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Monthly Archives: August 2008

Teasing on a Pro-Obama Music Video

Many have likely seen the pro-Obama music video, “American Prayer,” but libertarian Reason.tv takes a satirical look at the video in light of Obama’s oft-professed desire to transform the American economy and preserve American jobs.


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Wisconsin State Journal: “Probe Secret Deal for Deputy.”

I posted earlier this week on a news report that Columbia County D.A. Jane Kohlwey signed a secret deal with a criminal defendant (a deputy) so that the defendant could avoid a felony conviction.  The Wisconsin State Journal carried the story, originally from the Baraboo News Republic

Here are remarks from today’s State Journal editorial:

The state Office of Lawyer Regulation should investigate the galling actions of a Columbia County prosecutor. 
 
District Attorney Jane Kohlwey signed a secret deal last year allowing a former Sauk County sheriff’s deputy to escape a felony conviction for hit and run, the Baraboo News Republic reported this week. Kohlwey also agreed to destroy the deputy’s deferred-prosecution agreement if he abided by its conditions.

The Office of Lawyer Regulation needs to get to the bottom of this troubling episode and make sure other prosecutors across the state aren’t pulling similar stunts behind closed doors.

Trust in Wisconsin’s court system is at stake.

The editorial notes that “Kohlwey is admitting the obvious — she screwed up big time. She also says she didn’t destroyed the document, though an original can’t be found.”  Perhaps Kohlwey thinks that losing a document is better than destroying it, but it’s implausible that copies are not available somewhere, as there were at least two parties to the deal.   

Predictably, D.A. Kohlwey whines that she’s a victim: “The latest twist is Kohlwey complaining that it was unfair for her reprimand to become public.  Clearly Kohlwey needs a refresher course in open government — and quite possibly stiff punishment from the Office of Lawyer Regulation.”
 
How many secret deals are there like this in Wisconsin, where elected prosecutors hide pacts from the public, to avoid their own embarrassment?  

The editorial is available at

http://www.madison.com/
wsj/home/opinion/302700

Daily Bread: August 29, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

The National Weather Service predicts a sunny day with a high of 80. The Farmers’ Almanac continues a multi-day prediction with a forecast for pleasant and fair weather in the Great Lakes region. A match.

There are no public meetings scheduled for Whitewater on the last day of the week — the weekend begins on a private sector note.

Abuse of Protesters at the Democratic National Convention

One would think, and hope, that if an American citizen could protest peacefully anywhere, then he or she would be able to protest outside a political convention hall. 

Officials in Denver may have decided that a political convention means fewer rights for nearby citizens. 
 
News website Raw Story reports that police and municipal officials may have committed numerous violations of basic American freedoms. 
 
Among the allegations are claims that “police refused those arrested access to attorneys. Police did not let detainees use phones unless they posted their own bonds, and even failed to provide shoes, in one case marching a protester into court in bare feet and leg shackles.”  

Additionally, officials may have “tricked protesters into pleading guilty, by giving them the impression they had to plead guilty in order to post bond. This meant that no one was allowed to make a phone call unless they plead guilty, thus making it impossible for arrestees to even call a lawyer until admitting guilt.”
 
There’s a sad irony that people may not be able to lawfully protest outside of a convention for a political party that takes the name Democratic, but perhaps that irony escapes Denver’s officials.   

Here’s the link to the story:

http://rawstory.com/news/2008/
Protesters_denied_access
_to_attorneys_
forced_0828.html

Here’s a link to a letter outlining concerns:
 
http://rawstory.com/images/other/aclu82708.pdf

Student Housing in Whitewater: Our Mistaken and Repetitive Approach

There are two stories from yesterday’s Janesville Gazette that describe the pressures of student housing:
Students Spread Out in Whitewater
City, School Address Housing Concerns.

The stories ably describe arguments that residents of Whitewater have have made against student housing for years with no change in demand.

I certainly don’t believe that demand for student housing is the single biggest challenge facing the city. For an affected homeowner, though, it might seem that way. (I’d easily say municipal leadership and administration of justice is a far greater challenge.)

It’s typical of Whitewater’s anti-market impulses that the way out of these challenges seems to be more “aggressive enforcement.”

It’s a futile option. There’s a conflict because there’s an unwillingness to meet demand for student housing. Attempts to restrict supply through ordinance enforcement will prove intrusive and ineffectual.

The answer to demand for housing would be to permit construction of several off campus multi-unit student apartment buildings with typical amenities.

I would guess, however, that Dane Checolinski, a UW-Whitewater student
and member of our Housing Task force has it right:

These people don’t want students living in their neighborhood, but they have no suggestions for where students should live,” he said. “They want the university to house every single student.”

(This observation applies only to the most obstinate critics of student housing; others are more accommodating.)

Unwillingness to accept a few significant off campus student apartments leaves Whitewater locked in a perpetual war with a large student population that will not go away.

It says all one needs to know about our city administration that after years of debate, and a Housing Task Force, the administration has no standards to measure progress:

City Manager Kevin Brunner said…. “We’ve made a lot of inroads,” he said. “How do we measure that? I don’t know.”

The solution to demand is off campus supply, but that’s the last solution that this admintration will take. All the pamphlets in the world won’t create new rental space.

Until that happens, we’ll have this same discussion every year.

Daily Bread: August 28, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

The National Weather Service predicts a day of thunderstorms and a high of 79. The Farmers’ Almanac begins a new multi-day prediction with a forecast for pleasant and fair weather in the Great Lakes region. They won’t both be right.

There are no public meetings scheduled for Whitewater today.

On this date in Wisconsin history, in 1928, the Wisconsin Historical Society reports that Babe Ruth “hit a towering game-winning home run in the ninth inning to give his team a 5-4 victory in a baseball exhibition at Borchert Field in Milwaukee. Lou Gehrig also played at this event.”

Against Secret Prosecutorial Deals

Readers know that I am opposed to confidentiality agreements in municipal litigation: lawsuits against public entities, about public matters, involving public figures should be publicly known. 
 
Recently, Wisconsin’s Crime Victims Rights Board reprimanded Columbia County District Attorney Jane Kohlwey for something worse: a secret deal with a defendant’s attorney.    
 
The AP Wire relates that
 

The Baraboo News-Republic newspaper reports Kohlwey signed a secret deal with Riedel’s [the defendant’s] attorney in February, saying the case would be dismissed if Riedel satisfied certain conditions. The agreement also called for Kohlwey to destroy all copies of the agreement.

 
The defendant, a former sheriff’s deputy, was accused of “backing over his then-girlfriend.”
 
Under Wisconsin law, a victim is entitled to information on a case’s disposition.  The secret deal between the prosecutor and defense counsel kept that information from the victim as the law requires. 

Secret deals are wrong because they distort justice by allowing prosecutors to extend opportunities to select parties without accountability to the public that elects prosecutors, and often in contradiction to the prosecutors’ own grandstanding public statements. 
 
D.A. Kohlwey contends that she never destroyed the records of the deal.
 
I am unsympathetic; she should never have made the secret deal, and deserves no credit for failure to execute all parts of it before discovery. 
 
This secret pact happened in Columbia County, but we should and must expect that there will not be similar deals in nearby Rock, Jefferson, or Walworth Counties. 
 
Here’s a link to the AP story —
 
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/
W/WI_HIDDEN_RECORDS_CORRECTION_WIOL-
?SITE=WIMAD&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE
=DEFAULT

Daily Bread: August 27, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no public meetings scheduled for Whitewater today.

Today in Wisconsin history, in 1878, a Kenosha editor, Christopher Latham Sholes, patented the typewriter. The Wisconsin Historical Society reports on the details:

The idea for this invention began at Kleinsteuber’s Machine Shop in Milwaukee in the late 1860s. A mechanical engineer by training, Sholes, along with associates Carlos Glidden and Samuel Soulé, spent hours tinkering with the idea. They mounted the key of an old telegraph instrument on a base and tapped down on it to hit carbon & paper against a glass plate. This idea was simple, but in 1868 the mere idea that type striking against paper might produce an image was a novelty. Sholes proceeded to construct a machine to reproduce the entire alphabet. The prototype was sent to Washington as the required Patent Model. This original model still exists at the Smithsonian.

The National Weather Service, forecasts patchy fog with a high of around 83. The Farmers’ Almanac concludes a multi-day prediction with a forecast for stormy weather in the Great Lakes region.

A Little Joke About Joe Biden

I saw a post at a website comment board, that had the name of the poster, and his supposed comments.

Here’s what it looked like:

Joe Biden –

“Here’s a little speech that I wrote last night: Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears…”

A small joke, but amusing to find on a comment board, between other posts.

On Sheboygan Shenanigans: Part 3

Sheboygan confronts a lawsuit – a chaotic and troublesome matter. What are a few of the challenges awaiting a city in this situation?

(Sheboygan is far from my own small city – my analysis is general and implies no specific assessment or even comparison between the cities. Later this week, I will update on a case in Memphis. There is no hidden meaning in my assessment.)

Bad publicity.
A municipality and its so-called people of influence are vulnerable to bad publicity.  Their positions don’t depend on principle; they depend on social connections.  They value how they appear to others, and the outside press that follows a lawsuit isn’t easy to control. 

The Web spreads stories fast, and within a day or two, people from across America will be writing to the plaintiff-blogger, and posting on websites continent-wide, with messages of support.  People in Oklahoma will be following Mayor Perez of Sheboygan. 

The farther away from the small-town elite, the less sympathy there will be for his conduct, and that of the other defendants.      

(A favorable local press won’t help – the Web allows the plaintiff to leapfrog local flacks and hacks to reach a sensible, serious audience.) 

An American community’s reputation is strongest when it embraces the strong American embrace of liberty. 

Damages.
  There is a risk of having to pay damages – money – in most civil suits.  Worse, a federal forum will not include friends, cronies, etc., of the local officials.  If anything, federal staff will look askance at municipal officials who’ll seem small-time compared with federal practice and procedure.

To Social Standing. 
These situations go bad because a few local officials, egged on by ignorant and outraged locals, think they can do whatever they want to a blogger. 

They tell their circle that they’ll ‘handle the problem,’ ‘resolve the matter,’ ‘get the evil blogger,’ etc.  Their friends expect tough measures, and they assure their supporters and sycophants that they’ll ‘take care of things.’ 

When it becomes clear that the law does not allow municipal interference with a blogger’s lawful speech, suddenly all those officials who were going to get ‘tough’ look…weak, ignorant, and foolish. 

From the chatter and admissions of others.
  Most of these cases begin because politicians and their toadies think that their interests are all that matters, and they confer endlessly on the supposed threat that a blogger represents.  They chatter about it like mad.  These officials talk with friends about plans, schemes, theories, etc. 

When confronted from the outside, they’ll try to deny that half the conversations they had ever took place.  It’s too late by then – the same chattiness that causes them to squawk to their friends will lead to some of those friends to admit wrongful conduct in depositions or in affidavits. 

(Someone’s “I have no idea” denial faces a friend’s “Yeah, we talked about doing that a few weeks before it actually happened.”)

By the time a lawsuit’s filed, plaintiff’s counsel may already know who’ll provide impeaching testimony.  

To potential criminal conduct. 
In the Sheboygan case, the plaintiff contends that she is the victim of death threats. 

Death threats against a writer from Sheboygan. There is no one in Sheboygan or anywhere else who has, or ever will have, the right to threaten anyone. 

Not from detestable places like Iran, North Korea, or Libya – from Sheboygan, Wisconsin. 

Those involved deserve meaningful punishment. 

Look how wrong and risky all this might be, though, to those who might have circulated threats initially made by others. 

I have no idea how the threats were made, but look at the risk to everyone involved: did others know and circulate threatening statements made by third parties? 

Did anyone provide comfort and support for threatening statements that others made to a blogger?  (“Go ahead, do it,” “here’s what you should say,” “this is great,” “gotcha,” etc.)

Most or all of these risks to the defendants will might be present in a free speech case.

All might have been avoided, if the defendants had respected individual rights initially, or been sincerely contrite and reconciled to liberty afterward.  

On Sheboygan Shenanigans: Part 2

In a prior post, I mentioned the egregious and reprehensible treatment of Jennifer Reisinger, the blogger at Sheboygan Shenanigans. Her encounter with municipal officials occurred in 2007.

Why do municipal officials go wrong this way? I am not from Sheboygan, but I will offer a few guesses about how so-called public servants go astray, and run roughshod over individual rights.

Local officials fixate on their role as community leaders and people of influence. “I’m somebody” (true) becomes “I’m somebody special” (false).

Town politicians assume local ordinances and practices matter more than state or federal law.

Defenders of entrenched power rationalize their behavior as ‘for the good of the community.’ Government stops being instrumental, and becomes a supposedly higher calling. No it’s not; the defendants in the Sheboygan case will find out how far it is from a higher calling.

Police Lieutenants. There’s always one in these matters? What is it about the use of police lieutenants to enforce orthodoxy in the name of an ‘investigation,’ ‘civil discourse,’ or some other asinine excuse? Is this why someone joins a force – to be nothing but a caddy on behalf of third-rate officials?

Many politicians are ignorant of the law. Elect or appoint someone to office, and he suddenly thinks he’s an expert on the law. Someone memorizes a few rules of parliamentary procedure, and he imagines himself an expert on eminent domain, constitutional doctrine, contract law, etc.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched a politician pontificate erroneously on the law, all the while a staff lawyer sits in the room, whose opinion is never sought. In most areas, people wouldn’t assume that position confers knowledge and wisdom, but politicians often think that holding local office is the equivalent of reading law at Oxford. Suddenly they’re all-knowing.

If a person sat on a hospital board, it wouldn’t make him think that he could perform surgery; politicians often read a few words from a statute, wholly omitting the decades of judicial interpretation, and think they’ve found a quick, convenient answer.

Sometimes one thinks: “Do you believe what you say, or are you just hoping others believe it?”

Many of these locals bemoan coverage that’s lawful, and constitutionally protected, but actually tame. They think that if the coverage is critical, it’s evil. These are people who don’t understand a real press in cities across America – those accustomed to a compliant weekly paper are ignorant of what a vigorous press is like.

I have remarked before that, in my own situation, “America does not end where the Whitewater city limits begin.”

The same is true is Sheboygan, and across all America.

Bloggers typically love America – I know that I do, and I am certain that Ms. Reisinger does, too. When officials try to intimidate and silence a blogger, they place themselves against the American traditional of liberty. Bloggers – modern day pamphleteers — love and embrace this tradition, and those who try to scare them should and will fail.

America is bigger and better than any self-interested, rationalizing official who puts himself ahead of America’s free way of life.