Author: admin

  • The Prison Escape

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Matt

    If you read the brief Wiki post it is pretty clear this “person” is an escape risk.  Geez, talk about living off the government.  It makes me really rethink prison overcrowding.  I mean, I’m all for it.

    It is informative and disturbing to watch the coverage.  It affects communities in a large portion of the state.

    Just looking at prisons is always creepy.  The prison employees are not uplifting either.  Someone has to do it.

    http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/new-york-prison-escape/prison-escape-joyce-mitchells-husband-recounts-her-confession-n380131

    ————–

    Difficult to watch (interview with mother).  “I wish he would have gave up a long time ago,” said Pamela.  “I love you, always have and always will.”

    http://www.syracuse.com/state/index.ssf/2015/06/ny_prison_escape_dog_bounty_hunter_reward_david_sweat.html

    Like the Boston Marathon killings these manhunts provide a look into law enforcement militia.  When multiple agencies combine the force is extraordinary.  There is no way you are going to escape it.  The man who killed the Washington family (see below) drove back and forth to NYC and was followed the whole time.  The Spice Road guy was watched logging-in at the library.

    The NY Times and Washington Post said it differently—25 square miles or a circle with a 25 mile radius.  A line of people, each within eyesight of the next, provided a perimeter.  They knew Sweat was within it.

    That was the area in which you couldn’t open the windows at your house.

    They knew where he was.  “Less than two miles from the Canadian border” but they knew where he was.  It isn’t as if he almost made it.

    As soon as Sweat was spotted by the man who shot him (big safe vehicle vs. man on foot) the swarm was in motion and it was over.

    Everything is magnified because they of course have nothing to lose—the pictures, they hold him up like a shot animal.

    The woman who helped them and discussed killing her husband (also a jail employee)…  It seems inconceivable that anyone would be so dumb, and so desperate, that they would pick up escaped murderers and help them.  Given that she helped them get that far suggests that is not improbable at all.  It is the new definition of living your life in a sink hole.  This is in addition to not understanding or performing her job at all.  It is a maximum security prison.  Could you be more pathetic, present convict company excluded?  Look at what you have done.  People in the whole area were scared, homes were broken into, cars everywhere were stopped and searched.  A force of thousands at a cost of millions was assembled; the governor has better things to do.  Oh, but she decided not to go through with it.

    The first one was found and shot…

    good video

    http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/29/us/new-york-prison-break/

    http://www.inquisitr.com/2211101/clinton-correctional-facility-over-the-wall-transfer-of-possible-contraband-has-public-concerned-video/

    Does this place have a warden?  Who is in charge?

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/22/nyregion/new-york-prison-escape-an-array-of-oversights-set-the-stage.html

    procedures and reminding officers of what their job is

    “She explained she’d been unsure of his love and flattered by attention from Matt, who had tried to kiss her a few times, Lyle Mitchell said. But he said her fondness turned into fear when she told Matt she’d changed her mind about being their driver and he threatened to have her husband killed.”

    Perhaps she did not plot to kill her husband.  Yes, she was conned.  But she was working in a prison, not a tailoring business.  Her job was to keep the prisoners there and the public safe.

    http://www.people.com/article/joyce-mitchell-seduced-by-killers Denouement.  Fun comments.  Pamela Smart!

  • bookmark

    bookmark

    If you cannot afford it, one will be appointed for you.

  • Nothing is as Healing as the Human Touch

    http://www.psychologymatters.asia/article/141/nothing-is-as-healing-as-human-touch.html

    http://entertainment.time.com/2011/06/07/the-morning-after-finding-bobby-fischer/

    still searching

    “It sounds terrible to leave a 16-year-old to his own devices, but he is probably happier that way.”  A quick reading suggests Regina was a smart, independent, and attentive mother.  The husband, birth certificate, and degree things are legit.  She appears to have helped in his education and chess development; moving and a lack of funds was not her fault.  Was she warm?

    Fischer had lots and lots of contact with intelligent, mature chess players.

    Aside from the weird, chess-playing woman Zita, there is no mention of a woman.  (EDIT:  The Japanese wife?)

    Strange, the continued run-ins with the State Department.  Prelude to paranoia.

    FBI reports is the wrong way to find out about your family.  I know.

    There is no doubt he worked hard to realize his gift.

    The HBO documentary is good; the film is very good.  Maybe he could have been happier if the childhood years were different.  He still had plenty of chances.

    I wonder how many parents realize their kids, no matter how old, will always want their love.

  • Still a Favorite

    Still my favorite playlist.

     

    Shelleyan Orphan.  Sugar is new.  I don’t want to know how to control it.

  • Can Light

    3×3 watt LED ceiling light in a can.

    213

    The fairway, under construction.  Tees are to the right and up.

    216

     

    From the first tee.

    231          233

     

    From the second tee.

    252          240

  •  

    “I can’t touch what I feel.”

    This is the wrong playlist but it is close.  The lyrics are pretty depressing.  No, that is the wrong word–it is just really different.  My favorites are the deeper cuts, maybe that is because I have heard…  them all so many times.  Also, Cheryl Wheeler, Arrow.  Odd what I can and can’t find.  Schooner Fare, Leviathan.

  • Pizza Box Culture

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/savopoulos-family-thanks-law-enforcement-after-arrest-in-slayings/2015/05/22/4b5b488a-0077-11e5-8b6c-0dcce21e223d_story.html?hpid=z1

    The good news is that it was a targeted crime.

    For those who don’t know, a family was held captive in their home, ransom paid, murdered, house set on fire and the “suspect” is caught after going back and forth to NYC in a van and car with others.

    The family was absolutely in their prime and the victims included a household employee.

    And the story here is that TMZ got it wrong.  Hang himself at 25?

  • my story (a hundred days)

    (no caps)

    It is raining or snowing for the hundredth day in a row—what else happened to me a hundred days ago?—so I’ll take the time to write it down. 

    It is a civil right.  I believe there is sufficient evidence to win a court case; I think, even more strongly, that the case can be “won” (if that is possible) in the court of public opinion if it can be told explained properly.  There was a time—and that has not changed—that I expected dark blue sedans and SUVs with flashing lights to surround my home and protect me.  I have often compared it to Mississippi Burning.

    It is part of the much larger, often in the news subject of public safety.

    And then, this is where it really gets interesting to me.  The standard is what you think, “reason to believe” I think are the exact words.  (Only tangentially-related:  customer satisfaction is the highest standard.)

    It is a fantastic story that needs to be told.

    ******

  • The Week in Video

    I don’t know, I wasn’t really paying attention.

     

    Whatta ya like, do you want me to chase you around with a rolling pin?