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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Friday, December 18, 2015

RSN: A Blind Eye Toward Turkey's Crimes, Chicago Pays Millions to Victims but Punishes Few in Killings by Police, The United States Teams Up With Al Qaeda ... Again



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Robert Parry | A Blind Eye Toward Turkey's Crimes
Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan. (photo: Reuters)
Robert Parry, Consortium News
Parry writes: "The alleged ties between Turkish President Erdogan and Islamist terrorists in Syria is an embarrassment for the Obama administration and the U.S. news media, which would prefer to look the other way rather than face up to the danger created by an out-of-control NATO 'ally.'"
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Jeremy Scahill and Margot Williams | A Secret Catalogue of Government Gear for Spying on Your Cellphone
Jeremy Scahill and Margot Williams, The Intercept
Excerpt: "The Intercept has obtained a secret, internal U.S. government catalogue of dozens of cellphone surveillance devices used by the military and by intelligence agencies. The document, thick with previously undisclosed information, also offers rare insight into the spying capabilities of federal law enforcement and local police inside the United States."
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Planned Parenthood Survives Paul Ryan's First Budget Deal
Alex Zielinski, ThinkProgress
Zielinski writes: "Three months ago, Republican members of Congress - including multiple presidential candidates - were threatening to shut down the government if the federal budget included Planned Parenthood funding. Early Wednesday morning, these same funds slipped quietly into Congress' lengthy spending bill. None of the major policy riders that would leave the door open for future funding cuts made it in."
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An Unbelievable Story of Rape
T. Christian Miller, ProPublica and Ken Armstrong, The Marshall Project
Excerpt: "An 18-year-old said she was attacked at knifepoint. Then she said she made it up. That's where our story begins."
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Chicago Pays Millions to Victims but Punishes Few in Killings by Police
Monica Davey and Timothy Williams, The New York Times
Excerpt: "The Chicago Police Department has been known for issuing little or no punishment to its own."
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Dana Cross, the mother of Calvin Cross, a 19-year-old killed by the police in Chicago in 2011, outside her home. (photo: Andrew Nelles/The New York Times)
Dana Cross, the mother of Calvin Cross, a 19-year-old killed by the police in Chicago in 2011, outside her home. (photo: Andrew Nelles/The New York Times)

he gunshots blasted on and on, 45 in all, until Calvin Cross lay dead in a vacant lot. Mr. Cross, 19, had run away after three Chicago police officers pulled alongside him on a South Side street near his house. Bullets hit his chest, arm, back, face and the little finger on his right hand.
The officers, who fired four weapons including an assault rifle that night in May 2011, said that Mr. Cross had fired at them. Investigators found an old revolver several hundred feet from Mr. Cross’s path. But tests later showed definitively that the gun was inoperable and did not have Mr. Cross’s fingerprints.
Among the officers, part of a special unit that some have accused of aggressive stops and illegal searches and that has since been disbanded, there have been 17 complaints over the years, but none led to discipline. The three were cleared of wrongdoing in Mr. Cross’s death, too, and returned to duty.
The officers, who fired four weapons including an assault rifle that night in May 2011, said that Mr. Cross had fired at them. Investigators found an old revolver several hundred feet from Mr. Cross’s path. But tests later showed definitively that the gun was inoperable and did not have Mr. Cross’s fingerprints.

Among the officers, part of a special unit that some have accused of aggressive stops and illegal searches and that has since been disbanded, there have been 17 complaints over the years, but none led to discipline. The three were cleared of wrongdoing in Mr. Cross’s death, too, and returned to duty.

Nevertheless, the city this year paid Mr. Cross’s family $2 million after relatives filed a wrongful-death suit.


“One officer reloaded and another one shot at him with two different guns,” Dana Cross said of her son’s shooting, which she heard from inside her house. “I want to know why those officers are still working.”

The release last month of a 2014 video showing a Chicago police officer fatally shooting another teenager, Laquan McDonald, has upended this city. The police superintendent, Garry F. McCarthy, was forced out despite a reduction in crime citywide. So was the leader of an authority charged with disciplining officers. The Justice Department has opened an investigation into possible civil rights abuses by the Police Department. Demonstrators call nearly every day for Mayor Rahm Emanuel to resign.

But the Chicago Police Department’s record of brutality began long before Mr. McDonald, 17, lay crumpled on Pulaski Road. For decades — back to violent clashes at the Democratic National Convention in 1968 and the confessions coerced by a “midnight crew” of detectives accused of using suffocation, electric shock and Russian roulette on black men in the 1970s and 1980s — the Chicago police have wrestled with allegations of torture, racism, weak oversight and a code of silence.

“There is a problem in the city of Chicago when an officer who was sworn to serve and protect can gun down a citizen for no other reason than that he was black,” the Rev. Marvin Hunter, who was Mr. McDonald’s great-uncle, said last week at his church on the West Side. “Laquan McDonald represents thousands of Laquan McDonalds — same black skin, same poverty, same social and economic injustice that is put upon them, but with different names and different ages.”

In Chicago, the nation’s third-largest city, officers shot and killed 70 people, most of them black, in a five-year span ending in 2014. That was the most among the nation’s 10 largest cities during the same period, according to the Better Government Association, a nonprofit watchdog organization.

The Chicago Police Department has also been known for issuing little or no punishment to its own, even after a 2007 overhaul of its discipline system that was portrayed as creating a tough, autonomous authority.

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Andrew Cockburn | The United States Teams Up With Al Qaeda ... Again
Andrew Cockburn, Harper's Magazine
Cockburn writes: "Over the past year, some distinguished figures have voiced support for a closer relationship with Al Qaeda's rebranded extensions."
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Confirmed: World's Largest Fracking-Caused Earthquake Just Took Place in British Columbia
Lorraine Chow, EcoWatch
Chow writes: "Fluid injection from hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, triggered a 4.6-magnitude earthquake that struck northeast British Columbia over the summer, the Canadian province's energy regulator has confirmed. It's the largest fracking-caused earthquake in the province to date, according to The Canadian Press."
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