Archive for September, 2009

Two months after she quit the Legislature to take the helm of the Oregon parole board, Vicki Walker is leaving the high-profile job.

The former state senator, chosen by Gov. Ted Kulongoski to be chairwoman of the parole board, has agreed to tackle administrative work at the parole and post-prison supervision headquarters in Salem.

Walker cited the state’s ailing financial condition and uncertainties about parole board funding as reasons for the change.

"While it is abundantly clear this board needs a fourth member — and has for some time — in these financial times, I cannot continue to seek confirmation for a position for which there is no certainty that adequate funding will be available without jeopardizing other critical needs of the agency," Walker said Friday.

Walker won’t lead state parole board | StatesmanJournal.com | Statesman Journal

Neil Goldschmidt-What A Guy

Posted: September 26, 2009 in Miscellaneous

 
Oregon State Penitentiary-1990
 

Deputy Accused Of Theft At Casino

Posted: September 26, 2009 in News Articles

Too many cops out there like this guy, although most aren’t as stupid as this idiot.

Deputy Accused Of Theft At Casino – Portland News Story – KPTV Portland

Elie Wiesel called him a "God." His investors called him a "genius." But, proving correct that old adage from the country and western song, you never really know what goes on behind closed doors.

Bernie Madoff, for at least 20 years, ran a Ponzi scheme on thousands of clients, among them the people you and I would consider the best and brightest. Business leaders, celebrities, charities, even some of his own relatives and his defense attorney were taken for a ride (this has to be the first time a lawyer was hosed by the client).

We’re clearly in one of those historic, game changing years: up is down, red is blue and black is President. Aside from Obama himself, no person will provide a more iconic face of this end-of-capitalism-as-we-know-it year than Bernard Lawrence Madoff.

Which is too bad. Yes, he stole $65 billion from some already quite wealthy people. I know that’s upsetting to them because rich guys like Bernie are not supposed to be stealing from their own kind. Crime, thievery, looting — that’s what happens on the other side of town. The rules of the money game on Park Avenue and Wall Street are comprised of things like charging the public 29% credit card interest, tricking people into taking out a second mortgage they can’t afford, and concocting a student loan system that has graduates in hock for the next 20 years. Now that’s smart business! And it’s legal. That’s where Bernie went wrong — his scheming, his trickery was an outrage both because it was illegal and because he preyed on his side of the tracks.

Had Mr. Madoff just followed the example of his fellow top one-percenters, there were many ways he could have legally multiplied his wealth many times over. Here’s how it’s done. First, threaten your workers that you’ll move their jobs offshore if they don’t agree to reduce their pay and benefits. Then move those jobs offshore. Then place that income on the shores of the Cayman Islands and pay no taxes. Don’t put the money back into your company. Put it into your pocket and the pockets of your shareholders. There! Done! Legal!

But Bernie wanted to play X-games Capitalism, run by the mantra that’s at the core of all capitalistic endeavors: Enough Is Never Enough. You have the right to make as much as you can, and if people are too stupid to read the fine print of their health insurance policy or their GM "100,000-mile warranty," well, tough luck, losers. Buyers beware!

It would be too easy — and the wrong lesson learned — to put Bernie on TIME’s list all by himself. If Ponzi schemes are such a bad thing, then why have we allowed all of our top banks to deal in credit default swaps and other make-believe rackets? Why did we allow those same banks to create the scam of a sub-prime mortgage? And instead of putting the people responsible in the cell block in Lower Manhattan, where Bernie now resides, why did we give them huge sums of our hard-earned tax dollars to bail them out of their self-inflicted troubles? Bernard Madoff is nothing more than the scab on the wound. He’s also a most-needed and convenient distraction. Where’s the photo on this list of the ex-chairmen of AIG, Merrill Lynch and Citigroup? Where’s the mug shot of Phil Gramm, the senator who wrote the bill to strip the system of its regulations, or of the President who signed that bill? And how ’bout those who ran the fake numbers at the ratings agencies, the lobbyists who succeeded in making sleazy accounting a lawful practice, or the stock market itself — an institution that’s treated like the Holy Sepulchre instead of the casino that it is (and, like all other casinos, the house eventually wins).

And what of Madoff’s clients themselves? What did they think was going on to guarantee them incredible returns on their investments every single year — when no one else on planet Earth was getting anything like that? Some have admitted they did have an inkling "something was up," but no one really wanted to ask what it was that was making their money grow on trees. They were afraid they might find out it had nothing to do with gardening. Many of Madoff’s victims have told investigators that, over the years, they have made much more than the original investment they gave Bernie. If I buy a stolen car from the guy down the street, the police will take that car from me regardless of whether I knew it was stolen. If I knew it was stolen, then I go to jail for receiving stolen property. Will these "victims" give back their gains that were fraudulently obtained? Will the head of Goldman Sachs reveal what he was doing at the meetings with the Fed chairman and the Treasury secretary before the bailout? Will Bank of America please tell us what they’ve spent $45 billion of our TARP money on?

That’s probably going too far. Better that we just put Bernie on this list.

Moore’s new documentary on the wonders of capitalism debuts today in New York and Los Angeles.

Click the link below to go to Michael Moore’s website.

MichaelMoore.com : "Bernie Madoff, Scapegoat" by Michael Moore (for Time magazine)

Can’t wait for this video to hit YouTube. LOL! It just keeps getting more ridiculous, doesn’t it?

Tampa defense attorney Rick Escobar would argue the moment detectives turned on that video game and effectively seized it, they turned the search warrant into an illegal search.

"I’ve never seen anything like this," Escobar said after he viewed some of the video. Escobar has no connection to the case.

"All the citizens are thinking, ‘Wait a minute, we are paying these people to go out and protect us and here they are playing bowling on our time,’ " he said.

"The real question here is have they seized property that wasn’t described in the search warrant?" Escobar asked. "Clearly if they’re using it, they’ve seized it and for totally improper purposes, because it’s for entertainment. Investigations are not for entertainment."

Polk undercover drug investigators play Wii during raid

Jodie messaged me a few short weeks ago to tell me she was on her way to court in Clackamas County, and was expecting a 20 day sentence on a missy theft charge. Shoplifting probably. I didn’t ask.
 
She was sentenced to 20 days at her court appearance, but was told to report to jail on 9/11. When she reported, they sent her back home on house arrest…all at county expense.
 
As Jodie put it to me…"they didn’t want me anywhere near their jail."
 
Not surprised considering her due date is Oct. 4.

Not just a couple, but 26 idiots who obviously weren’t paying attention enough to slow down. How embarrassing, and probably the laughing stock of the entire outlaw biker culture in Portland. I can just see them piling up on each other. Only in Oregon I’m tellin ya.

26 Brother Speed motorcycles crash on I-5; traffic backs up for miles – OregonLive.com