Bill Simpich | Sirhan Denied Parole: It's a Broken Criminal Justice System
Bill Simpich, Reader Supported News
Simpich writes: "Sirhan Sirhan, the accused killer of Robert F. Kennedy, was denied parole for the 15th time on Wednesday, February 10. After 48 years in prison, he has done everything he could to change his life. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has called not only for his release but for a new investigation of his father's death."
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Bill Simpich, Reader Supported News
Simpich writes: "Sirhan Sirhan, the accused killer of Robert F. Kennedy, was denied parole for the 15th time on Wednesday, February 10. After 48 years in prison, he has done everything he could to change his life. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has called not only for his release but for a new investigation of his father's death."
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Rallies Take Place in Over 50 US Cities to Support Apple in FBI Case
Tim Hardwick, MacRumors
Hardwick writes: "Privacy campaigners held organized rallies across the US yesterday to protest the FBI's demands that Apple unlock the iPhone at the center of its San Bernardino shooter investigation."
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Tim Hardwick, MacRumors
Hardwick writes: "Privacy campaigners held organized rallies across the US yesterday to protest the FBI's demands that Apple unlock the iPhone at the center of its San Bernardino shooter investigation."
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Without Antonin Scalia on the Bench, the Supreme Court's Liberals Spoke Up and Won Out
Mark Joseph Stern, Slate
Stern writes: "Pondering how far the fruit has to be from the tree to cease being poisonous can be an amusing philosophical exercise. But, as Justice Sonia Sotomayor demonstrated during oral arguments in Utah v. Strieff on Monday, in impoverished minority communities like Ferguson, Missouri, the continued vitality of the exclusionary rule is no mere academic matter."
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Mark Joseph Stern, Slate
Stern writes: "Pondering how far the fruit has to be from the tree to cease being poisonous can be an amusing philosophical exercise. But, as Justice Sonia Sotomayor demonstrated during oral arguments in Utah v. Strieff on Monday, in impoverished minority communities like Ferguson, Missouri, the continued vitality of the exclusionary rule is no mere academic matter."
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Researchers Have Discovered a New and Surprising Racial Bias in the Criminal Justice System
Jeff Guo, The Washington Post
"For a nation as diverse as the United States, the judiciary is quite male and white. In theory, this shouldn't matter. Judges are supposed to be impartial - as boring as 'umpires,' in the famous words of Chief Justice John Roberts. In practice, of course, it's much messier."
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Jeff Guo, The Washington Post
"For a nation as diverse as the United States, the judiciary is quite male and white. In theory, this shouldn't matter. Judges are supposed to be impartial - as boring as 'umpires,' in the famous words of Chief Justice John Roberts. In practice, of course, it's much messier."
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New Trigger Warning at University of Houston Struggling With Campus-Carry Law: 'DO NOT Confront a Student'
Justin Wm. Moyer, The Washington Post
Moyer writes: "At the University of Houston, educators were being warned about triggers - by peers struggling with how to teach when a new Texas law takes effect Aug. 1 that will allow students who are licensed to carry concealed weapons on campus."
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Justin Wm. Moyer, The Washington Post
Moyer writes: "At the University of Houston, educators were being warned about triggers - by peers struggling with how to teach when a new Texas law takes effect Aug. 1 that will allow students who are licensed to carry concealed weapons on campus."
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Afghanistan War: Just What Was the Point?
Nick Paton Walsh, CNN
Walsh writes: "It is worse in Afghanistan now than I ever could have imagined. And I was a pessimist."
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Nick Paton Walsh, CNN
Walsh writes: "It is worse in Afghanistan now than I ever could have imagined. And I was a pessimist."
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Obama Bans US Imports of Slave-Produced Goods
Martha Mendoza, Associated Press
Mendoza writes: "Federal officials are preparing to enforce an 86-year-old ban on importing goods made by children or slaves under new provisions of a law signed by President Barack Obama."
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Martha Mendoza, Associated Press
Mendoza writes: "Federal officials are preparing to enforce an 86-year-old ban on importing goods made by children or slaves under new provisions of a law signed by President Barack Obama."
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