Issues

Millions Of Illegal Immigrants Are Using A Massive Scam To Get Bigger Tax Refunds Than You Are

TruthNews.US - News - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24
The American Dream | Did you know that illegal immigrants all over the United States are using a massive scam to receive tax refunds from the federal government that are often in excess of $10,000?

Former New England mob boss gets 5½ years in R.I. strip club plot

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — The former New England Mafia boss was sentenced Friday to 5½ years in prison for his role in the shakedown of Providence strip clubs, becoming the first ex-mob leader to be locked up in a case that has ensnared nine people described by prosecutors as having ties ...

Ghost City Goes High Tech

TruthNews.US - News - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24
Infowars.com | According to the BBC, the town will "test out the latest technologies such as renewable energies and terrorism security systems."

Kidnap-slaying suspect kills himself; 2 girls OK

GUNTOWN, Miss. — A man wanted by the FBI for killing a mother and daughter and kidnapping two other girls shot himself to death as officers closed in, but the two children were rescued without injuries and released from a hospital Friday.

Authorities who tracked Adam Mayes to a wooded ...

NYTimes.com: "2 Opinions on Stop-and-Frisk Report"

FourthAmendment.com - News - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24

NYTimes.com: 2 Opinions on Stop-and-Frisk Report by Al Baker and Joseph Goldstein

In 2003, the second year of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s first term, police officers confiscated 604 guns through 160,851 stop-and-frisk encounters: a success rate of one gun for every 266 stops.

Last year, the police seized 780 guns through 685,724 stop-and-frisk encounters, meaning that officers made 879 stops for each gun found.

Critics of the Police Department’s street-stop tactics, including the New York Civil Liberties Union, said the falling gun recovery rate was a sign that the department was stopping too many innocent people as it made an increasing number of street stops in minority neighborhoods.

"Marijuana Odor Perception: Studies Modeled From Probable Cause Cases"

FourthAmendment.com - News - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24

Marijuana Odor Perception: Studies Modeled From Probable Cause Cases, 28 Law and Human Behavior, No. 2 (April 2004), by Richard L. Doty, Thomas Wudarski, David A. Marshall, and Lloyd Hastings:

The 4th Amendment of the United States Constitution protects American citizens against unreasonable search and seizure without probable cause. Although law enforcement officials routinely rely solely on the sense of smell to justify probable cause when entering vehicles and dwellings to search for illicit drugs, the accuracy of their perception in this regard has rarely been questioned and, to our knowledge, never tested. In this paper, we present data from two empirical studies based upon actual legal cases in which the odor of marijuana was used as probable cause for search. In the first, we simulated a situation in which, during a routine traffic stop, the odor of packaged marijuana located in the trunk of an automobile was said to be detected through the driver’s window. In the second, we investigated a report that marijuana odor was discernable from a considerable distance from the chimney effluence of diesel exhaust emanating from an illicit California grow room. Our findings suggest that the odor of marijuana was not reliably discernable by persons with an excellent sense of smell in either case. These studies are the first to examine the ability of humans to detect marijuana in simulated real-life situations encountered by law enforcement officials, and are particularly relevant to the issue of probable cause.

Network World: "Fight the Patriot Act and win. Next? Promise privacy, a surveillance-free ISP"

FourthAmendment.com - News - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24

Network World: Fight the Patriot Act and win. Next? Promise privacy, a surveillance-free ISP:

Nick Merrill, once known as John Doe, secretly fought for our First and Fourth Amendment rights, battled against NSL abuse, a gag order, excessive government secrecy, and almost entirely redacted documents from FBI counterintelligence. Living under such mentally-exhausting circumstances for years is bound to change a person, but Merrill believes it is "better to die on your feet than live on your knees" and is "hoping to do further legal challenges to some of the warrantless wiretapping laws in America.” What’s next after fighting the Patriot Act and winning? Merrill intends to create a surveillance-free ISP with end-to-end encryption that promises to put your privacy above profit. The Calyx Institute promises to be an ISP that will stand up to the government.

FDA panel backs first pill to block HIV infection

SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP) — The first drug shown to prevent HIV infection won the endorsement of a panel of federal advisers Thursday, clearing the way for a landmark approval in the 30-year fight against the virus that causes AIDS.

In a series of votes, a Food and Drug Administration ...

Police: Kidnap-slaying suspect slain; 2 girls OK

GUNTOWN, Miss. (AP) — A manhunt for a fugitive accused of kidnapping and a double-slaying ended Thursday after the suspect apparently shot himself and died. The girls he fled with are safe, police said.

Adam Mayes, 35, was killed Thursday evening after authorities acted on a ...

8th-graders make 'minuscule gains,' still lag in science, report says

ATLANTA — Eighth-graders in the U.S. are doing better in science than they were two years ago, but seven out of 10 still are not considered proficient, the federal government said Thursday.

What's more, just 2 percent have the advanced skills that could lead to careers in the field. That's ...

Christie vetoes plan for health exchange

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Gov. Chris Christie on Thursday vetoed legislation that would set up a state health insurance exchange as part of President Obama's health care overhaul, saying the state shouldn't rush to enact such a law and possibly create new burdens on taxpayers while the constitutionality of the ...

Feds pick legal fight with Sheriff Arpaio

The Justice Department, which first targeted Sheriff Joe Arpaio four years ago over his handling of illegal immigrants arrested in the Phoenix area, filed a civil lawsuit in federal court Thursday accusing the sheriff and his office of "unconstitutional and unlawful actions" against Hispanics.

The complaint, which says the Maricopa ...

Asteroid Vesta pummeled twice by smaller objects

LOS ANGELES — The giant asteroid Vesta got clobbered not once but twice, and it has the scars to prove it.

Ever since the Hubble Space Telescope spied a huge depression in the asteroid's south pole, scientists surmised it was carved by a collision with a celestial object, most likely ...

National curriculum plan may face challenge

An influential group of conservative state lawmakers is on the verge of proposing model legislation to block the Common Core national education standards that have been heavily promoted by the Obama administration.

The American Legislative Exchange Council's board of directors, made up of two dozen state legislators from across the ...

Whooping cough cases prompt epidemic alert

SEATTLE — Washington state's worst outbreak of whooping cough in decades has prompted health officials to declare an epidemic, seek help from federal specialists and urge residents to get vaccinated amid worry that cases of the highly contagious disease could spike much higher.

It is the first state to declare ...

Strassel: Trolling for Dirt on the President's List

Opinion Journal - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24
First a Romney supporter was named on an Obama campaign website. That was followed by the slimy trolling into a citizen's private life.


Carpenter and Knepper: Do Barbers Really Need a License?

Opinion Journal - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24
Cosmetologists in many states face substantially heavier training requirements than do emergency medical technicians.


David Gelernter: Make It a Summer Without iStuff

Opinion Journal - Sat, 2024-11-30 05:24
Children with computers are little digital Henry VIIIs, sending plates clattering to the palace floor the moment their majesties are displeased.


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