Photo of the Day
Friday, February 12th, 2010Alexandria, Virginia.
Alexandria, Virginia.
This Billboard list of “sexiest songs” is offensive to anyone who has ever had sex. Do people really shag to “Sledgehammer”? And “Honky Tonk Women”? Because nothing’s hotter than a lyric like, “She blew my nose and then she blew my mind.”
Anyway, I’ll offer up a little Solomon Burke in protest. Here’s “Flesh and Blood,” the Joe Henry-penned tuned from Burke’s masterful album Don’t Give Up on Me.
Feel free to add your own favorites in the comments. Let’s see if we can compile a better gettin’ it on playlist than Billboard’s.
Certainly can’t do much worse!
President Obama has now gone 387 days into his presidency without issuing a single pardon or commutation. He trails only George Washington, John Adams, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush for longest pardon drought to start a presidency.
The ACLU is mounting a campaign to make Hamedah Hasan Obama’s first executive clemency. Hasan was given a 27-year mandatory minimum sentence for playing a relatively minor role in her cousin’s crack cocaine operation. The long sentence was due to the crack/powder cocaine sentencing disparity. It was Hasan’s first offense, and the acts that led to her conspiracy conviction were all nonviolent. The judge who sentenced Hasan is also asking for her release. So far, she’s served 16 years of her sentence. Only an act of executive clemency can prevent her from serving out the remaining 11 years.
More about Hasan’s case here.
Meanwhile, pardon power scholar P.S. Ruckman points to a CBS News story about Obama’s pardon drought, and says an administration aide’s explanation for the lack of clemency action—that first-year presidents get overwhelmed with pardon petitions—simply isn’t true.


Alexandria, Virginia.
Last month, California Superior Court Judge Andrea Bryan ordered the release of convicted child molester Augustin Uribe due to “numerous acts of misconduct” by the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office. Uribe’s conviction was overturned in 2008 after a videotape taken during a physical examination of the alleged victim called into doubt whether she had actually been assaulted. The video was never handed over to defense attorneys. The alleged victim has since recanted her accusation.
Shortly after Judge Bryan’s decision, Santa Clara County DA Dolores Carr put out a press release announcing her office would be boycotting Judge Bryan’s courtroom, a move a San Jose Mercury News editorial called “extreme, highly unusual, and broadly criticized by experts in legal ethics as a direct challenge to the independence of the court.”
Carr, who was elected in 2006 on a platform promising to reform the DA office’s win-at-all-costs mentality, lost sight of that objective rather quickly. I wrote a short piece last July about several related incidents:
In 2007 the San Jose Mercury News revealed that Deputy District Attorney Jaime Stringfield of Santa Clara County, California, had introduced a fake DNA report into evidence in a sex abuse case. In February, responding to the revelation that the district attorney’s office had failed to turn over thousands of videotaped interviews with suspects, many of which contained exculpatory information, the county public defender’s office announced that it would review 1,500 sex abuse cases for possible wrongful convictions. Later that month, a state bar judge suspended Deputy District Attorney Ben Field’s law license for four years based on misconduct in four criminal cases dating back to 1995. And in March, the Mercury News reported that in hundreds of cases, officials at the county crime lab didn’t tell prosecutors or defense attorneys when their experts couldn’t agree on fingerprint matches…
At a February meeting of county prosecutors, Carr vowed that none of her staff would be “thrown under the bus” as a result of the scandals. Immediately after the state bar’s decision to suspend Field’s license—the harshest penalty imposed on a state attorney in 20 years—Carr announced that Field would continue working for her office while he appealed the ruling. She also vowed to help limit the ability of the state bar to punish prosecutors for misconduct.
Since that piece ran, the number of tapes the DA’s office should have turned over to defense attorneys but didn’t has risen to more than 3,300.
I’ve written before about how rarely bad prosecutors are disciplined for their mistakes, even when those mistakes send innocent people to prison. It’s probably not surprising, then, to see some who hold the position come to view that lack of discipline as an entitlement. Carr seems to have lots of invective for the people who want to hold her deupties accountable, but little for the prosecutors who actually broke the rules.
Unfortunately, the political process doesn’t appear capable of holding Carr acountable, either. She’s favored to win reelection this year.
George Mason University Econ Chair Don Boudreaux summarizes my feelings as well in this letter to the editor of the Washington Post.
Your favorable front-page remembrance of the late U.S. Rep. John Murtha inadvertently testifies to the abysmally low standards to which politicians are held (“John Murtha dies; longtime congressman was master of pork-barrel politics,” Feb. 9). By your own account, Mr. Murtha was the “King of Pork.” He was known for skillfully using Congressional procedures to earmark funds for his district – that is, to prompt Uncle Sam to take money from Americans at large and give it to the relatively small number of Pennsylvanians who elect Mr. Murtha to office.
His justification? “I take care of my district.” Nothing here about spending taxpayer money wisely; nothing about the general welfare; nothing about principles or fiscal responsibility.
If Mr. Murtha on his own had traveled the country picking pockets, robbing banks, and burgling houses, only to bring the booty back to western PA and share it with his friends, he would have been rightly despised as a common criminal. But because Mr. Murtha joined forces with persons having similarly questionable morals, who together pass off their thievery as “lawmaking,” he’s celebrated in your pages – celebrated for doing, save on a grander scale, exactly what common thieves do.
And I’m sure it’s pure coincidence that many of the recipients of those earmarks just happened to be companies owned by or that employed Murtha’s friends and relatives.
The media loves to venerate politicians when they pass, simply because they were politicians. Doesn’t seem to matter what sort of scoundrels they really were.
We’re getting another 10-20 inches of snow, starting tonight. This is getting a bit ridiculous. At least Fairbanks has the Northern Lights.

So I’m wondering how many people saw the commercial below last night and not only didn’t find it farcical, satirical or horrifying, but were kind of okay with what they were seeing.
Maybe it’s my nutty libertarianism kicking in, but I actually initially thought it was some sort of PSA. Something like, “Do you part now, so it doesn’t have to get to this later.”
My crime column this week looks at that question in light of the 25oth DNA exoneration last week.
A quick roundup of recent stories on law enforcement officials and DWI laws…
Via Mark Frauenfelder’s Twitter feed, this picture is pretty funny.
Noel St. John, quasi-official photographer of TheAgitator.com, made this very cool time-lapse animation of the D.C.-area’s blizzard this past weekend.
Writing in Politico, Chris Preble of the (right-wing extremist!) Cato Institute and Heather Hurlburt of the National Security Network debunk the bipartisan Washington consensus that military spending should always be off-limits to budget freezes. For a proposal so outside the Beltway mainstream, their action plan sounds pretty reasonable:
But ultimately, because our national security rests on our economic health as well as on the strength of our military, a liberal and a libertarian can agree that the Pentagon should no longer get a pass. Congress must stop funding projects to satisfy parochial domestic interests. The Pentagon must stop buying weapons systems that are already outdated, unworkable or both. And the administration must carefully define our vital security interests, reshape our grand strategy to more equitably distribute the burdens of policing the globe and reduce the occasions when our military will be called on to fight.
This one will be tougher to pull off…
For nearly two decades, Republicans and Democrats in Washington have deployed the U.S. military as a police force of first resort. Now is the time for a change.
We might also change the odd policy of not including war spending when calculating the federal budget deficit.
Alexandria, Virginia.
Kudos to Mississippi State Rep. Bob Evans, who astute readers will also recognize is Cory Maye’s chief counsel.
Evans has introduced a bill (PDF) in the Mississippi legislature explicitly making it legal to videotape or record an on-duty police officer, firefighter, or conservation officer.


Two streets in my neighborhood that lie right next to one another. Photos were taken within seconds of one another. The street on the left is a main road. The street on the right is a service road. The service road is owned by the city, but for all practical purposes, it’s private. All of the parking spaces along the side are the property of the people who live in the houses that line the street. The street is one-way, and it’s only used by the people who own or rent those spaces. Anyone passing through obviously takes the main road. The city will eventually get around to plowing the main road. The city never plows the service road. Less than 24 hours after the blizzard, guess which road is clear, and which is suitable only for four-wheel drive vehicles?
More snow-themed econ here.
MORE: Some of you seem to have missed the point of the post. I’m not criticizing the city for not getting to the main road. It’s only been a day, and we got the largest snowfall in the area’s recorded history. The point is that where people expect the city to send eventually plows, the road is still snowed. Where the city has no history of sending a plow, and isn’t likely to, residents grabbed shovels, and cleared the road in 24 hours.
Got my front door open. Did some shoveling. Took some pictures. Today we have a bright winter sun. It’s beautiful on the snow, if a bit blinding. Hoping to get to Old Town before the Super Bowl this evening to snap some more pics.
On to the links . . .