9 multiple choice questions about Fingerprints

This person is credited being the first European to recognize the value of friction ridge prints and to actually use them for identification purposes:

 A.Sir William Herschel 

B. Dr. Henry Faulds 

C. Alphonse Bertillion 

D. Sir Francis Galton 

 

 

 

The first noticeable development of friction skin on the volar surfaces takes place at about ……..weeks gestation.

A. 6 

 

B. 8

C. 10

D. 12

 

 

 

 The person credited with the first use of a “LASER” for latent fingerprint development was:

A. Dr. Henry C. Lee

B.Dr. E. Roland Menzel 

C. Mr. David Ashbaugh

D. Dr Peter DeForest 

 

 

 

Items that give off light when exposed specific wave lengths of light without treatment are said to have: 

A. Inherent Luminescence 

B. Refractive Index 

C. Chemical Luminescence 

D. Photosensitivity

 

 

 

False fingerprint identifications fall into three main categories except…..

 A. Deliberate Misrepresentation 

B. Forgery of Latent Print 

C. Incompetency of Analyst 

D. The Randomness of Nature

 

 

 

The Brandon Mayfield case is an example of :

A. Failure to properly apply ACE-V 

B. Culture of the Absolute 

B. Examiner Bias 

D. All of the above

 

 

 Fluorescent Powders are made up of……..& ……….

A. Carbon and Zinc Sorbates 

B. Fluorescent Dyes and Carbon Black 

C.Talc powder and Slate 

 D. Silica and Rodamine Dye

 

 

Fingerprint impressions have been observed on relics as old as :

A. 1000 years old

 B. 3000 old 

C. 6000 years old

De 12,000 years old 

 

 

The use of Fingerprints for Identification purposes of (proof identity) may date back to :

A. Japan as early as  702 AD 

B. The United States as early as 1902 

C. China as early as 300 BC 

D. All of the above

Legal six

Labor relations and collective bargaining are significant challenges within the organization and when not addressed properly will cause issues within the organization. Drawing on your personal experiences and research in the field, you will provide a response using considerations from various labor sources and their relationship to the fire departments.

 

Read the case decision from your state regarding an arbitration that involved a fire department. You will want to use your favorite search engine and type in “public employee relations board,” as this will provide the student with options in researching arbitrated cases.

 

This case study will be answered in a minimum one page paper. The minimum page count does not include the title page or reference pages. You will briefly describe the case, provide the details of the case, and present why you believe the case was decided. All sources used, including the textbook, must contain proper citations and references.

Unit VII Research Paper

 

 

 

For this assignment, you are to evaluate one of the federal statutes that has been passed to prohibit various forms of discrimination in regards to employment. There are many different statutes you can choose to evaluate. Here are just a few:

 

1. Equal Pay Act of 1963

 

2. Rehabilitation Act of 1973

 

3. Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

 

4. Age Discrimination in Employment Act

 

5. Pregnancy Discrimination Act

 

FIR 3311, Legal Aspects of Fire Protection 5

 

In your evaluation, provide an overview of the statute and how it relates to your organization and what steps have been implemented to ensure that your organization is within compliance of that federal statute.

 

 

You should discuss your topic in a minimum one page research paper. The minimum page count does not include the title or reference pages. All sources used, including the textbook, must contain proper citations and references.

 

Wk1PITSV

Read the transcript…. Write 150 words What are two specific things you learned from this clip? No title page. Apa format. Need to cite and reference support answer

 

 

Transcript ot the video  “A Place in the Sun” The ccite and refernce for the video A place in the sun [Video file]. (1976). Retrieved May 4, 2017, from https://fod.infobase.com/PortalPlaylists.aspx?wID=18566&xtid=3374I saw the poverty over there in Italy. And theway they lived, it’s not for me because I wasborn different. They didn’t even have toiletpaper back there. They didn’t know whatwrapping paper was. I wanted to buy a bunch ofbananas, and my cousin told me, [INAUDIBLE]don’t buy that many. I says, why? She says, wellwe could get a banana and cut it in two andgive half to one person, half then another. Well, I said, we’re in America. We don’t do that. Webuy a bunch of them here, ten, twelve. InAmerica, you have everything you want.

Whereabouts are you from then?

Agosto, Catania. That’s about four hours awayfrom where your father comes from. Right. Notme, I was born here though.

Oh, your father.

Right. Well don’t let you think I’m an Americanhere.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Fisherman’s Wharf, San Francisco, California.

This was nothing but Italians here, 90%. Thiswas Italian headquarters here. They used to callit little Italy.

Most of the wharf in San Francisco is stillworked by the Italians, as it has been since theturn of the century.

My father came over here in 1890. He wasmarried here. And divorced in 1900. In 1902, hesent for another wife in Italy to come here, andmarried her. She was a widow. In those daysthey used to send photographs from Italy overhere. And if the fellow liked the person he wouldcall for her. If he didn’t like the picture, hewouldn’t send for her. That’s how they did it.

Everything was like they had in Italy. That thewagon would come selling potatoes in thestreet. The bread man would sell you breadfrom the wagon and wine and so forth. Wemade our own wine. And that’s how we lived.The same tradition they had in Italy was here.We didn’t have much, but whatever we hadhere was more than they had over there.

Immigration became a part of everyday life inItaly. A fact that was echoed in many popularsongs. This one describes the desolation of thecountryside as it appears to someone leftbehind.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Back there the poverty and the misery that theyhad was very difficult to live.

It was hard to get food. And it was hard to getany fish. They were all fishermen in that littlelocality there. And they thought there was moreof an advantage in this country than there wasin that country. And that’s what made themcome over here.

Over four million Italians poured into the UnitedStates between 1880 and 1914. In 1907 alone,over a quarter of a million arrived. They came toescape slums, bad landlords, corrupt laws, andthe sheer poverty of the soil. One young Italianin 10 left for the New World.

The desire was to come for three or four years,save enough money to return to Italy and to buythree or four acres of land so that we would nolonger be dependent on the exploitinglandholders. But then, of course, it didn’t workout that way.

The steamship companies had agents in NewYork. And we were just simply actually shippedas laborers to New York. And from theredistributed all over the country.

Angelo Pelligrini, now a professor of English,was 10 years old when he came to America in1913. With the rest of his family, he was to joinhis father, who had already settled on the westcoast. His father was working in a frontierlumber town in the state of Washington, over3,000 miles from Ellis Island. The family still hadin front of them as long a journey as they’dalready from Italy.

When we left Ellis Island and went to the railwaystation, to board the train, we were greetedwith the news that the place to which we weregoing, McClary, Washington, did not exist.Incredible, see, it was a frontier town, recentlyestablished, unincorporated. It wasn’t on themaps. It wasn’t on the time schedules. There isno such place. Well, mother would show themthe address in father’s beautiful handwriting.McCleary [? Metch-clay-arg ?] Vashington, it’sthere. So they decided that they would ship usto a central point in the state of Washington. Wewere tagged. The address was pinned to us. Andthey shipped us.

The journey across the continent took aboutseven or eight days. In crossing the continentwe had glimpses of the promised land. We saw,literally, mountain of apples on the groundunder the trees. Huge mounds of apples, andapparently no one was gathering them. When Isaw those and remembered that in Italy I oncewas nearly beaten to death by a peasant who’ssingle apple tree I had raided and got just oneapple. And he chased me and flailed me for onelousy apple. I said to myself, [SPEAKING ITALIAN], we have arrived.

The Pelligrini’s did find the town of McCleary,and their father, who was working as alumberjack. With his job went a house and land.To begin with, the new world fulfilled itspromise.

Soon we were all at work. Land, we have all that we could till. We didn’t have to buy it. A deedmeant nothing. I mean, for once in our lives, weknew the extraordinary delight of turning a sodand every shovel full was a loaf for us.

The people were not so generous. The Italiansspoke little English. They had darker skins andLatin ways. All this led to conflicts with the restof the population.

We were actually the first South Europeans that they had ever seen. These miserable natives, asI called them, because many of them had justcome maybe a generation before we. Maybethey were second generation immigrants, theNorwegians, and Irish, and Germans. And yet,they soon made us understand that the attitudeof the native American, as we called them,toward us was roughly what the attitude of theAmerican has been toward the blacks.

We were forbidden, for example, we young menwere forbidden to associate with Americangirls. And if one ventured to go out with anAmerican girl, number one, she would have tobe of a rather poor white trash derivation.Otherwise she wouldn’t be going with him. Andthen, being such she would have a brutalbrother, who would clobber that hell out of thisWop who dared.

In 1891, a mob in New Orleans murdered 11Italians. The chief of police had beenassassinated and a number of Italians werebrought to trial. They were acquitted, but localpeople were convinced that the mafia hadthreatened the jury. They took the law into theirown hands, broke into the jailhouse, shot someof the Italians, and lynched the rest. All over thecountry feeling ran high against Italians. TheNew York Times said of the incident, “our ownrattlesnakes are as good citizens as they. Ourown murderers are men of feeling and nobilitycompared to them.”

The Italians were the most despised of theimmigrant groups from Europe. They had totake the worst jobs. They were the ragpickers.They were the shoeshine boys. They were theknife sharpeners. They were the organ grinders.They were peddlers. Some were alwaysbeggars.

Some Americans claimed that their country wasbecoming a dumping ground for Europe’srejects. They saw the Italians as parasitesstealing food from the honest native. It washardly the welcome of a promised land.

I remember times that my father and motherwould sit and watch us. And we’d look at myfather and we’d see tears in his eyes. We didn’t have what to eat. It was that bad. Really, I thinkhe died of a broken heart because of thinkingwhat America held for him, and it was not there.And him feeling that, I believe in my heart, thathe was Italian. And in New York, at that time,Italians were not accepted as people. And, veryfrankly, people called them non-whites, Wop,Guinea, Dago.

Murderers, criminals, members of the blackhand, the mafia, that was the view of theItalians. The San Francisco Chronicle declared,“the duty of the United States is clear in thismatter. We must lock the gates and shut andbar them in the face of these conspirators andcriminals. Send them back as fast as they come.And if Italy does not like it, let her make the bestof it.”

I grew up in an Italian ghetto. And the badaspects were that we really were identified ascriminals. When I was a child, people believedthat all the criminals were Italian. I think thepoint however, is that in many ways, you wouldfind Italians are pushed into organized crime.Members of minority groups who come to theUnited States are really cut off from the normalavenues of making it in American society. Theycan’t get ahead as well as everyone else. Theydon’t have the same avenues to get good jobsas other individuals. Now, organized crime,serves as the first ladder on a very interestingway of getting out of the ghetto.

Francis Ianni has written extensively onorganized crime and the origins of the mafia.

What did happen is the Italians, the Sicilians,did bring with them this notion of bandingtogether in families for protection.

For 1,000 years Sicily was occupied by waveafter wave of foreign invaders. To survive theSicilians formed underground movements toharass and fight their oppressor. Secrecy,cunning, and vengeance became almost a wayof life. Sicily bred the mafia.

In Sicilian villages any festival is an occasion tocelebrate the island’s clannish, sometimesviolent, traditions.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

I am a Sicilian, says the storyteller. A maninsulted my wife. He has to die. He embroidersa traditional tale of vengeance for a wrong doneto the family.

This has developed, also, a very ritualistic codeof justice. It’s really a very strong sense of honorcentered always in the family. It’s most famousin Sicily as the vendetta. The idea that ifsomeone injures someone in my family, I amrequired, I am bound, to do something to somemember of your family. And families haveliterally been wiped out, down to males asyoung as 11 years of age, as a result of this idea.In Sicily, when someone carries out a ritualisticmurder of this sort, his notion is it had to bedone. I was merely the instrument of doing it. Ithad to be done because my family was insulted.

The carretti are a familiar site at Sicilianfestivals. Their hand-painted carts are covered with scenes of bloody conflict from the island’shistory. They celebrate violent resistance tounjust oppression. This tradition traveled withthe immigrants to America. An influentialmember of the Californian Italian communitydescribes the process.

Now, what happened when the immigrationstarted that land in New York, New Orleans, et cetera. They were victim of the sameoppression. They couldn’t speak. They started to call them Dago. They started giving thehardest jobs with very low pay. Workers in thesubways, if they were they might go, what’syour name? Lombardi. Lombardi? Two dollars.What’s your name? McCallister. Five dollars.Same work, same place.

And a new immigrant, he can’t speak. Hedoesn’t know the laws of the countries. Hedon’t know where to go. He goes someplaceand they’ll look at him and says, well, someDago, leave him alone. So he goes to somefriends who has a little power, who has a littleknowledge, who has been there before him. So like I said, immigrants that come, they come to me. They come to an older immigrant. Whoknows what Glen produces. It’s good for string beans. It’s good for this. [INAUDIBLE] Heconsults with someone of his own because hecan trust him. So he goes to this man who hasbeen there before him and who has a little bitprestige. And he says, look what happened tome. What’s can I do? The man says OK. We’ll fixhim. And they fix him.

So, but, the Irish had the same trouble. Thepeople from Poland they had more or less thesame discrimination. But the reaction wasdifferent. Because they didn’t have anexperience to do otherwise. That’s the way theyknew it, fight in the street, bloody nose, end up in jail. The Sicilian don’t want to end up in jail.He want to get away with it.

I’ve seen the mafia here. We’ve had it here. Butto call them mafias, I wouldn’t call them mafias.Because right here in 1920 we had 325 crab boats and they had an association. And theseSicilians all agreed with this association to gocrabbing, which was our livinghood. And if theunion said, unload one sack of crabs, thatmeant for everybody. But if some guy wouldunload two sacks in the night and we found outabout it, he didn’t unload anymore sacks. Hewas finished. And they’d have him floatingdown the river because they felt if there’s apiece of bread we’re all going to eat it. And you aren’t going to eat the whole loaf. No way. Andthat’s the way it went.

I’ve seen many men stabbed in this locality. Inthis locality, where we’re taking this picturenow, was nothing but lumberyard and dumps.And I used to hunt birds there and so forth. Andmany times we’d go fishing with my father. It was on a Saturday or Sunday. And I would see aman laying in the street and maybe he wasstabbed to death. And my father would hit us akick in the rear, keep moving. You didn’t seenothing. You don’t know nothing.

So they used the same method that they wereusing there. Underground and try to make itjustice of their own. See what the regularexpression was, take the law in their ownhands.

Organized crime became automatically linkedwith Italians. The movies, the newspapers, thebarroom jokes have hammered home themessage. It was not always fair, but Americawas a promised land for crime as for everythingelse. And some Italians came well equipped toprofit from it. But if they ever had a monopoly,it didn’t last. By the time Las Vegas was anotorious mob haunt, in late 1940s, there were plenty of non-Italians who found that crimedidn’t pay forever.

Las Vegas has become the gambling capital ofthe world. Just as the Italians can’t stop beingidentified with organized crime, neither can Las Vegas itself.

People, as long as there are people, will alwayslink Vegas, or gambling, with organized crime.And there is no way that you’re going to tellthem anything different. And I know whatthey’re getting at. Have you seen any Italian‘hoods around? Oh, is there any of them aroundhere? Well, how did you get your job? I earnedmy job. I worked hard for my job. And I think Icame a long way in the 10 years that I’m here.

As far as organized crime, or anything being inLas Vegas in 20, 25 years ago, that was true. Asfar as today, if it is here, if in fact it is here, I havenever seen it. There may be hotels in town thatdo accept it. I don’t know. I have no way ofknowing. I don’t want to know. It’s none of mybusiness. I make a living. That’s all I’mconcerned with. I don’t harm no one. I don’twant no one to harm me.

As far as an element being here, if it’s here, fine.If it’s not here, fine too. What annoys me iswhen anyone says organized crime, or the wordthey use mafia, right away there is an Italianname hung onto it. OK fine, there may beItalians involved in it. But I’m sure there’sothers involved. Why always they make out anItalian to be an animal? When someone saysthat to me, and they better have the door openwhen they say that to me, if they mean it, or even in jest, because I’m very proud of being anItalian. Very proud of my heritage.

Let us not forget that the Italian-American hasbeen an asset to this country that we built it with our backs brick by brick. We didn’t steal it.We didn’t burn it.

The Italians resent the view that otherAmericans have of them. They have formedanti-Defamation leagues to guard theirreputation. They have organized ralliesdemanding their acceptance as goodAmericans.

Boycott those who call us mafia. Hurt them in the pocketbook. On July 4th we will buy nonewspapers and July 5th we will buy nonewspapers at all. We need your support. That’swhat’s wrong. Everybody who wants to use usfor a tool. Well, the comedian is done. The toolusing is finished. And if you, the Italian-Americans do not band together and work foryour Italian-American bretheren then youdeserve what you get. You deserve to stay at thebottom of the totem pole. This is not an anti-American crowd. This is Italians wanting theirplace under the sun.

The Italian peasants, particularly here in theWest, the ones who were resourceful,ambitious, and industrious, whose husbandrywas impeccable, went ahead and had a goodlife. The ones who, in addition to that, hadcunning, and that extraordinary endowment ofthe peasant, of the acquisitive man, but whenthe peasant has it cunning is something elseagain.

When we came in from fishing, we’d haveplenty of fish on the boats. And we had to stayon the boats or the seagulls would eat the fish.They’d take it away from us. And we had to stayin the boat and we put a little charcoal fire andcooked our meal on the boat. And I’m talkingway back now where we had none of this bigrestaurants on the wharf. And we had a littlecioppino. Buy a cioppino, we get a couple ofpotatoes, a piece of fish in a tomato sauce, andcook it on this charcoal fire. We tied a piece ofstring on a jug of wine and threw it overboard tokeep it cold in the water. The fumes of thiscooking went up on top of the wharf, and somepeople were looking down. There’s one thingabout the Sicilian, he’s got a big heart. And weinvited some of these people down. And theystart eating, by the time they ate all up. Wesays, well wait a minute now, some guy got abrain idea. And a Sicilian says, well jeez, if weput a restaurant here, maybe it’ll go.

The brain idea went with a bang. And today thewharf is a tourist wonderland of restaurantsand other attractions. The Italians made theirmark on the west coast. AP Giannini foundedbank in San Francisco called the Bank of Italy.It’s immigrant customers prospered. So did thebank. Today, it’s called the Bank of America,and it the largest in the world. By 1920, theItalians were the largest immigrant group in SanFrancisco. As the west grew rich, they were busyturning their immigrant dreams into Americandollars.

The garbage business in San Franciscodemonstrates the classic American dream ofrags to riches. San Francisco is the only majorcity in the world whose rubbish is cleared byprivate companies. The people who run, andwork in it, are mostly Italians from the North.The early immigrants became rag pickers out ofsheer necessity. Today their descendantscontrol a multi-million dollar industry. AJ Campi has seen this happen in his lifetime. Hisfather was a rag picker.

I went out with my dad one time collecting. Andthis lady came to the door and he tipped his hatand she knew him. She went back to get themoney. Meanwhile, her son come out and hejust bawled my dad back and forth. And calledhim dirty dago and a lot of different names. Andmy dad didn’t say nothing. I was boiling. I wasabout 12, 13. And when the lady come out andpaid him, my dad tipped his hat and says, thankyou, and he walked away. When we got downthe bottom of the stairs, I says, dad, I says, doyou take that? He says, forget it, he says, I gotthe money.

The Genoese are known as people of very hard,industrious workers. They’re very frugal.They’re very conservative. In other words, theyused to– this is a slang term I’m using– they used to say they’re the Italian Jew are the Genoese people. And the industry being what itwas, hard work, long hours, not too much pay,they went at it. I can recall my dad cominghome at 10 o’clock at night sometimes. I canalso recall that at noon my mom and I wouldhave a big pot of soup and meet my father up in the corner lot and give him a little soup and alittle wine, and then him go on to his work.

Our Italian heritage goes back to the day whenno one else wanted the business. We’ve stayedwith it. And we’ve tried to create the sametraditions and incentives, and pride in the work.I don’t think that anyone in San Francisco todayis ashamed to admit they work in the garbagebusiness. Years ago, it was a case where therewas some say, ethnic prongs put out and say,well, you’re Italian and you’re a garbage man.You have a strong back and a weak mind, andthat’s why you’re in the business.

You might go down the street and see nine or ten garbage companies, which was a horse and a wagon picking up garbage in the same block.So the Italians said that, well, why should tentrucks pick up the garbage in the same streetwhen one could do it more efficiently. So theyformed together this cooperative. And puttogether this business, which was called theSunset Scavenger Company.

All of a sudden the world, I say the world, notSan Francisco, but the world realized thateveryone makes garbage, whether they’reCommunist, socialistic, or capitalistic.Everybody makes garbage. It touches everyhuman being in the world. We changed thename to Solid Waste Management. And I thinkthat our company is very proud of the fact thatwe’ve been instrumental in developing thesystem, primarily through experience,knowledge, and really a gut feeling for theproblem of garbage. And relating thatexperience to the city officials, and in turn,we’ve worked together to develop what wehave today.

It was all those poor people that turned around and came over here and just worked andworked and worked and work. I think that’swhat made this country successful. It wasn’tjust the people that were here. Because a lot ofEuropeans came over here and they had a lotmore brains than the American people had. Andthey made a lot of places and changes in thiscountry. But they all did it by hard work. That’sall they knew. They didn’t know anything else.

Nelu Ferrarri has come a long way from theslums of San Francisco where he was broughtup. Today, he has his own motor repairbusiness. He soon learned about America. His parents found it more difficult.

They figured America was a golden place. Sothey came over here in 1912. And they figured they were going to make nothing but money.But they didn’t. My father was a truckman forthe Southern Pacific. And my mother was aseamstress. And they both had to work just tomake a living. He said that over here was twiceas good as over there. Over there it was real,real bad. They didn’t have this, and he went towork when he was nine. The whole story, poorpeople all over Europe. He always told us, wewere lucky we were eating. Things were rough,blagga, blagga, blagga. So we didn’t say anything. We weren’t allowed to say anything.You were seen and not heard. That’s the way it was.

And the big excuse was I don’t have aneducation. You don’t need an education. Justdon’t have to have an education to make adollar. All you got to do is work. But in thosedays there their big excuse was I didn’t have aschooling. I only went to one, two years inschool and my father threw me out. And I thinkit reflects back to their father. What their fathertreated them like Italy, they treated us overhere. That’s what it seems. It was run down theline.

They lived by a code that was a lot of malarkey.We have to abide by it until we can get out of there. And that’s what I did, I got out of there.When I was a kid, I used to watch mechanicswork on cars. They wouldn’t let me near them.And I used to think, look at that guy, he fixedthat car. Maybe he only made $20, but $20 to uswas big money, right. So I turned around andthought, well if he can do it, why can’t I do it?That was my theory.

I seen too much hardships and I figured I didn’twant to sit there making $40 a week. I wantedto make $80 a week. So that’s what I did. I usedto work eight hours a day in a gas station, andthen work eight hours at night for nothing in amechanic shop in San Francisco. He didn’t giveme a nickel. But he told me he’d teach me thebusiness. And that’s what I did. And that’s how Ilearnt it. And that’s why I’m in business today.

To this day, or until the day my dad died, hewould never let me touch his car. Even though Iknew I was good at it. He wouldn’t ever let metouch it. That’s my son, I don’t want himtouching my car. Til the day he died, nevertouched his car once.

Nelu got ahead by rejecting much of his Italianbackground. Many Italian Americans see this asa danger. [SPEAKING ITALIAN] San Franciscohas its own television programs for Italianssponsored by local Italian businesses. Theprograms are run by people who are trying tokeep alive in America the traditions of theItalian community.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

Alvaro Bituci, a high school administrator, runsthis show in his spare time. The Italian soccerresults come by courtesy of a local pizza house.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

There is always a message from the local priest.The language is Italian, but the audience isAmerican. Al Bituci realizes that the twocultures are not yet reconciled.

An immigrant, or a first generation, has a choiceof what he wants to be. He could either runaway, go to the Italian ghetto, and becomeItalian. And become quite influential in thatenvironment. Or he could run to the otherextreme and become, I hate to use the word, anAnglo-Saxon with an Italian name, manychanged their names, and become American.Or you can choose the difficult road of being inthe middle. But hopefully you get the best fromboth sides. You’re not one of either one, but youget the best of both, and, I think, it makes you abetter individual in the long run.

The Bituci family live Italian style. Threegenerations share the same house. And Italianis the only language permitted at home. And itwasn’t fair game.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

When I’m with Italians, at times they say, wellyou’re Italian. I say, no, I’m not. I’m anAmerican. I was born here in the United States.And yet, with the Americans, where I want to beaccepted as an American, I’m not really 100%accepted. I remember not too long agospeaking to an educator saying, I’m sorry Al,you’re a great person, but I’ve been brought upagainst unions, against Catholics, and againstItalians. It is just as simple as that.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

In Italy, the family, the son, the daughter, very,very close. And maybe no good. No good. InAmerica, I don’t know.

She says that in America people tend to thinkabout themselves first. Where the Italianbackground, or Latin background, it’s thefamily. The pressures come from all over,especially those that have not become involvedwith other communities or other races. Buthopefully rather than they educating us ofbreaking away from our past, I hope that wecan educate them to see the good qualities ofhaving all the differences and keeping our owntraditions and cultures.

I’m proud of being Italian, but that doesn’tmean that I’m proud of what I was, or how I wasbrought up. I’m proud of what I made myself. Iwon’t eat any pasta. Forget it, I had that stuffedin me since I can remember, and I don’t want it.I just hate the stuff. The priest’s got everythingto eat. Priest come into the door and they weregone. And you knew it’d happen, if there wasany good stuff the priest got it. Right now, weeat more American stuff in our house. If that’swhat my son wants a steak, he gets a steak.What the hell? That’s the name of the game.Which, if I wanted a steak, I’d have gottenprobably a clock in the head.

Anyone that really strives hard, in all colors orcreeds, really wants to make it, they can.Because it is a country, economically speaking,and so on that, you can get ahead. But then ithas to be the push from within. And I think thisis one thing that Italians have. Be it in theghetto, or wherever, the push from the family,the sticking together. And I had this from mymother and father.

A neighbor of the Bitucis, Selena Cerquetinni isabout to make her first visit to the village inItaly where her father and grandmother camefrom. She was born in San Francisco, but stillfeels Italian.

The people that see me, the first thing they’llsay, you don’t look like an Italian. I’ve alwaysfelt that I do look like an Italian. And I speakItalian, so, right there, there shouldn’t be anyquestions. My sister’s mother-in-law was therejust before she passed away. And she said shewas really surprised they do still live the way,because it’s so remote from the big city. That’ssomething I’ve always wanted. I’ve wanted togo from the time I was about 13 years old. Ican’t wait.

Lena had only two days in Rome. She was on ahectic package tour of Europe. But she wasdetermined to find the time to drive the 200miles to her village. The tourist attractionscame first.

Around here I can tell that they are muchsharper people and really out to make a buck asfast as they can get it. They’re not at allembarrassed about asking the highest pricethey can possibly get for things. I did ask forCoca Cola in English. And I heard him say inItalian to the bartender to charge us so muchbecause we were touristas. So I knew werebeing taken, but we were so thirsty.

Lena has no family left in [INAUDIBLE], the tinyvillage which the Cerquetinni’s left over 60 yearsago, but the house is still there. And so are thetenants who have lived in it since her family leftfor America. Lena became the absenteelandlord. So the visit of the americana is veryimportant to the tenant, Olivio Olivanti

It’s more beautiful than what I expected, butItaly has got to be the worst country aboutripping people off. I mean, they practically stealthings right off of you. And I know we werewarned in the hotel about our passports rightaway when we got there to put them in thevault. Don’t carry them around in the streets.

Olivanti’s wife is also concerned to make a goodimpression. She and Olivio have lived rent freefor years. She doesn’t understand that theAmerican’s visit is largely sentimental.

I think I could picture the house. The stonewalls and it’s like a village.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

I didn’t expect to see anything new or modern. I was surprised to see such a modern bathroom.And I noticed a freezer in the house, which wasa surprise. They have a little freezer.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

He mentioned the fact about that property, buthad we decided to sell or what was going on.And I told him, we aren’t sure yet because wejust lost my father and that would have to behandled through the estate now whatever. Shewas more concerned about it than he wasabout this property. To make sure when I gothome to get them started.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

These people have been earning some kind of aliving. And not caring enough to paint theirhouses, if nothing else, at least to brighten uptheir little village. If you’re going to have to sitthere and look at walls, you’d think you wouldwant to brighten them up and clean up thearea. I think it’s laziness too. Just closing downand taking a siesta for four hours. I can’t believethat. When you’re missing out on earningmoney. You have American money, you want tospend it, and you can’t spend it because herethe shops are closed. I mean, what is it? Is itlaziness or the I don’t care attitude? I mean, it’sjust unbelievable.

I just wanted to see it and now I feel I’msatisfied. I have seen it and I can understandwhy my father never wanted to come back.Because he had a better life really in the UnitedStates.

I’m real happy my dad came here. That’s whyI’m here. I don’t how I would be living in Italy.Ever since I was a kid, all I’ve ever heard it wasnothing but a disaster area.

So far as we knew, none of our ancestors hadever ventured farther than his legs could carryhim. We had always lived there. We alwayscontinue to live there. And the only move thatwe were certain to make was to join ourancestors in the cemetery one mile away. So faras I was concerned, and all my classmates inthat community, the possibility of rising aboveour birth was so remote actually as to be non-existent.

CRJ 310 Assignment 3: Leadership Personal Issues and the Rules of Law

Law enforcement in America has seen drastic changes over the past one hundred years, from the educational requirements of officers to the interpretation of the bill of rights. Law enforcement officers today are expected to perform their duties at a very high level of professionalism and morality. Unfortunately, when officers don’t perform at this high level it is their commanders who ultimately may be held responsible for their actions. Use your textbook, the Internet, and / or Strayer library to research credible sources on the aforementioned issues as they relate to law enforcement operations and management.

Write a five to seven (5-7) page paper in which you:

  1. Examine the higher (postsecondary education) requirements that police hiring agencies have for potential candidates. Support or critique the requirement that officers possess such an education. 
  2. Compare and contrast the fundamental differences between arrest and searches and seizures conducted with and without warrants. Provide a rationale for why these areas are important as they relate to the Bill of Rights and Fourth Amendment guarantees.
  3. Compare and contrast the main ways in which Packard’s crime-control model and the due process model differ in the matter of police ethics. Provide your opinion on which of the two (2) approaches lends itself to the possibility of ethical violations in law enforcement?
  4. Hypothesize two (2) situations where police supervisors may be held criminally liable for their officers’ misconduct. 
  5. Use at least four (4) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

  • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format.

 

Points: 200

Assignment 3: Leadership Personal Issues and the Rules of Law

Criteria

 

Unacceptable

Below 60% F

Meets Minimum Expectations

60-69% D

 

Fair

70-79% C

 

Proficient

80-89% B

 

Exemplary

90-100% A

1. Examine the higher (postsecondary education) requirements that police hiring agencies have for potential candidates. Support or critique the requirement that officers possess such an education.

Weight: 25%

Did not submit or incompletely examined the higher (postsecondary education) requirements that police hiring agencies have for potential candidates. Did not submit or incompletely supported or critiqued the requirement that officers possess such an education.

Insufficiently examined the higher (postsecondary education) requirements that police hiring agencies have for potential candidates. Insufficiently supported or critiqued the requirement that officers possess such an education.

Partially examined the higher (postsecondary education) requirements that police hiring agencies have for potential candidates. Partially supported or critiqued the requirement that officers possess such an education.

Satisfactorily examined the higher (postsecondary education) requirements that police hiring agencies have for potential candidates. Satisfactorily supported or critiqued the requirement that officers possess such an education.

Thoroughly examined the higher (postsecondary education) requirements that police hiring agencies have for potential candidates. Thoroughly supported or critiqued the requirement that officers possess such an education.

2. Compare and contrast the fundamental differences between arrest and searches and seizures conducted with and without warrants. Provide a rationale for why these areas are important as they relate to the bill of rights and Fourth Amendment guarantees.
Weight: 20%

Did not submit or incompletely compared and contrasted the fundamental differences between arrest and searches and seizures conducted with and without warrants. Did not submit or incompletely provided a rationale for why these areas are important as they relate to the bill of rights and Fourth Amendment guarantees.

Insufficiently compared and contrasted the fundamental differences between arrest and searches and seizures conducted with and without warrants. Insufficiently provided a rationale for why these areas are important as they relate to the bill of rights and Fourth Amendment guarantees.

Partially compared and contrasted the fundamental differences between arrest and searches and seizures conducted with and without warrants. Partially provided a rationale for why these areas are  important as they relate to the bill of rights and Fourth Amendment guarantees.

Satisfactorily compared and contrasted the fundamental differences between arrest and searches and seizures conducted with and without warrants. Satisfactorily provided a rationale for why these areas are important as they relate to the bill of rights and Fourth Amendment guarantees.

Thoroughly compared and contrasted the fundamental differences between arrest and searches and seizures conducted with and without warrants. Thoroughly provided a rationale for why these areas are important as they relate to the bill of rights and Fourth Amendment guarantees.

3. Compare and contrast the main ways in which Packard’s crime-control model and the due process model differ in the matter of police ethics. Provide your opinion on which of the two approaches lends itself to the possibility of ethical violations in law enforcement.

Weight: 20%

Did not submit or incompletely compared and contrasted the main ways in which Packard’s crime-control model and the due process model differ in the matter of police ethics. Did not submit or incompletely provided your opinion on which of the two approaches lends itself to the possibility of ethical violations in law enforcement.

Insufficiently compared and contrasted the main ways in which Packard’s crime-control model and the due process model differ in the matter of police ethics. Insufficiently provided your opinion on which of the two approaches lends itself to the possibility of ethical violations in law enforcement.

Partially compared and contrasted the main ways in which Packard’s crime-control model and the due process model differ in the matter of police ethics. Partially provided your opinion on which of the two approaches lends itself to the possibility of ethical violations in law enforcement.

Satisfactorily compared and contrasted the main ways in which Packard’s crime-control model and the due process model differ in the matter of police ethics. Satisfactorily provided your opinion on which of the two approaches lends itself to the possibility of ethical violations in law enforcement.

Thoroughly compared and contrasted the main ways in which Packard’s crime-control model and the due process model differ in the matter of police ethics. Thoroughly provided your opinion on which of the two approaches lends itself to the possibility of ethical violations in law enforcement.

4. Hypothesize two (2) situations where police supervisors may be held criminally liable for their officers’ misconduct.

Weight: 20%

Did not submit or incompletely hypothesized two (2) situations where police supervisors may be held criminally liable for their officers’ misconduct.

Insufficiently hypothesized two (2) situations where police supervisors may be held criminally liable for their officers’ misconduct.

Partially hypothesized two (2) situations where police supervisors may be held criminally liable for their officers’ misconduct.

Satisfactorily hypothesized two (2) situations where police supervisors may be held criminally liable for their officers’ misconduct.

Thoroughly hypothesized two (2) situations where police supervisors may be held criminally liable for their officers’ misconduct.

5. 4 references

Weight: 5%

No references provided

Does not meet the required number of references; all references poor quality choices.

Does not meet the required number of references; some references poor quality choices.

Meets number of required references; all references high quality choices.

Exceeds number of required references; all references high quality choices.

6. Clarity, writing mechanics, and formatting requirements

Weight: 10%

More than 8 errors present

7-8 errors present

5-6 errors present

3-4 errors present

0-2 errors present

five to six page essay

The research project for this course requires you to identify a criminal justice professional field in which you would be interested in pursuing a career. If you already work in the criminal justice field, you can use your current position as the basis for this project. The course research project will be due in Unit VI. You will be required to not only research various aspects of the selected field, but you must also interview an individual who currently works in the selected field. When interviewing the professional working in the selected criminal justice field, you should consider asking the following types of questions: Why did you decide to work in this field of criminal justice? What are three key skills or competencies a person must possess to be successful in this field of criminal justice? What steps should a person take to prepare him or herself for working in this field of criminal justice? What types of substantive changes do you currently see occurring or foresee occurring within this field of criminal justice? What types of technology do you use on a regular basis within this field of criminal justice? The research project paper should consist of the following sections: Introduction: This section identifies the criminal justice field that the student has selected and includes a brief description of why this field is of interest (recommended length: no more than one page). Competencies: In this section, you will identify at least three competencies required for the selected criminal justice field and explain why each is important to the field. This section should be based upon research that you have conducted about the selected field and supported with cited resources (recommended length: one page). Professional interview: In this section, you will summarize the interview conducted with a professional working in their selected field of criminal justice. It is important for you to begin this section by identifying the person interviewed and his or her current position within the selected criminal justice field (recommended length: one to two pages). Evaluation: In this section, you will evaluate the selected field of criminal justice by discussing the following questions and supporting the evaluation with cited resources (recommended length: one to two pages): How did the competencies you identified for this field of criminal justice align or differ from the information obtained during the interview with a criminal justice professional? What learning goal would you like to set for yourself during this course, month, or year based on the skill sets and requirements discovered during your research and based upon the interview with a criminal justice professional?

WEEK 6 DISCUSSION

lease respond to the following:

  • View the clip below, in which one person believes they are partners and the other believes it is an employer / employee relationship. Agents may bind the principal in a number of ways. When you are reviewing the video, consider whether the intentions / understanding of each party make a difference, and then respond to the discussion question below. 
    • Clip – Agency – Richard Gere: You Work For Me (2012) (0:45)

playhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQoVbYGUGcU

  • As a small-business owner, you are faced with rising costs, particularly employment costs, insurance, et cetera. So, you decide to hire some friends and pay them as they work, rather than go through the expense and procedure of bringing in “actual” employees. Your friends wear the business uniform, deal with vendors and customers, and tell friends and family that they work for the business. One friend / employee orders way too much from a vendor. The vendor has dealt with the person numerous times; in fact, the person has been ordering from the vendor for months. 
    • Since the person who ordered was not an ”employee,” but a friend you hired, are you liable to pay for the improper order? 
    • Discuss the implications of agency that apply in this situation, and describe at least one (1) way the company may be able to cancel or return the order in question. 
    • Be sure to support your legal analysis with concepts and definitions from the reading.

LAWS 310 essay anyone?

Scenario/Summary

 

In this assignment, you will evaluate the requirements for a valid contract and contract clause considerations.

Your Role/Assignment

 

You are a business planner and accountant. Part of your expertise is in helping prospective business owners evaluate the various manufacturing and supplier options available based on the product they manufacture. You have a long history of working with widget manufacturers, which is why Gloria is meeting with you. Additionally, you are an expert in global business issues and can help Gloria review foreign supply options, including the applicable laws, customs regulations, and tax implications of using a foreign supplier versus a domestic supplier. Gloria has come to you to get some advice on which supplier will best meet her needs and objectives.

Key Players

 
Gloria Smithson

Gloria’s business is doing well. She has been manufacturing widgets in the United States, however, the costs for the raw materials have increased 200% with her current supplier. She has found a new U.S. supplier—Greenleaf Manufacturing—that is willing to negotiate costs with her. Gloria has scheduled an appointment with its CEO, Richard Franklin. She is also considering manufacturing her widgets overseas. She traveled to China and met with Jun Chin, who is interested in the contract. She also went to Brazil and met with Mateo Bonilla, who also discussed production with her. Currently, Gloria has been selling approximately 12,000,000 widgets per year, but she recently got a purchase order from a large retailer for 8,000,000 widgets and a guarantee for a minimum of 13,000,000 widgets over the next 24 months. The purchase order states that continued business is dependent on paying no more than $7.34 per widget. Gloria’s current cost to manufacture widgets is $6.22 and she has been selling them for $9.18. Doing business with this large retailer will take Gloria’s business to the next level, but she has to get her costs down.

 

 

Richard Franklin

He is the CEO of Greenleaf Manufacturing, which is a company located in the same state as Gloria’s business. He has submitted the following proposal to Gloria Smithson: He will manufacture up to 6,000,000 widgets per year at a cost of $6.37; another 6,000,000 widgets per year at $5.41; and a final 6,000,000 widgets per year at a cost of $5.01 each. However, Greenleaf’s proposal contains a clause that requires Gloria’s acceptance by 5:00 p.m. on March 3, 2016.

 

Jun Chin

She is the CEO of Sunrise Ltd. in Quanzhou, China. Her company has recently begun doing business with American companies. Ms. Chin is able to manufacture 100% of the widgets Gloria Smithson needs annually at a cost of $4.01 each.

 

Mateo Bonilla

He operates Groupo Embraco. Groupo Embarco has never done business with an American company, but like Gloria Smithson, he wants to expand his business. Presently, it can supply Gloria with 10,000,000 widgets annually at a cost of $3.83. Bonilla is willing to expand his operations in order to manufacture more widgets.

 

Assignment

 

You are a business planner and accountant. Gloria has come to you to get some advice on which supplier will best meet her needs and objectives. Prepare a paper that addresses the following.

  1. What elements are necessary for a valid contract to exist? Define what constitutes a “valid offer.”  Evaluate each proposal and discuss whether each of the offers constitutes a valid offer. Why or why not?
  2. Each proposal involves a different country. What are the particular concerns for Gloria in doing business in other countries? What contract provisions does she need to include in any business contract in order to protect her business?
  3. How can Gloria continue to protect herself and her family from personal liability if she obtains her widgets from a foreign manufacturer? Use your textbook and library references to answer these questions. Evaluate each proposal. Does it constitute an offer?

Assignment Requirements

  1. When preparing your responses, please use the facts provided in the You Decide and the following resources: (1) the assigned reading and (2) the DeVry Library.
  2. Your paper will be graded using the Week 5 You Decide Rubric.
  3. Your paper should be four to five pages long, exclusive of the cover page and references page, and it should be double-spaced. It should comply with APA 6th edition formatting.
    1. Cover page
    2. References page
    3. 12 point, Times New Roman font
    4. No website references
    5. Include at least three scholarly references in addition to your textbook
    6. Include in-text references to sources

Senior Project

Assignment 1: Identifying the Challenge

 

For your senior project, choose one of the following major criminal justice areas: law enforcement, prisons/corrections, the courts, Homeland Security, private security, or emergency management. This component will serve as the area for which your senior project will be based.

Next, identify a challenge or area of improvement within your chosen area. (For example, one may choose corrections as the topic area and violence in prisons as the problem). Over the weeks of this course, you will progressively research, learn about, write and present on a solution to the challenge or area of improvement from both a tactical and administrative perspective. Receive approval from your professor on your chosen topic. Additional project expectations are described in week 8.

Write a two to three (2-3) page paper in which you address the following:

 

  1. Outline the context of the problem or challenge, including the history and any policy decisions that have contributed to the situation.
  2. Why is it important that the problem be addressed?
  3. Who is impacted internally and externally?
  4. Why do you feel the problem hasnt already been solved?
  5. Use at least three (3) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

 

Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

 

  • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format.
  • Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
  • Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the students name, the professors name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.

 

The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

 

  • Explain how historical analysis informs the context of policy or situations.
  • Use technology and information resources to research issues in criminal justice.
  • Write clearly and concisely about criminal justice using proper writing mechanics.

 

 

Assignment 2: Internal and External Stakeholders

 

Considering your chosen topic answer the following questions related to stakeholders:

Write a three to four (3-4) page paper in which you address the following:

 

    1. Identify the Internal and External Stakeholders.
    2. Discuss how internal or external stakeholders have influenced the situation in a positive or negative way?
    3. How will you consider stakeholders in your solution to the problem?
    4. How will you motivate individuals to buy into your solution?
  • Use at least three (3) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

 

Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

 

  • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
  • Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student name, the professor name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.

 

The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

 

    • Consider personnel and stakeholders and how they influence decision making.
  • Use technology and information resources to research issues in criminal justice.
  • Write clearly and concisely about criminal justice using proper writing mechanics
  • Assignment 3: Technology Influences
                                                        
    DUE: MAY 7, 2017
    Considering your chosen topic, write a two (2) page paper in which you:

     

  • Discuss how technologies or information systems have contributed to the problem.
  • Discuss how you will propose technology be implemented into the solution.
  • Use at least three (3) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

 

Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

 

  • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
  • Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student name, the professor name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.

 

The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

 

  • Consider technology and how it influences decision making.
  • Use technology and information resources to research issues in criminal justice.
  • Write clearly and concisely about criminal justice using proper writing mechanics.

 

Assignment 4: Data Collection

 

     11th may

 

Considering your chosen topic, prepare a one (1) page paper in which you:

 

  1. Discuss what data you have collected or researched to indicate there is a problem.
  2. Include at least two (2) sources of data (charts, data, statistics, etc.)
  3. Discuss how each data source is relevant to the problem.
  4. Use at least two (2) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

 

Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

 

  • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
  • Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student name, the professor name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.

 

The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

 

    • Consider personnel and stakeholders and how they influence decision making.

  • Use technology and information resources to research issues in criminal justice.
  • Write clearly and concisely about criminal justice using proper writing mechanics.
  • Assignment 5: Senior Seminar Project

     

                       DUE: MAY 30, 2017

    In Week 1, you chose a topic area and problem or challenge within that area. Throughout this course, you have researched the dynamics of the problem. The final piece of your project is to develop a viable solution that considers resources, policy, stakeholders, organizational readiness, administrative structures and other internal and external factors, as applicable. Using the papers you have written throughout this course, consolidate your findings into a succinct project.

    Write a ten (10) page paper that as a minimum, your project should include:

     

    1. Identify the topical area (e.g., local police department, community jail, border patrol)
    2. Define a problem or challenge within your topical area that you understand in some depth or have an interest in (examples include high crime rate, poor morale, high levels of violence or recidivism, high number of civilian complaints of harassment, inadequate equipment). Outline the context of the problem or challenge, including the history and any policy decisions that have contributed to the situation.
    3. Describe how internal or external stakeholders have influenced the situation in a positive or negative way. How will you consider stakeholders in your solution to the problem? How will you motivate individuals to buy into your solution?
    4. Discuss how technologies or information systems have contributed to the problem and how you will propose technology be implemented into the solution.
    5. Discuss what data you have collected or researched to indicate there is a problem. Include at least two sources of data and how each is relevant to the problem.
    6. Develop an effective and efficient solution(s) and a course of action (i.e., plan) that addresses the problem or challenge.
    7. Explain what methods of assessment you will employ to measure the effectiveness of your solutions.
    8. Develop a 10-15 slide PowerPoint Presentation that summarizes the seven items above.
    9. Use at least 8 quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

     

    Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

     

  • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
    • Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.

     

    The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

     

      • Assess a policy or problem and develop solutions based on available resources, taking into account the political and global implications.

  • Use technology and information resources to research issues in criminal justice.
  • Write clearly and concisely about criminal justice using proper writing mechanics.

BA 270 (2)

BA 270 : The Legal Environment of Business

CH3 HOMEWORK:Alternative Dispute Resolution

Below is a scenario for you to analyze with your group. Draft a concise response (not to exceed 2 paragraphs) which incorporates the chapter discussion on awards including all Federal and State legislature. Explain how the material applies to this scenario.

Two brothers, both of whom are certified public accountants (CPAs), form a professional association to provide tax-accounting services to the public. They also agree, in writing, that any disputes that arise between them over matters concerning the association will be submitted to an independent arbitrator, whom they designated to be their father, who is also a CPA. A dispute arises, and the matter is submitted to the father for arbitration. During the course of arbitration, which occurs over several weeks, the father asks the older brother, who is visiting one evening, to explain a certain entry in the brothers’ association accounts. The younger brother learns of the discussion at the next meeting for arbitration. He says nothing about it, however. The arbitration is concluded in favor of the older brother, who seeks a court order compelling the younger brother to comply with the award. The younger brother seeks to set aside the award, claiming that the arbitration process was tainted by bias because “Dad always liked my older brother best.” The younger brother also seeks to have the award set aside on the basis of improper conduct in that matters subject to arbitration were discussed between the father and older brother without the younger brother’s being present. Should a court confirm the award or set it aside? Why or why not?

 

W3UEV

Watch the following segment from the “Unconstitutional: Examining the Patriot Act” video.

  • Sneak and Peek Warrants

Write 150 word response to video.  No title page. I need cite and references to support your response. What was the video about? What was interesting to you from the video? What thought was good and bad about the topic of the video? Explain your thoughts

 

 

Unconstitutional: Examining the Patriot Act [Video file]. (2004). Retrieved April 16, 2017, from http://fod.infobase.com/PortalPlaylists.aspx?wID=18566&xtid=49977

 

Video Transcript below

 

America was in shock. As we sifted through therubble in the weeks that followed 9/11, thecountry was terrified that another attack couldoccur at an any moment from any corner. TheBush administration quickly begin to pushthrough sweeping policy changes.

Before anyone had a chance to understand whatwent wrong, he proposed fixes that went farbeyond fighting terrorism. This is what happenswhen federal legislators respond in panic.

Congress had been evacuated because theanthrax scare, and most of us were hangingaround the lawn of the capital. We were really outof touch, yet they felt some desire to rush this billthrough.

Give us a weekend to read it, and let’s take it upMonday morning. Hey, I’ll come in and vote at7:00 on Monday morning, if it’s that urgent.

In the Senate, they called it the Uniting andStrengthening America Act, and in the House,they called it the Patriot Act ProvidingAppropriate Tools Required to Intercept andObstruct Terrorist Acts. And the compromise wasto call in both. The USA Patriot Act. But the realpurpose behind those names, of course, was tosuggest that anyone who would criticize it isunpatriotic, is a traitor.

To those who scare peace loving people withphantoms of lost liberty, my message is this. Yourtactics only aid terrorists.

When the Patriot Act was first sent to theCongress by the Bush administration, it came withthe request that we hold no hearings on it so thatthere would be no public input or publicdiscourse.

That might have even been somewhat acceptablehad it been a bill that was considered by, andadopted unanimously by, the committee, but it wasn’t.

For six weeks previously, Congress had debatedhow to address law enforcement needs in thewake of 9/11, and eventually a bill was craftedthat had bipartisan support.

To have Bob Barr on the far right, Barney Frank,far left, agree was an amazing feat.

We came up with a draft of the bill that did havevery, very broad support across the JudiciaryCommittee. Unfortunately, it was then changed ina last minute draft before it came up on the floor.

Sometime very late in the evening, after midnight,the John Ashcroft version, the Bush White Houseversion was substituted.

The bill was printed at 3:45 AM the morningbefore the vote on the House floor. You tell mehow many of the 435 members of Congress had achance between 3:45 AM and 11:00 AM to read abill that was 345 pages long.

No member of Congress read this legislationbefore it was voted on. Not one.

This is still warm. It just came off the Xeroxmachine. This isn’t the bill that was adopted by aunanimous 36 vote of Democrats and Republicansof the Judiciary Committee. These are criticalissues. This is what we’re fighting for. These areour civil liberties.

The new bill contained provisions that had beenrejected by Congress before 9/11 had evenoccurred.

When I looked at the draft, I said, I’ve seen thisbefore. Almost all of the provisions representedefforts to expand federal law enforcement power.

They used the cover of fighting terrorism to reallygreatly expand federal law enforcement powers.

The Patriot Act ultimately passed both the Houseand the Senate with overwhelming support.

This legislation is essential not only to pursuingand punishing terrorists, but also preventingmore atrocities in the hands of the evil ones.

President Bush quickly signed the Patriot Act intolaw. It was only the beginning.

Some of the worst violations of civil liberties havehappened without the input, or without theauthorization, of Congress or the American public.In fact, it’s often happened with the discussionand with the approval of a small number of menwithin the executive branch.

These few men have changed the character ofAmerica. But have they made us any safer?

We were starting to get calls very quickly afterSeptember 11th from people that would tell us,my cousin was arrested. My brother was arrested.My uncle. And when we started inquiring aboutwhere they were taken or who took them, most of the families that we were talking to didn’t reallyknow.

Right after 9/11, the government began arrestingimmigrants from Arab and Muslim countries in anunprecedented way.

We were targeting communities on the basis ofstereotypes. Hey, I saw someone with a beard.This one came out, he prays by kneeling downand putting his forehead on the ground. Must be aterrorist. That’s the level of ignorance that wehave in this country.

People were essentially presumed guilty untildetermined to be innocent.

The government called these people detainees, asif they were simply being made late for dinner, butthe reality was much uglier.

These folks were kept in solitary confinement,which is 23 to 24 hours a day of lockup. Nocontact with the outside world. Sometimes,without any blankets in the middle of winter. Thelights were on 24 hours. The windows werecovered over. People didn’t know what hour ofthe day or night it was. These were terribleconditions.

And many people were beaten during this time.They were shackled hands to waist to feet. Theywere strip searched every time they had to leavethe cell. Many of them were yanked along the floor.

The arrests were considered secret, and thedetainees were allowed little contact with theoutside world. They were held for months eventhough they had broken no criminal laws. TheJustice Department called it the hold until clearpolicy.

The hold until clear policy was not the subject ofany public debate, or even debate withinCongress. That was a change implemented by theJustice Department itself. It was done on thestroke of one politician’s pen, and it affected thelives of hundreds of immigrants all across thecountry.

This was undertaken wholly outside of the PatriotAct. It was simply a decision by John Ashcroft, avery public decision.

Even within the Justice Department itself, therewas enormous debate and controversy aboutwhether or not the policy was constitutional,legal, or correct.

This rule change will apply to the 75 individualswho are currently detained.

The same way McDonald’s tells you how manyhamburgers they’ve sold, the government wasgiving us kind of a running tally.

There have been a total of over 480 peoplearrested or–

We have arrested or detained 614 persons.

–detained nearly 1,000 individuals.

He swept broadly, he swept blindly, until thenumber was over 1,000, and people startedasking questions. They said, how many of these1,000 people have been charged with the crimesof September 11? And the answer was zero. Thenpeople asked, well, how many of these people,these suspected terrorist, have been charged withany crime related to terrorism? And the answerwas zero.

So those were not good answers from thegovernment’s perspective. So what did thegovernment do? In early November, it announced,we no longer will give out a daily tally. It’s toodifficult for us to give out a daily tally. It wasn’tdifficult for them when they thought it sent themessage that we’re doing something to fightterrorism.

But when it started to send the message, we’relocking up lots of people who aren’t even chargedwith terrorism, they just stopped telling us howmany people were detained.

The net result of our profligate use of detentionswithout legal representation has been to make usless safe. It hasn’t uncovered any terrorists.

The Constitution is really quite clear. In parts ofthe Constitution, the rights and privileges arereserved only for American citizens, like the rightto vote. But elsewhere in the Constitution, thefounding fathers were equally explicit. No personshall be denied life, liberty, or property withoutdue process of law. They did not say no citizen.They said no person.

We’ll never know exactly how many people weredetained in those first seven weeks alone. We’llnever know who all those people are.

As soon as September 11th, I knew, because I’man Arab, they’re going to hate the ground I walkon. And for sure, they did.

February 22nd, I got a phone call about 7:00 in themorning from my uncle saying that about 12 to 15federal agents just came into my parent’s house,picked up my mom, my dad, and my sister.

It was a terrible day. I will not forget in all my life.Me or my family.

Around 5:30 in the morning, I heard a hard knockon the door.

We wake up. What’s going on? What’s wrong?

I keep telling my husband, don’t open. We don’tknow who they are. But he was already there.

I opened the door for them, on suddenly they runeverywhere, shouting.

I thought out house was getting broken into, or maybe being robbed.

And you could hear officers running around, clear,clear, clear, like something you see on TV.

With their guns pointed out, they pulled theblanket off of me, and said get up into the livingroom now.

I was scared.

They had the flashlight in my eye.

Who are they?

I don’t know what they were doing. I don’t know why.

He pulled his gun, and he put it right in the middle of my forehead.

Then I just looked over to my mom on the bed.

Right away, there was one man ordering me to getup. I said, OK, go away, I need to go put my scarfon.

He said, you need to get up right now. I said, youneed to go out of my room so I can cover myselfso I can get up. He won’t let me.

One, he said, I am from the FBI, another said I’mfrom the INS.

He just freaked out. He just went crazy. What are you doing? Go you have a gun? No. No, I don’thave a gun.

We went out into the living room and they tookpictures of my sister, and we were all crying.

And then, when they took us outside, theyhandcuffed my dad.

They handcuffed me in front of my children. Meand my wife, and my daughters.

Just put us in the cat, and drove us to the INSdetention.

We were living legally, above the ground, openlyin this country. We were obeying the law.

But that didn’t seem to matter. Safouh Hamoui,his wife Hanan, and 19-year-old daughter Nadinwere taken here, to the Seattle INS detentioncenter. It was a place that reminded them of theoppression they thought they had left behind.

Safouh Hamoui had been a pilot in the Syrian AirForce when bad weather forced him to make anemergency landing. Rather than receive any kindof praise, he was accused of attempting toassassinate his passengers, which included theSyrian vice president. He fled Syria, and appliedfor political asylum in the United States.

He settled with his family in Seattle, and heopened the area’s first Middle Eastern grocerystore. For 10 years, he and his family livedpeacefully, until his application for asylum wasdenied due to the incompetence of his lawyer. Hewas ordered deported, but he remained in the USwhile awaiting the outcome of his appeal. The FBIcleared Safouh four days after he was arrested,yet the Hamouis were still kept in prison.

When I went there, my heart almost stopped. Myblood pressure went crazy. It was so scary, sounfair. What’s going on? Why am I here? Why arepeople doing this to me?

I just couldn’t understand how they could dosomething like that. I know my dad fought so hardto come to this country for freedom, and just to beable to live without fear of prosecution because ofhis religion, or because of his job, or because ofwho he is. 10 years later, we find out that thecountry that we came here to save us is actuallydoing the same to us.

Why? Why? Because I’m Arabic? Because I’mwearing my scarf? Because I’m proud of myreligion? My religion is so beautiful. Do not be myenemy and torture me when I thought I was infreedom country. I can keep my religion. I canpractice my religion. I can. You know?

You’re in a four walled room, and it’s very small.And you’re in there with your mom, and she’s sick,and– We should have never been in jail, let alonea solitary room.

Just watching them behind bars, all three of themwere crying, were in tears. All three of them werein shock. They just wanted me to find out whatwas going on. And why they’re there.

10 months. Just imagine. 10 months. Day by day.

Media attention helped bring about the release ofNadin and her mother.

I had to hold my mom faint more than 11 timesright in front of my face.

Safouh was let out one month later because theINS had finally admitted he was not a flight risk.

Freedom. That’s what I’m here for. I came to thiscountry for the freedom. And I found I fight for thefreedom, and I’m here for the freedom.

His daughter Nadin, her own memories all tooapparent, rushed to embrace him.

[CRYING]

The Hamoui’s youngest daughter arrived homefrom school to find her father there. The fate ofthe Hamoui family still hangs in the balance. Theymay yet be deported.

I’ve lived here my whole life since I was three. Idon’t know anything. I can’t speak Arabic. I can’twrite it. If I go back to Syria, I have nothing.

The American people need to know whathappened in the name of safety. in the name offighting this war on terrorism, we lost our civilliberties over it. We lost our freedom. And that’swhat the terrorists want. They wanted us to fall apart. They wanted us not to become united.They wanted us to separate and turn against eachother. And I think they might have succeeded.

The government has argued that rounding up anddetaining people like the Hamouis is a vital step inthe war against terror. But top counterterrorismofficials say such policies have destroyed ourrelationship with the very communities that couldwarn law enforcement about an impendingterrorist attack.

The first line of defense against internationalterrorism is information. It’s intelligence. It meanshaving sources within communities. What wewere doing by all these roundups is alienatingthose communities, and making them moredistrustful of law enforcement, less inclined to becooperative, less inclined to volunteer and tocome forward when they have information thatwould be of material value to law enforcement.

It was the wrong way to go around it. We weretargeting communities from which there was noknown terrorism, and yet we were doing it on thebasis on stereotypes. It isn’t going to stop the next9/11.

Take a look at this man. Clean shaven, welldressed. He could be a young businessman, buthe’s about to fly a plane into the World TradeCenter.

A group like al-Qaeda has demonstrated that theyunderstand what the American conception of aterrorist is, and they do everything they can toundermine it. The 19 suicide bombers we know,for example, shaved their beards, and theydeliberately avoided mosques because they feltthat mosques were under scrutiny by the FBI.

That’s why, when you base your law enforcement,your anti-terrorism measures on stereotypes,you’re bound to fail.

Extension 14. Message received.

Oh, thank you, I have a consultation to makeabout a case that we’re handling, and we werewondering if we are required to turn overinformation about the immigration status of ourvictims. It is a very specific case where we mightasked for doing that, and we would like toeducate ourselves, get as much information as possible. Please call me back. My number is–

Can you believe that? I have a police departmentcalling, asking if they need to turn over theimmigration status of crime victims. Crimevictims. The victims of crime. That’s what’shappening since Attorney General Ashcroft hasgiven people the idea that state and local policeare supposed to be involved in enforcingimmigration laws. The victims of crime are notprotected any longer.

Ashcroft’s directive that local police enforceimmigration also means that, if an immigrantwitnesses a crime, they will now be afraid to comeforward, fearing that they may be deported oreven locked up indefinitely. That leaves criminalsto run free on the streets, which is exactly whypolice departments in Los Angeles and Seattlehave policies not to enforce immigration law.

What you’re doing is making local policemansurrogates for this enforcement. And they’re notversed in immigration law. They don’t understandimmigration law. They don’t know what the lawis. How can you ask them to go and enforce it? It’sterribly destructive of local law enforcement timeand resources.

The only way to find the real terrorists is throughthe hard job of investigative law enforcement.Investigating individual suspicious behavior thatpertains to a person who’s doing somethingwrong, as opposed to attacking an entire segmentof the population.

To focus on whole groups of individuals, wholeclasses of individuals who’ve done nothing morethan be born in the wrong country or worship thewrong God is poor law enforcement that makes usless safe.

But the Justice Department has ignored therecommendations of counterterrorism experts.Instead, they initiated a sweep of immigrants whoworked at the nation’s airports with the idea thatsuch mass arrests would prevent anotherhijacking.

And many of the people who were rounded up,the majority were Latinos. They had nothing to dowith terrorism, no terrorists were caught.Somehow, the government felt like the countrywould feel better if we rounded up people servingpizza and cleaning in the airports.

And mass deportations were secretly begun.

What the federal government did is, itcommissioned private commercial airliner jetsfrom different airlines, and it had these night timeair lift deportations. 60, 70, 80 Pakistaniindividuals in an airplane that might be aPortuguese airline jet that would take off in themiddle of the night and return people to Pakistan.

Nobody here would be notified. People will havevanished. Their families won’t have been able totrace them. We rounded up people that wereseeking political asylum in this country. We sentthem back to the place they were running from.

Reports began to filter back that people had beentortured in Syria, disappeared in Egypt, andmurdered in Pakistan.

We put all these people in terrible situations allaround the world, and the enormity of that, everyonce in awhile, overwhelms me. This can’t be thecountry that I grew up in.

The way America had treated the detainees wasso bad that the Justice Department’s InspectorGeneral found it necessary to issue a reportcondemning what had occurred.

A report came out and by the Office of theInspector General of the Department of Justicethat basically confirmed that all of these thingsdid happen.

This was not a report of outside critics. This was areport done by the Inspector General of theJustice Department itself, criticizing thehaphazard and the indiscriminate manner inwhich the rights of immigrants were trampledupon in the aftermath of 9/11.

Within a day or two afterwards, Attorney GeneralJohn Ashcroft got on the news and said, well,we’d it the same way all over again.

He insisted that he had done nothing wrong, thathe had no regrets, that he would do it all overagain.

This is the chief law enforcement officer of theUnited States that’s saying, well, yes, we’d redoall of these unconstitutional policies all overagain. And we’re just floored, because there’sanother department in our government justbasically saying, this is horrendous, and it can’thappen. And here’s our Attorney General saying, I don’t care.

What’s happening in Guantanamo is symptomaticof the way the government is proceeding in itswar against terrorism, which basically seems tobe anything goes.

Guantanamo Bay, Cuba a strange place for the USto have a military base. Set up after the Spanish-American War in 1903, the US has paid about$4,000 in rent to the Cuban government annually.Until recently, it was a little known outpost, butafter 9/11, the US government adopted a policythat would shock the rest of the world.

Guantanamo Bay was chosen as the place wherethe administration wanted to hold people thatthey picked up in the war on terrorism. No matterwhere they picked them up. From Afghanistan, orPakistan, or Bosnia, or anywhere else. And theyreally went around, and they looked. Where canwe hold people and not be subject to court reviewor any legal restrictions?

In Guantanamo, the US government insists that the men held are not entitled to the protections ofthe Geneva Convention, since they’re notprisoners of war, that they weren’t combatants ofa state power. And yet, by the same token, thegovernment argues that they’re not entitled to the protections of constitutional laws becausethey’re not held on American territory.

The administration chose Guantanamo as anisland outside the sovereignty of the UnitedStates, but subject to our exclusive control. Andthey did that for the specific purpose of avoidingthe law. Avoiding all the rules. The GenevaConventions, our Constitution.

By creating this label of terrorist, unlawful enemycombatant, they’re trying to use propaganda onwhy we shouldn’t care about them, why weshouldn’t ensure due process for them, and kindof sacrifice our values as Americans that we’veheld so high.

BBC reporter Vivienne White was allowed toaudiotape his visit to a place that had beenpreviously off limits to all journalists.

I’m walking now along the line of cells, which areeight foot by eight foot metal grids. We’re deepinside Camp Delta. I can now see a group of mendressed in white in t-shirts. These are detainees.They were just a few feet away, the other side ofthe wire, and one of them then spoke to all of usin English.

Are you a journalist? [INAUDIBLE] Can we talk to you?

We’re from BBC TV.

Thank you very much. After a long time, we’relucky you’re here.

Sorry?

After a long time, we’re lucky you’re here. It’s busyfor [INAUDIBLE]. We should have saw you before,but [INAUDIBLE].

Keep him walking.

All of us thought, when we started hearing aboutGuantanamo, that the people that were goingthere were people that were fighting for theTaliban, that were part of al-Qaeda. And thereprobably are a lot of people there that aren’t verynice. But what we quickly learned from groupsthat were permitted to go in to do civil rights andhuman right’s assessments is that there werepeople there that really didn’t belong there.

Because the battlefield in Afghanistan waseverywhere and anywhere. And so that meantthat anyone who was in and around was subjectto being brought in.

Whether they were fighting for al-Qaeda orfighting for the Taliban as the military suggests, orwhether they were simply in the wrong place atthe wrong time picked up by a bounty hunter whowanted to claim a reward that the military wasgiving out for bringing in al-Qaeda people.

There were men that were well into their 80s thatwere brought into this, and there were children.This wasn’t just people that were soldiers on thefield.

Moazzam Begg is a British national whose familysays he was installing wells in Afghanistan andteaching in Pakistan until shortly after 9/11.

I received a telephone call from my son. He said,dad, I’ve been arrested. And I said, what? Why? He said, I don’t know. I said, who has arrested you?He says, Americans, and I don’t know where they are taking me. And the line was disconnected.

For over a month after his arrest, his family had noidea of his whereabouts. Finally, they received aletter. He had been taken to Guantanamo Bay.

Everything about these detentions is designed torender these human beings into this state of totaldependence on the United States military. They’reheld in solitary, they’re manacled when pulled outfor interrogation. They’re interrogated at greatlength. They can’t reach out to anybody, theycan’t call a lawyer. They can’t call their families.

These people are entirely at the mercy of themilitary, with no end in sight to their detention.And, not surprisingly, there have been suicideattempts.

At last count, more than 30 of the GuantanamoBay detainees had tried to kill themselves.

We don’t hear about that anymore, because thegovernment no longer reports suicide attempts.

Begg’s family had no understanding of thegraveness of his circumstances. The few lettersthey did get from him avoided details altogether.

In fact, he was trying to avoid everything becauseI had bypass operation and I was not well enough,so he was not writing anything clear to me. After a year, I wrote to him that I’m very well. There’snothing wrong with me. Then, in response to that letter, he wrote me a letter saying that I’m pleasethat you’re well. Please to know that you can do all the activities, but my position is different.

I haven’t seen moon, sun, or natural light for thelast one year except two minutes. I’ve been keptlike an animal in a cage. They don’t give me food.They don’t give me water. My clothes are torn.[INAUDIBLE]. There is no one to help me. That’swhy I’m writing you. So please help me, if you can.That letter tore me apart.

I didn’t know what to do. So I got in touch withthe foreign office, and they said, we don’t haveany access. Americans won’t allow us to go there,so we do not know anything about him. If wehear, we’ll let you know. They never, ever didanything.

What Begg’s father is asking for his son isspecifically guaranteed in tenets of internationallaw. He wants an impartial trial.

If he’s guilty, he should be punished. If he’s notguilty, why should he be there?

The United States has refused to abide by theGeneva Conventions. There are the rules of warthat were developed after World War II. Basically,what they say is, when you capture people duringa war, you have to treat them humanely. You haveto give them medical assistance.

You have to, first of all, decide who they are. Theyget this right to this tribunal that decides, are youa prisoner of war, are you a civilian. Do you havenothing to do with this whatsoever?

In lieu of a trial, President Bush has declared thatcertain of the Guantanamo detainees, Moazzam Begg among them, will be subjected to a militarytribunal.

There is no presumption of innocence in thisprocess, because, to even go to a militarycommission, you have to be presumed to be aterrorist. And they’re using that as justification tolower the standards of justice that we’re used tohis country.

President Bush has already let it be known howhe feels about these people.

The only thing I know for certain is that these arebad people, and we look forward to workingclosely with the Blair government to deal with theissue.

The White House Counsel Alberto Gonzalesadvised the president to ignore the GenevaConventions at Guantanamo. He said the GenevaConventions are obsolete and quaint, and shouldn’t govern the way that we need toquestion prisoners there. Secondly, he said it’s agood thing from our standpoint if you say theGeneva Conventions don’t apply.

Because under US law, violations of the GenevaConventions can be prosecuted as war crimes. Sowe could be prosecuted for war crimes for notfollowing them. But if we say they don’t apply,then we have an excuse to say that we can’t beprosecuted.

We’ve heard recently that there are allegationsthat what we’ve seen at Abu Ghraib reallyoccurred at Guantanamo as well. And we knowthat General Miller, who was in charge ofGuantanamo and now is in charge of Iraq, saidthat he could violate the Geneva Conventions atGuantanamo.

One of the real concerns when we treat others likethis in the name of fighting a war is that othersfighting us can treat out soldiers like this.

We’re setting the standard under which we’regoing to say, it’s OK to do this to our servicemembers. It’s OK for North Korea to capture a UScitizen and label them an unlawful enemycombatant, and try them in our same systemwhere some army general is making all thedecisions, and he appoints a panel of just hisarmy officers to be the judge and jury.

When Donald Rumsfeld was asked how long canthese people be held, he said as long as the waron terrorism lasts. Then they asked him, when will we know when the war on terrorism is over. Hesaid, when there are no longer any terroristorganizations of potentially global reach left inthe world. Now, all of us have potentially globalreach today, and we’re never going to eliminatepolitical violence from the face of the earth.

So what he’s essentially saying is that we can holdthese people forever without ever charging themwith anything, without ever giving them a hearingof any kind.

Congress shall have the power to declare war andmake rules concerning captures on land andwater. Article one of the US Constitution. Lockedup indefinitely, no lawyer, no trial. If you think thiscan’t happen to an American citizen, think again.

We have disrupted an unfolding terrorist plot toattack the United States by exploding aradioactive dirty bomb.

I get a phone call in the car. The prosecutor callsup, he says your client was taken by the military.And I thought they were joking.

Thank you, but no comment at this time.

Newman’s client, Jose Padilla, had been held as amaterial witness for an entire month beforeAshcroft’s dramatic announcement. He had beencharged with no crime, but was seen as someonewho could provide information to a grand juryabout 9/11. Suddenly, he was being called aterrorist.

We know that Abdullah al-Muhajir is an al-Qaedaoperative.

Broadcasting live from Moscow, Ashcroftannounced the arrest as if Padilla had just beencaught in a terrorist act narrowly averted.

We know from multiple independent andcorroborating sources.

Nothing had happened from the time of his arrestfour weeks before until his designation. And theinformation that they had was the same. So, onehas to think, OK, so then what changed?

And I wanted to point out to Director Mueller–

Just prior to Ashcroft’s announcement, FBIwhistleblower Colleen Rowley had beenappearing before Congress. She was testifyingabout the lack of intelligence sharing between theFBI and CIA, and how they’d bungled thewarnings that might have prevented 9/11.

We need to streamline the FBI’s bureaucracy inorder to more effectively combat terrorism.

Now, Rowley’s issues seem passe, as the JusticeDepartment kept emphasizing that interagencycollaboration had led to Padilla’s capture and thecountry save from a terrorist attack.

–was a result of the close cooperative work of FBIagents and CIA agents.

–close collaboration among US governmentagencies.

But what had all this cooperation yielded?

Within hours, I mean 24 hours, the governmentthen had news conferences in which theybacktracked. And they said, well, it wasn’t really aplot. It was just in the talking stages.

I want to emphasize again, there was not anactual plan.

There were discussions about this possible plan,and it was in the discussion stage.

Certainly wasn’t at the point of having a specifictarget.

What’s remarkable is, when you read thegovernment’s papers, is that they insist that thegovernment does not have to charge Mr. Padillawith a crime.

They don’t really have any evidence of any crime.They have a notion that he might have met withpeople from al-Qaeda, but they don’t think he’s amember, and they said so in court papers.

So what was the sudden urgency? The cynicalamong us might believe it was to deflect Rowley’sdamaging information. The government wasn’tsaying. And with Padilla now locked up in solitaryconfinement in a Naval brig in South Carolina, hewasn’t able to explain anything either. Someinformation about Padilla began to surface.

As a teenager in Chicago, Padilla’s involvement ina murder committed by an older gang memberlanded him in juvenile detention. He later movedto Florida, and when he was 21, he went to prisonfor 10 months after firing a gun into the air duringan argument. Upon his release, he converted tothe Islamic faith at a center known for preachingnonviolence.

Over the next 10 years, his only run ins with thelaw were for minor traffic violations. His newreligion would take him to the Middle East, wherehe married his second wife. On a return trip to theUnited States, he was taken into custody.

Mr. Padilla was arrested at Chicago O’HareAirport. He was initially detained under thematerial witness statute, and only after they couldno longer hold him under that statute, they thenlabel him as an enemy combatant.

Padilla’s activities and his association with al-Qaeda make him an enemy combatant.

An enemy combatant? Where did you make upthat term? I really had never heard of it.

I thought the administration’s rules on militarytribunals said they would be only for non-American citizens. Is the whole point of holdinghim as a military combatant to be able to question him without using conventional criminalprocess?

His status, as the Attorney General said in hisstatement, is as an enemy combatant. He is beendetained under the laws of war as an enemycombatant.

If the president labels them an enemy combatant,or in President Bush’s words, a bad guy, they canbe held indefinitely, incommunicado, without ahearing, without charges.

Congress has already ruled on this. Congress said,you can’t ever use our military for domestic lawenforcement purposes. We don’t want you doingthat. We don’t want you to use the military toarrest citizens. We don’t want martial law, andthis president and this Attorney General says, Idon’t have to follow the rules.

Does he have legal representation at themoment?

He was being held under the authority of a federaljudge, and he had legal representation inconnection with that. Yes?

Does he now? Does he now?

I called the Department of Defense. I even calledthe White House. I got the response, he will not beable to call me. I will not be able to call him. I willnot be able to visit him. And while, of course, I canwrite to him, they would not guarantee that hewould receive my mail.

Although the government now claims that Padillamay have been involved in a plot to blow upapartment buildings, they have provided noevidence nor charged him with a crime.

The detention of an American citizen indefinitely,without counsel is based not only on hearsay– it could be triple hearsay for all we know– but theyadmit that one of the individuals who gave theinformation has lied to them in the past, has hisown agenda for giving information, and the otherinformant in quotes recanted.

We’ve never, in the history of the United States,had investigative detention. We don’t do that.Except, now we do.

Recently, the Supreme Court decided that enemycombatants such as the Guantanamo prisonersand Jose Padilla have the right to an attorney andaccess to a court of law. It remains to be seen howthe government will comply with this ruling.

The accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy andpublic trial, and be informed of the nature andcause of the accusation and to have theassistance of counsel for his defense. The SixthAmendment of the US Constitution.

Every step of the way, we’ve heard John Ashcrofttell the public, trust us, we’re the government.And yet, he refuses to release importantinformation that the public needs in order tounderstand what’s at stake.

Government claims of secrecy can rightfully beviewed with suspicion.

And the secret, secret, secret, as we have learnedin history, generally it’s they’re hiding their lack ofevidence. Korematsu is a perfect example.Korematsu is when the Japanese who wereinterned based on the government’s allegationthat these people were dangerous and had to beput in internment camps indefinitely until the warwas over.

Subsequently, after the war, everybody nowknows that the information that the governmentgave to the court was false. They misled the courton purpose. And the rest of the information, of course, they said was a secret, secret, secret. Andthe secret, secret, secret, was we don’t haveanything.

In 1953, at the height of the Cold War, thegovernment also misled the Supreme Court in thecase of US v. Reynolds. That ruling established thegovernment’s right to secrecy if it jeopardizednational security. But the Los Angeles Timesrecently revealed that the government used theNational Security claim to hide the truth aboutthe Air Force’s poor maintenance of a B-29bomber that crashed, killing nine people. Thenational security claim was a lie.

There’s a legacy of abuse of these very kind ofpowers. We went through the civil rightsmovement where the FBI and the CIA wereinvestigating the civil rights leaders, Martin LutherKing, the anti-war protesters, people who wereperceived to be the political enemies of thegovernment. This same authority is now vested inthe Justice Department by the Patriot Act, andthat’s a dangerous situation for Americans.

I can’t confirm or deny who our client is. I can’tconfirm or deny some of the arguments thatwe’ve made in our legal papers. I can’t even talkabout the basic facts about what has led thegovernment to try to seal this lawsuit from publicreview and from public scrutiny. I can’t talk aboutwhy the government insists that it jeopardizesnational security.

The ACLU has challenged some of theunconstitutional clauses present in the PatriotAct, but they have been gagged from even tellingthe American public what is going on.

Even as the president has made the Patriot Actone of the cornerstones of his re-electioncampaign, we can’t tell the public about thecircumstances and facts of our lawsuitchallenging a portion of the Patriot Act’sconstitutionality.

I think that the world is going to be more peacefuland free. As a result of this discussion, our fellowcitizens have a better understanding of theimportance of the Patriot Act and why it needs tobe renewed and expanded. The importance of thePatriot Act when it comes to defending America,our liberties, and at the same time, that it stillprotects our liberties under the Constitution–

The public needs to have the facts as it makes itsdecisions about whether or not the Patriot Actwent too far.

The ACLU is not the only organizations that hasbeen silenced by the Patriot Act. If librarians havebeen approached by the FBI, they, of course, can’ttell you that, because one of the rules in thePatriot Act is that you can’t tell, which is terrifying,really.

What it allows the government to do is to come inand subpoena your customer records to find outwhat books have been checked out or what booksthey’ve bought. It doesn’t allow the bookstore tocontact a lawyer to fight it. It’s all done throughforeign intelligence surveillance court, anddoesn’t give us an opportunity to stand up for ourcustomers.

At least when you get a subpoena from a localcourt because there’s reasonable cause tosuspect that someone has broken the law andtheir library records would contribute to theinvestigation, that’s what the law used to be, atleast you could tell anybody that you hadresponded to the subpoena.

And they don’t even reasonable suspicion toobtain records on you. Employment records,medical records, and even banking records.

The government has deputized the bankingindustry to spy on American consumers. What wesee is the possibility that banks, in doing theirpolicing duty for the government, are going to belooking at who we are, finding out moreinformation than they ought. It’s a very profitableplace for them, because they get to sellinformation about us.

You just wonder, are you giving the wrong peopletoo much authority?

Government agents can now check on who youare sending email to, who you are getting emailfrom, and what websites you visit by claiming it isrelevant to an investigation.

It requires no showing that the individual whoserecords are being sought actually engaged in orhad any connection to any kind of terroristconduct. So it basically makes all of us vulnerable.

When you look at the Patriot Act, you’re struck bythe fact that many of its provisions are not limitedto fighting terrorism. They affect federal criminallaw, and procedure, generally.

Most Americans believe that the Patriot Act wasfocused on the war on terror, and yet they’resurprised to find that there are portions of thePatriot Act that have nothing to do with the waron terror. In fact, there is one section of thePatriot Act that allows the government to conductdelayed notice searches, what we call sneak and peak searches.

Sneak and peek warrants are when the FBI wantsto search your property, and even removepossessions, and the Justice Department candelay notifying you. So you can think for weeks,even months, that you’ve been victimized by aburglar when really, the Justice Department hassend its agents into your home.

It gives the government the power to get warrantsfor secret searches of homes and secret wiretapsof phones without any showing of probable causethat an individual has engaged in criminalactivity, which is the usual constitutionalminimum required.

These Patriot Act powers are being used on ordinary petty crimes. On drug enforcement, oncrimes that have had nothing to do with terrorismor the terrorist attacks of September 11th. Whatmuch of the American public doesn’t fullyunderstand is that the USA Patriot Act createspermanent changes to our nation’s loss. Morethan 90% of the Patriot Act will remain aspermanent law unless, and until, we change it.

The right of the people to be secure in theirpersons, houses, papers, and effects againstunreasonable searches and seizures shall not beviolated, and no warrants shall issue but uponprobable cause, the Fourth Amendment to the USConstitution.

The police and the federal law enforcementauthorities working in coordination are targetingpolitical activists because of their speech,because of their thoughts, because of theiropposition to this administration.

If a place is a place to which the public is invited,and in which the public is welcome, it is a place inwhich the FBI is welcome.

I believe that the Justice Department has gonetoo far in changing the domestic spyingregulations that have been on the books for 25years.

The Bush Ashcroft administration scrapped therestrictions on domestic spying.

The FBI is instructing local police officers toinfiltrate peaceful protests.

I get very, very queasy when federal lawenforcement is effectively saying, going back tothe bad old days when the FBI was spying onpeople like Martin Luther King.

They’re not hunting down or looking for whatmost people would define as terrorism. They’respending their money, their time, the hours of theofficers, looking after peace groups, andchallenging peace groups, and disrupting andsurveilling peace organizations.

There are people in this country, millions of us,who stand with the people of the world.

I’m sorry?

Get that out of my face, or you’re going to getarrested too.

In Colorado, they had police officers in their midstgetting arrested with them. One of the policeofficers had come to one of their meetings thenight before an activity, and acting as an agentprovocateur, had tried to encourage the group totake more aggressive and violent conducttowards the police.

He called himself Chris, when in reality, his namewas Darren Christensen, of the Arapahoe CountySheriff’s department. The group refused to goalong with his suggestion. When the others werebeing led away by the police, Chris was caught ontape being greeted by fellow officers. A similarthing happened in Washington DC.

There was an agent provocateur that came to ameeting of people planning for protests andproposed to them that they should plant bombson bridges, or items that look like bombs, or callin bomb threats. And that was immediatelyrejected by the group of political activists whowere there.

But of course, people who were coming to ameeting for the first time and see someone in the meeting who says that, who appears to be one ofthe political activists, but of course is just a policeofficer pretending to be a political activist, thathas a hugely chilling effect on people’s organizingand on people wanting to come back andparticipate with that group.

The actions of the police on the very first day thatthe Bush administration came to power perfectlyillustrate the abuses that occur under Ashcroft’sdirective.

People came from across the United States toprotest along the parade route, engaging in apeaceful protest, chanting, holding signs,opposing the incoming administration. And theMetropolitan Police department deployed policeofficers, two of whom we caught on video, on anintelligence detail.

On the video, what you can see is two manentering the crowd, and these are two policeofficers in plainclothes. One of them is wearingcamouflage with a hat pulled down low. The otherone is wearing a red jacket and a full faced blackmask covering his face except for his eyes. Theystalked through a crowd of peaceful protestersalong the parade route, beating and pepperspraying people.

You can see the man in the red jacket shaking acan of pepper spray in his hand, which isgovernment issued pepper spray. You can see himuse the pepper spray, spraying it in close range inpeople’s faces and eyes. You can also see himspraying it in wide berths. And this is into a crowd of peaceful protesters, people standing along theparade route, people engaging in a classic firstamendment protected activity, and beingattacked by the police department.

Cop, you’re a sadist. You’re a pig! You’re a cop!

Congress shall make no law abridging thefreedom of speech or the right of the peoplepeaceably to assemble. The First Amendment tothe US Constitution. This George WashingtonUniversity Graduate is a rowing champion. He’sthe first African American to win the US nationals,and he’s the first to win an internationalcompetition. He travels the world competing forthe United States.

My name is Aquil Abdullah, and it’s a Muslimname. My full name is Aquil Hashim Abdullah.Aquil means intelligent, Hashim means destroyerof evil, and Abdullah means follower of God.

He considers himself a Catholic, like his mother,but he was given a name that reflects his father’sfaith. Since 9/11, travel for me has beensomewhat interesting. I was stopped for the firsttime at the airport in Philadelphia. They call overthe airport police. It took about two hours and 45minutes.

It somewhat disturbed me, but at the same time, Ifelt as though, well, maybe this is a good thing.We need to have something in place that protectspeople. But then it happened to me again, and Iwound up missing my flight.

Like most Americans, Aquil was willing to acceptadded airport security measures. But why was ithappening again and again? How could he clearhis name?

I want to represent my country in every way, butonce you’re on the plane, you feel as thoughpeople are still looking at you as a possible threat.

It turned out, his name had been put on a speciallist. This was happening all over the US in aseemingly arbitrary fashion. David Lindorff brokethe no fly story in Salon magazine.

You don’t get a lot of confidence that theTransportation Security Administration’s list isreally doing anything to make us any safer,especially when you see some of the ridiculousthings that they’re doing. We have 71-year-oldnun who was simply flying with some students tolobby their congressmen.

Numerous people with the name David Nelson,which is obviously a very common name, werestopped at the airport and questioned inconnection with being on the no fly list.

They stopped a guy who had the unfortunatename Padilla, the alleged dirty bomber, but he’dalready been caught months before and was in amilitary brig in South Carolina.

Hundreds or possibly thousands of innocentpeople are stopped and detained at our airportsbecause of their name, when in fact, all of thatdoes nothing to improve security.

Many of the individuals who have been stoppedare people who have been critical of the Bushadministration’s policies.

I got stopped at the screening machines, and Iguess they asked me some questions, and theylooked at my ID, and then the next thing I knew isthey told me that they wanted to search me.There’s a little screen that’s there that’s a twopartition screen, and they tell me to go behind thescreen.

And I go behind the screen, and it blocks yourview from the people coming in this way. It doesn’t block your view this way. Well, I didn’treally know what they were going to do is not onlymake me take off my jacket and everything else Iwas wearing, but they made me pull my pantsdown. And I had my shoes off, my pants weredown around my ankles.

And there’s people walking this way, and there’snothing screening me from the rest of the airportthis way. So it’s like a little show there.

The government has now decided everyone willget a terrorism risk assessment. But who’s goingto sort through the data of the millions ofAmericans who fly, and what will be the criteriaused to decide who poses a risk? Besidesoverloading law enforcement with uselessinformation, these techniques reinforce thefeeling that no one has a real plan for catchingterrorists, and that everyone is a suspect.

The end result is a country of Americans rattingon each other, turning each other, calling thepolice. It happened to Andrew O’Connor in Utahwhen a security guard overheard him saysomething the guard thought was dangerous in acollege library.

A girl sat down next to me, and she had a no warbutton on. And I said, you know, George Bush isout of control. I would guess probably 30 minuteslater, I looked over my shoulder and there werefour Santa Fe a police officers standing behindme, and the one officer says to me, stand up, putyour hands behind your back.

And AJ Brown, a student in North Carolina, foundagents at her door eager to inspect the tip theyhad about un-American activities going on insideher apartment. They were referring to this poster.

They flipped out their badges and they said that they were from the Raleigh department of theSecret Service branch and whatnot, and I was like,whoa.

It got to the point where ratting on each other hadbecome institutionalized with the creation ofTIPS, the conceive Terrorism Information andPrevention System.

The idea was, they were going to try to get peoplein jobs like electric meter readers, telephonerepairmen, UPS delivery people, people intransportation like bus drivers and taxi drivers,and then homeowners, just people to report ontheir neighbors. And all these people would reportany suspicious activity.

20 million Americans spying on each other. Thatwas the target number that they were looking for.In order to see what was going on with the TIPSprogram, I signed up to be a volunteer. They hadan online sign up, and I must have waited severalweeks. I was anxiously hoping to get my decoderring and my spy kit, and nothing came.

So after a while, I called the Justice Department,and the woman said, well, we have set up with theFBI this 800 number for you to call. So I dialed the800 number and I got this perky woman’s voicesaying America’s Most Wanted. And I was taken aback, and I asked, well, isn’t this the FBI? I thought I was calling the FBI.

She said, no, this is the Fox TV program America’sMost Wanted. We’re working with the JusticeDepartment on the TIPS program. So this is theultimate in privatization turning over this wholeintelligence operation to Fox TV. The FBI deniedusing Fox TV, but Lindorff and Salon magazinestand by the story. Shortly after it hit the press,the Justice Department killed the program.

This kind of process, which the law enforcementpeople call shaking the trees, that might’ve beenmaybe minimally acceptable in the couple ofweeks after September 11th. But two years later,it is not, because there hasn’t done anything.

Another instance of shaking the trees is takingplace in scuba diving shops all across the country.We got a phone call from the LAPD on behalf ofthe FBI, and they served us with a subpoena. Thesubpoena was worded in such a way that theysaid they wanted the names of all of ourcustomers for the past three years.

That would include people who’ve done scubatraining. That would include people who came in and bought a book. If you came in and wereinterested in buying a snorkel, then I had to turnover your name to the FBI. The thought was thatterrorists were going train themselves as scubadivers, swim into ports and harbors, and blowthings up.

Basically, you’re talking about training people likeNavy SEALS train for years, and years, and years,and a lot of them can’t do this. It’s an incrediblycomplex skill. And I think, if anybody said, thissort of makes sense, and you think there’s a plotgoing on, you’re going to be happy to cooperate.

But again, this was just such a broad based fishingexpedition, that it’s a waste of their time as wellas a terrible infringement upon constitutionalguarantees that have been in place for over 200years. And so at that point, we said flat out, wewill not give you any names from our customerdatabase because we feel that the subpoenaviolated our Fourth Amendment rights tounreasonable search and seizure.

So when we said to them, we want to go before ajudge, they really balked. Our attorneys went backand forth a couple of times, and finally theywithdrew the subpoena. Had they gone to courtand lost, which I think they would have, theproblem is this voluntary cooperation is suddenly going to dry up. It would set a precedent. They donot have a right to get certain information. Theyare not allowed to ask you, give me all yournames, nor do you have to comply.

Attorney General Ashcroft accused librarians ofbeing hysteric about the Patriot Act. And whenyou understand all the libraries in the countrythat had been visited by FBI agents wantinginformation, I don’t think that their response washysteric at all. The FBI, or somebody, can’tsubpoena what we don’t have.

Lots of libraries across the country are shreddingtheir records just as we are. The second thing wedid was to post warning signs alerting our patronsto the fact that we were no longer going to be ableto protect their constitutional right to privacy.Most people really believe that public libraries aresacred institutions where what they go in andread is nobody’s business but their own.

If this nation is to be wise as well as strong, we areto achieve our destiny, then we need more newideas for more wise men reading more goodbooks in more public libraries. These librariesshould be open all except the censor. Let uswelcome controversial books and controversialauthors, for the Bill of Rights is a guardian of oursecurity as well as our liberty, John F. Kennedy.

Noncompliance has become a watchword ascommunities across America fight back againstthe destruction of civil liberties.

The oath of office, as a city council person, is todefend and uphold the Constitution against allenemies domestic and foreign. And it’s time totake back the government from an executivebranch that is running berserk.

Dave Meserve sponsored a resolution makingArcata, California, a civil liberties safe zone from the Patriot Act. If the police are requested byfederal agents to participate in a search or anarrest procedure that they perceive to be possiblyunconstitutional, then it is incumbent upon themunder our ordinance to refuse to cooperate at thattime, and to immediately notify the council thatthey’ve been asked to do that.

What we need to do is band together in states, inmunicipalities, and say, not in our town, you don’tenforce these unconstitutional laws.

Fear strikes really close to home. It is a local issue,and we’ve had quite a bit, quite enough of it inthis community since the Patriot Act was passed. Iwould submit to you, the Eugene City Council,that courage is the antidote to fear.

And I really urge you to have the courage to passthis resolution of the Lane County Bill of RightsDefense Committee, which opposes the portionsof the Patriot Act that are against theConstitution, that are against our rights under theBill of Rights.

You can say to yourself, well, it’s not going toaffect me. I don’t have any political dissidentviews. It’s not going to affect me, I’m not an immigrant. It’s not going to affect me, I’m notgoing to be investigated by the state or the police.It’s not going to affect me, I’m not going to besubject to any searches or seizures. Throughoutour histories, that sort of philosophy has notreally made America move forward. It has heldAmerica back. With that philosophy, certainpeople would be interned. Oh, god. Certainpeople are about to become interned.

Motion carries unanimously.

[CHEERING]

Now, four states and more than 300 municipalitieshave joined the cities of Arcata and Eugene inpassing resolutions against the Patriot Act.

We were very amused by comments from aJustice Department spokesman who says that,obviously, federal law trumps local law. If thefederal government would like to come and saythat somehow they are going to make uswithdraw our ordinance, to quote our president, Isay, bring them on.

We’ve always thought of ourselves as the city on the hill, the model for democracy that we wouldlike to disseminate throughout the world. And yet,by our actions after September 11th, we havedestroyed that model.

The designation of enemy combatant, to holduntil cleared policy, the disregard of the GenevaConvention, the infiltration of groups and firstamendment activities, all of that happenedwithout Congress’s say so, input, and without apublic debate about whether or not thegovernment was going too far, too fast.

This is not an issue of the left and the right. This isan issue of our basic freedoms.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Some of our values aren’t written in paper, but have been established and grown through ourhistory. And the intangible values that makeAmerica great and have the presence around thatit does, and be looked to as a leader, we need tostick to those intangible values as well.

The United States really is different from othercountries. We’re not like France, or England, orJapan. We’re not bound together by a commonrace or a common religion. What binds thiscountry together are our principles, mostimportantly, democracy, fairness, and the rule oflaw.

The American public has to remind itself not justwhat is it that we’re fighting against, but whatwe’re fighting for.

These core values that define us as a country arewhat makes us strong as a nation. They’re not ourweakness.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

First they came for the Muslims, and I didn’t speakup, because I wasn’t a Muslim. Then they came forimmigrants, detaining them indefinitely, solelyupon the certification of the Attorney General,and I didn’t speak up, because I wasn’t animmigrant. Then they came to enter homes andoffices for unannounced sneak and peeksearches, and I didn’t speak up, because I hadnothing to hide.

Then they came to arrest Americans Citizens andhold them indefinitely without any charges, andwithout access to lawyers, and I didn’t speak up,because I would never be arrested. Then theycame for immigrants and students from selectedcountries, luring them under the requirements ofspecial registration as a roost to seize them anddetain them.

And I didn’t speak up, because I wasn’t requiredto register. Then they came for anyone whoobjected to government policy, because it onlyaided the terrorists and gave ammunition toAmerica’s enemies. And I didn’t speak up,because I didn’t speak up. And then they came forme, and by that time, no one was left to speak up.