When police or prosecutors conceal significant exculpatory or impeaching material, we hold, it is ordinarily incumbent on the state to set the record straight. - Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Monday, January 19, 2009

Trial starts tomorrow for man accused of killing officer

CHESAPEAKE - Ryan Frederick, the Chesapeake man whose deadly confrontation with a police officer during a drug raid last year created an uproar in the community, will go on trial tomorrow for capital murder.

Frederick, 29, is charged in the death of detective Jarrod Shivers, 34, who was shot to death on Jan. 17, 2008, during a raid on Frederick's home.

Frederick's defense has maintained that he thought his home was being invaded and he shot in self-defense. The Chesapeake Police Department has said that the detectives announced themselves as police officers.

The case has generated a high level of interest locally, as Frederick's friends launched a "Free Ryan" campaign in his defense.
Please like the damn cops don't lie for each other, how to you think the term blue law started. Cops lie to protect other cops. Just like many cops have throw down in their cars. Just in case they kill someone by mistake.

I hope the citizens on Chesapeake will see the truth and allow Frederick to go home..

Va. Proposal Puts Mental Health Safety Net for Children on Chopping Block

For years, when some of Virginia's most troubled children have been struck by serious psychiatric problems, their most likely destination has been the low-rise brick building on a sprawling campus in the Shenandoah Valley that is home to the Commonwealth Center for Children and Adolescents.
"We're the place where kids can come when they can't go anyplace else," said Jeffrey Aaron, forensic coordinator and clinical director of an adolescent unit at the Staunton center.
Now the 48-bed, state-run facility has been identified by Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D) as a place the state can do without. To help close a $3 billion budget gap, he has ordered the elimination of the center and a 16-bed hospital unit in southwestern Virginia that provides similar care.

Goes to show that our so-called sorry ass elected officials don't give a damn about our children till its time to get thier fat asses elected again.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

What is the JIRC Hiding???

Via The VLW site
In its year-end report to the General Assembly, dated Dec. 1 and posted online Dec. 18, the Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission demonstrates just how busy it has been this year. Business is steady for the agency that provides ethics oversight to 772 judges in the commonwealth.

JIRC fielded 967 telephone inquiries, with the majority coming from judges and litigants. In 500 written inquiries, the agency heard primarily from inmates and civil litigants, many of them presumably unhappy with the outcome of their cases.

This year, the commission opened 20 files, as compared to 23 last year, and it dismissed 16 matters during 2008, with eight matters pending at year-end.

Under Va. Code § 17.1-918, the agency must report to the legislature findings of misconduct by judges seeking re-election, and it had one such matter in 2007 and one in 2008.
By Deborah Elkins
I have always said that JIRC serves only to protect Judges. I Guess I know why my complaint against jusge Olds was drop, since the Chairperson of the JIRC is Larry Willis, a judge who works with Olds in The Chesapeake JDR courthouse.

Commission Counsel provides informal ethics advice to Virginia judges on a daily basis. During the past twelve months, Counsel responded to more than 400 such requests.

Here I thought that Judges knew what they jobs entails,  I guess these judges need help to protect their lying asses. To see what laws they can break and not get charge with or thrown off the bench.

Written inquiries received
Attorneys-10
Judges-13
Court employees-2
General public-23
Litigants-189
Victims-2
Inmates-219
Media-0
Other-42
TOTAL-500

I can only guess they filed all written inquires from inmates are files in the oval filing cabinet. I really have to wonder what the 2 written inquires from court employees are about. What gets me is who are these "others"?

Nature of written inquiry
Ruling/decision-289
Ex parte-10
Bias or prejudice-60
Delay-18
Rude behavior-45
Failure to follow the law-25
Ethics opinion-10
How to file-30
Other


Well I sure those who complain about delays didn't have anything to do with these AJA meeting In Hawaii and other vactional places. In my opinion ever judge is guilty of rude behavior, Ex parte should never take place all, but they do in domestic cases, yes those DV advocate have a walk in policy with most judges. I wonder just how many of those ruling/decision was because the judge was contradicting their own prevous  orders, I know Judge Olds loves doing that. Who would every guess that a judge would be guilty of "failure to follow the law", each and every one of them thats who.

Telephone inquiries received
Attorneys-39
Judges-451
Court employees-11
General public-21
Litigants-310
Victims-9
Inmates-1
Media-1
Other-114
In Person-10

What is this, 451 calls from Judges, If they don't know how to do their damn job get them off the damn bench. Again with the court employees calling and written the JIRC, what do they know??? What are they writing and call the JIRC about? I guess we will never know these the JIRC works "behind closed doors."

Nature of telephone inquiry
Ruling/decision-236
Ex parte-13
Bias or prejudice-67
Delay-23
Rude behavior-66
Failure to follow the law-55
Ethics opinion-460
How to file-103
Other-208

Damn 460 calls concerning ethics, wow, I guess it not to far off, since must judges don't know what ethics are. I wonder what are these 208 other complaints, what is the JIRC hiding from the General Assembly? Could Sexuality improprieties be among them, what about bribes?