FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 10.10.16

Good moring, Whitewater.

Whitewater’s work week will begin with sunny skies and a high of seventy-one. Sunrise is 7:03 AM and sunset 6:19 PM, for 11h 15m 05s of daytime. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 62.7% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Planning Commission meets tonight at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1973, Vice President Agnew resigns:

On October 10, 1973, Spiro Agnew became the second Vice President to resign the office. Unlike John C. Calhoun, who resigned to take a seat in the Senate, Agnew resigned and then pleaded no contest to criminal charges of tax evasion,[31] part of a negotiated resolution to a scheme wherein he was accused of accepting more than $100,000 in bribes[32] during his tenure as governor of Maryland. Agnew was fined $10,000 and received three years’ probation.[33] The $10,000 fine covered only the taxes and interest due on what was “unreported income” from 1967. The plea bargain was later mocked by former Maryland Attorney General Stephen H. Sachs as “the greatest deal since the Lord spared Isaac on the mountaintop.”[34] Students of Professor John F. Banzhaf III from the George Washington University Law School, collectively known as Banzhaf’s Bandits, found four residents of the state of Maryland willing to put their names on a case that sought to have Agnew repay the state $268,482, the amount it was said he had taken in bribes. After two appeals by Agnew, he finally wrote a check for $268,482 that was turned over to Maryland State Treasurer William S. James in 1983.[35]

As a result of his no contest plea, the Maryland judiciary later disbarred Agnew, calling him “morally obtuse”.[36] As in most jurisdictions, Maryland lawyers are automatically disbarred after being convicted of a felony, and a no contest plea exposes the defendant to the same penalties as one would face with a guilty plea.[citation needed]

Agnew’s resignation triggered the first use of the 25th Amendment, specifically Section 2, as the vacancy prompted the appointment and confirmation of Gerald Ford, the House Minority Leader, as his successor. This remains one of only two instances in which the amendment has been employed to fill a vice-presidential vacancy. The second time was when Ford, after becoming President upon Nixon’s resignation, chose Nelson Rockefeller (originally Agnew’s mentor in the moderate wing of the Republican Party) to succeed him as Vice President. Had Agnew remained as Vice President when Nixon resigned just 10 months later, Agnew himself would have become the 38th President, instead of Ford.[30]

JigZone‘s daily puzzle for Monday is of a bridge:

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