Pre-flight cocktails

The Washington Post reports that there have been more than 250 recent cases of the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency giving “pre-flight cocktail” injections of psychotropic drugs to foreigners being deported. These injections of antipsychotic drugs have been given to people with no history of mental illness and for no medical justification, with the only apparent purpose to sedate them during their flights. The practice of “involuntary chemical restraint of detainees” without medical justification violates some international human rights codes, according to the Post, and is banned in several countries. Confidential documents obtained by the newspaper indicate that in some of the cases they report, detainees were not able to be given additional injections during layovers because to do so would be illegal in the countries in question. These sedations violate the government’s own rules, which only permit sedation if the individual has a mental illness which requires the drugs or if the person is aggressive to the point of creating a danger to those around them. The Post reports that during 2007, there were 67 people deported with medical escorts with no medical justification, 53 of whom were given psychiatric drugs, and 48 of whom had no documented history of violence. Most of those given drugs appear to be individuals who had previously resisted deportation. One man deported to Nigeria was still under the effects of the drugs for four days after his arrival. One drug often reported used was Haldol, which created some controversy during George H.W. Bush’s presidency when it was reported that he took the drug to avoid jet lag; some speculated that this drug was the cause of his vomiting at a dinner with (and vomiting on) the Prime Minister of Japan. A related story in the Post looks at 80 cases of deaths of immigration detainees, of which 30 were found to be “questionable,” including two in Arizona. (Via The Agitator.)

May 15, 2008 · 2 min

Same-sex marriage ban amendment may go to voters again

The Arizona House has passed SB 10242 and sent it on to the Senate. This would put a measure to the voters to amend the Arizona Constitution to ban same-sex marriage. A similar proposal was voted down in 2006, but that measure included a provision that would have prohibited state benefits to domestic partners–this one doesn’t. Unfortunately, I think this has a good chance of passing. Arizona already bans same-sex marriage by statute, but not in its Constitution.

May 13, 2008 · 1 min

Senior McCain advisor helped arrange Rev. Moon coronation

Charlie Black, a senior advisor to the McCain campaign, lent his name to and helped arrange the bizarre March 23, 2004 event on Capitol Hill in which Rev. Sun Myung Moon was crowned King of America and declared himself to be the Messiah. Rev. Moon is a very powerful, wealthy man who has been regularly supported at public events by people such as former President George H. W. Bush and evangelical Christians like Tim and Beverly LaHaye (he helped found the Institute for Creation Research through his Christian Heritage College, co-author of Left Behind; she is the head of Concerned Women for America) and Jerry Falwell. Jonathan Wells of the Discovery Institute is a member of Moon’s Unification Church, which makes DI another organization where evangelical Christians join hands with members of Moon’s cult. Most of these people probably don’t agree with Moon’s nonsense, but they like his money and aren’t above prostituting themselves in order to receive some of it. UPDATE (May 13, 2008): More on Charlie Black, from FiretheLobbyists.com: Charlie Black, McCain’s senior counsel and spokesman, began his lobbying career by representing numerous dictators and repressive regimes ...

May 12, 2008 · 2 min

McCain questionable land swap deal

Friday’s Washington Post describes an Arizona land swap deal–the largest in Arizona history–pushed through Congress by John McCain which had the effect of transferring valuable federal land to Fred Ruskin’s Yavapai Ranch Limited Partnership, that ended up being developed by SunCor Development, owned by McCain supporter Steven A. Betts. The Post article describes past land swap deals that McCain has also pushed through, which have benefited McCain donors Donald R. Diamond and Carl H. Lindner, Jr. Probably all just politics as usual. UPDATE (May 15, 2008): The Arizona Republic finally gets around to covering the story–by reprinting a story from USA Today.

May 12, 2008 · 1 min

McCain dishonesty

Arianna Huffington has given a list of occasions on which Arizona Sen. John McCain has “issued heartfelt denials of things that were actually true”: * That he had talked with John Kerry about possibly leaving the Republican Party to become his vice presidential running mate in 2004. * That he had claimed he didn’t know much about economics. * That he had ever asked for a budget earmark for Arizona. * That he’d ever had a meeting with lobbyist Vicky Iseman.

May 12, 2008 · 1 min

Scott Bloch gets raided by the FBI

Bush’s head of the Office of Special Counsel at the Department of Justice, Scott Bloch, has had his offices and home raided by the FBI. The FBI raided his offices in D.C. yesterday, seizing computers and shutting off email. Bloch himself was interviewed. It’s not clear exactly what prompted the raid, but Bloch has long been under fire for refusing to investigate claims of discrimination based on sexual orientation. There are also allegations that he has retaliated against employees and obstructed investigations. Bloch also has a tie to the Sternberg case, the crown jewel of “Expelled,” in that one of his like-minded appointees, James McVay, a man with no previous experience in employment law, whistleblower law, or federal sector work, took on the Sternberg case and wrote a preliminary report on it despite having no jurisdiction. His preliminary report managed to draw conclusions in contradiction to the actual evidence. UPDATE: The New York Times also covers the story. UPDATE (October 27, 2008): Scott Bloch has been fired. UPDATE (March 30, 2011): Scott Bloch has been sentenced to a month in jail for destroying evidence on his computer. ...

May 7, 2008 · 2 min

The superstitions of John McCain

John McCain carries thirty-one cents of lucky change, a lucky compass, and a lucky feather. He won’t throw a hat on a bed, or pick up a new lucky coin that’s showing tails instead of heads. He won’t take a salt shaker passed to him; it has to be set on the table first. He carries a laminated four-leaf clover in his wallet. He wears lucky shoes. He makes use of a magical lizard belonging to his trip director, Lanny Wiles, to help win golf bets and cause the right college sports teams to win. John McCain is a superstitious nut.

May 6, 2008 · 1 min

Gene Healy on The Cult of the Presidency

Last night I went to hear Gene Healy of the Cato Institute speak about his new book, The Cult of the Presidency, at the Goldwater Institute. I had a chance to speak to him briefly before his talk, and said I’d buy a copy of his book if I liked his talk. I did like his talk, and did buy his book–the clincher was the “illegal” cover of his book. He said that he had sent the galleys to John Dean, former Nixon White House counsel who has become a vocal critic of overreaching executive power, for a blurb, only to receive word back from Dean that his book cover violates U.S. law regarding the use of the presidential seal. (This was ironic in light of Healy’s previous book, Go Directly to Jail: The Criminalization of Almost Everything.) The Onion was sent a cease-and-desist letter by the Bush administration in 2005 for using the presidential seal on its website. In my non-lawyerly opinion, neither The Onion nor the book are actually in violation of the law since the law prohibits the use of the presidential seal in a commercial context that suggests presidential endorsement or approval, and it’s pretty obvious in both cases that no presidential endorsement or approval is implied. Healy’s talk criticized the expansion of executive power from the original description in the U.S. Constitution. While George Washington described himself as “chief magistrate” and refused to start wars with the Indians without Congressional approval, subsequent presidents have expanded their power. Academics of both conservative and liberal stripes have ranked as the “best presidents” those who have engaged in bold exercises of power, while those who have taken more limited roles in line with the Constitution are ranked among the worst (such as Warren G. Harding, whom Healy identified as the best president). Even William Henry Harrison, who served only 30 days as president, receives low poll rankings. By contrast, presidents such as Woodrow Wilson (whom Healy identified as the worst president, for actions such as throwing Eugene V. Debs in jail for criticizing the draft) and Franklin Delano Roosevelt (who put 110,000 Japanese into internment camps and attempted to subvert the U.S. Supreme Court by packing it with six additional appointees loyal to him) are identified as among the best presidents in polls. And today, we have Hillary Clinton saying that she’s prepared to be “commander-in-chief of our economy” from the moment she takes office, yet that’s clearly not the job of the president described in the Constitution, where the only reference to CIC is “Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States.” Healy identified his first moment of apprehension that things had gotten ridiculous about public expectations of the role of the president as a 1992 presidential town hall debate, in which Denton Walthall said (p. 132 of Healy’s book): The focus of my work as a domestic mediator is meeting the needs of children that I work with, by way of their parents, and not the wants of their parents. And I ask the three of you, how can we, as symbolically the children of the future president, expect the two of you, the three of you to met our needs, the needs in housing and in crime and you name it … [emphasis in Healy]None of the candidates challenged Walthall’s assumption that citizens of the United States should be treated “symbolically” as children of a president-father. Healy also spoke about what he called “situational Constitutionalism,” where Republicans oppose expansions of executive power when a Democrat is president, but are happy to expand it with a Republican president, and Democrats do the opposite. It occurred to me that the timing of his book could lead to such a criticism of his work, except that he has been a consistent critic of the Bush administration’s abuses. It’s too bad it didn’t come out before Bush’s re-election, though I doubt it would have made any more difference to the outcome than James Bovard’s The Bush Betrayal, which came out in August 2004, just before that election. In the Q&A, a self-identified liberal* asked if Healy thought that Bush was the worst abuser of executive power in light of his signing statements refusing to enforce, follow, or be bound by various laws. Healy answered that he didn’t consider the signing statements to be the worst of Bush’s actions, since at least they were written openly and not hidden. He said he considered the internment of Japanese-Americans in WWII to be worse than anything Bush has done to date, and that he found other actions of Bush’s to be worse than the signing statements, such as his warrantless wiretapping, his misuse of military commissions, elimination of habeas corpus, etc. He followed that up by saying that what he fears most from Bush’s legacy is that by expanding executive power under a “time of war” doctrine for the “war on terror”–a war that will likely never end–he has effectively made the powers permanent. The similar abuses of the past were during wars that at least were temporary conditions. I look forward to reading his book. * There were a few liberals in attendance, including a member of the Green Party who asked me if it was considered gauche to go for seconds on the food provided–I said no, I was taking seconds myself. UPDATE (May 6, 2008): Also see Mike Linksvayer’s report on Healy’s talk in San Francisco. ...

May 2, 2008 · 7 min

Heartland Institute publishes bogus list of 500 scientists who doubt anthropogenic climate change

Dennis Avery and the Heartland Institute issued a list of “500 Scientists with Documented Doubts of Man-Made Global Warming Scares” earlier this week. DeSmogBlog contacted 122 of the people on the list that they found email addresses for, and received replies from 45 of them within 24 hours, indicating that they did not agree to be on such a list and felt that the Heartland Institute had misrepresented their views. Here are some of the quoted responses: ...

May 2, 2008 · 4 min

Max Dunlap clemency hearing

Max Dunlap, the convicted killer of Arizona Republic investigative reporter Don Bolles, is seeking clemency in a hearing tomorrow. He would like to be released from his life sentence because he is 78 years old, suffering from incontinence from diabetes, and unable to walk easily due to a head injury received in prison. He was sentenced to life in prison for his role in paying two men (John Harvey Adamson and James Robison) to kill Bolles with a car bomb. Bolles died 11 days after the explosion, which took place on June 2, 1976 in the parking lot of the Clarendon Hotel in downtown Phoenix. Although Dunlap has never fingered him, it is widely believed that the hit was ordered and paid for by Arizona liquor wholesaler, land magnate, and organized crime figure Kemper Marley, who was a primary target of Bolles’ investigative reporting. (Adamson testified that Marley was behind the murder.) Not only did Marley never spend a day of his life in jail for his role in Bolles’ murder or any other crime, he has a building named after him at the University of Arizona–the Kemper Marley College of Agriculture building. He also has a building named after him at my high school alma mater, Brophy College Preparatory, called the Ethel and Kemper Marley Information Commons. He died in 1990 at the age of 83 at a beach home in La Jolla, CA. Kemper Marley employed former bootlegger Jim Hensley in one of his wholesale liquor businesses, United Liquor, which had a monopoly on liquor distribution in Arizona. In 1948, Hensley was convicted on seven counts of filing false liquor records, and was charged again in 1953, but was found not guilty that time thanks to a defense from attorney William Rehnquist, future chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. By 1955 Hensley had his own Budweiser distributorship. Hensley’s daughter Cindy inherited his fortune in 2000. She now shares it with her husband, Arizona Senator John McCain. The story of the Hensley fortune–and of how McCain is beholden to liquor interests–is told in a February 17, 2000 Phoenix New Times story, “Haunted by Spirits." The Arizona Project of Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc., is a package of stories, photos, and audio about Don Bolles, who was a member of the organization. UPDATE (July 22, 2009): Max Dunlap died in prison yesterday.

May 1, 2008 · 2 min
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