Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Career ender


A sad ending to a well-intentioned and otherwise outstanding career.

Good luck in your future endeavors, Judge Prohl.

The remaining investigations into the use of the forfeiture funds continue, as they should.


Judge's resignation stopped fund complaints
By Zeke MacCormack - Express-News

KERRVILLE — E. Karl Prohl's sudden resignation last month as state district judge resolved three complaints against him at the State Commission on Judicial Conduct, according to records released Tuesday by the panel.

The complaints prepared in 2008 by Kerrville attorney Richard Ellison, on behalf of himself and two criminal defendants, alleged Prohl was biased in favor of then-District Attorney Ron Sutton due to receiving money from a forfeiture account controlled by Sutton for uses that included buying office equipment and attending conferences in Hawaii.

A voluntary agreement to resign in lieu of disciplinary proceedings was signed by Prohl on Sept. 23, six days after he announced his retirement after 18 years on the bench in the 198th judicial district, which covers five counties in the Hill Country.

The rest of the story:

Tragedy averted


An extremely frightening and dangerous situation.

Without the quick thinking and instincts of Mr. Enloe this could have ended in tragedy.

Find the perps please.


Couple thwarts man during burglary attempt

-

When Edna Enloe looked out her kitchen window Monday afternoon and saw a vehicle pulling into her driveway on rural Bear Creek Drive, she had no idea she was about to experience the most terrifying moment of her life.

A trusting person, Enloe informed her husband, Ernie, that they had visitors and went with him to the front door. A sudden loud knocking put them on the defensive.

“He didn’t gently knock,” Ernie Enloe said. “I had my hand on the door unlocking the deadbolt when he proceeded to make that loud knocking and that got my adrenaline going.”

The Enloes will never forget what happened next.

“He opened the door and the man held out his hand,” Edna said. “He had a gun in his hand and it was right in my husband’s face.”

Ernie, a 63-year-old Vietnam veteran, grabbed the man’s arm and began struggling with him in the foyer, telling Edna to dial 911. While she was on the phone, Ernie managed to use the door to force the man outside. He slammed the door and locked it, and the man ran to his vehicle and fled the scene.

“It felt like it lasted an eternity,” Edna said. “The guy just wouldn’t leave. It was a struggle, and a struggle for my husband’s life. I was in total disbelief and shaking and I felt helpless. My instinct was to go help my husband, but I couldn’t because (the operator) kept saying ‘Stay on the phone!’ I knew something terrible was happening but it was hard to absorb.”

Ernie said he is not a hero, saying he just reacted automatically.

“When I saw the weapon, I determined I was going to do all I could to stop it,” Ernie said. “All I know is that that door had to be closed. I was fearful for my wife and I couldn’t allow him to come inside, because then he would have been in control.”

Comal County Sheriff’s deputies arrived minutes after the attack, but did not locate the attacker or his vehicle — a green Impala.

Ernie was not injured in the attack.

Edna Enloe described the assailant as a Hispanic male, 20 to 25 years of age, 5 feet, 10 inches tall, around 150 pounds with a shaved head. She witnessed a second man in the Impala, but the man never got out of the vehicle, she said.

Sgt. Brett Smith of the Sheriff’s Office said a total of five police units responded to the call. They dusted the door for fingerprints and are actively looking for the vehicle, Smith said.

Though the encounter was unusual, he said, the daylight hours are typically the time burglars target homes because owners are usually at work.

“This was in broad daylight,” Edna Enloe said. “I want people to be aware that these things are happening.”

She had no doubt what would have happened if the man had gained entry to their house.

“We would have died,” she said. “We came very close to losing our lives. He had a gun and he intended to use it. If my husband hadn’t been physically able to wrestle with that man and get him out of the house we would be dead.”

She thanked the deputies for their quick response.

“I want to praise them for being so professional, kind, and concerned for our wellbeing,” she said.

Smith advised the Enloes and all residents to keep their doors locked at all hours of the day and night and not to open the door to strangers.

“We have always helped people, but I will never again open my door to strangers,” Edna said.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Detroit's killer marathon


Heck, they're lucky they weren't murdered.

Okay, okay. That was a bit harsh.

They were lucky they weren't assaulted, robbed, murdered, and then raped.

It was held in Detroit, after all.


3 runners die competing in the Detroit marathon

DETROIT (AP) — A half-marathoner and two other runners died during the Detroit marathon on Sunday, organizers said.

Daniel Langdon, 36, of Laingsburg, collapsed at about 9:02 a.m. between the 11- and 12-mile markers, said Rich Harshbarger, vice president of consumer marketing for the Detroit Media Partnership.

Rick Brown, 65, of Marietta, Ohio, collapsed at 9:17 a.m., near where Langdon went down, and 26-year-old Jon Fenlon of Waterford collapsed at about 9:18 a.m., just after finishing the half-marathon in 1:53:37, Harshbarger said.

The rest of the story:

Potty Rage!


Holy smokes this guy needs some serious anger management counseling!

You just knew alcohol would have been involved as well, didn't you?


Police: Man Stabbed Son Over Clogged Toilet
Corkscrew Used In Vermont Attack
www.wptz.com

A Vermont man is behind bars after police say he stabbed his son with a corkscrew over a clogged toilet.

Nazeih Hammouri, 53, of Vershire, faces a first-degree assault charge in connection with the Monday morning stabbing.

Vermont State Police said they were called to Hammouri's home on Parker Road just after midnight and their investigation revealed Hammouri had stabbed his 19-year-old son in the stomach after an argument over a clogged toilet.

Police said Hammouri was drinking. He is being held on $15,000 bail and is scheduled to appear in Orange County Court Monday afternoon.

Medical supplies running low?


Maybe he was starting his own medicinal marijuana shoppe?

That was his inventory.

SAPD busts man with more than 300 pounds of pot
By Michelle Mondo - Express-News

San Antonio Police officers found more than 300 pounds of marijuana Monday evening in a truck that was pulled over for an expired registration.

Officer Matthew Porter, a department spokesman, said officers with the Tactical Response Unit made the routine traffic stop at 6:30 p.m. at the intersection of Commercial and West Burcham avenues on the city's South Side.

The officers became suspicious because of the driver's behavior, Porter said. The driver gave the officers consent to search the flat-bed pickup and they found 385 pounds of marijuana bundled and wrapped in black plastic.

The rest of the story:

Take home some books


Good use of folks otherwise sitting on their keisters in jail.

If you're in the neighborhood stop by and take some home.

Books, not prisoners. Heh.


Public Library prepares for book sale

-

2009 Friends of the Library Book Sale
When: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday; 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday

Where: New Braunfels Civic Convention Center, 375 Castell Ave.
Cost: No admission charge; most titles $2 or less

Comal County jail inmates are providing muscle for the move of 30,000 books from the public library to the New Braunfels Civic Convention Center. They are on loan Monday and Tuesday as part of a community involvement initiative by the Sheriff’s office.

The inmates, classified as low-risk, are given a chance to get some fresh air and stretch their legs as they perform daily tasks for non-profit groups like Friends of the Library.

Library volunteers have been sorting the 30,000 books for weeks in preparation for this weekend’s book sale, but loading them and unloading them was a daunting task for the woman.

“We couldn’t do it without them,” said Friends of the Library volunteer, Nancy Ament. “They were very courteous.”

The Friends provided thanks in the form of homemade cookies.

“It feels good (to help),” said inmate Nick Flowers. “It’s a nice day and it’s for a good cause.”

Fellow book sale committee members Ruth Wendel and Sherry Koerth joined Ament in supervising the transfer of the books to the New Braunfels Civic Center Monday afternoon as they enjoyed the cool weather and sunshine.

This weekend, thousands of books, priced between $1 and $2, will be available at the 2009 Friends of the Library Book Sale Friday and Saturday.

Now in its 20th year, the book sale has become a big draw for readers of all ages. The funds benefit the library. Past proceeds funded a “teen corner,” dramatic performances at the library and summer reading programs for adults, teens and children.

Organizers say titles will be available in almost every genre, including children’s books, teen and adult fiction, cooking manuals, history and reference books.

In addition, CDs, audio and videotapes and magazines will be for sale.

“This year, there will be more children’s books than ever before,” said Vickie Hocker, Friends volunteer.

The 2008 book sale raised over $20,000.

“We’re hoping to do better this year,” said Ament.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Live or Die?


This sounds a bit sketchy to me.

Leave folks with incurable cancer, end-stage MS and other unspecified illnesses out on the streets so those with the flu can get treated.

Is this getting close to the kinds of decisions people fear the government would make concerning seniors and those with end-stage illnesses if we had government controlled health care?


Florida plan advises hospitals to bar some patients in event of severe flu pandemic
SunSentinel.com

Florida health officials are drawing up guidelines that recommend barring patients with incurable cancer, end-stage multiple sclerosis and other conditions from being admitted to hospitals if the state is overwhelmed by flu cases.

The plan, which would guide Florida hospitals on how to ration scarce medical care during a severe flu outbreak, also calls for doctors to remove patients with poor prognoses from ventilators to treat those who have better chances of surviving. That decision would be made by the hospital.

The flu causes severe respiratory illnesses in a small percentage of cases, and patients who need ventilators and are deprived of them could die without the breathing assistance the machines provide.

The rest of the story:

Reefer Madness


Along with health care reform comes this news.

It will stimulate the economy and create jobs too.

I wonder how this will play out on House, M.D. ?



Feds to issue new medical marijuana guidelines
By Devlin Barrett

WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal drug agents won't pursue pot-smoking patients or their sanctioned suppliers in states that allow medical marijuana, under new legal guidelines to be issued Monday by the Obama administration.

Two Justice Department officials described the new policy to The Associated Press, saying prosecutors will be told it is not a good use of their time to arrest people who use or provide medical marijuana in strict compliance with state law.

The guidelines to be issued by the department do, however, make it clear that agents will go after people whose marijuana distribution goes beyond what is permitted under state law or use medical marijuana as a cover for other crimes, the officials said.

The rest of the story:

3 capital murder co-defendants


Round up the usual defense attorneys!!

Work to do.


Police arrest three suspects in capital murder
By Eva Ruth Moravec - Express-News

San Antonio police arrested three people and are looking for another suspected of killing a 32-year-old man they plotted to rob Friday afternoon at a hotel near downtown.

Calvin Jerome Massengale was arrested early Sunday morning; he's being held in Bexar County Jail on $1 million bond in connection with the fatal stabbing of James Jerome Holmes.

Larry Mitchell, 56, and Tonya Moody, 33, remain in jail on $500,000 bond. All three face a capital murder charge in connection with Holmes' death.

The rest of the story:

An Honorable Man


He was a great Judge.

My condolences to the family and friends of Judge Casseb.

Rest in Peace, your Honor.

(Judge Casseb is on the right in the photo)


Longtime judge dies in Laredo
By Julie Daffern - Laredo Morning Times

LAREDO — Judge Solomon Casseb Jr., who was a district court judge in San Antonio and became a senior district judge, died Friday night in Laredo.

He was 94 years old.

He was perhaps best known as the presiding judge in the Pennzoil vs. Texaco case in the mid-'80s, which resulted in the largest civil award in history to that point: $11 billion.

The rest of the story:

Sunday, October 18, 2009

This just rubs me the wrong way


Here ya go.

Your tax dollars at work stimulating........stimulating what?

Massage schools? Nail polishers and masseuses?

Especially when so many are laid off or otherwise out of work?


$2.3 million in federal stimulus is going to pay for Tampa Bay area beauty school tuition
By Will Van Sant, Times Staff Writer Tampabay.com

More than $2.3 million in federal economic stimulus grants have gone to eight Tampa Bay area cosmetology and massage schools to pay tuition for the hairdressers, masseuses and nail technicians of tomorrow.

That's swell news for those who see the beauty trades as a way to gain a firmer footing in the job market. But is there truly demand for more beauty school graduates at bay area salons?

Not really, said Monica Ponce, owner of Muse The Salon in Tampa.

"Instead of encouraging more people to go to beauty schools," Ponce said, "they should probably help the stylists who are unemployed."

Some area salons are hiring in this economy, but even industry lobbyists say beauty school is rarely a ticket to a thriving career.

Only 1 to 2 percent of beauty school graduates will be working in the field five years from graduation, said Bonnie Poole, treasurer of the Florida Cosmetology Association.

"Yes, it's a good trade," Poole said. "But it's only for a select few who want to wade through the mud to get to where they want to be."

The stimulus money is being paid to beauty schools in the form of Pell Grants, which are awarded to low-income students. The grants don't have to be repaid.

The government doesn't allocate the money based on an assessment of what kinds of job skills are in demand. Rather, students apply to the government for the grants and if eligible can put the money toward the vocational school, college or university to which they've been accepted.

The government sends the grant money directly to schools.

The stimulus bill includes $17 billion to boost the Pell Grant program and raise the maximum annual award from $4,731 to $5,350.

Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, voiced surprise when told beauty schools were getting a stimulus bump.

"It would raise the eyebrows of many Americans to know that is where their Pell Grant and stimulus money is going," Ellis said.

But the federal Education Department is supportive.

"We are committed to increasing access and affordability for higher education," agency spokeswoman Jane Glickman said in a statement, "and the stimulus funds are making additional money for Pell Grants available for students attending all types of postsecondary institutions."

According to a review of available data, 17 percent of the roughly $14 million in Pell Grants being paid to vocational schools in the bay area is going to those teaching cosmetology and massage. The percentage is tough to target precisely because some schools offer both academic and vocational study.

Other schools getting money offer vocational training in the health care, aviation, computer, fashion and design fields.

The grant awards include more than $1 million to Manhattan Beauty School in Tampa, $250,000 to Bene's International School of Beauty in New Port Richey and $280,000 to Sun State College of Hair Design in Clearwater.

Manhattan has nearly 600 students, Bene's about 250 and Sun State 230, according to interviews and federal data.

The data suggest those three schools rely heavily on Pell Grants. Information collected for 2007 and 2008 indicate that 81 percent of students at the schools used the grants.

Patrick Bene, president of Bene's International School of Beauty, said he has seen his enrollment increase roughly 40 percent in the recession, due in part to the increased availability of Pell Grants.

The grants, he said, are invaluable to a class of students who too often come from disadvantaged backgrounds and lack traditional academic skills.

"These are kids who are not going to be going to college," Bene said. "It's not part of their life plan, but they need a career."

For a course of study in cosmetology that can last almost a year, Bene's school charges $12,000, considerably more than an in-state student spends for a year at the University of Florida, the state's flagship. Most students rely on government and private loans in addition to Pell Grants.

It's true that hiring is down at salons, Bene said, but those that are closing had not established themselves. The successful salons, he said, are still doing a strong business.

"I'm not having graduates come back in and say 'Hey, Mr. Bene, I can't find a job,' " he said.

From July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008, Bene's International School of Beauty reported to regulators that 78 percent of graduates had been placed in jobs.

Others report a tight job market.

Dennis McMahan, owner of McMahan & Company, a St. Petersburg salon, said he recently tried to a hire a woman but could not because he can only offer commission.

"She needed an hourly wage," McMahan said. "I used to be able to do that, but not in this economy, our business is down."

McMahan's own daughter now goes to beauty school in St. Petersburg. He said he's comfortable with her choice because it has made her happy, and he'll give her a job in his salon.

Would he be worried about his daughter's future if he were not in a position to hand her work?

"Yeah," McMahan said. "Big time."

Chad Malm, owner of Salon Jack in Tampa, said he gets as many as six applicants every week. There are plenty of hairdressers, he said, and using stimulus money to put students through beauty school is ridiculous.

"It's not for everybody to be jumping in and wasting tax dollars," he said. "What, are you kidding me?"

Stop the madness, quit the spending!!


OMG!!

Can't someone, somewhere sit down with this administration and say ENOUGH ALREADY!?

Stop spending money like a drunken sailor on shore leave. You are not making it any better. You are making it worse. Your health care plans are making it worse, your "cap and trade" plans are making it worse.

Sheesh! Pretty soon we won't have any change left.

BTW its not George W. Bush's fault, you and Congress pushed through the stimulus package which hasn't done a thing. Both parties had an equal hand in starting all of this when it surfaced last year.

Just ask Dodd, Barney Frank, etc. Heck, just ask you, Mr. President, why are we giving $250 to every senior in the country?


2009 federal deficit surges to $1. 42 trillion
by Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON (AP) - What is $1.42 trillion? It's more than the total national debt for the first 200 years of the Republic, more than the entire economy of India, almost as much as Canada's, and more than $4,700 for every man, woman and child in the United States.

It's the federal budget deficit for 2009, more than three times the most red ink ever amassed in a single year.

And, some economists warn, unless the government makes hard decisions to cut spending or raise taxes, it could be the seeds of another economic crisis.

The rest of the story:

What goes up must come down


If it is true that the father, his wife, or both planned this as a publicity hoax I believe they should face not only criminal charges but also an investigation by the Colorado child protective services folks as well.


Charges expected in Colorado balloon case

(CNN) -- Authorities in Colorado say criminal charges are expected to be filed against Richard Heene, a storm-chasing father whose giant Mylar balloon ascended into the sky earlier this week, sparking fears that his 6-year-old was aboard.

"We do anticipate at some point in the future, there will be some criminal charges filed with regards to this incident," Larimer County Sheriff Jim Alderden said.

The saga captured the nation's attention early Thursday afternoon, after authorities reported the family's homemade helium balloon was set adrift, apparently with young Falcon Heene inside.

Since then, speculation has mounted over whether the incident was a hoax by the father, who has appeared with his family on ABC's "Wife Swap," and posted videos of storm chasing and other activities online.

Earlier Saturday, in an impromptu press conference outside his home, Heene told reporters the runaway balloon incident was "absolutely no hoax."

The incident prompted a widespread search in northern Colorado that included law enforcement from several counties, the Federal Aviation Administration and the Colorado National Guard.

It ended when Falcon climbed down from the attic above the garage at the family's Fort Collins, Colorado, home.

If the incident was a hoax, the only charge local authorities could press would be making a false report to authorities -- a Class 3 misdemeanor, Alderden told reporters Saturday.

However, a misdemeanor "hardly seems serious enough given the circumstances," the sheriff said.

The rest of the story:

If it sounds too good to be true....


Well, Nigeria isn't so far away after all.

And of course, the actual perpetrators are still in Nigeria, or wherever, and are untouched and unscathed.



Converse man faces charges in bogus money-order scam

A Converse man is in federal custody as part of an investigation into a so-called Nigerian scam that discovered more than $273,000 in counterfeit money orders headed for U.S. residents.

Zarnell Orlando Wilson, 47, is charged with dealing in counterfeit securities and a separate charge of possessing phony securities. Because Wilson's public defender was not ready for a bail hearing Friday, a federal magistrate judge sent Wilson back to jail until a hearing this week.

Wilson, according to a court affidavit filed by agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, is a middleman recruited by con artists in Nigeria.

The rest of the story:

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Trial delayed


FYI

I don't know how long the continuance will be for. But it could be a while if they're waiting on a SCOTUS decision on a similar case.

Judge grants Connolly trial delay
By Craig Kapitan - Express-News

The trial for embattled public relations consultant T.J. Connolly, who is charged with felony election code violations, has again been postponed — this time, pending the U.S. Supreme Court's review of a case that could affect his.

Connolly was set to go on trial Oct. 26, but state District Judge Mary Roman agreed to grant Connolly an indefinite continuance Friday after his lawyer cited the Supreme Court's decision to review a District of Columbia case dealing with corporate campaign spending and a person's right to free speech.

The case initially started when a Virginia-based conservative advocacy group called Citizens United challenged a Federal Election Commission's decision that prevented them from airing ads promoting a movie critical of then-Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton prior to the 2008 Democratic primaries. Citizens United claimed its free speech rights were violated.

The rest of the story: