Showing posts with label Paul Harris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Harris. Show all posts

Justice Department suggests evidence used to help convict Manning was flawed as officials reportedly agree to further tests


The fate of a death row prisoner in Mississippi remains in the balance just days ahead of Tuesday’s planned execution, following the intervention of federal officials who claim that forensic evidence used to help convict him was flawed.


Willie Manning is set to be put to death next week for the murders of two students, Jon Steckler and Tiffany Miller, whose bodies were discovered in rural Mississippi in 1992. They had both been shot dead.


But the Clarion-Ledger newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi has reported that a lawyer for the Justice Department has now written to a local district attorney, Manning’s lawyer and the Innocence Project advocacy group raising its concerns about the evidence.


The letter reportedly states that a review of the original tests had been carried out. “Through this review, we have determined that testimony containing erroneous statements regarding microscopic hair comparison analysis was used in this case,” the letter said.


It added that those statements “exceeded the limits of science” at that time and therefore were invalid.


The paper also reported that the FBI had now agreed to further testing of evidence in the case. An article in Saturday’s edition of the Washington Post, which has devoted a series of articles to questioning the conviction of Manning, stated that a spokesman for Mississippi governor Phil Bryant confirmed that the facts of the case were now being reviewed.


Reportedly, federal officials uncovered the problems with Manning’s conviction as part of a broad review, which began last summer, to recheck evidence from 21,000 cases involving forensic hair examinations.


Manning’s defenders and anti-death penalty advocates say his case is yet another example of a man facing the ultimate punishment for a crime he did not commit. Yet last week the Mississippi supreme court denied a request by Manning’s lawyers to re-examine a rape kit, fingernail scrapings, hairs and fingerprint evidence in the case.


The court ruled narrowly that even if Manning’s DNA was absent, that would not be enough to overturn his 1994 conviction.


“Our examination anew of the record reveals that conclusive, overwhelming evidence of guilt was presented to the jury,” presiding justice Michael Randolph wrote in the decision.


Manning was also separately convicted and sentenced to death for killing two elderly women in their apartment in 1993 elsewhere in the state. He has appealed against that conviction.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media 2013


[image via Mississippi Dept. of Corrections]






via The Raw Story http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/05/04/u-s-officials-claim-errors-in-case-of-death-row-prisoner-willie-manning/

Connecticut’s Chris Murphy writes to Rupert Murdoch, citing gun control debate clash with agenda of Sprint Cup sponsor


The Fox television network looks set to broadcast the NRA-sponsored Nascar Sprint Cup on Saturday, despite a plea from a Connecticut senator to pull the broadcast due to the pro-gun association’s “extreme” agenda.


Chris Murphy, a Democrat, wrote a letter to Rupert Murdoch, the chief of Fox’s parent company, News Corp, saying that the high-profile car race was taking place against the backdrop of a fierce national debate over possible gun control legislation. Those laws, being mulled by the Senate, have been brought in due to the Newtown shooting, in which 20 children and six adults were killed at a school in Connecticut at the end of last year.


In his letter, Murphy said the powerful NRA gun lobby – which since Newtown has been arguing for the placement of armed security guards in schools – had an “extreme nature”.


“I urge you to not broadcast this race on April 13th. Inserting Fox Sports in this debate at this critical time will give credence to an extreme organization that is opposed to reasonable policies to stem gun violence,” Murphy wrote.


Another issue is the tradition at the race, which is being held in Texas, of giving a rifle and six-shooters for the winning drivers to shoot – though the weapons fire blanks. “This celebration of guns is inappropriate in the immediate wake of the Newtown massacre,” Murphy wrote.


The letter follows a missive that Murphy sent a month ago to Nascar boss Brian France, asking him to reconsider the NRA sponsorship. However, there appears little chance that the race will not be shown live. It is expected to see around 150,000 people watching in person in Texas and an audience of millions on television.


A representative of the families at Newtown did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Nascar organisers have said they intend to take a “closer look” at the sport’s sponsorship process, although they indicated that the NRA deal does conform to Nascar’s existing criteria.


Murdoch, however, has shown himself to be in favour of gun law reforms in the wake of Newtown. On his Twitter page, Murdoch once asked: “When will politicians find courage to ban automatic weapons?” He has also urged president Barack Obama to act. “Nice words from [Obama] on shooting tragedy, but how about some bold leadership action?” he stated.


Obama is trying to do exactly that, waging a high-profile campaign to pass gun control. On Saturday, a mother of one of the Newtown victims used the president’s weekly address to issue a heartfelt plea for tighter gun controls. Francine Wheeler, whose six-year-old son Ben died at Sandy Hook elementary school, urged Americans to press Congress to pass “commonsense” laws including universal background checks on would-be weapons buyers


© Guardian News and Media 2013






via The Raw Story http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/04/13/fox-set-to-show-nra-sponsored-nascar-race-despite-senator-murphys-plea-to-rupert-murdoch/

Pre-dawn 50-49 vote passes Senate budget at odds with House fiscal blueprint as Obama prepares his own proposals


The US Senate passed a budget for the first time in four years on Saturday after an early morning vote that saw victory for the Democrats by the narrowest possible margin. The move matches the passing of a vastly different budget, drawn up by the fiscal conservative Paul Ryan, in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.


Now the sides must try to thrash out the differences between the two proposals in negotiations in April that appear far from guaranteed to succeed.


The budget that the Senate endorsed only just succeeded in getting passed. A final vote of 50 votes to 49 came in just after 5am. A group of conservative Democrats – Max Baucus of Montana, Mark Begich of Alaska, Kay Hagan of North Carolina and Mark Pryor of Arkansas – joined the entire Republican caucus in voting against it. All four dissenting Democrats face tough re-election battles next year.


The Senate had not passed a budget resolution since 2009 because of fiscal policy disputes with Republicans that forced Congress to turn to numerous stop-gap spending measures, in order to avoid government shutdowns. Neither of the new budgets would be passed by the opposing chamber and each gives a very different ideological platform from which to put forward its vision of the future of government in America.


The Democrats' plan aims to reduce deficits by $1.85tn over 10 years, through an equal mix of tax increases and spending cuts. It includes unspecified tax rises worth about $975bn. The Republican plan seeks $4.6tnin savings over the same period, without raising new taxes. It aims to reach a small surplus by 2023 through deep cuts to healthcare and social programs that aid the poor.


The Senate Budget Committee chairman, Patty Murray, said she intended to try to unite the two budgets but acknowledged the serious problems that lie ahead. "While it is clear that the policies, values, and priorities of the Senate budget are very different than those articulated in the House budget, I know the American people are expecting us to work together to end the gridlock and find common ground, and I plan to continue doing exactly that," she said.


The Senate's top Republican, Kentucky senator Mitch McConnell, immediately hit back. "This budget is a rehash of the extreme policies that continue to hobble the economy and crush the middle class," he said in a statement, noting that the budget would not become law.


President Barack Obama intends to release his own budget vision for 2014 next month, in a move that may go some way to uniting the two proposals so far. In a statement on Saturday, the White House said it was "encouraging that both the Senate and House have made progress by passing budgets through regular order".


But in an indication of entrenched party positions, the statement noted: "The House Republican budget refuses to ask for a single dime of deficit reduction from closing tax loopholes for the wealthy and the well-connected but instead makes deep cuts to education and manufacturing while asking seniors and the middle class to pay more. That is not an approach we support and it is not and approach the majority of the American people support."


The looming debates over the budget come as America faces yet another fierce battle over raising its debt ceiling. The measure used to be routine, allowing the US access to international capital markets in order to fund itself. But it has recently become a focus of intense political horse-trading as Republicans use the threat of a no vote to extract concessions on cutting government spending. Any failure to raise the debt ceiling could result in a US default on its financial obligations – potentially triggering a major global fiscal crisis.






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via The Guardian World News http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/23/senate-passes-budget-four-years

Drone attacks and new NDAA law under fire as critics fear US civil liberties are being undermined


President Barack Obama is facing a liberal backlash over his hardline national security policy, which critics say is more extreme and conservative than that pursued by George W Bush.


The outrage comes after a week in which Obama's nominee to be the next head of the CIA, current White House adviser John Brennan, faced a grilling from the Senate intelligence committee over his enthusiastic support of using unmanned drones to strike suspected Islamic militants all over the globe.


It also comes after a court hearing in New York in which numerous liberal activists and journalists argued that a new Obama law – the National Defence Authorisation Act (NDAA) – has dealt a serious blow to civil liberties by allowing American citizens to be detained indefinitely without trial.


Both developments also add to liberal frustration with an Obama administration that has ruthlessly cracked down on whistleblowers, especially on matters of national security, and failed to implement a promise to close down the Guantánamo Bay prison camp.


"If Bush had done the same things as Obama, then more people would have been upset about it. He is a Democrat though, and to an extent can get away with it," said Daniel Ellsberg, who as a government official leaked the Pentagon Papers in 1971 and helped to expose the truth about the Vietnam war. Ellsberg is now one of the plaintiffs in the case against the NDAA and insists that the administration has used the law to give itself widespread and unconstitutional new powers: "We have been losing our guaranteed freedoms one by one."


The government denies that the NDAA represents any sort of threat to ordinary citizens and has appealed against a judge's ruling that it is unconstitutional, saying that the White House needs such powers to fight terrorism. However, critics say its use of broad language to define what constitutes a terrorist or what actions make up support for terrorist groups could drag in journalists, activists and academics. The case, which is currently on appeal in New York, could go all the way to the supreme court. Liberal film-maker Michael Moore has attacked the Obama administration for backing the NDAA. "In order to protect us from terrorism, the government is taking away our constitutional rights," said Moore, who made the anti-Bush documentary Fahrenheit 9/11.


But much of the real focus of liberal ire has been the administration's huge expansion of its use of drones. Brennan has been at the forefront of that programme and its "kill list", maintained by the White House, which targets specific Islamist militants in countries such as Afghanistan, Yemen, Pakistan and Somalia. The programme is backed by military and intelligence chiefs but independent groups that track the attacks say it has caused hundreds of civilian casualties. It has also been criticised for killing radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki and his 16-year-old son, who were American citizens.


The administration is facing intense pressure to make public secret documents that lay out its legal rationale for the killings. But it has so far resisted, prompting many groups to compare Obama's national security policy to Bush's drawing-up of secret legal memos justifying torture techniques such as waterboarding. "The parallels to the Bush administration torture memos are chilling," said Vincent Warren, executive director for the Centre for Constitutional Rights. "Those were unchecked legal justifications drawn up to justify torture; these are unchecked justifications drawn up to justify extrajudicial killing."


Obama's policy has put him in political alliance with some strange bedfellows. Three hawkish Republican senators, including 2008 presidential candidate John McCain, filed a brief in support of the NDAA law during the court hearing. They defended Obama's stance on national security grounds.


Another source of anti-Obama anger for liberal groups has been the administration's attitude to whistleblowers. Obama has used an arcane piece of first world war legislation, the 1917 Espionage Act, six times to pursue cases, more than all his predecessors combined. One case involved former CIA agent John Kiriakou, who was prosecuted for leaks after he went public with allegations of torture of suspects. He has now been jailed, which critics point out means that, while no one has been prosecuted for torture, a man who sought to end the practice is behind bars. Jesselyn Radack, a director of the Government Accountability Project, which helps to defend whistleblowers, said using the Espionage Act was a strategy designed to intimidate those exposing government wrongdoing. "They are being labelled enemies of the state," she said.


One of those is Thomas Drake, a National Security Agency worker who has been prosecuted after leaking details of waste and overspending at the organisation. The case against him collapsed in 2011 after he agreed to plead guilty to a misdemeanour, and the government dropped more serious charges that could have jailed him for 35 years.


But the experience has left Drake a strident critic of the administration. At a meeting in Manhattan last week where numerous civil rights activists including Ellsberg and Moore gathered to discuss the NDAA case, Drake said that first Bush and then Obama had increasingly used secret powers to carry out national security policy since the World Trade Centre terrorism attacks of 2001.


"Everything that has happened since 9/11 has simply increased the power of that secret government. The constitution for them is just a piece of paper. It is an inconvenient truth," he said.






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via The Guardian World News http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/feb/09/barack-obama-extreme-anti-terror-tactics-liberal-backlash