudice of public confidence in the government of this State, as shown by the acts described in one or more articles, the resolution reads.
Paxton said Thursday the allegations are based on hearsay and gossip and dismissed the impeachment as an effort by liberal House members to overturn the results of a free and fair election.
Chief Litigant for the OAG, Chris Hilton, cited Texas Government Code Sec. 665.081 and contended Paxton cannot be impeached on charges of misconduct committed prior to the last election.
That section of code reads, (a) An officer in this state may not be removed from office for an act the officer may have committed before the officers election to office.
(b) The prohibition against the removal from office for an act the officer commits before the officers election is covered by: (1) Section 21.002, Local Government Code, for a mayor or alderman of a general law municipality; or (2) Chapter 87, Local Government Code, for a county or precinct officer.
It does not specify whether that means the officials most recent election to office or the initial election that placed him in the office in the first place.
In November 2022, Paxton was reelected with 53 percent of the vote compared to Democratic nominee Rochelle Garzas 44 percent.
In the Republican primary, Paxton advanced to a runoff with Land Commissioner George P. Bush after defeating Congressman Louie Gohmert (R-TX-01) and former Texas Supreme Court Justice Eva Guzman.
Paxton overwhelmingly defeated Bush with 68 percent of the vote.
Update:The Texan has acquired the list of how each member voted and this article now includes statements from several state officials.
A copy of the impeachment resolution can be found below.
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Simply losing it: Bitter fight brews over federal judges forced retirement effort – Yahoo News
Posted: at 11:56 am
CORRECTION: Francis Shen, then an associate professor at the University of Minnesota Law School, conducted research on the age of federal judges. Incorrect information appeared in an earlier version of this story.
A growing dispute over efforts to force the retirement of a 95-year-old federal judge is giving the public a rare glimpse into how the judicial system grapples with issues of age on the bench.
Questions about age are looming large over Washington lately, with doubts about whether an octogenarian president is fit for reelection and if the nations oldest sitting senator should finish out her term.
The judicial branch is not without its own issues on the matter, as colleagues of Pauline Newman, a federal appeals court judge, attempt to push her out over concerns about her mental state.
Anonymous court employees have alleged that Newman is simply losing it mentally with some describing her as paranoid, according to court filings.
A formal investigation is being run by three of her fellow judges after Newman rebuffed pressure to retire earlier this year, with new efforts to reduce her role at the court and demands she submit to a cognitive test.
Based on its investigation to date, the Committee has determined that there is a reasonable basis to conclude that Judge Newman might suffer a disability that interferes with her ability to perform the responsibilities of her office, the judges wrote in an unsigned order earlier this month.
The fight has since only turned more bitter. Newman this month sued her colleagues to block the investigation, insisting she is still fit to serve and that their probe is unconstitutional.
At all relevant times, Judge Newman has been and is in sound physical and mental health, Newmans attorney wrote in the complaint. She has authored majority and dissenting opinions in the whole range of cases before her Court, has voted on petitions for rehearing en banc, and has joined in the en banc decisions of the Court.
Story continues
Newmans chambers and her attorney did not return requests for comment.
The investigation comes as questions about age are being raised in the two other branches of the federal government.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), 89, faces increased concerns over her health after a months-long absence from shingles complications.
The age of President Biden, the oldest president in U.S. history, has been the source of attack from rivals. Biden would be 86 at the end of a second term.
But unlike the two branches comprised of elected officials, federal judges tenures are not limited, with one key exception: impeachment by the House and conviction in the Senate. The feat has only occurred eight times in U.S. history, according to the Federal Judicial Center.
Life tenure designed to provide independence allows federal judges to otherwise serve for as long as they so please.
In her lawsuit against the three-judge committee, Newman argued their investigation skirts those constitutional protections, also contesting their characterizations of her mental state and work output.
Defendants orders and threats constitute an attempt to remove Plaintiff from officeand already have unlawfully removed her from hearing caseswithout impeachment and in violation of the Constitution, Newmans attorney wrote in the complaint.
Its a stark contrast from how her colleagues have portrayed Newmans conduct. By March, half of her fellow active judges on the bench had expressed their concerns to Newman directly or tried to do so, court documents indicate.
Chief Judge Kimberly Moore then took things into her own hands, opening a formal investigation on March 24 under the federal judiciarys conduct and disability procedures. Before docketing the order, Moore showed a draft to Newman, who again refused to retire.
The probe remains ongoing, but the three-judge committee has already prevented Newman from taking on new cases at the court, even if she maintains her title and salary.
They have conducted more than 20 interviews with unnamed court employees, who described Newmans demeanor as paranoid, agitated and bizarre, the documents show. Among other things, the employees alleged Newman needs assistance with basic tasks, claims the court has bugged her phones, and repeatedly seems to have trouble retaining information in conversations.
Though it is difficult to say this, I believe Judge Newman is simply losing it mentally, one court employee said, according to the filings.
One of Newmans chamber employees purportedly invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination during their interview. After another was granted the ability to relocate outside of Newmans chambers while continuing their job, Newman allegedly threatened to have him forcibly removed and arrested.
Appointed in 1984 by former President Reagan, Newman, who will turn 96 next month, became the first person to be appointed directly to the Federal Circuit.
She is the oldest active federal judge, but the judiciary overall has generally trended older. In 2020, the average age of federal judges was 69, older than any time in U.S. history, according to research conducted by Francis Shen, who at the time was an associate professor at University of Minnesota Law School.
As judges age, speculation runs rampant about when they might retire, and which president might replace them.
Those battles are even more intense at the Supreme Court, with periodic calls for a justice to retire at a politically opportune time. Just prior to announcing his presidential campaign, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) this week openly discussed the vacancies he could fill, if elected.
But for Newman, who sits on the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which focuses on patent and other specialized disputes, the pressure to step aside has come from inside the court. Its a notable shift from Newmans long-respected reputation as the courts great dissenter.
Judge Newmans dissents have enriched the patent dialogue at the Federal Circuit, Daryl Lim, associate dean at Penn State Dickinson Law, wrote in a 2017 paper analyzing Newmans record.
A few have succeeded in gaining traction with the Supreme Court, with her colleagues, and with academics, he continued. Others are pitched to a key for a future court and a true measure of their influence lies in the hands of history. All have become part of its institutional memory, and they provide an unvarnished roadmap of the issues where she saw room for course correction.
Newmans reluctance to give into mounting pressure about her abilities is nothing new. Newman had told Lim that she had faced sexism when nominated, now nearly 40 years ago.
When I was nominated to be a judge, a number of people spoke out, including some who I thought were my friends, saying that they didnt think that I could handle the job, Newman said at the time.
This story was updated at 8:53 a.m.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.
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Worth County Board of Supervisors Meeting (LIVE) – KIOW.com
Posted: at 11:56 am
Join Zoom Meeting: https://zoom.us/j/435128100
(Click the link above to go to the Worth county Board of Supervisors meeting live).
The Worth County Board of Supervisors will meet on Monday beginning at 8:30am and you can view the meeting live on kiow.com.
The board will hear from County Engineer Richard Blumm who will discuss the current state of secondary roads in the county. the board will also hear from Arlen Throne, F.A.S.T. Speed Trial, who may request for Airport Roads Closure on Founders Day.
The board will also discuss drainage issues in the county and address drainage claims. the board will announce who is the winning bidder for the Drainage District 2 project.
The board will also address the Fifth Amendment to the Child Support Staffing Contract Between the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, Child Support Services and the Floyd County who is the Host Political Subdivision.
The board will also consider Resolution 2023-19 which is a Fiscal Year 2023 Budget Amendment.
The board will continue its discussion on the current state of the Emergency Medical Services issue.
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Trump Organization finishes last in brand reputation survey for second straight year – The Hill
Posted: at 11:56 am
The Trump Organization, the company led by former President Trump and his family, finished last in an Axios Harris survey of brand reputations for the second year in a row.
The annual poll compiles views of what respondents identify as the 100 most visible companies in the country. The company calculates its Reputational Quotient (RT) by measuring various characteristics — character, trajectory, trust, culture, ethics, citizenship, vision, growth and products and services.
The Trump Organization scored a 52.9 out of 100, making it the only company to receive a “very poor” score, according to the rankings. FTX, Fox Corporation, Twitter and Facebook received the next lowest scores, rounding out the bottom five.
The top-performing companies were Patagonia, Costco and John Deere.
The Trump Organization, which has come under heavy legal scrutiny in the past couple years, scored last in each of the categories the poll measured. Among its rankings, the company performed best in vision, with a score of 58.6, and worst in trust, with a score of 50.1.
New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) is pursuing a civil case against the organization, alleging the former president and his children — Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric Trump — systematically inflated the company’s assets to receive loans on favorable terms and then deflated them for tax purposes.
Trump sat for a deposition in the case for almost seven hours last month. He pleaded his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination during a deposition last year in the case.
Allen Weisselberg, who served as the company’s chief financial officer, also pleaded guilty in August to charges of tax evasion following an investigation from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. He was sentenced to five months in prison but was released early last month for good behavior.
The Trump Organization was subsequently found guilty in December of tax fraud, with much of prosecutors’ argument based on Weisselberg’s confession that he and other executives worked to conceal bonuses and perks from being considered taxable income for about a decade.
The Axios poll was conducted from March 13-28 among 16,310 Americans.
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They held down a Black teen who tried to shoplift. He died from … – Wisconsin Examiner
Posted: at 11:56 am
When the clerk at VJs Food Mart confronted Corey Stingley, the 16-year-old handed over his backpack. Inside were six hidden bottles of Smirnoff Ice, worth $12, and the clerk began pulling them out one by one.
Stingley watched, then pivoted and quickly moved toward the door, empty-handed. But there would be no escape for the unarmed teen in the light blue hoodie.
Three customers, together weighing 550 pounds, wrestled the 135-pound teen to the floor of the West Allis, Wisconsin, store. They pinned him in a seated position, his body compressed downward, according to a police account. One of the men put Stingley in a chokehold, witnesses would later tell investigators.
Get up, you punk! that man, a former Marine, reportedly told Stingley when an officer from the police department finally arrived. But the teen didnt move. He was foaming at the mouth, and his pants and shoes were soaked in urine.
Hed suffered a traumatic brain injury from a loss of oxygen and never regained consciousness. His parents took him off life support two weeks later. The medical examiner ruled Stingleys death a homicide following his restraint in a violent struggle with multiple individuals.
That was more than 10 years ago.
None of the men, all of whom were white, were criminally charged in the incident that killed Stingley, a Black youth. Police arrested Mario Laumann, the man seen holding Stingley in an apparent chokehold, shortly after the incident in December 2012. But the local district attorney declined to prosecute him or the other two men, arguing they were unaware of the harm they were causing.
When a second police review led to a reexamination of the case in 2017, another prosecutor sat on it for more than three years, until a judge demanded a decision. Again, there were no charges.
Prosecutors move on, but fathers dont. Refusing to accept that the case had been handled justly, Corey Stingleys dad, Craig, last year convinced a judge to assign a third district attorney to look at what had happened to his son.
That prosecutor, Ismael Ozanne of Dane County, was scheduled to report back to the court on Friday, but the hearing was postponed.
The case has parallels to a recent deadly subway incident in New York City. Both involve chokeholds administered by former Marines on Black males who had not initiated any violence. But unlike in Wisconsin, New York authorities acted within two weeks to file a second-degree manslaughter charge in the case.
While the New York subway incident grabbed national headlines, Corey Stingleys death which happened the same day as the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Connecticut did not gain much notice outside of southeast Wisconsin.
Years later, Craig Stingley tapped an obscure statute dating back to Wisconsins frontier days to convince the system to take a fresh look at his sons death. The law states that if a district attorney refuses to issue a criminal complaint or is unavailable to do so, a private citizen can petition a judge to take up the matter. Today, its loosely referred to as a John Doe petition, though in this instance there was no doubt who restrained Stingleys son: Laumann, who has since died, along with two other store patrons named Jesse R. Cole and Robert W. Beringer.
No one is alleging that the men set out to kill Corey Stingley. His father is asking the prosecutor to consider a charge of reckless homicide or even a lesser offense for using extreme force to detain his son.
He wasnt trying to harm anyone. He was trying to leave that store, said Craig Stingley, who thought his son made a youthful mistake. I believe he was scared.
VJs Food Mart is a typical small convenience store, packed with chips, candy, soda, beer, cigarettes and liquor. On Sunday mornings it offers a special deal on hot ham and rolls, a local tradition for an after-church meal. To combat theft, the store is equipped with security cameras.
On Dec. 14, 2012, Thomas Ripley and Anthony Orcholski stopped by the store for beer and snacks. Only a few steps in, they saw that three men had someone firmly pinned on the ground.
Security video shows Ripley and Orcholski pausing next to the pile of people and watching intently. In statements to police they both said they saw Laumann lying on the ground with his arms around Stingleys neck in a chokehold. Beringer had grabbed Stingleys hair, they said; the third man, Cole, had his hands on Stingleys back.
Ripley told police the teen was not moving and appeared to be limp.
I dont think he could breathe, Ripley would later testify during a special review of the case to determine if there should be charges.
Orcholski told a detective that he was concerned about the teen on the ground and may even have instructed the men to let Stingley go.
A decade later, Orcholski is still bothered by what he saw. Im upset, he told ProPublica. Three men thought they were going to be heroes that day because a 16-year-old boy was shoplifting. There could have been numerous different ways to restrain him other than choking him to death.
He added, Its common sense: When you squeeze somebody that hard for that long, theyre not going to be alive after it.
The security video is grainy, and much of the confrontation took place out of view of the cameras.
Authorities had a third witness, though. Troubled by what hed seen, store customer Michael Farrell felt compelled to go to the West Allis police station that evening and give a statement.
I felt bad. Im a dad, he explained, court records show.
Farrell told police he could see through the stores glass door that a man with a crazed look on his face had someone in a chokehold, very near the entrance. The guy was squeezing the hell out of this kid and never let up, he said. Farrell picked Laumann out of a photo lineup. (Farrell and another witness, Ripley, couldnt be reached for comment for this story.)
Corey Stingley and his dad lived just a couple of blocks from the store, making them one of the few Black families in a predominantly white neighborhood and city on the border of Milwaukee. Comments from the three men who held Stingley down imply that they saw him as an outsider.
Ripley told police that Beringer, 54, held Stingley by the hair and shook the teens head a couple of times. You dont do that, he said Beringer scolded Stingley. Were all friends and neighbors around here.
With Stingley subdued, the store clerk held a phone to Beringers head so he could talk to a police dispatcher. We have the perp, three of us have the perp on the ground holding him for you, Beringer said, according to a transcript of the 911 call.
Police estimated that the men held Stingley down for six to 10 minutes. When Stingley stopped struggling, Cole later told police, I thought he was faking it.
He added: I didnt know if he was just, you know, playing limp to try and get real strong and pull a quick one, you know.
When an officer arrived, she handcuffed Stingley with Beringers assistance but then realized that he wasnt breathing and called for help.
Beringer walked outside the market, according to Farrell, only to be confronted by another bystander who said, You guys killed that kid.
We didnt kill anyone, Beringer responded.
At nearby Froedtert Hospital, doctors concluded Stingleys airway had been blocked while he was restrained.
He had petechial hemorrhages tiny red dots that appear as the result of broken blood vessels to his eyes, cheeks and mouth. A deputy medical examiner attributed this pattern to pressure applied to the neck. There also was a bruise at the front of Stingleys neck, she testified.
She noted that his asphyxia also could be linked to compression of the chest.
Doctors put Stingley in a medically induced coma, attached him to a ventilator and inserted a feeding tube. As the situation became increasingly hopeless, his family spent Christmas at his bedside. Four days later, his parents made the agonizing decision to take him off life support.
In the New York subway case earlier this month, it took less than two weeks for the Manhattan district attorney to charge Daniel Penny, a former Marine, with second-degree manslaughter for the choking death of Jordan Neely, a homeless man who had yelled at other subway passengers. A prosecutor emphasized that Penny continued to choke Neely even after he stopped moving.
Pennys lawyers have defended his actions by saying he was protecting himself and other passengers. Laumann, in contrast, never claimed Corey Stingley was a danger. But he did dispute that he put his arm around the teens throat.
Interviewed by police that night, Laumann, then 56, recalled just leaning on him.
Pressed by a detective, Laumann appeared less confident, saying, A headlock is when you got your arms locked, right? And I didnt have him locked. He added: I had my arm around like this, yeah, but I didnt have him in a headlock. Unless maybe I did, maybe I I dont, no, I, I dont remember that, no.
His account conflicted with that of witnesses. And Laumanns older sibling Michael, also a former Marine, isnt so sure, either. Chokeholds are a part of basic combat skills, he said, used to restrain a person and take them down.
Thats the first thing they teach you, not only in boot camp but also in subsequent infantry training. It becomes an automatic restraint, to save your own life, Michael said. Im not saying that Mario did that. Because I dont know the situation. But all Im saying is that when youre in the Marine Corps youre taught how to save your own life. And to save the lives of your brotherhood. Sometimes it becomes, say, an automatic response.
Michael Laumann said he and Mario who died last year at age 65 seldom talked, and when they did, the store incident never came up.
Mario Laumann, who worked in construction after leaving the Marines, lived about two miles from the store. His family had been dealing with a variety of crises. His wife was battling cancer. She had been arrested four years earlier for driving under influence of prescription medications. She died in 2013.
And, by the time of the encounter with Stingley, Laumanns youngest son, Nickolas, was serving time in prison for sexual assault of a 15-year-old girl, intimidation of a victim and theft.
Writing online while in prison, Nickolas said his father would scream at me for drug use and whoop my ass. The police report about Stingleys death notes that Laumann had been arrested twice for battery, but charges in both cases had been dismissed.
Mario did have a temper, another brother, Mennas Laumann, said recently.
The three men who held Stingley down didnt know each other. Beringer, who lived next door to the food mart, told police he only recognized Laumann as a neighborhood guy.
Like Laumann, Beringer had had previous encounters with police. In 1996, Beringer pulled a gun on a Pakistani-born man and told him he hated fucking Iranians, according to a police sergeants sworn criminal complaint. Beringer pleaded guilty to misdemeanor gun charges and was jailed briefly then put on probation. A judge ordered him to complete a course in violence counseling or anger management and continue with mental health treatment, court records show.
Beringer, who no longer lives in West Allis, declined to talk to ProPublica. He came to the door of his apartment building and when asked to discuss Stingleys death said, No, no, see you later, and closed the door.
The third man to wrestle Stingley to the ground, Cole, was a 25-year-old electrician who lived about a mile from the store. Hed gone there to get cigarettes. The prior year he had pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor, for carrying a Glock handgun in the center console of his car and a magazine with 11 hollow-point bullets in the glove box. Cole didnt respond to ProPublicas attempts for comment.
In the immediate aftermath of the incident, all three men cooperated with police.
Cole said that as he and the others tried to halt Stingleys attempt to flee, the teen took a swing at him and landed a punch. He ended up with a black eye.
Asked by police why he restrained the teen, Laumann replied: Because hes a thief.
Several days after the struggle, West Allis police arrested Laumann and processed him for second-degree reckless injury. It was up to Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm to decide whether to prosecute him and the other men.
Chisholm eventually arranged for a judicial proceeding where sworn testimony could be heard. There, the three men invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in declining to answer questions. The original witnesses recounted seeing Stingley grabbed around the throat.
Though Farrell said he couldnt recall telling police that Laumann was squeezing the hell out of Stingley, he didnt back away from his original description of a chokehold.
Months went by with no word on charges. But Craig Stingley, a facilities engineer, couldnt just sit and wait. He rallied support from politicians in the community and tried to keep the pressure on Chisholm.
Stingley brought state Sen. Lena Taylor to meetings with the prosecutor to discuss the case. They came away discouraged. Taylor got the impression that the case was challenging for prosecutors on many levels. The video was not sharp, for one thing. Taylor also believed that race relations in Milwaukee County fed Chisholms concern that a jury might not convict anyone in the case.
At one meeting, Taylor said, she questioned what would have happened if the people involved had been of different races. They wouldnt let a group of Black guys do that to a young white guy, without any consequences, she said.
More than a year after the incident, in January 2014, Chisholm announced he would not bring charges, on the grounds that the men did not intend to injure or kill Stingley and didnt realize there was a risk to his life or health. It is clear that the purpose of restraining Corey Stingley was to hold him for police, Chisholm wrote in a five-page summary of his investigation.
None of the actors were trained in the proper application of restraint, he added
Coreys mother, Alicia Stingley, was stunned. Its just mind-boggling to me, just the decision that was made that it was more so because he didnt think he could win a case or didnt think what they did was on purpose, she said. There were no repercussions for a grown man taking a young childs life by choking him.
For Craig Stingley, its inconceivable the men did not know his son was in distress during the prolonged time they held him down. Applied properly, a chokehold can render an aggressor unconscious in as little as eight to thirteen seconds, according to a 2015 Marine Corps instructor guide.
Chisholm is still the district attorney. Through an assistant, he declined comment, citing the new review. Among the questions sent by ProPublica to Chisholm was whether he investigated Laumanns training in restraints as a Marine.
Chisholms decision sparked media coverage and community protests. To Craig Stingley, Corey was more than a symbol, he was a cherished son.
He was my buddy, Stingley said, describing how he and Corey would watch sports together. A skilled athlete, Corey Stingley was a running back on his high school football team and a member of the diving team. He took advanced placement classes in school and made the National Honor Society at school, his father said. He also worked part-time at an Arbys.
His social media accounts include references to girls and partying. It also catalogs his love of Batman, the Green Bay Packers and Christmas and shows him gently mocking his friends and family.
My dad just got texting and hes experimenting with winky faces, he wrote in 2012, ending with #ohlord.
Craig Stingley and his ex-wife filed a wrongful death suit in 2015 against the three men and the convenience store, which led to a settlement. Records show that Laumanns homeowners insurance paid $300,000, as did Coles. (Beringer didnt have homeowners insurance.) There was no admission of wrongdoing by the defendants. In court filings the three men said their actions were legal and justified, citing self-defense and their need to respond to an emergency.
A good portion of the proceeds from the suit went to pay for hospital and funeral costs and lawyer fees, Stingley said.
In the civil suit, an expert forensic pathologist hired by the Stingley familys lawyer concluded the teen died because his chest was compressed and he was strangled.
Once his airway became completely obstructed, Dr. Jeffrey Jentzen of the University of Michigan wrote, Corey would have experienced severe air hunger, conscious fear, suffering and panic with an impending sense of his own death for a period of 30 seconds to approximately one minute until he was rendered into a fully unconscious state.
Craig Stingley still obsessed about what had happened and how to revive a criminal case. He relived his sons death over and over, watching the surveillance video of his last moments frame by frame, looking for something new.
Using a movie maker app on his computer, he slowed the video down and grabbed individual frames. He concluded that Cole initially had his son in a headlock, but that Laumann too had an arm around his neck before bringing him to the ground. That conflicted with Laumanns statement to police.
Stingley took his findings to the West Allis police, where a detective agreed theyd missed this detail. The department wrote a supplemental report for Chisholm, who asked a judge to appoint a special prosecutor for another look.
Racine District Attorney Patricia Hanson got the case in October 2017. But what followed was more waiting.
Stingley said he called Hansons office routinely in the years that followed, but she never met with him. Reached via email recently, Hanson declined to comment.
The case has not even been assigned a referral or case number after three years in that office, state Rep. Evan Goyke complained in a December 2020 letter to Milwaukee County Circuit Court Chief Judge Mary Triggiano. This is unacceptable, he wrote.
In later correspondence, Triggiano noted Hanson had refused to say when her decision would be forthcoming because in the midst of the pandemic, she had a lot of cases needing attention.
In March 2021, Hanson told the court in a one-page memo that she had reviewed Chisholms file and agreed with his earlier decision: I do not find that criminal charges are appropriate at this time.
John Doe proceedings allowing citizens to directly ask a court to consider criminal charges date back to 1839, when Wisconsin was still a territory, according to an account in state supreme court records. The law is used infrequently, legal experts said, and rarely successfully.
Petitions have been filed by prisoners, by activists alleging animal cruelty in research experiments and by citizens claiming police misconduct. The efforts typically fail, ProPublica found in reviewing court dockets, news accounts and appellate rulings. In Milwaukee County, Wisconsins most populous, there were only 19 such cases in 2020, dockets show, including Stingleys. None succeeded.
Other states have similar methods of giving citizens a voice, but none are exactly like Wisconsins. According to the National Crime Victim Law Institute, six states Kansas, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota and Oklahoma allow private citizens to gather signatures to petition a judge to convene a grand jury to investigate an alleged crime. In Pennsylvania, individuals can file a criminal complaint with the district attorney; if rejected, they can appeal to the court to ask it to order the district attorney to prosecute.
Milwaukee attorney Scott W. Hansen, who has served as special prosecutor in a John Doe case, is critical of the Wisconsin process. He said it allows citizens to present a one-sided, skewed version of facts to a judge, without benefit of cross-examination or adverse witnesses.
The law, however, does state that the citizens petition must present facts that raise a reasonable belief a crime was committed.
Former state Supreme Court Justice Janine Geske described the John Doe petition as a check and balance on prosecutors by citizens. If people believe a crime has been committed, and youve got prosecutors not living up to their responsibilities, and you think somebody ought to be held accountable, its a way to have some judicial review, she said.
Stingley has known all along that the odds were against him, so turning to a longshot petition didnt daunt him. Writing to Chief Judge Triggiano in late 2020, he alleged dereliction and breach of legal duty by the Milwaukee and Racine county district attorneys to conduct thorough criminal investigations into his sons death.
Triggiano assigned the case to Judge Milton Childs. He formally appointed Ozanne, the first Black district attorney in Wisconsin, as special prosecutor last July. Ozannes inquiry has included reviews of court transcripts and interviews with West Allis police and others.
Craig Stingley was pleased that Ozanne and his staff met with him for several hours to listen to his concerns and to hear about his son.
When I left that meeting, Stingley said, my son got his humanity back.
This story was updated Friday, 5/26/2023, 11 a.m., to report that a scheduled hearing was postponed.
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Top 5 Technologies That Will Make Mars Habitable – Jumpstart Media
Posted: at 11:56 am
From silica aerogel to MOXIE, these revolutionary technologies are bringing us a step closer to making Mars home!
Mars, the fourth planet from the Sun, has long captivated the curiosity of scientists. Some of the most intelligent mindsBuzz Aldrin, Neil Degras Tyson and Stephen Hawkingagree that humankind should work towards occupying Mars. And there is a good reason for that. When life on Earth was evolving, Mars was going through significant climate change. Studying the red planet, both its past and present, can help us understand the details of the evolution of Earth and other planets in the solar system.
Besides, scientists have found evidence of water on Mars that could be harvested for human consumption. Consequently, we are seeing the emergence of projects like Artemis 1, which intends to establish a human presence on Mars by 2028. But the million-dollar question is: How will this plan, or any other plan to colonize Mars come to fruition? Here are some of the technologies that have been developed or are currently being developed, that will help make life on Mars possible.
Silica aerogel is a porous, lightweight translucent material used for high-temperature insulation. Its insulating properties are so potent that, in 2019, researchers from Harvard University and NASAs Jet Propulsion Lab found that silica aerogel could mimic the greenhouse effect on Mars. What makes Mars uninhabitable right now is the low temperatures and high levels of ultraviolet radiation. The researchers believe that a 2-3 cm thick silica aerogel layer would transmit sufficient life for photosynthesis, help block out the radiation and raise temperatures above the melting point of water.
Mars atmosphere is made up of 95% carbon dioxide (CO2). In 2021, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in the U.S. and its partner biotechnology company Nzyme2HC came up with the idea of harnessing this CO2 supply to make ethylene. To do so, it is using ethylene-emitting cyanobacteria (bacteria that obtain energy from photosynthesis) created by NREL scientists in 2012. Creating ethylene (an integral component of plastics) from the CO2 supply on Mars could help astronauts readily produce the building materials needed for a Mars colony.
While the red planet has a lot of CO2, its atmosphere only consists of 0.6% molecular oxygen. This means, to make life possible on the planet, scientists need to find a way for us to breathe. To help solve this problem, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has created the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment (MOXIE). MOXIE is a lunchbox-sized device that collects atmospheric CO2 and heats it to 1500 degrees Fahrenheit, splitting it into oxygen and carbon monoxide. The device is still in the experimental stages but has been successful in producing oxygen seven different times.
Another major barrier is traveling back and forth between Earth and Mars. There is a distance of 33.9 million miles between the two planets, and it takes seven months to travel from one to the other, kicking off at a speed of about 39,600 km per hour. To tackle this issue, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has partnered with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to work on nuclear thermal propulsion technology for rockets. This technology provides a high thrust and propels the rocket much faster than chemical rockets. Reducing the travel time will help cut down the supplies needed for inter-planet travel. While the technology isnt ready yet, NASA says it intends to make it possible by 2027.
Given how far the two planets are from each other, it would be greatly beneficial to have a source of fuel on Mars as well. In 2021, the Georgia Institute of Technology suggested that microbes could be carried to Mars to produce fuel on the red planet. These microbes are cyanobacteria (which converts carbon dioxide into sugar and oxygen) and an engineered variety of E.colii (which converts the extracted sugar into a fuel called 2,3-butanediol).
To give these microbes the environment to be functional, plastic materials would have to be carried to Mars which would then be assembled into photobioreactors for the microbes. Besides creating fuel, the process also generates 44 tons of excess clean oxygen. This process of producing fuel on Mars would reduce power consumption by 32% as compared to the current method (carrying methane and liquid oxygen reserves to the planet).
From creating oxygen to reducing fuel costs and eliminating radiation, evolving technologies solve the many problems associated with Mars colonization. It opens up possibilities for sustained human habitation on the planet. As we continue to push the boundaries of scientific and technological innovation, we can look forward to a future where humans are not only Earthbound but also interplanetary, with Mars being the first step in our journey to the stars.
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10 Best Paradox Interactive Games – TheGamer
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Paradox Interactive has released many great titles and series over the years after becoming an independent company in 2004. When you think of games that Paradox has published, titles like the Cities Skylines series, Surviving Mars, and many other strategy games come to mind.
Related: The Best Ubisoft Games
Grand strategy games are not the only ones it has under its belt, however. Action adventure, role-playing, and simulation and management are some of the other genres that the company has published, which have been some of the most successful releases. With a wide variety of games, these are some of the best titles to check out from Paradox Interactive.
Fantasy games always bring forth a very interesting world no matter how they are received on release. Magicka brought a new world based on Norse mythology, creating a fun and rich experience.
In this game, you are a wizard who is trying to stop an evil sorcerer who has caused chaos in the world. There are many spells you can cast and combine for a magic system unlike any other, and many items to find. You can also play solo or in co-op with up to four friends in a dozen campaigns.
Victoria 2 is the second installment in the grand strategy Victoria series. Taking place during the 19th-century colonial era you guide your country to expand and industrialize. This includes expanding through political power, military conquest, and colonization.
This political simulation game gives you many options in terms of gameplay. You have dozens of different governments, production for your country, and a very detailed economy. There are over 200 countries to play as along with many historical missions. All of these features really help make Victoria 2 a very intriguing strategy game, and one of the best.
The Age of Wonders series has captivated fans with its unique gameplay and story. Age of Wonders 4 continues to bring together roleplaying and strategy along with turn-based combat. All of those elements put together in a fantasy realm are what make this game really popular.
Related: Age Of Wonders 4: Beginner Tips
The fantasy realm is created by you, in which you create your followers, build up armies, get magical tomes to evolve your followers, and create powerful beings. There are endless possibilities for your creations and realms to explore. You can be a fearful ruler that dominates other realms or one that creates alliances to squash the evil in the world.
There are many games that are part of the grand strategy war games genre. One of the most well-known series is Hearts of Iron. The fourth installment transports you into World War 2 and offers both historical and alternative events.
This military simulation game gives players the opportunity to command any nation while managing politics, economy, production and supply lines, and military units. There is also a complex research tree and multiplayer in which you can take control of different aspects of a nation's strategy.
Europa Universalis is one of Paradoxs biggest series and for good reason. A grand strategy game with the ability to dominate, explore, and expand your world. Starting before the Renaissance, this game lets you build your own empire and change history.
You can choose any date you want with historical figures and nations and experience history throughout your time. Choosing marriage candidates, building alliances, and trading with others help your nation thrive. Even whoever is on the throne really influences your nation's progression for both good and bad.
Out of all the grand strategy games in Paradoxs catalog, Stellaris is the one that took a different approach to its setting. Most of the games are based on history, but Stellaris decided to take the genre to space.
Related: Stellaris: Guide For Absolute Beginners
Your journey takes you into space exploration and building a galactic empire. You can discover many new species out in the galaxy by sending research ships out, building space stations, and discovering new planets. There is an infinite number of races to discover, characteristics for your race and others, as well as diplomacy and galactic warfare. If the gameplay doesn't capture your attention, then maybe the stunning visuals created will.
There are many big-name developers that partner up with publishers for their next big game. So when Obsidian Entertainment, developer of games like Fallout: New Vegas and South Park: The Stick of Truth, decided to make a new RPG, the decision was to partner with Paradox.
Pillars of Eternity is an adventure game that aims to recapture the nostalgia of classic RPGs. This game delivers a very expansive and deep character development system that adds to the six races you can play. Each has its own core skills that add to the characters' uniqueness. Not to mention a rich world with many classes, missions, and a reputation system that has an effect on your character.
Prison Architect became a hit management and simulation game due to its fun and chaotic nature. This game brings top-down gameplay with building and managing a prison. As warden of the prison, it is your job to create an environment for the world's most vile prisoners.
Related: Prison Architect: Tips For Building And Running A Successful Prison
What really made this game a hit and stand apart from others is the sporadic nature of the prisoners. While your main job is to optimize the prison, the prisoners can cause riots, start fights, or even start a fire. There are various things that can go on within the prison walls, like gang activity and even disease, so it's wise to make sure you have hired the best staff such as guards, doctors, and others. These are just a few of the features that make this a fun game.
Combing roleplaying and grand strategy in the Medieval Ages is exactly what makes Crusader Kings 3 an outstanding game. Part of the original Paradox Development Studio, this game continues to expand on the Crusader Kings series.
You start by taking control of your house and expanding your dynasty on a vast map. There is a very in-depth customer characterization that has effects on your journey. This game is all about lineage and keeping your heir and bloodline in charge through the years. You can make choices about who you marry or who your heirs marry. You can be as graceful as a ruler as you want, or be devious by sending spies to other houses, plotting against houses, and murdering those you want for your own advantage.
Perhaps one of the biggest and most well-known management games is Cities: Skylines. You get to build up your own city however you want and from there make sure the residents of your city are happy. There are plenty of obstacles that you will face when you plan out your city.
Everything from education, street flow, food, businesses, healthcare, entertainment, and commute all have an effect on your citizens. Those are only a few of the factors you need to think about when constructing your city. There are various DLCs that add different things like airports, stadiums, and weather events that add some extra fun and difficulty to the game. Cities: Skylines also has one of the most active modding communities where you can find a plethora of items to add to your world.
Next: The Best Story-Driven Games
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Hanwha propels Nuri rocket project – The Investor
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Nuri rocket, also known as Korea Space Launch Vehicle-II, is erected on the launch pad at the Naro Space Center in Goheung, South Jeolla Province, Tuesday, a day before liftoff. (Korea Aerospace Research Institute)
Hanwha Group, South Koreas seventh-largest conglomerate, stands at the forefront of the countrys efforts to grow and nurture its space industry, as Hanwha Aerospace became the first system integration company to lead the launch of the homegrown Nuri rocket.
Hanwha Aerospace won the government bid in December to take charge of upgrading the Nuri rocket, also known as Korea Satellite Launch Vehicle-II, and launching it four times through 2027. The company signed a contract worth approximately 286 billion won ($220 million) with the state-run Korea Aerospace Research Institute.
With the responsibility of overseeing the assembly of the Nuri rocket and launch operations, Hanwha Aerospace has been gaining knowledge and expertise from working with KARI, which led all of the countrys space launch projects including the earlier Naro rocket. According to the company, however, there is still a lot to be done for Hanwha to take full control.
Strictly speaking, (the project) is not led by the private sector at the moment. We developed core systems such as the engine, propulsion and position control systems. But KARI has supervised the overall process. Right now, we are in the learning phase. Once we get to the sixth launch, we will play a bigger role, Lee Jun-won, senior vice president at Hanwha Aerospace, told The Korea Herald in an interview earlier this year.
Hanwha Aerospace is looking to win another government project to develop a next-generation satellite launch vehicle capable of launching heavier payloads than the Nuri rocket. Unlike the countrys past space projects led by KARI, the next-generation rocket project will see a private company taking the lead from the beginning.
Hanwha Groups space vision took shape when it established the Space Hub, a conglomerate-wide council dedicated to developing space businesses, in March 2021. Kim Dong-kwan, the groups vice chairman and the eldest son of Hanwha Group Chairman Kim Seung-youn, stands at the helm of the Space Hub.
Hanwha has actively bolstered its space portfolio, acquiring Satrec Initiative, Koreas only satellite company with export sales, and investing in OneWeb, a UK firm specialized in connecting hundreds of low-Earth orbit satellites.
Over 300 local companies, including Hanwha Aerospace, participated in making the Nuri rocket, which successfully placed a dummy satellite into orbit in June last year to make S. Korea the seventh country in the world to have homegrown capability to develop and launch a satellite weighing 1 ton or more.
Following the Nuri rocket milestone, Korea also succeeded in launching and operating the countrys first lunar mission Danuri, also known as the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter, last year.
The series of successful space missions prompted the current Yoon Suk Yeol administrations announcement of ambitious goals to land on the moon in 2032 and on Mars in 2045 when it marks the countrys 100th anniversary of liberation from Japanese colonization. The government underscored the importance of the space economy, signaling the countrys entry into the global space race.
By Kan Hyeong-woo (hwkan@heraldcorp.com)
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Do Androids Dream of Terrible Streets? | Compact Mag – Compact Mag
Posted: at 11:56 am
The arrival of ChatGPT has placed artificial intelligence at the center of US discourse. Not surprisingly, one touchstone for these debates have been the novels of sci-fi author Philip K. Dick. As it happens, this AI-inspired interest in the author of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, among many other visionary works, comes at a time when American policy elites are also gripped by a new urban malaiseanother constant motif in Dicks body of work.
Today, this pair of Dickian concernsthe rise of the AI era and urban declineare assigned different weights by the left and the right. So far, its mostly progressive institutions like The New York Times sounding the alarm about the risks of unhindered AI. The mostly libertarian-inflected right, by contrast, has taken a predictable Let it rip! attitude, the better to punish coastal liberals whose bullshit jobs are threatened by platforms like ChatGPT.
Meanwhile, Americas urban malaise codes as a right-wing concern, with conservative politicians and media determined to make electoral hay of disorder in the cities, a situation that they charge has been exacerbated by liberal politicos lax approach to lifestyle crimes. Among conservatives, the term blue city is permanently (and not wholly unjustly) linked with needle-strewn sidewalks, homeless encampments, and rampant shoplifting.
The two issues are, in fact, closely entangled, in a way that Dick saw clearly but that has often eluded both his cinematic interpreters and the elites who have sought to understand the present by examining his imagined futures. A minor episode in the intellectual history of Los Angeles illustrates this. That was the last time American officialdom turned to Dick as a prophet, albeit via Blade Runner, Ridley Scotts cinematic adaptation of Do Androids?
In 1988, some 150 eminent citizens of LAleaders in politics, business, academe, and philanthropysubmitted a report to then-Mayor Tom Bradley outlining their ambitions for the city as it prepared for the 21st century. In the most notable contribution, the California historian Kevin Starr paid tribute to generations of Angelinos for embracing a headlong futurity: constantly adapting the environment to their visions, natural limits be damned.
Yet Starr wasnt without his fears. The LA of the 1920san era of dramatic growth, when the city had willed its water, railroads, and housing stock into being and then invited a million newcomershad a dominant establishment and a dominant population. He meant white protestants. Yes, their primacy meant overlooking certain suppressions and injustices, but the old regime had supplied the civic unity needed to sustain cohesion amid explosive growth.
Where, Starr wondered, will Los Angeles 2000 find its community, its city in common? One answer came courtesy of Dick-inspired sci-fi: There is the Blade Runner scenario: the fusion of individual cultures into a demotic polyglotism ominous with unresolved hostilities that would now erupt in violence, now settle down in negotiated truce.
Techno-capitalism and urban dilapidation seemed to go hand-in-hand.
As the Marxist geographer Mike Davis, who died last year at age 76, noted, Starrs offhand remark attested to Blade Runners enduring status as the star of sci-fi dystopias. The film has become a sort of visual shorthand for a set of persistent American anxieties about biotechnology, corporate misrule, and multiculturalism, projected from the California dream factory onto the rest of the country (and the world). For Davis, it was significant that the dream factory, Hollywood, was located nearby other key Golden State industries, not least computing and biotech, whose business was to slingshot our species into Dickian dystopia.
Yet Davis wasnt very impressed by Blade Runner as a piece of urban futurism. While boasting whiz-bang effects (by 80s standards), the movie presented a retread of a much older old, and racially tinged, picture of the future as Manhattan-style giganticism: teeming masses of culturally mixed and confused human drones huddling under massive pyramids of steel and glass.
That picture no doubt appealed to the likes of Starr as they sought to place the sole blame for the political-economic dislocations and contradictions of California at the feet of multiculturalism. Lamenting the loss of WASP primacy was a lot easier than facing up to the de-industrialization and middle-class destruction wrought by the neoliberal revolution launched by the likes of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.
For Davis, the Kevin Starr/Blade Runner vision of Los Angeles (as yellow-peril giganticism) missed something still more crucial: the fact that the advances in technology hatched in California sat next to a great unbroken chain of aging bungalows, stucco apartments, and ranch style homesall decaying as the city entered the third millennium. Techno-capitalism and urban dilapidation, sentient machines and lousy bus lines, seemed to go hand-in-hand.
This overlapping of high-tech and physical disrepair is by now ubiquitous not just in California, but across the United States. In Gotham, where I live, Wall Streets Masters of the Universe are still at it, deploying unbelievably complex algorithms to squeeze arbitrage out of the real economy and into their own asset ledgers. Meanwhile, the roads connecting New York City to its airports are riddled with cracks and potholes that recall the Third World (except, many developing nations are actually pulling ahead and frequently boast gleaming new infrastructure). The city itself is filthier than I remember in more than a decade. The subway system dates from the 19th century. The mayor has appointed a rat czar.
America is still the worlds largest and, by some measures, most advanced economy. Yet its headlong futurity coexists with a country where bedbugs quite literally suck the life out of prisoners. New York, LA, Chicago, Seattle, and the Bay Area distill this apparent contradiction in especially concentrated form, but its a national problem. Indeed, Americas Republican-governed states are in some ways worse, since their low-tax, low-spending model fails to attract the sexy futuristic industries.
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How Elon Musk says he splits time among Tesla, Twitter, SpaceX – Automotive News Europe
Posted: at 11:56 am
Elon Musk has two huge companies to run in addition to Tesla, so the billionaire says he generally spends each day "predominantly" focused on only one of them.
"My days are very long and complicated, as you might imagine," Musk said at The Wall Street Journal's CEO Council last week.
"There's a great deal of context switching," he said, which he described as "quite painful."
Musk said he has just one part-time assistant and handles most of his own scheduling because "it's impossible for someone else to know what the priorities are."
He said he works most of the time he's awake and typically goes to bed at 2 a.m.
In the coming weeks, Musk plans to step down from one of his three CEO jobs after hiring NBCUniversal advertising chief Linda Yaccarino to run Twitter, which he bought last year for $44 billion. When Yaccarino arrives, Musk will become Twitter's executive chairman and technology chief.
Musk said he has made plans for who he wants to eventually take over for him at Tesla, Twitter and SpaceX. Don't expect it to be his 3-year-old son X AE A-XII, who often attends company events, or any of Musk's other eight children, the oldest of whom is 19.
"I am definitely not of the school of automatically giving my kids some share of the companies, even if they have no interest or inclination or ability to manage the company," he said. "I think that's a mistake."
Musk said he's weighing plans for how his ownership stakes in his companies would be handled after his death but hasn't made a final decision. But he has told the companies' boards who he wants to succeed him.
"There are particular individuals identified that I've told the board, 'Look, if something happens to me unexpectedly, this is my recommendation for taking over,'" he said. "So in all cases, the board is aware of who my recommendation is. It's up to them. They may choose to go in a different direction."
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How Elon Musk says he splits time among Tesla, Twitter, SpaceX - Automotive News Europe
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