San Francisco’s City Hall reportedly dished out more than $25,000 in tickets for a Jay Z and Justin Timberlake concert at Candlestick Park to local politicians and their pals.
Tag Archives: City Hall
Portland police order dispersal of City Hall homeless camp and Occupy protest
Police dispersed protesters aligned with the 2011 Occupy movement who were camped out in front of Portland, Ore.’s City Hall on Tuesday morning, five days after city workers hung eviction notices from nearby trees. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
13 arrested in Zimmerman verdict protests in Los Angeles
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said violence and vandalism in city streets resulted in 13 arrests in protests over George Zimmerman’s Florida acquittal in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.
Speaking at a news conference with Garcetti late Monday, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said about 150 people broke off from a larger, peaceful protest and began walking through the streets, committing multiple acts of vandalism and several assaults.
The officials didn’t elaborate on the assaults or any potential injuries.
Beck said more than 300 officers were called to the scene. They were slow to directly engage the protesters in an attempt to allow a peaceful end to the demonstration.
He said police would take a much stricter posture if the protests continued for another night.
Protesters ran through Los Angeles streets, stopping traffic, breaking windows and at one point raiding a Wal-Mart store, and a major freeway was blocked in the San Francisco Bay Area in the third night of protests in California over George Zimmerman’s Florida acquittal in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.
Several hundred mostly peaceful protesters gathered Monday night at Leimert Park southwest of downtown Los Angeles, many of them chanting, praying and singing.
But a smaller group of about 100 people splintered off and began blocking traffic on nearby Crenshaw Boulevard, some of them jumping on cars and breaking windows.
At about 10 p.m., a few hours after the splinter protest began, police declared the group an unlawful assembly, and many in the crowd began to disperse.
Several protesters ran into a Wal-Mart store, where they knocked down displays before store security chased them out, and police began guarding the door.
TV news helicopters showed some people apparently throwing punches along the street. There were no immediate reports of injuries.
“I commend the prayer rally attendees in Leimert Park for practicing peace,” tweeted LA Mayor Eric Garcetti, who returned early from an East Coast visit. “I call on people in street on Crenshaw to follow their example.”
In Oakland, dozens of demonstrators briefly blocked all lanes of Interstate 880 at the tail end of rush hour Monday evening, stopping traffic in both directions for several minutes before they were cleared by authorities. Several protesters laid their bicycles on the ground in front of stopped cars.
“You’ve got to go. You will go to jail,” one police officer shouted at demonstrators who were blocking traffic, the Oakland Tribune reported. However, police decided not to make arrests as the marchers, chanting “Justice for Trayvon Martin,” were directed back to surface streets.
Later, another group tried to march up the onramp to Interstate 580 before being turned away by Oakland police and California Highway Patrol officers.
The freeway protesters broke off from a larger group organized via social media that gathered at Oakland City Hall about an hour earlier. Several people were arrested for acts of violence and vandalism while marching from City Hall, authorities said.
Over the weekend, demonstrators in Oakland and Los Angeles blocked traffic and clashed with police in protests over a Florida jury’s acquittal of neighborhood watch volunteer Zimmerman in …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
Protests of Zimmerman verdict mostly peaceful, sporadic violence, vandalism reported
Communities nationwide braced for a day of demonstration, and possibly even dissent, as the public awoke Sunday to learn a six-person Florida jury had acquitted George Zimmerman of second-degree murder, overnight, in the February 2012 killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.
Protesters on the West Coast massed, and in some cases marched, in four California cities, beneath the lingering sunshine that had already yielded to twilight and nightfall by the time the decision had been rendered shortly before 10 p.m. on the mostly quiescent East Coast.
Mostly, the California demonstrations proved peaceful, although matters were marred by sporadic reports of stray violence and vandalism, including the halt of a passenger train, the burning of American and California flags, the lighting of small fires in city roadways, shattered storefront windows and the spray painting of a courthouse, as well as the damaging of a police squad car.
In San Francisco, raucous, yet peaceful protesters marched on the city’s Mission District neighborhood; while about 200 in Los Angeles convened for a vigil in Leimart Park, or the city’s historically black neighborhood. City News Service in Los Angeles said, at one point, a smaller group halted an Expo Line train, somewhere within the city, but police could not immediately confirm details of that account.
Los Angeles Police Department Lt. Andy Neiman said another group of 50 to 100 demonstrators marched around midnight.
“There was a period where crowds were running among vehicles, but police dissuaded them,” he reportedly said, although he added that he knew of no arrests.
Meanwhile, in Oakland, police reported about 100 people protested, with some among the crowd breaking windows and starting fires in the streets. As the protest eventually fizzled, the office of police information added that it had no word of any arrests as of 2 a.m., PST.
However, some Oakland marchers reportedly vandalized a police squad car, and police were — at one point – forced to form a line to block the protesters’ path.
The Oakland Tribune reported some downtown office windows had been shattered, and footage from a television helicopter portrayed people starting fires in the street and spray painting anti-police graffiti. Protesters, there, also reportedly burned an American, and California state flag and spray painted Alameda County’s Davidson courthouse.
In Sacramento, more than 40 people gathered at City Hall, and the Sacramento Bee reported protesters riotously chanting: “What do we want? Justice. When do you we want it? Now. For who? Trayvon.” Meanwhile, a banner unfurled behind the speakers read, “No justice, no peace!” as the crowd cried out in unison.
Meanwhile, in Florida, media outlets reported mostly subdued sadness, and no violence or large gatherings.
“I’m sad,” was the only response Miami Gardens barber Steve Bass could muster to the Miami Herald, when asked for his opinion regarding the verdict. Bass had reportedly cut Trayvon Martin’s hair since the teen was a toddler.
Outside the Seminole County courthouse, where the trial took place, the Orlando Sentinel reported that a bewildered crowd of about 150 received the not-guilty verdict with chants of, “No justice, no peace.”
“He …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
Report: Cubs, city close to finalizing $500M deal
By Jason Mastrodonato The Chicago Sun-Times reported Thursday evening that the Cubs and City Hall expect to finish up a $500 million deal by Monday’s home opener that would include some changes to the 99-year-old ballpark, including the addition of a jumbotron (size yet to be identified) in left field. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at MLB
Oregon couple reportedly claims neighbor's medical marijuana smell makes them sick
An Oregon couple reportedly claims the noxious smell of their neighbor’s medical marijuana plants are making them sick.
Gloria Peterson, of Portland, wants city officials to intervene and do something about the strong odor, KATU News reports.
“They’re too close,” she told the station. “They’re way too close for this to be happening. There needs to be some sort of zoning regulation that there has to be some sort of distance, I believe, between a marijuana grow and a neighbor.”
City Hall officials, as well as the Portland Police Department, the Department of Environmental Quality and Multnomah County Health Department all said on Monday that they couldn’t do anything about it.
According to Portland City Code, no person “shall burn upon any premises or in any street, alley or other place, any animal or vegetable substance which shall create an offensive or noxious odor.”
Police officials referred the station to City Hall, which then sent reporters to the Multnomah County Health Department. A spokesperson there said inspectors investigate stinky smells, but not marijuana. The county health department then referred the station back to police.
Roughly 53,000 people carry medical marijuana cards in Oregon.
Statement by the President on Mayor Thomas M. Menino
Boston is the vibrant, welcoming, and world-class city it is today because of Tom Menino. For more than two decades, Mayor Menino has served the city and every one of its residents with extraordinary leadership, vision, and compassion. His efforts to revitalize neighborhoods, schools, and businesses, better integrate police officers into their communities and reduce gun violence, reach out to the homeless and marginalized, and engage young people in the life of their city has charted Boston on a course for a better future. No two people wear their hearts on their sleeve for the City of Boston and its people as openly as Tom and Angela Menino. And as they depart City Hall next year, Boston will be a better place to live, work and raise a family because of the Meninos’ proud service to the city they love.
…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House Press Office
Detroit Emergency Manager Protestors: ‘This Is Not A Black Issue’
By The Huffington Post News Editors
DETROIT, MI – A crowd of about 100 demonstrators gathered outside City Hall just after 11 a.m. Monday in a lively protest against the start of emergency management in city government.
Emergency Financial Manager Kevyn Orr took office today after being named by Gov. Rick Snyder earlier this month.
Read More…
More on Detroit Politics
Rhode Island Mayors Call For Gay Marriage In State
By The Huffington Post News Editors
By Daniel Lovering
BOSTON, March 25 (Reuters) – Six Rhode Island mayors voiced support for same-sex marriage on Monday, calling on the state Senate to pass a bill legalizing gay marraige that has already won overwhelming support in Rhode Island‘s House of Representatives.
The House in January voted strongly in favor of the bill, but the measure was expected to face an uphill battle in the state Senate.
Nine states and the District of Columbia have already legalized gay and lesbian weddings. Illinois, like Rhode Island, has a bill pending on the issue, with the state’s Senate having approved legislation in February but with its fate in the state House uncertain.
The legislation in Rhode Island, supported by independent Governor Lincoln Chafee, has been introduced in the House every year since 1997.
Rhode Island currently allows gay civil unions. It is the last of New England‘s six states without a law allowing gay nuptials.
On Monday, four mayors — Angel Taveras of Providence, Donald Grebien of Pawtucket, Daniel McKee of Cumberland and James Diossa of Central Falls — threw their support behind the bill at City Hall in Providence, said Devin Driscoll, a spokesman for Rhode Islanders United for Marriage, an advocacy group.
Two other mayors, Scott Avedisian of Warwick and Charles Lombardi of North Providence, also support the measure, but were unable to attend the news conference, Driscoll said.
“It’s a strong indication of the kind of unrelenting momentum that this campaign for marriage equality has,” he said, adding that the mayors were a majority of the state’s nine mayors. “This is the year.”
The state Senate president, Teresa Paiva Weed, opposes gay marriage but has said she would allow a Senate Judiciary Committee vote on the bill if it passed in the House. Last week, a Judiciary Committee hearing lasted for 12 hours, dragging on until 5 a.m., after hundreds of people signed up to testify, Driscoll said. No date has been set for the vote. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post
Villaraigosa Leaving Office Without Regrets, Or Job – NYTimes.com
By The Huffington Post News Editors
LOS ANGELES — Antonio R. Villaraigosa has been a mayor whom this city loves to love and loves to hate. The red carpets. The late-night parties. The lofty promises, many met and some not. The disintegration of a marriage and a relationship with a television reporter while in office, all covered with the flashbulb ferocity befitting a Hollywood personality.
“I love life,” Mr. Villaraigosa, 60, said in an interview at his City Hall office, scattered with the mementos of his eight years as mayor. “And I get beaten up about the fact that I love life, from time to time. If there’s a concert, I’ll get up and I’ll dance with Aretha Franklin. Yes I will.”
City Of Chicago Hit With $57.8 Million Tab In Parking Garage Snafu
By The Huffington Post News Editors
Chicago taxpayers have been hit with a $57.8 million ruling in favor of the private company that runs four city-owned, downtown parking garages — stuck with that bill because former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s administration mistakenly allowed a competing garage to open nearby, according to documents obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel has 90 business days to appeal the Feb. 25 decision by a panel of independent arbitrators regarding Chicago Loop Parking LLC’s claim that City Hall violated the terms of its 99-year garage-privatization deal by subsequently approving plans for a garage in the 82-story Aqua building, about a block from the company’s nearest garage.
NY judge halts Bloomberg ban on large sugary drinks
A state judge on Monday stopped Mayor Michael Bloomberg‘s administration from banning New York City restaurants and other venues from selling large sugary drinks, a major defeat for the mayor who has made public a health initiatives a cornerstone of his tenure at City Hall.
Getting Wise To Government Lies
Take President Obama and his Cabinet of Liars, please.
We all know what dirty tricks they played to try and stop the sequester’s automatic budget cuts from happening.
They spent weeks trying to frighten the America people into believing the country would collapse into chaos and suffering if the federal government’s sequester-forced spending cuts went into effect.
The campaigner-in-chief and his chorus of toadies did everything they could to make sure the puny spending cuts — which would have merely taken the federal budget back to its 2012 level — would cause the most pain to the most people.
Supposedly, the cuts were going to decimate the ranks of our local police forces and firefighters, throw hundreds of teachers into the streets, create long lines at airports, and maybe even leave the United States vulnerable to a military invasion by Greece.
Of course, most of Big Media played right along with Obama’s dirty political game. Like the dupes they are, they publicized every sequester scare-story like it was going to mean the end of America as we know it.
(Too bad the MSM don’t devote the same level of hysteria to covering some of our real problems, like Obama’s runaway federal spending and our unpayable future debt load.)
In case you haven’t noticed by now, Armageddon didn’t happen. The sequester came, and the sun is still coming up. Planes aren’t falling from the heavens. And I haven’t had to use my guns to defend my home against a single robber or terrorist.
Even the invertebrate Republicans in Congress haven’t caved to pressure from the special interests who oppose the sequester cuts, though perhaps they just need more time.
So far, Obama’s cross-country campaign of whoppers hasn’t worked on the American people, who don’t need Karl Rove to tell them that the “Big Bad Wolf” the president was yapping about every day wasn’t really at their doors.
Another hopeful sign that most Americans are not as naive or stupid as the Obama Gang thinks they are came this week when the citizens of Los Angeles went to the polls.
The mayoral primary was the top draw, but also on the ballot on Tuesday was one of California’s infamous ballot measures.
The official title was “Proposition A — Neighborhood Public Safety And Vital City Services Funding And Accountability Measure.” That’s government-speak for a half-cent sales tax hike.
If you’re not familiar with the fiscal condition of my home city of Los Angeles, it’s a depressing microcosm of the federal government and the state of California. Taxing too much and spending even more, the city already has a sales tax of 9 cents and a projected annual budget deficit of $216 million.
To get voters to OK the higher sales tax and add $200 million in annual revenue to City Hall’s $7.2 billion budget, LA’s politicians imitated the president’s tactics.
Just as Obama tried to scare the public into believing that the sequester would hurt our national security, the local pols here tried to scare voters into thinking public safety would be endangered without Proposition A.
Proposition A was …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism
Texas city spurns dating site's advances, won't change name
By Greg Wilson
Sugar Land is not for sale – well, at least not for the $500,000 a dating website offered the east Texas city to change its name.
Sugardaddie.com, which bills itself as the place “where the classy, attractive and affluent meet,” offered Sugar Land half a million bucks to share the website’s name for 10 years. Mayor James Thompson declined, but it was unclear if he thought it was a bad idea or if the site was simply too cheap of a date.
“I’d consider any offer, but I get to do the zeroes and the decimal points, know what I mean?” Thompson told local radio station The 9-5-0 just before officially jilting the city of 80,000’s suitor.
Sugardaddie.com, which has offices in Miami, London and Los Angeles, made the offer in conjunction with Valentine’s Day, which is also the dating site’s 10th anniversary.
“It’s a marketing stunt, but that doesn’t mean we’re not looking to write a check too,” the spokesman said.
City spokesman Doug Adolph lauded the proposal, but said Sugar Land‘s name is worth a lot more than Sugardaddie.com offered.
“These Californians are a lot more clever than we’ve given them credit for,” Adolph said. “Clearly these folks are familiar with our city demographics, and the many accolades and awards that we’ve received in the past.
“But we have an assessed valuation of over $10 billion,” Adolph told FoxNews.com. “The naming rights for Constellation Field, where [Sugar Land‘s minor league baseball team] the Skeeters play, sold for substantially less than that.
Sugardaddie.com’s offer required that the city that lies 20 miles southwest of Houston reflect the new name at City Hall and on “official government correspondence and institutions,” even the Sugar Land Regional Airport and Constellation Field. Oh, and the CEO of SugarDaddie.com demanded a key to the city.
Unable to make a love connection with Sugar Land, Sugardaddie.com was mulling its options, the spokesman said. But being spurned must have been a strange feeling for a site that prides itself on combining money and matchmaking.
“The site is basically for older rich dudes to meet younger, attractive women,” he said. “That doesn’t mean you have to have $10 million or even $1 million. It just means you like to travel, eat well, and your cellphone doesn’t get cut off in the middle of a date.”
Oscars Excitement Won’t Include “2016: Obama’s America”
February 24th will mark the 85th Anniversary of the Academy Awards and Hollywood will be festive and totally consumed with it’s annual star-studded tradition that day. Hotels throughout Beverly Hills and the Westside of Los Angeles are all largely booked, and restaurant reservations at Spago, CUT and The Ivy cannot be found for those not really, really rich or highly famous. But sadly, one terrific film project that proved to be a box office smash in 2012 will be completely over-looked: conservative author Dinesh D’Souza’s “2016: Obama’s America,” a gripping documentary produced by Oscar-award winner Gerald Molen (Shindler’s List) that earned a record $33.4 million.
Apparently Hollywood’s bias against anything conservative or anything mildly realistic about Obama contributed to the oversight of even a nomination for the film, which was passed over for 15 other lesser grossing documentaries, and liberal films, including “Sugar Man” (how two Cape Town residents tracked down 1970s singer Sixto Rodriguez), “Detopia” (a story about Detriot’s steep decline) and “Ethel” (a film about the Kennedy family). Of these, “Detopia” is most of interest, though the true sources of Detroit’s decline, namely over-reaching by the United Auto Workers contributing to high-costs and the resulting failure of the auto industry, wasteful public spending by liberal Democratic politicians, unbridled welfare and pension policies leading to public agency bankruptcy, crime, and rampant corruption in City Hall, which are the true causes of Detriot’s hardships, are hardly touched on in the film. Instead “downsizing” and “greedy auto executives” forced to “outsource” manufacturing (by whom may we ask??!!) are made the culprit. And that is an evident lie. But it is a lie that liberal Hollywood easily embraces. Look for Detopia to get the Oscar.
Read More at CA Political Review . By James V. Lacy.
City Hall crowd cheers champion Ravens
By Associated Press Thousands of Baltimore Ravens fans are cheering, singing, dancing and marching along with the team in a parade to celebrate the team’s Super Bowl victory.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at ESPN Headlines
Fans mob Baltimore streets to celebrate Ravens win
Hundreds of giddy Ravens fans poured into the streets Sunday night, whooping, hollering, dancing, and high-fiving complete strangers as they celebrated the team’s 34-31 victory over the San Francisco 49ers.
On the far opposite coast, however, a spirit of hope and anticipation rapidly deteriorated to sullen disappointment as dejected fans tried to absorb their team’s loss.
In the East, patrons who packed into Mother’s Federal Hill Grille in Baltimore to watch the Ravens’ second Super Bowl appearance since the team arrived in the city in 1996 jumped up onto the bar and began belting out a rendition of the Queen song “We are the champions.” Bartenders sprayed purple party string into the air.
“I love this team. I love this city!” screamed Andrew Bieler, 21, shortly after the game ended.
Ashlee Tuck, 28, shouted “Yes!” and alternated between kissing her boyfriend and dancing as fans streamed out of the bar.
Michael Falls, 25, said he plans to take Monday off from his accounting job and his boss was going to do the same.
“I’m going to live up the night,” he said.
Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake joined in the fun, dancing and singing alongside the fans.
“The Baltimore Ravens once again demonstrated strength, poise, and perseverance as they prevailed in Super Bowl XLVII,” Rawlings-Blake said in a statement.
In a live interview from New Orleans on WBAL-TV, Rawlings-Blake said the city will hold a parade in the team’s honor on Tuesday that will start at City Hall and end at the Ravens’ stadium. She also urged fans to celebrate peacefully, while local television footage showed police mounted on horseback circling the crowds to maintain order.
Fans came decked out in purple for the game, many arriving at bars hours early to get seats. Women arrived with their nails painted purple. Men wore purple Mardi Gras beads. There were purple-feathered boas; purple, black and white camouflage pants; and a sea of purple and black jerseys.
It seemed no jersey was more popular than that of retiring middle linebacker Ray Lewis, No. 52. And whether they were wearing his number or not, fans said they wanted to win for Lewis, the only current player who started with the team when it came to Baltimore in 1996.
“We have to do it for Ray. It’s not all about Ray. It’s 90 percent for Ray, 10 percent for the city of Baltimore,” said Darren Love, 40, an off-duty police officer who wearing one-piece, zip-up pajamas with the Ravens’ logo in addition to purple wig.
Fans at Pickles Pub, just a few blocks from the Ravens’ M&T Bank Stadium, cheered when Lewis was shown on television at the start of the game. And the cheers continued when the team scored the first touchdown. The Ravens never trailed.
Chrissy Ramirez, 22, a first-grade teacher, was one of the fans who emptied out onto South Charles Street in the Federal Hill neighborhood after the win. Ramirez, who was wearing the No. 5 jersey of Ravens’ quarterback Joe Flacco, Ravens earrings, and a hat shaped like a Raven head, said she was excited and happy. She said she planned to “be ecstatic the rest of the week.”
In San Francisco, fans stumbled dejectedly out of bars in the Mission District, which had been the center of celebrations — and violence — after the San Francisco Giants won the World Series in the fall.
“Damn, that’s all I have to say,” said Niners fan David Mejia, 32.
As the game drew to an end, dozens of police officers and sheriff’s deputies fanned out on foot, motorcycles and patrol cars. A patrol helicopter hovered above, watching for signs of trouble.
The city had braced for possible rowdiness in the wake of the damage caused after the Niners won the NFC Championship Game two weeks ago. After that game, about a dozen people were arrested, mostly for public intoxication.
When the Giants won the World Series in late October, a city bus was set ablaze, cars were overturned and bonfires were in trash containers and in streets. About three dozen people were arrested.
Despite the large number of people on the streets Sunday night, however, most appeared to be well-behaved. Police declined to say how many arrests had been made.
“Citywide, everything seemed to be pretty good,” Officer Carlos Manfredi said. “We did have a couple of flare-ups in the Mission District but otherwise everyone seemed to be behaving themselves.”
___
Associated Press writer John S. Marshall in San Francisco contributed to this report.
Follow Jessica Gresko at http://twitter.com/jessicagresko
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
Alabama standoff continues as officials silent about talks with alleged abductor
As a police standoff with an Alabama man accused of holding a 5-year-old boy hostage in an underground bunker entered its fifth day, authorities were saying little except that their talks with the 65-year-old loner were continuing through a ventilation pipe.
Negotiators were still trying late Friday to persuade Jimmy Lee Dykes to surrender. Police have said they believe the Vietnam-era veteran fatally shot a school bus driver on Tuesday, and then abducted the boy from the bus and disappeared into the home-made bunker.
While police were mostly staying mum about the delicate negotiations, it fell to neighbors to fill in the blanks about Dykes, described by some as a menacing figure who held anti-government views.
One of Dykes’ next-door neighbors said the suspect spent two or three months constructing the bunker, digging several feet into the ground and then building a structure of lumber and plywood, which he covered with sand and dirt.
Neighbor Michael Creel said Dykes put the plastic pipe underground from the bunker to the end of his driveway so he could hear if anyone drove up to his gate. When Dykes finished the shelter a year or so ago, he invited Creel to see it — and he did.
“He was bragging about it. He said, `Come check it out,” Creel said.
He said he believes Dykes’ goal with the standoff is to publicize his political beliefs.
“I believe he wants to rant and rave about politics and government,” Creel said. “He’s very concerned about his property. He doesn’t want his stuff messed with.”
Police have used a ventilation pipe to the bunker to talk to the man and deliver the boy medication for his emotional disorders, but they have not revealed how often they are in touch or what the conversations have been about. Authorities waited until Friday to confirm the suspect’s identity.
While much of what is going on inside the bunker remains a mystery, local officials who have spoken to police or the boy’s family have described a small room with food, electricity and a TV. And while the boy has his medication, an official also said he has been crying for his parents.
Meanwhile, Midland City residents held out hope that the standoff would end safely and mourned for the slain bus driver and his family. Candlelight vigils have been held nightly at a gazebo in front of City Hall. Residents prayed, sang songs such as “Amazing Grace” and nailed homemade wooden crosses on the gazebo’s railings alongside signs that read: “We are praying for you.”
“We’re doing any little thing that helps show support for him,” said 15-year-old Taylor Edwards said.
Former hostage negotiators said authorities must be cautious and patient as long as they are confident that the boy is unharmed. Ex-FBI hostage negotiator Clint Van Zandt advised against any drastic measures such as cutting the electricity or putting sleeping gas inside the bunker because it could agitate Dykes.
The negotiator should try to ease Dykes’ anxieties over what will happen when the standoff ends, and refer to both the boy and Dykes by their first names, he said.
“I want to give him a reason to come out,” Van Zandt said,
Police seemed to be following that pattern. At a brief news conference to release a photo of Dykes, they brushed off any questions about possible charges.
“It’s way too early for that,” said Kevin Cook, a spokesman for the Alabama state troopers.
Police have described the bunker as about 4 feet underground, with about 6-by-8 feet of floor space and the PVC pipe that negotiators were speaking through.
State Rep. Steve Clouse, who represents the Midland City area, said he visited the boy’s mother and she is “hanging on by a thread.” Clouse said the mother told him that the boy has Asperger’s syndrome as well as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD.
Dr. Nadine Kaslow, a family therapist and psychiatry professor at Emory University in Atlanta, said the boy’s emotional troubles might make things even more difficult for him.
“They have less way to make sense of things,” she said of children with Asperger’s and ADHD.
The normally quiet red-clay road leading to the bunker was busy Friday with more than a dozen police cars and trucks, a fire truck, a helicopter, officers from multiple agencies and news media near Midland City. The town, population 2,300, is about 100 miles southeast of Montgomery.
Police vehicles have come and gone for hours from the command post, a small church nearby.
Neighbors said Dykes was easily angered and once beat a dog to death with a lead pipe, threatened to shoot children for setting foot on his property and patrolled his yard at night with a flashlight and a firearm.
He was in the Navy from 1964 to 1969, serving some time in Japan, according to military records.
Authorities said Dykes boarded a stopped school bus filled with 21 children on Tuesday afternoon and demanded two boys between 6 and 8 years old. When the driver tried to block his way, the gunman shot him several times and took the 5-year-old boy.
The bus driver, Charles Albert Poland Jr., 66, was hailed by local residents as a hero who gave his life to protect the pupils on his bus.
Dykes had been scheduled to appear in court Wednesday to answer charges he shot at his neighbors in a dispute last month over a speed bump. Neighbor Claudia Davis said he yelled and fired shots at her and her family over damage Dykes claimed their pickup truck did to a makeshift speed bump in the dirt road. No one was hurt.
Creel said his father and Dykes are friends. Creel said that after Dykes’ arrest, Dykes wrote a 2- to 3-page letter that at least in part addressed the menacing case.
Michael Creel said he hasn’t seen the letter but that his father, Greg Creel, has. Dykes reportedly told the elder Creel he had sent the letter to the local media, politicians and Alabama’s governor.
Police on Friday took a copy of the letter from the Creels’ home, according to Michael Creel. Reached for comment, Greg Creel confirmed the existence of the letter but declined further comment and said he was cooperating with police.
A neighbor directly across the street, Brock Parrish, said Dykes usually wore overalls and glasses and his posture was hunched-over. He said Dykes usually drove a run-down “creeper” van with some of the windows covered in aluminum foil.
Parrish often saw him digging in his yard, as if he were preparing to lay down a driveway or building foundation. He lived in a small camping trailer and patrolled his lawn at night, walking from corner to corner with a flashlight and a long gun. Authorities have not disclosed what firearms Dykes might have in his possession.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
Four San Francisco protesters arrested while naked, defying nudity ban
Police have arrested four naked people protesting San Francisco‘s nudity ban on the steps of City Hall.
The arrests on Friday came as the city’s prohibition on going out in the buff took effect.
About a dozen people in various states of undress took to the streets as part of the protest, though only the fully nude were taken into custody.
A federal judge ruled this week that nudity was not protected free speech and upheld San Francisco‘s ban on most displays of public nudity.
The Board of Supervisors voted 7-4 in December in favor of the ban.
Activists challenging the measure had argued that the ordinance was unfair because it grants exceptions for nudity at permitted public events such as the city’s gay pride parade.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
4 naked protesters arrested defying nudity ban
Police have arrested four naked people protesting San Francisco‘s nudity ban on the steps of City Hall.
The arrests on Friday came as the city’s prohibition on going out in the buff took effect.
About a dozen people in various states of undress took to the streets as part of the protest, though only the fully nude were taken into custody.
A federal judge ruled this week that nudity was not protected free speech and upheld San Francisco‘s ban on most displays of public nudity.
The Board of Supervisors voted 7-4 in December in favor of the ban.
Activists challenging the measure had argued that the ordinance was unfair because it grants exceptions for nudity at permitted public events such as the city’s gay pride parade.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

